How can I practically buy stocks? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar...

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How can I practically buy stocks?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
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6















I'd like to buy a little amount (say, 5000 €) of stocks. I know it's risky, especially for an absolute beginner like me. Maybe you would like to persuade me to start with stuff such as such as mutual funds or ETF (btw, thanks for dissuading me from buying Bitcoins 😀).



However, I made up my mind, and I'm going to do it. I decided which stocks to buy, and I decided how long to keep them (10 years, hoping that the companies whose stock I'm buying don't go bankrupt before). The companies are all headquartered in USA.



I have no idea how to do it in practice, though. I have a bank account in a online bank, and it looks like the bank provides tools to buy stocks (I can provide the bank's name, if needed). However, in my country (Europe, but again I can provide the precise country, if strictly needed) you would never just subscribe a mortgage with your bank, because it's quite likely that by shopping online for mortages, you would find better options. The same is true for car insurance, for example.



So, I was wondering if I should look around for "online portfolio systems" (is this the right name?). However, I recently got a lot of spammy phone calls about forex (even though I never put my phone number online recently, and I also have 0 interest at all for forex). So I'd rather not expose myself online too much, searching for ways to buy stocks.



So my question is: how do I buy stocks? Since I'm going to keep them for a long time, I guess I'll need a service which has mostly low keeping fees, while buying/selling fees may be less important, since I'm not planning to buy/sell in the short term. Any suggestions on how to find it? Also, can I buy any numbers of a given stock, or are there some minimal amounts, and how do I find them? Finally, my employer gave me quite a lot of company stocks as a bonus. Is it possible to exchange part of them with the stocks I want to buy? Or the only thing I can do is to sell them (say, sell 5000 € of my company's stock) and buy an equivalent amount of the stocks I'm looking for?



PS not sure if the tag trading applies to my case: if it doesn't, please suggest a better tag.










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    Welcome back, adding a country tag will help significantly with suggestions as not all providers have operations throughout the EU. Mentioning the origin of the companies' stock you want to buy will also help since not every broker offers worldwide exposure for instance.

    – Leon
    4 hours ago






  • 4





    You asked for a better tag instead of "trading". I'd suggest "brokerage".

    – mastov
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Thanks for the sell signal.

    – Five Bagger
    2 hours ago











  • @FiveBagger lol, good one :D

    – Leon
    2 hours ago













  • @mastov done changing trading with brokerage. I feel like I should now ask what's brokerage 🙂 but I don't want to go OT. I'll try to read something online, or see if someone else asked the question here.

    – DeltaIV
    47 mins ago


















6















I'd like to buy a little amount (say, 5000 €) of stocks. I know it's risky, especially for an absolute beginner like me. Maybe you would like to persuade me to start with stuff such as such as mutual funds or ETF (btw, thanks for dissuading me from buying Bitcoins 😀).



However, I made up my mind, and I'm going to do it. I decided which stocks to buy, and I decided how long to keep them (10 years, hoping that the companies whose stock I'm buying don't go bankrupt before). The companies are all headquartered in USA.



I have no idea how to do it in practice, though. I have a bank account in a online bank, and it looks like the bank provides tools to buy stocks (I can provide the bank's name, if needed). However, in my country (Europe, but again I can provide the precise country, if strictly needed) you would never just subscribe a mortgage with your bank, because it's quite likely that by shopping online for mortages, you would find better options. The same is true for car insurance, for example.



So, I was wondering if I should look around for "online portfolio systems" (is this the right name?). However, I recently got a lot of spammy phone calls about forex (even though I never put my phone number online recently, and I also have 0 interest at all for forex). So I'd rather not expose myself online too much, searching for ways to buy stocks.



So my question is: how do I buy stocks? Since I'm going to keep them for a long time, I guess I'll need a service which has mostly low keeping fees, while buying/selling fees may be less important, since I'm not planning to buy/sell in the short term. Any suggestions on how to find it? Also, can I buy any numbers of a given stock, or are there some minimal amounts, and how do I find them? Finally, my employer gave me quite a lot of company stocks as a bonus. Is it possible to exchange part of them with the stocks I want to buy? Or the only thing I can do is to sell them (say, sell 5000 € of my company's stock) and buy an equivalent amount of the stocks I'm looking for?



