Yesterday I attended a seminar at the LSE, jointly hosted by Interactive Brokers.
IB questioned whether Spread Betting was more or less profitable than traditional trading. They provided an alogrithm, which I didn't write down, showing the profit available on trading 100 shares in one particular FTSE company (again I didn't write this down) and assuming it made just one point.
It showed the round-trip costs charged by themselves and assumed capital gains tax would be paid.
They also stated how it was so much easier to make one point than 3, 4, 10 etc points - obvious really. They mentioned the, typically larger, spreads on spread betting.
So looking at different tax situations, different fees, different holding sizes, timescales, spreads, whether trading on margin or not and all the other variables which is the most profitable ?
Also how would you factor risk into the equation ?
Charlton
IB questioned whether Spread Betting was more or less profitable than traditional trading. They provided an alogrithm, which I didn't write down, showing the profit available on trading 100 shares in one particular FTSE company (again I didn't write this down) and assuming it made just one point.
It showed the round-trip costs charged by themselves and assumed capital gains tax would be paid.
They also stated how it was so much easier to make one point than 3, 4, 10 etc points - obvious really. They mentioned the, typically larger, spreads on spread betting.
So looking at different tax situations, different fees, different holding sizes, timescales, spreads, whether trading on margin or not and all the other variables which is the most profitable ?
Also how would you factor risk into the equation ?
Charlton