The hidden perils of misrepresenting and miscalculating risk factors are sure to derail a trader's chances to beat the market
I think it's safe to say that more money has been lost through wrong measurement of risk - which gives one a false sense of security - than by failure to measure risk at all. To provide an analogy, it would be safer to drive a car without a speedometer than a car with a speedometer which understates the true speed by 25%.
If there was no actual gauge of the speed, you would be conscious of that absence of information and as a result would take extra caution. If instead you are relying on a speedometer that shows 60 kmph when in fact the true speed is 75 kmph or higher, then you will be more prone not only to speeding tickets, but accidents as well.
Similarly in trading, relying on risk measurements that significantly understate true risk may be far more dangerous than not using any risk measurement at all. The most recent example to illustrate this is January 15th's SNB debacle.
The constant assurance of the Swiss officials that the EUR/CHF peg was there to stay, coupled with low margins for CHF pairs offered by brokers who should have known better led to hundreds of millions in aggregate losses.
Would there have been so many traders affected had they not listened to officials talking their book? Would there have been so many brokers affected - I'm looking at you FXCM - had they raised margins accordingly for a currency, which was no longer free floating? I think everyone would agree the answer to both questions is a resounding NO.
Another example of faulty risk measurement that comes to mind, seven years since Bear Stearns imploded, is the trillion-dollar-plus losses suffered by traders and investors in 2007-2008 in debt securitizations linked to subprime mortgages. Investors bought these securities because they had AAA ratings from top rating agencies. But the risk evaluation behind the top grades was based on assumptions that had nothing to do with the underlying data - holdings that consisted of low quality subprime mortgages.
What would have happened if investors were offered unrated debt securities with a collateral that consisted of subprime mortgages with no income, job, down payment or asset verification? Very few would have touched them. Yet investors bought huge quantities of these securities because of the implicit assurance provided by the AAA rating.
Before finishing, I would also like to touch on the false security given by track records with a seemingly ever rising balance slope. Just looking at the graph and not considering the strategy used to obtain those numbers is not only meaningless, but potentially dangerous too.
I think it's safe to say that more money has been lost through wrong measurement of risk - which gives one a false sense of security - than by failure to measure risk at all. To provide an analogy, it would be safer to drive a car without a speedometer than a car with a speedometer which understates the true speed by 25%.
If there was no actual gauge of the speed, you would be conscious of that absence of information and as a result would take extra caution. If instead you are relying on a speedometer that shows 60 kmph when in fact the true speed is 75 kmph or higher, then you will be more prone not only to speeding tickets, but accidents as well.
Similarly in trading, relying on risk measurements that significantly understate true risk may be far more dangerous than not using any risk measurement at all. The most recent example to illustrate this is January 15th's SNB debacle.
The constant assurance of the Swiss officials that the EUR/CHF peg was there to stay, coupled with low margins for CHF pairs offered by brokers who should have known better led to hundreds of millions in aggregate losses.
Would there have been so many traders affected had they not listened to officials talking their book? Would there have been so many brokers affected - I'm looking at you FXCM - had they raised margins accordingly for a currency, which was no longer free floating? I think everyone would agree the answer to both questions is a resounding NO.
Another example of faulty risk measurement that comes to mind, seven years since Bear Stearns imploded, is the trillion-dollar-plus losses suffered by traders and investors in 2007-2008 in debt securitizations linked to subprime mortgages. Investors bought these securities because they had AAA ratings from top rating agencies. But the risk evaluation behind the top grades was based on assumptions that had nothing to do with the underlying data - holdings that consisted of low quality subprime mortgages.
What would have happened if investors were offered unrated debt securities with a collateral that consisted of subprime mortgages with no income, job, down payment or asset verification? Very few would have touched them. Yet investors bought huge quantities of these securities because of the implicit assurance provided by the AAA rating.
Before finishing, I would also like to touch on the false security given by track records with a seemingly ever rising balance slope. Just looking at the graph and not considering the strategy used to obtain those numbers is not only meaningless, but potentially dangerous too.
