Available vacancies at SHELL Malaysia
Position
1. Principal Processing Geophysicist
2. Head of Acquisition & Processing
3. Snr Operations Geophysicist
4. Principal QI Geophysicist
5. Process Safety Section Head
6. Trainee Operation Technician
7. Marine Technical Assistant
8. Operating Integrity Coach
9. Deputy of Pipeline integrity team lead
10. Technology Management and Deployment Lead
11. Geophysical Data Consultant
12. Technologist – Gas & Utilities
13. NGO & Stakeholder Relations Advisor
14. Project Quality Engineer
15. Senior Contracts Engineer
16. Senior Regional Geologist
17. Senior Production Geologist
18. Country Reserves Focal Point & HCM Lead
19. Disc Lead Prod Technology (FEPD)
20. Reservoir Engineer
21. Reservoir Engineering Consultant
22. Logistics Systems Specialist
23. Wells Position Upstream
24. Due Diligence Investigator
25. Key Account Manager – Government Sector
26. Office-based Account Manager – Government Sector
Closing date 31 October 2013
Maklumat lanjut dan permohonan klik sini
Welcome to Kerja Kosong Online 2016
Daily Job Vacancies UPDATE!!!.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(66)
-
▼
October
(24)
- KERJA KOSONG PETRONAS 2014
- KERJA KOSONG SKMM 2014
- KERJA KOSONG PUBLIC BANK 2014
- KERJA KOSONG BANK ISLAM MALAYSIA 2014
- KERJA KOSONG MAYBANK 2014
- KERJA KOSONG AGROBANK 2014
- KERJA KOSONG PROTON 2014
- KERJA KOSONG PENGURUSAN ASET AIR BERHAD 2014
- KERJA KOSONG FELDA GLOBAL 2014
- KERJA KOSONG UITM 2014
- KERJA KOSONG KEMENTERIAN WILAYAH PERSEKUTUAN 2014
- KERJA KOSONG TEKUN NASIONAL 2014
- KERJA KOSONG SPAD 2014
- KERJA KOSONG PPUKM 2014
- KERJA KOSONG POS MALAYSIA 2014
- KERJA KOSONG UPSI 2014
- KERJA KOSONG PIDM 2014
- KERJA KOSONG UKM 2014
- KERJA KOSONG LEMBAGA LADA MALAYSIA 2014
- KERJA KOSONG SHELL 2014
- KERJA KOSONG KERAJAAN NEGERI MELAKA 2014
- KERJA KOSONG KEMENTERIAN KESIHATAN MALAYSIA 2014
- KERJA KOSONG BANK RAKYAT 2014
- KERJA KOSONG KEMENTERIAN PERTAHANAN 2014
-
▼
October
(24)
How Forex Brokers Work
Like any other business in the history of business, your broker’s raison d’etre, is to make as big a profit as possible. There are about as many ways to go about this as there are brokers. For those who are in it for the long haul, however, it is generally best to adopt a set of practices which are deemed fair by their clients: certain boundaries are set, and operating beyond them can cost a brokerage its reputation, and along with it its clients. Straying outside these boundaries, therefore, is not considered as being in line with the long term goals of the business. How strictly these boundaries are enforced, especially when there is little chance of clients ever even becoming aware of any transgression, again varies from business to business. For the sake of simplicity, in this article we assume that everyone in the business is squeaky clean, as if every client could peek into the broker’s back office at any time and dissect every trade. This is obviously not the case, and many brokers do take advantage of this opaqueness, but the details of that are best left for another discussion.
So without further ado, let’s get into the details of how forex brokers function. Somewhat removed from the top-tier interbank market, retail forex brokers are there to provide a service that would otherwise not be available, that is, giving an investor with a $10,000 bankroll the chance to speculate in the up-until-recently very exclusive forex market. There are generally considered to be 2 types of brokers providing access at the retail level: Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs) and Market Makers. ECNs are generally somewhat more exclusive, requiring larger deposits to get started, but are seen as providing more direct access to the interbank market. As we will see, there are certainly advantages to this, but some disadvantages as well. Market makers, on the other hand are more often than not, the counter party to their clients’ trades, creating somewhat of a conflict of interest, whereas ECNs profit from commission fees charged directly to the clients, regardless of the result of any trade, they are seen as being completely impartial – an ECN has no incentive for a client to lose money. In fact, one could argue that an ECN stands to profit more if a client is successful, meaning that s/he will stay around longer and they will be able to collect more commission fees from them. A market maker, on the other hand, being the counterparty to a client’s trade, makes money if the client loses money, providing an incentive for some shady practices, particularly in an unregulated market. The extent to which this happens varies among individual brokers. There are also some benefits to trading with a market maker (see our ECNs vs. Market Makers article) Some brokers also provide a service that doesn’t quite fit into either category – they route different orders differently, depending on complex algorithms, or on a dealing desk, that analyze each order and attempt to fill it in the way that will be most beneficial to the broker’s bottom line. They can offset some client orders against one another, effectively creating an in-house market, they can choose to be the counterparty to a client’s trade (trade “against” the client), or they can offset their position with a hedge through a higher-tier counterparty. Note that the market maker is mainly concerned with managing its net exposure, and NOT with any single individual’s trades. They are NOT gunning for your stop losses specifically, but may be gunning for clusters of stops.
So without further ado, let’s get into the details of how forex brokers function. Somewhat removed from the top-tier interbank market, retail forex brokers are there to provide a service that would otherwise not be available, that is, giving an investor with a $10,000 bankroll the chance to speculate in the up-until-recently very exclusive forex market. There are generally considered to be 2 types of brokers providing access at the retail level: Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs) and Market Makers. ECNs are generally somewhat more exclusive, requiring larger deposits to get started, but are seen as providing more direct access to the interbank market. As we will see, there are certainly advantages to this, but some disadvantages as well. Market makers, on the other hand are more often than not, the counter party to their clients’ trades, creating somewhat of a conflict of interest, whereas ECNs profit from commission fees charged directly to the clients, regardless of the result of any trade, they are seen as being completely impartial – an ECN has no incentive for a client to lose money. In fact, one could argue that an ECN stands to profit more if a client is successful, meaning that s/he will stay around longer and they will be able to collect more commission fees from them. A market maker, on the other hand, being the counterparty to a client’s trade, makes money if the client loses money, providing an incentive for some shady practices, particularly in an unregulated market. The extent to which this happens varies among individual brokers. There are also some benefits to trading with a market maker (see our ECNs vs. Market Makers article) Some brokers also provide a service that doesn’t quite fit into either category – they route different orders differently, depending on complex algorithms, or on a dealing desk, that analyze each order and attempt to fill it in the way that will be most beneficial to the broker’s bottom line. They can offset some client orders against one another, effectively creating an in-house market, they can choose to be the counterparty to a client’s trade (trade “against” the client), or they can offset their position with a hedge through a higher-tier counterparty. Note that the market maker is mainly concerned with managing its net exposure, and NOT with any single individual’s trades. They are NOT gunning for your stop losses specifically, but may be gunning for clusters of stops.