Gotcha, thank you kind sir.
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You could add the DRP shares as a buy at the the amount you would have got if you took the cash dividend.
777 is correct. DRP issued shares are shares you are purchasing at the issue value. They are not free. They are actually a 'buy' at the stated price.
Otherwise you'll distort your financials for that stock.
I have just signed up to Jardins new site. So far I am totally unimpressed with the presentation. I much preferred the old format. I have now signed up to ASB. Hopefully ASB’s presentation is more to my liking.
I have some unlisted shares in the Direct portfolio eg skyline which doesn’t update, not a real concern but is there a way I can update the price manually . Thanks
You can even sell stuff you bought from another broker and they don't even know about. They must check.
Is directbroking still the cheapest broker or is there a cheaper option
Sharesies.
Directbroking's rate card is $29.90, and then 0.2% beyond $15k. A $5k, $10k or $15k order is $29.90, a $30k purchase is $59.90)
Sharesies is 0.5% up to $3k, then 0.1% beyond $3k, or $15 for the first $3k then 0.1% on the rest. A $5k order is $17, a $10k order is $22, $15k is $27 and $30k is $42. There's also a monthly/annual fee but at $30/yr its not a biggie. These rates are lower across all price points.
Whether the problems with sharesies are an issue for you depends on your investment approach. They don't yet have Australian shares. The shares aren't transferred into your name (which is how they do the partial share ownership, but you can transfer in freely and its $5/company to transfer out), and someone posted in the past that you can't post multiple orders at different prices for the same stock. I haven't done this, but some do.
Also some posters have noted issues with their "at market" execution, so it may be safest to use limit orders