Mastering CFDs
Benefits of CFD trading
Let’s take a look at the advantages of CFD trading, so you can decide whether you want to start buying and selling contracts for difference today.
- What are the advantages of CFD trading?
- Profit from falling markets
- Keep your capital
- Resemblance to traditional trading
- Trade stocks, indices, forex and more
- Hedge with CFDs
- Try out trading risk free
What are the advantages of CFD trading?
With access to a huge range of markets, leverage and flexible short trades, it isn’t hard to understand why CFDs have become popular in recent years. If you’re still trying to make up your mind, though, here is a step by step guide on how to trade CFDs.
1. Profit from falling markets
The main difference between CFDs and traditional trading is that with CFDs, you never own the underlying market. This brings several advantages – including the ability to go short as well as long.
To open a short CFD position, you sell your chosen number of contracts instead of buying them. Then, when you want to close your trade, you buy the same number of CFDs.
Doing this enables you to profit when markets fall in price, which adds a whole extra dimension to your trading.
Say you've researched a stock but believe that it’s in for some tough times. Instead of searching for a new opportunity, you could short the company with a CFD, earning a profit if its share price falls. However, if the stock rises instead, you’ll earn a loss.
Unlike investing, you don't have to borrow anything to short a CFD. It's the same process as going long, just the other way around. And you can sell any market that you can buy: including stocks, indices, commodities and even bonds.
2. Keep your capital
Another benefit to never owning the assets you're trading is leverage. Leverage enables you to open positions without paying for their total value – instead, you pay a deposit known as your margin.
This works because you're only speculating on the price movements of markets, not buying them outright.
To trade $100,000 of USD/CAD, for example, you might only have to put down $1,700. So, you can avoid tying up all your capital on just a few positions.
However, it's important to remember that your profit or loss will be based on the full $100,000. If USD/CAD moves 5% against you, you lose $5,000, which is a significant chunk of your margin. Because of this, using risk management tools – such as stop-loss orders, take profits and guaranteed stops – is advised.
3. Resemblance to traditional trading
CFDs aren't the only way of trading financial markets without purchasing any assets. There are lots of other derivatives available (depending on territory), including futures, options and spread betting.
However, if you're used to traditional trading and investing, you might find CFDs a bit more familiar than other derivatives. That's because with CFD trading, you're buying and selling contracts designed to mirror the assets they represent.
A single CFD tends to represent the standard unit of trading of its underlying market. To set your position size, you decide how many contracts to buy or sell.
If you want to trade the equivalent of 50 Unilever stocks, for instance, you can buy 50 Unilever share CFDs. To short a single lot of NZD/USD, you can sell an NZD/USD CFD.
4. Trade stocks, indices, forex and more
CFD brokers tend to offer access to a wide range of asset classes, so you aren't limited in what you can trade. At FOREX.com, for example, you can buy and sell:
- Stocks, including blue-chips such as Apple and Amazon
- The world's leading stock indices, from the S&P 500 to the DAX and more
- Major, minor and exotic forex pairs
- Gold and silver, plus other key commodities
Plus, every single market is available on a single platform, so switching from indices to energies takes just a couple of clicks.
5. Hedge with CFDs
Remember that you can use CFDs to take short positions? As well as profiting from falling markets, this can be a useful way of offsetting the risk from negative moves in your investment portfolio.
For example, say you hold 1,000 American Airlines stocks, but are worried about a spike in oil prices hurting the company's bottom line in the short term. You could sell your stock – but that would close your position entirely.
Using CFDs, you can open a short position on 1,000 American Airlines stocks. Then, any negative moves in your portfolio will earn you a profit from your CFD position, cancelling out the loss.
If airline stocks start to climb again, you can close your CFD position.
6. Try out trading risk free
If you want to see how CFD trading works in practice, you can open a demo account. Demo accounts give you access to the price movements of thousands of financial markets, with virtual funds so you can experience trading with none of the risk.
A FOREX.com demo account, for example, gives you $50,000 virtual funds to trade on the live prices of a huge range of markets. You'll get full, unlimited access to all the features and tools of our platform for 12 weeks.