Here's a transcript of some questions and answers that I
recently asked Phaedrus. They're probably useful to other ShareChat
readers. Please feel free to add your own knowledge and experience
to my questions below.
Q: What are the tax implications for trading in AUS and USA?
Do you pay capital gains tax there and how is it treated if you bring the
money back to NZ? Are you taxed twice on capital gains or is it just treated
as overseas income and taxed at your personal tax rate?
A: You pay no tax in the overseas country in which you make the profits,
but pay tax here at the appropriate rate when you declare those profits as
income.
Q: Do you buy "put" and "call" options to cover your respective
long and short positions? It would seem a good risk reduction strategy
despite the lower returns.
A: I do not trade options at all, so do not use them as a risk
reduction strategy. I have read of some people doing this, though.
Q: I've decided to buy the book "Trading for a living" by Dr
Alexander Elder. It gets a pretty good rap from most people that have read
it.
A: Dr Elder's book "Trading for a Living" is an excellent choice for
a first book. Some of his ideas do not work so well in markets (or
stocks) that are lightly traded, though.
Q: How easy is it to short sell?
A: NZ :- All but impossible.
Aus :- Cumbersome, difficult,
restricted.
USA :- Easy, fast, cheap. (Exactly the same
procedure as going long)
Q: Ok, so you mean you can be in a short position for an
indefinite period of time?
A: In the USA, there is no time limit as to how long you can short a
stock.
Q: How do you screen for stocks? I saw that you
suggested that BCH was now in a confirmed uptrend, but how did you notice it?
Is there a way to set up a screening monitor for particular TA indicators
across a whole market?
A: There are many ways to screen stocks :-
(1) By eye, quickly looking
at the chart of each stock in turn. This might only take about 5 seconds per
stock.
(2) Software such as MetaStock can be used to screen for any
technical parameter, or combination, that you can think of.
(3) There are
many web-based screening utilities available. They may be based on fundamental
or technical criteria, or even candlestick patterns.
(4) Most US brokers
provide stock screening utilities for their customers, as well as their own
ranking systems, which can be used as a preliminary screen. They even have
intraday screeners.
Thanks Phaedrus!