
***Missy***
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I know that Natwest buy/sell shares. Try a high street bank. |
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John D
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I started using the Halifax Online Share Dealer a couple of years ago. It is probably the easiest way to buy and sell shares and also one of the cheapest. You can sign up by visiting the link below.
To buy shares there is a transaction fee of £12 plus a stamp duty charge of 0.05% of the value of the shares and a further £12 fee if you wish to sell again. Bearing this in mind you would probably want to invest no less than £500.
As it is football shares you want you can also buy them from the club website or from places like Amazon and eBay (link to a site selling NUFC shares attached). Beware though as these are often sold as gifts and the prices can be highly over inflated. If you are only wanting to by a couple of shares as a memento then this is you best bet but if you want to have them as a serious investment buy through Halifax.
You can find out the current share price on a number of websites and news papers. Yahoo Finance is pretty good. The link below will take you to the football share index. Newcastle is currently trading at 66p a share.
Hope this helps. |
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Bob
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your bank can arrange it |
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mutual_fund_expert
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Hi, i know what your question means. i also think stock market is a nice place for investing.
I found some useful tips in stock trading. It includes stock basics, how to protect your profit, find a potential increase share, control and manage stock risk, when to sell/buy stock and so on.
http://www.bernanke.cn/stock-trade/
Best Wishes && Good Luck! |
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charlie r
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Buying shares in a football club is not an investment. Your boyfriend would be better saving his money. Football teams are famous for being run by people with more money than sense. They're like internet start ups spend spend spend. There is no minimum amount that you have to buy. You can buy a single share if you really want to. However there will be minimum fees payable to the broker. I don't know what the Toon Army shares are trading at but it makes no sense spending £15 to buy something worth £2 (for example) But if it gives you that feeling of owning the club then who knows you can't put a price on emotions. As Oscar Wilde said a cynic is someone who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing. For regular trading I'd recommend an online broker as their charges are much cheaper but for a one off a High St bank will be more convenient. Perhaps if you go to the Strawberry Tavern outside St James if they haven't pulled it down you can pick up some shares on a Saturday when United have just lost and there's a frustrated fan drowning his sorrows with a bottle o' dog. A transfer form is all you need if you find someone who already owns some shares. Brokers are not a legal requirement. You will have to pay transfer duty which is miniscule less than 0.5% You then send share cert with transfer doc and fee payment to the share registrars (address probably shown on shares otherwise check with a broker). If you want to make any more investments I suggest using head not heart! |
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martini
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you could go to www.shareviewdealing.co.uk and set up an account (controlled by Lloydstsb) and pretty safe. You must then deposit some money with them and buy some shares on line when your transfer is thru. You can still get a quote on that site without being able to deal. The minimum amount of Shares would be about £2000 worth as you will have dealing commission and stamp duty when you buy and commission when you sell. good luck. |
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CeeVee
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Have a look at
www.fool.co.uk
lots of information about share dealing, brokers etc on there.
Remember that investing in shares is just a polite way of saying gambling on share price movements.
Never use money that you can't afford to lose or may need in a hurry. |
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jonnyknowsbest
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Best thing to do is to speak to your bank. Most high street branks also have stock broking facilities. |
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Al Zymer
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Some banks, inc. Barclays and Nat West do share trading in-branch and online. If you are not going to trade often, then in-branch is probably best, however, some football club shares may not be available. You need sellers to match buyers. |
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|ATN|JONO
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There is no minimum or maximum, its the amount that you can afford, if u do internet banking u should be able to buy you shares online or go to a share website to buy them, think how much u want to spend and think there is a risk of losing the money.
P.s Not certain that u can invest in newcastle... might be wrong |
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Brian R
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If you drink enough of the Breweries products, they will come to you and give you Shares. |
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manundso
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If they are a publicly traded company you can open an account on E-Trade or a similar website. Once you deposit money into your account you can buy and sell to your hears content. Be careful they charge you a service fee for every transaction |
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daddybear
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get a leaflet from the bank, there is a minimum dealing charge so its not worth buying too few.
The price of the shares will determine how many you may wish to buy. The price is quoted on the net each day. |
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srracvuee
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pop into your nearest broker, he'll give you all the info you need, but if i were you i would invest in something more solid and whatsmore because you hold shares in a f/c they will do you no favours |
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XiaoMei
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You can do it on the internet :
http://www.selftrade.co.uk/ |
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