Forex Trading Sessions --- September 2013 - March 2014

This thread will track session times in 27 time zones for the coming 6 month period.

[B]Time changes which will occur over the next 5 weeks[/B]

Forex traders around the world will be affected by time changes occurring in the principal forex markets on 4 separate dates between September 29 and November 3, 2013, as follows:

• September 29 — New Zealand will go onto Daylight Saving Time (DST)

• October 6 — southeastern Australia (Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Adelaide, Hobart, etc.) will go onto DST

• October 27 — eastern, central, and western Europe, the U.K., and Ireland will return to Standard Time

• November 3 — the U.S. and Canada will return to Standard Time

Prior to each of those 4 dates, the Table of Forex Trading Sessions will be updated and posted, so that you will have current session times during this 5-week transition period. In addition to the countries and regions listed above, other countries and regions experiencing time changes on (or about) those 4 dates will be updated in the Table, as well.

[B]Time change which will occur this weekend[/B]

The next post will include the Table, updated to show the Daylight Saving Time change occurring in New Zealand this weekend.

This Table update will be effective for one week.


1 Like

On Sunday, September 29, New Zealand will go onto Daylight Saving Time. The time zone throughout New Zealand will change from NZST (GMT+12) to NZDT (GMT+13).

Beginning with the opening of the retail forex market in Wellington, New Zealand on Monday morning, September 30:

• The opening and closing times of the Wellington Trading Session will change by one hour for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in New Zealand, and

• The opening and closing times of the other six Trading Sessions will remain unchanged for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in New Zealand.

The Table of Forex Trading Sessions has been updated to reflect these changes. The updates are highlighted in yellow.

Notes following the Table explain the format of the Table and how to use it, and give general information on time zones and time changes.

The next update to the Table will be posted in one week (when southeastern Australia will go onto Daylight Saving Time).




How to use this Table:

1. The upper portion of the Table lists the opening time and closing time of the normal (8am-5pm) business day in each of the 7 principal forex trading markets. These opening and closing times are shown for each of 27 different GMT time zones. In most cases, you will be concerned with only one of those 27 time zones — the time zone where you are located.

2. Each horizontal line in the upper portion of the Table refers to a particular GMT time zone. The times shown on that line are local times in that time zone.

3. If you know your current GMT time zone, you can use the upper portion of the Table to find opening and closing times in 7 markets. The times shown are current, local times in your time zone.

4. If you do not know your current GMT time zone, you can use the lower portion of the Table to find the correct time zone for your location, for this particular time of year. Then, refer to your GMT time zone in the upper portion of the Table, and read the current opening and closing times in 7 markets.

Example: Let’s say you’re in South Africa, you want to find the opening and closing times for the New York Session, but you don’t know your GMT time zone.

• Step 1 - Go to the lower portion of the Table, and there you will find South Africa listed in the GMT+2 time zone.

• Step 2 - Go to the upper portion of the Table, find the line for GMT+2, and read across to the column labeled “New York Session”, where you will find the times that you are looking for. The times shown there are local times in your South Africa time zone.

5. The list of countries (and regions) in the lower portion of the Table is far from being a complete list of the countries of the world.

Basically, 3 groups of countries (and regions) are listed in the Table: (1) the 7 principal forex markets (e.g., the U.K., Japan, etc.), (2) countries in the same time zone as one of the principal markets, which trade simultaneously with that market, and (3) a few other countries (or regions) included as geographical reference points (e.g., Pakistan, west-central Russia, Iceland, etc.).

For a much more complete list of countries, together with DST information for each of them, refer to — Daylight Saving Time Around the World 2013

Additional notes on the Table, plus some time zone factoids:

1. The 7 markets shown in the Table are considered to be “principal” forex markets, because —

B[/B] Six of the 7 markets in the Table are the largest forex markets in the world. Listed in order, according to total daily trading volume, they are:

