Originally posted by IR35 Avoider
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Spread Betting Online within Ltd Company
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Originally posted by SantaClaus View PostI am willing to bet here that you will hand that £1500 back to the spreadbetters today or this week.
Here's my advice:
Step 1.
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Open a demo account. Trade a maximum of 2% of your account per trade. Only take trades with a risk/reward of 1:2 and try to triple your account.
Only then are you ready to trade with real money.
Step 2.
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When you have ignored the advice in step 1 and blown your live account, go back to step 1 and repeat.
Given that the minimum commision is £10 each way - percentage wise its pointless as you're 10-20% down before you even start to win or lose.
The only way to comply with those rules is to have £100,000 in your account to play with!!
Have I missed something here?The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of HeavenComment
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Spread betting
I have started experimenting with spread betting also, only small amounts 10 p per point.
One thing I have found is that paper trading is miles away from the real thing, even at 10 p per point. With paper trading there is absolutely no emotion attached, when you SB for real you have loads of emotion, good and bad.
I personally think they are like chalk and cheese. Shorting the market sounds much simpler than it actually is when you have real money riding on the deal.
I think as much research as possible and then have a go, it might not be for you but it'll be a pretty cool journey of self discovery while it lasts.
Cheers
MikeComment
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Originally posted by ookook View PostI've seen this advice before and always wondered about it. Ignoring the demo account for now - if you had a fund of say 10K to trade with on leveraged CFD's or spread betting, then 1-2% of your account would only be £100 -£200 per trade.
Given that the minimum commision is £10 each way - percentage wise its pointless as you're 10-20% down before you even start to win or lose.
The only way to comply with those rules is to have £100,000 in your account to play with!!
Have I missed something here?
2% of a £10,000 account is £200. So your risk in the market at any time should not exceed £200.
Aim for a risk reward ratio of 1:2 or better, so your winners will cover your losers even if you are only getting 50% of trades right.
So lets say we risk 30 pips to make 60. Add 3 pips for spread, thats 33 to make 60. Thats approx £6 per point (£200 divided by 33). If you win you make £6 x 60 pips = £360.
Now lets say you aim for 3 winners and 1 loser a week.
3 x £360 - 1 x £200 = £880 per week on a £10,000 account.
In order to get this right, you need lots and lots of patience to wait for the best setups and pass on the mediocre ones.
Thats all I have time for folks. Must get back to my charts'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.Comment
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Originally posted by SantaClaus View PostYes, I think you've missed something!
2% of a £10,000 account is £200. So your risk in the market at any time should not exceed £200.
Aim for a risk reward ratio of 1:2 or better, so your winners will cover your losers even if you are only getting 50% of trades right.
So lets say we risk 30 pips to make 60. Add 3 pips for spread, thats 33 to make 60. Thats approx £6 per point (£200 divided by 33). If you win you make £6 x 60 pips = £360.
Now lets say you aim for 3 winners and 1 loser a week.
3 x £360 - 1 x £200 = £880 per week on a £10,000 account.
In order to get this right, you need lots and lots of patience to wait for the best setups and pass on the mediocre ones.
Thats all I have time for folks. Must get back to my charts
Using the example of CFD's and IG markets;
IG markets has 0.1% commision, minimum £10 each way on any trade
So you bet £200 on Barclays long - your commision is £10 or 5% of your bet.
If we say for arguements sake your leverage is 10% giving you £2000 worth of shares - then the underlying share price has to move .5% just to break even! and thats just on the way in - same applies on the way out.
So if you get lucky and Barclays share price rises 5% - giving you a £100 profit - then after the commision in and out you get £80 out - which is the equivalent of a 4% rise....
Same applies if you lose - a 5% fall will cost you £100 of your original bet - plus £20 in opening / closing fees - making £120 in total, or the equivalent of a 6% share price loss
so to make any bet worthwhile in terms of minimum commision you need to be betting £1000 minimum - which according to your advice above would necessitate 100,000 in your account.
