Jason Rogers
ET Sponsor
Quote from Wallace:
recent changes to fx regulation Only in the province of British Columbia, Canada has meant
that BC residents are limited to a choice of 3 fx brokers, and a 100:1 leverage limit
UK companies such as FXCM and Alpari will not accept an account application from BC
residents due to the BC regulations. FXCM closed their Canada operation in September 09
Jason Rogers, can you explain how it came about and why BC residents can't open accounts
with FXCM UK ?
...
as far as alternates are concerned, while at present i have an account with Oanda using
50:1 leverage, i've yet to take a leap to higher leverage ( i discovered FXCM and Alpari's
restriction when attempting to apply for an account ) with an 'offshore' broker particularly
'Russian' and 'Caribbean' brokers (must qualify Alpari Moscow is one of the oldest fx brokers
and has UK and US branches) i am more confident now about Some brokers in Cyprus due
to: http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=184795
and point to Windsor Brokers as one example of a 'home grown' Cyprus broker who has
always complied with FSA, CySec and MiFID regulations
....
from my overly suspicious pov, i have to wonder if the US is trying to prevent - specifically
selling of the US $ at a time when many feel there will be a collapse of this currency
so far as leverage is concerned, imo it's not leverage that kills but the 'trading system'
high leverage means a fast death, low leverage is 'death by a thousand cuts', in either case,
if the trader is unable to trade profitably, they will 'die'
Hi Wallace,
BC regulations require any broker accepting accepting accounts from BC residents to be regulated by the British Columbia Securities Commission. Any broker not registered in BC and accepting BC residents would be subject to legal actions. FXCM UK is regulated by the FSA in the United Kingdom and not British Columbia, therefore it cannot accept BC residents.
from my overly suspicious pov, i have to wonder if the US is trying to prevent - specifically
selling of the US $ at a time when many feel there will be a collapse of this currency
If this were the case, I doubt the retail forex market would be targeted due to the size of retail trading volumes compared to the whole. According to data in this recent Financial Times article (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97077034-ffaf-11de-921f-00144feabdc0.html), retail forex trading is a little over 3% of daily FX volume.
-Jason