Worked for me on mobile, at least.
And enough of those damn characters.
Worked for me on mobile, at least.
And enough of those damn characters.
If you can only log into online banking at times when you don’t have the time, then OP is a really poor option for many.
You certainly pay for those bonuses in the form of the higher loan interest rates that OP charges.
The cooperative bank policy is that the customer must be humble just to get any kind of service.
I wouldn’t recommend stock trading through them even for members.
Is it possible to add companies listed on the Canadian stock exchange to your portfolio in Kauppalehti’s Oma Salkku service? For some reason, when I’m adding companies to the portfolio, the search function doesn’t find Canadian firms for me, but it does find, for example, US firms. Does it only find companies from certain specific exchanges or all of them?
ps. Feel free to move this to another discussion forum if it doesn’t belong here.
Are stock lists working for others on Nordnet?

No, and here’s some blah blah so we can get 50 characters filleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeed
At least in the app they seem to be working

On the desktop, only h25 can be found for Helsinki………………………………………………………..
Those worked for me, but the mobile app price alerts aren’t working. I updated the app yesterday. I sent a message to Nordnet’s customer service about the price alert issue.
Hi,
I’m comparing brokers. Could someone help with the following questions regarding OP, which I have no experience with:
ETF trading costs for e.g., Amundi, iShares, and Xtrackers products? In addition to direct stock investing, I have ETF monthly savings.
User interface on the book-entry account side – pros and cons?
Thanks a lot!
The answer to the first one is likely this price list (source). I haven’t noticed any Nordnet-style monthly saving for ETFs at a more affordable price (if anyone has, please do tell).
The second point is, of course, a matter of taste, but it’s manageable. I’ve mostly entered the few trades that occur at OP (my main portfolio is at Nordnet) via mobile, which definitely loses to Nordnet in terms of data volume and “trading features.” I don’t know anyone who has specifically chosen OP because of its investment interface. ![]()
To put it a bit bluntly and summarize, I think OP is good, at least compared to Nordnet, if:
The OST (Equity Savings Account) is still a truly poor showing at OP (no foreign stocks, etc.), but let’s not go into that further since you asked about the AOT (book-entry account).
Unbelievable, but true. Nordea has finally got my quotes sorted out. It took a while after the death of Investor, but they are no longer fifteen minutes delayed all the time. While excited about that, I noticed on the side that you can’t see the brokerage fee at all in Nordea’s service (at least it’s not showing for me). Investor showed the figure already at the buy/sell stage. Nordea seems to only show the cost on the receipt after the trade has taken place.
Nordea is apparently continuing its Equity Savings Day, but with a slightly different concept. Previously, there were clearly specific market(s) per day, and now there are various “themes” mixed in:
I noticed yesterday while browsing the Revolut app that they offer commission-free ETF savings.
Over 1,000 ETFs are available (ETF investment plan) and there is no minimum amount; you can invest as little as €1 / day into an ETF.
Well, it looks like Nordnet crashed. They seem to have started the updates already even though it was supposed to be in the evening—and even then, it would have been while the US markets are still open. This just keeps happening; they’re such idiots. You’d think the IT department would at least have a clue when the markets are closed and schedule the updates for then.
Yep, they announced it would be out of use over the weekend due to maintenance. It’s not even the weekend yet. Sucks for many traders, including myself, as I was planning to sell off one stock.
I noticed the same thing, it’s really strange that they’ve scheduled maintenance to start while the markets are still open. What’s the logic in that?
Looks like Nordnet is working again. And apparently, I didn’t even have to log back in.
Now that Nordea is changing its pricing on May 1st and premium membership would be available with €100k in investments, I inquired whether there would be any costs if I transfer shares from another broker to their book-entry account (AOT). I almost spat my coffee on the keyboard when I received the answer that they charge €70 per security for foreign shares. That is, just for receiving them
No other broker charges anything for bringing in new money/investments. Quite incomprehensible pricing.
Is there even any practical benefit to Nordea’s Private level compared to the mortgage/preferred customer level? A cheaper Premium MC card, faster customer service, and maybe cheaper loans. But otherwise, in investing or other banking matters?
There’s no need for the bank’s investment advice, i.e., sales. Nor are private banking services in the plans.
It would be nice to centralize spending and investments mainly at Nordea (or similar) and enjoy the customer levels and bonuses. In Nordea’s case, the investment side is so simple and rudimentary that I don’t want to manage anything more than my current portfolio of a couple of funds there.
At Nordea’s Premium level, you can get the package including Mastercard Platinum and Gold for slightly under €6, which is quite affordable since the card includes continuous travel insurance with luggage coverage and 6 lounge visits per year. All family members in the same household can also get it at that discounted price. With cash back, you can lower the cost even further when paying with the credit side. Aside from that card, there don’t seem to be any other meaningful benefits.