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Now excuse me for showing my ignorance here, but I wanted to ask why it is so difficult to buy EEE shares. It's unlike any company I've traded before, in that I can put a buy order in (at market value) and just have it sit there for hours, during which time the price fluctuates wildly. Granted I am using the Trading 212 app, so perhaps this is causing this, but I have no issue with any other stock I buy or sell? For example I've had a buy order in this morning since trading opened and it's still sitting there. I've tried to buy larger volumes (50K shares) and it's almost impossible, so now have taken to trying to buy smaller increments and still find the process immensely frustrating. Does anyone else experience this? Is there a trick I'm missing?
Set a buy in price limit, within the spread above.
It does it quicker and will go through when it hits that price
Might be old fashioned but ring your broker. Get an immediate price and often on a very tight spread. Easy
I use a different app but I usually have to set my buy limit very close to the ask if not right on the ask. It sometimes executes under that price but there's no guarantee.
I found the same with T212 on a few small cap shares. Too risky if there are big moves and you need out fast, so sold out and moved to freetrade. Instant transactions for market value trades. Only downside is that you can't transfer your ISA over, you need to sell T212 and rebuy in a new freetrade ISA.
I don't really get trading on AIM, although I can see its ranges but the whole buying at bottoms, selling at highs throughout the year seems long winded for me. I just like to invest, only selling if I'm in good profit and I'm aware of the direction its pulling and I can get a better price with a higher volume of shares but it's rare I will.
I like nasdaq for day trading as its instant, albeit risky but predictive at times, or things like ocado last year, which I have my eye on once inflation starts dropping!!!
I also don't get AIM, and indeed EEE is the first AIM I've really followed. I'm not a day trader, I just want to buy at a reasonable price and sit on it like a big fat hen until they build the processing plant next year. Then I'll play it by ear depending on what happens.
No worries, it's a good stock.
Has risks like they all do, but there are some smart people here who know there biscuits so I'm.sure you spectate long enough you will seek them out.
Good luck
I’ve never had trouble with AJ Bell. If you’re buying 50k shares then the £5 dealing fee + 0.25% per annum doesn’t really hurt much.
Depends on your age and tax bracket I guess but at 60 I’m more inclined to load my SIPP than my ISA because it guarantees everyone at least 20% with the basic rate tax relief plus another 20% if you’re lucky enough to be in the 40% tax bracket.
Buying £5k worth of shares in an ISA will get you £5k worth of shares. Buying £5k worth of shares in a SIPP will give you £5k worth of shares plus another £1250 tax relief to play with.
Some of us are young men grumble, I liked my.old broker but I kinda liked this trading212 app for my isa. Very manageable indeed, awful with AIM when making buys, but if your savvy you can get round its shortcomings. Cracking for nasfaq trading, 9am to 1am pre and after hours. Its nice to be able run that as a side earner, get some good strike rates at closing bell at times.
Sending pigeons and telegrams lost on new generations, even making a phone call these days seems bizzare.
I found it best to roll with the times. I'll go back to brokers eventually, once I've ended my journey and had some fun
Try ii investors.vey good. AIM regulators are the pits. Really never to be trusted. Look at AMTE.
Am I reading the last two trades correctly? Two 600k share buys. That’s confidence for you.