Forex Basics

History of Forex Trading: From Gold Standard to Modern FX

The foreign exchange market that retail traders access today — 24/5, electronic, with leverage and micro lots — is a product of the last 50 years. Its origins trace back to the Bretton Woods agreement of 1944 and the gold standard era before it. Understanding how the modern forex market came to exist helps explain why it works the way it does.

Key Takeaways

  • The modern forex market emerged after the Bretton Woods system collapsed in 1973.
  • Before 1973, most currencies were pegged to the US dollar at fixed rates.
  • Electronic trading in the 1990s opened the forex market to retail participants.
  • Today the forex market trades over $7 trillion per day on average.

The Gold Standard (1870–1944)

For most of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, major currencies were pegged to gold at fixed rates. The US dollar was convertible to gold at $20.67 per troy ounce. The British pound, German mark, and other currencies were similarly fixed.

Under the gold standard, exchange rates between currencies were essentially fixed — determined by each currency’s gold peg. There was no speculative forex market. International trade was conducted in gold-backed currencies with predictable relative values.

The gold standard broke down during World War I as governments printed money to fund the war effort beyond their gold reserves. Attempts to return to gold after WWI were unstable and contributed to deflationary pressures during the Great Depression. By the time of World War II, the gold standard had been effectively abandoned.

Bretton Woods (1944–1971): Fixed but Dollar-Anchored

In July 1944, representatives from 44 Allied nations met at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to design a new post-war international monetary system. The result established:

  • The US dollar as the world’s reserve currency, convertible to gold at $35 per troy ounce
  • All other participating currencies pegged to the US dollar at fixed exchange rates (within ±1%)
  • The International Monetary Fund (IMF) created to oversee the system
  • The World Bank created to finance post-war reconstruction

Under Bretton Woods, speculative currency trading was limited — exchange rates were stable by design, and central banks intervened to maintain fixed rates. The system worked while the US had sufficient gold reserves to back its dollar obligations. As the US ran persistent trade deficits and printed dollars to fund the Vietnam War, confidence in dollar-gold convertibility eroded.

The Nixon Shock (1971): Birth of the Modern Forex Market

On August 15, 1971, US President Richard Nixon announced that the United States would no longer convert dollars to gold at the fixed $35/oz rate. This “Nixon Shock” ended dollar-gold convertibility and effectively broke the Bretton Woods system.

Without the gold anchor, currencies could not maintain fixed exchange rates. By 1973, major currencies had moved to freely floating exchange rates — their values determined by market supply and demand rather than government decree.

Why 1973 matters: This is when the modern speculative forex market was born. Once exchange rates floated freely, they became tradeable assets. Corporations needed to manage currency risk; banks needed infrastructure to facilitate currency exchange; speculators identified profit opportunities in exchange rate movements. The forex market grew from this structural need.

Interbank Market Development (1970s–1980s)

Initially, forex trading was exclusively an interbank activity. Large commercial and investment banks traded currencies with each other to facilitate client transactions and manage their own currency exposures. Trades were executed by telephone between bank dealers.

In 1976, the IMF formally endorsed floating exchange rates through the Jamaica Agreement. The major currencies — dollar, deutschmark, yen, pound, franc — became the first actively traded currency pairs.

Reuters launched its first computer-based quote system in 1973 — a significant step toward electronic trading. The 1980s saw major volatility events: the Plaza Accord of 1985 was a coordinated intervention by G5 central banks (US, Germany, Japan, France, UK) to deliberately weaken the overvalued US dollar — one of the most significant coordinated currency interventions in history.

Electronic Trading and Institutional Access (1990s)

The 1990s brought electronic trading systems that transformed the interbank market:

  • 1992 — Black Wednesday: The European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) crisis. George Soros’s firm shorted the British pound, forcing the UK’s withdrawal from the ERM. The trade reportedly generated over $1 billion in profit — demonstrating the power of large speculative currency positions and entering popular culture as “Black Wednesday.”
  • 1993: The EBS (Electronic Broking Services) platform launched, bringing automated electronic matching to interbank forex trading.
  • 1997 — Asian financial crisis: Demonstrated the vulnerability of pegged emerging market currencies (Thai baht, Indonesian rupiah, Korean won) to speculative attack when economic fundamentals were weak.
  • Late 1990s: Online forex platforms began appearing for institutional and eventually retail clients.

