When 95% of people lose their money, and the rest 5% of lucky rich guys win what the 95% lose. Who is really winning that money?
The Br0kers? Or some people working in those br0kers? Or simply PRO's with a PhD in economics or some Brain like Bernanke or whatever that are trading exactly in the opposite direction as you?
What I am unable to understand after reading the First Class Lawsuit against FXCM, is why would the br0ker want people to lose their money?
If in the end, it's supposed that the br0kers are making money with the spreads and fees... It's supposed that they don't earn money when the trades go against people.
When the trades go against people, it's supposed that the 5% or rich lucky brains earn that money, and not the br0kers. Or am I wrong?
If that Scam ponzi sheme programming to make people lose trades really exist and it's proven, then it means that the br0kers are earning a big part of what 95% of people lose. And it would be an EVEN more serious issue, rather than the trick to make people lose money.
Can someone please explain How the Win-Lose issue really works.
Thanks.
The Br0kers? Or some people working in those br0kers? Or simply PRO's with a PhD in economics or some Brain like Bernanke or whatever that are trading exactly in the opposite direction as you?
What I am unable to understand after reading the First Class Lawsuit against FXCM, is why would the br0ker want people to lose their money?
If in the end, it's supposed that the br0kers are making money with the spreads and fees... It's supposed that they don't earn money when the trades go against people.
When the trades go against people, it's supposed that the 5% or rich lucky brains earn that money, and not the br0kers. Or am I wrong?
If that Scam ponzi sheme programming to make people lose trades really exist and it's proven, then it means that the br0kers are earning a big part of what 95% of people lose. And it would be an EVEN more serious issue, rather than the trick to make people lose money.
Can someone please explain How the Win-Lose issue really works.
Thanks.
The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable