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Profit-Sharing PMS vs Flat Fee PMS

If you have ever looked into Portfolio Management Services (PMS) in India, you have probably come across a question that sounds simple but is surprisingly tricky to answer: Should I go with a flat fee structure or a profit-sharing one?

The answer is not one-size-fits-all. It depends on how markets perform, how active your fund manager is, and — most importantly — what kind of investor you are. In this article, we break down both models in simple language, walk you through real numbers, and help you figure out which option suits your situation better.

profit sharing or flat fee pms

What Is PMS?

Portfolio Management Services is a premium investment service designed for wealthy individuals. In India, you need a minimum of ₹50 lakh to invest in a PMS (this minimum was doubled by SEBI from the earlier ₹25 lakh to ensure that only financially sophisticated investors participate). Unlike mutual funds, where thousands of investors pool their money into a single fund, a PMS gives you a personal, separately managed portfolio. Your stocks and securities are held directly in your own demat account, not pooled with others.

Because a professional fund manager is making decisions specifically for you — picking stocks, timing trades, and rebalancing as needed — PMS providers charge a fee for this service. And this is where things get interesting, because how they charge that fee can have a dramatic impact on your actual returns.

The Three Fee Models in PMS

Before diving into the flat fee vs. profit-sharing debate, it helps to know that PMS providers in India generally offer three types of fee structures:

  1. Fixed Fee (Flat Fee): You pay a fixed percentage of your total portfolio value every year, no matter what returns you earn. This is usually in the range of 1% to 2.5% per annum.
  2. Profit-Sharing (Performance Fee): You pay no fixed fee. Instead, the fund manager takes a cut of your profits — typically 10% to 20% of gains — but only after your returns cross a minimum threshold called the “hurdle rate.”
  3. Hybrid Fee: A combination of both. You pay a lower fixed fee (say, 1% to 1.5%) plus a performance fee on gains above the hurdle rate. This is actually the most commonly chosen structure among HNI clients in India.

For the purposes of this article, we’ll focus primarily on the contrast between the flat fee model and the pure profit-sharing model, since that is the most debated comparison in the industry.

How the Flat Fee Model Works

The flat fee model is straightforward. You pay a fixed percentage of your assets under management (AUM) every year, regardless of whether your portfolio went up or down.

Example: Say you invest ₹1 crore in a PMS that charges a flat fee of 2% per annum.

  • You pay ₹2 lakh every year — whether your portfolio returned 30% or lost 10%.
  • If your portfolio grows to ₹1.5 crore over three years, you still pay based on the current AUM: roughly ₹2–3 lakh per year as the portfolio grows.

The upside: Predictability. You know exactly what you’re paying before the year begins. The fund manager’s incentive is consistent — they want to grow your AUM because that grows their fees too, but they are not tempted to swing for the fences just to unlock a performance bonus.

The downside: You pay even in bad years. If markets crash and your portfolio drops 20%, you still owe the manager their annual fee. This can feel frustrating and financially painful.

How the Profit-Sharing Model Works

In the profit-sharing model (also called the performance fee model), you pay nothing fixed. The fund manager earns money only when your portfolio performs well — specifically, only after it crosses the hurdle rate.

What Is a Hurdle Rate?

The hurdle rate is the minimum return your portfolio must generate before the fund manager can charge a performance fee. Think of it as a floor. If your portfolio doesn’t cross this floor, the manager earns nothing.

Typical hurdle rates in India range between 6% and 10% per annum. Some managers set the hurdle rate at a fixed number (e.g., 8%), while others peg it to a market benchmark like the BSE 500 index.

Example: You invest ₹50 lakh in a PMS with a 0% fixed fee and a 20% profit-sharing fee above a hurdle rate of 8%.

  • If your portfolio grows 5% (below the hurdle), you pay ₹0 in fees.
  • If your portfolio grows 15%, the manager takes 20% of the gains that exceed 8%. That means they share in the 7% excess gain. On ₹50 lakh, 7% is ₹3.5 lakh. The manager’s cut: ₹70,000.

This feels fair on the surface — the manager only wins when you win.

What Is the High-Watermark Principle?

SEBI mandates that PMS providers follow the high-watermark (HWM) principle when charging performance fees. This is a crucial investor protection rule, and it works like this:

The fund manager can only charge performance fees on new highs in your portfolio. If your portfolio rose in year one but fell in year two, the manager cannot charge a fee in year three until the portfolio first climbs back above the old high from year one.

