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Antitrust: Commission opens investigation into possible anticompetitive practices by Microsoft
$CALT 🚀🚀🚀 FDA Approval Dec 15 🤑🤑🤑
"ETORO APES" LOOKS LIKE "FIN-NET" FOR THE EUROPE AND FOS(UK) IS THE WAY TO DRS FROM ETORO! WE EURO APES SHOULD CONSIDER CONTACTING THE "FIN-NET" IN THEIR COUNTRY.
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It takes time to build up the military again. In 2025 the EU/EEA spent about USD 500 billion on defense and it’s still increasing a lot. The US spends more than USD 800 billion, but EU spending is not insignificant. Europeans have understood that they cannot trust Russia or USA, so I expect military spending to increase or stay high also after the war end. More spending will also stay inside Europe, which is good for European companies.
The revenue in femasys going to sky rocket since it started selling their fembloc services in European Economic Area (EEA)- Spain, France and Benelux region, the UK, and New Zealand. They are still undergoing clinical trials in the U.S to seek FDA approval. This can rally hard since they are already building revenue in multiple Countries for fembloc
They (especially Norway) pay massive sums to EU countries via the EEA or bilateral treaties. They also must follow most of their laws but get none of the voting rights.
I do agree with you, but there is a certain mentality over here towards working that I do not consider sane, as a lot of people my age don’t have any ambition nor dream ; it’s quite sad to see. Can’t invest in a FTSE because it’s not eligible with a “PEA”, a tax-advantaged investment account that only allows EU/EEA stocks. But it doesn’t exclude ETFs, so I can still invest in World, Nasdaq, or S&P 500 trackers as long as they’re EU-domiciled.
EU leaders have confirmed that the deal is mostly related to private organizations, and that the EU has no legal capacity to force European businesses to invest in the USA or buy American products. The European Union is not a federation and cannot act on behalf of its member states. It can issue guidelines and provide frameworks to make it easier for businesses to operate, but unlike the U.S. federal government, it has no legal authority to compel any organization to take specific actions. The only way the EU typically enforces anything is through regulations. For example, farming regulations that all countries must comply with if they want to be part of the EEA (European Economic Area). And for the record, you don’t even have to be an EU member to be part of the EEA. I’m not sure if Trump himself understands how it works, or if his administration is simply banking on the fact that most Americans are unaware of how the EU functions when it comes to applying pressure on independent, sovereign nations within the EEA. So, the EU-U.S. deal largely depends on whether the U.S. can make itself attractive to foreign investors based on basic economic principles, not political alliances. In short, it’s a deal that says the EU will try to create a business-friendly framework, but it comes with no legal guarantees regarding actual investments.
TikTok has been fined 530 million euros ($601.3 million) by Ireland's privacy regulator for sending user data to China. The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) — which leads on privacy oversight for TikTok in the EU — said Friday that TikTok infringed the bloc's GDPR data protection law over transfers of European user data to China. The regulator ordered TikTok to bring its data processing into compliance within six months and said it would suspend TikTok's transfers to China if processing is not brought into compliance within that timeframe. "TikTok's personal data transfers to China infringed the GDPR because TikTok failed to verify, guarantee and demonstrate that the personal data of EEA users, remotely accessed by staff in China, was afforded a level of protection essentially equivalent to that guaranteed within the EU," Graham Doyle, deputy commissioner at the DPC, said in a statement Friday. "As a result of TikTok's failure to undertake the necessary assessments, TikTok did not address potential access by Chinese authorities to EEA personal data under Chinese anti-terrorism, counter-espionage and other laws identified by TikTok as materially diverging from EU standards," he added.
The rest of the world is scared more about that Trump represents. The rest of the world now expects extreme back and forth swing of politics from the US. The polarization of society represented in 4 year schedule. You can't plan things if you expect things will change in the short term (like with these back-and-forth tariffs) and in the long term (with democrats coming back in the next election). Why would you put a factory in the US if the next democrat president would probably reduce/eliminate the tariffs? Just as an example if the US were to leave NATO in this administration and a subsequent democrat one were to try to rejoin it would likely be refused by the other NATO members. To some extent the shitshow of Brexit was handled better, at least there was no backsies and everyone knew the UK would leave the EU and EEA with the only thing in question was when and what special deals were to be made or not-made.