B London.[/B] The London market is, by far, the largest forex market in the world, and, together with Ireland, accounts for 41.1% of worldwide forex trading volume.
B New York.[/B] In this Table, New York represents North America, comprising the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. These three countries transact the vast majority of their currency trading volume in the New York market, and together they account for 20.4% of worldwide forex trading volume.
B Zurich.[/B] The central European market, comprising Switzerland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, and a dozen other countries, accounts for 14.6% of worldwide forex trading volume. This market is represented in the Table as the Zurich market, but many traders refer to it as the Frankfurt market, or simply as the European market. Central Europe is one time zone ahead of the London market, so there is a period of 8 hours each trading day when these two markets overlap. And there is a three-hour period in each trading day (8am-11am New York time, 1pm-4pm London time, and 2pm-5pm Zurich time) when the three largest forex markets in the world, accounting for a total of 76.1% of worldwide trading volume, are all open at the same time.
BSingapore.[/B] In this Table, Singapore represents the Mainland Asian trading session, comprising Singapore, Hong Kong, China, and Taiwan, all of which are in the GMT+8 time zone year-round. Together, these 4 locations account for 10.9% of total worldwide forex trading volume.
B Tokyo.[/B] The Tokyo market, together with Korea, accounts for 6.3% of worldwide forex trading volume. Tokyo is one time zone ahead of the Mainland Asian (Singapore) market. So, there is a period of 8 hours each trading day when the world’s fourth and fifth largest markets are open at the same time, accounting for a total of 17.2% of total world trading volume (plus some additional volume, 2% or so, coming from the partial overlap of the Sydney and Wellington markets with the Singapore and Tokyo markets).
B Sydney.[/B] The Sydney market accounts for 2.7% of worldwide forex trading volume.

BWellington[/B] (New Zealand). Wellington is included in this list of 7 principal markets because the New Zealand dollar is an important commodity currency (referred to as a commodity dollar, or comdoll). The New Zealand dollar is the tenth most actively traded currency in the world, despite the fact that forex trading in New Zealand accounts for only 0.2% of worldwide forex trading volume.

(Note: the market share percentages listed above are from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) 2013 Preliminary Central Bank Survey, published in September 2013. The final 2013 Central Bank Survey will be published in December.)

2. The 7 forex markets in the Table are listed (from left to right) in the order in which they open on a daily basis.

By international agreement, a new calendar day begins at midnight at the International Date Line, in the Pacific Ocean, east of New Zealand. So, a new calendar day begins first in New Zealand, then in Australia, then in Japan, and so forth.

For the purpose of our Table, we are saying that a new business day begins at 8am in each location. So, following the sun, a new business day begins first in New Zealand, then in Australia, Japan, Singapore (and the rest of mainland Asia), then later in Europe, the U.K., and North America.

Looking at a map, it’s clear that the business day progresses from right to left (east to west, as the sun moves across the map). But, our Table reads from left to right, because it’s written in English.

3. The International Date Line splits one time zone down the middle: east of the Line, that time zone is called GMT-12; and west of the Line, the time zone is called GMT+12. When you cross the Line from east to west, you cross from one day on the calendar, into the next day.

On the other side of the world, the Greenwich Meridian (which runs through the London suburb of Greeenwich) splits the GMT time zone down the middle. In this case, however, the time zone is the same on both sides of the Meridian: GMT+0.

Altogether, counting the GMT+0 time zone, there are 24 hourly time zones circling the earth, from GMT+12 on the west side of the International Date Line, to GMT-12 on the east side of the Line. In addition, there are several half-hour time zones (for instance, GMT+9½ in Northern Territory, Australia).

4. You will not find the GMT+13 time zone on some time-zone maps. The GMT+13 time zone is an artificial time zone designating New Zealand (and some other Pacific island nations) when they are on Daylight Saving Time. When New Zealand is on Standard Time, their time zone is GMT+12.

There is even a GMT+14 time zone, used by certain Pacific island nations located east of New Zealand. These nations choose to adjust their clocks to correspond to the position of the sun, while remaining on the same side of the International Date Line (and, thus, on the same calendar day) as their important trading partners in New Zealand and Australia.

5. Each sovereign country decides for itself what the time of day shall be within its borders, and therefore what time zone, or zones, the country shall lie within. This can lead to some wild distortions of the time zone map — not to mention a very crooked International Date Line.

China, for instance, has decided that their entire country will be in one time zone (GMT+8), even though it is a very large country (east to west). China extends all the way to Pakistan (GMT+5). So, if you were to walk across the border from Pakistan, into China, you would be stepping across 3 time zones. (And, probably, you would be shot.)

India has decided that they don’t like being either GMT+5, or GMT+6; so, they have established themselves as GMT+5½.

6. Many countries do not observe Daylight Saving Time (DST). In the Table, those countries (or regions) which do not observe DST are marked with an asterisk (*).

In the U.S., the states of Arizona and Hawaii do not observe DST. Portions of Canada and Mexico do not observe DST. In Australia, the states of Queensland, Northern Territory, and Western Australia do not observe DST. Except for Hawaii, this Table ignores the non-DST locations within the U.S., Canada, and Mexico; but, it does list the non-DST states in Australia.

7. Russia has decided to remain on Daylight Saving Time permanently. The Russians have had some fun claiming that they’ve permanently banned winter from Russia. In the western region of Russia (Moscow, St. Petersburg) for example, the time zone will remain GMT+4 year-round.

Overall, Russia spans 9 time zones from GMT+12 (on their Pacific coast) to GMT+4 (at their border with Latvia) — but, they skip the GMT+5 time zone, so they actually use 8 of the 9 time zones.

8. Here’s an odd time zone factoid: Daylight Saving Time at the South Pole —

All time zones converge and disappear at the Poles. But, the South Pole has been assigned a time zone. Furthermore, during southern hemisphere summertime, the South Pole goes onto Daylight Saving Time. But, during that time period, the sun never sets at the South Pole. So, what’s the point of Daylight Saving Time there? Wikipedia explains —

“There is no a priori reason for placing the South Pole in any particular time zone, but as a matter of practical convenience the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station keeps New Zealand Time. This is because the US flies its resupply missions (“Operation Deep Freeze”) out of McMurdo Station which is supplied from Christchurch, New Zealand.”

So, when New Zealand goes onto Daylight Saving Time in September each year, the South Pole goes onto Daylight Saving Time, as well.

But, what about the North Pole? From Wikipedia:

“There is no permanent human presence at the North Pole, and no particular time zone has been assigned. Polar expeditions may use any time zone that is convenient, such as Greenwich Mean Time, or the time zone of the country they departed from.”

9. The best website for finding accurate, reliable time-zone and time-conversion information (in my opinion) is — timeanddate.com

That site was used to check (and double-check) all of the times, and time zones, shown in the Table, above. If you find errors in the Table, no doubt the fault will be mine (or yours), not the fault of the timeanddate.com website.


Thanks for the great job Clint

Valuable info Clint. Thanks for your time

Thanks, Clint. +1

Thanks, guys. I appreciate the feedback.

Who does this guy Clint think he is passing along, you know… useful information? Sheesh!

You had me going there, for a minute, John :18:

Extremely useful information Clint. Thanks!

On Sunday, October 6, four southeastern states in Australia — South Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania — will go onto Daylight Saving Time.

In the state of South Australia (Adelaide, etc.), the time zone will change from ACST (GMT+9½) to ACDT (GMT+10½).

In the states of New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania (Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, Hobart, etc.) the time zone will change from AEST (GMT+10) to AEDT (GMT+11).

Beginning with the opening of the retail forex market in Sydney on Monday morning, October 7 (Sunday afternoon, New York time), and continuing for three weeks:

• The opening and closing times of [B]the Sydney Trading Session will change[/B] by one hour for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in southeastern Australia, and

• The opening and closing times of [B]the other six Trading Sessions will remain unchanged[/B] for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in southeastern Australia.


The Table of Forex Trading Sessions has been updated to reflect these changes. The updates are highlighted in yellow.

Scroll back to post #2 on this thread for Notes explaining the format of the Table and how to use it, and for general information on time zones and time changes.

The next update to the Table will be posted here in 3 weeks (when Europe and the U.K. will return to Standard Time).




Note: Chile went onto Daylight Saving Time on September 8, and should have been included in the last Table update.
I apologize for the oversight. Chile is now shown (highlighted) in its correct time zone in the Table above.

