Yu, who is now regretfully married to Nortel
Hao
Grid.ID -
Sometimes financial conditions are the main reason for women to marry a man
regardless of other conditions.
One of them is a Vietnamese girl, willing to
marry a 70-year-old grandfather just for money and make him fall in love.
This love story happened 8 years ago,
unfortunately on November 6, this girl expressed her regret.
Reporting from the Bastille Post, he claimed
to regret marrying the old man who became her husband.
In addition, he also considered himself very
stupid.
The girl from Vietnam is known as Nguyễn Thị
Bích, 35 years old.
Her husband, Ngô Thanh Học, is a 70-year-old
retired veteran from the same village.
Nguyen is more often called with Yu and her
husband is called Nortel Hao.
The story of his
second love happened eight years ago.
Nortel Hao at that
time was a retired veteran who had decent money with pension and gold rations
every month.
That was, Yu, who was
27 at the time interested in Nortel who often visited his family.
Because it was also
the relationship between the two was getting closer, until finally they decided
to get married.
After marriage, both
have 3 children, 2 girls and 1 boy.
At first Yu felt that
he was sufficient to rely on his retired husband to support his family.
Every month, Nortel
receives around 537 Hong Kong dollars or around Rp900 thousand.
Yu took care of
his three children
But when their children start school, the
costs become bigger and the money is not enough, even Nortel does not support
family life.
Of course, because Nortel was too old to take
care of his wife and children, he was often sick and hospitalized.
Instead of taking care of his three children
easily, Yu even had the hassle of taking care of Nortel who was old and made
his life even harder.
In fact, this life made Yu's life even more
miserable.
Likewise when giving birth, her husband cannot
accompany her so that she can only be accompanied by her mother.
Now she regrets being married to Nortel and
feeling so stupid.
If there is a chance Yu chooses not to marry
Nortel.
But
that was already done, even he did not have the heart to ask for a divorce
because he could not bear to leave her husband.
Source : babe
Forex Trading Scams to Watch
The
forex market involves very active trading of over $1 trillion each day, not
including futures and currency options, which put the trading at closer to $5
trillion daily. The market does not have
much in the way of regulation, although things have started to improve
recently.
The
opportunity still exists for many forex scams, which tempt new investors with a
promise of quick fortunes through "secret trading formulas" or
algorithm-based "proprietary" trading methodologies. Before choosing
a broker or platform, go through your own due diligence by visiting BASIC, or
the Background Affiliation Status Information Center, created by the
self-regulatory NFA (National Futures Association).
01
Signal Sellers
Stock
Market Illustration
One
of the challenges a rookie forex investor faces is determining which operators
to trust in the forex market and which to avoid. Signal sellers make a good
example.
Basically,
a signal seller is offering a system that purports to identify favorable times
for buying or selling a currency pair. The system may be manual, where the
trader enters the info and gets a result, or it may be automated.
Some
systems rely on technical analysis, others rely on breaking news and many
employ some combination of the two. But they all purport to provide information
that leads to favorable trading opportunities. Signal sellers usually charge a
daily, weekly or monthly fee for their services.
Some
analysts propose that many or even most signal sellers are scam artists. A
frequent criticism is that if it were really possible to use a system to beat
the market, why would the individual or firm that has this information make it
widely available? Wouldn't it make more sense to use this incredible signaling
system to make huge profits?
Other
analysts distinguish between known scammers and more reputable information
sources such as Metatrader, that offer a well-thought-out signaling service.
Behind
these opposing views lies a larger difference of opinion about whether anyone
can predict the next move in a trading market. This fundamental disagreement
won't be settled any time soon. Nobel Prize-winning Economist Eugene Fama
proposes in his well-regarded Efficient Market Hypothesis that finding these
kinds of momentary market advantages really isn't possible.
His
economist colleague, Robert Shiller, also a Nobel Prize winner, believes
differently, citing evidence that investor sentiment creates booms and busts
that can provide investment and trading opportunities.
The
best way to determine if a signal seller can benefit you is to open a paper
money or practice trading account with one of the better-known forex brokers.
Be patient, and eventually, you'll determine whether predictive signaling works
for you or doesn't.
02
Phony Forex Investment Management Funds
In
the world of investing, outrageous claims are the surest sign of potential
fraud
In
the past few years, forex management funds have proliferated. Most of these, if
not all, are scams. They offer an investor the "opportunity" to have
his forex trades managed by highly-skilled forex traders who can offer
outstanding market returns in return for a share of the profits.
The
problem is, this "management" offer requires the investor to give up
control over his money and to hand it to someone he knows little about other
than the hyped-up and often completely false record of success available on the
scammer's website and brochures.
The
investor often ends up getting nothing, while the scammer uses investors' funds
to buy yachts and private islands.
A
good rule of thumb in the forex market, as with other investments, is that if
it sounds almost too good to be true, such as annual returns of more than 100
percent, for example, it's almost certainly a scam.
03
Dishonest Brokers
Trader
watching stocks crash on screen
Although the forex market is not entirely
unregulated, it has no central regulating authority. The forex spot market is
completely unregulated and accounts for the majority of trades. Unsurprisingly,
some forex brokers do not deal fairly with their customers and, in some
instances, defraud them.
You
have two ways to avoid bad brokers. Before engaging a forex broker, look the
brokerage up on a website that identifies dishonest forex brokers. Better yet,
trade with a broker that also handles other stock market trades and is subject
to SEC and FINRA oversight. While the forex trade itself may be unregulated, no
broker subject to such oversight would risk its license for other securities by
defrauding its forex customers.