He’s not wrong though, im Norwegian, so I got the aspect of being in the EEA, and being outside the EU. You guys cant agree on shit, and when there are talks with Britain about trade or a defense mutual fund, France always barges in about fishing rights. It is a dysfunctional union that barely works in peacetime, and now there is need of action, nothing happens.
Apple is frontloading supplies—maybe just as a precaution, but 'D-Day' is coming. Think about it: The U.S. is hiking tariffs across the board, and with so many trade deals to negotiate, how long before things get messy? [https://www.msn.com/en-in/money/technology/apple-shipped-five-plane-loads-of-iphones-and-other-products-in-three-days-to-beat-us-tariff-deadline/ar-AA1CnCxr?cvid=1E34A5EEA4AC4C329E354A2EAB53949F&ocid=hpmsn](https://www.msn.com/en-in/money/technology/apple-shipped-five-plane-loads-of-iphones-and-other-products-in-three-days-to-beat-us-tariff-deadline/ar-AA1CnCxr?cvid=1E34A5EEA4AC4C329E354A2EAB53949F&ocid=hpmsn)
They’re also not in the EU, but they’re part of the EEA—so they get access to the single market without being fully tied to EU rules and currency. Kind of the best of both worlds but still a risky investment because of the size of the country.
EU would be a bridge too far tbh, although EEA may be possible, closer cooperation at least would be my hope.
Imagine if Canada decides to join the EU and/or EEA?
You do realize no one gives a fuck about how much more Americans are indeed paying for goods right? The USA is a small part of the world. And a small part of every export made from the EU for example. The EU exports roughly 60% to the EEA, and only close to 18% to the US. Your president is taxing its citizens. Not the world. lol
It’s whatever for countries on the EEA to be honest. Having the average US citizen pay a shit load of taxes (disguised as tariffs) couldn’t bother me any less. Even if we forfeit all of the USA export market (…) the EU sells WAY more to the EEA than to the USA, as it stands the US accounts for about 18-20% of everything we export.
ok update: I just tried to buy SGOV and Schwab tells me "Client has legal residence in an EEA country or the United Kingdom and is not eligible to purchase US registered ETFs, ETNs or closed-end funds." So, what can I actually buy?? No money market, no mutual funds, no ETFs either?! I have no difficulty buying single stocks and/or bonds directly...
Retired and just sold some small caps with good gains. Plowed it back into JEPI, JEPQ, GLD, NOBL, EEA, and a big chunk of money market funds to redeploy later this year. Rebalancing is irrespective of an overheated and overvalued market correcting and cooling. I don’t expect I will ever be as wealthy for a few years as I have been on paper but I know I am being as prudent as I know how to be.
For real, Canada should aks to be member of EEA, get the Norway deal. It wouldnt change that much from current trade deals but would send a nice message. Also Red and white flag ~~(and blue)~~, north, good at hockey, exporting energy to EU. Canada could pretend to be Norway.
Norway is still in the EEA, European Econonic Area which means they are part of the economy but not the union. Legislations ruled by the EU court applies to Norway as well.
Buddy, for maple syrup, we'll let you in in EU, Schengen, EEA, Bundestag, El Classico, you name it...
I think I found my answer... sorry, I was not able to share that I am in the UK. "* All US ETF positions opened by clients of eToro (Europe) Ltd and eToro (UK) Ltd who are residents of the EEA or the UK are only available as CFDs." May I ask if you know what are the cons of buying CFDs for Indeces specifically? https://help.etoro.com/s/article/what-do-i-purchase-when-i-buy-etfs-on-etoro?language=en_GB#:~:text=Any%20CFD%20trade%20will%20be,is%20under%2C%20please%20click%20here.
Plus Switzerland from the EEA side of the house.
I am American, and I have travelled the world, one of the perks of an American salary. You're missing the point. Yes people here aren't 10X better. But we are 1000X more pro-business as a country. There are risks with opening even branches in the EU/EEA. Government regulations are written without consulting businesses, leading to unworkable standards and paperwork. If we cared about cost and cost only, why would we hire Swedish when we can hire Indian? Singapore is also now a hub for Southeast Asia talents and still pay lower than the EU, and their government is 100X more pro-business. Why would we hire Swedish when we can hire Canadian? Also much lower pay than in the US, but with similar timezones and cultures. European offices are just for the European market. You guys do make better commercial planes though, I'll give you that.
