Wanita Ini Mendapat “Hadiah Hari Ibu” yang Tidak Terduga, Bikin Mewek!
Sebuah acara televisi di Australia berniat untuk memberikan sebuah kejutan yang berasal dari Amerika untuk seorang ibu yang bekerja di sebuah toko supermarket (Tina).
▼Tina memiliki 4 orang anak, dia sendiri bekerja di sebuah supermarket dengan shift malam.
▼Dia dan putrinya (Donna) sudah 1 tahun tidak bertemu karena Donna berada di Amerika. Namun, untuk kejutan kali ini, Donna terbang kembali ke tempat ibunya bekerja untuk memberikan kejutan hari ibu. Donna pun menunggu di salah satu lorong.
▼Pemilik toko sengaja memanggil nama Tina untuk pergi ke lorong nomor 6.
▼Tina yang tidak tahu apa-apa pun akhirnya menuruti suara operator dan pergi ke lorong 6.
▼Donna yang membelakangi ibunya juga terlihat gugup, dia pura-pura melihat kardus makanan ringan disana.
▼Saat ibunya sudah berdiri di sebelahnya, Donna sengaja bertanya pada ibunya.
Awalnya, Tina tidak menyadari bahwa Donna siapa, tapi begitu sadar, dia langsung memeluk anaknya terharu. Tina sama sekali tidak menyangka bahwa anaknya akan muncul di supermarket tempatnya bekerja. Yuk, langsung aja kita lihat videonya:
Apakah sobat jadi kangen pada keluarga? Yuk kita ambil telepon kita dan telepon orangtua kita, keluarga kita, mereka pasti juga kangen sama kita!
Sumber : pastiseru
Spotting a forex scam
The spot forex market trades $1.65 trillion a day, according to the Bank of International Settlements’ Triennial Survey. Combine that with currency options and futures contracts, and the amount traded on any given day is more than $5 trillion.
With this volume of money floating around an unregulated spot market that trades instantly, over the counter, with no accountability, forex scams offer the lure of earning fortunes in limited amounts of time. While many of the popular old scams have ceased, due to serious enforcement actions by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the 1982 formation of the self-regulatory National Futures Association (NFA), some old scams do still linger, and new ones keep popping up.
Back in the Day: The Point-Spread Scam
The old forex scam was based on computer manipulation of bid/ask spreads. The point spread between the bid and ask basically reflects the commission of a back-and-forth transaction processed through a broker. These spreads typically differ between currency pairs. The scam occurs when those point spreads differ widely among brokers. Brokers often do not offer the normal two- to three-point spread in the EUR/USD, for example, but spreads of seven pips or more. (A pip is the smallest price move that a given exchange rate makes based on market convention. Since most major currency pairs are priced to four decimal places, the smallest change is that of the last decimal point.) Factor four or more pips on every $1 million trade, and any potential gains resulting from a good investment are eaten away by commissions.
This scam has quieted down over the last 10 years, but be careful of any offshore retail brokers that are not regulated by the CFTC, NFA or their nation of origin. These tendencies still exist, and it’s quite easy for firms to pack up and disappear with the money when confronted with actions. Many saw a jail cell for these computer manipulations. But the majority of violators have historically been United States–based companies, not the offshore ones.
The spot forex market trades $1.65 trillion a day, according to the Bank of International Settlements’ Triennial Survey. Combine that with currency options and futures contracts, and the amount traded on any given day is more than $5 trillion.
With this volume of money floating around an unregulated spot market that trades instantly, over the counter, with no accountability, forex scams offer the lure of earning fortunes in limited amounts of time. While many of the popular old scams have ceased, due to serious enforcement actions by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the 1982 formation of the self-regulatory National Futures Association (NFA), some old scams do still linger, and new ones keep popping up.
Back in the Day: The Point-Spread Scam
The old forex scam was based on computer manipulation of bid/ask spreads. The point spread between the bid and ask basically reflects the commission of a back-and-forth transaction processed through a broker. These spreads typically differ between currency pairs. The scam occurs when those point spreads differ widely among brokers. Brokers often do not offer the normal two- to three-point spread in the EUR/USD, for example, but spreads of seven pips or more. (A pip is the smallest price move that a given exchange rate makes based on market convention. Since most major currency pairs are priced to four decimal places, the smallest change is that of the last decimal point.) Factor four or more pips on every $1 million trade, and any potential gains resulting from a good investment are eaten away by commissions.
This scam has quieted down over the last 10 years, but be careful of any offshore retail brokers that are not regulated by the CFTC, NFA or their nation of origin. These tendencies still exist, and it’s quite easy for firms to pack up and disappear with the money when confronted with actions. Many saw a jail cell for these computer manipulations. But the majority of violators have historically been United States–based companies, not the offshore ones.