♡ Winning Binary Options Trades Daily report 6th August Forex Euro USD 6E Futures
Winning Binary Options Trades Daily report
6th August Forex Euro
USD 6E
Futures.
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Text Courtesy Of
Wikipedia
In the late
1990s CFDs were first introduced to retail traders. They were popularised by a number of UK companies, whose offerings were typically characterised by innovative online trading platforms that made it easy to see live prices and trade in real time. The first company to do this was
GNI (originally known as Gerrard &
National Intercommodities); GNI and its
CFD trading service GNI touch was later acquired by MF
Global. They were soon followed by IG Markets and
CMC Markets who started to popularise the product in
2000.
It was around 2000 that retail traders realised that the real benefit of trading CFDs was not the exemption from stamp tax but the ability to trade on leverage on any underlying instrument. This was the start of the growth phase in the use of CFDs. The CFD providers quickly responded and expanded their product offering from just
London Stock Exchange (
LSE) shares to include indices, many global stocks, commodities, bonds, and currencies. Trading index CFDs, such as the ones based on the major global indexes e.g.
Dow Jones,
NASDAQ,
S&P; 500,
FTSE,
DAX, and
CAC, quickly became the most popular type of CFD that were traded.
Around 2001 a number of the CFD providers realised that CFDs have the same economic effect as financial spread betting except that the tax regime was different, making it in effect tax free for clients. Most CFD providers launched financial spread betting operations in parallel to their CFD offering. In the UK the CFD market mirrors the financial spread betting market and the products are in many ways the same. However unlike CFDs which have been exported to a number of different countries, spread betting relying on a country specific tax advantage has remained primarily a UK and
Irish phenomenon.
The CFD providers started to expand to overseas markets with CFDs being first introduced to
Australia in July
2002 by IG Markets and CMC Markets. CFDs have since been introduced into a number of other countries; see list above.
Until
2007 CFDs had been traded exclusively over-the-counter (
OTC); however, on
5 November 2007 the
Australian Securities Exchange (
ASX) listed exchange-traded CFDs on the top 50
Australian stocks, 8 FX pairs, key global indices and some commodities. There were originally 12 brokers offering ASX CFDs, but as of 2009 there are only five.
In June 2009, the UK regulator the
Financial Services Authority (
FSA) implemented a general disclosure regime for CFDs to avoid them being used in insider information cases.[3] This was after a number of high profile cases where positions in CFDs were used instead of physical underlying stock to hide them from the normal disclosure rules related to insider information.[4 .
Exchange-traded binary options
In 2007, the
Options Clearing Corporation proposed a rule change to allow binary options,[1] and the
Securities and Exchange Commission approved listing cash-or-nothing binary options in 2008.[2] In May 2008, the
American Stock Exchange (
Amex) launched exchange-traded
European cash-or-nothing binary options, and the
Chicago Board Options Exchange (
CBOE) followed in June 2008. The standardization of binary options allows them to be exchange-traded with continuous quotations.
Amex offers binary options on some
ETFs and a few highly liquid equities such as
Citigroup and
Google.[3] Amex calls binary options "
Fixed Return Options"; calls are named "Finish
High" and puts are named "Finish Low". To reduce the threat of market manipulation of single stocks, Amex
FROs use a "settlement index" defined as a volume-weighted average of trades on the expiration day.[4]
The American Stock Exchange and
Donato A. Montanaro submitted a patent application for exchange-listed binary options using a volume-weighted settlement index in