by Carlhole » Thu 04 Sep 2008, 02:24:12
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonexFRAUD', 'I')t's interesting to hear this from the perspective of an insider. I consider this information very valuable, at least for the sake of learning a lesson from someone that knows. I will probably refer people to this thread for an explanation on what happens with boiler rooms like Monex. I think if more people could read this thread they might be a little better equipped to repel these kinds of sales pitches.
You should try it! Find out for yourself! You could learn everything you need to know in about 2 months.
They'll hire almost anybody. But you DO need to be smart enough to pass a test. All you need to do is find some outfit that will "sponsor" you as you study and pass the Series-3 Commodity Futures and Options Exam. You can't just take it by yourself. You have to have a firm sponsor you.
When I started out, I cold-called for other brokers until I passed the Series-3. That was actually at The Sage Group in Irvine. It was located in that tall, cylindrical high-rise building in Irvine, if you happen to know the one. The Sage Group did a regular TV spot and Bruce Serra and a partner (can't remember his name) was the guy who actually did the show. Sometimes the phones went crazy with action. But there still weren't enough really good quality leads to go around so most of the brokers there were cold-calling retreads over and over again. Monotonous. It's the most boring work you can possibly imagine. You can easily go broke too trying to become a successful broker. But a firm won't pay anything. Other brokers might pay you a little to cold-call for them. But the dwindling of savings reserves and ever-present threat of poverty
made for very aggressive brokers who would do anything to churn some commission out of their "book". which usually didn't amount to a whole lot.
A decent commodity broker could make a nice living for himself on a book of clients that totaled at least $100,000 - $200,000 in the market at any one time. You would be living pretty well on the commissions generated from that. By "decent broker", I mean someone who has got a book of very wealthy clients who can all afford to play the commodity markets and who do so for fun. A decent broker would be someone that makes the game fun for these rich guys. Obviously, the broker does not want to ruin his relationship with these guys so he tried not to abuse them terribly. Rich people who play commodities know from experience that you lose, lose, lose, lose , lose...WIN!! and when you win, you win big. But you have to be able to stand all the losses.
A decent broker is nothing more than a glorified croupier. He will call his book of rich clients with trades that he knows they will find interesting. As an established broker, he has a bank account with a little padding and doesn't have to worry about daily living expenses.
But, how many rich people are out there in this world with tons of money to burn? Not many. And it's hard as hell to find them.
However, there are plenty of people hungry enough to go out and get a Series-3 License. This means that they will most likely make their bread-and-butter on people who really should not be involved in the commodity markets as speculators in the first place. And these brokers will be forced to churn and burn for commissions as soon as possible because they've got bills that are mounting up and they need good drugs to calm the nerves.
Once, I remember, I had collected some money, a good sizeable chunk. In fact, the manager noticed and told me, "I'm high on you!". But I was trying to be careful how I sunk it in the market. I was waiting for a clear bottom signal or some shit. I can't remember what it was I was doing. Anyway, I had this same manager come over while I was on the phone with a client. He was yelling at me in an abrasive, thick New York accent: "Make a f*cking trade! Make a f*cking trade! You don't make any f*cking trades, you're outta here today!"
I was a little bit of a tinkerbell back then. Until then, I had thought I was supposed to actually try to make money for clients. Imagine my surprise.
Contrast that with the brokers at Merrill Lynch. In the office where I worked, if you had a "book" with total assets of $30 million, you would make a salary of $20,000 - 30,000 per year. The successful brokers in that office had books upwards of $100 million. This is because the portfolio turnover rate was so low. Most of their clients were elderly retired.