Abstract:Understanding the difference between major, minor, and exotic currency pairs is a critical first step for new traders. This guide explains how currency quotes work and why the highly liquid EUR/USD pair is the most practical starting point for your trading journey.

When you open a Forex trading app for the first time, you are immediately greeted by a wall of flashing letters and numbers: EUR/USD, GBP/JPY, USD/SGD. For a beginner in Malaysia, staring at dozens of fluctuating currency pairs can be overwhelming. You might be tempted to jump into a pair just because it is moving fast, or perhaps look for something tied to regional economies.
However, experienced traders usually give the same practical advice: start with the Euro and the US Dollar (EUR/USD). To understand why this specific pair is the default training ground, you first need to understand how the market categorizes currencies.
In the Forex market, currencies are always traded in pairs. You cannot buy or sell a currency in isolation; you are always exchanging one for another.
Take the EUR/USD pair as an example. The first currency listed (EUR) is the “base” currency, while the second (USD) is the “quote” or “counter” currency. The price you see on your screen tells you exactly how much of the quote currency is needed to buy one unit of the base currency. If EUR/USD is quoted at 1.2500, it costs 1.25 US Dollars to purchase 1 Euro.
When you execute a “buy” order on this pair, you are buying the base currency (Euros) and selling the quote currency (US Dollars). Conversely, a “sell” order means you are selling Euros to receive US Dollars. The broker will present you with two prices: the bid price (what the broker will buy the base currency from you for) and the ask price (what the broker will sell the base currency to you for). The narrow gap between these two prices is the spread, which is the basic cost of your trade.
The total number of currency pairs in the world is massive, but they are divided into three distinct categories based on their daily trading volume.
Major Pairs
These comprise the most heavily traded currencies paired against the US Dollar. Because the USD is involved in the vast majority of global currency transactions, major pairs see the highest trading volume. Examples include EUR/USD, USD/JPY (US Dollar/Japanese Yen), and GBP/USD (British Pound/US Dollar).
Minor Pairs (Crosses)
Minor pairs, also known as cross pairs, bypass the US Dollar entirely. Instead, they pair other major global currencies against each other. Common crosses include EUR/GBP (Euro/British Pound) or GBP/JPY. While these are still heavily traded, they do not have the massive volume of the majors, which means their spreads can be slightly wider.
Exotic Pairs
These pairs link a major currency with the currency of an emerging or smaller economy. An example is the USD/SGD (US Dollar/Singapore Dollar). Exotics have much lower trading volumes. Because fewer people are buying and selling them, the spreads on exotic pairs are significantly wider, making them more expensive to trade.
New traders often hunt for exotic pairs or volatile crosses under the false impression that faster price swings equal faster profits. From experience, this usually leads to unnecessary stress and quick losses.
The EUR/USD is considered the most liquid currency pair in the world. High liquidity means there is an enormous, constant flow of buyers and sellers. For a beginner, this translates directly to lower trading costs. Because the broker has no trouble finding a buyer or seller for your order, the spread on EUR/USD is typically the tightest in the market.
Furthermore, massive liquidity smooths out erratic price jumps. While the pair still reacts to economic data—like interest rate changes or national growth reports—it generally moves in a more readable manner compared to exotic pairs heavily burdened by thin trading volumes.
Your goal as a beginner is to learn how to read market structure, manage your risk, and execute trades without letting emotions take over. Doing this on a costly, unpredictable exotic pair puts the odds against you. Sticking to a major pair like EUR/USD keeps your trading costs low and provides a stable environment to test your strategies.
Once you are comfortable navigating the EUR/USD, you can gradually explore minor crosses. However, before you place any real funds into the market, your first priority is platform safety. Take a moment to run your chosen broker through the WikiFX app to verify their regulatory status and license, ensuring that when you finally place that first EUR/USD trade, your capital is in secure hands.

