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2006-10-02 19:40:11 · 7 answers · asked by vishu 1 in Business & Finance Investing

7 answers

You need to explain further and be more specific.

The word "market" encompasses many things and many different meanings. As stated, your question makes no sense.

Are you asking if you "can" trade the commodities like stocks?

Can you trade oil like you trade a stock?

Or can you trade index futures on stocks or the index?

I could guess all night, but you need to rephrase your question and repost it.

2006-10-02 19:54:37 · answer #1 · answered by dredude52 6 · 1 0

you can trade the commodity market like the stock market you can trade the big nasdaq which means for every point per contract you make or lose $100 or the mini nasdaq at $10 per point.Or you can trade the dow which is cheap .I dont recommend it for the long terms because you can ask a broker close to %90 lose money in the long run because of commissions and slippage.I traded commodities for a few years.Their is a question on your questions page about premier trade i answered this,this will tell you where you can make some money my name is gary it will be the longest answer.

2006-10-02 19:50:11 · answer #2 · answered by gary 1 · 0 0

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!
commodity trading is absolutely not for beginners
nor is forex trading
nor is day trading

if you want to play in the commodity arena, but lack experience...
I would suggest an couple of ETFs that mirror some commodity markets, but, as equities , have the distinct advantage of stop limits, limit orders, saddles and straddles...

check DBC and GSG
also PEO for oil

check ishares.com, amex.com, powershares,com for a list of available ETFs and ETNs

2006-10-02 20:07:06 · answer #3 · answered by Gemelli2 5 · 1 0

relies upon on the bonds. some bonds such because of the fact the U. S. i-bonds and the Canadian reductions bonds could properly be redeemed at any time and for this reason there is not any secondary marketplace as they are able to easily be redeemed. even regardless of the undeniable fact that different bonds such because of the fact the U. S. Treasury bonds and maximum company and municipal bonds can basically be redeemed early via advertising to a various buyer on the secondary marketplace meaning they could have a marketplace value which could compete with comparable bonds on the marketplace for this reason they have an inflation value risk. while achievable, there is usually a secondary marketplace, they are able to't keep you from attempting to sell something which you own; that is in basic terms that there is probably no longer a reason to have a secondary marketplace.

2016-12-26 08:06:34 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

IAU is an ETF that owns physical gold & trades like a stock. DBV is the same for currencies + there is 1 for silver.

2006-10-03 03:59:24 · answer #5 · answered by vegas_iwish 5 · 0 0

You don't need to become a broker, you need to sign up with a brokerage firm. UBS, Shwaub, E-trade etc. Their brokers will execute the buys or sells you order.

2006-10-02 19:51:37 · answer #6 · answered by James 4 · 0 0

You have to register and become a broker. but to start with you can be a sub-broker of broking house too.

2006-10-02 19:44:03 · answer #7 · answered by Rammohan 4 · 0 0

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