Yes it's such a pain in the ass. But nice job EU, keep protecting the people. This is really what we needed. FYI from Google Support webpage *"Ashwarya Google Community Manager Mar 13, 2024 Hi there, In order to comply with the EU Digital Markets Act (DMA), we made changes to Google Search in European Economic Area (EEA). Maps that may appear in Search results do not link to Google Maps (example 1). The Maps link at the top of the Search page that links to Google Maps has been removed (example 2). Google published a blog about compliance with the DMA. Here's the link to the blog if you'd like to learn more: https://blog.google/around-the-globe/google-europe/complying-with-the-digital-markets-act/."*
When you open a non-leveraged BUY (long) position on an ETF, you own the underlying asset. In this case, you shouldn't be subject to daily or overnight fee. However, for clients of eToro (Europe) Ltd and eToro (UK) Ltd who are residents of the EEA or the UK, US ETF positions are only available as CFDs.
All US ETF positions opened by clients of eToro (Europe) Ltd and eToro (UK) Ltd who are residents of the EEA or the UK are only available as CFDs. The are regulated in multiple jurisdictions. You need to check your jurisdiction. They are not a real broker.
The EEA+UK+Switzerland is way above everyone at 12850 tons, The EU alone is at 11500 tons. Germany France and Italy together are already at 8242 tons on their own. And that's without counting all the Nazi gold that Switzerland is still hiding. https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/gold-reserves?continent=europe
I’m not familiar with EU laws except that they tend to be stricter then US. I also won’t pretend to know more about the law then the EEA like you are… So let’s wait and see if this anti competitive behavior is against their laws.
“…may have limited the interoperability between its productivity suites and competing offerings. These practices may constitute anti-competitive tying or bundling and prevent suppliers of other communication and collaboration tools from competing, to the detriment of customers in the European Economic Area (‘EEA'). If proven, the behaviour under investigation may breach EU competition rules, which prohibit the abuse of a dominant position (Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (‘TFEU')).”
I think Pharming is a good buy. Last month they got FDA approval for Joenja (leniolisib) for APDS disease. EEA and UK are still waiting for approval by the EMA expected later this year. APDS is a very rare disease, however, there is no competitor, the selling price and margin is very high and it is covered by insurance companies in the US. The current share price is ridiculous and even quoted lower than after approval. Peak sales are expected in 2027. [https://www.pharming.com/pipeline](https://www.pharming.com/pipeline)
I am a bot. You submitted a picture of a banned ticker, EEA. The market cap of EEA is **59,242,450** This check will fire if you included unnecessary pictures that have bad keywords/phrases. Repost with the useless pictures omitted if you did that.
“Switzerland is not an EU or EEA member but is part of the single market.” You should probably take it up with the EEA, as that’s from their own website.
That could get rather complicated depending exactly what goes wrong at the bank. The EU and EEA don't have an equivalent to the SIPC in the US: https://www.reddit.com/r/eupersonalfinance/comments/y6m6po/what_is_the_swiss_equivalent_of_the_american_sipc/
While everybody is talking about SVB. This big boy is big enough to bring down the whole banking sector. Fun fact: Switzerland is not a member of the EEA. So its faith is in hands of the Swiss government. Seatbelts on. This is gonne be HUUUUGEEE.
**[General Data Protection Regulation](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation)** >The General Data Protection Regulation (2016/679, "GDPR") is a Regulation in EU law on data protection and privacy in the EU and the European Economic Area (EEA). The GDPR is an important component of EU privacy law and of human rights law, in particular Article 8(1) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. It also addresses the transfer of personal data outside the EU and EEA areas. The GDPR's primary aim is to enhance individuals' control and rights over their personal data and to simplify the regulatory environment for international business. ^([ )[^(F.A.Q)](https://www.reddit.com/r/WikiSummarizer/wiki/index#wiki_f.a.q)^( | )[^(Opt Out)](https://reddit.com/message/compose?to=WikiSummarizerBot&message=OptOut&subject=OptOut)^( | )[^(Opt Out Of Subreddit)](https://np.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/about/banned)^( | )[^(GitHub)](https://github.com/Sujal-7/WikiSummarizerBot)^( ] Downvote to remove | v1.5)
It's not a load of tripe, I'll concede it's not huge in the grand scheme of things but some estimates suggest that from [2001-2011 non-EEA migration fiscally cost the UK 10 billion a year](https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/the-fiscal-impact-of-immigration-in-the-uk/). While EEA was in some estimates over the same period a small fiscal positive and in others a small negative (1 billion a year or so.) What policies are you thinking of that's causing the govt to raise taxes to the highest pretty much ever? All the money handed out during covid, stuff like that?