On Sunday, October 27, eastern, central and western Europe, the U.K. and Ireland will return to Standard Time.

In eastern Europe (Finland, Ukraine, Bulgaria, etc.) the time zone will change from EEST (GMT+3) to EET (GMT+2).

In central Europe (Switzerland, France, Germany, etc.), the time zone will change from CEST (GMT+2) to CET (GMT+1).

In western Europe (Portugal), the time zone will change from WEST (GMT+1) to WET (GMT+0).

In the U.K., the time zone will change from BST (GMT+1) to GMT.

In Ireland, the time zone will change from IST (GMT+1) to GMT.

In addition, time changes in Mexico, Brazil, Israel, and Greenland are included in this update. Refer to the Table for details.

Beginning with the opening of the retail forex markets in Zurich and London on Monday morning, October 28:

• The opening and closing times of [B]the Zurich and London Trading Sessions will change by one hour[/B] for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in Europe, the U.K., Ireland, most of Mexico, Israel, and Greenland.

• The opening and closing times of [B]the other five Trading Sessions will remain unchanged[/B] for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in Europe, the U.K., Ireland, most of Mexico, Israel, and Greenland.

• The opening and closing times of all 7 Trading Sessions will change (by 1 or 2 hours) for forex traders in Brazil.


The Table of Forex Trading Sessions has been updated to reflect these changes. The updates are highlighted in yellow.

Scroll back to post #2 on this thread for Notes explaining the format of the Table and how to use it, and for general information on time zones and time changes.

The next update to the Table will be the final update for this season. It will be posted here in 1 week (when the U.S. and Canada will return to Standard Time).




[QUOTE=“Clint;556016”]On Sunday, October 27, eastern, central and western Europe, the U.K. and Ireland will return to Standard Time. In eastern Europe (Finland, Ukraine, Bulgaria, etc.) the time zone will change from EEST (GMT+3) to EET (GMT+2). In central Europe (Switzerland, France, Germany, etc.), the time zone will change from CEST (GMT+2) to CET (GMT+1). In western Europe (Portugal), the time zone will change from WEST (GMT+1) to WET (GMT+0). In the U.K., the time zone will change from BST (GMT+1) to GMT. In Ireland, the time zone will change from IST (GMT+1) to GMT. In addition, time changes in Mexico, Brazil, Israel, and Greenland are included in this update. Refer to the Table for details. Beginning with the opening of the retail forex markets in Zurich and London on Monday morning, October 28: • The opening and closing times of the Zurich and London Trading Sessions will change by one hour for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in Europe, the U.K., Ireland, most of Mexico, Israel, and Greenland. • The opening and closing times of the other five Trading Sessions will remain unchanged for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in Europe, the U.K., Ireland, most of Mexico, Israel, and Greenland. • The opening and closing times of all 7 Trading Sessions will change (by 1 or 2 hours) for forex traders in Brazil. _____________________________ The Table of Fr

Awesome Clint. You make BabyPips a much better place. If you don’t trade professionally, I’m guessing you’re an actuary or engineer.

On Sunday, November 3, the U.S. and Canada will return to Standard Time.

Five time zones in the U.S. (including Alaska), and seven time zones in Canada (including Nova Scotia and Newfoundland), will be affected by this time change.

In the eastern U.S. and Canada, which includes the key New York market, the time zone will change from EDT (GMT-4) to EST (GMT-5). This will change the London / New York time difference from 4 hours (currently) to 5 hours (which is typical for most of the year).

Also on November 3, Bermuda and Bahamas will return to Standard Time.

Beginning with the opening of the retail forex market in New York on Monday morning, November 4:

• The opening and closing times of the New York Trading Session will change by one hour for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in the U.S., Canada, Bermuda and Bahamas.*

• The opening and closing times of the other six Trading Sessions will remain unchanged for all forex traders EXCEPT traders in the U.S., Canada, Bermuda and Bahamas.*

*These statements do not apply to Arizona and Hawaii in the U.S., or to certain portions of Canada, because those places do not observe DST.


The Table of Forex Trading Sessions has been updated to reflect these changes. The updates are highlighted in yellow.

