New Compliance Rule 2-43(b) requires an FDM to offset positions in a customer account on a first-in, first-out basis, thereby prohibiting a trading practice commonly referred to as "hedging."
Quote from forexsavior:
âFirst in, First outâ is not a concept that comes into play all that often in forex trading.
Hi All,
As part of our due diligence on the NFA's "anti-hedging" rule from April 13 (NFA rule 2.43(b)), we have been informed of a follow up or clarification from the NFA. We have not been able to get the NFA to confirm or deny, but we have heard from multiple independent sources.
The NFA has informed the clearing firms that they will need to use First In-First Out (FIFO) accounting for retail traders. This has an important effect on all traders, but specifically MetaTrader4 users!!
FIFO accounting means that if a trader has a position in a currency pair that was formed by the combination of two orders, when the trader goes to close out a portion of that position, the first order in will have to be the first order closed. HUH? Here is an example of the new ruling:
Trader bought 100,000 EUR/USD this morning (call it the morning trade), and bought another 100,000 this afternoon (call it the afternoon trade). So the total position is 200,000 EUR/USD. When the trader chooses to close part of his position by selling 100,000 EUR/USD......the trader must close the morning trade. He/She can not close the afternoon trade before the morning trade. Sooooooo.....
This ruling will significantly affect the use of Stop Loss and Limit Orders on open positions. Think of it....in the above example, you would not be able to put a Take Profit order on your afternoon trade until/unless you had closed the morning trade; the closing order of the open trades must be FIFO! Without some complicated changes being made to the coding of the retail FX platforms, the clearing firms will have to eliminate the use of Stops and Limits.
This clarification (once confirmed) will effect almost all trading styles, but specifically effect the following strategies:
- Martingale
- Grid Trading
- One Cancels Other (OCO) orders
Please note that the above is in addition to the main part of rule 2.43(b) which eliminates hedging for retail traders.
An important executive of the Retail Forex industry just informed me that the NFA will not be allowing stop and limit orders on open positions either, as this conflicts with their FIFO - first-in, first-out - new policy. This goes into effect may 17th.
Quote from forexsavior:
So Long Stop & Limit Orders?
Quote from cabletrader:
Hang on, they're not suggesting stops and limts aren't allowed, look at it logically. (Why, apart from some gridding strategies, would anyone want to close a specific part of a trade anyway, in this instance it's swings and roundabouts whether the P/L is realized or not)
Although stops and limits may no longer be allowed on each trade individually, part/all of a position can still have a stop and limit, in effect it's just a pending order to Buy/Sell x amount at a preset price (or better). In theory the broker wouldn't know what the trade was for, it could be a new position, a stop loss, a take profit, and I guess that's what the NFA are trying to achieve with this idea. This would actually be better as orders would be used in the correct way instead of being linked to a particular part of a cummulative trade with a big label on saying 'Stop' or 'Limit', that's like waving a flag saying come and get me (or miss me by 1/10th of a pip!)
It's a while since I've traded FX at IB but isn't that the way they've always done it?
forexsavior, I didn't have you down as a sensationalist or scaremongerer!
Quote from forexsavior:
You are correct in your analysis cable guy. The problem is that most brokers don't consolidate individual orders for one currency pair. They are all ticket based. And NFA now appears to be saying that you can't put stops on individual tickets. This means brokers will have to completely redo their software and systems traders who work off the ticket system are in a huge bind. These are huge changes. Traders need to have a backup plan in case.