Order Routing Destinations

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Registered Firms Dealing in Securities in The Bahamas

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Updated List, May 2024:

  1. Acetop Global Markets Limited

  2. ActivTrades Corp.

  3. Alliance Investment Management Ltd.

  4. AlpacaX Securities Ltd.

  5. Alternative Investment Solutions Ltd.

  6. Axmin Capital Ltd.

  7. Banca del Sempione (Overseas) Ltd.

  8. Banco Santander International SA

  9. BankPro Limited

  10. Bank J. Safra Sarasin (Bahamas) Ltd.

  11. Blackwell Global Investments Limited

  12. Britannia Bank & Trust Ltd.

  13. Britannia Securities Limited

  14. Capital Index (Global) Limited

  15. Capital Union Bank

  16. CBH Bahamas Ltd.

  17. CF Group Company Limited

  18. CFAL Securities Ltd.

  19. Coralisle Pension Services (Bahamas) Limited

  20. Core Capital Partners Ltd.

  21. Corner Bank (Overseas) Limited

  22. Credit Suisse AG, Nassau Branch

  23. Credit Suisse Brazil (Bahamas) Limited

  24. Dartley Securities Limited

  25. Deltec Bank & Trust Ltd.

  26. Deltec Securites Ltd.

  27. EFG Bank & Trust (Bahamas) Ltd.

  28. Eightcap Global Limited

  29. Elco Securities Limited

  30. Equity Bank Bahamas Limited

  31. EuroBanco Bank Limited

  32. First Overseas Bank Limited

  33. FirstCaribbean International Bank (Bahamas) Limited

  34. FirstCaribbean International Trust Company (Bahamas) Limited

  35. First Prudential Markets (Global) Ltd.

  36. Fusion Markets Ltd.

  37. FxPro Global Markets Ltd.

  38. Gonet Bank & Trust Limited

  39. High Tech Invest Limited

  40. IC Markets Ltd.

  41. Inteligo Bank Ltd.

  42. ITG Bahamas Inc.

  43. IX Capital Group Limited

  44. Kirkoswald Global Management Services Ltd.

  45. LCG Capital Markets Limited

  46. Leno Corporate Services Limited

  47. Levant Securities Ltd.

  48. LOM Financial (Bahamas) Limited

  49. Lombard Odier & Cie (Bahamas) Limited

  50. Lydda Capital Ltd.

  51. Macro Bank Limited

  52. MMG Bank & Trust Ltd.

  53. Mosaic Financial Ltd.

  54. Oracle Capital Advisors Ltd.

  55. Palm Global Capital Ltd (Formerly Destek Global Limited)

  56. Pepperstone Markets Limited

  57. Pictet Bank & Trust Limited

  58. Plotio Global Financial Limited

  59. PLUS500BHS Ltd

  60. Prex Markets Limited

  61. Providence Advisors Limited

  62. Quantfury Trading Limited

  63. RBC Dominion Securities (Global) Limited

  64. Renhe Financial Services Limited

  65. RF Bank & Trust (Bahamas) Limited

  66. Scotiabank (Bahamas) Limited

  67. Seacapital Ltd.

  68. ST Global Markets Ltd.

  69. Techfin Markets Limited

  70. The Bank of Nova Scotia Trust Company (Bahamas) Ltd.

  71. The Private Trust Corporation Limited

  72. The Winterbotham Trust Company Limited

  73. Toredo Ltd.

  74. Trade Nation Ltd.

  75. TradeZero Inc.

  76. UCAP Bahamas Limited

  77. WG Capital Ltd. (GENG, Wen)

Movies Watched -- The Gift (2015)

Added on by C. Maoxian.

108 minute running time so just 8 minutes too long, but I liked this one a lot… it was a re-watch for me. A W.D.S. By Movie (written, directed, and starring the same guy) … Edgerton is a talented Australian and the beautiful Rebecca Hall is British … American Jason Bateman plays a great scumbag yuppie … this was well-made and a good thriller. Green-go! John Farr recommends it too.

And I want to make crazy, weird love to you, with my creepy, with my creepy little pee-pee pleasey-weasy.

Movies Watched -- Zone of Interest (2023)

Added on by C. Maoxian.

