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<p>Banks and large financial institutions (often called institutional traders) use strategies that are very different from retail traders. They focus on long-term stability, low-risk profits, arbitrage, and exploiting inefficiencies, rather than guessing market direction.</p><p id="isPasted"><strong>Market-Making (Providing Liquidity)</strong></p><p>Banks frequently act as market makers:</p><ul><li>They quote buy and sell prices constantly.</li><li>They earn money from the spread (difference between buy and sell).</li><li>They profit even if the market moves sideways.</li></ul><p>Example:</p><p>Buy at 1.2000 → Sell at 1.2002</p><p>Profit = 2 pips * millions = big profit.</p><p>This is one of the most reliable sources of income for banks.</p><p><br></p><p id="isPasted"><strong>Arbitrage Strategies …</strong></p>