BENEFITS
+ Go Long or Short
+ No Commisions
+ No Stamp Duty
+ No Capital Gains Tax
+ No Currency Risk
+ Instant Execution
+ Trade in Small Sizes
+ Hedging Facilities
+ Extended Dealing Hours
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An introduction to Spread Trading

Welcome to the world of spread trading. The Financial Spread Trading Course will introduce you to the ins-and-outs of this form of trading. In fact, by the end of the course, you should be set-up and ready to start spread trading. Over the next 8 lessons you'll learn how to open a spread trading account, and how to use stop losses to minimise losses. The course also explains how to use world indices to make big money. And if you're having trouble choosing the right trade? Well, you'll learn how fundamental and technical analysis can help you spot that winning trade - by both going long and going short. At the end of the course, you will also receive a full glossary of spread trading terms, something that no spread tradeter can do without. Well, without further a due, let's get started.

Spread Trading is creating a revolution in the financial markets by allowing everyone access to a new world of opportunity. There are no barriers to entry with spread trading, apart from your level of enthusiasm. Even money should not be a problem and you do not need to have City experience.
For once it is not an area where those in the City get to gain at the expense of all those who do not belong to their elitist club. Indeed, in many ways, with spread trading, private investors hold all the aces. And soon, you'll hold all the aces too.

What spread trading is - and isn't


The type of trading you are probably most familiar with is rather different from financial spread trading. In normal Trading, you are taking a view on a horse race or a football game and are looking for a particular result. But in financial spread trading, the trade that you are making is not this fixed result, a single moment in time. You don't 'trade' that BP shares will hit 439p on 28 January, for example. Instead, you place a trade on whether you think a share or a market will be higher or lower in a few months than it is today.

Spread Trading should be regarded simply as a way of backing your view on where the financial markets are going. Like anything else, the more you get it right the more money you make. But it is not a game. If you are wrong you will lose real money.
How spread trading has revolutionised the market
Spread Trading was first offered by Stuart Wheeler in 1974 when IG Index opened its first market on the gold price. As with share futures, clients were able to trade on where they saw the gold price going in the future. This product took off rapidly and soon spread to the financial world. In 1985, IG Index offered its first financial spread trade on the FTSE 100 index. The rest, as they say, is history. And now you too can use spread trading to maximise your gains.
Six advantages of spread trading

There are six main advantages to spread trading:

1. Spread Trading profits are tax free
The major advantage of spread trading is that all profits are free of capital gains tax (CGT). It is difficult enough right now to make money on the markets, without the Inland Revenue taking away a large proportion of the gains.

2. You can minimise risk by restricting your losses
With spread trading, you can guarantee your 'stop loss', or the point at which you exit your trade. A conventional share purchase also allows you to set a stop loss, but this is not guaranteed. Therefore, when your share moves a great deal overnight, your broker may not be able to get you out the next morning at the stop-loss price you requested. But spread trading is different. Even if the shares move a great deal, you'll still be taken out of the trade at the guaranteed stop-loss price you asked for - the spread trading company has to swallow the extra cost itself. 3. Use bear markets to your advantage by going short 'Going short' means reversing the normal process of buying low and selling high. When you go short you first sell high and then buy low at a later date. You do this by borrowing shares from a broker in order to sell them. When you buy the shares, you're actually merely giving back the shares you borrowed. The further a market falls, the lower your buying price and the more profit you'll make.

Going short of a market or share is something that only insiders or the rich were able to do until recently. In a bear market, going short is one of the few ways of making money and spread trading is the easiest and most efficient way of doing this.
Here's an example on how to profit from going short:
You believe that AstraZeneca is overvalued.

* The spread trading company quotes you 1864 - 1872.

* You 'sell' £30 a point at 1864.
The market then slumps, dragging AstraZeneca with it.

* The company is now quoting AstraZeneca at 1844 - 1852.

* You decide to close your position at 1852.
Your profit is (1864-1852) x £30 = £360, free of capital gains tax.

4. You can start small with spread trading - before hitting the big-time
With spread trading you can choose exactly what the size of the trade is going to be. The range is from 1p 'a point' with financial spreads to hundreds of pounds per point. This means that you cannot only trade as small or as large as you like, you can enter and exit positions in stages.

5. You can lock in some profits, but keep the trade open
Unlike Trading on a horse, with spread trading you are not locked in until the result is known. You can close a trade at any time, even just a few seconds later. And you can also close off part of the trade to lock in some profit, but keep the remainder of the trade open in order to try to make more money.

