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Robo-Advisor with Python

You're reading from   Robo-Advisor with Python A hands-on guide to building and operating your own Robo-advisor

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801819695
Length 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Aki Ranin Aki Ranin
Author Profile Icon Aki Ranin
Aki Ranin
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Basic Elements of Robo-Advisors
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Robo-Advisors FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: What Makes Up a Robo-Advisor? 4. Chapter 3: Robo-Advisor Platforms versus Algorithms 5. Chapter 4: Leasing, Buying, or Building Your Own Robo-Advisor 6. Part 2: Building Your Own Robo-Advisor
7. Chapter 5: Basic Setup and Requirements for Building a Robo-Advisor 8. Chapter 6: Goal-Based Investing 9. Chapter 7: Risk Profiling and Scoring 10. Chapter 8: Model Portfolio Construction 11. Chapter 9: Investment Projections 12. Chapter 10: Account Opening and KYC 13. Chapter 11: Funding Your Account 14. Chapter 12: Order Management and Execution 15. Part 3: Running and Operating Your Own Robo-Advisor
16. Chapter 13: Performance Reporting 17. Chapter 14: Rebalancing 18. Chapter 15: Dividends and Fee Management 19. Chapter 16: Regulations for Robo-Advisors 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Differences between fractional and whole-share orders

When it comes to trading financial products, the traditional method would be to trade whole shares. This means that the broker would expect orders with integers, not fractions of units. For example, if one ETF costs $100, then that would impose that any portfolio including that ETF could only make orders of at least $100. Now, if you have 10 similar ETFs in your portfolio, your minimum account and investment are effectively $1,000. This is a barrier for a lot of people to start investing.

Luckily, innovation has taken place, and many online brokers now support notional or fractional trading. Now, you can place orders in exact dollar amounts. So now, you can buy a slice of that $1,000 portfolio with just $1. The way it works is that your $1 gets split down into fractional units. Instead of owning one unit of each ETF, you only get 0.01 units. This method is what we will be using in this chapter.

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