PS not sure if the tag trading applies to my case: if it doesn't, please suggest a better tag.










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    Welcome back, adding a country tag will help significantly with suggestions as not all providers have operations throughout the EU. Mentioning the origin of the companies' stock you want to buy will also help since not every broker offers worldwide exposure for instance.

    – Leon
    4 hours ago






  • 4





    You asked for a better tag instead of "trading". I'd suggest "brokerage".

    – mastov
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Thanks for the sell signal.

    – Five Bagger
    2 hours ago











  • @FiveBagger lol, good one :D

    – Leon
    2 hours ago













  • @mastov done changing trading with brokerage. I feel like I should now ask what's brokerage 🙂 but I don't want to go OT. I'll try to read something online, or see if someone else asked the question here.

    – DeltaIV
    47 mins ago














6












6








6








I'd like to buy a little amount (say, 5000 €) of stocks. I know it's risky, especially for an absolute beginner like me. Maybe you would like to persuade me to start with stuff such as such as mutual funds or ETF (btw, thanks for dissuading me from buying Bitcoins 😀).



However, I made up my mind, and I'm going to do it. I decided which stocks to buy, and I decided how long to keep them (10 years, hoping that the companies whose stock I'm buying don't go bankrupt before). The companies are all headquartered in USA.



I have no idea how to do it in practice, though. I have a bank account in a online bank, and it looks like the bank provides tools to buy stocks (I can provide the bank's name, if needed). However, in my country (Europe, but again I can provide the precise country, if strictly needed) you would never just subscribe a mortgage with your bank, because it's quite likely that by shopping online for mortages, you would find better options. The same is true for car insurance, for example.



So, I was wondering if I should look around for "online portfolio systems" (is this the right name?). However, I recently got a lot of spammy phone calls about forex (even though I never put my phone number online recently, and I also have 0 interest at all for forex). So I'd rather not expose myself online too much, searching for ways to buy stocks.



So my question is: how do I buy stocks? Since I'm going to keep them for a long time, I guess I'll need a service which has mostly low keeping fees, while buying/selling fees may be less important, since I'm not planning to buy/sell in the short term. Any suggestions on how to find it? Also, can I buy any numbers of a given stock, or are there some minimal amounts, and how do I find them? Finally, my employer gave me quite a lot of company stocks as a bonus. Is it possible to exchange part of them with the stocks I want to buy? Or the only thing I can do is to sell them (say, sell 5000 € of my company's stock) and buy an equivalent amount of the stocks I'm looking for?



PS not sure if the tag trading applies to my case: if it doesn't, please suggest a better tag.










share|improve this question
















I'd like to buy a little amount (say, 5000 €) of stocks. I know it's risky, especially for an absolute beginner like me. Maybe you would like to persuade me to start with stuff such as such as mutual funds or ETF (btw, thanks for dissuading me from buying Bitcoins 😀).



However, I made up my mind, and I'm going to do it. I decided which stocks to buy, and I decided how long to keep them (10 years, hoping that the companies whose stock I'm buying don't go bankrupt before). The companies are all headquartered in USA.



I have no idea how to do it in practice, though. I have a bank account in a online bank, and it looks like the bank provides tools to buy stocks (I can provide the bank's name, if needed). However, in my country (Europe, but again I can provide the precise country, if strictly needed) you would never just subscribe a mortgage with your bank, because it's quite likely that by shopping online for mortages, you would find better options. The same is true for car insurance, for example.



So, I was wondering if I should look around for "online portfolio systems" (is this the right name?). However, I recently got a lot of spammy phone calls about forex (even though I never put my phone number online recently, and I also have 0 interest at all for forex). So I'd rather not expose myself online too much, searching for ways to buy stocks.



