The Forex Establishment
Currencies / Forex Trading Oct 18, 2009 - 07:19 AM GMTBy: Elite_E_Services
  
While collecting data about the Forex  market, it is important to know who the major players are.  Who originally designed Forex, who are the  major participants, who makes decisions that have a significant impact on the  Forex market?  This and more will be  explored in “The Forex Establishment.”   First, let’s examine what is an establishment.
What is an establishment?
Established interests, powers, businesses,  individuals, and organizations, develop a territory in their own field.  This is done by creating a paradigm; their  own set of rules, objectives, and culture; associated with their field.  ‘The Establishment’ originally was coined by  British Journalist Henry Fairlie, in 1955:
  
"By the 'Establishment', I do not only mean the centres of official power—though they are certainly part of it—but rather the whole matrix of official and social relations within which power is exercised. The exercise of power in Britain (more specifically, in England) cannot be understood unless it is recognised that it is exercised socially."[1]
The Forex Establishment is the Forex equivalent of those who control the Forex market by design, necessity, or other function. While modern Forex originated by the floating of the Dollar and the breakdown of the Breton Woods agreement, it has grown into something new.
Those  who were initially impacted by the floating of the US Dollar reacted to it in  various ways.  Some reacted by implementing  advanced trading techniques such as hedging to combat a volatile currency  environment.  Others simply changed the  way they did business.  
  What  types of players move the Forex market?
Banks- Central Banks
 - Governments
 - Corporations
 - Organizations (such as the IMF)
 - Hedge Funds
 - Forex Brokers
 
Who are the significant players, in each  category?
  
Brokers
  
Brokers don’t have a natural place in  Forex, as they do on the exchanges.   Exchanges require customers to use a broker who has a seat on the  exchange or an affiliate of one.  This gives the exchange objectivity, and  allows for brokers to compete with each other offering efficient pricing models  for execution.  
  
But since banks were unwilling to offer  Forex trading for smaller, retail investors, brokers seized an opportunity  offering account sizes as low as $1.   Oanda has no new account minimum and it is possible to trade 1 unit (as  opposed to a bank imposed 100,000 minimum).
  
Some statistics say that retail Forex now  represents 5% of overall FX volume.  Forex  Blog “Forex Magnates” claims this number is closer to 2%, citing $118 Billion  in July 2009.  While this is not a large figure, it grew  from zero in a period of 10 years.   Orders are getting larger and brokers need solutions for liquidity, they  are now some of the banks best customers for FX.  Saxo Bank can auto-execute an order on major  pairs up to 100 Million per click, and regularly processes orders for customers  who trade 1 billion per order.
Brokers are also leading the technology  development behind Forex.  Banks mostly  take the view of offering what is necessary to trade for their existing  customers, whereas the brokers offer an edge to obtain new business.  Banks have been slow to adapt to new  technology, for many reasons but plainly; they have something that is outdated  but works, so why create potential liability and expense without any guaranteed  return?  Banks like guarantees, and this  type of thinking is what cost them missing a great business opportunity.  Or maybe it saved them a lot of trouble, but  the fact is that if the banks had invested in FX technology and offered Forex  to retail customers, modern forex brokers such as Saxo Bank, Oanda, and others,  would likely not exist at all.
  
Suddenly, in 2007 many banks started  offering retail platforms, and in 2008 Citibank finally offered retail Forex  trading using the Saxo Bank platform.   This was a pyrrhic victory for retail Forex, for Saxo Bank, and a final  defeat for the big banks to take the lead.   Citibank being one of the world’s largest banks surely could find  resources sufficient to build their own proprietary platform, but they chose to  use an existing retail platform built by 2 traders publicly accused of  defrauding and misleading investors in a ‘bucket shop’.  The final irony sealing the argument is Citi  is one of Saxo’s liquidity partners, so a customer of Citibank retail FX may  deposit funds with an omnibus account at Citibank (custody customer funds  account for Citi clients at Saxo) and while placing a large order on the Saxo  Bank platform, Saxo may pass the trade through to Citi, if they are on the  offer!  So what then does Citibank need  Saxo Bank’s platform for, a simple GUI?  
  Saxo Bank represents the “New Forex  Establishment,” a growing number of companies who have been founded since 1990  that are setting standards in Forex.  
  