In German. 105 minute running time so a good length. I really liked Glazer’s previous movies, Sexy Beast and Under the Skin, so I was excited to see this Holocaust movie centered on the commandant of Auschwitz and his family. Unfortunately it didn’t work, it was too abstracted, too art-house.

Yes, I know Glazer wanted to keep the violence off screen and just hint at it with constant background gunshots and yelling and trains chugging and furnaces roaring and chimneys billowing smoke. But that got repetitive and quickly lost its effect.

Anyone who has seen Son of Saul knows that that was a Holocaust movie done the right way … it is breathtaking and a must-see. Zone of Interest can’t hold a candle to it.

Mick LaSalle was right to say: “it’s less a movie than a misguided work of conceptual art.”

Dick Brody correctly called Zone of Interest “an extreme form of Holokitsch.”

I agree with Manohla Dargis who says the movie is “a hollow, self-aggrandizing art-film exercise.”

And I’ll give the final word to Nicolas Rapold: “It must be said that the banality of the Höss family and the bureaucracy of genocide are no revelation, and there’s something wrongheaded in Glazer’s cold replication of their murderous perspective and peekaboo roundabout glimpses of the Nazi atrocity.”

I could have my husband spread your ashes across the fields of Babice.

Zippo Armor Toker Chips Design, No. 46144

Added on by C. Maoxian.

High-polish green, two-sided, Deep Carve … I like the dollar signs, but this simple pot leaf design makes it a pass. Spring 2024 release. $100. I did buy the Map Design in high-polish green, and also did buy No. 29834, “Piled High,” a marijuana motif design that I found more pleasing. I don’t buy every Zippo Armor that comes out; I only buy the ones that I really like.

65 Quintessential Things

Added on by C. Maoxian.

I was watching an interview with Jerry Seinfeld and he mentioned a book called “Quintessence,” so I borrowed a copy through inter-library loan. It was written by Betty Cornfeld and Owen Edwards (whom I assume is gay) and published in 1983. Edwards writes: “this is a book about … things that offer more to us than we specifically ask of them and to which we respond more strongly than is easily explained.”

What follows is their list of 65 quintessential things from over forty years ago … it’s interesting to see which ones are still around:

