Saturday, April 18, 2009

Trading Procedures

Below are the trading procedures:
  1. Open an Account

    Open a trading account and a Central Depository System (CDS) account with a stockbroking company.
    You will then be engaged with a licensed dealer or a remisier.

  2. Engage Remisier

    Give an order to your remisier to buy or sell a specified number of shares of a company at a specified price.
    This is when you will need to provide the CDS account number for order entry.

  3. Placing an Order

    Your orders are keyed into the WinSCORE (Bursa Malaysia's fully automated trading system) terminal at the stockbroking company.
    It is then relayed through the WinSCORE system to Bursa Malaysia's central computers.
    The order confirmation is immediately routed back to the stockbroking company.

  4. Match Order

    Orders are matched automatically by the system.
    All prices which orders are matched are determined by market forces of supply and demand through a process of bids and offers.
    In every transaction, a security is sold to the highest bidder and purchased at the lowest offer.
    The price transacted for a buy order will either be at the same price keyed in, or lower if the seller's price is below the buyer's price.
    For a sale transaction, the price will be the same or higher if the buyer's order is higher.

  5. Trade Confirmation

    Once the order is matched, a trade confirmation is printed out, providing details such as the original order number, stock number, price and quantity matched and the counter-party stockbroking company.
    The remisier in turn confirms with his client that he has bought/sold the specified number of shares and the price at which it was bought/sold/.
    To facilitate differentiation and to avoid confusion, the stockbroking company has different coloured slips for 'sell' and 'buy' orders.

  6. Contract Notes

    The broking house will then send out contract notes to you, giving details of the transaction such as brokerage, stamp duty and clearing fees payable as well as the cost of purchase or proceeds of the sale.

  7. T + 3

    There is no physical delivery of shares under the CDS. Instead, the CDS uses a simple book entry system to keep track of the movement of shares which arise from trades affected on Bursa Malaysia.
    For example, if you are a buyer of share A, your CDS account will be credited with Share A and the seller's account will show a debit of Share A.
    Sellers must have adequate shares in their CDS accounts by 12.30 pm on T+2 and buyer's account will be credited on T+3 with the shares, with T being the transaction date.

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