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 Interactive Brokers (IBKR), IBKR users, welcome!

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dwRK
post Oct 4 2023, 10:46 PM

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QUOTE(TOS @ Oct 3 2023, 11:14 PM)
One moderator from HWZ says that IB01 allows you to bypass all the withholding and estate taxes.

https://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/threads/...#post-149574191
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go ask him what he meant by bypass... why just IB01... why not other treasury ucits... wink.gif

hedfi
post Oct 5 2023, 02:29 PM

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I'm trying to buy Aussie Bond (Ausnet 6.134%) but don't seem to able to even though I've enabled trade for Australia and bonds. Can somebody pls help. Tq
SUSTOS
post Oct 6 2023, 02:34 PM

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FT Undercover Economist

Netflix and bill - the high price of a subscription lifestyle
Businesses have cashed in on our carelessness

by Tim Harford (3 HOURS AGO)

QUOTE
One of the modern classics of economics is an article from 2006 with the self-explanatory title “Paying Not to Go to the Gym”, in which researchers Stefano DellaVigna and Ulrike Malmendier studied the behaviour of nearly 8,000 gym members and found it “difficult to reconcile with standard preferences and beliefs”.

By that, they meant that gym members seemed to be delusional, weak-willed or both. People on a monthly contract paid more per visit than those who simply showed up and paid at the door, suggesting they either had a very basic problem with arithmetic or, more likely, optimistic expectations about how often they would exercise. People on the rolling monthly contract also tended to let more than two months elapse between the last visit and the moment they got round to cancelling their membership.

For nerds like me, the article has an important message about the field of behavioural economics. We’ll get to that. There’s also a broader question. The subscription business model has expanded from traditional products, such as newspapers and gym memberships to software, streaming media, vegetable boxes, shaving kits, makeup, clothes and support for creative types via Patreon or Substack. We should all be asking ourselves, if so many people are paying not to go to the gym, what else are we paying not to do?

A new working paper from economists Liran Einav, Benjamin Klopack and Neale Mahoney attempts an answer. Using data from a credit and debit card provider, they examine what happens to subscriptions for 10 popular services when the card that is paying for them is replaced. At this moment, the service provider suddenly stops getting paid and must contact the customer to ask for updated payment details.

You can guess what happens next: for many people, this request reminds them of a subscription they had stopped thinking about and immediately prompts them to cancel it. Relative to a typical month, cancellation rates soar in months when a payment card is replaced — from 2 per cent to at least 8 per cent. Einav and his colleagues use this data to estimate how easily many people let stale subscriptions continue. Relative to a benchmark in which infallible subscribers instantly cancel once they decide they are no longer getting enough value, the researchers predict that subscribers will take many extra months — on average 20 — to get around to cancelling.

Don’t take the precise numbers too seriously — as with most social science, this is not a rigorously controlled experiment but an attempt to tease meaning out of noisy real-world data. What you should take seriously is the likelihood that you are swimming in barely noticed subscriptions, some of which you would choose to cancel if you were forced to pay attention to them for a few minutes. Perhaps you should. Come to think of it, perhaps I should.

But I promised a geeky lesson about behavioural economics too. Loyal readers will have noted some recent scandals in behavioural science: experiments conducted separately by two well-known researchers, Dan Ariely and Francesca Gino, have been found (in the opinion of independent experts) to contain manipulated or fraudulent data. Both deny wrongdoing.

In the light of this dismaying situation, it would be understandable if people lost a bit of confidence in the field of behavioural economics. So it is worth reminding ourselves of what behavioural economics is trying to achieve. The field has long aimed to bring some psychological realism to economics, whose traditional textbook model has no room for people who take out a gym membership, fail to go to the gym and then neglect to cancel the gym subscription.

Its founding member is the co-author of Nudge, Nobel memorial prize winner Richard Thaler. Thaler’s project has always been not to argue that the textbook model is contradicted by laboratory experiments, but that it is contradicted by the way that important markets work in the real world.

It is certainly reasonable to ask how many experiments in social psychology may have been fraudulently manipulated. Less outrageous, but of more practical significance, is the possibility that many experiments in social psychology are poorly reported and analysed. As I’ve argued recently, we need to strengthen the foundations of scientific practice to prevent this.

Economists can certainly learn from experiments, but contact with reality should be an important part of economics, which is — or should be — a practical subject.

Whether we are sticking closely to the old textbook model or embracing the latest ideas from behavioural science, our concepts should be taken more seriously when they explain what we see around us every day.

If people really are lazy, short-sighted and inattentive, as behavioural economics suggests, then subscriptions are a hugely attractive business model. The subscriptification of everything suggests that businesses have noticed this.

There are some whimsical ideas in behavioural science, and some of them will not stand the test of time. But the central proposition of Nudge is not whimsical: it’s that the default position matters far more than you’d think, not in a laboratory experiment but in markets where billions or trillions are at stake.

People delegate life-changingly huge decisions — for example, about contributions to their pensions — to the path of least resistance. If behavioural public policy means anything, it means shaping those default positions for the public good. It’s an idea to which I still subscribe.