So my question is: how do I buy stocks? Since I'm going to keep them for a long time, I guess I'll need a service which has mostly low keeping fees, while buying/selling fees may be less important, since I'm not planning to buy/sell in the short term. Any suggestions on how to find it? Also, can I buy any numbers of a given stock, or are there some minimal amounts, and how do I find them? Finally, my employer gave me quite a lot of company stocks as a bonus. Is it possible to exchange part of them with the stocks I want to buy? Or the only thing I can do is to sell them (say, sell 5000 € of my company's stock) and buy an equivalent amount of the stocks I'm looking for?



PS not sure if the tag trading applies to my case: if it doesn't, please suggest a better tag.







stocks brokerage online-tools






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 38 mins ago







DeltaIV

















asked 5 hours ago









DeltaIVDeltaIV

1986




1986








  • 3





    Welcome back, adding a country tag will help significantly with suggestions as not all providers have operations throughout the EU. Mentioning the origin of the companies' stock you want to buy will also help since not every broker offers worldwide exposure for instance.

    – Leon
    4 hours ago






  • 4





    You asked for a better tag instead of "trading". I'd suggest "brokerage".

    – mastov
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Thanks for the sell signal.

    – Five Bagger
    2 hours ago











  • @FiveBagger lol, good one :D

    – Leon
    2 hours ago













  • @mastov done changing trading with brokerage. I feel like I should now ask what's brokerage 🙂 but I don't want to go OT. I'll try to read something online, or see if someone else asked the question here.

    – DeltaIV
    47 mins ago














  • 3





    Welcome back, adding a country tag will help significantly with suggestions as not all providers have operations throughout the EU. Mentioning the origin of the companies' stock you want to buy will also help since not every broker offers worldwide exposure for instance.

    – Leon
    4 hours ago






  • 4





    You asked for a better tag instead of "trading". I'd suggest "brokerage".

    – mastov
    3 hours ago






  • 1





    Thanks for the sell signal.

    – Five Bagger
    2 hours ago











  • @FiveBagger lol, good one :D

    – Leon
    2 hours ago













  • @mastov done changing trading with brokerage. I feel like I should now ask what's brokerage 🙂 but I don't want to go OT. I'll try to read something online, or see if someone else asked the question here.

    – DeltaIV
    47 mins ago








3




3





Welcome back, adding a country tag will help significantly with suggestions as not all providers have operations throughout the EU. Mentioning the origin of the companies' stock you want to buy will also help since not every broker offers worldwide exposure for instance.

– Leon
4 hours ago





Welcome back, adding a country tag will help significantly with suggestions as not all providers have operations throughout the EU. Mentioning the origin of the companies' stock you want to buy will also help since not every broker offers worldwide exposure for instance.

– Leon
4 hours ago




4




4





You asked for a better tag instead of "trading". I'd suggest "brokerage".

– mastov
3 hours ago





You asked for a better tag instead of "trading". I'd suggest "brokerage".

– mastov
3 hours ago




1




1





Thanks for the sell signal.

– Five Bagger
2 hours ago





Thanks for the sell signal.

– Five Bagger
2 hours ago













@FiveBagger lol, good one :D

– Leon
2 hours ago







@FiveBagger lol, good one :D

– Leon
2 hours ago















@mastov done changing trading with brokerage. I feel like I should now ask what's brokerage 🙂 but I don't want to go OT. I'll try to read something online, or see if someone else asked the question here.

– DeltaIV
47 mins ago





@mastov done changing trading with brokerage. I feel like I should now ask what's brokerage 🙂 but I don't want to go OT. I'll try to read something online, or see if someone else asked the question here.

– DeltaIV
47 mins ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















4














If you're just planning to buy-and-hold, it is worth considering whether the value of the time you spend on searching for a cheap brokerage will not dwarf the savings.



Around here (Denmark) banks don't generally seem to charge fees merely for holding stock for you. They charge a commission for each trade, some fractional percentage of the value which could easily eat into one's profit if one is doing frequent speculative trades. But for buy-and-hold that's a one-off expense. If it costs you 5 or 10 euros to invest your 5000 through your local bank, how much shopping-around effort is it worth to you to cut that down to 1 or 2?



