General Information& Regulation
Established on May 22, 2001, News Securities is a securities company located in Japan. It is mainly engaged in financial instrument business. In 2007, News Securities entered overseas markets to provide stock product business. News Securities is regulated by the Japan Financial Services Agency (FSA), and the regulatory certificate number is 1011001036691.
Market Instruments
New Securities provides investors with a series of financial instruments, including domestic stocks (face-to-face trading like physical trading, margin trading, futures trading and option trading), foreign stocks, foreign currency bonds (AUD, NZD, BRL, ZAR, TRY, MXN, etc.), investment trusts, etc.
Commission
When the contract price is 1 million yen or less, the domestic stock commission is (contract price * 1.150%) * 1.10 (including consumption tax), and the minimum fee is 2,750 yen. The bond commission is the contract price * 1.00% * 1.10 (including consumption tax). The basic cost of foreign stocks varies from country to country. For example, Russian stocks are contract price (rubles)*2.20% (minimum commission is 1,200 rubles), and account management fees are not charged.
Cooperative Banks
The main banks that News Securities cooperates with are Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ(MUFG), Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation(SMBC), Resona Holdings Inc., and Mizuho Bank. MUFG handles stock business in Japan as well as in Vietnam, Russia, Thailand, Dubai & Abu Dhabi and Brazil, and transfer fees are borne by the bank.
Accepted Countries
In addition to domestic stocks in Japan, the countries that News Securities accepts for overseas stock business include Vietnam, Russia, Thailand, Dubai & Abu Dhabi, Brazil, the United States, Europe, China, Singapore, etc.
Risk
Customers buying stocks, bonds, investment trusts and other financial products need to be alert to price fluctuation risks, credit risks, exchange rate fluctuation risks, political and economic risks of the investment country, liquidity risks, counter-party risks, order execution risks, etc.