Hello UKBF - Voda Fx

Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
Hello to everybody at UK Business Forums. We are Voda Fx, a software distribution company that has just entered Ireland with distribution rights to sell Voda Fx into all of Europe.

Our product is an automated trading software system, it has been trading for several years, it was distributed initially through accountants in South East Asia and we are proud to say now distributed by Voda Fx into Europe.

How does it work?

A client first purchases the license to run our software and then deposits €10,000 with a broker of their choice. Our software then trades for the client using complicated algorithms, making dozens of tiny trades per day on the Foreign Exchange Market and ultimately generating a passive income for the client without any input on their behalf needed.

Historic returns have shown Voda Fx averages between €800-€1200 per month in profits for clients over the last few years.

Our clients have recommended to us that we post trading statements in a public forum for all to see. I will be posting trading statements from real clients here each week (Please let me know if this is not the appropriate thread and point me in the right direction). That way you can see what sort of returns we offer with complete transparency and we are able to answer any questions you may have.

Thank you for your time and we look forward to any questions



-VODA FX
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
Thanks Sam,

Trading statements that have been posted on our blog will be posted here soon. We have had a fantastic response from Accountants in Ireland so far. We welcome any accountants in the UK to a demonstration of the software where they can see live trading and audited results. Please be in touch if this interests you.
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
Hello Everybody,

Here is an article I read on Forbes.com, I thought you all might find quite interesting:


Algorithmic Trading Trickles Down To Individual Investors

"Six flights up in a dim, grungy office building in Manhattan’s Union Square neighborhood, Christopher Ivey is working on what he thinks is the next step in the evolution of trading. His efforts also serve as a subtle reminder that the current bull market seems to be a bit frothy.

Armed with $4.5 million in funding, the 2011 Harvard grad recently launched a Web-based platform called Rizm, designed to let individual investors with no coding skills build computer programs that select and trade stocks automatically, similar to the trading programs used by quant funds and high-frequency trading firms.

The pitch: For $99 per month investors get quick cloud access to sophisticated algorithm-building tools and the capability to back-test strategies. You can easily generate rapid-fire executable trades, sans emotion, and place them with an e-broker. Suddenly the notion of blasting out math-driven trades like über-successful quant hedge funds, such as James Simons‘ Renaissance Technologies, are a few clicks away.

“If you can only follow five trades a day, because that’s the mental bandwidth for a human trader, now run it against 500 stocks,” says Ivey. “Or just let it run on your five, and go spend time with your daughter and hang out, because it’s running for you.”

If that sounds like trouble–amateurs turning their financial ovens to high and then leaving the house unattended–you’d better get used to it. This is the natural evolution of the self-directed trading boom that started with Charles Schwab and the deregulation of commissions in 1975. Cheap technology and sophisticated engineers have disrupted almost every other aspect of Wall Street. Now we get hedge fund tools for the masses. Besides Ivey’s startup, EquaMetrics, there are at least four other companies offering programming-free algorithm builders that sport slick names like CoolTrade and Prodigio.

Sociologist Alexandru Preda, who studies traders, says he’s seen an uptick in individuals building trading programs over the past four years. Some are young math and science graduates who may have learned some algorithmic techniques in campus trading clubs sponsored by investment banks. Others are veterans of quant funds and investment banks, retired or laid off, who are using the tricks they learned to manage their own money.

Individual investors are clearly gaining more confidence in the post-financial-crisis bull market. The number of self-directed brokerage accounts in the U.S. rose 5% last year to 40 million, according to the market research firm Celent. More tellingly, the ranks of active traders (10 or more transactions a month) jumped 14% over the same period, now encompassing 2.4 million accounts.

“It doesn’t take a lot to get started nowadays” building trading programs, says Ernie Chan, who runs a systematic trading consultancy. “The price of platforms for retail traders is dropping, and more brokers are catering to them.”

Exhibit A: Tim Richardson, a former pro football player and hospital executive from Raleigh, N.C., who is one of 1,250 Rizm account-holders. The 49-year-old now trades for a living and says that the DIY algo platform has allowed him to ramp up to almost 30 trades a day, from fewer than 10. His strategy revolves around tracking technical indicators and jumping in when stocks or ETFsappear oversold. “Before, I could only comfortably look at a couple of stocks. Now I can follow 10.” Richardson says automating his strategy has also helped him curb competitive instincts that could keep him in positions too long. “When I first started trading everything for me had to be a win. I would ride it to the bottom.”

Some websites offer finished products; investors can browse established trading programs and subscribe to them or download a robot, as they’re sometimes called, to run on their own computer. Needless to say, though, the pros aren’t sharing their alpha-generating secrets, and the independent newbies often follow suit. “No one wants to talk about their algorithms, and they don’t want to talk about the rig they built to operate it,” says John Fawcett, cofounder of a browser-based development platform called Quantopian.