Keeping it with the bank where you're already a customer will also save you the hassle of managing a set of separate credentials for a different online broker that you will use perhaps once a year (and keeping your details with them up to date if you move, etc). And, psychologically, the bank's commission percentage may help you resist the impulse to start trading speculatively.






share|improve this answer
























  • I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

    – DeltaIV
    30 mins ago













  • PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

    – DeltaIV
    25 mins ago






  • 1





    @DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    21 mins ago





















2














Banks that offer brokerage services tend to charge high commissions and some charge additional account maintenance fees. Therefore, it's possible that your bank may not be the best choice.



Best broker depends on what your needs are. If all you want is the ability to buy and sell stocks occasionally, I'd suggest that you look for a reputable broker in a regulated country that has low commissions and no maintenance fees. If you need more services (research, charting, real time streaming news, etc.), you're likely to pay higher commissions. There are a number of brokers that offer trading in multiple countries. Do a Google search on "Best European Brokers" and compare them.



Whether you can sell your company stock depends on whether it has any restrictions. Speak to your employer about that.






share|improve this answer
























  • Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

    – DeltaIV
    26 mins ago











  • Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

    – DeltaIV
    20 mins ago













  • @DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

    – Christian
    19 mins ago











  • I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

    – Bob Baerker
    12 mins ago











  • @Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

    – DeltaIV
    10 mins ago



















-4














Stock buying is like anything...



You can only learn by doing.



I would start by learning about stock. I would start by reading about Warren Buffett.



https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/092214/best-books-warren-buffett.asp



And read his annual reports and his shareholder owner's manual.



Then I would open an account and start investing.



WB says:
Invest in businesses you understand



Invest in honest people (honest managers/ceos)



Invest in competent people (competent managers/ceos)



There is really no point to practicing.. (you can make a phony account where you pretend to buy stock with pretend money). .



but that's probably counterproductive.



use real money.. no training wheels.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

    – DeltaIV
    28 mins ago











  • @DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

    – sofa general
    19 mins ago








  • 2





    Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    11 mins ago






  • 1





    @sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    8 mins ago












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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









4














If you're just planning to buy-and-hold, it is worth considering whether the value of the time you spend on searching for a cheap brokerage will not dwarf the savings.



Around here (Denmark) banks don't generally seem to charge fees merely for holding stock for you. They charge a commission for each trade, some fractional percentage of the value which could easily eat into one's profit if one is doing frequent speculative trades. But for buy-and-hold that's a one-off expense. If it costs you 5 or 10 euros to invest your 5000 through your local bank, how much shopping-around effort is it worth to you to cut that down to 1 or 2?



Keeping it with the bank where you're already a customer will also save you the hassle of managing a set of separate credentials for a different online broker that you will use perhaps once a year (and keeping your details with them up to date if you move, etc). And, psychologically, the bank's commission percentage may help you resist the impulse to start trading speculatively.






share|improve this answer
























  • I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

    – DeltaIV
    30 mins ago













  • PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

    – DeltaIV
    25 mins ago






  • 1





    @DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    21 mins ago


















4














If you're just planning to buy-and-hold, it is worth considering whether the value of the time you spend on searching for a cheap brokerage will not dwarf the savings.



Around here (Denmark) banks don't generally seem to charge fees merely for holding stock for you. They charge a commission for each trade, some fractional percentage of the value which could easily eat into one's profit if one is doing frequent speculative trades. But for buy-and-hold that's a one-off expense. If it costs you 5 or 10 euros to invest your 5000 through your local bank, how much shopping-around effort is it worth to you to cut that down to 1 or 2?



Keeping it with the bank where you're already a customer will also save you the hassle of managing a set of separate credentials for a different online broker that you will use perhaps once a year (and keeping your details with them up to date if you move, etc). And, psychologically, the bank's commission percentage may help you resist the impulse to start trading speculatively.






share|improve this answer
























  • I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

    – DeltaIV
    30 mins ago













  • PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

    – DeltaIV
    25 mins ago






  • 1





    @DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    21 mins ago
















4












4








4







If you're just planning to buy-and-hold, it is worth considering whether the value of the time you spend on searching for a cheap brokerage will not dwarf the savings.