Scroll back to post #2 on this thread for Notes explaining the format of the Table, and how to use it; and for general information on time zones and time changes.

This is the last update to the Table for this season. The times shown here will apply through Friday, March 7, 2014.




Here is a cleaned-up copy of the Table. The yellow highlighting has been removed from the previous post.
The trading session times have not been changed. The Notes (from post #2) have been added at the bottom of this post.




How to use this Table:

1. The upper portion of the Table lists the opening time and closing time of the normal (8am-5pm) business day in each of the 7 principal forex trading markets. These opening and closing times are shown for each of 27 different GMT time zones. In most cases, you will be concerned with only one of those 27 time zones — the time zone where you are located.

2. Each horizontal line in the upper portion of the Table refers to a particular GMT time zone. The times shown on that line are local times in that time zone.

3. If you know your current GMT time zone, you can use the upper portion of the Table to find opening and closing times in 7 markets. The times shown are current, local times in your time zone.

4. If you do not know your current GMT time zone, you can use the lower portion of the Table to find the correct time zone for your location, for this particular time of year. Then, refer to your GMT time zone in the upper portion of the Table, and read the current opening and closing times in 7 markets.

Example: Let’s say you’re in South Africa, you want to find the opening and closing times for the New York Session, but you don’t know your GMT time zone.

• Step 1 - Go to the lower portion of the Table, and there you will find South Africa listed in the GMT+2 time zone.

• Step 2 - Go to the upper portion of the Table, find the line for GMT+2, and read across to the column labeled “New York Session”, where you will find the times that you are looking for. The times shown there are local times in your South Africa time zone.

5. The list of countries (and regions) in the lower portion of the Table is far from being a complete list of the countries of the world.

Basically, 3 groups of countries (and regions) are listed in the Table: (1) the 7 principal forex markets (e.g., the U.K., Japan, etc.), (2) countries in the same time zone as one of the principal markets, which trade simultaneously with that market, and (3) a few other countries (or regions) included as geographical reference points (e.g., Pakistan, west-central Russia, Iceland, etc.).

For a much more complete list of countries, together with DST information for each of them, refer to — Daylight Saving Time Around the World 2013

Additional notes on the Table, plus some time zone factoids:

1. The 7 markets shown in the Table are considered to be “principal” forex markets, because —

B[/B] Six of the 7 markets in the Table are the largest forex markets in the world. Listed in order, according to total daily trading volume, they are:

B London.[/B] The London market is, by far, the largest forex market in the world, and, together with Ireland, accounts for 41.1% of worldwide forex trading volume.
B New York.[/B] In this Table, New York represents North America, comprising the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. These three countries transact the vast majority of their currency trading volume in the New York market, and together they account for 20.4% of worldwide forex trading volume.
B Zurich.[/B] The central European market, comprising Switzerland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, and a dozen other countries, accounts for 14.6% of worldwide forex trading volume. This market is represented in the Table as the Zurich market, but many traders refer to it as the Frankfurt market, or simply as the European market. Central Europe is one time zone ahead of the London market, so there is a period of 8 hours each trading day when these two markets overlap. And there is a three-hour period in each trading day (8am-11am New York time, 1pm-4pm London time, and 2pm-5pm Zurich time) when the three largest forex markets in the world, accounting for a total of 76.1% of worldwide trading volume, are all open at the same time.
BSingapore.[/B] In this Table, Singapore represents the Mainland Asian trading session, comprising Singapore, Hong Kong, China, and Taiwan, all of which are in the GMT+8 time zone year-round. Together, these 4 locations account for 10.9% of total worldwide forex trading volume.
B Tokyo.[/B] The Tokyo market, together with Korea, accounts for 6.3% of worldwide forex trading volume. Tokyo is one time zone ahead of the Mainland Asian (Singapore) market. So, there is a period of 8 hours each trading day when the world’s fourth and fifth largest markets are open at the same time, accounting for a total of 17.2% of total world trading volume (plus some additional volume, 2% or so, coming from the partial overlap of the Sydney and Wellington markets with the Singapore and Tokyo markets).
B Sydney.[/B] The Sydney market accounts for 2.7% of worldwide forex trading volume.

