General Information& Regulation
FPG Securities Co., Ltd., a securities company, provides financial advisory and arrangement services. It serves primarily corporate clients. FPG Securities Co., Ltd. was formerly known as FinTech Partners, Inc. and changed its name in October 2005. The company was founded in 2004 and is based in Tokyo, Japan. As of March 1, 2013, FPG Securities Co., Ltd. operates as a subsidiary of Financial Products Group Co., Ltd. It is regulated by Financial Services Agency(Regulatory No. 8010401054347).
Core Business
FPG Securities Co., Ltd. offers services ranging from consultation and financial/management strategy preposition to funds procurement services through structured finance techniques.
Commission
When trading financial instruments, customers may need to pay commissions and other fees (for example, in stock transactions, brokerage commissions and consumption taxes are paid at the commission rate agreed in advance; in investment trust transactions, sales commissions, trust fees, and other expenses stipulated for each period are paid). In the case of investment trust transactions, it may be necessary to pay sales expenses, trust expenses, and other expenses stipulated for each period.
Margin
In the case of derivatives transactions, customers may be required to pay margin, the amount of which will be determined by agreement; customers may also be required to pay additional margin (the ratio of transaction amount to margin, etc. is currently unclear). The transaction amount may exceed the deposit amount (the ratio of the transaction amount to the deposit amount cannot be calculated at the moment). As the type of transaction varies, there may be a difference between the selling price and the buying price stipulated in Article 16, Paragraph 1, Item 6 of the Implementation Regulations of the Financial Commodity Exchange Law.
Tech Stack
The technologies that are used by FPG Securities are: WebARENA, Google Analytics, Apache HTTP Server, G Suite, Gmail for business and PHP.
FPG Securities Risk
All financial instruments have specific risks associated with them and may result in significant losses or payment obligations due to changes in domestic and international political, economic and financial conditions, market conditions such as exchange rates, stock markets, commodity markets, real estate markets and interest rate levels, as well as changes in the creditworthiness of the issuer and other indexed underlying assets.