- Joined
- 21 April 2005
- Posts
- 3,922
- Reactions
- 5
What would be the best guide for a trader wanting to trade commodities? Broker variety, and costs etc.
Thanks Joe.Hi Snake,
I've moved this to the "Commodities" forum as the topic of the thread is primarily about commodities even though it's a beginner question.
Hi Snake, I trade commodities with CFD's. They offer access to all the major commodity markets. They are flexible and diverse and with careful money management provide begginers with a relatively low cost entry into these markets.
TH, can you offer an safe alternative for begginers new to those markets, who often only have limited capital to start with?
The begginer will want a guaranted stop and would only want to risk a few hundred dollars per trade.
The spreads offered, I suspect reflect the fee of this service and risk involved.
I did say relatively low cost.
And relatively speaking, for a lot of begginers often the peace of mind of a guaranteed stop is worth the extra price, until their confidence builds.
Everybody is different and have different approaches to trading.
Not everybody trades short term (whatever that means?), where the spread and "the real market" are a more important part of the equation.
I gotta say I don't like your sums. After say 10 round trips on Gold your beginner will be down $10-$20 X whatever size they are trading. Where the futs trader will be down $0.50-0.40 in brokerage & spread.I know where I would be looking for peace of mind.
The problemn with CFDs is they ARE expensive. Its just adds to the many reasons why newbies with small accounts and no experance shouldn't be encouraged to jump in to the retail friendly, small capital, soon to be no capital CFDs.
Hi Trembling Hand, from your posts (and your journal) I consider you a poster who genuinely knows what he is talking about. So how do you recommend a newbie get involved with commodities with as little capital as possible?
Hi Trembling Hand, from your posts (and your journal) I consider you a poster who genuinely knows what he is talking about. So how do you recommend a newbie get involved with commodities with as little capital as possible?
Can I butt in here?
The short answer is - don't. Stick to stocks unless you have at least 100-200k capital... and preferably more.
basically what Wayne said.
The more newbies joining in with their $10-20K accounts, the bigger the overall profit pool for those traders who actually has an edge. You should have encourage Bat_Ears to start
Could you elaborate on why this so?
When someone loses money its not lost into a black hole its goes to another trader. In a normal market, shares, futures bonds etc Sum money lost = Sum of money won by others.
In the "Beginner commodity trading" CFDs money lost goes to your broker. Candy from a baby.
Thats why the CFDs are pushed so hard, low margin rates, simple interface, low capital to enter, stacks of ads etc etc etc. Its not a market where you are trading against other traders. Its a market where you trade against your broker!!
So its hard to win out because your broker is more experienced and knows the market better? Or do you mean something more by edge?
How does having more capital help?
How do you get involved in CFDs that aren't "Beginner commodity trading"?
Hello and welcome to Aussie Stock Forums!
To gain full access you must register. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds to complete.
Already a member? Log in here.