Example:

  • Year 1: Portfolio grows from ₹50 lakh to ₹60 lakh → High-watermark set at ₹60 lakh. Fee charged on ₹10 lakh gain.
  • Year 2: Portfolio falls to ₹52 lakh → No fee charged.
  • Year 3: Portfolio recovers to ₹58 lakh → Still no fee. The portfolio hasn’t crossed the ₹60 lakh high-watermark yet.
  • Year 4: Portfolio reaches ₹65 lakh → Fee is now charged only on the ₹5 lakh gain above the previous high of ₹60 lakh.

This system ensures investors never pay twice on the same profits. It’s one of the most investor-friendly aspects of the profit-sharing model.

Flat Fee vs. Profit-Sharing Comparison

Let’s look at the same ₹50 lakh portfolio under both models across different market scenarios to see which one actually costs you less.

Assumptions:

  • Portfolio: ₹50 lakh
  • Flat fee option: 2% per annum
  • Profit-sharing option: 20% of gains above 8% hurdle, high-watermark applies

Scenario 1: Bull Market (25% annual return)

  • Flat fee: 2% of ₹50 lakh = ₹1 lakh
  • Profit-sharing: 20% of (25% – 8%) = 20% of 17% = 3.4% of portfolio = ₹1.7 lakh

Winner: Flat fee. In a big bull market year, the flat fee costs you less.

Scenario 2: Moderate Market (12% annual return)

  • Flat fee: ₹1 lakh
  • Profit-sharing: 20% of (12% – 8%) = 20% of 4% = 0.8% of portfolio = ₹40,000

Winner: Profit-sharing. When markets are just modestly positive, you pay less on profit-sharing.

Scenario 3: Flat Market (4% annual return, below hurdle)

  • Flat fee: ₹1 lakh
  • Profit-sharing: ₹0 (return is below the 8% hurdle)

Winner: Profit-sharing — by a mile.

Scenario 4: Bear Market (-10% annual return)

  • Flat fee: ₹1 lakh (you still pay)
  • Profit-sharing: ₹0

Winner: Profit-sharing. No performance, no fee.

The pattern is clear: profit-sharing favours you in dull or bad markets. Flat fees favour you in explosive bull markets.

The Hidden Dangers of the Profit-Sharing Model

While the profit-sharing structure looks appealing — especially the idea of “pay only when you profit” — it comes with some subtle risks that investors often miss.

  1. It Can Encourage Risk-Taking

When a fund manager earns nothing unless the portfolio crosses the hurdle rate, they may be tempted to take bigger risks to hit that target. In finance, this is called a “perverse incentive.” The manager doesn’t fully share in downside losses (the worst outcome for them is earning ₹0 in fees), but they benefit handsomely from upside. This asymmetry can push managers towards riskier bets.

Vidya Bala, co-founder of PrimeInvestor, explains this concern well: profit sharing can create incentives for managers to take on outsized risk or churn the portfolio frequently to generate short-term gains that trigger fees — and that churning also creates tax liabilities for the investor.

  1. Portfolio Churn and Tax Drag

When a fund manager frequently buys and sells stocks to chase short-term gains (and therefore performance fees), it creates taxable events in your PMS account. Remember, unlike mutual funds, every trade in a PMS portfolio is taxed in your hands individually. Short-term capital gains are taxed at a higher rate than long-term capital gains. Excessive churning can quietly eat into your real returns, even as the fee looks attractive on paper.

  1. Fees Can Be “Lumpy”

In a profit-sharing model, fees can be zero for two or three years during a slow market and then suddenly very large in a single strong year. This unpredictability makes it hard to plan your finances. In contrast, a flat fee gives you a reliable, predictable cost that you can factor into your budget every year.

As Sahil Jethwani of Dezerv points out, the flat fee keeps the cost and the manager’s incentive consistent across market cycles — unlike profit-share, where fees can be extremely lumpy during rallies and absent during flat or bear markets.

  1. The First-Year Front-Loading Problem

Some studies have shown that in portfolios with strong early-year returns, performance-fee structures can result in the investor paying far more over the long run than they would under a flat fee — not because returns were bad, but because high early returns triggered large performance fees that compounded into a significant total. One analysis by Capitalmind found that over a multi-year period, fixed fees were “dramatically lower” than performance fees — the difference running into ₹20 lakh or more on a ₹1 crore portfolio in some scenarios.

What the Industry Thinks

There is a clear trend in the industry toward rethinking the “two and twenty” model — where investors paid a 2% fixed fee plus 20% profit share. Increasingly, the industry is moving to a “zero and twenty” model — no fixed fee, only profit-sharing.

This shift is partly driven by greater investor awareness, partly by regulatory changes from SEBI, and partly by competition among PMS providers. Firms like Motilal Oswal Asset Management have launched zero fixed fee models, betting that investors will prefer a pure alignment-of-interest structure.

