What are forex signals — and what makes them the best?
Forex signals are trade alerts on currency pairs that tell you what to trade, in which direction, and at what levels. The best forex signals are never just 'buy EUR/USD' — they are complete plans: a precise entry price, one or more take profit (TP) targets, a stop loss (SL) that caps the downside, and a short note on why the trade exists, all sized within a risk-management framework.
The other mark of a serious forex signal provider is verifiable results. We publish a weekly record — currently 94% average accuracy by points across 25 reported weeks and +135,081 net points in total — so you can judge the service on evidence rather than marketing. Review it on the performance page, and if you are comparing services more broadly, start with our best trading signals guide.
Forex rewards this kind of structure more than any other market. The currency market runs 24 hours across five days, turns over trillions of dollars daily, and moves on a constant flow of economic data — too much for one person to watch alone. A disciplined signal service compresses that flow into a handful of prepared trades: the analysis is done, the levels are set, and your job reduces to execution and position sizing.
Daily forex signals on the major pairs
Our daily forex signals concentrate on the major pairs, because that is where execution is cheapest and cleanest: the deepest liquidity, the tightest spreads, and the least slippage between the signal level and your fill. Setups are driven by the London and New York sessions and by scheduled economic data.
We deliberately do not blast out dozens of trades a day to look active. Each signal is a selected setup with a sensible risk-to-reward ratio, delivered the moment it is issued so the entry is still live when it reaches your phone.
Timing follows the market's own calendar. The London open sets the day's first real direction; the London–New York overlap brings peak liquidity and most of our intraday setups; and scheduled releases — central-bank rate decisions, inflation prints, the monthly US jobs report — create the sharp moves around which entries and stops are planned. On days when the calendar makes conditions dangerous rather than tradable, we simply issue fewer signals; skipping a bad day is itself a trading decision.
Major pairs we cover and why
| Pair | Name | Why we trade it |
|---|---|---|
| EUR/USD | Euro / US dollar | Highest liquidity in the world, tightest spread |
| USD/JPY | US dollar / Japanese yen | Clean trends, strong reaction to rate policy |
| GBP/USD | British pound / US dollar | Healthy volatility, reliable intraday setups |
| USD/CHF | US dollar / Swiss franc | Safe-haven flows, useful diversification |
| AUD/USD | Australian dollar / US dollar | Commodity-sensitive, reacts to China data |
| EUR/JPY | Euro / Japanese yen | Wide-swinging cross for swing trades |
Anatomy of a professional forex signal
Every signal we issue contains the same six elements. Learn to demand them from any provider — each one exists to remove a decision you would otherwise be making blind.
Entries are grounded in structure, not guesswork: a confirmed break or rejection at a support/resistance level, aligned with the higher-timeframe trend. Exits get equal care — targets are often staggered as TP1 and TP2, and once the first target fills we move the stop loss to break-even, so a winning trade can no longer turn into a losing one. That single habit is worth more than most indicators.
The six components of every forex signal
| Component | What it is | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Pair and direction | e.g. EUR/USD buy or sell | Defines the trade unambiguously |
| Entry price | Exact level to open at | Planned execution, not chasing |
| Take profit (TP) | One or more targets in points | Disciplined profit-taking |
| Stop loss (SL) | Level where the trade closes at a loss | Caps risk, protects capital |
| Position size guidance | Lot size matched to your balance | Keeps risk at 1–2% per trade |
| Trade logic | Why the setup exists | You learn instead of executing blindly |
Why the stop loss is non-negotiable in forex
Currency prices can move violently around news releases — a rate decision or payrolls print can travel dozens of points in seconds. The stop loss is what turns a losing trade into a small, planned loss instead of an account-threatening one. That is why no signal of ours is ever issued without an SL, and why we move the stop to break-even once the first target is reached.
Be equally clear about the flip side: there is no such thing as a guaranteed forex signal. Any service promising certain profits is being dishonest. What compounds an account over time is a documented edge plus strict loss control — exactly what a published by-points record lets you verify.
The stop also does quiet psychological work. Knowing your worst case is defined before the trade opens removes the panic decisions that destroy accounts: no averaging into losers, no freezing while a loss grows, no revenge trades afterwards. Traders who follow complete signals with fixed stops are not just copying levels — they are borrowing a risk framework until it becomes their own.