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- 17 August 2006
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Uncle Festivus said:I use 2 cfd providers - IG Markets (L1 for controlled risk) for indexes, derivatives & precious metals & Etrade (Man) for DM access cfd's and normal shares (WebIress).
I have tried CMC but gave up after too many re-quotes, and spurious order changes.
The big negative with IG is that they don't pay interest on your cash account, & the L1 is pretty basic, (although the new tick charts are good). I have yet to find the perfect cfd provider.
Spikes in prices & charts are usually errors that IG don't hold you to eg if it did take you out of the trade a phone call usually fixes it (and the chart).
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barney said:Howdy UF, Just out of curiousity, what are E trade/Man's fees?? I am also with IG who only charge .01% so an order of say $8,000 (total value of trade) is only charged a fee of $8 ........I also have another CFD provider who has a minimum transaction fee of $10 ......... Therefore for smaller positions IG is far superior (this is handy when building a position slowly) ......... How does Man compare?? ....... Cheers.
I wonder if the phone call fixes the trade for you and not for everyone else?Uncle Festivus said:Spikes in prices & charts are usually errors that IG don't hold you to eg if it did take you out of the trade a phone call usually fixes it (and the chart).
MichaelD said:I wonder if the phone call fixes the trade for you and not for everyone else?
barney said:Howdy UF, Just out of curiousity, what are E trade/Man's fees?? I am also with IG who only charge .01% so an order of say $8,000 (total value of trade) is only charged a fee of $8 ........I also have another CFD provider who has a minimum transaction fee of $10 ......... Therefore for smaller positions IG is far superior (this is handy when building a position slowly) ......... How does Man compare?? ....... Cheers.
Uncle Festivus said:Hi Barney, I'm on the professional rate on Power Etrade (WebIress combined with Man) minimum fee is $10. As for the percentage rate that is negotiable, as with most cfd providers. I started out at something like 0.15% and now I'm on 0.1%, as one of their 'active traders' or some such fancy name. Basically I rang them one day and said that IG was charging 0.1 and would they match it. After some mumbling about having to trade minimum amounts blah blah they changed it to .1%. Basically if you ask straight up to give you 0.1 or lower they usually want the business so they give it to you.
Theres also a monthly data fee of approx $80 or so, but reduces to zero depending on the number of trades.
Etrade is also DMA so no gsl, only contingent orders. Basically Etrade for share cfd's (& normal shares), IG for indexes.
I use 2 cfd providers - IG Markets (L1 for controlled risk) for indexes, derivatives & precious metals & Etrade (Man) for DM access cfd's and normal shares (WebIress).
mikeg said:Hi Uncle Festivus,
In reference to your quote below, why don't you use IG L2 platform for your CFD's. You can place an GSL on the L2?
hector said:I'm with FP Markets at present, min trade $10 or o.1%. DMA, no GSL. Broadest universe, low margins, but no indices. Any stock you want to go long just ring them and next day it's there (penny dreadfuls @ 99%, but still cheaper brokerage than shares). Platform webIRESS $55 /m. Largest range of shorts too.
Ive just started trading CFDs (as my blog outlines).
If anyone is interested i will be posting on my blog after every trading day so you will be able to be kept up to date with what is going on.
However it quickly retreated and I could tell momentum would not be with this stock for now. I hadnt seen a reason to sell and contniuned to hold, around the hour mark it started showing signs of weakness and I jumped ship. The end result was a profit of 13 pounds, a couple of minutes later it quickly dropped. If I had held I would have seen a loss of a couple of hundred dollars pretty quick. So although not successful in terms of return I was pleased with my timing and the reading of the market.
Hi Paul, Do you think your discretionary approach will bring you unstuck?
For instance this following quote from your blog indicates you could have lost $200 rather quick which is more than the "2%" capital you supposedly risk/trade.Is no fixed stop loss a good practice in your opinion?
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