However, many experienced advisors believe the flat fee model is actually better for investors in practice. PrimeInvestor, for example, charges only a flat fee. Dezerv offers both but recommends the flat fee for its predictability.

Among 349 PMS approaches tracked by PMSBazaar, 184 offer all three fee models. The hybrid fee — combining a modest flat fee with a performance component — is actually the most commonly selected by HNI investors, suggesting that many clients want a balance: some predictability with some incentive alignment.

The Role of SEBI

SEBI has been active in regulating PMS fee structures to protect investors. Key rules include:

  • High-watermark is mandatory: Performance fees can only be charged on new portfolio highs. Managers cannot charge fees while a portfolio is still recovering from a previous loss.
  • Frequency of fee charge: Performance fees must be charged no more frequently than quarterly, giving investors fair assessment periods.
  • Transparency requirements: PMS providers must disclose the full range of fees in client documents, so investors know whether they are being charged at the high or low end of the industry spectrum.
  • No cap on fees: SEBI has not capped PMS fees the way it caps mutual fund expense ratios. This means investors must read the fine print carefully.

Other Costs

The management or performance fee is just one part of what you pay in a PMS. Here is a complete picture of all the cost components:

Entry Load: Most PMS firms charge 1% to 3% of your investment when you enter. On ₹50 lakh, that is ₹50,000 to ₹1.5 lakh upfront, before a single trade is made.

Brokerage: Since every trade in your portfolio is executed separately (unlike a pooled mutual fund), brokerage costs apply to each transaction. These can add up, especially in actively managed portfolios.

Custodian Charges: A custodian holds and safeguards your securities. This involves a small annual fee.

Depository Charges: Costs related to maintaining your demat account.

GST: GST of 18% is applicable on the management fee. This is often overlooked in fee comparisons but adds meaningfully to your real cost.

Audit and Other Charges: Annual auditing of your PMS account may attract additional fees depending on the provider.

When you add all of these up, the total cost of a PMS investment can easily range from 2.5% to 4% per year — or more in strong bull markets under a profit-sharing model. That is significantly higher than a mutual fund’s expense ratio, which is why it’s critical to choose a PMS that genuinely delivers returns well above a comparable index fund.

Which Model Is Right for You?

Here is a simple way to think about which fee structure might suit you best:

Choose the Flat Fee model if:

  • You expect strong, consistent returns over the long term.
  • You value predictability and want to budget your costs clearly every year.
  • You are investing in a bullish or secular growth market.
  • You plan to stay invested for the long haul (5+ years).
  • You don’t want your manager to have an incentive to take excessive risks.

Choose the Profit-Sharing model if:

  • You are cautious about paying fees when markets are flat or negative.
  • You prefer a clear “skin in the game” arrangement where the manager only earns when you do.
  • You are comfortable with the possibility of large fee payouts in very strong years.
  • You are investing in a period of market uncertainty and want to minimize guaranteed costs.

Choose the Hybrid model if:

  • You want the best of both worlds — a lower base cost with some performance incentive.
  • You are comfortable with moderate predictability and moderate alignment-of-interest.
  • Most experienced HNI investors and advisors tend to find this a reasonable middle ground.

The Bottom Line

Neither fee model is universally superior. The right choice depends on your expectations, the market environment, and the specific terms offered by the PMS provider.

That said, the broader consensus among experienced advisors leans toward flat fee structures for their simplicity, predictability, and the disciplined investment behaviour they encourage. Profit-sharing sounds fair in theory — you only pay when you make money — but in practice it can lead to riskier portfolio behaviour, higher churn, unexpected tax costs, and surprisingly large fees in strong bull years.

The hybrid model, with its balance of predictability and incentive alignment, is worth considering if you want to split the difference.

Whatever you choose, the most important thing is to read every line of your PMS agreement carefully, understand all the charges involved, and ensure that the fee structure is aligned with your investment goals — not just your fund manager’s.

After all, a great-sounding return of 20% is only great if you actually get to keep most of it.

Transfer from mAadhaar to UIDAI’s New Aadhaar App

mAadhaar is old now. Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) has introduced an entirely new Aadhaar mobile application. This app is expected to take over the place of the previous mAadhaar app which many of us have been using since years. The new Aadhaar App is offering multiple features and enhance security with face authentication and biometric lock. Users can manage their digital identity and share Aadhaar data securely. The app allows access to all Aadhaar details on smartphones. Updates like mobile number and address can be done through the app.

