Yeah, beside making possible profit on fluctuations as active investor I'd also would like to ask how it looks when somebody holds it until the end. Assuming that they announced that delisting materialize in 30 days, in theory, is it better to sell on day 1 or hold until it closes and wait for...
I am wondering about price fluctuations in last month but also in case somebody held it till the end, how much did they pay them in cash compared to final closing price on last day of ETF trading.
I wonder are there any tools or charts that could help you calculate such risk, lets say you would enter ETF index company list and claim that there's 50% tech crash and/or 30% healthcare crash etc, and it would try to calculate ETF/index worth after such crash. In theory you could do it by...
AFAIK TradeStation is out of line, they have their International/Global subsidiary that is actually an introducing broker for Interactive Brokers UK(not US-domiciled).
In reference to my previous topic, I'd like to ask are there any solid US-based brokers that would open accounts for people from EU? It seems that most bigger companies would not and if they got global subsidiaries operating in EU, those are limited by EU restrictions(ETFs in my case). I'm not...
As I stated above, from Europe you can only start IB-UK not IB-LLC(US) account. And IB-UK is not offering certain US-domiciled securities like ETFs. Moreover IB-LLC has their Pro and Lite account and latter has no $10 fee(albeit it's very limited compared to Pro but can be upgraded one anytime)...
In most cases yes, hopefully it's like that in US(IB LLC). Did you check the link I provided in my first post? Anyway in EU their IB -UK subsidiary has plenty of local introducing brokers who are just registered across various European countries. Now those can either open you direct personalized...
For some it's risk, for others diversification. Also, there are very many ETFs of all kinds in US with very many investment possibilities. In EU you just have few big ones and no liquidity. Of course there are some downsides too, like in EU most ETFs are accumulating dividends and because of...
I know this trick, it's pretty good and you can make extras just on options but AFAIK you must buy at least 100 units per transaction. You can sell them right after(like buy 100 then sell 70 to hold 30) but it's still not the same as being able to trade directly. Moreover there's always slight...
I have forgot to add, most "international" brokers will have EU-residence. The problem is, there is no access to certain US-domiciled products because of this, like ETFs(EU law KIIDS issue). That is the reason I don't want to open with IB-UK or any EU-based front for them. And they ain't opening...
Different fee structure, sometimes more optimized for your needs. Some will take more in certain commissions while less in others, some will have different monthly fees or none, sometimes it will be in spreads etc.