Another significant broker that represents  the “New Forex Establishment” is Oanda:
  
OANDA is an outgrowth of the Swiss Olsen  Group and was created to serve as an internet trading platform to  automate techniques based on the group's 20 years' worth of research in foreign  exchange trading.[4] Much of OANDA's technology is based on  algorithms published in the book High Frequency Finance [5], which was co-authored by Dr. Richard  Olsen, a principal of OANDA and co-inventor of these algorithms. OANDA  Corporation was incorporated in 1996 in the state of Delaware, and initially  provided online access to live currency information that was previously  inaccessible to the public at large. At its inception, OANDA.com offered free  currency conversion tools, tables of historical data, news, and analysis  through a multilingual interface [6], and other information likely to be of  use to international travelers. In 2001, OANDA launched FXTrade, an online Forex  trading system designed with the aim to lower the costs and risks associated  with Forex trading. Some of its more innovative features included flexible  trade sizes, 24/7 trading, instant settlement on all transactions, continuous  interest payments calculated second-by-second throughout the day, and no lot  size restrictions (that is, traders could buy and sell any number of units, all  at the same rate).  In 2005, OANDA  published The Forex Trader's Bill of  Rights to outline its philosophy of what Forex markets can and should  offer to Forex traders. In 2007, OANDA offered spot trading in an expanded list  of currencies, including the Chinese Yuan.[7]In 2008 OANDA launched FXGlobalTransfer,  an automated online foreign currency transfer service designed to offer  corporate clients a low-cost, convenient, and secure method of sending funds  globally at any time from any computer connected to the Internet. The same  year, OANDA launched FXPedia, an online wiki of Forex information and  commentary, and FXConsulting, a consulting service for corporate hedging.
  
Banks
  The top 20 Forex trading banks in terms of  liquidity, according to a Euromoney poll:
Deutche Bank- UBS
 - Barclays Capital
 - RBS
 - Citi
 - JP Morgan
 - HSBC
 - Goldman Sachs
 - Credit Suisse
 - BNP Paribas
 - Morgan Stanley
 - Bank of America
 - Societe Generale
 - Dresdner Kleinwort
 - State Street
 - Standard Chartered
 - RBC Capital Markets
 - Calyon
 - ABN Amro
 - Merrill Lynch
 
