Articles of Interest

Why Trade CFDs?

Benefits of trading CFDs
CFDs are derivative products that offer distinct benefits including:

  • Liquidity
  • Traded on margin
  • Traded long or short
  • Traded online
  • Low transaction cost
  • Access to international markets
  • Benefits from dividends

Liquidity
CFD prices are obtained directly from the underlying market. This means CFDs give you access to the liquidity in the underlying market, plus liquidity offered by the CFD provider. Most of the time there is much more liquidity in the CFD market than in the underlying or physical market due to the higher number of participants including private and institutional traders.

Trade on margin
CFDs are traded on margin, typically from 5-10% to for shares and 1% for indices. This means a more efficient use of your capital as you only need to allocate a small percentage of your funds to secure a trade. This also enables you to magnify the returns on your investment with a much smaller capital outlay.

Trade long and short
Before CFDs, going short a stock could only be done through a traditional broker that would charge hefty fees on top of the normal brokerage. With CFDs traders can now go short any position or market without any extra cost. Going short is as easy as going long with CFDs. Going short also provides another benefit that was not available before. Your CFD provider will pay you interest on a short CFD position. This is similar to earning interest on your bank account balance.

Trade on-line
With an estimated 13.4 million Australians with Internet access online share trading has also been on the increase, giving traders more control and constant access to their positions. Most CFD providers offer free software and CFD trading platforms that allow traders to place orders online even outside normal trading hours.

Low transaction cost
Trading CFDs can cost you as low as $10 each way compared to traditional stock brokerage rates of around $25-30. Although transaction costs are a small portion of your overall trading cost, they have an impact on your bottom line once the volume of your transactions increases.

Access to international markets
CFDs open up a wide range of trading instruments. Most CFD providers offer CFDs on Australian and International shares, indices, sectors, commodities, foreign exchange and treasuries. Most of these markets were not available or accessible to private traders before due to the complex nature or complicated set up of traditional brokerage accounts.

Receive benefits of dividends and stock splits
As CFDs reflect the price and movement of the underlying physical share, they also mirror any corporate actions that take place in the underlying share. This means, if you are a holder of a share CFD, you will also receive dividends and stock split benefits once they become due. However, you are not entitled to any voting rights or franking credits. On the same vein, when you are short a share CFD and the underlying stock goes ex-dividend, you have to pay the dividend amount as you would if you were short the physical share.

To find more helpful CFD trading tips you can download our free CFD Guide.

Pairs Trading CFDs

Pairs trading is the action of a trader buying one CFD and simultaneously selling another. As the trader is long one CFD and short the other they are not affected by broader market movements instead they are subject to the price movements of pair of securities which they are trading. As long as the trader buys the outperforming security or sells the underperforming security they will make money.

Most traders buy CFDs with the expectation that the market will rise, few traders take short positions with the view the market will fall. Pairs traders are indifferent to market direction and don’t mind which way the market moves so long as they choose a strong pair of related securities.

Pairs trading has become popular since the introduction of CFDs, prior to this it was difficult for a trader to short sell. CFDs have made pairs trading simple accessible to the everyday investor.

Most traders adopt pairs trading strategies when there is uncertainty as to the direction of the market. The reason for this is that it removes the market risk, rather whether the trade makes money will depend on whether you buy a CFD that will outperform or sell a CFD that will underperform. A typical example of this would be buying Commonwealth Bank (CBA) and selling ANZ Bank (ANZ), because you expect that CBA will outperform ANZ. Should both stocks rise or fall you will be indifferent, however should CBA rise and ANZ fall as you expected, you will make money. If CBA falls less than ANZ you will make money likewise if CBA rises more than ANZ you will also make money. 

There are a number of benefits of using CFDs in your pairs trading strategy. One of the main benefits is the financing offset that will be achieved when you earn a financing income on your short position. Take the above example for instance, when you open your long CFD position on CBA you will pay a small financing charge however when you go short the ANZ CFD you will receive financing income. Although the offset is not 100% it will most certainly reduce the cost of the trade. In many ways pairs trading as a short to medium term strategy and can be much cheaper and less risky than simply opening a naked long or short position.  

Pairs trading is not only commonly used when trading share CFDs but has also become very popular for use with indices. When using CFDs over indices traders can take the view that one index will outperform the other. An example of this may be the US market versus the Australian market. In this example you would buy the ASX 200 index CFD and sell the S&P 500 index CFD with the view that the Australian market will outperform the US market. 

Pairs traders adopt a number of strategies, one of the more common strategies used is to choose pairs that are correlated, for example Stockland against Mirvac or Rio Tinto against BHP Billiton. It is also common for traders to use sector CFDs in their strategy such as the healthcare sector versus the materials sector or energy sector versus the ASX 200 index.  

An example of sector trading would be the resources sector versus the ASX 200 index. You might be of the view that the resources sector is overvalued relative to the market and will underperform the market, you would short the resources sector and buy the ASX 200 index. Alternatively you may feel that the market will retreat and money will move back into the defensive stocks, in this case you would buy the healthcare sector and short the energy sector. When choosing sectors you should consider their weighting within the overall index as this will help you determine the sectors correlation to the overall market. 

Pairs trading can be done on just about anything except currencies which by their very nature are already a pair’s trade. A common pairs trading example is illustrated below.

You have the view that ANZ is undervalued and trading on much lower earnings multiples than CBA, and will therefore outperform CBA. The pairs trade is go long ANZ and short CBA.

You buy a $10,000 worth of CFDs over ANZ and sell $10,000 worth of CBA CFDs. The margin on each position is $1,000 or 10% of the value of the contract.

ANZ CFDs are trading at $22, your $10,000 investment gets you 454 CFDs. CBA CFDs are trading at $52, your $10,000 investment gets you 192 CFDs.