The Retail Forex Revolution (2000s)

The early 2000s democratised forex trading through internet platforms accessible to individual retail traders:

  • Retail forex brokers launched platforms with minimum deposits of $500–$2,000 — enabling individuals to participate for the first time
  • MetaTrader 4 (MT4) launched in 2005 by MetaQuotes, becoming the dominant retail forex trading platform globally — still widely used today
  • ECN/STP execution models emerged, giving retail traders access to near-interbank pricing with tighter spreads
  • The 2008 global financial crisis caused extreme currency volatility and highlighted the risks of unregulated leverage in retail accounts — ultimately triggering regulatory reform

Modern Regulated Forex (2010s–Present)

Following the 2008 financial crisis, regulatory bodies globally moved to increase retail forex oversight and client protection:

  • 2018 — ESMA leverage caps: The European Securities and Markets Authority introduced leverage limits for EU retail clients — 1:30 maximum for major currency pairs, lower for minor pairs and other assets. Negative balance protection became mandatory for EU/UK retail accounts.
  • Similar regulations implemented by the FCA (UK), ASIC (Australia), and other major financial regulators
  • The BIS Triennial Survey recorded daily forex turnover growing from ~$1.2 trillion in 1995 to $7.5 trillion by 2022
  • Algorithmic and high-frequency trading grew to account for a significant portion of institutional volume
  • Mobile trading became the primary access method for many retail traders globally

Today’s retail forex market offers access that was unimaginable in 1973 — micro-lot trading, spreads of 0.5–2 pips, real-time pricing derived from interbank rates, execution in milliseconds, and regulatory protection of deposited funds at regulated brokers. The fundamentals of why currencies move — interest rates, growth differentials, policy — are the same as they were in 1973. The access and cost of participation have transformed entirely.

Key Dates in Forex History

YearEventSignificance
1944Bretton Woods AgreementUSD becomes world reserve currency, pegged to gold at $35/oz
1971Nixon ShockUSD-gold convertibility ends; Bretton Woods collapses
1973Floating exchange rates beginModern speculative forex market born
1976Jamaica AgreementIMF formally endorses floating exchange rate system
1985Plaza AccordG5 coordinated intervention weakens overvalued USD
1992ERM crisis — Black WednesdayGBP forced out of ERM; Soros trade earns $1B+
1997Asian financial crisisPegged emerging market currencies collapse under speculative pressure
2005MetaTrader 4 launchesRetail trading platform standard established; remains widely used
2008Global financial crisisExtreme currency volatility; retail regulation reform begins
2018ESMA leverage caps — EURetail leverage limited to 1:30 (major pairs); negative balance protection required
2022BIS Survey: $7.5T daily volumeLargest financial market ever recorded

Frequently Asked Questions

The infrastructure for retail forex trading — online platforms, accessible minimum deposits, leverage for individuals — emerged primarily in the late 1990s and accelerated with widespread internet access in the early 2000s. MetaTrader 4 (2005) was particularly significant in standardising the retail experience. Before that, forex was exclusively institutional — accessible only to banks, corporations, and large hedge funds.
The US dollar retained its reserve status after Bretton Woods ended because of the depth and liquidity of US financial markets, the size of the US economy, US geopolitical influence, and the established international pricing of key commodities (especially oil) in dollars. No alternative currency has achieved sufficient global adoption to displace it, though China’s yuan internationalisation is an ongoing development. The dollar’s share of global reserves has declined gradually but remains dominant at ~58–60% (IMF data).
The UK joined the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) in 1990, committing to keep the pound within a fixed band against the German deutschmark. By 1992, UK economic conditions (high inflation, rising unemployment) made the fixed rate increasingly untenable. Speculators — most famously George Soros’s Quantum Fund — recognised this misalignment and shorted the pound aggressively. The Bank of England could not sustain the rate despite raising interest rates to 15% in a single day. The UK withdrew from the ERM on September 16, 1992 — “Black Wednesday.”
ESMA (European Securities and Markets Authority) introduced leverage limits for EU retail clients: 1:30 for major currency pairs, 1:20 for minor pairs, 1:10 for commodities, and lower for crypto. Negative balance protection became mandatory — meaning retail clients could not lose more than their deposited capital. Brokers were also restricted from offering certain bonuses. These rules were intended to reduce retail trading losses from excessive leverage. Similar rules followed in the UK (FCA) and Australia (ASIC).
Under the gold standard, each currency had a fixed conversion rate to gold. Since two currencies were each fixed to gold, the exchange rate between them was effectively fixed by their respective gold parities. For example, if 1 GBP = X grams of gold and 1 USD = Y grams of gold, then GBP/USD = X/Y. This created stable, predictable exchange rates — but also removed flexibility for countries to adjust monetary policy in response to economic conditions, which contributed to deflationary pressures during downturns like the 1930s Great Depression.

Build confidence with a free FXGlory demo account. Test forex strategies, learn platform tools, and practice risk management without using real funds.

Open a Free Demo Account