Buy Stocks with Wit and Sell Stocks with Confidence | A Guide to Conquering Wall Street

The basic game of investing is as follows: you buy stocks from an investment firm, specifically a broker, in the form of cash, borrowing on margin, or reinvesting your dividends.

There are various places you can purchase stocks from

  • Full-service investment firms: you pay fees and commissions for the investment advice they provide you, and for buying and selling stocks
  • Discount brokerages: online firms that require lower commissions because you don’t get advice on investments
  • Portfolio Managers: these advisors focus on clients with a higher overall net worth of usually over $250,000

Opening an investment account

  • Cash account: the most common type. It allows you to pay cash for your stocks
  • Margin account: the type you open if you want to borrow from your investment firm to invest
  • Registered plans: RRSPs, RESPs and TFSAs. These are always cash accounts

Buying and selling stock

  1. What you want to buy or sell: your choice may allow you to place multiple trades on one order
  2. How much you want to buy or sell: you may need to purchase a minimum amount of stock
  3. The price you want to pay: will determine whether you will make a market or limit order
  4. How you want to pay: you can use money from your cash account, or borrow to buy stocks

Dividend Reinvestment Plan (DRIP)

A DRIP allows you to automatically reinvest dividends by buying more shares without paying a commission. DRIP is usually offered by larger companies with a history of paying dividends.

Featured Image: depositphotos/borysshevchuk

About the author: Grace is currently studying at UBC to achieve her BA in Computer Science. She is due to graduate in 2020. As a content creator, Grace has written financial analysis, stock market news, and informational investing articles. She also worked as an editor with her university publication 'UBC Undergraduate Journal of Art History'.