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Broker refuse to tell me whether my trades on their A-book or B-book!?

Jan 20, 2019 at 14:49
Przeglądane 1,484
35 Replies
Uczestnik z Sep 02, 2012   11 postów
Jan 20, 2019 at 14:49
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?
Uczestnik z Aug 27, 2017   994 postów
Jan 21, 2019 at 08:13
What is A-Book and B-book? Unfortunately, I’m not aware of this kind of terminology.
Uczestnik z Sep 29, 2016   264 postów
Jan 21, 2019 at 11:13
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?

A respectable and well regulated broker would not refuse such a request, can you clarify from which broker you had requested this?
ourmyfxbook@
Uczestnik z Feb 22, 2011   4862 postów
Jan 21, 2019 at 13:39
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?

Why does it matter to you?
Uczestnik z Aug 27, 2017   994 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 07:45
L3CAP posted:
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?

A respectable and well regulated broker would not refuse such a request, can you clarify from which broker you had requested this?

Exactly; it sounds something different. I’m also interested to know the broker’s name.
Uczestnik z Nov 28, 2016   14 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 07:46
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?

is none of your business. As long your broker processes your withdrawals correctly
Uczestnik z Sep 02, 2012   11 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 08:04
Adribaasmet posted:
What is A-Book and B-book? Unfortunately, I’m not aware of this kind of terminology.

- You can read about A-Book & B-Book broker here:-

https://www.forexsignals.com/blog/2017/08/the-difference-between-a-book-and-b-book-brokers/
Uczestnik z Sep 02, 2012   11 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 08:08
togr posted:
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?

Why does it matter to you?

- They said that they updated their servers to provide us with better liquidity & execution, but I know from their mt4 that they are the market maker(because when you look at their execution it is INSTANT).

- So, why they are lying about new liquidity because they are the old & new liquidity.
Uczestnik z Feb 22, 2011   4862 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 09:59
mohasasa posted:
togr posted:
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

- What to do in this situation?

Why does it matter to you?

- They said that they updated their servers to provide us with better liquidity & execution, but I know from their mt4 that they are the market maker(because when you look at their execution it is INSTANT).

- So, why they are lying about new liquidity because they are the old & new liquidity.

These are actually different thing
broker: market maker vs. STP broker
execution: A book vs. B book

I would say as long as you make profits and withdraw them good for you. Especially with instant execution.
The only issue could be with very big trades that are profitable AND were not sent ot market
but I assume this is not the case.
Uczestnik z Nov 27, 2018   10 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 11:47
I do not think that a broker has to tell you that information. It might be the case that they do not know until you take a trade. If it is small trade then it may be one but if it is a larger then it may be another
Uczestnik z Jan 05, 2016   1189 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 17:57
Adribaasmet posted:
What is A-Book and B-book? Unfortunately, I’m not aware of this kind of terminology.

In generalized simple terms you can consider 'A Book' trades to be handled via a liquidity provider, whereas 'B Book' trades are handled by the internal brokerage capital.




If it looks too good to be true, it's probably a scam! Let the buyer beware.
Uczestnik z Jan 05, 2016   1189 postów
Jan 22, 2019 at 23:58
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

What prompted you to ask the broker that?
Did something happen with your account?


mohasasa posted:
- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

What does it say in your terms of service and account agreement paperwork?


mohasasa posted:
- What to do in this situation?

What situation? There isn't any situation to deal with. Is there some additional event that happened with your account that we are unaware of?

You asked the broker for confidential information and they told you that the information is not available to their clients.




If it looks too good to be true, it's probably a scam! Let the buyer beware.
Uczestnik z Sep 02, 2012   11 postów
Jan 24, 2019 at 08:40
Professional4X posted:
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

What prompted you to ask the broker that?
Did something happen with your account?


mohasasa posted:
- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

What does it say in your terms of service and account agreement paperwork?


mohasasa posted:
- What to do in this situation?

