While
from within the country you can use
http://icicidirect.com,
for NRIs; ICICI provides a sub domain based web
address
http://nri.icicidirect.com for online trading.
You must first transfer the money to your ICICI bank account through a
transfer of funds from your resident country, assuming that you do not
already have
money for use of share trading in your account.
How much money is needed?
This is a question many people ask. There is no fixed
figure here. You can buy shares for as small an amount as Rs. 500 (depending on which
stocks you buy) or as much as whatever your financial capacity entitles.
Understand that money is no constraint here. You can start very small;
gradually increase your investment in equities. In fact this is the
preferred method when you are new. So that you can understand the dynamics
of the market as you increase your investment and make smart moves.
Going back to buying and selling, after you login to your
account for the first time, you may need to agree some terms and
conditions. Then you can allocate funds through the allocation menu,
assuming that you have already transferred money to your bank – DMAT
account, Select Non PINS account for primary markets (IPOs) and PINS account
for secondary markets (equity purchase). You will be mostly using PINS
account.
ICICI support.
You can get help from ICICI in case you are facing any
problem or have doubts on how to go about. Their e-mail support is very
efficient. You can ask any kind of questions and they will come back with an
answer fairly quick.
Once you allocate funds, you can easily buy shares by
choosing the ‘buy’ option. There is a simple window that opens up where you
have to mention, the stock you like to buy, (find out its code from the
'find stock code' option), the number of shares, and as the third option specify limit or market
option.
Market or Limit order:
Market order for a sell or buy means that the order is
immediately executed at the current market price of that stock. A limit
order means that you are specifying the amount of money you are willing to
pay or get (in case of a sell) for that particular stock. For example if the current market
price of a share is 100 you can say you are willing to buy it at 99. Such a
limit order when placed is queued for execution at the exchange. The moment
the price of that share reaches the value specified, the order get executed.
If it does not reach the specified value, the order gets cancelled at the
end of the market day. Same thing happens if it is a sell order.
Once you confirm your sell or buy order, your order appears on the order book.
This is where you can monitor the status of your order. It is then queued
and executed (status changes automatically depending upon whether the
exchange is trading at that particular time, whether your price can be
acceptable for a purchase etc. Examples of status indications are 'queued',
'executed', and 'cancelled' (if you did).
Also, once a limit order has been placed, the system will
automatically present you an option to make changes to that order after it
had been unsuccessful in executing for a certain period of time. At
this stage, you can decide either to modify or cancel your order. If you
choose to do nothing, your order will continue to wait until the value
specified by you, matches the market value.
A look at ICICI online trading systems 'Buy' menu: