It's amazing to me the actual lengths people will go to in order to avoid hard work.
this is getting abit over the top, all i wanted to know was is what i am doing illegal? if so how? the broker has a no negative account policy and the other accounts are traded under dofferent names ex Me and john are friends i tell john "hey john i think the eu/us is gonna go down and john says no its gonna go up so i place my bet to go up and he places it to go down one of us is a winner, how would this be illegal or fraud?
It's amazing to me the actual lengths people will go to in order to avoid hard work.
For sure. Europe too.If you were to do this in the U.S. And were found out you'd be hit with money laundering, wire fraud and about 4 more regulatory violations that carry a 300k fine each.
Was this related to my post? I was talking about something else, not fraud, in Europe - probably doesn't exist any more and too small to bother with if it does.I really doubt that Europe would be so different.
For sure. Europe too.
OP: here is what you are doing and why its illegal. You have $15k which you own. You give $7.5k to John to open a trading account in his name with your money. That is money laundering.
Then John represents to the broker that the is the beneficial owner of the account - which isn't true and means John has committed a money laundering offence. And because he has made the misrepresentation in order to realise a gain (or cause loss to another) it is also fraud.
You control account A in your name and account B in John's name each with $7.5k.
You then buy 1 million of EUR/USD in account A and you sell 1 million of EUR/USD in account B.
Your position is flat and you've paid 2 lots of spread.
Over the weekend, EUR/USD rises 1%.
Account A is now worth $17.5k and account B is worth -$2.5k.
Your combined accounts are worth $15k. No gain or loss because you are flat.
Except because you are pretending to be two people, your combined accounts are actually worth $17.5k because the notional negative balance is written off as part of a gentleman's agreement not to enforce a negative balance. But if the broker knew that accounts A and B shared the same beneficial owner they would net off the debit in B with the positive balance in A leaving no negative balance and $15k overall. (less total spread paid + slippage)
Therefore the $2.5k over and above the initial $15k which you put in does not exist "but for" the fraud you perpetrated on the broker by concealing the fact that accounts A and B have the same beneficial owner.
volpunter: I'm not going to lose time looking up statutes - it will vary by country, but the above conduct will support a charge of fraud and money laundering in any G8 country. I did a degree in law (though I've never practiced) and garachen knows what he is talking about.
Was this related to my post? I was talking about something else, not fraud, in Europe - probably doesn't exist any more and too small to bother with if it does.
i feel the same hereYour all to clever for me
you must be a complete idiot, its amazing the length people would go to put others down when all they seek is advice or help.It's amazing to me the actual lengths people will go to in order to avoid hard work.
you must be a complete idiot, its amazing the length people would go to put others down when all they seek is advice or help.
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hanks for your post, my strategy is simple, i have 5 accounts i would put an exact amount on 2 accounts and start open buy and sell position at the same time just before the market closes and upon opening one closes automatically if the market goes down or up by 0.25% snd i close the one with profit manually, the account that goes bust automatically goes back to Zero as the broker policy is that you cannot lose more the. your account balance which means no negative balance, i then cashout my profit and use another account and repeat, the accounts with profits dont trade again untill i have completed my cashout.