Quote from short&naked:
Well, while you ROTFLYAO, consider this: There is also the threat to price action. Things might get a lot choppier with lower levels of leverage. fx futures is around 1:60, not 1:20.
My hat's off to you, quite an unselfish statement, you don't see that everydayQuote from Kicking:
No the real threat to FX is a move back to fixed exchange rates.
I trade currencies but I am for a fixed exchange rate system . Floating rates are an economic plague that profits only to bankers and speculators.

1.5:1 would significantly hurt retail FX. Let's hope that never becomes a reality. However, lowering to around 25:1 won't destroy the game. It will probably take away a little bit of the dead money though.Quote from cocaineaddict:
also remember that NFA is proposing 1.5:1 leverage
which is basically a cash account
Quote from aceholic:
1.5:1 would significantly hurt retail FX. Let's hope that never becomes a reality. However, lowering to around 25:1 won't destroy the game. It will probably take away a little bit of the dead money though.
Quote from cabletrader:
I think every central bank around the world complains about disorderly markets caused by speculators, Trichet's always banging on about it, so did Greenspan, decreasing available leverage will probably make intervention easier (or cheaper) for them.
I don't know if, or by how much, Soros leveraged when he screwed the BoE but what happened is a classic example of how speculators wield enough power to screw economies up.
They're planning on restricting commodities speculators, why not go for currency speculators as well, hell why not just go all the way and ban capitalism altogether!
Quote from Ivanovich:
Oddly enough, I'm for a certain amount of regulation on speculation. If for no other reason than speculators take things way to the extreme just to do it. they ignore fundamentals in many cases and just try to smash price in one direction or another and it's disruptive to the common man (like in the case of energy). The plus side is that it provides liquidity. I get that.
But when everyone jumps on the bandwagon, things just get out of hand. So I guess you can say I'm against extreme speculation.
