Banking and Finance  » DxInOne 101: The Two Ways You Make Money in the DxInOne

DxInOne 101: The Two Ways You Make Money in the DxInOne

Article:

From Mr E's Free DxInOne Tutorial

(http://www.surfatmy.com/dx101.htm). How You Make Money in

Dxinone

There are two ways DxinOne provides portfolio growth that is far

superior to traditional investment programs. They are as follows:

1- By providing the ability to make multiple 'virtual' deposits

based on an ongoing "Line of Credit" Note Oct 14 - after reading

this section, I would advise you to go to Click Here to go a

further discussion on this matter.

2- By providing daily [vs. yearly] compounding growth on your

balance.

Let's start with the second item.

Imagine you are one of those people who actually saves money.

How is this most commonly accomplished? What you do, usually, is

take some of your hard earned money to your local bank and

deposit it in a retirement or savings account. There your

deposit collects interest, usually based in yearly gains, like

3% or 4% interest a year [and this is high-end these days, in

mid 2005].

Maybe you make one deposit to your savings plan a year. Maybe

one deposit a month (for 12 a year) or if you're really good,

you might make a deposit to your savings every paycheque, like

every two weeks. In the first case you make one deposit a year,

in the second case you make twelve, and the third case, you make

about twenty-five over the course of the year.

But what if you could make about DxInOne0 deposits a year? This

is exactly what DxInOne allows for - potentially - and they

literally give you the other 329. In the DxInOne system, if you

make a deposit, of say fifty dollars, you are entitled to make

other deposits on the following days based on a percentage of

your original fifty dollar deposit.

You may think of those later deposits as "Lines of Credit" that

are made available to you daily [- and they are Lines of Credit

that you don't have to pay back!] Because of this, I was able to

deposit another thirty-seven dollars into my account on Day 2,

another twenty-seven on Day 3, and twenty-one on Day 4. When

combined with my original deposit of $50, what this means is

that by the end of Day 4, my balance had risen to $135! By the

fourth day in Dx my return has already risen to $135, for a

growth factor of not 4%,but 170%... By Day 24 it was up to $360.

Keep in mind that in our traditional scenario, the $50 deposited

would rise to only $52 after one year at 4% return by year's

end, which is probably more than you could get anywhere in

The author (who when online prefers going by the handle Mr. E)...

Summer 2005. So, this is the first thing that makes the DxInOne

portfolio opportunity truly extraordinary, a single deposit

leads to many, many others.

In DxInOne jargon, your deposit total is known as your TDV,

which means total digot value. Digots are DxInOne's unit of

currency by the way, more on that later. Think of your DxInOne

TDV as 'virtual equity'.

Because you can make so many deposits, your balance can quickly

boom to astronomical levels that pay huge sums of real money

daily.

Now, Let's look at the other way you make money with DxInOne.

This is the first item listed above.

Remember that at our bank our single $50 grew to $52 at years

end by gaining 4%?

With Dx, your overnight growth historically averages 0.3% -

that's daily.

With 4% per year, you get one instance of compounding a year.

With Dx, you get 365 instances of compounding at 0.3%.

The growth curve here is staggering.

If our $50 deposit grows by 0.3 a day, a year later it is worth

$149, not $54 dollars. It would take several decades for a

traditional account paying 4% to build to $149.

From this we can see that even this second way of making money

with DxInOne is vastly superior to what the traditional consumer

market is offering.

THE REALITY WITH DXINONE IN LATE 2005

When I first signed on to DxInOne, everybody was not only

earning these overnight gains, but they were also placing

'virtual deposits' to the maximum possible extent allowed for by

the DxInOne system. Then in July 2005 DxInOne abruptly imposed

restrictions on people's ability to do this (in order to prevent

hyper-inflation).

This turned out to be the first of several changes intended to

curb portfolio growth. The effect this has had is that now

people are making far less of these 'virtual deposits' than they

did before.

The reason why people are curtailing their portfolio growth is

because each month a portfolio owner is required to pay fees

that are a direct measure of their TDV or portfolio balance. In

theory, these fees can generally be paid from within a portfolio

balance's monthly growth. (That is, if your balance grows by

$1,000 in a given month, your fees will be less than this,

leaving you with a net profit.)

In order to pay your fees from within your account's growth, you

now must move the required funds out of the system and then back

in by the end of the month, when the fees are due. This,

unfortunately, is not so easily accomplished at this time.

The current problem boils down to liquidity, which refers to a

system's ability to provide cash as soon as you want it. (ATM's

have better liquidity than banks because you can walk right up

and get your cash any day of the week. Banks are closed on

weekends, meaning it is impossible to get your cash out of the

system on those days.)

These days it is taking several weeks to a month or two to pull

your money out of DxInOne, whereas in normal times it generally

takes anywhere from a few hours to a few days. Therefore, if you

can't cycle your DxInOne "fee money" out and back into the

system before fees are due, you need to pay the fees out of

pocket. Predictably, it doesn't take any time to move 'new'

money into DxInOne So, managing portfolio growth becomes a

function of self-regulation. While overnight growth is virtually

guaranteed with DxInOne, it is up to the client to make sure

that one takes care to not overextend when it comes to making

those 'virtual' deposits.

Next Chapter: Moving your money through the Dx System

(http://dx101_movemoney.htm )

The author (who when online prefers going by the handle Mr. E)

has just put out a site called "Surf At My Dot Com -

http://www.surfatmy.com -" which he hopes will evolve to include

a listing of "unique and/or very cool" sites found on the Net.

Thus far Mr E has found three places that meet his stringent

qualifications, all in the realm of online money making.

This is no coincidence.

While Mr E is most enthusiastic about what he's found so far,

he feels (at the moment anyway) that this is neither the time

nor place for flagrant self promotion. To that end he wishes to

refer you to www.surfatmy.com .

However Mr. E does want it to be known that he's much more than

a materialist.

To this end he would welcome any and all suggestions about

sites of quality pertaining to areas other than money - and the

usual exclusions do apply... ;)

About the author:

Whether or not DxInOne takes over the world of E-Currency

Exchange remains to be seen, but one thing is for sure: The

Company is attracting attention in ever-increasing numbers. This

chapter, taken from Mr E's free DxInOne tutorial, explains how

one makes money in DxInOne's most fundamental "Portfolio"

system.