Series 34 Exam: Essential Guide to Forex Exam Registration and Content

A forex analyst reviews a text book in preparation to take the Series 34 exam.

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The Series 34 is an exam and license required for individuals seeking to engage in off-exchange forex transactions with retail customers. It is part of the registration and certification process for most forex managers, dealers, and intermediaries.

Key Takeaways

  • The Series 34 Exam is essential for individuals looking to engage in off-exchange forex transactions with retail customers. Passing this exam is part of the certification process for forex managers, dealers, and intermediaries.
  • Administered by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and overseen by the National Futures Association (NFA), the exam is officially known as the Retail Off-Exchange Forex Examination. Successful candidates are designated as "forex Associated Persons."
  • The exam comprises 40 multiple-choice questions that candidates must complete within 60 minutes. A minimum score of 70% is required to pass.
  • Key areas of focus for the exam include definitions and terminology, trading calculations, risks associated with forex trading, market concepts, and regulatory requirements.
  • Candidates must either pass the Series 34 exam or have equivalent credentials, such as the Series 3 or Series 32, to receive the necessary certification for off-exchange retail forex activities.

Understanding the Series 34 Exam and Its Significance

The Series 34 Exam, also known as the Retail Off-Exchange Forex Examination, is a National Futures Association (NFA) exam administered by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA). Upon passing the exam, an individual is known as a 'forex AP,' or 'forex Associated Person.'

According to the NFA, obtaining Series 34 certification is required of anyone seeking approval as a forex firm or forex individual before engaging in off-exchange retail forex unless they have already passed the Series 3 (National Commodities Futures Examination) or the Series 32 (Limited Futures Examination-Regulations) exams. They also must have passed the Series 34 within the previous two years or have been continuously registered with an NFA member firm after passing the Series 34 without a registration lag of more than two years.

What to Expect on the Series 34 Exam: Comprehensive Content Breakdown

The Series 34 Exam consists of 40 multiple-choice questions. Candidates have 60 minutes to complete it. To pass the exam, the applicant must get at least 28 questions correct to achieve a passing score of 70%.

The following represents a sample list of major subject areas covered by the Series 34 Exam, though it is not exhaustive (For more, see the NFA's Retail Off-Exchange Forex Examination Content Outline):

Section A:

Definitions and Terminology - American/European Terms; Base, quote, terms and secondary currency; Bid/ask spread; Collateral, Regulated entities listed in the Commodity Exchange Act; security deposit, margin; Cross rates, crosses and pairs; Direct and indirect quotes; Exchange rate; Forward Points; Forward rate/bid forward rate; Interest rate differential and parity; Mark-up and mark-downs; PIPs; Rollovers; Spot rate/price; Trade/Settlement date; Swaps.

Section B:

Forex Trading Calculations - Cross rate transactions; Effects of leverage calculations; Netting of positions; Open trade variation; Profit & loss calculations; Pip value, price after pips; Return on collateral. security deposit; margin; and Transaction costs.

Section C:

Risks Associated with Forex Trading - Country/sovereign risk; Credit, exchange rate; interest rate, liquidity, market, operational risk; Settlement, and Herstaat risk.

Section D:

Forex Market - Concepts, Theories, Economic Factors and Indicators, Participants: Balance of payments; Balance of trade; Bank for International Settlements (BIS); Capital account and current account; Central bank activities, intervention, sterilized intervention; Clearing House Interbank Payment System (CHIPS); Discount rate; Economic indicators: employment, consumer spending, income, industrial and inflation indicators; Elasticity of exchange rates; Exchange rate intervention; Exchange rate volatility; Federal Reserve Board, Fedwire; Fiscal policy; Fisher effect; Foreign investment indicators; Gross national product, gross domestic product; Inflation; Interbank funds transfer and settlement systems; International Fisher effect; International Monetary Fund; Portfolio balance; Role of central banks; Theory of elasticities; Theory of purchasing power parity and the World Trade Organization.

Section E:

Forex Regulatory Requirements - CFTC Regulations, including: Close out of offsetting positions, Disclosure of profitable vs. non-profitable accounts, Prohibition of guarantees against loss, Registration requirements, Re-quoting, Security deposits, Specific authorization for trades; CFTC jurisdiction and jurisdictional limitations; Conflicts of interest; Disclosures to customers; Jurisdictional & regulatory framework; Know your customer; NFA Interpretive Notices, including: The Allocation of Bunched Retail Forex Orders for Multiple Accounts, Forex Transactions, Requirements for Forex Transactions, Supervision of the Use of Electronic Trading Systems, Prohibition on the Use of Certain Electronic Funding Mechanisms (Effective January 31, 2015); NFA membership and associate membership requirements; Promotional material & solicitation; Reports to customers, confirmations, monthly summaries; Security deposit rules; Security of customer funds, no segregation.

Article Sources
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  1. NFA. "Proficiency Requirements - Futures Industry."

  2. FINRA. "Series 34 – Retail Off-Exchange Forex Exam."

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