ES or NQ. So commission should be around $0.50 R/T ?What contract. Es you should be able to get < 1.00
Wait .... aren't prop firm reg fees $0.50 per side ? How can you get under a buck ?
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ES or NQ. So commission should be around $0.50 R/T ?What contract. Es you should be able to get < 1.00
Sorry Minmike , I don't believe you- stated reg fees are $0.47 for exchange members and $0.50 for prop firms..commercial accounts. 0.43 may have been in the past...but not now..05 to fcm a side.
.43 to exchange a side.
Less than 1.00 round turn.
Don't believe me. Prop firms fall under 106.j.Sorry Minmike , I don't believe you- stated reg fees are $0.47 for exchange members and $0.50 for prop firms..commercial accounts. 0.43 may have been in the past...but not now.
Ah, I see....$0.36 then. I was under the impression the prop firms fell into the 106.R category.Don't believe me. Prop firms fall under 106.j.
So prop firms must charge $0.14 in commish in order to get down to $1.00 R/T.
I find it hard to believe they would go that low....unless you are doing 500+ R/T's per day.
So now the question is : How do the foreign exchanges compare fee-wise to the CME ?Not hard to do at all. I used to trade a few hundred thousand Eurex R/T’s per month prop.
So now the question is : How do the foreign exchanges compare fee-wise to the CME ?
I am thinking Eurex, Hang Seng, Nikkei, etc.
Ah...then that helps Terry Duffy to justify the current fee structure. I see the Shanghai exchange is way behind and only offers options on the ETF50. No futures in sight there....Chicago fully in control here.Eurex and Liffe (Euronext) are actually just slightly more expensive to trade, as they don’t have the various “Seat” structures which are legacy artifacts left over from the CME/CBOT/Comex/NYBT/CME/LME ownership structure.