Around here (Denmark) banks don't generally seem to charge fees merely for holding stock for you. They charge a commission for each trade, some fractional percentage of the value which could easily eat into one's profit if one is doing frequent speculative trades. But for buy-and-hold that's a one-off expense. If it costs you 5 or 10 euros to invest your 5000 through your local bank, how much shopping-around effort is it worth to you to cut that down to 1 or 2?



Keeping it with the bank where you're already a customer will also save you the hassle of managing a set of separate credentials for a different online broker that you will use perhaps once a year (and keeping your details with them up to date if you move, etc). And, psychologically, the bank's commission percentage may help you resist the impulse to start trading speculatively.






share|improve this answer













If you're just planning to buy-and-hold, it is worth considering whether the value of the time you spend on searching for a cheap brokerage will not dwarf the savings.



Around here (Denmark) banks don't generally seem to charge fees merely for holding stock for you. They charge a commission for each trade, some fractional percentage of the value which could easily eat into one's profit if one is doing frequent speculative trades. But for buy-and-hold that's a one-off expense. If it costs you 5 or 10 euros to invest your 5000 through your local bank, how much shopping-around effort is it worth to you to cut that down to 1 or 2?



Keeping it with the bank where you're already a customer will also save you the hassle of managing a set of separate credentials for a different online broker that you will use perhaps once a year (and keeping your details with them up to date if you move, etc). And, psychologically, the bank's commission percentage may help you resist the impulse to start trading speculatively.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 hours ago









Henning MakholmHenning Makholm

1,8551918




1,8551918













  • I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

    – DeltaIV
    30 mins ago













  • PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

    – DeltaIV
    25 mins ago






  • 1





    @DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    21 mins ago





















  • I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

    – DeltaIV
    30 mins ago













  • PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

    – DeltaIV
    25 mins ago






  • 1





    @DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    21 mins ago



















I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

– DeltaIV
30 mins ago







I like your point about commissions preventing me from trading speculatively, but that's not a risk 🙂 I'll check with my bank if there's an holding fee. In that case, shopping around will be very likely worth it.

– DeltaIV
30 mins ago















PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

– DeltaIV
25 mins ago





PS so I understand that buying a stock and keeping it for multiple years is called "buy-and-hold". Good to know!

– DeltaIV
25 mins ago




1




1





@DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

– Bob Baerker
21 mins ago







@DeltaIV - It makes no sense whatsoever to overpay on commissions in order to dissuade you from speculatively trading. You trade when there's a reason to trade. It also makes no sense to overpay on commissions because you don't want to put in the time to find a low rate as well as the broker that best meets your needs. Sometimes, investments don't go well and it becomes Buy & Hope :-)

– Bob Baerker
21 mins ago















2














Banks that offer brokerage services tend to charge high commissions and some charge additional account maintenance fees. Therefore, it's possible that your bank may not be the best choice.



Best broker depends on what your needs are. If all you want is the ability to buy and sell stocks occasionally, I'd suggest that you look for a reputable broker in a regulated country that has low commissions and no maintenance fees. If you need more services (research, charting, real time streaming news, etc.), you're likely to pay higher commissions. There are a number of brokers that offer trading in multiple countries. Do a Google search on "Best European Brokers" and compare them.



Whether you can sell your company stock depends on whether it has any restrictions. Speak to your employer about that.






share|improve this answer
























  • Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

    – DeltaIV
    26 mins ago











  • Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

    – DeltaIV
    20 mins ago













  • @DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

    – Christian
    19 mins ago











  • I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

    – Bob Baerker
    12 mins ago











  • @Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

    – DeltaIV
    10 mins ago
















2














Banks that offer brokerage services tend to charge high commissions and some charge additional account maintenance fees. Therefore, it's possible that your bank may not be the best choice.



