neiltheseal
Registered User
- Messages
- 38
spread bettting is considered gambling for taxation,so no unless you are a full time spreadbetter,in which case it would fall under income tax.Not 100%,you should get clarification from a professional
You do not need professional advice. It is exempt, same as a professional gambler. No stamp duty on the shares and no CGT.
You do not need professional advice.
Do you have the same problem with borrowing shares or short selling?I wish I can trade something I do not have for some money
Not that smart of course even if I can destroy my ethical argument.
So you dont have an 'ethical argument' against short selling or spreadbetting(long or short), it is just that you dont understand how people can make money from it, which is fair enough. I was just curious about the ethical point.> Do you have the same problem with borrowing shares or short selling?
Not doing that as do not know how to consistently win it.
The only thing I know that can make me money similar to the market average on the long run is buy&hold well diversified portfolio of cheap passive indexed funds (e.g. Vanguard, Fidelity) with periodic rebalancing.
Read some real academic work and not believe in something called "financial porn" in the US.
Spread betting is too risky, similar or even more to futures and even probably more then futures.
In futures (spread betting) market small number of people are winning a lot and they are usually either best pros or lucky people at that moment.
Consistently winning year after year is almost impossible.
Go away from such thing and you will most probable save time and money
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