The old mAadhaar app has limitations – slow, less secure and less modern features such as multiple profile, face recognition, biometric locking, sharing QR code and offline access. So, new app was developed and launched in 2026. It is very clear from the statement made by UIDAI that the older mAadhaar application will no longer work after some time. Therefore, it will be better if one migrates to the newer application as early as possible so as to avoid any future inconvenience. The launch of the new application has raised several questions among the Aadhaar cardholders regarding migration from the older mAadhaar app to the new app.

mAadhaar to New Aadhaar App

Key Features of New Aadhaar app

The new Aadhaar app offers various services like mobile number update, address update, biometric lock and unlock, selective sharing of Aadhaar verifiable, credential, check aadhaar authentication history, download e-Aadhaar, share contact card, etc. Details are given below.

  • Face Authentication: Along with OTP verification, you can use your face as a method of authentication. It is faster and safer.
  • Biometric Lock and Unlock: Your fingerprints and irises will be securely locked by default and only unlocked for temporary usage.
  • Multiple Profiles: You can keep up to 5 Aadhaar profiles on one device, which is ideal if you are a parent since you can manage the entire family from one application.
  • Update Options: You can easily update some personal data like your mobile number or residential address using the application.
  • QR Code and Verifiable Credentials: You can now share verifiable credentials using QR codes instead of sharing photocopies of your Aadhaar card.
  • Offline Mode: Most of the features are still available offline once the application is installed.
  • e-Aadhaar Instant Download: You have access to the latest version of the PDF file.
  • Authentication Attempts: You can see the history of all attempts to use your Aadhaar ID and where exactly.
  • Contact Card Sharing: You can create and send your contact card to the required individuals or services.
  • Enhanced Security: You have enhanced security features including improved encryption and frequent updates.

These additional features will help you greatly when you want to apply for something.

How to download the new Aadhaar app and register your name

Step 1: Download the Official Application

You can download the app from Google Play Store for Android users or from Apple App Store for iPhones. The application name is “Aadhaar” which is provided by UIDAI.

Step 2: Launch the Application and Choose the Language

After downloading it, open it. Choose the language that you wish to access, such as English or Hindi.

Step 3: Register or Add the Profile of Yours

Input your 12-digit Aadhaar number and then verify yourself through your registered mobile number by entering OTP received via SMS.

Then complete the next process, which is verifying the face. It will require you to look straight into the camera of your phone in sufficient light. Also, take off glasses or masks if required.

If you have not registered your mobile number with UIDAI, then you might have to undergo initial authentication before adding your profile.

Step 4: Create Your Unique Security PIN

This involves creating a security PIN for your app which should have six digits in it (example: 987654). This will act as a password. Apart from that, most smartphones support other types of authentication methods, such as fingerprint/Face ID.

Step 5: Adding Other Profiles (Optional)

If managing the Aadhaar numbers of family members is what you want to do, just select the “Add additional profiles” and repeat the steps above. Note that only one primary profile may be in operation at once for certain transactions.

Step 6: Access the Dashboard

After all that, you will be able to access all sorts of things like your Aadhaar data, biometrics locking, updating of information, downloading of documents, and so forth.

Conclusion

Migrating to the new Aadhaar app by UIDAI is effortless, fast, and very convenient. With enhanced security measures, convenience of upgrading without going anywhere, availability of several profiles, and updated features, it becomes even easier to manage your crucial identity document.

Do not wait until the existing mAadhaar stops functioning. Install the new app immediately, follow the instructions outlined above to get it ready, and have peace of mind. In case of any difficulty, contact the UIDAI helpline number.

Your Money Your Right – Claim your unclaimed financial assets

The Ministry of Finance has launched a unified awareness initiative titled “Your Money, Your Right” to help citizens locate and recover forgotten or unclaimed assets such as unclaimed deposits, insurance and shares.

We build financial assets by way of placing deposits with banks, investing in shares/mutual funds or other financial instruments and securing family by taking insurance policies. Sometimes at the time of maturity these assets do not reach back to the beneficiaries or legal heirs. These funds are unclaimed and remain with bank or respective financial organization. Now rightful owners can claim these financial assets easily using Your Money, Your Right.

Your Money Your Right

What is the “Your Money, Your Right” campaign? 

To help citizens locate and recover forgotten, unclaimed assets, the central government has launched a website, https://www.unclaimedassetsportal.in, where a single gateway directs users to appropriate regulator-managed portals to reclaim bank deposit claims, insurance claims, share claims, etc.

As per a Ministry of Finance statement , the service is free to use and does not require any registration. This service helps you to locate unclaimed fixed deposits, insurance, mutual funds and shares. It is like lost and found portal for the financial assets in India.