Best broker depends on what your needs are. If all you want is the ability to buy and sell stocks occasionally, I'd suggest that you look for a reputable broker in a regulated country that has low commissions and no maintenance fees. If you need more services (research, charting, real time streaming news, etc.), you're likely to pay higher commissions. There are a number of brokers that offer trading in multiple countries. Do a Google search on "Best European Brokers" and compare them.



Whether you can sell your company stock depends on whether it has any restrictions. Speak to your employer about that.






share|improve this answer
























  • Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

    – DeltaIV
    26 mins ago











  • Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

    – DeltaIV
    20 mins ago













  • @DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

    – Christian
    19 mins ago











  • I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

    – Bob Baerker
    12 mins ago











  • @Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

    – DeltaIV
    10 mins ago














2












2








2







Banks that offer brokerage services tend to charge high commissions and some charge additional account maintenance fees. Therefore, it's possible that your bank may not be the best choice.



Best broker depends on what your needs are. If all you want is the ability to buy and sell stocks occasionally, I'd suggest that you look for a reputable broker in a regulated country that has low commissions and no maintenance fees. If you need more services (research, charting, real time streaming news, etc.), you're likely to pay higher commissions. There are a number of brokers that offer trading in multiple countries. Do a Google search on "Best European Brokers" and compare them.



Whether you can sell your company stock depends on whether it has any restrictions. Speak to your employer about that.






share|improve this answer













Banks that offer brokerage services tend to charge high commissions and some charge additional account maintenance fees. Therefore, it's possible that your bank may not be the best choice.



Best broker depends on what your needs are. If all you want is the ability to buy and sell stocks occasionally, I'd suggest that you look for a reputable broker in a regulated country that has low commissions and no maintenance fees. If you need more services (research, charting, real time streaming news, etc.), you're likely to pay higher commissions. There are a number of brokers that offer trading in multiple countries. Do a Google search on "Best European Brokers" and compare them.



Whether you can sell your company stock depends on whether it has any restrictions. Speak to your employer about that.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 hours ago









Bob BaerkerBob Baerker

19k22754




19k22754













  • Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

    – DeltaIV
    26 mins ago











  • Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

    – DeltaIV
    20 mins ago













  • @DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

    – Christian
    19 mins ago











  • I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

    – Bob Baerker
    12 mins ago











  • @Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

    – DeltaIV
    10 mins ago



















  • Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

    – DeltaIV
    26 mins ago











  • Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

    – DeltaIV
    20 mins ago













  • @DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

    – Christian
    19 mins ago











  • I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

    – Bob Baerker
    12 mins ago











  • @Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

    – DeltaIV
    10 mins ago

















Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

– DeltaIV
26 mins ago





Ok, so the right search is "Best European Brokers": thanks for the answer, this is exactly what I was asking for. I'll just wait a bit to see if there are new answers, but for now yours seems the most appropriate.

– DeltaIV
26 mins ago













Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

– DeltaIV
20 mins ago







Uh, just a clarification: can I buy stocks of American companies with an European Broker? I don't see why I couldn't (don't we live in a connected world?) but from other comments I'm wondering whether there may be restrictions or not.

– DeltaIV
20 mins ago















@DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

– Christian
19 mins ago





@DeltaIV Of course you can, but there are tax implications that might create some work for you.

– Christian
19 mins ago













I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

– Bob Baerker
12 mins ago





I can't speak to what's available in your country or its restrictions since I'm in the US. As an example of interconnection, Interactive Brokers offers trading in 200+ countries though I don't think that it applies to you since your account size might be too small and it charges fees for inactivity. Schwab and other mainstream brokers also offer trading in and from other countries. Do the Google search. Make sure to check on tax implications.

– Bob Baerker
12 mins ago













@Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

– DeltaIV
10 mins ago





@Christian ouch, you mentioned a bad word 🙂 would it make a difference if I used an American Broker rather than an European one? I live & pay taxes in Europe. If this becomes involved from a fiscal point of view, I may have to reconsider: it's already a gamble, but if I also have to pay an accountant in order to sort things out fiscally, this might not be worth the hassle.