What situation? There isn't any situation to deal with. Is there some additional event that happened with your account that we are unaware of?

You asked the broker for confidential information and they told you that the information is not available to their clients.

1. Every 2/3 years they change their forex quote from 4 to 5 digits then from 5 to 4 digits. So I asked them why over the years you change your FX quotes:- they said it is for better liquidity & execution.
11. Nothing happened to my account.

2. The last time I read their T&C, it was 10 years ago, so I don't remember.

3. OK
Uczestnik z Feb 22, 2011   4862 postów
Jan 24, 2019 at 12:14
mohasasa posted:
Professional4X posted:
mohasasa posted:
- Last week I have contacted my broker and asked him to give me a statement that shows whether my trades were on their A-book or B-book.

What prompted you to ask the broker that?
Did something happen with your account?


mohasasa posted:
- They refused and told me that's confidential and we cannot share this information with our clients.

What does it say in your terms of service and account agreement paperwork?


mohasasa posted:
- What to do in this situation?

What situation? There isn't any situation to deal with. Is there some additional event that happened with your account that we are unaware of?

You asked the broker for confidential information and they told you that the information is not available to their clients.

1. Every 2/3 years they change their forex quote from 4 to 5 digits then from 5 to 4 digits. So I asked them why over the years you change your FX quotes:- they said it is for better liquidity & execution.
11. Nothing happened to my account.

2. The last time I read their T&C, it was 10 years ago, so I don't remember.

3. OK

Perhaps change the broker
4 digits are outdated nowadays only used on cent account
Uczestnik z Apr 02, 2018   12 postów
Jan 27, 2019 at 09:33
Hello Professional4X,

Yes A-Book a trader is sending the trades to the bank or liquidity provider via FIX ( Financial Information Exchange ) Protocol and B-Book means the Broker is keeping the trades.

If the broker keeps the trades and the trader wins, the broker has to put from his pocket but that almost never happens because he always cancels each trader out, here is a small and simple example:

From all traders together the broker have, 50 lot BUY EURUSD and 40 lot SELL EURUSD, they cancel each one out and the broker just has a risk of 10 lot BUY EURUSD.
Then the Broker send to the bank/liquidity provider 10 lot BUY EURUSD, pay big commission from it but has zero risk from his side.

So the Broker gets commission/spread from 90 lot and just pays smaller spread to the bank/liquidity provider of 10 lot.

The MT4 Server does not handle the trades to the bank or any of this, thats why we have to connect to it using old c++ code and handle it accordingly.

This is called a Risk Management System for a Broker, it is rent for a little as $5000 / month to them, or many big brokers has in house programmers and do it themselfes.

Also btw sending a trade to the bank is not easy.. they give you 50 different prices every second, you need to compare prices between different banks and liquidity provider in milliseconds and take a quick decision where to send the trade on the cheapest price..

Also sending 50 lot to the bank at once is NOT good, they give you very bad prices, thats why you need to slice the order down, send small pieces to different banks and in some cases even wait 1 to 10 seconds to refresh prices and keep sending the trades.. this is called the Order Slicer System for Brokers.

If you have more questions on how it works from the brokers side, just ask!
Happy Trading
Price is King, Volume is Queen, all the rest are just story tellers!
Uczestnik z Apr 18, 2017   920 postów
Jan 27, 2019 at 10:53
senselead posted:
Hello Professional4X,

Yes A-Book a trader is sending the trades to the bank or liquidity provider via FIX ( Financial Information Exchange ) Protocol and B-Book means the Broker is keeping the trades.

If the broker keeps the trades and the trader wins, the broker has to put from his pocket but that almost never happens because he always cancels each trader out, here is a small and simple example:

From all traders together the broker have, 50 lot BUY EURUSD and 40 lot SELL EURUSD, they cancel each one out and the broker just has a risk of 10 lot BUY EURUSD.
Then the Broker send to the bank/liquidity provider 10 lot BUY EURUSD, pay big commission from it but has zero risk from his side.

