Trading from Japan

>hopeful

Hope you didn't get caught up in that Nova mess
that I read about.

There is no problem shorting Japanese stocks. Not
all stocks are available for shorting, but most are.
The only problem is if you want to do a number of
trades each day, as your margin is not replenished
immediately as it is if you're doing cash trades.
If that's a problem, have you considered Nikkei Futures?
I haven't traded stocks for a long while so I'm not
aware of which brokers offer the lowest commissions.
But checking kakaku.com I see that Century charges
472 yen up to 5 mil. That's only .009%.

Just found a site that compares more brokers than
kakaku.com. http://www.onlinetrader.jp/compare1.php
 
Quote from liar:

i wanna put up a system to trade the US market from japan, direct market, low commission, 10:1, any ideas?

Liar

PM me, I think I can help you.

Cheers
 
anyone still trading the NYSE out of japan? i wanna find a firm that offers 1:10 leverage and direct market access and reasonably low commission. thanks
 
Quote from send_to_tony:

anyone still trading the NYSE out of japan? i wanna find a firm that offers 1:10 leverage and direct market access and reasonably low commission. thanks


Not a prop firm but what about IB?
 
Quote from hopeful:

I did have a go at Japanese and Australian stocks but found it much harder to find good trades. And the commissions are much higher as well. Also, you can't short Japanese ones AFAIK (at lease I couldn't with the broker I used). I guess you are more of a swing trader then? Do you also short them? How? What Japanese stock are good for day trading? Which broker do you use? I used marusan for a while but heard that livedoortrade (the company apparently survived its dramas) is excellent for hyperactive traders due to their all-you-can-trade commission structure). I know a local daytrader who is quitting it in this bearish environment (perhaps because he can't short?).

I can get my 6/7/8 hours sleep, no problem if I restrict to trading until US lunch which at the moment is 2am here (1am in the summer). Of course if I could sleep a little earlier that would be nice but not a big deal if you are free to sleep all morning (hint hint: the gaijin sensei is in highest demand in the evenings).

Oh, I sometimes trade the Hang Seng too, but US stocks are by far the best instrument for day trading actively.

Japanese shorting rules are the same as US before the SHO. You can only short on upticks or at the ask and you need a locate to short...


gaijin sensei?
 
Gaijin usually means Caucasian foreigner, sometime just foreigner, sometimes it just means non-Japanese. It's funny when I hear Japanese talking about all the gaijins everywhere when they are in a foreign country! Japanese can never be foreigners.

Sensei means teacher/professor/doctor/instructor - kind of a generic term.
 
Quote from hopeful:

Gaijin usually means Caucasian foreigner, sometime just foreigner, sometimes it just means non-Japanese. It's funny when I hear Japanese talking about all the gaijins everywhere when they are in a foreign country! Japanese can never be foreigners.

Sensei means teacher/professor/doctor/instructor - kind of a generic term.
Thx for clearing that out... what do you teach?
 
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