BWellington[/B] (New Zealand). Wellington is included in this list of 7 principal markets because the New Zealand dollar is an important commodity currency (referred to as a commodity dollar, or comdoll). The New Zealand dollar is the tenth most actively traded currency in the world, despite the fact that forex trading in New Zealand accounts for only 0.2% of worldwide forex trading volume.

(Note: the market share percentages listed above are from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) 2013 Preliminary Central Bank Survey, published in September 2013. The final 2013 Central Bank Survey will be published in December.)

2. The 7 forex markets in the Table are listed (from left to right) in the order in which they open on a daily basis.

By international agreement, a new calendar day begins at midnight at the International Date Line, in the Pacific Ocean, east of New Zealand. So, a new calendar day begins first in New Zealand, then in Australia, then in Japan, and so forth.

For the purpose of our Table, we are saying that a new business day begins at 8am in each location. So, following the sun, a new business day begins first in New Zealand, then in Australia, Japan, Singapore (and the rest of mainland Asia), then later in Europe, the U.K., and North America.

Looking at a map, it’s clear that the business day progresses from right to left (east to west, as the sun moves across the map). But, our Table reads from left to right, because it’s written in English.

3. The International Date Line splits one time zone down the middle: east of the Line, that time zone is called GMT-12; and west of the Line, the time zone is called GMT+12. When you cross the Line from east to west, you cross from one day on the calendar, into the next day.

On the other side of the world, the Greenwich Meridian (which runs through the London suburb of Greenwich) splits the GMT time zone down the middle. In this case, however, the time zone is the same on both sides of the Meridian: GMT+0.

Altogether, counting the GMT+0 time zone, there are 24 hourly time zones circling the earth, from GMT+12 on the west side of the International Date Line, to GMT-12 on the east side of the Line. In addition, there are several half-hour time zones (for instance, GMT+9½ in Northern Territory, Australia).

4. You will not find the GMT+13 time zone on some time-zone maps. The GMT+13 time zone is an artificial time zone designating New Zealand (and some other Pacific island nations) when they are on Daylight Saving Time. When New Zealand is on Standard Time, their time zone is GMT+12.

There is even a GMT+14 time zone, used by certain Pacific island nations located east of New Zealand. These nations choose to adjust their clocks to correspond to the position of the sun, while remaining on the same side of the International Date Line (and, thus, on the same calendar day) as their important trading partners in New Zealand and Australia.

5. Each sovereign country decides for itself what the time of day shall be within its borders, and therefore what time zone, or zones, the country shall lie within. This can lead to some wild distortions of the time zone map — not to mention a very crooked International Date Line.

China, for instance, has decided that their entire country will be in one time zone (GMT+8), even though it is a very large country (east to west). China extends all the way to Pakistan (GMT+5). So, if you were to walk across the border from Pakistan, into China, you would be stepping across 3 time zones. (And, probably, you would be shot.)

India has decided that they don’t like being either GMT+5, or GMT+6; so, they have established themselves as GMT+5½.

6. Many countries do not observe Daylight Saving Time (DST). In the Table, those countries (or regions) which do not observe DST are marked with an asterisk (*).

In the U.S., the states of Arizona and Hawaii do not observe DST. Portions of Canada and Mexico do not observe DST. In Australia, the states of Queensland, Northern Territory, and Western Australia do not observe DST. Except for Hawaii, this Table ignores the non-DST locations within the U.S., Canada, and Mexico; but, it does list the non-DST states in Australia.

7. Russia has decided to remain on Daylight Saving Time permanently. The Russians have had some fun claiming that they’ve permanently banned winter from Russia. In the western region of Russia (Moscow, St. Petersburg) for example, the time zone will remain GMT+4 year-round.

Overall, Russia spans 9 time zones from GMT+12 (on their Pacific coast) to GMT+4 (at their border with Latvia) — but, they skip the GMT+5 time zone, so they actually use 8 of the 9 time zones.