So the Broker gets commission/spread from 90 lot and just pays smaller spread to the bank/liquidity provider of 10 lot.

The MT4 Server does not handle the trades to the bank or any of this, thats why we have to connect to it using old c++ code and handle it accordingly.

This is called a Risk Management System for a Broker, it is rent for a little as $5000 / month to them, or many big brokers has in house programmers and do it themselfes.

Also btw sending a trade to the bank is not easy.. they give you 50 different prices every second, you need to compare prices between different banks and liquidity provider in milliseconds and take a quick decision where to send the trade on the cheapest price..

Also sending 50 lot to the bank at once is NOT good, they give you very bad prices, thats why you need to slice the order down, send small pieces to different banks and in some cases even wait 1 to 10 seconds to refresh prices and keep sending the trades.. this is called the Order Slicer System for Brokers.

If you have more questions on how it works from the brokers side, just ask!
Happy Trading

Thanks for this reply, mate! I have learned this issue from your words; excellent job! Have a good weekend.
Uczestnik z Sep 02, 2012   11 postów
Jan 28, 2019 at 08:22
senselead posted:

If the broker keeps the trades and the trader wins, the broker has to put from his pocket but that almost never happens because he always cancels each trader out ....


- Thank you for taking the time to enlighten us,

- Assume with me that I'm trading an exotic pair and there is no other trader is trading this pair with me, so broker fill the other side of my trades. Also assume that I'm a consistent winner.

- What happen to this broker after a long losing time trading with me? (Is he going out of business?)
Uczestnik z Sep 02, 2012   11 postów
Jan 28, 2019 at 08:22
senselead posted:

If you have more questions on how it works from the brokers side, just ask!

- Could you tell us about the dirty tricks from a broker with a consistent winner trader?

+ Thanks in advance.
Uczestnik z Apr 02, 2018   12 postów
Jan 29, 2019 at 07:44
mohasasa posted:
senselead posted:

If the broker keeps the trades and the trader wins, the broker has to put from his pocket but that almost never happens because he always cancels each trader out ....


- Thank you for taking the time to enlighten us,

- Assume with me that I'm trading an exotic pair and there is no other trader is trading this pair with me, so broker fill the other side of my trades. Also assume that I'm a consistent winner.

- What happen to this broker after a long losing time trading with me? (Is he going out of business?)

Hello Mohasasa,

No.. Broker don't go out of business.. if the broker just have you trading the Symbol, he just send your trades to the bank/liquidity provider, you pay spread, from this spread the broker pays smaller spread to the bank exactly like a Middle man, doesn't matter if you always win or lose the broker always makes money.

Because the broker puts the risk to the banks side from your trades.. and trust me the banks almost always have someone to cancel the trades out.. the banks work on similar basis, and even if the banks don't have someone to cancel trades out, guess what, they change price on the opposite side and makes money no matter what.

And you know what's the best? They don't need to explain no one why price changed opposite direction!

If the Brokers see you always losing he keeps the trades and gets all your money, if the broker see you always winning he sends all your trades to the bank and makes smaller money but always makes money.

The only time Broker takes risks is when he keeps the trades thinking your a loser and then suddenly you are winning, then he needs to pay from his pocket, that's why there are risk management systems to check everything on real time and change you quick from B-book to A-book.

That is if the broker makes everything the correct way..if he is a bad guy the dirty things the broker is able to do that I know of is that he can open and close trades in your name, your account, and you can not do nothing about it, if you deposit your money to a broker you should trust him.
Price is King, Volume is Queen, all the rest are just story tellers!
Uczestnik z Feb 22, 2011   4862 postów
Jan 29, 2019 at 09:12
It is the way that traders whose are profitable get their trades executed on market
Trades of the unprofitable traders are processed internally by broker and never send to market.
The broker asses who is profitable and who is not.
The problem arise at the moment when unprofitable trader makes a big profitable trade - such trade was not sent to market and thus broker has to pay it from own pocket - or refuse payment.
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