Tim Harford’s new book for children, “The Truth Detective” (Wren & Rook), is now available
Source (with paywall): https://www.ft.com/content/b2622d99-4eaf-44...e2-4b61c716a06b

This post has been edited by TOS: Oct 6 2023, 02:34 PM
SUSTOS
post Oct 6 2023, 10:29 PM

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Poor Nestle...

https://www.reuters.com/business/retail-con...out-2023-10-06/

Takudan still holding? laugh.gif
Takudan
post Oct 7 2023, 09:21 AM

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QUOTE(TOS @ Oct 6 2023, 10:29 PM)
BBBBBUUUUUUU

I'm surprised such a news can affect food stocks... you still gotta eat right?!
Medufsaid
post Oct 7 2023, 09:47 AM

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QUOTE
"I think it comes after Walmart's comments regarding the impact on weight loss drug consumers perhaps buying less," the head of European consumer equities at Kepler Cheuvreux, Jon Cox, said.
I think walmart terjinxed nestle. barbra streisand effect
Medufsaid
post Oct 7 2023, 05:03 PM

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QUOTE(Hoshiyuu @ Aug 24 2023, 08:55 PM)
Small update, if you do not have any balance at all, it will not borrow money for you even on margin account. Pretty good system.
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possible bug on IBKR. even so, if u manually convert your currency, U$0.35 commission fees is still cheaper than 0.05% for LSE instruments

user posted image

user posted image

This post has been edited by Medufsaid: Oct 7 2023, 05:08 PM
cybermaster98
post Oct 9 2023, 03:29 PM

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How do i transfer funds from IBKR LLC to Maybank Malaysia? I tried to trasnfer USD but IBKR had a pop up stating i need a Correspondence Bank. I called maybank and it said just provide the SWIFT code which i did but IBKR said this was insufficient.

Can someone advice how to do this?

This post has been edited by cybermaster98: Oct 9 2023, 03:34 PM


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Medufsaid
post Oct 9 2023, 05:17 PM

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cybermaster98 if withdrawing via SGD->CIMB SG->CIMB MY isn't possible, are you able to withdraw USD via Wise? then convert to RM, and topup to ewallet (TNG or BigPay). BigPay very lax when it comes to DuitNow to local bank accounts, TNG ewallet might be stricter (or not. since this isn't credit card funds)

i will strongly discourage transfer as you've shown
cybermaster98
post Oct 10 2023, 12:16 AM

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QUOTE(Medufsaid @ Oct 9 2023, 05:17 PM)
cybermaster98 if withdrawing via SGD->CIMB SG->CIMB MY isn't possible, are you able to withdraw USD via Wise? then convert to RM, and topup to ewallet (TNG or BigPay). BigPay very lax when it comes to DuitNow to local bank accounts, TNG ewallet might be stricter (or not. since this isn't credit card funds)

i will strongly discourage transfer as you've shown
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Why?
dwRK
post Oct 10 2023, 12:53 PM

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QUOTE(cybermaster98 @ Oct 10 2023, 12:16 AM)
Why?
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save on fx n fees...

cybermaster98
post Oct 10 2023, 01:50 PM

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But i wont be withdrawing often. I only plan to do it in maybe 10 years but wanted to test it out now to see how it works. Thats why need someone who is familiar with IBKR to Maybank transfers.

SUSTOS
post Oct 10 2023, 02:05 PM

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QUOTE(cybermaster98 @ Oct 10 2023, 01:50 PM)
But i wont be withdrawing often. I only plan to do it in maybe 10 years but wanted to test it out now to see how it works. Thats why need someone who is familiar with IBKR to Maybank transfers.
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Call Maybank's HQ in Kuala Lumpur, not just the branch. They may be able to tell you who are their correspondent bank.
dwRK
post Oct 10 2023, 02:21 PM

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QUOTE(cybermaster98 @ Oct 10 2023, 01:50 PM)
But i wont be withdrawing often. I only plan to do it in maybe 10 years but wanted to test it out now to see how it works. Thats why need someone who is familiar with IBKR to Maybank transfers.
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its probably jp morgan chase...

SUSTOS
post Oct 11 2023, 09:29 AM

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Novo Nordisk is running wild...

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare...rly-2023-10-10/

Should have bought more...
SUSTOS
post Oct 11 2023, 05:26 PM

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LVMH tumbles 6% after weak results.

(with paywall) https://www.ft.com/content/ce43b24e-89ab-44...80-2b21fa14a8ad

LVMH official results documents: https://www.lvmh.com/shareholders/agenda/2023-q3-revenue/

Waiting for it to slide towards 540 EUR...
bill11
post Oct 12 2023, 03:47 PM

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Can someone advise on this IBKR -- WISE link for USD withdrawal ?

Seems like WISE disabled the USD account ? then only route is wire transfer or sg cimb ?

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Medufsaid
post Oct 12 2023, 04:05 PM

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CIMB sg is cheaper so no big deal for us here. unless you've already withdrawn once per month to bank, so have to use Wise for once-a-month free withdrawal

you can still link IBKR to wise right? then can still deposit into IBKR, just the most expensive way. Wise bank account is in case you want to do ACH deposit into IBKR

This post has been edited by Medufsaid: Oct 12 2023, 04:36 PM
cybermaster98
post Oct 12 2023, 05:50 PM

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How to transfer to Maybank Malaysia?
abcn1n
post Oct 13 2023, 06:51 PM

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QUOTE(Medufsaid @ Oct 12 2023, 04:05 PM)
CIMB sg is cheaper so no big deal for us here. unless you've already withdrawn once per month to bank, so have to use Wise for once-a-month free withdrawal

you can still link IBKR to wise right? then can still deposit into IBKR, just the most expensive way. Wise bank account is in case you want to do ACH deposit into IBKR
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Yes, can link IBKR to Wise. Can deposit from Wise to IBKR but unfortunately have to convert into USD using Wise forex rate which is more exp than IBKR rate. So its better to deposit from Singapore bank account to IBKR, then use IBKR forex rate to change to USD

This post has been edited by abcn1n: Oct 13 2023, 06:52 PM

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