| Spread Betting In market terms spread betting companies quote two figures for
an index which is known as the spread. They quote a high and a low value and the investors either sells
at the low price, or buys at the high price. If the index rises and you buy high then you sell out and
at the close of business at a profit relative to how right you were. For example, if you predicted an
index to close high and it closed 6 points above the quoted figure, your profit will be calculated at
6 times your stake. The risk is that if you go low (sell) and the index rises, you make a loss, also calculated
by the margin meaning that you can lose more than you invested.
Spread betting is popular but carries a high level of risk. There are however no commission charges,
fees and the profits are tax free.
Spread betters try to minimise the risk by keeping themselves well informed and off setting losses
(for example making alternative bets halfway through a day if predictions were wrong).
There are a number of courses, books and firms set up to help you learn more about spread betting and
the links below will help to guide you.
Looking to try spread betting? www.moneyjungle.net/directory/spreadbetting
Further reading and training courses can be found here:
Contracts for difference (CFD’s)
A contract for difference enables users to speculate on share price movements without owning the underlying
shares. Investors trade on margin and pay a deposit (typically 10 – 20%) of the contract’s
full value. There are no fixed timescales allowing users to take long or short positions contrasting them
from futures contracts.
There are many advantages and charges to be aware of when considering CFD’s so research is essential.
For detailed information on CFD’s click here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contracts_for_difference
For independent advice click here
http://www.moneyjungle.net/advice
Looking for a CFD? Click here:
http://www.moneyjungle.net/businessdirectory
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