‘’Avoid it like the plague’’ - Each to their own Marc. I was simply writing my own personal experience with this company. I am not an idiot; I did not just jump into such an investment; I did my sums and thoroughly checked out the company before I let go of any of my precious hard earned money. (I am also a financial sector professional: retired)
Well it must have certainly only been a ‘’quick look’’ you had before you jumped into writing a post full of opinionated-based statements.
Perhaps the description of my experience wasn’t extensive enough.
Goldenschild are not a broker - the broker they deal with is MIG bank based in Switzerland. It is here that your investment is made after rigorous paperwork and if you like you can check out the regulatory statement on MIG’s website – they are both a bank and a broker. My funds are held with that bank/broker and inaccessible to anybody except me. Goldenschild are the fund managers, meaning they trade the forex market for the client. They do not hold the client’s funds. I don’t see why you are pointing out Goldenschild’s regulatory body - they use MIG’s legal framework. If there are cases of severe negligence, MIG may open an investigation regarding this.
I do not understand where you came up with :
"Foreign exchange is generally an unregulated activity and subject to the risk of high fees.
Trading currencies is speculation not investing is highly volatile and the expected return is zero before costs and negative after costs.’’
Can you point me somewhere that states Foreign exchange is an ‘’unregulated activity’’? If it was unregulated I would not have made such an investment.
Trading currencies is highly volatile – I agree entirely with this, however "expected return is zero before costs and negative after costs’’? This does not make sense at all Marc. How did you come up with this? It almost makes me laugh. I don’t know where you came up with such a statement - what research have you done on the foreign exchange market or have you experienced trading it first hand with zero or negative returns?
I don’t know where you would advise your clients to invest Marc, but with the way things are in this country, I am certainly better off with this investment than any investment with our banks and the pittens returns they offer. As with any investment, it is the management of such that will yield benefits in the long run. To delve even deeper into my personal monetary affairs (but in good counsel) I also have post office (state savings) investments which I feel have excellent returns. As stated above, I have withdrawn well in excess of my original investment (plus paid fees to date) from Goldenschild/MIG and re-invested this into a post office state savings investment. Alongside this, my initial capital is higher than my original investment.
As I mentioned, I tried my hand at trading in the forex market and I still do a little when time allows. It is not a market where you can sit back and let your outlay work for itself. The forex market is so volatile you have to be on the ball constantly. Risk can be managed through structured money management and before making this investment I had to complete a form to assess my own interpretation of the risks involved and to advise them of what risk level of risk I expected/ wanted my capital to endure.
As I said, it is a volatile market and your eye has to be on the ball at all times – it’s a 24 hour market. Even with your eye on the market, it is still challenging and very very difficult to become consistently profitable. I hardly expect someone to manage my account for free.
Then you go through the various accounts offered. Fair enough.
You’re pointing out the fees and zero returns. Your speculative zero returns again! Let’s outline a few of the banks investment offerings and their ongoing fees… but let’s do it with zero returns. Does that make sense?
My investment made 21% return last month.
So let’s work that out on a capital of $10000
A return of $2100 – less the fixed fee of $400 leaves $1700. (Plain to see that this return is far from zero or negative!)
The returns vary but when I began, my support agent specified that they offer a monthly target of 10%. Yes it is a target, this is the forex market. So it is subject to risk. However, they generally exceed 10% and on months of lower return, higher return months well- outweigh the lower returns and fees. Did you look at their past performance and previous returns? It would not make fiscal or common sense make an investment where the fees outweighed the returns. It is not so difficult to calculate your potential returns if you do the maths correctly.
Then the other type of accounts, yes, higher fees. Well again, if you do the mathematics, the higher your investment the higher your returns.
I don’t mean to sound argumentative Marc, I am new here and didn’t even come on this website to discuss this – I simply came across the post while browsing - I simply wrote my experience and you posted a reply that almost made me out to be foolish. Managed accounts are a dime a dozen on the net and I have heard several horror stories. I am not one to push risk investments on anyone, but I am also not one to push negative comments and ridicule another person’s experience. Investments are a complex and risky field especially in trading forex, stocks and shares. However, I did my research and I’m glad I didn’t ‘’avoid them like the plague’’
Jim