Individual monetary forms can crash, for example, the GBP when the Brexit choice was declared. Be that as it may, in contrast to stocks, the forex market all in all can't crash. That is on the grounds that every cash moves autonomously against the wide range of various monetary standards. Consider monetary standards like lifts — assuming the GBP lift is going down compared with the EUR and USD lifts, then active the EUR and USD lifts are going toward the GBP lift. So while according to the viewpoint of an English individual, the GBP crashed on that day, according to the point of view of an American, the person could believe that the USD took off versus GBP on that day. Stocks then again are designated in one cash, so they're all going all over against the dollar (or whatever money). So the cost, everything being equal, can go down compared with the money they're designated in. So in principle, assuming you got everything 100 percent right, you'd have the option to bring in cash consistently in FX regardless of anything else. Obviously, no one does on the grounds that no one at any point gets everything 100 percent right.