settlement
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Our system detected that the amount of your EUR Money Market Funds (MMF) participations has exceeded our compensation limit over the last days. We remind you that at DEGIRO all non-used money is automatically invested in MMF’s via a standing order. Negative returns, due to market interest rates and fund costs, are only compensated for the first 2500 EUR in MMF holdings. If you want to avoid negative return in the Money Market Funds, some of the options are the following:
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So they're charging me a negative interest rate? Any idea how I find out the rate?
The reason I have money in my account is to invest but obviously right now I'm not incredibly keen so is my only option to withdraw it and then send it in again the day I decide to invest? It may be a snap decision so I didn't want to have to wait to transfer
You've more than 2,500 in cash, and it's earning a negative interest rate. So you're losing money.
We've concrete confirmation that confirmation bias is a real thing.Here we have concrete confirmation of this where now retail investors are being charged negative interest rates on cash deposits.
Isn't that a different topic? It might be useful if you started a separate thread on this so it doesn't get lost.Another aspect not discussed is the fall in value of the euro on international exchanges lately
Yes but this is hard evidence of negative interest rates directly affecting retail investors. The problem is that once you move your newly released capital from your brokerage account to your bank account then that capital wont go back into stocks when the panic ends, you will just wait and wait, the cash will just sit in your current account, then because stock markets are "dangerous", that money will burn a hole in your current account, so a new kitchen or a cruise around antartica will beckon (obviously with the ice melting because of global warming it is crucial to experience this, there is always a worthy justification), it will be spent and not re invested. So money that was an investment ends up as discretionary spendingIf you don't want negative returns, just move the money to your current account. Problem solved.
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