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CFD Trading Explained

Posted in financial investing by Rowan –

A Contract for Difference, or CFD is an two way trading deal between two different parties based on the rise or fall in the trading price of an agreed number of in a company over an agreed time – no actual share purchase is necessary. While it may sound slightly complicated it really is not at all. Many investment groups and hedge funds have found a great deal of success with CFD for over ten years now within the UK stock markert as an alternative to traditional share trading. CFD trading is similar in many ways to spread betting in that both of these are margined products so you can gear yourself up or actually take a decision that is a multiple of your available funds.

 

So if you take the margin on a firm youre interested in was 10%, establishing a position of £100,000 would really only require a deposit of £10,000. Any running profits you make can be used as margin to establish new positions but any running losses would have to be made good by reducing your position or providing additional funds.

While stamp duty of 0.5% on all UK share purchases has in the opinion of some traders reduced the cost effectiveness of ‘day-trading’ traditional stocks and , both CFDs and are exempt and this has added to their appeal. CFDs are liable to capital gains tax whereas spread bets are tax free, but losses incurred from spread bets are gone for good while CFD losses can be offset against future profits for tax purposes. When you trade in CFDs, you purchase those contracts in almost the same way that youd buy . Let’s say you wished to invest on a thousand in a business – with CFD trading you would need to sell 1,000 units at eg 494p per share, whereas with you would just place a bet of £10 per point to get an equivalent return.

The other difference between the two instruments lies in the flexibility in the bid-offer spread. With CFD you are the cost maker, which is why hedge funds tend to use CFDs rather than . CFDs do not enfold the costs of financing a position within the spread (as does ) but charge those costs and commissions separately. CFDs do not wrap the costs of financing a position within the spread (as does ) but charge those costs and commissions separately. Because of this, the CFD spread quote will forever be very close to the underlying price of the share or commodity that you are following. CFD’s also mimic almost every aspect of actually owning the underlying share or market, so if you hold a position long enough, you receive the benefit of any dividends being paid on the underlying .

CFDs and have particular features that will appeal to different trading styles and there is no one best instrument to use. However they should not be regarded as substitutes for long term investment or saving, as more people seek to take control of their financial destiny, theres been a growing realisation that going short is a legitimate means of trading in market thats become progressively difficult to profit from in a traditional sense.

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