Fawcett aims for Quantopian to become a hub for math and science grads who have programming skills and are looking to get into the game, and it provides standardized tools to do so. With $2 million in funding from backers such as the high-frequency trading firm Getco, his website offers a free back-tester, sample programs to clone, and forums and supporting documentation. Live trading is in beta.

Ivey’s Rizm platform differs from Quantopian in that it offers algorithmic trading to people who can’t code and don’t want to learn how. In Rizm, users drag and drop modules to build strategies–throw in a Bollinger Band indicator, set the terms (buy at the lower band, sell at the upper), toss in a stop-loss module, enter the stocks to track and voila.

“It’s infinitely scalable,” says Ivey. “You can nest as many strategies as you want, and it will just keep getting bigger and bigger.”

Rizm has its detractors. Programming snobs scoff at the inherent limitations of drag-and-drop algorithms. Big retail brokerages firms like Fidelity and TD Ameritrade are also skeptical about the market opportunity in general. Most have offered auto-trading tools, of varying levels of sophistication, going back as far as 2006. Nicole Sherrod, managing director of the trader group at TD Ameritrade, says she sees a higher payoff in focusing on options and futures trading, and improving the brokerage’s mobile platform. Most investors aren’t interested in taking on the complexity of formulating rules-based strategies, she says.

Still the new wave of amateur quants means more trades, more commissions and more market volatility. Will these geeky hyper-traders beat the buy-and-holders? David Leinweber, who ran a $6 billion quant fund at First Quadrant and now heads the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Computational Research Division’s Center for Innovative Financial Technology, doesn’t think so. “Algorithmic trading frees you from the drudgery, but do you have good ideas? There aren’t that many masterpieces out there.” A lesson the day traders of the 1990s learned the hard way."



Just to be clear, VodaFX doesn't allow you to choose your own strategies, it is a fully automated system similar to those that are mentioned halfway through the article as a "finished product".

What a great read though, if you have any questions on algorithmic trading, feel free to post here.

Have a great day.
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
There are some great videos by Bloomberg News on Automated FX Trading and also High Frequency trading. You can find these by searching for each topic with Bloomberg in the search bar also. They explain well to the Layman and also have some great facts and statistics on the trading world.

I recommend you take a look!
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
In a recent Bloomberg article this week this was stated:

“A widening probe of the foreign-exchange market is roiling an industry already under pressure to reduce costs as computer platforms displace human traders.

Electronic dealing, which accounted for 66 percent of all currency transactions in 2013 and 20 percent in 2001, will increase to 76 percent within five years, according to Aite Group LLC, a Boston-based consulting firm that reviewed Bank for International Settlements data. About 81 percent of spot trading — the buying and selling of currency for immediate delivery — will be electronic by 2018, Aite said.”

VodaFX generates small profits using automated algorithms just like the majority of traders in the world now, as you can see this type of trading is in no way on the way out. If you want to get involved in seeing the software trade live then do get in touch and we can arrange a time for you to see real money made in real time.
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
Today we have for you another treat. VodaFX Trading History for July 2013 which is filled with a large number of profits and losses which resulted in a profit of 816.26! A total of 210 trades were automatically made, without any input needed.

Accountants love looking at these statements, but once you come on board we recommend that you look at your results on a quarterly or bi-annual basis. Months can vary as you can see, and obviously day by day trading has even more differences, but on a bi-annual basis the returns make it quite clear that VodaFX does very well in the medium to long term.

These files have been posted to our blog.

We welcome your questions.
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
Here is an excerpt from a recent article in The Irish Times which contains some interesting statistics (February 18 2014)


"A widening probe of the foreign-exchange market is riling an industry already under pressure to reduce costs as computer platforms displace human traders.


Electronic dealing, which accounted for 66 per cent of all currency transactions in 2001, will increase to 76 per cent within five years, according to Aite Group, a Boston-based consulting firm that reviewed Bank for International Settlements data.


About 81 per cent of spot trading - the buying and selling of currency for immediate delivery - will be electronic by 2018, Aite said."
 
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Voda-Fx

Free Member
Feb 13, 2014
19
1
VodaFX is proud to say that we now have a client base in Ireland with decent number of accounts live and trading making profits. The response has been great to the product here and we want to thank some of the users that have been in touch from the UK Business Forum via private messages. We welcome anyone to speak HERE in this forum post of different ways that they have created Passive Income over the years as we are always looking for other products to distribute that will help our clients achieve what they are looking for financially.

Look forward to your input.
 
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