RFXT targets innovation in online trading products

For the second year running, Royal Forex Trading SAL has been recognised for the firm’s outstanding work within online brokerage, offering some of the industry’s best products over recent times. This comes as numerous FX brokerage firms are being established worldwide every month and competition is increasing in emerging markets such as in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.

Based in Beirut, Lebanon and regulated by the Central Bank of Lebanon, one of the strictest financial regulatory bodies in the world, RFXT has come to know the meaning of success. As one of the first brokerage firms operating in Lebanon, the firm began by carving a significant chunk of the local market before looking outwards to the rest of the region and the world. In little under three years, RFXT has grown to service thousands of clients worldwide with premium brokerage services that include products across the financial spectrum.

Trading growth in MENA
This success didn’t come easy though, especially in a region not known for its large trader demographics at the time. However, over the last few years online trading, primarily in FX, CFDs and to a lesser degree futures and equities, has grown exponentially, especially in the Gulf. The region now hosts international firms offering the same products and services, and in an already overly saturated sector, one main quality is increasingly becoming critical to traders: client services. This extends from the typical realm of 24-hour trading services and support to ease of operational transactions and security of funds.

It is no secret that the online trading industry has been plagued by less than trustworthy brokers and scams, not to mention major brokers seeking bankruptcy and liquidation due to insufficient and faulty risk management practices. RFXT though, has made it a priority to put its clients and their funds first through the use of segregated accounts, and maintaining a clear distinction between those funds and the firm’s own operational working capital. Furthermore, and as per local financial regulations, financial brokerage firms have to maintain risk committees and undertake mechanisms to mitigate the firm’s exposure to risks and hold off any threat to client funds or the firm’s financial viability.

RFXT’s management team has been trained by some of the industry’s largest and most respected financial institutions and strictly endorse fair business practice, foreign exchange regulation and increased investor protection. These underlying principles and the collective experience form RFXT’s solid base.  In another move to boost its credibility and reputation as a reliable, trustworthy broker, the firm’s Chief Compliance Officer, Mr Fady Jawlakh, was recently awarded the designation of Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialist by ACAMS.

Building on a secure organisational foundation, RFXT can offer its clients the services in most demand from FX and CFDs to metals and indices through the hugely popular MetaTrader4 trading platform. For more professional and institutional investors, RFXT also offers access to Futures through the exchange linked CQG platform and US, UK and European equities through the ROX interface, designed by Lek Securities that maintains a partnership with the NYSE. RFXT also caters to the growth in popularity of the MENA stock markets through the state of the art Mubasher DT platform that allows investors to access the stocks of publicly listed companies across 14 exchanges in the region.

“We are always looking to add innovative new products online as well as offline. RFXT will soon initiate its long awaited asset management programme which will include top of the line VIP managed account services,” says RFXT CEO and Chairman, Rayan El Annan.

“Our team will combine the highest standards in experience, professionalism and discipline to be able to offer this highly demanded service.”

On the institutional side, RFXT has revamped its White Label package to include more services and features for the same cost.  New brokerage upstarts can now take advantage of support services that aside from the trading platform and complementary technologies, include website content, company incorporation advice, back office setup, and optimised configuration.  The new firm’s staff will also be coached on all the skills needed to run a successful company from sales, operations, and compliance, to back office and IT networking. RFXT’s management believes that through this kind of assistance, new firms can get off to a running start.

To be able to offer these products to its clients in an efficient and quality manner, RFXT has invested heavily in the network infrastructure critical to running a top tier online trading brokerage firm. It has also linked up with multiple liquidity providers to ensure that the client experiences the best of online trading through superior execution and exclusive prices. This means RFXT’s clients can access trades at the prices they want when they want with no delay or re-quotes. At a time when there are brokers worldwide dictating the trades their clients can take, through manual dealing, RFXT gives its clients the liberty to completely control their trading destiny.

That is the fundamental concern of RFXT; providing its clients with the tools they need to achieve financial success. RFXT currently reaches its clients through several mediums to make sure traders have the information necessary to make educated and calculated decisions on whether to go long or short in a volatile market and manage their risk. Every morning, RFXT clients receive a summary of the previous trading day’s movement across the European, US and Asian markets, on their platforms and by email in addition to a comprehensive report offering analysis and recommendations on the seven major currencies, as well as on gold, silver and oil. Aptly named the Edge Report, it gives traders an accurate prediction of the market’s movements in the framework of the day’s economic calendar and technical analysis to keep them ahead of the game.

Furthermore, clients can also access an exclusive member’s area on the website, www.rfxt.com, through which they can study a multitude of reports and graphs displaying market movements, volatility, economic analysis and live streaming news and prices. All these studies are also augmented with updated economic news and releases by SMS directly to the client’s mobile phone. It is hard to imagine a more suitable environment for investor trading success.

Successful partnerships
Mr El Annan puts it best by affirming that “since the establishment of RFXT, we have strived to provide unparalleled service and superior spreads, as well as offering our clients all the necessary tools and guidance in order for them to achieve their financial goals. We pledge to uphold our industry standard by continuing to provide the best in service, financial products, support, and execution, 24 hours a day to fulfil their financial expectations.”

This is why the firm works with its clients as strategic partners to create and execute lucrative solutions that address traders’ most pressing strategic, financial and trading needs anywhere in the world.

Educational and trading support is not just confined to RFXT’s clientele but extends to society as a whole, forming a cornerstone of the firm’s corporate social responsibility programme. Aiming to provide trading awareness and advice to potential investors and traders as well as academic insight into the financial markets, RFXT has embarked on hosting seminars and lectures at its offices and at universities around Lebanon. The leading brokerage firm also makes it a point to sponsor campaigns that further the common good and address public concern such as road safety and awareness.

