... Could you do something like this with them?
This is where the Halifax Sharedealing service comes in. A low cost, online way to buy and sell shares which works brilliantly for me and allows me to keep track of how well, or badly, my shares are doing in real time.
OPENING AN ACCOUNT ... Read review
Advantages: It is great fun and could even make you a fortune Disadvantages: Shares can fall in value as well as rise and this site does not give you advice
.../>
This is where the Halifax Sharedealing service comes in. A low cost, online way to buy and sell shares which works brilliantly for me and allows me to keep track of how well, or badly, my shares are doing in real time.
OPENING AN ACCOUNT
Well, if you are already a Halifax online customer, go to Halifax-online.co.uk and register for sharebuying. If you are a non-customer, go to the same site. The registration ... ...that one off transfers from Halifax accounts are not instant and usually take 24 hours. Additionally, they cannot be collected from the excellent WebSaver account that currently pays 4% interest.
BUYING SHARES
When you are accepted for an account, you will be allocated a credit limit for buying shares with. You can only buy shares after you have returned a direct debit mandate, as the cost of any purchase will ... more
Now, most of us know what has happened to the stock market over the last few years. The FTSE has dropped over 40% from its peak, life assurance companies are failing to pay out promised returns on endowments and pensions and people are running a mile from investing their money anywhere that has a perceived risk.
This probably means that NOW is the time to start ploughing your money in. Last time markets dropped by over a third, they bounced back strongly with sustained growth over many years. Investing in peoples' business acumen has a proven track record of giving higher long term returns that sticking your money in the post office.
While there are no guarantees, investing in stocks and shares can make you wealthy and be bloody good fun along the way. In my case, I throw £20 a month in savings, £100 a quarter in expenses and earnings from yougov.co.uk, ciao and dooyoo in to stocks and shares, along with any overtime I can occasionally call on!
This is not a lot of money to invest. It all comes from little extra bits of money that I would not normally have. In other words, I have nothing to lose and don't miss the money. Think about how you use your overtime, commissions, bonuses, winter fuel allowances etc. Could you do something like this with them?
This is where the Halifax Sharedealing service comes in. A low cost, online way to buy and sell shares which works brilliantly for me and allows me to keep track of how well, or badly, my shares are doing in real time.
OPENING AN ACCOUNT
Well, if you are already a Halifax online customer, go to Halifax-online.co.uk and register for sharebuying. If you are a non-customer, go to the same site. The registration process is the same, but you will have to wait for an access code to be sent before using the service.
FUNDING YOUR SHAREBUYING:
You can set up a regular direct debit, a one-off funding arrangement, use of your credit limit, a switch/delta payment to pay for share purchase. It is simple. The only frustrating thing for me is that one off transfers from Halifax accounts are not instant and usually take 24 hours. Additionally, they cannot be collected from the excellent WebSaver account that currently pays 4% interest.
BUYING SHARES
When you are accepted for an account, you will be allocated a credit limit for buying shares with. You can only buy shares after you have returned a direct debit mandate, as the cost of any purchase will be direct debited to your account.
There are two ways of buying. The quickest way is Real Time. In other words, you key in the share you want, how much you want to invest, and the site gives you a quote, including dealing charge (which is a flat fee of £11.95). If you want to go ahead, you click accordingly and the shares are yours. Next day the money disappears from your account!
My preferred way is using the Sharebuilder option. The advantage of this scheme is that it only costs £1.50 a deal, regardless of the size of your investment. For a modest saver like me, this is a godsend! There is, however, a minor catch. The shares you select are bought on a date selected by the Halifax between 1 and 7 days in the future. In other words, if the price should rise between now and the pre-determined date, you will pay the higher price. This does work both ways, so if the price drops, you benefit! As I simply do not have the skill or expertise to determine the perfect timing, I usually settle for the £1.50 option!
Additionally, the Sharebuilder option allows you to purchase a fixed amount of a companys share on the same date each month until you tell them otherwise. So, for example, if you wanted to buy £50 a month of Marconi shares (as someone not a million miles away did) you just give the instruction! If you forget to fund your account, they email to say that no shares were bought and you are not charged!
After each purchase, I get an email confirming the deal.
With many experts recommending that you invest little and often in the stock market, this provides an excellent route to achieving just that. And rather than relying on fund managers, you get the buzz of selecting where your money goes.
