NEW YORK, NY, February 06, 2011 (Press-News.org) Banc De Binary (www.bbinary.com) is riding high, with a company value that has nearly tripled within the past year. As the largest binary options investment house prepares to announce its new platform additions later this month we asked two analysts to weigh in on whether the company can make good on the market's enthusiastic expectations. Here's what they had to say:
Greg Hopkins, Economist, WebValue Experts: "Banc De Binary has taken the online trading field past its given potential. When we sat with the company's board about a year ago, we figured it would eat away at the online forex trading field. We never expected such a high demand so quickly. Just look at the sites Alexa ranking and traffic. Its enormous! I would probably expect the company to IPO within the next two years at a nice level."
Daniel Lee, Technology Analyst, InvoTrade Singapore: "From what I can tell, Banc De Binary has demonstrated in its use of technology the vast potential of online binary options trading. Applying state of the art technology to the financial world has reflected the true value of this industry, combining two major fields that continue to grow exponentially. We are beginning to see signs of binary option trading challenging the traditional forex companies and possibly replacing them in the near future."
After hearing from the experts, we wanted to see what Banc De Binary's own CEO had to say about the increasing demand for binary options, its impact on forex trading, and how these upcoming platform additions will affect and perhaps increase their stronghold on the online trading market. We met up with Mr. Laurent after an international finance conference in London.
Oren Laurent, CEO, Banc De Binary: "When we began receiving a huge demand for binary options, we were not shocked at all. We expected the industry to grow and we always strive to lead it. We still believe the industry is still very fresh and untapped, so we continue to expand and recruit the best brokers and analysts we can. The binary option movement has begun. Clients are asking for the safer, easier, and more lucrative product - and the forex companies are struggling to keep up with demand."
Banc De Binary is a private online bank allowing trades to safely trade binary options 24/7 with a personal private broker. For more information please call: 1800 656 6163 or visit www.bbinary.com.
Online Market Experts: "Binary Options to Replace Online Forex Trading Within the Next Two Years"
Banc De Binary CEO: "The binary option movement has begun. Clients are asking for the safer, easier, and more lucrative product - and the forex companies are struggling to keep up with demand."
2011-02-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Seeing the light: Berkeley Lab scientists bring plasmonic nanofields into focus
2011-02-05
In typical plasmonic devices, electromagnetic waves crowd into tiny metal structures, concentrating energy into nanoscale dimensions. Due to coupling of electronics and photonics in these metal nanostructures, plasmonic devices could be harnessed for high-speed data transmission or ultrafast detector arrays. However, studying plasmonic fields in nanoscale devices presents a real roadblock for scientists, as examining these structures inherently alters their behavior.
"Whether you use a laser or a light bulb, the wavelength of light is still too large to study plasmonic ...
Arctic fisheries' catches 75 times higher than previous reports: UBC research
2011-02-05
University of British Columbia researchers estimate that fisheries catches in the Arctic totaled 950,000 tonnes from 1950 to 2006, almost 75 times the amount reported to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) during this period.
Led by Prof. Daniel Pauly, the research team from UBC's Fisheries Centre and Dept. of Earth and Ocean Sciences reconstructed fisheries catch data from various sources – including limited governmental reports and anthropological records of indigenous population activities – for FAO's Fisheries Statistical Area 18, which covers ...
Blood-clotting protein linked to cancer and septicemia
2011-02-05
In our not-so-distant evolutionary past, stress often meant imminent danger, and the risk of blood loss, so part of our body's stress response is to stock-pile blood-clotting factors. Scientists in the Molecular Medicine Partnership Unit (MMPU), a collaboration between the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, and the University of Heidelberg Medical Centre, have discovered how stressed cells boost the production of the key blood-clotting factor, thrombin. Their work, published today in Molecular Cell, shows how cancer cells may be taking ...
Host or foreign -- the body's frontline defense mechanism understood
2011-02-05
This week, the highly-respected US Academy of Sciences journal (PNAS) published an article describing how the first line of defence of the human immune system distinguishes between microbes and the body's own structures. The basis of this recognition mechanism has been unclear since the key protein components were discovered over 30 years ago – and has now finally been cracked by a collaboration between high-level research groups at the University of Helsinki, Finland.
When a microbe has infected us, the first defence mechanism that attacks it is a protein-based marking ...
Review confirms benefits of outdoor exercise
2011-02-05
A systematic review carried out by a team at the Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry has analysed existing studies and concluded that there are benefits to mental and physical well-being from taking exercise in the natural environment. Their findings are published in the leading research journal Environmental Science and Technology today, 4th February 2011.
The research team, supported by the NIHR Peninsula Collaboration in Leadership for Applied Health Research and Care (PenCLAHRC, part of the NIHR family of health and research initiatives) in collaboration with ...
