Neve Chua

Neve Chua

Green Finance Reporter | ESG Investment Advisor

Switched from Environmental Economics to finance, earned CFA ESG Investing cert. Writes for Sustainable Finance Weekly, founded Zero Carbon Investment Club. Specializes in translating carbon data into actionable advice. Translated Rich Dad Poor Dad Green Edition.

Latest Articles

How Much Are the Fees for Buying $1,000 of U.S. Stocks? A Breakdown of U.S. Stock Trading Costs
How Much Are the Fees for Buying $1,000 of U.S. Stocks? A Breakdown of U.S. Stock Trading Costs
There is no fixed fee for buying $1,000 of U.S. stocks. The actual cost usually depends on commission, platform fees, external agency fees, regulatory-related fees, minimum charges, executed shares, and order type. This breakdown uses a $1,000 order to explain U.S. stock trading costs, helping beginners estimate fees before placing an order and verify statements after execution.
How Are U.S. Stock Trading Fees Calculated? Using Commission, Platform Fees, and External Agency Fees as Examples
How Are U.S. Stock Trading Fees Calculated? Using Commission, Platform Fees, and External Agency Fees as Examples
U.S. stock trading fees usually consist of commission, platform fees, external agency fees, regulatory-related fees, options contract fees, ADR fees, and margin interest. Learning to calculate each item based on executed shares, trade value, minimum charges, and fee caps helps you understand order estimates and trade statements.
Why Beginners Shouldn't Look Only at "Zero Commission" Before Buying U.S. Stocks
Why Beginners Shouldn't Look Only at "Zero Commission" Before Buying U.S. Stocks
Beginners should not look only at zero commission before buying U.S. stocks, because real costs also include platform fees, regulatory fees, bid-ask spreads, slippage, margin interest, market data fees, and account service fees. Understanding the U.S. stock trading fee structure, order execution quality, and platform selection checklist can help investors evaluate trading costs more carefully.
How Do Zero-Commission U.S. Stock Trading Platforms Make Money? Fees and Service Models Explained
How Do Zero-Commission U.S. Stock Trading Platforms Make Money? Fees and Service Models Explained
Zero-commission U.S. stock trading platforms are not cost-free. Learn how payment for order flow, interest income, margin lending, securities lending, platform fees, regulatory fees, and hidden trading costs affect whether a platform is truly suitable for investors.
ChatGPT Payment Was Not Approved: Card Declined Causes and Fixes
ChatGPT Payment Was Not Approved: Card Declined Causes and Fixes
ChatGPT payment was not approved? Learn why cards get declined, how to fix billing address, 3D Secure, renewal, app-store, API credit and refund issues.
What to Do After ChatGPT Plus Auto-Renewal Fails? Downgrade, Retry, and Resubscription Process
What to Do After ChatGPT Plus Auto-Renewal Fails? Downgrade, Retry, and Resubscription Process
After ChatGPT Plus auto-renewal fails, first confirm your subscription channel, payment method, and current account status, then decide whether to update payment, wait for retry, cancel the old subscription, or resubscribe. Web, iOS, and Android have different handling paths, so avoid duplicate charges before taking action.
Why Fees Shown Before Placing an Order May Differ From the Final Statement
Why Fees Shown Before Placing an Order May Differ From the Final Statement
Fees shown before placing an order are usually estimates. The final statement may be affected by execution price, partial fills, regulatory fees, platform fees, exchange rates, and settlement rules. Understanding these differences can help you review trade confirmations and account statements more accurately.
Buying U.S. Stock ETFs vs. Individual Stocks: How Are the Trading Fees Different?
Buying U.S. Stock ETFs vs. Individual Stocks: How Are the Trading Fees Different?
The cost difference between buying U.S. stock ETFs and individual stocks is not only about commissions. ETFs also involve expense ratios, bid-ask spreads, premiums/discounts, and tracking error, while individual stocks have no fund management fee but may involve higher concentration risk, liquidity spreads, and ADR fees.
Long-Term Investing vs Short-Term Trading: Where Do U.S. Stock Trading Costs Differ?
Long-Term Investing vs Short-Term Trading: Where Do U.S. Stock Trading Costs Differ?
The cost difference between long-term investing and short-term trading in U.S. stocks is not just about commissions. It also includes platform fees, spreads, slippage, currency exchange, margin interest, taxes, and settlement cycles.
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