The article also states that:
Embattled banks boosted by performance in booming FX markets – Deutche Bank retains top position; Highest-ever turnover and client activity recorded in the survey.
Not only do these banks represent “The Forex Establishment,” their FX divisions are highly successful:
Buying and selling bonds, currencies and commodities probably boosted trading revenue, excluding writedowns, above the 5.07 billion-euro ($6.7 billion) record in the first three months of 2007, people familiar with the matter said. The rebound will propel earnings at the Frankfurt-based bank, which posted a 4.8 billion-euro loss in the final quarter of 2008, analysts said.
Many of these firms’ Forex trading activities are not public; the above information is derived from public financials which are of a general ledger nature. Those financials do not explain how profits were obtained by trading currencies, using what types of strategies, and in what amounts.
  What we do know, there have been many  releases in the press from firms such as Goldman Sachs and Deutche Bank about  the success of their trading operations.   In fact, some of the articles indicate these were the only profitable  units in their business, and in some cases were at least partially responsible  from preventing firms from bankruptcy or takeover.
Revenue from  fixed-income, currencies and commodities, the company’s biggest unit, was a  record $6.8 billion in the second quarter, which compared with $6.56 billion in  the first quarter and $2.38 billion in last year’s second quarter.  
This is quite a statement, but how much of  that $6.56 billion was derived from Currency trading vs. other trading operations?  
Central  Banks
Central Banks are the real driver of the  Forex market as they are the manufacturer of money.  Only a central bank has the real power to  create money.  While banks create money  by issuing debt, as does the treasury in the US, Central Banks have the  authority, charter, and ability to create money that didn’t before exist.  This money can be used domestically to  purchase various assets, or it can be used to purchase other money – which is  where Forex becomes interesting.  This is  an efficient measure of how much the US Dollar is worth not in terms of  purchasing power, but compared with another currency, for example the  Euro.  This game is more subtle on the  major liquid currencies and much more obvious on less liquid exotics.
 In the case of Zimbabwe, the most extreme  example in recent history of hyperinflation, the inflation rate reached  26,470.8% in 2008.  Hyperinflation is caused simply by the  oversupply of money, created by the central bank issuing more money than the  market could reasonably absorb.  This is  the millionaire dilemma of capitalism – we all want to be billionaires, but if  we all had a billion dollars how much would you bill your neighbor to cut his  grass (assuming you would even consider it) – at least $10 Million.  Imagine you owned a bank, and you could add  as many zeros to your account as you want.   Soon you would realize the dilemma, that the more you gave yourself and  spent it, your vendors would also become richer and demand more, in addition to  spending your money on other vendors and so on, until your money became less  and less valuable.  According to  hyperflation experts, this can be the beginning of a ‘vicious circle’ in which  you need to create more money in order to create the same amount of money in  the last cycle, due to the declining value, adding even more downward pressure  on the value of money.
What  prevents central banks from creating large amounts of capital is the potential  for hyperinflation as in Zimbabwe. 
  Each central bank is very different in terms  of ownership, operations, structure, function, design, and powers.  Western countries have adopted an  ‘independent’ model where the government supposedly doesn’t influence bank  policy, because the temptation is for governments to print as much money as  they need to fund their social programs which will bring more voters – a  natural political temptation.  
In smaller, more tightly controlled central  banks that are less independent, they are more proactive in protecting a  countries wealth and currency.
Central Banking Resources:
http://www.centralbanking.com/ http://www.bis.org/cbanks.htm
Hedge Funds
  