Vlad Gubernat is a full-time trader based in Romania who shares his thoughts on his blog JLTrader. Independent trader and blogger on everything trading related.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
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Today’s lead: Washington moves closer to reshaping crypto markets as the CLARITY Act advances through the US Senate, with the Senate Banking Committee holding its markup and vote on the bill today. Also ahead: record revenue at Rakuten Securities, losses narrow at Valutrades, Pepperstone expands its crypto infrastructure push, and a dormant Bitcoin wallet resurfaces after more than 11 years following an AI-assisted recovery. It’s Thursday, 14 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Washington moves closer to reshaping crypto markets as the CLARITY Act advances through the US Senate, with the Senate Banking Committee holding its markup and vote on the bill today. Also ahead: record revenue at Rakuten Securities, losses narrow at Valutrades, Pepperstone expands its crypto infrastructure push, and a dormant Bitcoin wallet resurfaces after more than 11 years following an AI-assisted recovery. It’s Thursday, 14 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Washington moves closer to reshaping crypto markets as the CLARITY Act advances through the US Senate, with the Senate Banking Committee holding its markup and vote on the bill today. Also ahead: record revenue at Rakuten Securities, losses narrow at Valutrades, Pepperstone expands its crypto infrastructure push, and a dormant Bitcoin wallet resurfaces after more than 11 years following an AI-assisted recovery. It’s Thursday, 14 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Washington moves closer to reshaping crypto markets as the CLARITY Act advances through the US Senate, with the Senate Banking Committee holding its markup and vote on the bill today. Also ahead: record revenue at Rakuten Securities, losses narrow at Valutrades, Pepperstone expands its crypto infrastructure push, and a dormant Bitcoin wallet resurfaces after more than 11 years following an AI-assisted recovery. It’s Thursday, 14 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Washington moves closer to reshaping crypto markets as the CLARITY Act advances through the US Senate, with the Senate Banking Committee holding its markup and vote on the bill today. Also ahead: record revenue at Rakuten Securities, losses narrow at Valutrades, Pepperstone expands its crypto infrastructure push, and a dormant Bitcoin wallet resurfaces after more than 11 years following an AI-assisted recovery. It’s Thursday, 14 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 13 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 13 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 13 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 13 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 13 May 2026
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Today's lead: A group of forex and CFD brokers moves to formalise cooperation with regulators through a new industry body in the Bahamas. Also ahead: Interactive Brokers UK posts a sharp profit jump driven by interest income and client growth, eToro’s volatile trading session after earnings, and FM Singapore Summit 2026 floor activity. It's Wednesday, the thirteenth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: A group of forex and CFD brokers moves to formalise cooperation with regulators through a new industry body in the Bahamas. Also ahead: Interactive Brokers UK posts a sharp profit jump driven by interest income and client growth, eToro’s volatile trading session after earnings, and FM Singapore Summit 2026 floor activity. It's Wednesday, the thirteenth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
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Today's lead: A group of forex and CFD brokers moves to formalise cooperation with regulators through a new industry body in the Bahamas. Also ahead: Interactive Brokers UK posts a sharp profit jump driven by interest income and client growth, eToro’s volatile trading session after earnings, and FM Singapore Summit 2026 floor activity. It's Wednesday, the thirteenth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: A group of forex and CFD brokers moves to formalise cooperation with regulators through a new industry body in the Bahamas. Also ahead: Interactive Brokers UK posts a sharp profit jump driven by interest income and client growth, eToro’s volatile trading session after earnings, and FM Singapore Summit 2026 floor activity. It's Wednesday, the thirteenth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: A group of forex and CFD brokers moves to formalise cooperation with regulators through a new industry body in the Bahamas. Also ahead: Interactive Brokers UK posts a sharp profit jump driven by interest income and client growth, eToro’s volatile trading session after earnings, and FM Singapore Summit 2026 floor activity. It's Wednesday, the thirteenth of May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 12 May 2026
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Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: XTB shares surge following record account growth in Poland and a new buyback program. Also ahead: Freetrade losses widen under IG Group ownership and Trade Republic signs Brad Pitt for its campaign and Robinhood doubles down on venture funds for retail traders. It is Tuesday, the twelfth of May 2026. You are listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 11 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 11 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 11 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 11 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 11 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 11 May 2026
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Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CMC Markets moves into Germany’s certificates market as BaFin tightening looms. Also ahead: Deriv opens a new Mauritius office built around its AI-first strategy, ESMA pushes major reporting simplification reforms, and at Coinbase the head of prediction markets told Finance Magnates the segment is becoming what he called a truth signal. It’s Monday, 11 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.