Swissquote seems to support korean stocks. Their screener shows actions to buy NICE holdings. For me this would be the best option, since swissquote has the same securities as germany with banking . ( okay i verified it, SADLY not tradable, so i am out. I know Boom is a long existing bank with backup in Japan, BUT i dont want to put my money at that amount of risk :/ ) DAMN why is it so freaking hard to invest (safely) in south korea.
Boom responded after my security question:
If you mainly buy Korea stock, it is not under the Fund protection, unfortunately. However, HK broker are required by law to segregate client's assets from that of the firm. Client stocks/ cash are deposited in a segregated Trust account or Client account Legally speaking, in case of bankruptcy of the broker firm, only the client themselves could claim after the assets inside these Trust account./ Client Account The shareholder, creditors of the firm cannot claim after the assets inside the Trust account/ Client account, as they are NOT considered the properties of the broker firm
Under this legal arrangement, the client should still be able to get back their assets, as long as these stocks/ cash are deposited within the Trust account/ Client account as per the legal requirement
Back to the topic. Anyone has a good writeup about NICE Holdings besides the valueinvestorclub article?
However, HK broker are required by law to segregate client's assets from that of the firm. Client stocks/ cash are deposited in a segregated Trust account or Client account
RetroRanger, thanks for taking this up with Boom. Do you understand the above to mean that also client stocks traded outside of HK/China, such as Korea, are to be held in segregated accounts? Or does the HK regulator only enforce that for HK/Shanghai/Shenzhen stocks?
Tbh, the issue keeps bugging me. Why is there a huge rescue fund when it would be much more efficient to check regularly whether all licensed brokers keep their clients' accounts segregated.
Also, the rescue fund has honored claims to clients of 6 defaulted brokers since 2006: https://www.hkicc.org.hk/claims/notice_e.htm This seems a rather large number of brokers who had not implemented or sustained the mandatory practice of keeping client accounts segregated.
However, HK broker are required by law to segregate client's assets from that of the firm. Client stocks/ cash are deposited in a segregated Trust account or Client account
RetroRanger, thanks for taking this up with Boom. Do you understand the above to mean that also client stocks traded outside of HK/China, such as Korea, are to be held in segregated accounts? Or does the HK regulator only enforce that for HK/Shanghai/Shenzhen stocks?
Tbh, the issue keeps bugging me. Why is there a huge rescue fund when it would be much more efficient to check regularly whether all licensed brokers keep their clients' accounts segregated.
Also, the rescue fund has honored claims to clients of 6 defaulted brokers since 2006: https://www.hkicc.org.hk/claims/notice_e.htm This seems a rather large number of brokers who had not implemented or sustained the mandatory practice of keeping client accounts segregated.
I feel like we are hijacking this thread. I started a new topic in the general discussion section for anyone interested in opening an account to invest in Korean stocks.
I did reach out to several Korean Brokers. It seems theoretical possible to open an account, but it sure does not seem easy. Will let you know how it goes in the new thread.
The advantage of trading with korean broker is that you can trade most of the stocks except for those for the foreign investor restricted stocks. However, you have to give them orders like old school. If you are value investor don't trade much but want to execute orders at certain price range, korean broker is a good option. If you are looking for one, you can contact koowoonmo@ebestsec.co.kr for more details. (fees, monthly statements, and etc)
Last digression on Korean stock brokers, I promise:
Understand from Koowoonmo that a member of this board is a client of Koowoonmo who pointed him into the direction of the board (thank you!). If you read this can you message me? He seems very professional and I have nothing but good things to say so far, but would be great to validate with someone who has more experience with him. Thanks for your help!
I am new here and also new student of NICE :) Thank you for such a broad discussion. Since I am from Europe(Lithuania), I have little understanding of the Korean market. Do you have any recommendations for the Korean market (books, blogs, articles) about the economy, politics, history?
Do you know if there is more coverage about NICE companies besides this discussion, official IR materials, and VIC?
Assuming we are talking about Nice Holdings KRX:034310 needs its own post. Not sure if we keep discussing it here or create a new post for this another ticker. I read the VIC writeup on it. Looks quite interesting.
I agree that Nice Holdings should have a separate topic, since there are many subsidiaries which can be discussed.
Off-topic remark/question about arbitrage in Korea. I found an article that Li Lu did some Korean Preferredsarbitrage. In the article mentioned a few examples. Did anybody have any experience or thoughts on this approach?
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RetroRanger
Swissquote seems to support korean stocks. Their screener shows actions to buy NICE holdings.
For me this would be the best option, since swissquote has the same securities as germany with banking .
