There are hundreds of different currency pairs in the forex market, and each can be categorised into one of three groups: majors, minors, or exotics. Let’s look at each of these three categories in more detail.
Majors
Major currency pairs comprise some of the world’s biggest economies: the Euro, Pound, US dollar, Japanese yen, New Zealand dollar, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, and Swiss franc.
All major currency pairs are listed with the US dollar because the US dollar is seen as the world’s primary reserve currency. The US dollar can be either the base currency or the quote currency; for example, in USD/JPY, it’s the base currency. Meanwhile, EUR/USD is the quoted currency.
Minors
Minor currency pairs, also known as cross-currency pairs, still include currencies from the majors; however, they don’t include the US dollar. Examples are EUR/GBP or GBP/CAD.
Even though these currency pairs are still popular among many traders, they see less liquidity than the major currency pairs since they don’t include the US dollar.
Exotics
Exotic currency pairs are some of the least traded currency pairs. They consist of one major currency paired with a currency from an emerging economy, such as GBP/SGD (the Great British pound against the Singapore dollar) or USD/ZAR (the US dollar against the South African rand).
For the most part, traders will end up trading the majors rather than the minors or exotics, mainly due to the high liquidity the major currency pairs offer.