17-01-2015, 10:09 PM
What a impact from the Swiss franc shock...
Swiss franc shock shuts some FX brokers; regulators move in
LONDON (Jan 17): The Swiss franc shock reverberated through currency trading firms around the world on Friday, wiping out many small-scale investors and the brokerages that cater to them and forcing regulators to take a closer look at the sector.
Some major banks also lost out when the Swiss National Bank scrapped its three-year-old cap on the franc against the euro without warning on Thursday, including Britain's Barclays, which lost "tens of millions" of dollars, an industry source said.
Retail broker Alpari UK filed for insolvency on Friday, while New York-listed FXCM Inc, one of the biggest platforms catering to online and retail currency traders, said it looked to be in breach of regulatory capital requirements after its clients suffered US$225 million of losses.
FXCM had to turn to Leucadia National Corp, the parent of investment bank Jefferies, to quickly broker a US$300 million loan.
In the past 15 years, retail currency trading has grown quickly, attracting individuals staking their own money with long trading hours, low transaction costs and the ability to take on huge risks for a relatively small sum.
Retail currency trade makes up nearly four percent of global daily spot turnover of nearly US$2 trillion, the latest survey from the Bank of International Settlements shows, having grown from almost nothing in the 1990s.
This small share means the sector poses limited risk to the financial system but retail brokers are much more vulnerable to big losses than banks.
...
http://www.theedgemarkets.com/sg/article...ators-move
Swiss franc shock shuts some FX brokers; regulators move in
LONDON (Jan 17): The Swiss franc shock reverberated through currency trading firms around the world on Friday, wiping out many small-scale investors and the brokerages that cater to them and forcing regulators to take a closer look at the sector.
Some major banks also lost out when the Swiss National Bank scrapped its three-year-old cap on the franc against the euro without warning on Thursday, including Britain's Barclays, which lost "tens of millions" of dollars, an industry source said.
Retail broker Alpari UK filed for insolvency on Friday, while New York-listed FXCM Inc, one of the biggest platforms catering to online and retail currency traders, said it looked to be in breach of regulatory capital requirements after its clients suffered US$225 million of losses.
FXCM had to turn to Leucadia National Corp, the parent of investment bank Jefferies, to quickly broker a US$300 million loan.
In the past 15 years, retail currency trading has grown quickly, attracting individuals staking their own money with long trading hours, low transaction costs and the ability to take on huge risks for a relatively small sum.
Retail currency trade makes up nearly four percent of global daily spot turnover of nearly US$2 trillion, the latest survey from the Bank of International Settlements shows, having grown from almost nothing in the 1990s.
This small share means the sector poses limited risk to the financial system but retail brokers are much more vulnerable to big losses than banks.
...
http://www.theedgemarkets.com/sg/article...ators-move
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