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发表于 14-8-2007 19:31:00|来自:新加坡
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<p>1. If I'm not wrong, you can "sell short". However, you MUST cover your position by the end of the trading day.</p><p>2. It's a matter of how much your Security Firm trust you. When you buy shares, nobody knows how much money you have in your bank account. By due date, you must pay up. If you can't pay up, the Security Firm may take action to enforce sale of your shares. If they can't recover all the monies, they will surely take legal action against you.</p><p>3. Normally, stock & shares are traded in lots of 1,000. However, some firms (like SingTel)may allow trading of smaller lots of 100 or even 10. This is to allow very small investors to participate in the trading. If I'm not wrong, Warrants are also traded in lots of 1,000 shares.</p><p>4. Margin Ttrading accounts are not limited to warrant trading. Margin Trading, as the name applies, allows you to trade within a margin, that is to say, whatever you bought through this account, the shares are held by the security firms. The market value of the shares held can be used for further trading, provided there is a margin as stipulated by the agreement. Remember, this is like taking a loan from the security firms. It can be risky when the market turns sour.</p> |
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