6. Use it to hedge your portfolio
Hedging has only been available to large institutions, banks and wealthy individuals until very recently. As an example, if you think the property rise has been unsustainable, you can hedge against the value of house prices going down by spread trading on the property market.
Small investors can now compete on the same level as the large financial players, giving the equity market a new dimension. This aspect of spread trading is still a point that is under-emphasised in the mainstream financial media. In some ways this is hardly surprising, because if you gain knowledge of even the most basic aspects of spread trading you should be able to manage your own financial fate at least as well as the so-called professionals.

The facts about spread trading
When you spread trade, you place the trade with a spread trading company. The spread trading company predicts where it thinks a share or index will stand at a point in the future. You decide whether you think the share or index will be higher or lower, and you place your trade accordingly. In other words, you will never actually own the share or index; you will just benefit from its movement.


trades are based on time
There are two timelines with spread trades: trades that finish today and trades that finish at the end of a quarterly cycle (the end of March, June, September and December). As an example, you can place trades on where BT will end the trading day or on where it will be in June. The end of the day or quarterly cycle is referred to as the expiry date.

You don't have to keep the trade open to its expiry date, though. You can close your position at any time until the expiry of the trade. This is a great feature of spread trading, because if you've guessed correctly and are sitting on profit, you can grab it immediately. You can also 'roll over' a trade if you want to keep it open past the expiry date. Rolling over is cheaper than opening a new trade and you can roll your trade as many times as you choose. If you do not roll or close your trade, it will automatically close at the settlement price on expiry.

The amount you are risking moves with the market
When you trade, you trade a certain amount of money 'per point' or 'tick'. A point is the movement in a share or an index. For example, a share price movement from 313p to 317p is a movement of four points. A point doesn't always equal a penny, though. Sometimes it's a cent, sometimes it's a point or a fraction of a point, such as when you trade on an index.
If you trade £10 per point and the index moves 20 points in your direction, then you'll make £200 (£10 per point x 20 points). The money you make is free of capital gains tax (CGT).
It is essential to remember that when you trade you are trading your stake on a per point movement. You are liable for that open position in the market, and therefore you are not risking a 'fixed' amount. The outcome of the trade is as variable as market sentiment itself.

The value of gearing

Spread Trading is a geared action, which is one of the reasons why it's great for small investors. Because of gearing, even a small move in the price can give you a big return.
Let's imagine you thought Tesco shares were going to go up and you wanted to make money from this conviction. You could either choose to buy some Tesco shares and later sell them for a profit, or you could make an up trade with a spread trading company. If you bought 1,000 Tesco shares at 200p, you'd have to fork over £2,000.

But that's not the case with spread trading. With almost all spread trades, you only have to pay 10% of your total market position. In this example, you'd only need to have £200 in your account in order to make your trade.

If Tesco was at 200p when you bought your shares and then it moved to 210p when you sold, you would have made a 10p profit per share, and with 1,000 shares your actual profit would have been £100. A £100 profit on an outlay of £2,000 is a 5% profit. Your returns are much tradeter with spread trades. That £100 profit on the spread trade outlay of £200 is a 50% profit.

Do you like the sound of spread Trading?
That's a basic introduction to the world of spread trading. But does spread trading sound the thing for you? Well, next time we'll learn how to open a spread trading account. You'll also see the importance of using a stop loss, and the potential of placing limit orders. Spread tradeters make use of very specific jargon. You'll be introduced to the basics of spread trading language. But that's all in the next course, on its way to you soon.

This article was originally  published on http://www.financial-spread-betting.com/  a UK financial website which  specialises in offering free guides and information on stockmarket products  such as financial spread trading.

 

Risk Warning: Spread trades are margined products; it is possible to lose more than your initial margin deposit or credit allocation as well as any variation margin that you may be required to deposit from time to time. Therefore you should only speculate with money that you can afford to lose. Spread Trading may not be suitable for all customers; therefore please ensure that you fully understand the risks involved and seek independent advice if necessary and prior to entering into such transactions. When spread trading with WorldSpreads you are merely trading on the outcome of a financial instrument, sporting or political event etc. and therefore do not take delivery of any underlying instrument, nor are you entitled to any dividends payable or any other benefits related to the same. Risk Disclosure Notice