rtsurvivor
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I've been doing a lot of reading and some research too. I'm from the old school of commodity trading. In futures a trader traded against another trader and not a broker.
In the futures world trading is a "Zero Sum" game. There is a winner and there is a loser; neither of which is the broker of a trade.
In the forex world there seems to be an instant conflict of interest when trading against a broker that handles the trade. The only real exception that I can see is when ECN or straight thru trading takes place.
I have 25+ years experience as a futures trader. A brain trauma 7 years ago forced an end to my futures trading life. I actually thought that the FX would be a good avenue of new income.
However, at this point it seems like an absolute loosing game if a small FX trader trades against the broker that takes the trade. :-0
I may be wrong; I kind of hope that I am, but playing against a stacked deck doesn't seem all that smart.
So. Can anyone fill me in on what I'm missing when it comes to looking at the "Broker/Trader" relationship in the FX markets?
The "Buyer" thinks he/she is right. The "Seller" thinks he/she is right. Like the Highlander said. "There Can Be Only One!"
Any thoughts?
RT... :clover:
In the futures world trading is a "Zero Sum" game. There is a winner and there is a loser; neither of which is the broker of a trade.
In the forex world there seems to be an instant conflict of interest when trading against a broker that handles the trade. The only real exception that I can see is when ECN or straight thru trading takes place.
I have 25+ years experience as a futures trader. A brain trauma 7 years ago forced an end to my futures trading life. I actually thought that the FX would be a good avenue of new income.
However, at this point it seems like an absolute loosing game if a small FX trader trades against the broker that takes the trade. :-0
I may be wrong; I kind of hope that I am, but playing against a stacked deck doesn't seem all that smart.
So. Can anyone fill me in on what I'm missing when it comes to looking at the "Broker/Trader" relationship in the FX markets?
The "Buyer" thinks he/she is right. The "Seller" thinks he/she is right. Like the Highlander said. "There Can Be Only One!"
Any thoughts?
RT... :clover: