jthetrader
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Greetings,
I've been experimenting with trading simulators for the best part of two years now, I have had ups & downs (mostly the former thank god) and now, thanks to a couple of thousand £ I received from some bonds maturing on my 18th birthday, I want to try it for real. I have blessing of my parents, so now its just a matter of learning the ins and outs of real trading before I start putting real dosh on the line.
I have used Investopedia's forex sim, where I racked up 1,400% returns, I've used their normal sim (stock sim) where I have slightly less impressive returns (but no 'down months' in 24 months) and I've used Forex dot com (don't ask, I went long on the FTSE at the wrong time, and have lost much of the fictional £50,000). I know I know, diversify.
Anyway, I settled on foreign exchange trading, the money seems to be easy come easy go, which is always risky, but I don't think a few hundred pounds in a basket of ordinary shares will produce massive yields. Better to run the risk of losing for the chance to win properly.
So I spoke to the man at Forex, well actually he called me. I asked him a few questions, about CFDs (regarding counterparty risk he assured me that Forex Ltd is the counterparty and not the other users), about commodity trading and, crucially, about options.
Now given the extremely high levels of leverage used in Forex I was concerned that if I put say £100 into a position and was able to control £10,000 if the position soured and I lost my £100 + more than was in my account I could end up with a lien against me (not that I have much they can seize but being a bankrupt at 18 isn't going to do me many favours in life). The chap at Forex assured me that although options are not included in their trading platform they don't bother chasing people up for losses when they exceed the amount in the account? Is this true?
Before anyone asks why I'm using Forex, my only reason is that, firstly, the capital requirements are quite low (£250 for a mini-account compared to, I think, $10,000 equivalent for a Charles Schwab) and secondly they are very well known.
Any experiences, good or bad, with Forex.com would be appreciated.
Cheers.
I've been experimenting with trading simulators for the best part of two years now, I have had ups & downs (mostly the former thank god) and now, thanks to a couple of thousand £ I received from some bonds maturing on my 18th birthday, I want to try it for real. I have blessing of my parents, so now its just a matter of learning the ins and outs of real trading before I start putting real dosh on the line.
I have used Investopedia's forex sim, where I racked up 1,400% returns, I've used their normal sim (stock sim) where I have slightly less impressive returns (but no 'down months' in 24 months) and I've used Forex dot com (don't ask, I went long on the FTSE at the wrong time, and have lost much of the fictional £50,000). I know I know, diversify.
Anyway, I settled on foreign exchange trading, the money seems to be easy come easy go, which is always risky, but I don't think a few hundred pounds in a basket of ordinary shares will produce massive yields. Better to run the risk of losing for the chance to win properly.
So I spoke to the man at Forex, well actually he called me. I asked him a few questions, about CFDs (regarding counterparty risk he assured me that Forex Ltd is the counterparty and not the other users), about commodity trading and, crucially, about options.
Now given the extremely high levels of leverage used in Forex I was concerned that if I put say £100 into a position and was able to control £10,000 if the position soured and I lost my £100 + more than was in my account I could end up with a lien against me (not that I have much they can seize but being a bankrupt at 18 isn't going to do me many favours in life). The chap at Forex assured me that although options are not included in their trading platform they don't bother chasing people up for losses when they exceed the amount in the account? Is this true?
Before anyone asks why I'm using Forex, my only reason is that, firstly, the capital requirements are quite low (£250 for a mini-account compared to, I think, $10,000 equivalent for a Charles Schwab) and secondly they are very well known.
Any experiences, good or bad, with Forex.com would be appreciated.
Cheers.