Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Penny Shares
12 Answers
Has anyone had experience of investing in these? I might 'dabble' but need to read up on it first as I have no experience in this area.
I'll set up a bank account with a set amount of money in (say 100 GBP) and use this capital as an initial investment. If I lose it then I lose it - its a gamble but I wont be tempted to put more capital in.
What sites can you use to buy/trade penny shares and get advice on good investments?
I'll set up a bank account with a set amount of money in (say 100 GBP) and use this capital as an initial investment. If I lose it then I lose it - its a gamble but I wont be tempted to put more capital in.
What sites can you use to buy/trade penny shares and get advice on good investments?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Booldawg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Penny shares are not really any different to any other shares in my view.
If you have £100 you can buy 2000 shares @5p, or 100 shares @ £1 or 1 share @ £100.... or anything in between.
If the price of a share doubles you double your money. If it halves you lose your money.
The only difference I can see is that price changes may be more dramatic in percentage terms for penny shares so your gains or loses may be greater
If you have £100 you can buy 2000 shares @5p, or 100 shares @ £1 or 1 share @ £100.... or anything in between.
If the price of a share doubles you double your money. If it halves you lose your money.
The only difference I can see is that price changes may be more dramatic in percentage terms for penny shares so your gains or loses may be greater
Note that share buying is not for short term "profit" but for long term investing.
Share prices can go up and down a lot, but over time do tend to go up.
However you need to ride the "up and down" storms and stick with them for years to see a profit.
No point selling them the minute anything goes wrong or you lose your money.
Share prices can go up and down a lot, but over time do tend to go up.
However you need to ride the "up and down" storms and stick with them for years to see a profit.
No point selling them the minute anything goes wrong or you lose your money.
Plent of free advice on line , then just use your bank to do the transactions.
http://www.pennystocksshares.co.uk/
http://www.pennystocksshares.co.uk/
I'm not aware of banks offering a free dealing service. I haven't bought any for a while but 10-15 years ago I think a good rate was £10 - 15 per transaction. Even if it were still only £15 that's a fair chunk of the £100 - and then there will be fees when you come to sell.
And of course there is always a spread between the buying and selling prices.
So, for an outlay of £100 I think you'd need a massive increase in the share prices before you'd make any money
And of course there is always a spread between the buying and selling prices.
So, for an outlay of £100 I think you'd need a massive increase in the share prices before you'd make any money
factor30 is quite right; by far the biggest cost in these shares is the difference between bid and offer prices. I own some shares in a penny stock (as noted, this is gambling money only). On a recent day the bid was 50 cents, the offer $2. Meaning that if you wanted to buy you'd pay $2, if you wanted to sell you'd get 50 cents. Most trades actually occur inside these quotes but the swings can be dramatic; last week the stock went from $2.10 to $1.45 to $1.25 in the space of three trades (obviously someone was selling).
However, the true "value" of the company will only be realized in the long run (I'm hoping they get acquired for $10/share some day in the distant future) so darting in and out of the stocks on a daily or weekly basis, once you add in brokerage costs and tax consequences, is not likely to be a money-maker.
However, the true "value" of the company will only be realized in the long run (I'm hoping they get acquired for $10/share some day in the distant future) so darting in and out of the stocks on a daily or weekly basis, once you add in brokerage costs and tax consequences, is not likely to be a money-maker.