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Day Trading System
The volume of shares
traded on the Internet has risen sharply this year. Especially the
use of a day trading system and the sale of day trading systems.
Investors have been warned of the dangers of day trading in shares
by the UK's top financial watchdog.
Day trading, where shares are bought and sold
over the Internet at
short notice, has become popular in the United States and is widely
seen as a quick way of getting rich.
But Howard Davies, chairman of the Financial Services Authority,
said 70% of day traders in the United States lost money and it was
important that people were aware of the risks and understood the
expenses needed to stand any chance of making a profit.
He said it was likely that day trading would grow in the UK as
Internet share dealing systems became more popular.
"There is nothing illegal or unethical about day trading. But
investors need to know what they are doing," he said.
Chat room risks
Mr Davies also warned of the risks posed by Internet chat rooms
where online traders can exchange gossip and tips.
Howard Davies says beware chat room advice
He said investors should beware of expertise provided as advice
could be unauthorised.
And he warned that tips offered in cyberspace could be examples of
"share ramping" when the value of a share is talked-up artificially.
Mr Davies, who was speaking at a conference organised by the
Association of Private Client Investment Managers and Stockbrokers,
also raised a number of regulatory issues regarding Internet share
trading in general.
He said firms offering day trading services needed to ensure their
clients were credit-worthy and that their trading systems were not
being used by criminals to launder illegal money.
He said the watchdog needed to ensure it did not "stand in the way
of technological change" and should not bias regulation in favour of
traditional paper-based trading.
Rapid growth
The volume of shares traded over the Internet is growing rapidly in
the UK. Around 29,000 trades were carried out online in the first
three months of the year. This figure jumped to 51,000 by the second
quarter.
The growth is expected to accelerate as more stockbrokers offer such
facilities.
In the US, 16% of all share trades are carried out over the
Internet.
But one of the leading electronic share dealing services, E-trade,
which has set up a UK subsidiary, denied that it would be promoting
day trading in Britain.
A spokesman pointed out that the company did not provide day trading
floors, or allow people to operate margin accounts, where they can
borrow money from their stockbroker to buy shares.
"There are also fundamental differences between the nature of the
markets here compared to the USA that make it unlikely that day
trading will ever have the same impact. Stamp duty on every buy
transaction is a major inhibitor. There also isn't the same volume
or volatility in the UK market to make pure day trading attractive
or feasible here," E-trade told BBC News Online.
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