Why trade CFDs?
CFDs are an increasingly popular way to trade, thanks to their
flexibility and the access they provide to global markets.
Leverage your investment potential
CFDs are traded on leverage, so you can increase your exposure
to an underlying asset from the same initial investment. To open a
CFD trade, you need to deposit only a fraction of the total trade
value, usually around 10-30 per cent, allowing you to take a larger
position than would be possible if you needed to fund it in full.
Leverage is great news if the market moves in the direction that
you expect, but it carries a high degree of risk if the market
moves against you.
Trade financial markets around the world
CFD trading gives you access to a wide range of markets that
would not otherwise be available to retail investors. It is as easy
to trade on the price movement of commodities such as oil or gold
as it is to trade an individual equity. CFDs also allow you to
speculate on whole indices or sectors from a single trade.
Profit when markets fall as well as rise
By ‘going short’ (selling), you can profit from a falling market
as easily as you could profit from a rising market by buying it. If
you believe that a company or a market will experience a loss of
value in the short term, you can use CFDs to sell it today, with
the expectation that you can buy it back in the future. As always,
if the price of your trade moves against you, your position will
result in a loss.
Hedge other investments
As CFDs offer the ability to go short as easily as long, they
can be used to provide ‘insurance’ against price falls in an
existing portfolio. For example, if you have a long-term portfolio
that you wish to keep, but you feel that there is a short-term risk
to the value of your investments, you could use CFDs to mitigate a
short term loss by ‘hedging’ your position. If the value of your
portfolio falls the profit in the CFDs should offset these
losses.