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Ricky Zamboni
Private citizen
Join date: 4 Jun 2004
Posts: 1,080
04-27-2006 13:40
From: Svar Beckersted
Ok, I'm really new to currency trading anwhere but are you people telling me that I will never be able to issue a limit buy order like I have for my sell orders? I had 1 sell order trade at 299 a couple of days ago and got the equivilant of about 309.5 Lindens per dollar after the 3.5% commision. If I have to buy on the open spot market at below 300 Lindens per dollar how do I ever make a profit?

Apparently limit buy orders is "in the works". I doubt it will ever materialize.

Oh, and the way LindeX is structured, it clear that you're *not* supposed to make a profit trading.
Svar Beckersted
Registered User
Join date: 14 Apr 2006
Posts: 783
04-27-2006 13:45
From: Ricky Zamboni
Apparently limit buy orders is "in the works". I doubt it will ever materialize.

Oh, and the way LindeX is structured, it clear that you're *not* supposed to make a profit trading.


wow, Thanks for the quick response Ricky. Is there another way to get USD into your ingame account other than going through the currency exchange. The USD I got from that one trade has already been used for a land sale.
Jeanette Hailey
Diva Designs
Join date: 11 Mar 2005
Posts: 185
04-27-2006 19:43
I posted this in the Answers forums and also below in the L/E forum....i'm afraid many have not seen it due to my less than creative title. I really believe this could be a good answer to some of the issues we are experiencing.

From: Jeanette Hailey

Hi there L's!

I have a few comments/questions/suggestions about our currency exchange market and LL fiscal policy.

At first glance, our economy seems to use a free floating exchange rate (XR) which is determined by supply and demand. This seems all well and good until you begin to parallel our economy to RL ones.

In the real world, there are actually four parties that are concerned with a currency exchange transaction. There is the buyer, the seller, the bank which is facilitating the transaction and the Federal Reserve Bank.

The buyer and seller having obvious roles, let's move on to the facilitating bank. Thier role is to exchange the currency at the bid and ask rates (buying and selling, respectively) which are determined by things such as demand and supply of the currency and the volume of that currency which is traded regularly (more commonly traded currencies will have lower prices). The difference between the ask and bid rates are what the bank keeps as revenue for the transaction.

The job of the Fed is to control the monetary supply, deciding how much currency to make and destroy each day, which will in turn, determine the price at which banks ask and bid. Part of monetary policy is also using interest rates to control the XR but that isn't thus far relavent in SL.

Sorry for the finance lesson, but it seems that someone at LL may need it (no offense, please). Obviously because of the organization of our economy, LL acts as both the facilitating bank and the Fed, but nowhere in the usual course of things does it say that either the buyer or the seller can set their OWN price in a currency exchange.

LL does attempt to determine the market XR through making and destroying L$. However, LL doesn't have *control* over how much L$ is created because of the stipend system. I am not suggesting that stipends go away. I think our economy would crash and burn if that happened, as non-business owners would have no money to spend unless they bought currency. (It is a vicious cycle, I won't get deep into that.) As for destroying currency, it is obvious that we do not have enough money sinks to accomplish true fiscal policy. Which leads nicely into my suggestion.

LL should set the ask and bid price of currency. The difference would be the normal spread that citizens in the real world pay as a price for the exchange. Instead of keeping it as revenue (as L$ is worthless to LL when you really think about it), the money would simply become the sink, being destroyed and taking the currency out of circulation.

If there is part of this explanation that I left out, please do ask for clarification. I'm not a "sky-is-falling" kind of person, but when I see that someone is selling L$ for L2750/$1, I do get a bit concerned as a business owner. Our options as currency traders are to either sit with our L$ for sale at a quasi-reasonable rate of L295/$1 or to beat the underhanded people at their own game and undercut them by 1L, which leads to more inflation.
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Mystique Webb
Registered User
Join date: 9 Mar 2006
Posts: 5
04-28-2006 03:41
FastFreddy sayeth:
"To those who are saying this is all crap I say this: If you are that worried about inflation, do not sell your lindens but lend them out for interest. Start a loan company with contracts and let people borrow your money."

Just gotta wonder, what entity is going to enforce timely payments? Sounds like the lender would also need to arrange some hit-avies too!
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