Petrol stations pollute their immediate surroundings
2011-02-05
In Spain it is relatively common to come across petrol stations surrounded by houses, particularly in urban areas. Researchers from the University of Murcia (UM) have studied the effects of contamination at petrol stations that is potentially harmful to health, which can be noted in buildings less than 100 metres from the service stations.
"Some airborne organic compounds – such as benzene, which increases the risk of cancer – have been recorded at petrol stations at levels above the average levels for urban areas where traffic is the primary source of emission", Marta ...
Scientific research reveals brain alterations linking omega 3 deficit with depression
2011-02-05
The link between deficits of omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acids (AGPO-3) and the onset of depressive disorders is not new in the medical field. However, what has not been known until now is the brain mechanism by which diet can condition mental health to a certain extent. Research undertaken by scientists in Bordeaux (France) and at the Faculty of Medicine and Odontology of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) and published in Nature Neuroscience, provides new clues to understanding this phenomenon.
The name of the research work, 'Omega-3 nutritional deficiencies ...
New images show cloud exploding from Sun ripples like clouds on Earth
2011-02-05
Physicists, led by a researcher at the University of Warwick, studying new images of clouds of material exploding from the Sun have spotted instabilities forming in that exploding cloud that are similar to those seen in clouds in Earth's atmosphere.
These results could greatly assist physicists trying to understand and predict our Solar System's "weather".
The researchers, led by of the Centre for Fusion Space and Astrophysics, at the University of Warwick's Department of Physics, made their discovery when examining new images of clouds of material exploding from ...
Sugar boost for Oxfordshire scientists who are planning ahead for future medicines
2011-02-05
Scientists continuing to investigate a 50 year mystery have discovered another vital clue that could help pave the way for improved medicines. The results feature in a special edition of Nature celebrating the International Year of Chemistry. The findings reveal an important insight into the way carbohydrates (sugars) bond and this will influence the way drugs are designed in the future.
Using specialist laser equipment from the EPSRC-funded Laser Loan Pool managed by STFC's Central Laser Facility, Professors John Simons and Ben Davis together with co-workers from the ...
Tipping points -- the future of the pharmaceutical industry
2011-02-05
This declining trend is blamed on a failure of innovative drive in the industry, failure of the UK to support basic research, failure of venture capital to invest in early stage research, or failure of the Health Service to provide smart procurement.
A research centre funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) shows that radical reform of the drugs industry regulatory system must be an important part of the solution to ensure a productive and profitable pharmaceutical sector, both globally and in the UK.
Researchers from the ESRC's Innogen centre have ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Mayo Clinic researchers use AI to predict patient falls based on core density in middle age
Moffitt study develops new tool to predict how cancer evolves
National Multiple Sclerosis Society awards Dr. Manuel A. Friese the 2025 Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research
PBM profits obscured by mergers and accounting practices, USC Schaeffer white paper shows
Breath carries clues to gut microbiome health
New study links altered cellular states to brain structure
Palaeontology: Ancient giant kangaroos could hop to it when they needed to
Decoded: How cancer cells protect themselves from the immune system
ISSCR develops roadmap to accelerate pluripotent stem cell-derived therapies to patients
New study shows gut microbiota directly regulates intestinal stem cell aging
Leading cancer deaths in people younger than 50 years
Rural hospital bypass by patients with commercial health insurance
Jumping giants: Fossils show giant prehistoric kangaroos could still hop
Missing Medicare data alters hospital penalties, study finds
Experimental therapy targets cancer’s bodyguards, turning foe to friend to eliminate tumors
Discovery illuminates how inflammatory bowel disease promotes colorectal cancer
Quality and quantity? The clinical significance of myosteatosis in various liver diseases
Expert consensus on clinical applications of fecal microbiota transplantation for chronic liver disease (2025 edition)
Insilico Medicine to present three abstracts at the 2026 Crohn’s & Colitis Congress highlighting clinical, preclinical safety, and efficacy data for ISM5411, a novel gut-restricted PHD1/2 inhibitor fo
New imaging technology detects early signs of heart disease through the skin
Resurrected ancient enzyme offers new window into early Earth and the search for life beyond it
People with obesity may have a higher risk of dementia
Insilico Medicine launches science MMAI gym to train frontier LLMs into pharmaceutical-grade scientific engines
5 pre-conference symposia scheduled ahead of International Stroke Conference 2026
To explain or not? Need for AI transparency depends on user expectation
Global prevalence, temporal trends, and associated mortality of bacterial infections in patients with liver cirrhosis
Scientists discover why some Central Pacific El Niños die quickly while others linger for years
CNU research explains how boosting consumer trust unlocks the $4 billion market for retired EV batteries
Reimagining proprioception: when biology meets technology
Chungnam National University study finds climate adaptation can ease migration pressures in Africa
[Press-News.org] Online Market Experts: "Binary Options to Replace Online Forex Trading Within the Next Two Years"Banc De Binary CEO: "The binary option movement has begun. Clients are asking for the safer, easier, and more lucrative product - and the forex companies are struggling to keep up with demand."


