broker e SIM -quale scegliere?

 

  By: Vaicru on Venerdì 13 Novembre 2015 12:58

sembra buono. ma i soldi dove sono depositati ?

 

  By: temistocle2 on Giovedì 12 Novembre 2015 12:23

salve ci sarebbe questa nuova realtà , credo olandese, ora anche con traduzione in italiano: https://www.degiro.it/ Avevo letto qualcosa un annetto fa, ma poi non ho avuto tempo di approfondire l'olandese.... ora hanno tradotto in 17 lingue e credo anche risolto i cavilli legali per operare in questi paesi. Non ne sapere niente? conviene/non conviene, è affidabile, etc... saluti

 

  By: gianlini on Lunedì 01 Luglio 2013 00:19

mi sembra che ricalchi da vicino il copione e la storia de "a un km da wall Street"

 

  By: GZ on Domenica 30 Giugno 2013 23:33

Un film che potrebbe essere divertente è questo di Martin Scorsese con DiCaprio che esce ora sulla ^incredibile storia di Jordan Belfort#https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G3K92uugO9o^ un ragazzotto che negli anni '90 creò una società di broker con più di mille dipendenti che pompavano azioni sottili chiamando la gente a casa. A 26 anni Belfort guadagnava 50 milioni di dollari l'anno, viveva con jet personali e modelle e aveva un mega yacht che schiantò in Sardegna Poi è finito in prigione e ha dovuto restituire 100 milioni di dollari agli investitori defraudati (ma in prigione solo per due anni) e uscitone ha scritto un libro sulla sua storia che ha venduto milioni di copie in tutto il mondo e di cui ora appunto fanno il film e campa molto bene facendo lo speaker motivazionale ^"The Wolf of Wall Street Trailer 2013 Scorsese"#www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QniaZL42Ec^

 

  By: mick3000 on Mercoledì 26 Settembre 2007 12:51

Per quanto riguarda il Trading su azioni USA : Bank of America e Zecco offrono trading a zero commissioni sulle azioni USA. C'è qualcuno che li usa ? Come vi trovate ? E il capital gain?

 

  By: mick3000 on Mercoledì 26 Settembre 2007 12:49

Per quanto riguarda il Trading su azioni USA : Bank of America e Zecco offrono trading a zero commissioni sulle azioni USA. C'è qualcuno che li usa ? Come vi trovate ? E il capital gain?

 

  By: Mr.Fog on Sabato 22 Settembre 2007 15:56

Ciao Esteban, non ne so molto ma, se sui buoni paghi il capital gain, credo che si possa fare.

 

  By: Esteban on Sabato 22 Settembre 2007 13:51

c'è ch mi può illuminare in merito a ... Il capital gain relativo a buoni fruttiferi postali può essere portato in compensazione a perdite di borsa ? esempio : ho 1000 euri in perdita su un titolo .. ma ho pure 1000 euro di capital gain da pagare ... stabilito che l'intestatario è lo stesso per i differenti conti X(banca) e Y(posta). vendo il titolo e realizzo 1000 euri di perdita ... sul conto banca X certifico la minusvalenza .. vendo dei buoni fruttiferi conto Y e anzichè pagare il 12.5% me li tengo in compensazione alla perdita. E' possibile tale compensazione o i buoni non possono essere considerati ? Intendo relativamente al tipo di strumento ...

 

  By: bonatti on Mercoledì 14 Febbraio 2007 20:29

Anch` io sono con Global Futures il rapporto tra commissioni e servizio e` imbattibile.

 

  By: marco on Mercoledì 14 Dicembre 2005 16:56

ok ma forse perche ho guardato frettolosamente ma non riesco a trovare i mercati europei ed i sottostanti su cui si può operare.