SELLING YOUR SHARES
Firstly, you should understand that the more times you buy and sell a share, the higher your costs. Shares should be seen as a long term investment, so buying £50 of Abbey National shares at £4.85 a share will get you 10 shares worth £48.50, after the £1.50 buying cost. If the price goes up to £5 a share, you now have £50 of shares. Cash in your profit by selling (minimum fee £5) and you will only get £45 back.
The only way of selling on this service is real time. You get a quote of the value of your trade and if you click on the appropriate button the deal is done, with fee deducted automatically as quoted. You can then decide where you want the proceeds to be invested next or, if necessary, take the cash! The dealing fee is also £11.95, with the exception of trades under £250 in value where a £5 charge applies.
INSIDER KNOWLEDGE:
This is an execution only service. In other words, you get no advice from professional investors. It is your call where your money goes and any gains or losses are your responsibility. Still, I bet you think you can do better than your endowment company's fund manager! That said, the site offers excellent access to recent company information, provides graphs on past performance of an individual share and also compares it to the sector average. In other words, you can compare Abbey National to the performance of other bank shares and see how poorly the company has performed in the last 12 months. You are also liable for Capital Gains Tax if you make large gains (unlikely for my size of investment though - if I can make over £7,000 a year on less than £2,000 invested I will WILLINGLY pay CGT!).
OTHER INFO
Dividends on shares under the Sharebuilder scheme are automatically reinvested in more shares in the same company. This is done to keep the costs of the scheme down and to avoid posting out cheques for dividends for silly amounts like 35p! Where the shares are bought real time, you can opt for dividends to be paid or reinvested.
You can check a fully dealing statement online at any time, and also get a current valuation for your portfolio, which will change by the minute as the market moves.
Frustratingly, the site is closed between 10pm and 8am. I have no idea why, but it means I cannot check things before I go to work, and this is perhaps my only downer on what is an excellent service.
Over the past 10 months, I have invested £1700 that is now worth £1800. This actually is better than the market average, so I should obviously be an overpaid city wide boy earning a Porsche a week in bonus.
My investments have been in the following companies for the following reasons. Remember, I am NOT suggesting you should follow suit!
Marconi (bought at 4p as I thought they had done so badly they were bound to go up - they collapsed to 1.25p a week later (when I bailed out), loss of 68%)
Vodaphone (bought at 102p as I thought at least one established telecom company will come through the slump, current price 125p, profit of 22%)
Manchester Utd (bought at 105p, as I thought the long term potential of the international brand, including cable tv rights, would lead to sustained growth, current price 130p, profit 23%)
Torex (bought at 550p, as they sponsor my stepson's team, Oldham Athletic. Current price 400p, loss 30%)
MyTravel (bought at 120p, as the travel market was bound to improve as we move away from 9/11. Current price 10p, loss 91%)
Safeway (bought at 220p, as I considered them good potential for takeover. Piled quite a bit in and sold at 295p, profit 34%, avoiding the potential for Monopolies Commission involvement in the industry)
Woolworth (bought at 33p, as a good takeover possibility. Current price 35p, profit 6%).
Egg (bought at 130p as a likely success story for an internet only bank. Current price 90p, loss 30%)
As you can see, there are some dramatic losses within individual companies, and my Safeway investment pulled me out of a hole. I have also avoided investing in my own employer, as they would then control my salary, pension, and share options.
As none of my holdings are substantial, I have made a decision to continue building up the investments in the companies above, and not expand the portfolio any wider. This means that when I do eventually sell, I hope to have at least £750 holdings in each, which makes the cost of selling much lower as a percentage of the total transaction.
The service provided is excellent. The money I have lost to date does not really matter as I would have spent a lot more pursuing any other hobby. And I still have hope that I will more than earn my losses back as the market (hopefully) picks up. The surge of frustration as MyTravel lost me a small fortune, compared to the feeling of smug joy as Morrisons bid for Safeway (told you so Dad!) and I recouped most of my earlier losses. And what money have I lost? Dooyoo, Yougov and Ciao money I never previously had. Overtime money that I would have frittered away on nothing in the dim and distant past. And £20 a month that I would have spent watching my beloved Stockport County play appallingly. And I can still look for BIG gains in the future!