According to their website before it was taken offline, they had licenses in multiple jurisdictions. They were supposedly regulated by each of those jurisdictions. https://ftexchange.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360056976411-Jurisdiction-regulations-licensing-and-practices Licensure and Regulation FTX Trading Ltd is incorporated in Antigua and Barbuda. FTX Digital Markets Ltd, a subsidiary of FTX Trading Ltd, is licensed under The Bahamas' Digital Assets and Registered Exchange Act, 2020 and regulated by the Securities Commission of the Bahamas. FTX Trading Ltd owns, through its Gibraltar subsidiary Zubr Exchange Limited, a crypto derivatives exchange licensed by the Gibraltar Financial Services Commission as a distributed ledger technology provider. FTX provides services to Australian customers via FTX Express Pty Ltd, an AUSTRAC-registered digital currency exchange provider, and FTX Australia Pty Ltd, an Australian Financial Services Licensee. FTX Digital Markets Ltd does not currently facilitate users who are from Japan, The Bahamas, Australia, or Singapore; and it does not service trading of tokenized stocks or prediction markets. All other services and users currently are or soon will be facilitated by FTX Digital Markets Ltd. FTX Europe's domain is approved through K-DNA Financial Services Ltd., a duly incorporated Investment Firm in Cyprus that is passported to the European Economic Area. FTX is a brand operated by K-DNA Financial Services Ltd. and regulated by the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission, with license number 273/15. FTX offers tokenized stock trading in partnership with K-DNA and FTX Switzerland GmbH, utilizing a German license in concert with FTX Trading GmbH. FTX's subsidiary, FTX Switzerland GmbH, can provide financial services and limited custody services. It is registered for AML purposes with SRO Treuhand Suisse and is a member of Finanzombudsstelle Schweiz (FINOS) FTX's subsidiary, DAAG Certificates GmbH, has an approved base prospectus for various tokenized financial instruments, which is valid in Switzerland and is passported across the EEA. FTX's subsidiary DAAG Trading, DMCC, is a licensed proprietary trader and swap dealer in the United Arab Emirates. FTX's subsidiary, FTX Exchange FZE, is licensed and prudentially supervised as a Virtual Asset Exchange and Clearing House in the United Arab Emirates by the Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (VARA). FTX's subsidiary, FTX Japan Corporation (formerly Quoine Corporation), is licensed as a cryptocurrency exchange business (Cryptocurrency Exchange Business Kanto Finance Bureau Director No. 00002), and a Type 1 Financial Instruments Business by the Japan Financial Services Agency. FTX's subsidiary, Quoine Pte Ltd, has been granted an exemption from holding a licence under the Singapore Payment Services Act with respect to digital payment token services. FTX provides derivatives products and services to South African customers as juristic representative of OVEX FSP (Proprietary) Limited (authorized FSP 50776). United States: FTX.US, a separate trading platform not owned by FTX, does operate in the United States, and maintains a variety of US regulatory licenses, including an MSB, MTLs, DCO, DCM, and SEF. FTX offers tokenized stock trading in partnership with K-DNA and FTX Switzerland GmbH, utilizing a German license in concert with FTX Trading GmbH. FTX is owned by FTX Trading LTD, a company incorporated in Antigua and Barbuda, and headquartered in the Bahamas as FTX Digital Markets Ltd. FTX's market identifier code (MIC) under ISO 10383 is XFTX.
Got it, thanks. Just to clarify, so it is possible to open an account as a resident and citizen of a country that is not US or any country in the EEA?