 

  By: delta0618 on Mercoledì 14 Dicembre 2005 16:00

Io la uso solo per i futures americani, per l'Europa è più sicuro (nel senso che la piattaforma è più stabile), tradare con Strategy Runner

 

  By: marco on Mercoledì 14 Dicembre 2005 15:56

Ma delta tu hai capito la lista prodotti su cui si può operare?

 

  By: delta0618 on Mercoledì 14 Dicembre 2005 15:21

Mi permetto si segnalare questa Joint venture, tra la migliore piattaforma di trading al mondo con un broker americano ^http://www.trademaven.com/#http://www.trademaven.com/^ E' eccellente per chi opera soprattutto intraday Qui si trada direttamente sulla chart, e come indicatori e impostazione dei grafici.... è come esignal ( barre, volume bars, tick bars, e range bars) ....questa ad esempio è dell'SP a range bars ..dimenticavo 3 dollari e 80 centesimi round turn ( andata e ritorno, tutto incluso) per contratto

 

  By: Moderatore on Giovedì 13 Gennaio 2005 20:34

DIRECTA FESTEGGIA 10 ANNI, TRADING COSTO ZERO IL 20/1 TORINO, 13 GEN - Per festeggiare il decennale della sua costituzione, Directa il 20 gennaio prossimo permettera' ai propri clienti di operare a commissioni zero sui mercati azionari della Borsa Italiana (MTA, SEDEX, IDEM). Concepita dall' inizio con la missione esclusiva di permettere ai privati di operare sui mercati finanziari direttamente dal proprio PC, Directa diventa operativa nel marzo 1996. E' la nascita del trading online italiano cui seguiranno molti altri momenti dall' avvio dell' operativita' via internet nel '98 al lancio, l' anno successivo, del ''GSM Trading'', prima piattaforma di brokeraggio on line al mondo tramite telefono cellulare. ''E' una grande soddisfazione, a dieci anni di distanza - ha dichiarato Mario Fabbri, amministratore delegato di Directa - constatare che quello che nel 1995 potev apparire un sogno fuori da ogni realta', e' invece diventata un' azienda vitale, e apprezzata sul mercato nazionale, con molte migliaia di clienti e milioni di esecuzioni all' anno. Con questa giornata di trading a commissioni zero abbiamo inteso ringraziare coloro ai quali in primo luogo siamo debitori di tutto questo, e cioe' i nostri clienti''. Per quanto riguarda i principali dati sull' anno appena concluso i futures IDEM, Eurex e, da luglio, CME, nel 2004 sono cresciuti del 43% rispetto al 2003, superando nell' anno i 400 mila contratti. Sui mercati tradizionali MTA, SEDEX e azionario USA, la vistosa diminuzione della volatilita' a Piazza Affari nel periodo maggio-giugno ha toccato particolarmente gli scalper, che rappresentano la clientela piu' attiva per Directa e ha determinato una riduzione dei volumi intermediati a 28.874 milioni di euro (-6%) e 2.570 mila eseguiti (-20%). Di grande rilievo, invece, la crescita, da 50 a 75 (+50%), delle convenzioni con gli istituti di credito che offrono il trading Directa ai loro clienti. Positivo l' andamento dei clienti attivi, che sono aumentati a 11.508 (+4% rispetto al 2003).

 

