Career...Tell me if this is true

Quote from TradeSA:

lot of q's!

pure traders provide liquidity both to the market and to their own internal different desks. it might be that an options desk needs to hedge and your posi can help them. so instead of going to the market they trade with you. the bank also like the idea of creating money without using clients. its like magic...

no profits = no bonus but you earn a monthly salary. no bank will keep you on for a long period if you don't show some profits at some point or provide some other service to your company. dealers get paid less than traders and rarely get a proper bonus.

banks have both short and long term traders. i would say mostly long term and they tend to be the ones sticking around for longer time at a bank. trading size depends on your own risk tolerance. short termers generally smaller than long termers. i trade $5million posis a day while our longer term traders VERY seldom take a single posi below $10million and then they increase proprtionally up to $100 million over time. (as the trend persists). also remember you can buy 10 euro and sell 10 cable effectively showing a very small usd position and thus playing the eurgbp cross they can take larger than even their position risk limits. kind of a loophole at our bank (and elsewhere) at the moment as they only limit usd positions. stupid i know but your P&L will stop a large loss occuring even if your usd position is very small.

Thanks TradeSA,

How long does your short term trades last? Do you trade like 2 to 3 times per day? Do you have to be physically at the bank to trade? Can you set stop levels for your longer term trades and go for a round of golf?? And do banks train you or do they only take in traders who they think will be profitable? If only 20% or so are consistently profitable, does that mean that there will be frequent firings at the forex department? How many traders are there currently at the bank you are trading?

Thanks
 
hi,

yes you can leave stops with your own bank and go and play some golf. yes 2/3 trades a day so not scalping. yes i have to be at the bank to trade. all calls are recorded so i have to use an office phone to put my trades that go outside the bank. banks sometimes take in a junior trader from another department (back-office) and then train them up. usually they just poach someone from another institution. the bank will usually give you 2 years without making money and then you will know your number is up. you will usually leave before being fired...we have about 6 pure forex traders and many many dealers to handle all our clients. i am the only trader in our regional offices and place all my trades using the phone so it can be a problem trading intraday (slippage). yes the bank also have brokers but you have to phone physically to get a quote. its not as "computerised" as the internet brokers i have read about on this forum.

we also have a feed where we can see where actual interbank trades have been made and i have also meta.t.r.a.d.e.r forex charts and a well known "internet broker feed" and their software. the difference between "internet broker prices" and where the real market is, is sometimes frightening. i know there is questions about whether the brokers run stops etc. from looking at these different feeds i can tell you that all of them at some time must be doing it. of course they will argue that some of their clients have orders there so there is a market at that price. of course they can also take those orders directly to the banks and "prove" that a price was made there. it just doesn't make sense that the actual banks trading price stays constant (no tics) for 5 minutes on a single quote while the internet brokers show like 100 tics coming through in the same time. thats one of the reasons why its so funny to read things like - "wait until it breaks the high by 1 pip" its your broker breaking that high by 1 pip not the market.

if for example you look at todays euro at 6-615 london time (15minute charts) you will see in metat.r.a.d.e.r (demo server) a high of 36 low of 29 the interbank was at high 36 low 34. so clearly the brokers took it lower by 5pips than the banks did. i have previously made some trades against these brokers when i see them differ from the market by more than 15pips. easy money. i really think some brokers are rip-offs. there is in my opinion two forex markets out there - the real market and the one created by the internet "prices". THATS the reason long termers will easier survive than short-termers in the forex market - less manipulation by the broker (if you go for 400 pips instead of 40 they will not be able to run your orders (either way)).

ok enough of that before some broker sends a death squad for scaring people away from them. i have named no one broker here (metatrader is a demo server) so hopefully i will still be able to sleep tonight.
 
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