
In the old days, “boiler rooms” referred to the back room operations
of scrupulous brokers. So called “boiler rooms” because they are
usually found in the cramp, secluded, steaming hot back rooms of small
offices to keep their illegitimate operations away from the prying eyes of
authorities. In Hongkong, they were called sweat shops. Through the
years the term boiler room became synonymous with scams and swindling
operations. However, they now operate in style from well furnished
offices situated in prime business districts. The boiler rooms of the
old were usually situated in some obscure addresses.
Today, as if flaunting their ill gotten capital from extended years
of scamming operations, they set up fully equipped plush offices, and
this was for good measure - to hoodwink clients into believing their
businesses are legit. Where did these people come from? And how are
they able to operate almost anywhere with impunity?
Hong Kong and Macau were the centers of their scam operations
before. Starting out with commodity futures trading they soon shifted
to the much bigger foreign exchange market after the world embraced the
open trade policy in early-1990’s.
During that time international foreign currency cash transactions
were done only through big banks, and between and among the central
banks of different countries, huge multi national corporations and
giant insurance companies whose global operations were liven up by the
open market policies embraced by almost all nations at that time. The
transactions were usually in large volumes hardly imaginable by
individual investors. Forwards or currency futures contracts were then
traded through established exchanges like the International Monetary
Market (IMM) of the Chicago Board of Trade and the London International
Financial Futures Exchange. As global trade increased, so did the
volume of foreign currency transactions which also brought about rapid
and frequent swings in the rates of exchange of the different
currencies. Entities involved in cash transactions found it necessary
to hedge their risks with currency futures. Currency futures brokers on
the other hand found it necessary to source their requirements for
maturing obligations from the cash market. And that developed the
linkages between the two markets - one , an informal network consisting
of banks, multinational companies, and insurance giants linked
electronically with each other, the other the established financial
futures exchanges around the globe.
The increasing risks from exchange rate fluctuations forced some of
the smaller banks dealing in spot cash transactions to find a way to
spread out the risks. They needed volume. They needed more participants
to partake the risks. So they adopted the leveraged trading system
(margin trading) of the financial futures exchanges. Retail, off
exchange foreign currency trading was thus born,
The boiler room operators were quick to identify this evolving
opportunity for them in the rapidly changing financial market place.
Leveraged trading was their forte and by experience, they knew that the
unlearned investors would easily fall prey to another get-rich-quick
scam specially so if they can easily pass it off as being bank-based!
But are they?
One clear cut difference between a legitimate broker dealing in
retail foreign currency trading (leveraged forex trading) and the forex
boiler room operator is the fact that legitimate brokers are accredited
investment intermediaries of either a bank or a member broker of an
established currency futures exchange, while the boiler room operator
operates on his own, faking off the linkages to the legitimate currency
market participants with the use of sophisticated trading software and
subscription to live market data feeds from legitimate sources.
A system to stream live the actual spot foreign currency
transactions of various major participating banks, financial
institutions and currency futures exchanges worldwide was developed by
both Dow Jones and Telerate years before they merged. Anyone may
subscribe to these services for a fee. And true enough, these services
were used to the hilt by boiler room operators world wide using their
own trading platforms which simulates actual trading in the interbank
spot currency market. However, the funds invested through them were
never really coursed to the inter-bank spot currency network, much less
to a bank or an exchange. the money was simply bucketed!
Performance Foreign Exchange Corporation uses the eForex Asia
trading platform the parent company of which Michael Liew also helped
establish. Why didn’t the authorities then push on the investigation
all the way to eForex Asia. This would have shown that neither PFEC nor
eForex Asia have legitimate linkages to the forex market place. This
would have proven PFEC is indeed selling the investing public short.
This would have proven that online forex trading through PFEC is no
different from the online casinos you see sprouting everywhere. |