Forex hedge funds are a small part of the  hedge fund community.  Barclay Hedge  lists Currency Traders with Managed Futures programs the top 10 having only 1.7  Billion AUM (see on right).
Bruce Kovner
  Bruce Stanley Kovner (born 1945 in  Brooklyn, New York) is an American businessman. He is the founder and Chairman  of Caxton Associates, LLC, a hedge fund that trades a global macro strategy and  is considered amongst the world’s top and largest 10 hedge funds with an  estimated $14 billion under management. In 2006, Kovner had an estimated net  worth of around $2.5 billion. Described as secretive even by family and  friends, the 63-year old divorcee is perhaps one of the least known New York  City billionaires outside of professional circles. His Caxton Associates  despite the large amount of assets under management is known to be amongst the  top 25 most enigmatic and secretive hedge funds globally. 
Axel Merk
Axel Merk is the  Founder and President of Merk Investments. Merk is an expert on macro trends,  hard money, international investing and on building sustainable wealth. An  authority on currencies, he is a pioneer in the use of strategic currency  investing to seek diversification. Axel Merk is a sought after speaker and author on topics ranging from the economy, gold and currencies to sustainable wealth  and personal finance, as well as a regular guest and contributor to the business media around the  world.
  Having pioneered the currency asset  class as head of Merk Investments, LLC, Axel Merk suggests that these times with inflation looming, the  U.S. dollar failing, equity markets remaining  volatile and economic recovery stumbling might call for investors to further  diversify their portfolios with baskets of foreign currencies. Axel, who  strongly recommends The Gold Report as a "brilliant resource" in his  about-to-be released book (Sustainable Wealth: Achieving Financial Security in  a Volatile World of Debt and Consumption), looks at the wider picture too. For  instance, he tells us that while a world reserve currency is impractical,  ungovernable, unworkable and unlikely, diversification within each country's  reserves would make sense in the global economy.
http://www.merkfund.com/ 
Merk has just launched a retail Forex product:
  Money manager Axel  Merk has a proposition for average investors: play the currency markets like a  hedge fund for a mere $2,500. Normally the world's foreign exchange markets --  where dollars, euros and yen exchange hands at lightning speed and in enormous  sums -- are off limits to people who are saving a few hundred dollars a week  for retirement or college tuition.
FX Concepts
FX Concepts is one of the world’s  oldest and most established independent currency managers. For more than 20  years, we have been helping investors generate sustainable returns while  managing their currency risk. Our world-class research team provides currency  forecasts and market insights to institutional money managers and investors on  a subscription basis.
  John Henry
Founded in  1982, John W. Henry & Company, Inc.  (JWH®) is an alternative asset manager that is one of the longest  established managed futures advisors in the world. Utilizing global markets in  foreign exchange, financial; futures and commodities, JWH historically has  generated returns non-correlated to those of equity and fixed income  investments. The firm manages assets for retail, institutional and private  investors in the Americas, Europe and Asia. JWH's 6 investment programs, and  funds for which JWH acts as manager or  co-manager, offer investors a wide  variety of investment solutions to suit various portfolios and investment   strategies.
John Henry has been listed as one of the largest currency traders on Barclay Hedge in terms of AUM figures.
Michael Marcus
Michael Marcus is a commodities trader  who, in less than 20 years, is reputed to have turned his initial $30,000 into  $80 million. Marcus met his mentor Ed Seykota while working as an analyst and  learned money management from him. … who went on to become one of the world's  biggest currency speculators. He made a fortune in gold and another fortune in  cocoa before moving into trading tanker rates and other indices in the shipping  industry. He parlayed a thirty-thousand-dollar stake into an  eighty-million-dollar fortune. He owned ten houses in every beautiful place in  the world, many of which he had never slept in. His wife left him, but Marcus  was too busy to notice. Trading from a beachside mansion in California, he was  waking up every two hours throughout the night to place  three-hundred-million-dollar bets on currency markets in Australia, Hong Kong,  Zurich, and London. His secret? Marcus is a chartist. He is a trend follower  who keeps an eye on market penetration and resistance.
There are many other significant Forex funds, too many to name in an article. Importantly, there seems to be no common ground for these traders. They all come from various backgrounds, unlike other more established industries. The National Security Council, purportedly the most powerful committee in the world, has accepted members who all are 1 or 2 degrees of Henry Kissinger (meaning they either worked or went to school with Kissinger or one of his close associates). One might think that due to the significance and size of the Forex market, a similar crowd rules, but it does not.
 
Institutional  Funds
Pimco 
  The Pacific Investment Management Company, LLC (PIMCO), is an  investment company and runs the Total Return fund, the world’s largest bond fund. Founded in 1971 in Newport Beach, California, with just US$12 million in assets  under management at the time, it is now owned by Allianz, a global  insurance company based in Munich, Germany. Mohamed A. El-Erian is PIMCO's chief executive  officer and co-chief investment officer along with co-founder William  “Bill” Gross. Gross manages PIMCO's Total Return Fund, which has over $150  billion under management. As of March 31, 2009, PIMCO in total had over US$756  billion in assets under management and more than 1,200 employees.[1] On May 16, 2007, former Federal  Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan was hired as a special consultant by  PIMCO and he will participate in PIMCO’s quarterly economic forums and speak  privately with the bond manager about Fed interest rate policy.[2] 
With Pimco’s nearly $1 Trillion in Assets Under Management, Pimco’s international bond plays can move the Forex market. While Pimco doesn’t have a primary focus on speculating in Forex, they do implement hedging on foreign bond purchases. Bill Gross is frequently making statements about Foreign Exchange, such as a recent article:
Bill Gross, who runs the $169 billion Pimco Total Return Fund, is also warning the U.S. currency will fall. Holders of dollars should diversify before central banks and sovereign wealth funds do the same because of concern government budget deficits will deepen, Gross said in June. Gross’ fund has returned 12 percent in the past year, outperforming 96 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
  Industry  Statistics: Global Fund Management Industry
Forex as a daily turnover trades $3.98 Trillion according  to the infamous Triennial Central Bank Survey.  Who is trading these vast sums, certainly not  travelers?  The Global Fund Management  Industry is trading Currencies both for speculation in Forex, but mostly to  settle international bond and equity portfolios.
Assets of the global fund management industry increased for the fourth year running in 2007 to reach a record $74.3 trillion. This was up 14% on the previous year and double from five years earlier. Growth during the past three years has been due to an increase in capital inflows and strong performance of equity markets. Pension assets totaled $28.2 trillion in 2007, with a further $26.2 trillion invested in mutual funds and $19.9 trillion in insurance funds. Together with alternative assets, such as those of sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds, private equity funds and funds of wealthy individuals, assets of the global fund management industry probably totaled around $110 trillion at the end of 2007.The US was by far the largest source of funds under management in 2007 with nearly a half of the world total. It was followed by the UK with 9% and Japan with 6%. The Asia-Pacific region has shown the strongest growth in recent years. Countries such as China and India offer huge potential and many companies are showing an increased focus in this region
Seeking Alpha, these fund managers invest  in Foreign Bonds, Equities, and other Foreign Currency denominated assets,  driving Forex.
The  new technology establishment
Meta Quotes Software Companywas in the right place at the right time offering the ideal platform. A free, easily obtainable, easy to download and install in Windows, offering anyone the ability to program their own automated trading system and run it through the tester. This is very thrilling and they are then compelled to open a live account with any broker offering the MT4 system. This is a great marketing tool, because customer demand can be a powerful governing force of a corporate budget. Now, MT4 is ubiquitous in Forex, both retail and institutional.
Open a free demo account for Meta Trader 4: http://demo.eesfx.com/
  A more developed technical establishment is  the Fix Protocol.  FIX is used in non-FX  markets so it has some support for r&d by large equity broker-dealers with  big budgets.  Regardless, FIX has become  the standard messaging protocol for API FX Trading.
  http://www.fixprotocol.org/ 
Who wants to support the US Dollar?
Contrary to popular belief, it is very questionable who really wants a strong dollar.
 It would seem that the US Government and  large US Corporations would want a strong dollar, and the common belief that if  the dollar is strong that is good for the US Economy in general.  However, currency expert Marc Chandler  doesn’t agree, and he explains his argument in detail.  In his most recent book by Bloomberg Press,  “Making sense of the Dollar” Chandler explores many myths and common  misconceptions, most notably; he claims that it doesn’t matter if the dollar is  strong or weak.  He claims that when the  dollar is down, US companies who own a great majority of their assets overseas,  profit because of a strong non-USD asset base.   He also points out, that during the recent administration Strong Dollar  Policy, the US Dollar lost considerable value.  
If Marc Chandler were a lone author living  in a small cabin in the woods his arguments may strike some as lacking  credibility.  But Mr. Chandler could not  be a more credentialed FX expert, working as the Chief Forex Strategist for  prestigious bank Brown Brothers Harriman.   He previously worked at HSBC and has been quoted in many financial media  news articles such as the Financial Times, Barron’s, and Currency Trader.
What this proves is not what the prevailing bias is for the USD in the US. It proves there is no consensus; there are differing views inside an economy whether their currency should be weak or strong. These forces may counterbalance each other internally in addition to competing with external forces. The conclusion is, whether Marc Chandler is right or wrong, there are significant forces inside the US (for example US based exporters) who want a weak dollar. Right or wrong, these forces influence Forex rates. This is a part of why Forex is such a complex and interesting market.
  What corn seller wants the price of Corn to  decline?  What CEO wants his stock price  to collapse?  Most markets have a bullish  bias, where many participants, usually on the sell side, will do nearly  anything to promote the purchase of their commodity or security.  
  If there are domestic interests, in any  country, worried that Forex traders can undermine their authority to support  their currency they are gravely mistaken.   If anything, they are a natural extra arm of any administration – no  Forex trade can outlast a Central Bank intervention (no one has deeper pockets  than a Central Bank!), they will quickly get on the bandwagon, follow the  trend, and return profits to their clients or their own accounts.  In other words, they can just as easily bid  up the US Dollar as they could offer it down.
Alpha  by money creation
  