I'm not sure if the same applies to Spread Betting and I'm happy to be corrected on any of the aboveThe mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of HeavenComment
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Originally posted by ookook View PostAhh but its the commission I'm talking about..
Using the example of CFD's and IG markets;
IG markets has 0.1% commision, minimum £10 each way on any trade
So you bet £200 on Barclays long - your commision is £10 or 5% of your bet.
If we say for arguements sake your leverage is 10% giving you £2000 worth of shares - then the underlying share price has to move .5% just to break even! and thats just on the way in - same applies on the way out.
So if you get lucky and Barclays share price rises 5% - giving you a £100 profit - then after the commision in and out you get £80 out - which is the equivalent of a 4% rise....
Same applies if you lose - a 5% fall will cost you £100 of your original bet - plus £20 in opening / closing fees - making £120 in total, or the equivalent of a 6% share price loss
so to make any bet worthwhile in terms of minimum commision you need to be betting £1000 minimum - which according to your advice above would necessitate 100,000 in your account.
I'm not sure if the same applies to Spread Betting and I'm happy to be corrected on any of the above
OK, first question. Why are you using CFDs? Spreadbetting is tax-free and the minimum bet on for instance the eur$ is 0.50p per pip.
Secondly, where's your stoploss in the above calculation? Work out your risk based on the distance from entry price to your stoploss multiplied by your pip amount. Remember, you are not risking Barclays shares going down to zero, you are risking them going down to your stoploss level.
At the time of writing, IGindex were quoting Barclays at:
Sell 368.1 Buy 369.9
Thats a 1.8 pip spread. There is no further comission, the minimum bet is £1, guaranteed spread is a further 1.11 pips.
Lets say you bought at that point and at a place in the market where you thought it wouldnt go more than 30 pips against you.
So take your original £200 risk / (30 pip stoploss + 1.8 spread + 1.11 guaranteed stop charge) = £6.07 per pip.
You would place a trade with a stop of 30 pips at £6.07 per pip.
Ok lesson over.
Note: This post is for educational purposes only. I do not advocate trading the markets with money you cannot afford to lose.Last edited by SantaClaus; 3 October 2008, 11:47.'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.Comment
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Originally posted by SantaClaus View PostI'm not sure I want to be drawn into a long beginners conversation on trading, but I will try to help:
OK, first question. Why are you using CFDs? Spreadbetting is tax-free and the minimum bet on for instance the eur$ is 0.50p per pip.
Secondly, where's your stoploss in the above calculation? Work out your risk based on the distance from entry price to your stoploss multiplied by your pip amount. Remember, you are not risking Barclays shares going down to zero, you are risking them going down to your stoploss level.
At the time of writing, IGindex were quoting Barclays at:
Sell 368.1 Buy 369.9
Thats a 1.8 pip spread. There is no further comission, the minimum bet is £1, guaranteed spread is a further 1.11 pips.
Lets say you bought at that point and at a place in the market where you thought it wouldnt go more than 30 pips against you.
So take your original £200 risk / (30 pip stoploss + 1.8 spread + 1.11 guaranteed stop charge) = £6.07 per pip.
You would place a trade with a stop of 30 pips at £6.07 per pip.
Ok lesson over.
Note: This post is for educational purposes only. I do not advocate trading the markets with money you cannot afford to lose.The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of HeavenComment
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Originally posted by ookook View PostYeah erm, thanks Warren, Once again you rabbit on about spread betting when I'm talking about CFD's. I didn't bother including the stoploss data in the above example because its irrelevant - I was giving an example of excess commision.. The only mildly interesting point you've made is that spread betting doesnt have minimum commision - I didnt know that so I'll check them out. I've done all trading with CFD's or normal shares until now.'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.Comment
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Originally posted by SantaClaus View Postok, good luckComment
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Originally posted by wizard1974uk View PostIt is one of those times where you need to go and headbutt a brick wall.The mind is its own place, and in itself, can make a Heaven of Hell, a Hell of HeavenComment
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