No, it's not a bug, that's the way it's supposed to be. If you're for instance trading the eur/gbp pair, then the deals will go through eur/usd and gbp/usd. In MT4 this process was left behind the curtain, but in nettradex one can see how it works.
Luck is when a person guesses, acts out of luck. In this same case, the trader conciously didn't exit the deal, supposing that the price would move in his direction. Yes, in some ways it is luck, but in general it's a result of consious actions.
Well, the main evidence that this broker abides by the rules and laws is that he's been on the market for 10 years now, just judging by that you can conclude that it's reliable.
Well, I just want to know about round withdrawals, with farthings it was without problems, but now I have a pretty penny on my deposit and I want to withdraw it once.
Yes, there are some differences in some moments they are very noticable, but personally that doesn't bother me to trade, and after you get used to it, the terminal even seems more comfortable to use.
By the way, it isn't very comfortable that you can't see right away what the spread is, but you have to count. I hope they work that out in the new version.
This happens on a floating spread, and not a fixed spread, it can't be expanded by much. Well say, by 1 point, if the news is big, then by 2 points max and that's all, but not by tens of points.
Right now, I can’t see the entrance for opening a deal on the asset, so I’ll wait until the price reaches one of the levels, and then I’ll make a decision.
Exactly such small things stack up into a big convenience. Sometimes everything seems fine, but something is still missing, and if you add an element, you get the thing you wanted!
The main advantage of their terminal is the possibility of creating and using pci geworko in trading. If you think that some panel is unnecessary, you can close it. Just click with the right mouse button above the graph window and clean the elements you don’t need.