Your pairs trade would be ‘buy’ 454 ANZ CFDs and at the same time ‘sell’ 192 CBA CFDs.

Typically CFD commission rates are $10 or 0.10%, your trade will cost you $10. As the trade consists of four trades (buying and selling) your total commission would be $40 ($10 x 4).

Let’s assume that ANZ rises to $30 and CBA rises to $55. In this scenario you would make a profit on your ANZ position and a loss on you CBA position.  

Your positions would now look like this:

Long  454 ANZ shares @ $30     = $13,620
Short  192 CBA shares @ $55    = $10,560

ANZ profit     = $3,632
CBA loss       = -$576
Commission   = $40
Gross profit   = $3,016

To find more helpful information on CFD trading you can download our free CFD Guide.

 


Recent Posts


Tags

Limit order ASX CFDs CFD Day Trading CFD order types Trading Seasonality Market Scanning Software IOS CFD portfolio CFD GST Margin Loans Investing EAS Trustee Trading Plan sector CFD Traders Edge IC Markets Forex Spreads CFD Sniper chart patterns Automated Trading Wbeiress Java WebIRESS Java Trading Currencies WebIRESS Errors Shares webiress Pro Deal Trading Platfrom CFD provider Sniper International Capital Markets CFD Dealer Stop loss order Options stop out level Foreign Exchange Information Flow Pro Deal Platfrom dma cfds webiress VPS Initial margin webiress trading platfrom Opening Price Auction CFD position liquidation Trust account reuters news Trading Style Trading stratery Pairs Trading Forex Broker WebIRESS Firewall CFD Trade Size Share Settlement Realised Profits Forex Trading Guaranteed Stop-loss Financing Stock Transfer ProDeal Platform Meta Stock CFD liquidity Overconfidence MT4 intra-day trading Hedge Webiress Demo end of day trading Spark Direct Market Access MQL4 ECN Broker HIN Day Trader Psychology CFD Trade Selection Trading Edge Risk Managment CFD Margin Rates Metatrader4 CFD order Trading on the match Company Profitability Match Phase margin rates Liquidity CFD margins Short Selling Shares IOS Plus Trading Profits Margin Calculation Dividends Online Share Trading Over The Counter Direct Market Access CFDs Closing Price Auction Best CFD Broker Portfolio Diversification Webiress Cost CFD financing CFD Broker Webiress Review DMA Exchange Order Book Forex Liquidity short CFD Risks: Risk Management Issuer sponsored Self Managed Superfund Spread Betting CFD Edge CFD brokerage CFD trading CFD margin Low CFD Margins Short CFDs Direct Markets Access WebIRESS Advantages Order Book Trading timeframes Currency global cfds swing trading CFD risk DMA Forex CFD trading style CFD trading system Pro Deal Underlying Exchange CFD Dividends What is a CFD zone trading Forex Robots If done order Lowest CFD Margins Forex DMA ASX 200 Variation margin Share trading Scalper Electronic Communications Network Stop-loss order Trading Benefits Market Depth CFDs online Index CFD Market Maker DMA CFDs Webiress watchlists IOS Classic ProDeal Trading Platform Tight Spreads webiress platform Stock split CFD Income Broker sponsored Trading on the open Trust Deed OTC GST Shares Hedge Book CFD price WebIRESS Problems Small Cap CFDs, Speculative CFDs EA Currency Trading CFD leverage Margin Lending Pre Borrow Webiress workspace Settlement Trading fear Take Profit Trading Lifestyle HIN Transfer Day Trading DMA CFDs ECN Unrealised Profits ProDeal Trading Strategy dow jones charts CFD Scalping Webiress Market Map Company Fundamentals Tax Ruling CFD Volatility CFD benefits Technical Ananlysis International CFDs S&P 500 cfd instruments Forex ECN CFD Providers Best CFD Provider Virtual Private Server CFD Trading Mistakes CFD financing charges Trade Excecution Charting Package Spreads trailing stop-loss Price Feed Expert Advisors requote CFD trading strategy Webiress MDI Market Auction Low CFD Margin Rates WebIRESS Help Trusts CFDs Best Metatrader Broker Metatrader Demo indice Tight Forex Spreads Real-time Margining CFD Trade Management Company Balance Sheet Trust Settler Pairs Trade Share CFD CFD Parcel WebIRESS Error Directional Trading Managing Risk Metatrader Broker Margin Trading Short Selling Trading Psychology ATO ID 2007/57 Scalping webiress charts CFD Day Trader CFD Commission cfd trading platform Shortselling CFDs Hedging Trading Strategy Commission Free CHESS Market order Market Makers end-of day trading CFD Trading Edge Margin call TR-2005/15 CFD Leverage Trading Habits Transaction cost Pairs Psychology webiress cfds index ICM Loss aversion Stop-loss Fixed Spreads Forex oco order Volatility DMA CFD Fixed Spread Broker Trust account CFDs Trading Mistakes Trend trading Tax Intraday trading Sector CFD CFD Franking Credits Share CFDs Prime Broker Equites Technical Analysis Metaquotes Portfolio Managment Market Map Risks of CFDs Metatrader Trading Capital Money Management Online Trading Day Trader ASX CFD CFD liquidation long ATO Take profit order Contracts for Difference ATO ID 2007/56 Day trading webiress plus DMA CFD Provider Trading emotion Risk diversification Trading Styles CFD Profits WebIRESS Problem Global Market Conditions CFD Costs CFDs Company Management news trading Share split CFD Risks Cash Flow SMSF Currencies CFD Provider Review trading platform CFD Scalper CFD Trading Benefits Stop-loss orders

Archive