8. Here’s an odd time zone factoid: Daylight Saving Time at the South Pole —

All time zones converge and disappear at the Poles. But, the South Pole has been assigned a time zone. Furthermore, during southern hemisphere summertime, the South Pole goes onto Daylight Saving Time. But, during that time period, the sun never sets at the South Pole. So, what’s the point of Daylight Saving Time there? Wikipedia explains —

“There is no a priori reason for placing the South Pole in any particular time zone, but as a matter of practical convenience the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station keeps New Zealand Time. This is because the US flies its resupply missions (“Operation Deep Freeze”) out of McMurdo Station which is supplied from Christchurch, New Zealand.”

So, when New Zealand goes onto Daylight Saving Time in September each year, the South Pole goes onto Daylight Saving Time, as well.

But, what about the North Pole? From Wikipedia:

“There is no permanent human presence at the North Pole, and no particular time zone has been assigned. Polar expeditions may use any time zone that is convenient, such as Greenwich Mean Time, or the time zone of the country they departed from.”

9. The best website for finding accurate, reliable time-zone and time-conversion information (in my opinion) is — timeanddate.com

That site was used to check (and double-check) all of the times, and time zones, shown in the Table, above. If you find errors in the Table, no doubt the fault will be mine (or yours), not the fault of the timeanddate.com website.


1 Like

Clint,

Referring to the GMT line only. in the clean up version table above, the Tokyo is always shown on various graphs, i.e. Forex Factory, opening at 0000-0900, however you show Tokyo 2300-0800 even though that Tokyo has no DST and should not change.

Which one is correct?

In the [I]column[/I] labeled Tokyo Session, all of the times shown (including the times on the GMT [I]line[/I]) are based on 8am-5pm Tokyo time, because 8am-5pm local time has been used for every forex market in the Table.

To say that every forex market opens at 8am local time, and closes at 5pm local time, is obviously a generalization. And using those times throughout the Table is obviously a judgement-call on my part. On other websites, you will find other “opening” and “closing” times for the principal forex markets. A valid argument can probably be made for all of those various times. Take your pick.

As we all know, the retail forex market is closed [I]only[/I] on the weekend, from roughly 5pm New York time on Friday, until roughly 8am Wellington time on Monday. For the rest of the week — approximately 120 hours — retail trading is “open” around the clock in every location. But, in each location, most of each day’s trading is concentrated in the normal business hours in that location. By my estimates, more than 80% of each day’s trading volume occurs in the 9 hours between 8am and 5pm in each forex market; and less than 20% occurs in the 15 hours between 5pm and 8am the next day.

What we call the “forex trading session” in each market is simply that daytime period of high-volume trading, which roughly coincides with the normal business day in that market.

But, trading sessions don’t have sharply defined opening and closing times. Rather, each trading session ramps up in the morning, and tapers off in the afternoon. Putting precise times on the “opening” and the “closing” in any market basically involves making assumptions. So, again, take your pick. Go with what you prefer.

Many traders have observed that various markets tend to open differently. Markets seem to have their own personalities, to some extent. London frequently opens with a sudden flurry of volume and price movement, right at 8am London time. Zurich and New York sometimes open in a similar fashion, at 8am local time; but, generally, neither of them opens as dramatically as London. Tokyo typically opens much more gradually than London, Zurich or New York. And Wellington and Sydney open even less suddenly than any of the others. And markets tend to close according to their own personalities, as well. Some websites apparently attempt to capture these differences between markets, by adjusting their so-called “opening” and “closing” times. In my view, that’s splitting hairs.

All that being said, it’s interesting to consider the local factors affecting the opening of the various markets. For more on that subject, here is something I wrote a couple of years ago — 301 Moved Permanently

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Clint,

After many years of developing my MT4 robot, I have forced myself to look at opening/closing cycle of various markets as an indicator and to my surprise my back testing shows very positive results by filtering my algorithm via these market windows.

So in lest couple of week I have tried to figure out how the market works so I can write appropriate code based on some rules.

As always you have been big help in my research – until next time.

Thanks.

I found this post doing a google search and I had to sign up just to say thanks. This is awsome!! Bookmarked!! Clint, thank you. With your knowledge you should have a website called “Clint’s FX market hours and DST.com

Thanks again.

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