  By: delta0618 on Giovedì 13 Gennaio 2005 13:11

Direi che è sempre una questione di preferenza...questo tizio ad esempio può darsi che non si diverta a tradare i futures...BTW fa circa 200.000/300.000 round turns al giorno....e non credo si ponga il problema se è più appagante professionalmente tradare le azioni USA The Worlds most Successful Trader Paul Rotter - aka "the Eurex Flipper" Paul is arguably the single largest and most succesful individual futures trader on planet Earth, executing trades on the Eurex exchange primarily in the Bund, but also in the Bobl and Schatz interest rate futures. He trades between 200-300,000 roundturns daily using the X_Trader platform, and clearing through GNI Touch. Every trader can aspire to imitate Pauls success as he is proof that it IS possible for a small trader to build on his success and grow into the biggest most active speculator around. Interview introduction (translated from German language interview with Traders Mag): Paul Rotter has made it - he belongs to the best traders in the world and counts as a real big player. he usually does 150 000 rt/d, sometimes up to 250 000 mostly in BUND/BOBL/SCHATZ futures. in the hall of fame of celeb EUREX players he?s top notch end even leaves tom baldwin (bonds) or lewis borsellino (S&P) behind. he had to work hard to make it. he blew up in the beginning of his career, which was painful but also educational - he learned his lesson and with lots of research, seeking improvement all the time, he became the man. q: was there any key event that brought you into the game? a: no, no key event like 'buying my first stock'. took part in some trading contest while at school. q: how did you get to professional trading? a: when i was apprentice in a german bank i had to work on the DTB (now EUREX) execution desk for several weeks. this attracted me a lot. during that time i was doing gamble trades on my private account, losing pretty much all of it. when it was deeply in the red, i had to leave the bank but shortly after, i was allowed to start trading in a japanese bank. i was very lucky here, since i was allowed to gain knowledge through learning by doing. q: did the bank give you any mentor? a: not, i didnt have one. in the beginning i was exchanging ideas with the chieftrader ajiasaka, who was constantly profitable. he sometimes even hedged the positions of his boss, when he thought that his boss was wrong. i had many conversations about market psychology, which proved to be very helpful, especially after bad losing days. q: how was your trading back then? have you been constantly profitable from the very beginning? a: i was doing 100 - 150 rts a day after a short time...i had no losing month with the first 3 years of my trading. later on with bigger position sizes i took occasional hits, especiallly after EUREX allowed terminals in the US and big players like harris brumfield / chicago were entering the field. q: there is a saying that every trader has to completly blow up his account at least once before he can become successful. what did you learn out of it? a: like i earlier said, my private account saw some bad times during my apprentice in the bank, although i must admit, that back then i had absolutely no idea that there was something like 'risk-managment'. later on i found 7-digit losses to be cumbering. on day i had a blackout and after losing 2,5 mln ? i was seriously thinking about stopping. i still had enough capital left to live without having to worry about financial issues and i just wouldnt want to take those psychological hits anymore. after taking 4 weeks off, i regained my motivation and returned in the ring. i was able to make up the loss in a relatively short period of time, so that i came out stronger than before. q: has this changed the views of the market in a way? a: with the expirience of bigger losing days coupled with good phases right afterwards, i?m not so sensible for losing days anymore. i know that i can make it back. this has lead to being able to switch off the screens on a day with medium/small losses more easily, instead of forcing the way back into positive territory. q: what are your strengths as a worldclass trader and where are the differences between you and other traders? a: it?s the ability to get more aggressive in winning phases, taking bigger risks, and scaling back in losing times. this is against human nature. the best thing is to have somebody around who is neutral to trading, that switches the terminals off, when a certain loss level has been reached for the day. q: you are known as a orderbook-scalper, could you please explaining to our readers what you are doing and what your strategies look like? what is your tactic? a: it?s some kind of market making where you place buy and sell orders simultaneously, making very shortterm trading decisions b/c of certain events in the orderbook (level2). for example, i usually have lots of orders in different markets at the same time, pretty close to the last traded price. the resulting trades are usually a zero sum game, but i get a pretty good feeling for what is going on and then ultimately can make a decision for a larger trade. q: how long are you usually in a positon? a: since i do trend plays very seldom and actually scalp the market, i constantly get fills in different markets on both sides which can cause constantly changing positions for hours. sometimes i change my opinion several