What are the most important factors when choosing a Broker?

I use CMS right now and I love their charting software, but they can be unstable. Sometimes they crash and i can’t enter orders in, so i think i’m going to look for a new broker. what should i be looking for in a broker? any recommendations would be greatly appreciated!

I’d have to say that the most important factor is to make sure your broker is in a jurisdiction where the retail forex is properly regulated and in good standing.

You also might want to look at their reputation. You don’t want to pick a small broker, but rather an established broker that is well known and has a good company history.

Also make sure they don’t stop hunt :slight_smile:

I agree with liztrader… go with the larger brokers. I also recommend brokers that have trading desks you can call into to make trades. I think all brokers stop hunt to a certain degree, so stop hunting shouldn’t be a big factor.

Explain stop hunting for us less fortunate folk, if you could. Appreciate.

Yes, please explain what is stop hunting.

Also, I would go for established companies/brokers to do the trading for me, the ones with reputation. Investing money is not a joke and you should entrust it to somebody who are reliable and credible. So, I would say, go for the brokers who are already known to have lasted, with good management and who are credible, too.

Yes, first, make sure they are registered and regulated. Second, the spread on majors shouldn’t be more than 5 pips. Third, you have to make sure their execution is up to speed. However, to check that, demo isn’t going to do. You have to get a real account. As far as stop hunts, I will not even go into that… lol.

Make sure you register in a large broker with proven record of reliability.
Make sure of the broker’s credibility and they must have a very accessible support desk.

When a broker stop hunts, they look at peoples’ accounts and find where many have placed their stop losses (usually they are around important support and resistance lines). The broker then, because they have the power to manipulate their quotes, goes in and makes the price hit the stops, closing many trades, to the loss of the traders and the profit of the broker.

Because, as everyone should know, the broker usually hedges against you and makes money when you lose yours. If you don’t like it, switch to an ECN instead of a Market Maker (broker).

Hello everybody,

I am too a new baby in forex trade.Was trying to get a good broker.Do anyone know about forex.com.Are they good.Actually what happend is that I had already spend some time understanding their sotware and that was before I knew babypips.So to save myself starting with another software, your feed back will be appreciated.I have a demo account with them.

Stop hunting is when your forex broker moves their quote simply to hit their customer stop orders. Remember, unless you are trading with a non-dealing-desk broker, they are trading against you, so when you sell on a stop, they are buying. They have complete price control.

FXChant
Singing the world of forex

I think the above comments about being regulated are very important. Don’t let them hold your money off-shore!

FXChant
Singing the world of forex

How do i find a non dealing desk broker, i’ve heard the term, but never thought it was that important. I am with FX Solutions but i’m not sure if they have a non dealing desk or not, but i will check.

Thx

Not sure why this ended up here, hope for a reply

Yes, stop hunting can and does happen but don’t dwell on it. As mentioned already they tend to do it where the masses place their stops, right at key support and resistance levels. They won’t start going into individual accounts to see where YOU specifically placed your stop and pick it off. When and if it happens with your particular broker, it happens to the masses at the same time. So, if you happen to use these areas as stop levels just give yourself a little more breathing room. In other words, instead of placing your stop 5 pips beyond a key level, place it 20 pips or something to that effect. I trade off the 4 hour and daily charts and i find that 20-30 pips beyond the main level is more than enough to keep you from being “hunted”

the spread on the NFP! :slight_smile:

I read on another forum that most brokers would stop hunt individually. Read this link if you’re interested.

I have to say I lost a lot of trust and confidence since I heard about stop hunting.

I haven’t had a practical experience on the forex yet. I am still a beginner.

But after a lot of reading, I think that one should not choose a broker according to his size or capital. The market makers “make a market” for the individual traders. You don’t really have access at the interbank market. Whenever you buy, the broker sells, and vice versa. So the brokers has a big capital, guess where that comes from? Probably money they made from their customers.

I’d rather pay a commission on every lot traded, rather than a commission hidden in the spread (“free commission”). So I’d be sure how much the service costs me.

I tried some non-dealing desk brokers. Since the brokers only transfer (and do not requote, or manipulate the price) the prices, you get sometimes spread as little a 1 pip. Unlike market makers, who manipulate the price and give you single quote on bid /ask, you get a few different ones with a non-dealing desk.

It seems though that the software is less sexy than that of the market maker’s. For example, the two demo I downloaded do not have a charting package included. But then, I could get that somewhere else.

I am still a beginner and I do not have a practical experience in the forex market. If you’re looking for those non-dealing desk broker, do like me: Google it.

So-called pip hunting, if it occurs, is only a problem for scalpers and very short-term traders - or traders who put their stops way too close to the market price. My strong personal feeling - and I’ve been trading forex since before it became the sexy thing to do - is that stop hunting is used by a great many traders to place the blame elsewhere when they lose money.

To get back to the original question of this thread, some of the important things you need to look at when selecting a broker are:

[ul]
[li]Account minimum deposit (if any)
[/li][li]Transaction size flexibility
[/li][li]Spreads
[/li][li]Execution/Slippage
[/li][li]Commissions (if any)
[/li][li]Security of deposited funds
[/li][li]Allowable leverage
[/li][li]Currency pairs available for trading
[/li][li]Usability of the trading platform
[/li][/ul]

How you rank the above is a personal thing.

The most important factor when choosing a retail forex broker is to make sure your broker is in a jurisdiction where the retail forex is properly regulated and in good standing.You also might want to look at their reputation. You don’t want to pick a small broker, but rather an established broker that is well known and has a good company history,such as Oanda,FXCM,and other like that.

The problem with using a “Non Dealing Desk” broker, is you lose the fixed spreads and the guarantee of no slippage.
Which is the lesser of 2 evils?:rolleyes:
Thanks
Sherry

I think it’s important to note that any guarantee of no slippage from a dealing desk broker is not a 100% guarantee. Check the fine print of their application documents. They will quite happily slip you when it suits them.

I think in the future we’re going to see the non-dealing desk approach gain more traction and really take off. You only have to look at the world of stocks and futures to see to see what the future of spot brokers will look like.

hello, doest it means MM (delaing desk or non dealing desk) must agaist us(trader)?
it seem like not MUST …
can u explain detail. Y it always agiast trader?
Thanks
:smiley: