Sunday, August 26, 2007

MARKET



MARKET OVERVIEW

With starting in the middle of the 19th century seasoned Endowment policies have been traded in Great Britain.

Explanations about those TEP´s (= Traded Endowment Policies) on that most exciting market, you can read easily on Internet. You can also find dissertations on a wide range. It´s not our deal to explain it here in details.

The volume on regulated market nowadays is well over 800 million Euros and steadily increasing. The second owner/buyer can calculate on guaranteed profits year by year. Demonstrating a inherent first class financial derivative to investor.


CHANCES ON PRIMARY MARKET
How is it possible now to share profits on primary market ? This is exactly what we want to achieve, because there are very lucrative profits. Basically one need a loan from a powerful banking institution to achieve the leverage effect. You must imagine that you can have 80,000 US Dollar in cash to your disposal - being leveraged so to speak

NOT FOR FREE - BUT COUPLED TO YOUR POLICY EVENTUALLY
With allocation of a one-time service and maintain fee of US$ 50 your application will be accepted and initiated

We spend additional US$50 to get your application being worked on in the cooperating bank and to get executed by us your platform manager and Endowment Broker. To this time all parts work in a high complex synergy.

Many years of experience on the field of TEP, financial derivatives all kind of and bank securities with the necessary cash flow to proceed fluently, set us into postion to offer this project on the mass-market now.

A project this size needs large-scale authorisations from european and american supervisor bodies like SEC, because the total payouts to 10,000 TEP members will be in the billions.

This is not possible with online e-payment solutions. All profits from the loan investment will be available after maturing time of 6 months. Our designated offshore banks will provide this discreet service.

Surely, you know that such projects with the most stern profile of NON-Disclosure Agreements must run outside the public market. Though the supervisor bodies are informed and installed for watching, one wants to set antipoles facing the ever weakening of US Dollar currency.

Patronizing reasonable retaliatory within a suitable economical context, which have the potential to terminate the decrease of US Dollar. Also because of that our project has been qualified and sealed at all. It is restricted and forbidden to give any more informations. But we think, you might imagine the whole picture now much better.


FOREX
The Foreign Exchange market, also referred to as the "Forex" or "FX" market, is the largest financial market in the world, with a daily average turnover of US$1.9 trillion -- 30 times larger than the combined volume of all U.S. equity markets.

"Foreign Exchange" is the simultaneous buying of one currency and selling of another. Currencies are traded in pairs, for example Euro/US Dollar (EUR/USD) or US Dollar/Japanese Yen (USD/JPY).

There are two reasons to buy and sell currencies. About 5% of daily turnover is from companies and governments that buy or sell products and services in a foreign country or must convert profits made in foreign currencies into their domestic currency. The other 95% is trading for profit, or speculation.

For speculators, the best trading opportunities are with the most commonly traded (and therefore most liquid) currencies, called "the Majors." Today, more than 85% of all daily transactions involve trading of the Majors, which include the US Dollar, Japanese Yen, Euro, British Pound, Swiss Franc, Canadian Dollar and Australian Dollar.

A true 24-hour market, Forex trading begins each day in Sydney, and moves around the globe as the business day begins in each financial center, first to Tokyo, London, and New York. Unlike any other financial market, investors can respond to currency fluctuations caused by economic, social and political events at the time they occur - day or night.

The FX market is considered an Over The Counter (OTC) or 'interbank' market, due to the fact that transactions are conducted between two counterparts over the telephone or via an electronic network. Trading is not centralized on an exchange, as with the stock and futures markets.