I’m not familiar with many investment managers using a performance-led adjustable compensation model for a retail-focused, mass market, zero/low-leverage fund with a vanilla strategy trading shares, fixed income, spot commodities etc. They do pop up now and then in such funds (‘UCITS’ - undertaking for collective investment in transferrable securities), but aren’t at all common. Quite the opposite is so in the case of ‘AIFs’ (Alternative Investment Fund - a super-broad catch-all for any collective investment undertaking, whatever its legal form, that falls outside the various conditions a vehicle must meet to qualify as a UCITS. So hedge funds, private equity, weird derivative strategies, venture/seed capital - they can trade more or less whatever they’d like, and operate under a far looser regulatory framework than their mainstream cousin. For the pleasure, the trade-off is that promoting and accepting investor contributions is restricted to persons who has enough knowledge and experience to identify and think through the product, strategy, etc. And, have the capital needed to cope with losing the lot in and AIFs are generally significantly more hardcore risk-wise. Onto performance fees, then - standard practice is for an investment manager to take ‘2 and 20’ waterfall model; 2% a year ongoing … 20% of whatever the fund makes on top of its target return. Example of how the waterfall works: A) a fund has a target Internal Rate of Return (IRR) of 5% over the calculation period; makes 15%. B) Investors are paid up to 5% (in accordance with a ranking sometimes - eg biggest investor is paid their scratch first, second most second, then third …..’); leaving 15-5 … 10% C) Firm is paid 20% - OF THE TOTAL IRR of 15% (people tend to duff this bit here up, if they duff at all); 20% of 15 is … 3 - firm is paid this as performance fee D) Remaining is 10-3 … 7%; This amount is then split evenly, or in accordance with a proportional hierarchy of size based on the amount the investor contributed - say I1 put in 4m, they get 4%; I2 put in 2m, they get 2%; I3 gets the remaining 1 This article on fee level and structure among UCITS Management Companies has a light splash of insight you might find helpful: https://www.morningstar.com/articles/641895/the-years-biggest-fee-cuts-and-hikes It says Vanguard, Janus and Fidelity are the only major fund managers who ever use performance-tied adjustable fee structures (though I understand Fidelity has since stopped doing so). A couple of ideas on funds with such a structure in there too. ESMA EEA guidance on performance fees in UCITS and certain A: https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/library/esma34-39-992_guidelines_on_performance_fees_en.pdf
Investment bonds are a ball-ache generally - *weird rules re how they’re taxed on withdrawal in most jurisdictions, because the legal form they utilise is a load of identical life assurance policies (100 commonly) that are underwritten by an insurer on a life or lives of a person / persons, but whose premiums are almost entirely invested in risk-facing assets. In the UK, they’ve got their own confusing af set of rules, which subject certain ‘chargeable’ events (such as cashing some or all of it in) to income tax - rather than the typical levy on any capital gains most investment returns are exposed to. Recently I discovered the magnificent realm of chaos that is the Italian tax regime - I’m not familiar with the approach to investment bonds, but I suspect it could be a bit tricky *costs and charges are often significantly higher than you’ll see with dealing platforms (IB, HL, eToro, etc), and less transparent (not always particularly clear what exactly deduction x, mark-down y is buying you *choice of investments much more limited - only a selection of crappy closet trackers (funds that are ostensibly ‘actively’ managed by people making informed, insightful investment decisions, but which actually just hover within a %ish of an index by mirroring more or less all of its components *IPS and similar products are hosted in the proper greasy lax on tax offshore money-farms like British Overseas Crown dependencies (Jersey, Guernsey) or usual EEA mainstays (Luxembourg, Ireland). Generally, capital growth is taxed lightly or not at all. Hope this helps - let me know if you’ve got a lot specific questions, and I’ll do what I can ;)
The main reason is that IS companies tend to retain their earnings to reinvest while Europeans tend to pay their out. US companies will also buy back shares and a higher rates than EEA companies.
Switzerland is part of the European Economic Area or EEA. It is a class of membership in the EU. Compared to regular members, they receive special treatment, but in exchange will not be able to vote on laws for EU members. They are still in the Schengen area, they still maintain trade agreements, and so on so forth.
Reasons are many. - America is a much larger market that startups can address virtually as day one. Some US states by themselves have a larger or similar size than the UK or other single European countries. This is key because even if you consider the EU or other agreements (EEA, Schengen), there is ZERO common market for services in Europe. Most startups operate in the service sector and there is also a language barrier to scale. - Access to capital is much easier, because also the financial sector is larger than any single EU country or even the EU overall. - the mindset in (most) of the US truly is more favourable to entrepreneurship. Their culture of failure is very different than Europe. Take Adam Neumann who recently raised 1.7 Bln after the shitshow with WeWork. - they now have a very wide advantage that is difficult to overcome. In the late 2000s Europe had Skype, NOKIA and a few other players who could compete with US tech. They have almost all been acquired or failed by now. Difficult to compete in a space that is now dominated by giants. Fun fact is that the only countries that punch above their weight in this regards are Sweden and Finland. Spotify, Skype and Nokia are / were all from there.
