Crocodile
- 12 Sep 2003 23:06
We have lots of experienced traders on MoneyAM who would be glad to help if you have any trading questions.
dalrymp
- 29 Oct 2003 15:24
- 213 of 460
Anyone
What does BC after a trade (BUY) mean. Just saw it on RTD trades.
Many thanks
Exotoxin
- 29 Oct 2003 16:00
- 215 of 460
Sometimes used to show a T+20 purchase for example - i.e. an exceptional condition.
dalrymp
- 29 Oct 2003 16:26
- 216 of 460
Thanks little woman and exotoxin.
There were 2x200,000 buys and a 250,000 buy for rtd, maybe something is afoot!!!!!
washlander
- 01 Nov 2003 00:23
- 217 of 460
I trade with Comdirect. They do not do after hour trading. How or where can I learn more about this as I notice certain hugh buys or sells take place after hours and I am locked out.
washlander
- 03 Nov 2003 09:53
- 218 of 460
Another question.
If interest rates go up this week. Would I be right in thinking that a there is a good chance of defensive stocks would be the place to be in?
goldfinger
- 03 Nov 2003 10:21
- 220 of 460
Have to say guys that I think interest rates increase of a quarter percent is already priced into the market, the problem would be if we were on the end of a half point rise, but I dont see that coming.
If you are holding in a finance company though I would start to be looking to off load. If Gordon Brown hikes up taxes as is generally thought and we get the rates increase these type of companys will come under pressure.
Three Gurus have warned on this in the last few weeks, David Schwartz the stock market historian, Evil Knievil and Edmund Jackson.
On the market as a whole I am rather bullish and am hoping for an xmas spike.
Good luck to everyone.
GF.
Melnibone
- 03 Nov 2003 10:29
- 221 of 460
In fact for example I'd be very surprised if many peoples mortgages will go up much, as they certainly didn't follow very closely the rates on the way down!
Banks look after themselves.
When rates go down they drop them straight away for savers but drag
their feet for borrowers thus maximising their differential.
When rates go up they will raise the borrowers and drag their
feet for the savers.
Don't forget that 0.25/0.5% has a greater percentage effect at 3% than it will
at say 9.0%.
Melnibone
goldfinger
- 03 Nov 2003 10:38
- 222 of 460
Spot on Melnibone, and your reasoning also adds weight to the problems Finance companies will face as they borrow from the banks at say x interest rate and pass these onto their customers at xxxx interest rates. I dont beleive the finance companies offer any fixed term loans.
gf.
Many thanks for that, Im going to use your example on another board where too many posters are oblivious to the problems caused by rate hikes. Many thanks again.
easty
- 03 Nov 2003 10:40
- 223 of 460
croc hi,
i'm hunting around for a long term saving plan with the best growth potential.
ive looked at fidelity.co.uk at there multimanager growth portfolio which on the face of it looks quite good.
I plan to stick away 1k a month.
i would be gratefull if you or anyone could help me out.
Many thanks
Easty
Crocodile
- 03 Nov 2003 21:47
- 225 of 460
easty I am not the best person to ask on this, according to Radio4 the other day the record on many of these savings plans is awful.
Anybody have any good ideas?
ricardopage
- 04 Nov 2003 17:23
- 226 of 460
How do you take a short position on a share?
I use a basic Self Trade account (still!) is it possible to use this type of account to short shares (not CFD's)?
Maybe I should ring them up!
Only asking as it seems much easier (for me) to spot a stock that's about to drop rather than one about to rise.
zzaxx99
- 04 Nov 2003 19:47
- 227 of 460
-- ricardopage,
You generally need an old fashioned dealer for this. Online execution-only accounts don't allow you to short unless you have an account that allows T+ settlement (ie T+10, T+20). In that case, some will allow you to sell stock that you don't have, provided you cover within the settlement period.
However, in most cases, this is either not allowed, or only allowed due to crap systems that don't check your current holding before letting you trade.
Crocodile
- 04 Nov 2003 21:34
- 228 of 460
Ricardo
Consider opening a CFD account it can be much less expensive as there is no stamp duty.
D.
dannycarswell
- 06 Nov 2003 10:10
- 229 of 460
Morning all, very basic question for the likes of you guys. p/e ratio means exactly what? many thanks!!
dannycarswell
- 06 Nov 2003 10:57
- 231 of 460
thanks LW. sorry for sounding really thick but how is that calculated.