  1. The Ace Comb

  2. The American Express Card

  3. Barnum’s Animal Crackers (recipe has changed since my youth, now awful)

  4. Bass Weejun Loafers

  5. Bayer Aspirin

  6. The Brown Paper Bag

  7. Budweiser Beer

  8. Camel Cigarettes

  9. Campbell’s Tomato Soup (1200 mg of salt, 20 g added sugar per can)

  10. Cartier Santos Watch

  11. The Checker Cab

  12. The Cigarette Hawk Speedboat

  13. Coca-Cola (in glass bottle)

  14. Coppertone Suntan Lotion

  15. Crayola Crayons (big box no longer has built-in sharpener)

  16. Dom Perignon Champagne

  17. El Bubble Bubblegum Cigar (now made by Tootsie Roll, another “quintessential” candy one could argue)

  18. The English Bull Terrier

  19. The Faber Mongol #2 Pencil (made in Mexico now)

  20. Fox's U-Bet Chocolate Syrup (never heard of it)

  21. Frederick's of Hollywood Lingerie (multiple Chapter 11 bankruptcies)

  22. The Frisbee Flying Saucer

  23. The Ghurka Express Bag No. 2 ($2,695)

  24. The Goodyear Blimp

  25. Green Giant Peas (no longer available in a can?)

  26. The Hamilton Beach Model 936 Drink Mixer (pdf of old user manual)

  27. The Harley-Davidson ElectraGlide Motorcycle ($27,000)

  28. Heinz Ketchup (in glass bottle) (squeeze bottle a great leap forward)

  29. The Hershey's Chocolate Kiss (awful chocolate, but I agree the foil packaging with tail is genius)

  30. Honey Bear (hard to find example with nipple on head)

  31. Ivory Soap

  32. Jockey Briefs (purely a boxer briefs man now)

  33. Johnson's Baby Powder (discontinued, $9 billion lawsuit settlement (cancer))

  34. Keds High-top Sneakers (not Converse?)

  35. Kleenex Tissues

  36. The L.L. Bean Maine Hunting Boot (only good if lined)

  37. Lacoste Polo Shirt (early status symbol, later overtaken by Liftshitz polo pony)

  38. LePage's Mucilage (looks like it’s no longer made)

  39. Levi's Jeans 

  40. The Louisville Slugger Bat (good thing for home defense)

  41. M&M's Chocolate Candies (peanut-filled was a good brand extension, peanut butter was pushing it)

  42. The Märklin Electric HO Gauge Model Trains (expensive hobby for adults only)

  43. The Martini (60 ml gin and 10 ml dry vermouth)

  44. The Milk-Bone Dog Biscuit

  45. Monopoly Board Game (awful game when you think about it)

  46. The Mont Blanc Diplomat Pen (does anyone use a fountain pen now?)

  47. Nathan's Famous Hot Dog (never had one)

  48. Ohio Blue Tip Matches (now owned by Diamond?)

  49. Oil Can

  50. The Oreo Cookie (authors lament advent of “Double Stuf” which ruins the Oreo’s quintessence, they say)

  51. The Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwich (rarely had one of these as a kid, considered a great luxury junk food)

  52. The Polaroid SX-70 Camera (sold out of course)

  53. Ray-Ban Sunglasses (Aviator Classic the pair they mean)

  54. Silly Putty (played with as a kid, great stuff, esp. the smell)

  55. The Slinky (played with as a kid)

  56. The Spalding Rubber Ball (looks like Spalding no longer makes these)

  57. Steiff Teddy Bears (the ancient Steiff teddy bears in my life were too valuable to play with and therefore useless to me)

  58. The Steinway Piano

  59. The Stetson Hat

  60. The Swiss Army Knife (Victorinox sole manufacturer now?)

  61. Timex Mercury 20521 Watch (the 20521 is no longer made, but I’ve linked to the Marlin, which is a re-issue that appeals to vintage lovers)

  62. Tupperware Containers (not a fan of plastic food storage except for the lids)

  63. The Volkswagen Beetle Car (we had one when I was a kid)

  64. Wedgwood Plain White Bone China (plain white a little boring, but they have a point)

  65. The Zippo Lighter (I collect Zippo Armor lighters, love them)


Unfortunate typo of the author’s name on the cover page … Cornfeld not “Cornfield”

Movies Watched -- The Circle (2000)

Added on by C. Maoxian.

In Persian. 87 minute running time so the perfect length. Very interestingly constructed movie with the story shifting seamlessly from one character to the next over the course of a day … clever … the conclusion is I’m darned glad that I’m not a woman in Iran … this is feminism at its best … Jafar Panahi worked with Abbas Kiarostami (my favorite Iranian filmmaker) and clearly learned a lot … this is a green-go, but it ain’t a feel-good picture. John Farr also recommends it.

27 Remaining Car Models You Can Get with Stick Shift

Added on by C. Maoxian.
  1. Aston Martin Valour  $1,500,000

  2. Porsche 911  $117,000

  3. Cadillac CT5-V Blackwing  $96,000

  4. BMW M4  $80,275

  5. Lotus Emira  $77,100

  6. BMW M3  $76,995

  7. Porsche 718  $69,950

  8. BMW M2  $64,195

  9. Cadillac CT4-V Blackwing  $62,890

  10. Toyota GR Supra  $47,535

  11. Nissan Z  $44,110

  12. Toyota GR Corolla  $37,595

  13. Hyundai Elantra N  $34,850

  14. Volkswagen Golf  $34,000

  15. Subaru WRX  $33,855

  16. Ford Mustang  $33,000

  17. Acura Integra  $32,995

  18. Chevrolet Camaro  $32,495

  19. Subaru BRZ  $31,315

  20. Toyota GR86  $30,395

  21. Mazda MX-5 Miata  $30,170

  22. Mini Hardtop and Convertible  $29,945

  23. Honda Civic  $26,000

  24. Mazda 3  $25,355

  25. Volkswagen Jetta  $22,660

  26. Kia Forte  $21,145

  27. Nissan Versa  $17,820