You can get deep
discounts on your trading costs based on the volume you trade.
Not exact matches
$ 14.99 - $ 6.00 (40 %
trade discount) $ 8.99 (net profit)- $ 3.25 (print
cost for book sold
on Amazon) $ 5.74 (profit; royalty split depends
on publisher)
$ 14.99 - $ 8.24 (55 %
trade discount) $ 6.75 (net profit)- $ 3.86 (print
cost for book sold through third - party retailer) $ 2.89 (profit; royalty split depends
on publisher)
After accounting for commissions, my
cost basis was reduced to $ 106.76, which is like buying Apple at a 1.9 %
discount to the price it was
trading for when I placed the
trade on Friday.
(2) Typically you pay transaction
costs of $ 10 or less per
trade on a
discount brokerage account, which is negligible as a percent of assets if you have a moderate sized account and
trade infrequently.
Now, with so many
discount brokers to choose from, some even offer stock
trades that
cost less than $ 4 per
trades (for example, OptionsHouse $ 2.95 /
trade and SogoTrade $ 3 /
trade) without the constrain that you can only invest
on a particular day of the month, I don't know how many people are still interested in
trading with ShareBuilder.
Credential Direct that was once the best
on - line
Discount Broker that did not charge extra data fees in exchange for higher
trading costs.
Throughout these years, as more and more online
discount brokers emerged, I have also got accounts with other brokerage firms in order to reduce
trading cost, even though the money I saved
on commissions isn't really significant at all.
Many
discount brokerages charge $ 29 per
trade, so the
cost of rebalancing is about $ 116, or 1.16 % annually
on a $ 10,000 portfolio.
Immediately after a NextShares
trade executes
on Nasdaq, the exchange provide the parties to the
trade with a notice of
trade execution, indicating the number of shares bought or sold and the executed
trading cost (premium /
discount).
Instead, the premium or
discount to NAV at which share prices are quoted and transactions execute will vary depending
on market factors then in effect, including the balance of supply and demand for shares among investors, transaction fees and other
costs in connection with purchasing and redeeming Creation Units of shares, the
cost and availability of borrowing shares, competition among market makers, the share inventory positions and inventory strategies of market makers, the profitability requirements and business objectives of market makers, and the volume of share
trading.
from above: «Unlike some of their
discount brokerage peers, CIBC Investor's Edge does not have US dollar registered accounts so clients will have to factor in currency conversion fees into their
costs if they plan
on trading US - listed securities.»
Even bigger
discounts on your brokerage
costs, including 25 commission - free
trades for stocks, options, non-Vanguard ETFs, and transaction - fee funds.
While I do appreciate that QT offers the Canadian investor the opportunity to save a lot of money
on trading costs, especially the investor who doesn't have $ 100k to qualify for TDW's and other online brokers»
discounted rates, the fact remains that customer service remains an issue.
I've learned a bit about how cold calls work (and how to deal with them, although I don't get any cold calls overseas), what a
trade should
cost with a
discount broker (about $ 30), why I really don't have any business messing with options (too risky, too fast moving), why I probably don't want check - writing privileges
on my mutual fund (too many taxable events to report), and such things.
As for VOF itself, it
trades on a 0.81 Price / Book multiple, despite an aggressive & ongoing share buyback programme — I see plenty of gains ahead in terms of NAV growth &
discount compression, as Vietnam continues to leverage & benefit from its labour /
cost export advantage, and (just as importantly) its burgeoning domestic consumer economy.
My conclusion was that TFG
trades at a
discount because of it's egregious fee structure a — i.e. if you have the same underlying risk
on two bonds and someone «steals» 20 % of your coupon then that bond should naturally
trade at a
discount... I chose to invest in CIFU as it consistently pays out 50 % of all free cash as dividend and reinvests the other 50 % in similar asset and its running at much lower
cost base and REALLY is a pure play (i.e. no Asset Management assets)-- adding to that ISA eligible and CIFU stands out from my perspective.
A couple of suggested topics that I think you could do a job with: 1) Quantitative view of how to evaluate closed end funds
trading at a
discount to NAV with a given NAV and
discount history, fee /
cost structure, and dividend history; 2) How to evaluate the fundamentals of the return of capital distributions from MLPs — e.g. what fraction of them is true dividend and what fraction is true return of capital and how should one arrive at a reasonable profile of the future to put a DCF value
on it?
Not only do they seem to never make any (or much)
on the
trades, but they are racking up TONS of
costs in commissions — even using
discount brokers.
Through my
discount links, Barry's system is the lowest
cost profitable
trading system that I have reviewed
on this site so far.
However, there's an even more obvious reason for the suppressed rate of completions: Germany's one of the few countries where second - hand property prices have
traded (
on a medium / long term basis) at a major
discount to new construction
costs.
You can get deep
discounts on your spread
costs based
on the volume you
trade.
Low
costs: Scottrade's $ 6.95
trade commission
on stocks and exchange -
trade funds is in line with TD Ameritrade ($ 6.95) and E-
Trade ($ 6.95, though volume
discounts are available).
Entries for Common Accounts Payable Transactions — This covers accounting for purchases
on account,
trade discounts, purchase
discounts, purchase returns, and
cost determination.
The
cost of equity is also more expensive, because REITs are
trading at a
discount to NAV,
on average, by about 10 percent.