The CEO of one of the UK spreadbetting companies explained it on film years ago. He said the penalties for stop-hunting in the UK are just so high it isn't worth the effort. And that they could never keep it secret - he actually said as soon as the firm had its next round of redundancies, the fired staff would be straight round to the FCA office and the game's up. All sounds completely plausible.
Spreadbetting of course is a form of trading which has no direct relation to the buying and selling of currency. A spreadbet is a type of CFD and no matter how large the position or how long you hold onto it,. no currency changes hands. The SB firm adjust their spreads to take account of their exposure to the risk of clients winning, since they don't levy any charges, all their profit comes from the spread. The fact that they need to adjust spreads does actually imply that some clients are winning, else there would be zero risk to the SB firm and the SB firm that widened its spreads without reason would be undercut by their competitors.
I admit I know nothing about the SEC.
Manhattan was not what I had in mind as an island not to do business with....
Spreadbetting of course is a form of trading which has no direct relation to the buying and selling of currency. A spreadbet is a type of CFD and no matter how large the position or how long you hold onto it,. no currency changes hands. The SB firm adjust their spreads to take account of their exposure to the risk of clients winning, since they don't levy any charges, all their profit comes from the spread. The fact that they need to adjust spreads does actually imply that some clients are winning, else there would be zero risk to the SB firm and the SB firm that widened its spreads without reason would be undercut by their competitors.
I admit I know nothing about the SEC.
Manhattan was not what I had in mind as an island not to do business with....