We received 1.1 million immigrants last year. The people voted to reduce net migration "to the tens of thousands, not hundreds of thousands" back in 2010. A big part of Brexit was to cease the excuse of EU pressure to keep the borders open. I should also remind you that every Prime Minister since Thatcher has been pro-EU (even Boris was right before he saw an opportunity to do a Cameron and feign support for a popular issue) and is glad to sabotage our leaving the EU (like Cameron not preparing for leaving in the 7 years from his election to the referendum). I know that Remainers enjoy dismissing all of that to pretend that leaving was a bad idea, but there still is zero reason why we couldn't just trade with the EU as the EEA nations do. We never voted to join the EU either. Open borders have destroyed this country over the past 25 years, both from government insistence and EU policy.
Or just the UK... (not part of the EEA)
EU region? western europe? EEA? the continent ? unironically asking this because even within europe those things get (purposely) confused
Free for EU/EEA, Switzerland, & speakers of Finnish or Swedish. PhD programs free for all. Some classes only in Finnish or Swedish. Learn yourself some Finnish and get on over there, she's waiting.
>Not all of us voted for that insanity. Yeah but why is Labour intending to "make brexit work" instead of saying "we will look into EEA membership"? It's just delaying the inevitable.
\#Italeave is very close to being real. They're very, very, very deliberately not giving it any amplification whatsoever in mainstream media since Brexit was such a shock, Italy leaving would be basically the end of the EEA and the EU. At that point, Germany and France have no incentive to keep feeding the useless eaters in countries with lower economic productivity,
That was entirely due to Theresa May and BJ's indecision. There was an "oven-ready" solution they could have readily agreed to, membership of the EEA, like Norway. But the British were too stubborn.
Sorry, I am too European to access this website: > 451: Unavailable due to legal reasons > We recognize you are attempting to access this website from a country belonging to the European Economic Area (EEA) including the EU which enforces the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and therefore access cannot be granted at this time. For any issues, contact info@franklinnews.org or call (847) 497-5230. Conform to our European directives *or else!*
I would not tough Pocket Option with a hundred-foot dollar bill. They are essentially an unregulated foreign broker. Here is their location. Gembell Limited does not provide service to residents of the EEA countries, USA, Israel, UK and Japan. Gembell Limited is registered at Trust Company Complex, Ajeltake Road, Ajeltake Island, Majuro, Republic of the Marshall Islands MH 96960 with the registration number 86967.
any non-YOLO stock advice greatly appreciated! Here's a tip, send him to uni in Germany. Uni's are great there, and the costs are 500 euro's per semester if I'm not mistaken? Similar deals are seen in Norway and Sweden I think. It really depends, you have to google for non EU/EEA student but there's a goldmine there that many Americans don't touch. Make sure it's a technical university with a lot of prestige. Here's a list: [https://www.mastersportal.com/articles/2741/top-10-engineering-schools-in-europe-engineering-rankings-2022.html](https://www.mastersportal.com/articles/2741/top-10-engineering-schools-in-europe-engineering-rankings-2022.html) The technical university of Munich is also a cheap uni I think. I can attest to some of these universities. I'm honestly not sure about Oxford and Cambridge, I know nothing about England. I know the uni's are prestigious but other uni's are actually winning hyperloop challenges, not Oxford or Cambridge. Research that and you'll be good with aboud 20K to 30K tuition money, especially at today's EUR/USD prices! Best of luck :)
If you’re a US national/green card holder, a US broker with connectivity to LSE is probably best. Here’s a Charles Schwab pricing factsheet https://www.schwab.com/resource/global-account-markets-and-pricing If you’re an EEA/UK citizen living in US temporarily, I’d look into opening an account with a UK-domiciled platform. Any decent one will offer trading in AIM shares.
