isn't the margin less? and what about the options?I see no advantage of the futures contract over the cash.
I see no advantage of the futures contract over the cash.
I see no advantage of the futures contract over the cash.
I traded but I cant use my current tight stop strategy because of the low liquidity(best trading time is from 3am-10:30am sometimes longer) so I am testing another strategy for M6E(e-mini eur/usd). In America retail cash is a Dealing desk(aka market makers ie the broker is your counter part to your trades). Granted during low liquidity times your probably trading against 1 or 2 market makers but either way if you dont have a good strategy it doesnt matter who you go with. I think they are cheaper to typically you have a tick spread in futures in cash its dependshi
i was thinking to trade the future contract of eur.usd has any one used the options to the actual contract?
1. your not trading against your broker where they can see your server placed stops(even if they arent using it which they have all the data needed to predict most of their customers actions and know how much risk they have to unload via removing liquidity to push weaker players out.
2. could be cheaper 1 mini lot(i think its a mini $1.25/pip) my broker(tradovate charges 0.52/round trip) so a regular lot would cost you $5.20/round trip
3. you have a central order book
The one problem I admit with the cash is that if you don't have a large account, you are stuck with shit API like MT4. Therefore, no market orders.
- The spreads are wider by quite a bit in the futures
- The bid on the futures is 1.18 x 1.19. The spread is 1.18 x 1.19 on the cash (the cash is always tighter but for demonstration purposes let's assume they are equal). I don't care who is on the other side.
- If you know how to program, you can build your own aggregated book and route accordingly.