Why Trade Crosses Instead of Majors
"Why trade crosses instead of majors? Learn the benefits of cross currency pairs, from diversification and volatility opportunities to reducing dollar dependence in Forex trading."
Wikilix Team
Educational Content Team
10 min
Reading time
Intermediate
Difficulty
Most individuals new to Forex trading are immediately drawn to the majors: EUR/USD, GBP/USD, or USD/JPY pairs, since these pairs tend to be well-known, heavily traded, and frequently presented as the "go to" currency pairs for new traders. However, the Forex market is much larger than simply the majors. There is a wide range of conditions and opportunities in cross-currency pairs, or "crosses," which in fact exclude the dollar.
So, why would a trader take a cross over a major? The answer is simply diversification, unique opportunities, and, to a certain extent, captures moves that the dollar does not necessarily explain. This discussion looks at the rationale for including crosses permanently in the toolbox of any trader.
Cross currency pairs are any Forex pairs that do not include the dollar. For example:
• EUR/GBP (European Union vs. British Pound)
• AUD/JPY (Australian Dollar vs. Japanese Yen)
• EUR/CHF (Euros vs. Swiss Francs)
These currency pairs indicate the relative strength between two economies, not based on the dollar. Crosses used to require that a trader convert through the dollar first historically; however, with today's platforms that is no longer necessary nor efficient.
1. Diversification beyond the U.S. dollar
Major pairs are evident and most driven by the U.S. dollar. When trading majors, you are betting on the strength of the dollar or the weakness of the dollar. Crosses allow you to diversify, and focus on the economic relationships with different economies, e.g Europe vs U.K, or Australia vs Japan and so on.
2. More Direct Economic Comparisons
Crosses remove the dollar from the equation and show how two regions are performing in relation to each other. For example, instead of looking at EUR/USD and GBP/USD separately, when you are trading EUR/GBP, you get a clearer picture of the Eurozone vs. the U.K.
3. Greater Volatility and Opportunity
Some crosses, such as GBP/JPY, are known for their swings in price. While this volatility comes with risk, it also presents some of the more favorable opportunities for traders who know how to manage volatility.
4. Carry Trade Potential
Many crosses are incomparably popular in carry trades as traders try to earn interest from holding the higher-yield currencies against the lower-yield currencies. The AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY have long been two of the more popular pairs for a carry trade.
Euro Crosses
EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, and EUR/CHF are among the more liquid and more widely followed cross pairs.
Yen Crosses
Some popular crosses, such as GBP/JPY and AUD/JPY, are popular in part due to volatility and global risk appetite.
Commodity Crosses
AUD/NZD and CAD/JPY are two pairs that more directly represent the strength of commodity economies.
Although each of the categories has more unique patterns of price behavior and characteristics for traders to provide value in their respective market environment.
1. Liquidity
Majors are considered to be the most liquid instruments in the Forex market, which typically equates to tighter spreads. Crosses are likely wider spreads, yet with continued widespread popularity, many crosses are still quite tradable given the overall liquidity.
2. News Sensitivity
Majors are sensitive to U.S. data. On the other hand, crosses provide traders with the chance to trade economic and news events related to other economies that are sometimes overlooked.
3. Relative Strength Comparisons
Crosses allow traders to follow the opportunities where one economy is stronger than another, even if the role of the dollar influences, making that dynamic more opaque in the major pairs.
While crosses can be profitable, there are also some inherent risks, such as:
• Wider Spreads: Some crosses can be less liquid, which increases the cost of trading.
• Volatility: Price action can swing significantly and create a greater degree of risk.
• Lack of information: Media tends to cover the majors more than the cross, so having to scour more news to get good info can add a level of annoyance.
1. Use a Blend of Fundamentals and Technical
Analyze the relative strength of the two economies in the respective currency pair, and then analyze the charts and mechanics to time your entries.
2. Understand Correlations
Crosses will often have relationships with other major pairs. For example, EUR/GBP will move with EUR/USD and GBP/USD.
3. Focus on Liquid Pairs First
Starting with pairs like EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, and AUD/JPY will offer traders a better experience than using more exotic pairs with little liquidity.
4. Risk Management
Crosses are usually more volatile, so they require more disciplined sizing of positions with stop loss placement.
If the Eurozone releases higher than expected inflation and the U.K. economic reports signal weak retail sales, trading one of the majors, EUR/USD or GBP/USD in this example, would be dollar influenced but does not tell one to the other directly whether the euro has strength or weakness relative to the U.K. However, trading EUR/GBP would reflect the relative strength between both economies.
Foreign exchange crosses present attractive positions to experienced traders because they:
• Offer hedging from dollar exposure.
• Provide opportunities to trade pairs during times of lower volatility.
• Provide a unique pattern of volatility and often different trading patterns for strategies.
Major pairs will always dominate headlines in forex, but cross pairs can provide an equal platform for attention. Trading crosses may add diversification, trade-offs if a trader looks for comparative comparisons between economies, and trade-offs for short-term and long-term trades.
Trading crosses can add to a trader's existing strategies, lessen the reliance on the dollar, and promote an increase in potential profit.
The key is preparation, understanding the fundamentals, tracking the economic matrices of each economy, evaluating technical charts, and risk management. Overall, if you practice a methodology, cross-trading can become a valuable tool in your trading toolbox when shifting between trades.
Keep building your knowledge with our structured learning path. Each section builds upon the previous one.
This is the first section
You're at the beginning of your journey!
This is the last section
You've completed this course!