Antonym wrote:Did you know that the NSE (in India) charges only 0.1% on the buy side and 0.1% on the sell side for intra-day online trades?
That's what SEC should do. This will increase the circulation and create a healthy market.
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Antonym wrote:Did you know that the NSE (in India) charges only 0.1% on the buy side and 0.1% on the sell side for intra-day online trades?
duke wrote:Antonym wrote:Did you know that the NSE (in India) charges only 0.1% on the buy side and 0.1% on the sell side for intra-day online trades?
That's what SEC should do. This will increase the circulation and create a healthy market.
Appreciate if you could elaborate the relation between relaxing of credit and short-selling in layman's language please!Academic wrote:My suggestion is if SEC relax credit policy by any mean, short-selling should be allowed. So that credit bubbles may not create and many manipulations can be avoided. What do you think?
Last edited by Kithsiri on Sun Aug 07, 2011 8:31 pm; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : spelling errors.)
Thanks.SanjivFund wrote:In order to facilitate Short Selling,settlements need to be made..mark to market.This means on a daily basis..Henceforth credit cannot be allowed for it to operate
If an investor wants to trade using credit,then He/She should open a Margin Trading Account.
The fact that we have not achieved proper credit rules..in the CSE,has impacted the further development of the exchange.
Happy Trading
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FINANCIAL CHRONICLE™ » CORPORATE CHRONICLE™ » If SEC relax credit policy, short-selling should be allowed
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