Are futures brokers like Amp or Velocity members of SIPC? No.Quote from steve0617:
Yes, and I've read the SIPC site over and over again.
*Nowhere* does it say a cash position held inside a futures account is NOT covered. It does say that commodities and futures contracts held (and lost through bankruptcy) will NOT be replaced like securities would (eg they replace the actual security held, not the cash that security was worth if lost to bankruptcy).
But it does not say anywhere, that a cash position, held in a futures account, and then is lost through bankruptcy of the firm, is NOT covered.
<b>I'm reading it's covered. Please provide a link if you disagree.</b>
And let's not forget, this assumes that there is actual money missing from the MF accounts. The SIPC insurance won't be needed if there isn't any actual money gone. Using customer funds doesn't *automatically* mean they're gone. And I've never seen any actual announcement that that's the case. The NYT story saying 'sources' say money is missing and the lawyer for MF quoting MF management that it's not.
No SIPC release, which is only thing I'm listening to, has said money is actually missing.
Quote from opt789:
Are futures brokers like Amp or Velocity members of SIPC? No.
Does IB�s website specifically state that they sweep cash from your futures account back to your securities account in order to get SIPC protection? Yes.
Here is your link:
http://www.nfa.futures.org/news/newsComment.asp?ArticleID=334
Which states �It also makes up for the lack of SIPC-like protection, which would be inefficient in the futures markets.�
And here:
http://www.nfa.futures.org/nfa-faqs...orex/how-is-my-futures-account-protected.HTML
�even though an FCM is required to segregate customer funds, customers still may not be able to recover the full amount of any funds in their account if the firm becomes insolvent and there are insufficient funds available to cover the obligations to all of its customers. Customer accounts are not insured.�
Regarding FSA, I have written en email to FSA and got the answer below:Quote from southall:
I think the UK version of SIPC is company based and not account type based.
Cash, Stocks, FX, Futures accounts are all protected up a limit as long as the financial company is authorized to handle public money by the financial regulator (the FSA).
You guys in the US need something similar, SIPC should cover all account types.
Quote from kinggyppo:
does anyone know ballpark what the notional value of MF globals
segregated accounts would be. I would guess maybe a couple of billion if that?
Quote from opt789:
And net net that can mean you have absolutely no protections and no insurance of any kind with a futures account at any firm. Even when IB sweeps your excess money in your futures account back to your securities account, all the funds in your futures account are completely at risk.
It is NOT one account, you have a separate account for each. The same thing is done at thinkorswim, but I actually get emailed my futures statement everyday even though from the trading software it all looks like one account. IB just doesnât let you see your futures statement and they pretend that it is all one account because they think that is easier for people to understand.Quote from Traderham:
With IB, one account trades stocks, futures, and forex. How do they sweep your funds from a futures account to a securities account if it's all in the same account????
Quote from opt789:
It is NOT one account, you have a separate account for each. The same thing is done at thinkorswim, but I actually get emailed my futures statement everyday even though from the trading software it all looks like one account. IB just doesnât let you see your futures statement and they pretend that it is all one account because they think that is easier for people to understand.
A securities account and a futures account are two separate and distinct legal accounts, and that is the same for every broker whether or not they make it appear like one account.