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Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
Investing to become financially independent
Investing to become financially independent
YaPasPhoto said
2) Brokerage fees as a percentage and not as a flat rate, which is interesting for buying or selling small volumes and therefore increases the liquidity of the deposit.
They still take a minimum commission.
Detailed prices: https://www.cornertrader.ch/export/sites/cornertrader/.content/.galleries/downloads/PDF/en/Commissions.pdf
Thank you for your answers,
My reasoning was a little hasty. (I'm a beginner )
I first came across this:
"According to a market source, Bryan Garnier has raised its recommendation on Roche from Neutral to Buy but reduced its price target from 302 to 287 Swiss francs. The broker believes that any decline in the stock would represent an attractive investment opportunity."
( http://www.zonebourse.com/ROCHE-HOLDING-LTD-9364975/analyses-broker/ROCHE–Bryan-Garnier-passe-a-lAchat-19774135/ )
and that
"[…]However, Roche is trading at a slight discount compared to its peers[…]" (Boursorama)
I then noticed that most analysts give a price target higher than the current share price, whether they recommend "accumulate" or "buy" (today 16 "buy" recommendations on Boursorama)
And with all this I did not pay attention to indicators, such as the high PER or distribution ratio.
So I will continue on my initial course of action for the moment: learning, observation and patience.
Greeting,
Alzheimer's