( okay i verified it, SADLY not tradable, so i am out. I know Boom is a long existing bank with backup in Japan, BUT i dont want to put my money at that amount of risk :/ )
DAMN why is it so freaking hard to invest (safely) in south korea.
Boom responded after my security question:
If you mainly buy Korea stock, it is not under the Fund protection, unfortunately.
However, HK broker are required by law to segregate client's assets from that of the firm. Client stocks/ cash are deposited in a segregated Trust account or Client account
Legally speaking, in case of bankruptcy of the broker firm, only the client themselves could claim after the assets inside these Trust account./ Client Account
The shareholder, creditors of the firm cannot claim after the assets inside the Trust account/ Client account, as they are NOT considered the properties of the broker firm
Under this legal arrangement, the client should still be able to get back their assets, as long as these stocks/ cash are deposited within the Trust account/ Client account as per the legal requirement
Back to the topic.
Anyone has a good writeup about NICE Holdings besides the valueinvestorclub article?
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Genyi
RetroRanger, thanks for taking this up with Boom. Do you understand the above to mean that also client stocks traded outside of HK/China, such as Korea, are to be held in segregated accounts? Or does the HK regulator only enforce that for HK/Shanghai/Shenzhen stocks?
Tbh, the issue keeps bugging me. Why is there a huge rescue fund when it would be much more efficient to check regularly whether all licensed brokers keep their clients' accounts segregated.
Also, the rescue fund has honored claims to clients of 6 defaulted brokers since 2006: https://www.hkicc.org.hk/claims/notice_e.htm This seems a rather large number of brokers who had not implemented or sustained the mandatory practice of keeping client accounts segregated.
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Genyi
RetroRanger, thanks for taking this up with Boom. Do you understand the above to mean that also client stocks traded outside of HK/China, such as Korea, are to be held in segregated accounts? Or does the HK regulator only enforce that for HK/Shanghai/Shenzhen stocks?
Tbh, the issue keeps bugging me. Why is there a huge rescue fund when it would be much more efficient to check regularly whether all licensed brokers keep their clients' accounts segregated.
Also, the rescue fund has honored claims to clients of 6 defaulted brokers since 2006: https://www.hkicc.org.hk/claims/notice_e.htm This seems a rather large number of brokers who had not implemented or sustained the mandatory practice of keeping client accounts segregated.
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Cicero
I feel like we are hijacking this thread. I started a new topic in the general discussion section for anyone interested in opening an account to invest in Korean stocks.
I did reach out to several Korean Brokers. It seems theoretical possible to open an account, but it sure does not seem easy. Will let you know how it goes in the new thread.
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koowoonmo
The advantage of trading with korean broker is that you can trade most of the stocks except for those for the foreign investor restricted stocks. However, you have to give them orders like old school. If you are value investor don't trade much but want to execute orders at certain price range, korean broker is a good option. If you are looking for one, you can contact koowoonmo@ebestsec.co.kr for more details. (fees, monthly statements, and etc)
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Cicero
Last digression on Korean stock brokers, I promise:
Understand from Koowoonmo that a member of this board is a client of Koowoonmo who pointed him into the direction of the board (thank you!). If you read this can you message me? He seems very professional and I have nothing but good things to say so far, but would be great to validate with someone who has more experience with him. Thanks for your help!
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Jakusimo
Hello!
I am new here and also new student of NICE :) Thank you for such a broad discussion. Since I am from Europe(Lithuania), I have little understanding of the Korean market. Do you have any recommendations for the Korean market (books, blogs, articles) about the economy, politics, history?
Do you know if there is more coverage about NICE companies besides this discussion, official IR materials, and VIC?
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Poor Charlie
How Asia Works
Asia’s Next Giant
Seoul Man
The Birth of Korean Cool
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Jurgis
Oppan Gangnam Style!
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nik_explores
Assuming we are talking about Nice Holdings KRX: 034310 needs its own post. Not sure if we keep discussing it here or create a new post for this another ticker. I read the VIC writeup on it. Looks quite interesting.
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Jakusimo
I agree that Nice Holdings should have a separate topic, since there are many subsidiaries which can be discussed.
Off-topic remark/question about arbitrage in Korea. I found an article that Li Lu did some Korean Preferreds arbitrage. In the article mentioned a few examples. Did anybody have any experience or thoughts on this approach?
https://seekingalpha.com/article/3980970-using-li-lu-introduction-to-asian-equities
I didn't find preferred stocks on Nice holdings
https://www.forbes.com/sites/lukeschiefelbein/2018/02/01/why-korean-preferred-shares-trade-at-a-discount/
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