Investing in people is the bedrock of RFXT’s corporate culture, through acquiring and training its staff to the highest standards of performance and customer service. The firm boasts experienced financial professionals as personal brokers, account executives, and dealers at its state-of-the-art offices. In addition, its operations staff is top notch, accepting account applications and executing client requests with the speed and efficiency of a well-oiled machine.

RFXT has come a long way from the small brokerage firm it was in 2008. Thanks to the guidance and vision of its management and the perseverance, efficiency and professionalism of its staff, RFXT is uniquely positioned to offer its retail and institutional clients with the level of standards and quality expected of a premium financial services brokerage firm. It is up to time to tell us where RFXT will be next year but we can be assured of one thing: RFXT is here to stay.

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The May – June 2013 Issue

Highest corporate tax
rates in Europe

European countries are scrambling to raise every last penny of funds through taxes. But some countries may have gone too far...

Belgium

Though all business taxes in Belgium can be paid online with little effort and preparation, the rates are still sky-high at 57.7 percent, including a staggering 50.8 percent total rate on profits only in social security contributions.

Belarus

In Belarus, a company spends up to 338 hours annually preparing for and paying ten different taxes and duties. The total tax rate has incredibly been lowered to 60.7 percent, from 117.5 percent in 2008.

France

A company in France pays seven different taxes and duties, the sum of which can amount to 65.7 percent of profits; though President François Hollande has announced a wave of business tax rate cuts coming up.

Estonia

A business in Estonia pays 67.3 percent of profits in tax, 37.2 percent exclusively in social security contributions. The country has gone against the grain in Europe by raising businesses taxes from 48.6 percent in 2008 to the current rates.

Italy

While corporate income tax (IRES) in Italy is limited to 38 percent of taxable profit, a company operating in Italy can expect to pay 14 other taxes and duties, including social security contributions, bringing their total payable tax to 68.7 percent of profits, according to the World Bank.

Norway

Norway taxes motor fuels twice, with a road use tax and a CO2 emissions tax. Combined with strikes in the energy sector that have curbed output, the price of gas at a local pump has soared to $10.12 per gallon.

Turkey

Though Turkey sits on the Suez Canal and neighbours many oil rich countries, the price of a gallon of average gas clocks in at $9.41 in Turkish pumps, because of a 60 percent share of taxes. 

Israel

Like Turkey, Israel is surrounded by oil-rich neighbours, but drills very little itself. Gas prices are controlled by the government, so about half of the $9.28 per gallon goes to taxes.

Hong Kong

There are few gas stations in Hong Kong, but the ones available charge up to 76 percent more per gallon than mainland China, where the government caps the cost of fuel. A gallon at the pumps will cost around $8.61 on the island.

Netherlands

Expensive labour costs make the Dutch petrol prices the dearest in Europe, at $8.26 per gallon; though the 57 percent tax add-ons don’t help.

The credit crisis

8 February 2007
HSBC warns of subprime mortgage losses

2 April 2007
New Century goes bus

14 September 2007
Wholesale markets have dried up

17 March 2008
Rescue of Bear Stearns

7 September 2008
Rescue of Fannie Mae

15 September 2008
Lehman Brothers file for bankruptcy

3 October 2008
US congress approves $700bn bailout

14 February 2009
$787bn stimulus approved by congress

 

The effects of the current financial crisis are global and irrefutable. With the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the domino effect of irresponsible public monetary policies, huge levels of unsustainable debt, and a deregulated financial sector, has escalated to the point where no corner of the globe has been left untouched.

1973 oil crisis

October 1973
Syria and Egypt launch an attack on Israel on Yom Kippur and set off a twenty day war;

1977
US President Carter creates Department of Energy, which develops the US strategic petroleum reserve

 

The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) used their oil reserves as a weapon with the Arab Oil Embargo against those who supported Israel. By January 1974, world oil prices were four times higher than they were at the start of the crisis, especially in the US, and the shock led to a huge drop in the stock market with NYSE losing $97bn in just six weeks.  The embargo lasted five months, and the effects are still seen today.

German hyperinflation

1922-1923

Hyperinflation
1923 – 1924
Stabilisation

 

The trouble began when Germany missed a repatriation payment, worth about one third of the German deficit in this period. Inflation was already high but by 1923 it was raging. Prices doubled within hours, and by late 1923, it cost 200bn marks to buy a single loaf of bread. People burned money as it was cheaper than buying firewood. Germany eventually regained control of its economy when it introduced the Rentenmark into circulation in 1923, and then the Reichmark in 1924.

The Great Depression

1929-1933
The Great Crash
1934-1939
Recovery and Recession

 

After the decadence of the Roaring Twenties, the 1930s saw the biggest economic slump of all time. The stock market crashed on 29 October 1929, and optimism and decadent living tumbled along with the figures. The GDP fell from $103.6bn in 1929, to $66bn in 1934 and the subsequent years of recovery were the most dramatic in US history.

1907 bankers’ panic

1907
Otto Heinze and his brother Augustus Heinze bought shares of United Copper.

 

The stock market was already cautious over the tight money supply, but the US was thrown into a depression after the stock market fell nearly 50 percent from its peak in 1906. The Heinze brothers thought they could influence market shares but ended up bankrupting lenders that provided the financing to buy the stock. A chain reaction left nine institutions bankrupt. By February 1908, the panic was over and the government created the Federal Reserve system, to prevent banks from exercising too much control over the economy.