Historically
the securities markets have been looked at, at least by the majority of the public,
as an investment vehicle. In the last ten years securities have taken on a more
speculative nature. This was perhaps due to the downfall of the overall stock
market as many security issues experienced extreme volatility because of the "irrational
exuberance" displayed in the marketplace. The implied return associated with an
"investment" was no longer true. (If indeed it ever was.) Many traders engaged
in the "day trader" rush of the late 90's only to realize that from a leverage
standpoint it took quite a bit of capital to day trade, and the return while potentially
higher than long term investing was not exponential to say the least. After the
onset of the "day trader" rush, many traders moved into the Futures stock index
markets where they found they could leverage their capital greater and not have
their capital tied up when it could be earning interest or making money somewhere
else. Like the futures markets spot currency trading is an excellent vehicle for
the pattern day trader that desires to leverage his current capital to trade.
Spot currency trading provides more options and greater volatility while at the
same time stronger trends than currently available in stock futures indexes. Former
securities day traders have an excellent home in spot foreign exchange.
No Middlemen Centralized
exchanges provide many advantages to the trader. However, one of the problems
with any centralized exchange is the involvement of middlemen. Any party located
in between the trader and the buyer or seller of the security or instrument trader
will cost them money, either in time or in fees. Spot currency trading does away
with the middlemen and allows clients to interact directly with the market maker
responsible for the pricing on a particular currency pair. Simply, quicker access,
cheaper costs. Buy/Sell
programs do not control the market
How
many times have you heard that "fund A" was selling "X" or buying "Z"; Rumor had
it that the funds were taking profits because of the end of the financial year
or because today is "triple witching day", all as an explanation of why this stock
is up or the market in general is down or positive on the session. No matter what
your broker says the stock market is very susceptible to large fund buying and
selling, and it is not uncommon for a fund to "run" a particular issue for a few
days. In spot currency trading the liquidity of the market makes the likelihood
any one fund or bank to control a particular currency very slim. Banks, Hedge
funds, FCM's, governments, retail currency conversion houses, and large net worth
individuals are just some of the participates in the spot currency markets the
liquidity is unprecedented.
At
the mercy of Analysts on TV Have
you watched TV lately? Heard about a certain Telecomm stock and an analyst of
a prestigous brokerage firm accused of keeping their recommendations "BUY" when
the stock was rapidly declining? It is the nature of these relationships. No matter
what the government does to step in and discourage this type of activity, we have
not heard the last of it. IPO's are big business for both the companies going
public and the brokerage houses. Relationships are mutually beneficial and analysts
work for the brokerage houses which need the companies as clients. That catch-22
will never disappear. Foreign exchange, as the prime market, generates billions
in revenue for the world's banks are a necessity of the global markets. Analysts
in foreign exchange don't drive the deal flow, they analyze. 7800
stocks vs 4 major currency pairs There
are approximately 4,000 stocks listed on the New York Stock exchange. Another
2,800 are listed on the NASDAQ. Which one will you trade? Got the software? Got
time? Got milk in case you have aged significantly when you finally find your
trade? In spot currency trading you have 6 major markets, 24 hours a day 5.5 days
a week. You have approximately 34 2nd tier currencies to look at in your spare
time (if you are so inclined). Concentrate on the majors, find your trade. Spend
your afternoon on the golf course, or with your kids instead of with your eye
doctor trying to diagnose why you are seeing double. Commission
free Simply put- No commissions. No clearing fees, no exchange fees, no government
fees, no brokerage fees. Sure there may be different names for different fees
at different places, but in spot currencies no commissions means just that- NO
COMMISSIONS. Same
price for broker assisted trades No
premium for calling in orders, whether or not you trade via the phone, use market
orders, stop orders, limit orders or even contingent orders. In spot currency
trading you do not have to worry about extra charges. Ever wonder why a securities
brokerage house charges you more if they have to guarantee you a price than if
you give them a market order with no price qualifier? Well you don't have to worry
about it if you trade spot currencies. Trade
off of your profits Ever
been up on a stock and wished you could leverage that profit and get in a little
more of the issue? In spot currency trading you can. Use your open profits to
add to your positions. As you gain experience, experiment with pyramid trading
strategies. The options are endless because the market is cutting edge.
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