Your forex
broker assumes that you will lose money over the long run when you trade. Given
that 95% of forex traders lose money, it is a very safe assumption. Every
broker has to decide whether a new account will belong to the group (95%) of
traders that loses money, or the group (5%) that makes money.
Every new
account is assumed to belong to “group A” – those traders that will lose money.
Since 95% of the traders belong in this group, your broker is only too happy to
assume that you belong in this group.
After some time,
if you have consistently made profits, your broker will re-assign you to “group
B” – these are the lucky 5% of traders who consistently make money. After you
have joined this group your broker will lump your trades with all of the rest
of group B and hedge against your trades. So, for example, if all traders in
group B have bought the EUR/USD your broker will place a trade in the interbank
forex market to offset any profits group B make on this trade.
Basically, your
broker puts up with group B traders but is really interested in gaining group A
accounts. This is because if a trader in group A loses $10,000 – that is, he
completely blows up his $10,000 account, then the broker gets all of that
money. The broker makes money on the losing accounts. So most forex brokers are hoping you will lose. This
is also why brokers are constantly advertising for new customers. The brokers
need “fresh blood” to keep making money, many of the traders in group A will
give up on trading or move to another broker. So, the next time you see a forex broker
advertisement you will know who they are really after.
The above secrets and techniques are
some thoughts that are used commonly by most broker companies.
Happy Trading!
Post a Comment