Beginner's Guide: What broker choose?
Note: This "Beginner's Guide" is designed for those who want to learn to invest in the stock market from scratch. If you find it too basic can read the Articles of Exchange.
Feel free to ask all the questions you want about the stock market, investment and money management in general in the Investment Forum and the attempt to solve.
No broker that is best for everyone. Where a broker is best for a particular investor it depends on many factors such as the number of operations by the investor a year and the average, the markets in which it operates (Spain, Europe, USA, etc.), using products (stocks, options and futures, ETFs, etc.).
For a long-term investor choosing the broker is not a vital issue. Even if you choose the worst will not be a big problem. Any bank or building society will serve known values. Logically, if you choose a good broker that suits your needs better, and for this should be set at 2 things, commissions and services they provide.
As for fees, for a long term investor suited commissions are more important maintenance and collection of dividends that the purchase / sale, since having a low portfolio turnover will pay many times more commissions maintenance and payment of dividends to the buy / sell.
As the services are brokers that offer companies analysis, graphics, tools to select values according to different criteria, etc. Some may be of interest. Not always the cheapest broker is the best. Can any of these services will compensate pay a little more commissions.
If you want to have this "Beginner's Guide" as a book to read more comfortably, you can purchase it on Amazon at the following link (Price: € 3.15 ebook, 7.16 € paper book):
Feel free to ask all the questions you want about the stock market, investment and money management in general in the Investment Forum and the attempt to solve.
No broker that is best for everyone. Where a broker is best for a particular investor it depends on many factors such as the number of operations by the investor a year and the average, the markets in which it operates (Spain, Europe, USA, etc.), using products (stocks, options and futures, ETFs, etc.).
For a long-term investor choosing the broker is not a vital issue. Even if you choose the worst will not be a big problem. Any bank or building society will serve known values. Logically, if you choose a good broker that suits your needs better, and for this should be set at 2 things, commissions and services they provide.
As for fees, for a long term investor suited commissions are more important maintenance and collection of dividends that the purchase / sale, since having a low portfolio turnover will pay many times more commissions maintenance and payment of dividends to the buy / sell.
As the services are brokers that offer companies analysis, graphics, tools to select values according to different criteria, etc. Some may be of interest. Not always the cheapest broker is the best. Can any of these services will compensate pay a little more commissions.
If you want to have this "Beginner's Guide" as a book to read more comfortably, you can purchase it on Amazon at the following link (Price: € 3.15 ebook, 7.16 € paper book):