When a central bank creates money, usually it is created in the form of loans to banks and large institutions such as governments. But in a Forex intervention, money is created by purchasing other money. In the case of the Central Bank of Japan, they will sell JPY (of which they have an unlimited supply) in order to drive down the value of the JPY so exporters profits will be boosted as foreigners can purchase cheaper Japanese goods with their strong non-JPY currencies. When the Japanese central bank intervenes by purchasing foreign currencies, whoever is the holder of those currencies is the beneficiary. Multiplied with leverage, this can be a very profitable FX trade. It benefits all participants in the economy of the foreign currency, but to have a direct pecuniary impact it needs to be reflected in an FX account by holding a short JPY position during the intervention, for example being long EUR/JPY or USD/JPY.

This is a financial anomaly, and contradicts the economic adage there is no such thing as a free lunch. This is free money in all manners of understanding. Of course, you would be losing if you were long JPY during an intervention. This trade, with no leverage, generated 33% in 2 years.
 Other markets such as the stock market need  a loser for a winner.  This is one reason  why in FX there can be multiple winners, statistically speaking, there can be  more winners than losers both in real terms and on a percentage basis.  In this USD/JPY trade above, the Central Bank  of Japan is the loser.  But since they  are the primary source of money, they aren’t a loser in the traditional  understanding of a trade, because their goal is financial stability of the Japanese  economy.  A weak JPY does boost imports  so the net gain for Japan is positive.   It is a subtle way of financing your customers.  The Central Bank of Japan is giving you money  to buy their products.
If we can for a moment set aside the individual trade technicalities, those profits, in aggregate, are absorbed by the global market. They are spread around between the USD, EUR, GBP, CAD, NZD, AUD, and others. It’s important to understand that these profits are only tangible if you have a direct FX position in the JPY. Otherwise benefits will be felt in terms of purchasing power of the currency and cost of products, but this is less direct.
Necessary data
  Currently, there are few sources to obtain  quality valid Forex data.  The CFTC  publishes a quarterly report of all regulated US based FDMs, but the statistics  offered will only tell us about the capitalization of these firms.  This is valuable, but it is only a small  piece of a larger puzzle.  What brokers  and banks could publish that would be very interesting, could include:
Total number of profitable  accounts from open to close
  Average % win for losing  accounts
  Average % loss for winning  accounts (From open until today)
  Total profit made from all  customers
  Total loss created by all  customers
Profit made by FDMs from  dealing operations, from commissions, from other services (profit structure  breakdown)
For Banks:
- % of Forex accounts used for Hedging vs. Speculation
 - Average profit and losses for hedgers vs. speculators
 - Amount of profit earned per trade by the bank
 - Profit made by the bank in proprietary Forex trading
 
Some companies are willing to disclose information answering the above questions unofficially. That statement cannot be substantiated because this information was gained in confidence. Such is the world of Forex.
The Forex Establishment is being redefined rapidly. The defunct Lehman Brothers was a top 10 Forex liquidity provider. Technology standards have been established by non-financial software startups from obscure locations. The only certainty about The Forex Establishment is that it will adapt at an ever increasing rate.
By Elite_E-Services
http://eliteeservices.net/ Elite E Services FX Systems See more articles at www.eliteforexblog.com
Elite E Services is an electronic boutique brokerage specializing in currency trading, intelligence, and technology surrounding foreign exchange markets. EES offers FX trading systems for clients and investors, FX consulting, technology and tools for trading, system development, custom programming, and FX solutions for businesses.
DISCLAIMER: Trading foreign exchange on margin carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to invest in foreign exchange you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	
Comments
| 
		
                  tanmay.sasvadkar@gmail.com
                 21 Oct 09, 18:56  | 
        
                  Charlotte Financial
           Your post is really informative for me. I liked it very much. Keep sharing such important posts.  | 
      

  