Sunday, April 26, 2009

The Truth About Forex Scams

By Jack Sawyer

What makes for Forex scams? A lot of people think that any Forex trading system, informational product or service which fails to make them rich beyond their wildest dreams overnight must necessarily be a scam. These are generally the same people who flee from get-rich-quick scheme to get rich quick scheme, constantly disappointed because they fail to get rich. These people are unwilling to spend ay kind of time or effort learning how to make a product or service work for them and they just accuse them of being Forex scams. There is no such thing as a system which will make you rich overnight. Think about it for a minute ? if there was such a thing, wouldn?t we all be using it already? This system would also not continue to work so well for long ? it?s a matter of elementary economics.

The fact is that the money you make has to come from somewhere. Technology can improve our methods of producing goods so that everybody's standard of living improves and everybody becomes richer in real terms. However, when you are trading, gambling or doing anything else that involves 'pure money' without any goods or services being produced, then for one person to gain, another person or institution has to lose.

It is true that in currency exchange, some of the bad prices are taken by people or institutions who either do not know or do not care. Businesses who import or export goods rarely bother to try to schedule their payments for a moment when the currency rates are favorable. People taking a vacation overseas are the same. Nevertheless, there are so many people and institutions in the 'pure' forex market these days that it is simply not possible for everybody to make money from forex trading.

So when you are in an internet forum and you are trying to decide whether negative comments that you read about a product are really a sign of a scam, it is useful to picture the situation happening in the real world, i.e. offline.

Imagine you bought a book about forex from a bookstore, but the system described in it did not work for you. It might be that the methods in the book were out of date, or they might not be suitable for you for some reason. You would probably have learnt something, and you would just shrug and accept that wasn't the right system for you. You wouldn't go back into town and call the bookstore owner a scammer.

But if the bookstore was inviting everybody to pre-order a great new book on forex that was about to be published, and you and 1000 other people all handed over your cash, and the next day the store was closed and the owner had left town ... that is a scam.

A scam is a completely fraudulent business activity which is created with the intention of swindling people. A scam is by definition illegal ? if a product or service is offered in good faith, it is not a scam.

People are naturally a little resistant to buy anything online, especially with the word scam being used so lightly. In many cases, it?s simply a customer who didn?t get the results they wanted trying to shift the blame to the product. While you may not want to buy these products, it would not be accurate to call them Forex scams. - 23217

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