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How You can Start Trading Worldwide Financial
by Jide Hospedale |
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Published on this site: December 28th, 2006 - See more articles from this month
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In the past, trading on the movement and price direction of
financial markets was largely the preserve of major banks, high
net worth individuals and sophisticated investment houses.
However, the advent of online applications like the Internet
has now made it possible for retail investors with limited capital to trade worldwide financial markets in exactly the
same way these sophisticated investors did in the past. This
form of online trading is widely known as Financial Spread
Trading/Betting.
What is Financial Spread Trading?
Financial Spread Trading is a highly leveraged form of trading that
has become a mainstream investment tool for retail
investors around the world. Effectively, it is a mechanism for
ordinary individuals with limited capital to gain access to worldwide financial markets. You can actually trade shares,
options, indices, currencies, commodities and just about any
other financial instrument through an online financial dealer.
Unlike the traditional way of investing the stock market,
Financial Spread trading is based on a simple concept.
Individuals get the opportunity to back a trading judgment that
they may have, that a particular market is going to rise in
value or is going to fall in value. For instance, if you
believe that the shares of Microsoft are going to rise in
value, you would "buy" Microsoft shares. Conversely, if you
believe that Microsoft shares are going to fall in value, you would "sell" Microsoft shares. You don't actually own the
underlying asset. You are simply trading on the price direction
of the financial instrument. If your prediction is correct, you
make a profit. If you are incorrect, you suffer a loss.
There is also provision of posting a "stop loss order" on every
trade you initiate. A stop loss order is a way of reducing your
risk exposure to the markets, which means that you can
effectively limit your loss in the event of the price moving
against your perception.
Spread trading is most easily explained through an example -
the concept is the same whatever the market. Let's assume that
it's October, and due to an imminent breakthrough in the cure
for bird flu, the shares of XYZ Corp have been rising steadily
over the past few weeks. You've been following the market closely, and decide you want to get in on the action. The
shares of XYZ are currently selling at $42.14 per share. In
order to buy shares in any listed company, you need to buy a
minimum of 100 shares. This means that you need a minimum of
$4214 just to buy 100 shares. However, you only have $150 risk capital. What can you do?
Well, given your limited capital, you can simply place a spread
trade with a financial dealer on XYZ Corp shares to rise.
Financial spread trading enables you to be highly leveraged
because you actually trade on margin. Leveraged trading, or
trading on margin means that you are not required to deposit the full value of your trade in order to open a position, so
buying XYZ Corp shares at $1 a point is actually the equivalent
of purchasing 100 shares of the same company. Thus if you are
looking to buy 1000 shares of XYZ shares, instead of paying
$42,140 for the shares, you can place a spread trade on XYZ shares to rise at $10 a point.
Let's assume that you contact a dealer for a price on December
contract futures in XYZ Corp and get a quote of 4214/4219. You
always buy at the higher price, so you buy $4 per point at
4219. This means that each penny movement in the price of the
shares is worth $4 to you. To limit your risk exposure to the
market, you also place a stop loss order of 30 points, which
means that should the market go against you, the maximum you
could lose is $120. Over the next few weeks, the stock of XYZ
Corporation continues to rise. Six weeks later, you contact
your dealer, and the quote for December XYZ Corporation is now 4293/4298.
Because you're trading futures, it means that the contract
expires in December. However, this doesn't mean that you have
to wait until December before you close out the trade. You can
close out the trade the same day or at any point before the
contract expires.
You decide to take your profits and sell to close at 4293.
Because the market went in your favor, you get your full
deposit of $120 back.
In addition, your profit on this trade is
calculated as follows:
Closing level 4293
Opening level 4219
Difference 84 points
Your profit: 78 x $4 = $336
Financial Spread Trading is a derivative product. This means
that you are trading on a price that is actually derived from
the underlying product. Therefore, if you are trading Microsoft
shares, a financial dealer would give you a "derived" price
of
Microsoft shares. As the prices of those shares go up and down,
so would the dealer's derived price of Microsoft shares go up
and down.
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Jide Hospedale - writes for
http://Financial-Spread-Trader.com a
site dedicated to developing your skills as a spread trader over the
long-term.
You can find out more about Financial Spread Trading at
http://www.Financial-Spread-Trader.com
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