Advantages: An easy share dealing system to use Disadvantages: none- fairly competitive with rest of market
Halifax Share dealing is quite a good way for any novice to experiment with the stock exchange. I am writing this from a novice perspective for an absolute novice who wants to get started. There are two types of account, either you can go for a normal share dealing account suited for investors and speculators who want to be able to buy and sell shares on the same day, ie to make a profit in the afternoon from shares that have gone up in price since ... ...case that commission charges with Halifax or any other share dealing service will wipe out most of your profits, unless you are fortunate to be tipped off about a penny share that dramatically jumps up in value (but such finds are rare unless you are very experienced, and there are many internet rumors to encourage penny share investors to part with their money quickly).
If you are interested in building up a portfolio of penny shares on a budget ...
llbcollins 22.08.2008 (16.10.2008)
· Read full review
Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Halifax Share Dealing Ltd
Advantages: Quick, cheap, easy to operate. If selling you get your money with 3 days. Disadvantages: Site can be slow, too many passwords to remember
I started out opening a Halifax Websaver online. I then printed off the documentation and took it down to my local Halifax branch with two forms of identification. That got the money laundering requirements out of the way and meant that once I'd received all the passwords in the mail, I could go ahead and open my Sharexpress account online straight away because I was already a customer. The Websaver pays a great rate of interest too, far better than ... ...The Halifax are one of the few online brokers who won't charge you to convert your paper share certificates into online stocks, which is great if you are like me and were drowning in hundreds of certificates with small amounts of shares for the same company. It tidied things up quite a bit. The shares are held in Nominee Names but don't worry, you still get your dividends etc. The main advantage is that you get to sell your shares much easier than ...
fallen121 05.05.2001
· Read full review
Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Halifax Share Dealing Ltd
Advantages: Nominee account, funds don't need to be lodged in order to trade Disadvantages: You may not be able to trade at all during busy times
Halifax sharexpress uses a nominee based system, this means that they hold the shares in an account for you rather than sending certificates out by post, in my opinion this is a far superior system as shares can be bought and sold on any trading day without the need to wait for certificates (can take up to 1 month with some brokers).
Dealing fees are reasonable at £12.50 for deal for trades under £2000.
Halifax don't require that you have funds ... ...requested directly from your bank account on the settlement day, I find this to be very convenient, they have never missed a payment to my account.
On the negative side the service became slow and impossible to use during last years bull run when it seemed that everybody and his dog wanted to deal in shares. This has settled down now and the service has become very reliable but I still fear the worst when the bull returns. If you find that you can't ...
DeanBolton 29.09.2000
· Read full review
Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Halifax Share Dealing Ltd
Advantages: Quick, easy, no need to hold share certificates, deal online Disadvantages: Share Prices go down as well as up
...telephone banking facilities then the Halifax Share Dealing Account is definitely worth a look.
The Account:
When you open a Share Dealing Account, you are effectively opening two accounts, one for your shares and one for to manage your cash which you deal with. In order to start dealing you will need to fund your account. This can be done in one of two ways, either by transferring money online from another Halifax account, or by setting up a direct ... ...Dealing Account is that the Halifax keep all your share certificates, meaning you don't have to worry about keeping them in a safe place. You will receive either a paper or an online certificate for each purchase you make so you'll have a copy incase they make a mistake, which I'm pleased to say hasn't happened to me yet.
Market Information:
Whether you are a first time investor or an expert in the field, the Share Dealing Account provides you ...
bigmadeejit 13.05.2005
· Read full review
Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Halifax Share Dealing Ltd
Advantages: Good Web Site Disadvantages: Account information sparse
Trading Shares with Halifax ShareXpress.
The Halifax ShareXpress Service provides share dealing by phone or Internet. The lowest costs are for trading using a nominee account. £12.50 up to £2500.00. Having traded shares only using certificates the decision to sign up to this type of account was a change of direction. The most obvious difference and possible advantage is that holding and dealing in shares with a certificate as proof of ownership ... ...removal of the need to keep share certificates and the accompanying paperwork involved in each transaction. To sell or buy shares using certification involves sending and receiving them by post with the accompanying concerns that entails.
A nominee account such as ShareXpress offers consists of an account number and the means, passwords, identification etc to access it in this case using the Internet. So far I have only used the Internet Service ...
GS26 26.12.2000
· Read full review
Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Halifax Share Dealing Ltd