– DeltaIV
10 mins ago











-4














Stock buying is like anything...



You can only learn by doing.



I would start by learning about stock. I would start by reading about Warren Buffett.



https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/092214/best-books-warren-buffett.asp



And read his annual reports and his shareholder owner's manual.



Then I would open an account and start investing.



WB says:
Invest in businesses you understand



Invest in honest people (honest managers/ceos)



Invest in competent people (competent managers/ceos)



There is really no point to practicing.. (you can make a phony account where you pretend to buy stock with pretend money). .



but that's probably counterproductive.



use real money.. no training wheels.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

    – DeltaIV
    28 mins ago











  • @DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

    – sofa general
    19 mins ago








  • 2





    Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    11 mins ago






  • 1





    @sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    8 mins ago
















-4














Stock buying is like anything...



You can only learn by doing.



I would start by learning about stock. I would start by reading about Warren Buffett.



https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/092214/best-books-warren-buffett.asp



And read his annual reports and his shareholder owner's manual.



Then I would open an account and start investing.



WB says:
Invest in businesses you understand



Invest in honest people (honest managers/ceos)



Invest in competent people (competent managers/ceos)



There is really no point to practicing.. (you can make a phony account where you pretend to buy stock with pretend money). .



but that's probably counterproductive.



use real money.. no training wheels.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

    – DeltaIV
    28 mins ago











  • @DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

    – sofa general
    19 mins ago








  • 2





    Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    11 mins ago






  • 1





    @sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    8 mins ago














-4












-4








-4







Stock buying is like anything...



You can only learn by doing.



I would start by learning about stock. I would start by reading about Warren Buffett.



https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/092214/best-books-warren-buffett.asp



And read his annual reports and his shareholder owner's manual.



Then I would open an account and start investing.



WB says:
Invest in businesses you understand



Invest in honest people (honest managers/ceos)



Invest in competent people (competent managers/ceos)



There is really no point to practicing.. (you can make a phony account where you pretend to buy stock with pretend money). .



but that's probably counterproductive.



use real money.. no training wheels.






share|improve this answer













Stock buying is like anything...



You can only learn by doing.



I would start by learning about stock. I would start by reading about Warren Buffett.



https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/092214/best-books-warren-buffett.asp



And read his annual reports and his shareholder owner's manual.



Then I would open an account and start investing.



WB says:
Invest in businesses you understand



Invest in honest people (honest managers/ceos)



Invest in competent people (competent managers/ceos)



There is really no point to practicing.. (you can make a phony account where you pretend to buy stock with pretend money). .



but that's probably counterproductive.



use real money.. no training wheels.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 55 mins ago









sofa generalsofa general

4016




4016








  • 1





    I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

    – DeltaIV
    28 mins ago











  • @DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

    – sofa general
    19 mins ago








  • 2





    Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    11 mins ago






  • 1





    @sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    8 mins ago














  • 1





    I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

    – DeltaIV
    28 mins ago











  • @DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

    – sofa general
    19 mins ago








  • 2





    Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

    – Bob Baerker
    11 mins ago






  • 1





    @sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    8 mins ago








1




1





I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

– DeltaIV
28 mins ago





I asked how to practically buy a stock, not which stock to buy or how to choose which stock to buy.

– DeltaIV
28 mins ago













@DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

– sofa general
19 mins ago







@DeltaIV: I said.. there is no such thing ... as practice.. just do it. You buy with real money or you don't. And if you are asking how to open a trading account... you probably shouldn't be doing this... at all (ever)

– sofa general
19 mins ago






2




2





Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

– Bob Baerker
11 mins ago





Ask for the time and you get told how to build a clock :-)

– Bob Baerker
11 mins ago




1




1





@sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

– Austin Hemmelgarn
8 mins ago





@sofageneral The OP is asking about a practical method for buying stocks, not practicing buying them. Those are two very different things. And it's not exactly the same as asking about how to open a trading account. What he appears to want is advice about how to go about selecting a broker.

– Austin Hemmelgarn
8 mins ago


















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