times within a couple of minutes, which is not pretty hard for me, since i?m only looking for the next 3-5 ticks. q: during your professional career, have you always been a scalper or did you try other strategies (momentum/swing) as well? a: yes, i have always been a scalper, but i am adjusting my strategies to different market situations all the time. on volatile days i of course have less orders in the market and do more 'single trades', although i ususally hold them only for a couple of seconds. q: your strategies only work on electronic exchanges? a: yes, b/c you cannot handle that much orders in a pit, looking for counterparties and so on. computer exchanges grant faste orderflow and are not as easy to manipulate. q: as a scalper, are you trying to run stops? a: well, yes, but because of the increase of liquidity in the last couple of years, the fast spikes caused by stops are not happening that often anymore. apart from that, that stops often are not where you would suppose them to be, because the other market participants are not silly either or learned their lesson in the past. q: what role plays risk-managment in your trading? a: i set daily goals for my p&l, whereas the most important thing is the stopping limit, the maximum loss i take, before i switch off the screens. my biggest positions are 5 digit number of contracts. i dont use any specific money-management rules. q: what are you doing when a position goes against you? are you using stop-loss orders? a: i striclly close my position when they start going against me. with bigger positions this is not that easy, because i move the market against me, which could cause other traders to get in the same situation like me, which could accelerate the move. however, most of the time i am able to make some of the losses up, b/c i know what caused that move and therefore take the opposite position. q: why dont you have any problems with closing out the position and even taking the opposite direction? shouldnt a trader stick to his opinion? a: no, definetly not. an analyst or some kind of gure has to stick to it, but as a trader you should have no opinion. the more opinion you have, the harder gets it to get out of a losing position. q: what role plays market psychology? a: i constantly try to read the psychologiy of the market and base my decsisions on it. q: how do you handle distracting thoughts and emotions? a: when it gets really bad - taking a cold shower or jumping in a cold swimming pool. q: how do you prepare for the trading day? do you follow any routines or do you take it as it comes? a: before the open i check all the economic reports that are about to be released, speeches of central bankers - simply anything that could move the market. then i try to define important levels in the markets i trade. i do this through my own analysis and through reading analyst commentaries. that?s how i get a picture of the market and its important levels. i am not interested in opinions of other market participants as this would influence my own opinion. q: anykind of mental preparation? a: nothing specific. actually i am motivated all the time...i see trading more as a sporting challange and try to erease the thought of the money. q: how many hours do you spend in front of your screens? a: usually 5 hours, thats when i trade actively...in case of special events i can be up to 11 hours q: isnt it hard to spend that much time in front of your pc?s? how do you stay concentrated for such a long time? a: that is what my japanese colleagues asked themselves as well...well i take it as some kind of game where i forget the time. therefore the real troubles are more physical (eyes) than psychological. q: what do you do to calm down / relax? a: i do lots of sports and take lots of vacations. q: what equipment do you use? a: MD-trader from TT, reuters, bloomberg, CQG and a USD-squawkbox. q: why a USD-squawkbox? a: i use it because ?/$ had some effects on the intrest rates over the last couple of months. those effects change, right now it influences oil prices and the DAX. q: what timeframes are you using on your charts? a: usually 5- - 30-min charts for trendlines and indicators. i prefer p&f charts because they give me a clearer view on patterns (triple tops). for indicators i like the CCI because it also shows the volatility of the markets. q: do you think is it possible for a single player to manipulate the market? a: no, in my opinion a single player cannot influence the market around the clock. there are always several big players in the market. take the BUND for example - there are one million contracts traded a day. when a trend starts out of the blue with only slight pullbacks, i could trade against it, but with no effect. i couldnt stop the market from going up, because there would be more money needed that i could bring in. apart from that, so-called 'Analytics' computerized scalpers have made it tougher for me lately. as far as i know they are analysing the behaiviour in the orderbook and create a fully automated system. since they act in several markets at the same time, i think these computer freak come from the fully automated arbitrage- and spread-trading. q: what has one to do if he wants to become a scalper? a: he has to watch the orderbook for a very long time. when asked for advice for the readers, Rotter says that everything can happen all the time, so you better have your toilet close to your trading desk.