T
theSnaggle
Quote from marketsurfer:
you seem to be very familiar with the FX business. here's a question for you, i have used the NDD option and note that that spread is generally 3 pips in the eur/usd, but occasionally flashes 2 pips--- obviously, there is some dealer intervention here---- what's the story?? how can they state no dealer desk, but the spreads are still this wide??
thanks,
surf
Hey, you know what? I've wondered about that myself. They claim they are presenting the best bid and ask prices from their "liquidity pool," yet there is materially no difference between the NDD and the fixed-spread platforms in terms of spreads. I rarely see 2 pip spreads on EURUSD. Likewise, I rarely see anything less than 4 pip spreads on GBPUSD and others. I have even seen ads where they claim "spreads as low as 1 pip," but I have yet to see a 1 pip spread on any pair!
The only possibilities I can think of are:
(1) Either they add one or two pips on top of the best bid/ask from their "liquidity pool," or
(2) Their liquidity pool is comprised of an outfit like Deutshe Bank, whose spreads are in fact not that competitive despite their deep pockets.
So, in effect, the worst case scenario is that FXCM NDD customers may be getting prices from another dealing desk -- one at a major bank rather than at FXCM.
Honestly, it is inexplicable that their NDD spreads are that wide. They give the impression the NDD is an ECN. Yet, look at all the other ECNs out there -- much more competitive in terms of transaction costs (even when they charge half a pip in fees each way), mui superior trading platforms with much greater order interface functionality, and generally very good execution.
Think about it --
EURUSD round trip is 6 pips 95% of the time for FXCM Non-Dealing Desk. GBPUSD is 8 or 9 pips. GBPJPY is often 16 pips. There really is little difference between NDD and fixed-spread, other than with NDD you can place orders within the spread, but you are also prone to more frequent slippage than with other variable-spread platforms that I have used. With EFX, EURUSD round trip is 1 pip 90% of the time (yes, boys and girls, that a half pip each way), plus a 0.5 pip commish each way ($5 each 100K turn), for a total of 2 pips round trip. GBPUSD, USDCHF, USDJPY, and others are often at 1 or 2 pips round trip, with a similar commish (a bit more for non-USD denominated pairs). I won't even tell you what the difference in spreads for GBPJPY are. It's rediculous how much less in transaction costs I pay, and I give up nothing from either the front or back end of my trading.
I'm mystified why an outfit as big as FXCM doesn't get it. But I'm even more mystified why smaller retail traders continue to keep their accounts at FXCM.
Vote with your feet people!