Investulator, Thank you for your analysis. I should have clarified better that the ETFs that had the 77% drop were; RSX, ERUS, RSXJ, RUSL, and RUSS. [https://finviz.com/map.ashx?t=etf&st=w4](https://finviz.com/map.ashx?t=etf&st=w4) My funds didn't settle in time to take long positions, before these funds were banned from trading in us markets. There is a rumour that you can still buy RSX on Robinhood, and a russian pegged index on the london exchange. I took positions in CEE, EEA, GF, IFN, and will continue to cost avg in. CEE - was trading 15 - 30, now at 7.5. -50% from the low end EEA - was trading 9.5 to 10, now at 8.5 -10% from the low end IFN - was comparing the recent price movement to its 52wk trading range, 20-22 now at 18-19. however i am always open to learn more about how to evaluate stocks. GGB and GOGL may be undervalued depending on how Russian sanctions impact global trade. For GGB, I believe their recent down trend correlated with the price drop in BRIC markets. While their price increase comes from; Brazil declaring their neutrality, the Russian sanctions restricting the world supply of metal, and good fundamentals at $6 price point. Will the world turn from Russian to Brazilian steel? Gogl, is a shipping company with good fundamentals that paid a 20% dividend last year. i believe with oil at $100 a barrel, railroads and shipping will dominate the transportation industry. I would love to hear what positions your taking or considering.
GF and EEA paid large special distributions recently which account for half their drops.
Yeah and you likely live in the states, which was my point. Venmo is "not available in Europe, EEA or Eu countries" While there's transferwise, revolut etc available. Im not sure what venmo DOES Actually since I (in Eu) can send money in 5sec from one account to another directly from my bank account, Both of my banks support such features so I'm assuming venmo fixes some shortcomings of your local options.
I was talking about the inhabitants of the EU, as they would be the only one to be affected by this change. Not all European states are in the EU / EEA. https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php?title=Population_and_population_change_statistics
The question is does this impact the national security of neighboring countries, which it probably doesn’t. With cannabis it’s a completely different case. Countries like Poland are going to fight any legislation that is going to increase the amount of drugs inside their borders. Looking at the amount of US citizens that live in illegal states and go to legal states to buy cannabis says enough about the path this is leading to. Loads of member states looking to give Germany a hard time. The amount of conservative states within the EEA is considerable. Besides that the convention I mentioned doesn’t apply to any of the examples you stated. It does apply to cannabis.
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For whatever its worth, Europe is shitting a brick right now. https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/sites/default/files/documents/Implications-emergence-spread-SARS-CoV-2%20B.1.1.529-variant-concern-Omicron-for-the-EU-EEA-Nov2021.pdf
I am a bot from /r/wallstreetbets. You submitted one or more banned tickers: EEA PBT. Message /u/zjz if they're above 1.5 billion-ish market cap and not related to crypto/pennies/OTC/SPACs.
Depends on your country, it's legislation and freedom of internet for using international services or mobile apps. In the US there should be these services, in the EU you might want to check out Malta or Luxembourg, for EEA Liechtenstein or Switzerland might have some as well. When it comes to China, Economics Explained has a video about investing there: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qsrt6Hultj8
They were barely profitable on a GAAP basis using using many bad assumptions. For example, they use *35* year depreciation when their panels only have 20-25 year contracts. Yet after 20 years customers won't keep the panel because they can get a new one that's many generations newer. An honest assumption is that most people get rid of it - at RUN's expense, rather than RUN gets to renew 90%+ of contracts at just a 10% discount. Look at page 56 and the especially the table on the bottom of 57. https://seekingalpha.com/filing/5394129#RUN-20201231_HTM_I93C11BB5EEA24F88AC75DB01576B1BAF_40 They make other dishonest assumptions, too, like a very low default rate and low maintenance cost / high reliability.
Honkai Impact 3rd's latest version introduces new S-rank Seele! Learn more: https://mhy.link/0794EEA6. Enter my UID (100214654) on the event page to claim free Crystals!
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Hi all, The CIIG/Arrival merger will complete this week and is expected to start trading on NASDAQ on Thursday. In Arrival's statement, right at the bottom it says that shares won't be available to retail investors in the UK or EEA. Does anyone know what will happen to your shares if you already hold shares in CIIG? I use DEGIRO. [https://arrival.com/news/CIIG-Merger-Corp-Announces-Stockholder-Approval-of-Business-Combination-with-Arrival-Sarl](https://arrival.com/news/CIIG-Merger-Corp-Announces-Stockholder-Approval-of-Business-Combination-with-Arrival-Sarl) Thank you in advance!
>Norway isn't part ofthe European Union. Yes and No. It's not a member state but it is part of the EEA (European Economic Area). For more about this intricacies about the European relationship between countries, see this [image.](https://images.app.goo.gl/bTToC1wf2wwCwhxa6)