How can you find unclaimed bank deposits? 

Under the portal, individuals can search for unclaimed bank deposits through the RBI’s UDGAM portal. The portal allows users to look for deposits that may have become inoperative or remain unclaimed across participating banks.  Old savings accounts, fixed deposits, recurring deposits and accounts that have remained inactive for long periods may appear in the search results.

Customers/depositors can claim a refund of their unclaimed amounts from their banks. Based on the request of claim made by customer/depositor or legal heirs (in case of deceased depositors), the banks shall repay the customer/depositor along with interest (applicable only in case of Interest-Bearing deposit accounts) and then lodge a claim for a refund from the DEA Fund maintained by the RBI for an equivalent amount paid to the customer/depositor.

How can you trace unclaimed insurance policies? 

For insurance-related claims, users are redirected to resources provided by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI). Policyholders or nominees can use the available tools to trace forgotten life insurance policies and begin the process of claiming benefits that may remain unpaid.

Policyholders/beneficiaries can visit the website of concerned insurer(s) and make online enquiry using the following details:

  1. Policy Number
  2. PAN of the Policyholder
  3. Name of the Policyholder (Mandatory)
  4. Date of Birth of the Policyholder (Mandatory)

Insurers’ website Links to enquire about unclaimed amounts are also published in the IRDAI’s Bima Bharosa portal.

Incase you find your or your relative’s policy unclaimed, You need to contact the insurance company with the following details and submit the documents required for submitting the claims

  1. Policy details/document
  2. Bank Account details
  3. Claimant’s Photo ID and Cancelled cheque
  4. KYC documents to prove identity
  5. Valid ID, address and relationship proof (if the claim is made by a beneficiary/nominee, other than the policyholder)
  6. Duly completed Claim form

If the original policy document is lost, you may need to file an indemnity bond depending on the company’s policy.

How can investors locate unclaimed mutual fund investments? 

Investors looking for forgotten mutual fund holdings can access support resources through SEBI’s MITRA platform.  The facility helps investors identify inactive or unclaimed mutual fund folios and obtain information on the process required to reclaim them.

In order to claim the amount, The investor can download the form available on AMC’s website and submit the duly signed form to the AMC/RTA’s office. After verification of records and matching of signature, the unclaimed amount is paid from the Unclaimed Dividend and Redemption Scheme (UDRS) along with the applicable appreciation.

How can shareholders claim unclaimed dividends and shares? 

Unclaimed dividends and shares transferred to the Investor Education and Protection Fund Authority (IEPFA) can be searched through the designated portal.

IEPFA provides a facility to search for unclaimed shares, dividends or deposits on its website by entering the PAN, name, or company name. You can check by visiting the IEPFA portal (www.iepfa.gov.in) and click on “Click here for login and registration to “IEPF Search Facility” section and create an account if not already registered or login using your credentials.

You can search using any of the following three methods:

  • By PAN
  • By Basic Information (Name, DOB, etc.)
  • By Company Name & Demat ID/Folio Number

The system will check its database and list any entries that match your details.

Shareholders, deposit holders or their legal heirs who have unclaimed dividends, deposits, debentures or shares for a continuous period of 7 years are transferred by the company to the Investor Education and Protection Fund (IEPF). These individuals remain eligible to claim a refund by applying to the IEPF Authority through the filing of webform IEPF-5 along with the necessary documents.

AI in Stock Trading: Strategies & Benefits

Stock selection is time-consuming, and at times, you may not be certain about whether the decision was right. Artificial Intelligence provides a platform where you can accelerate the entire procedure. Be it information analysis, evaluation of your trade strategy, or selection of an effective portfolio, everything can be done with the assistance of AI.

While there are no guarantees whatsoever, artificial intelligence will make stock trading easier for you.

AI Stock Trading

Application of AI tools in choosing stocks

One of the main applications of AI technologies in stock trading is stock picking. In case you are going to buy or trade particular stocks, AI tools will be useful for you as a stock picker. For instance, you can make use of an AI technology to look for growth stocks in a definite industry, firms with certain price-earnings (P/E) ratio values, or stocks by sentiment.

Additionally, AI tools will allow you to evaluate various data by taking into account not only its nature but also sentiment, historical patterns, and performance. This type of data will be analyzed automatically and the result of your evaluation will come out in just seconds, providing you with a list of options.

How to implement the use of AI in your trading strategy

AI programs can be used not only to determine which assets to trade but for other types of financial analyses and calculations as well, whether you trade actively or follow a passive investment strategy.

Custom indicators creation

Some stock exchange websites and applications offer the possibility of building unique charts with additional indicators. Using AI, you can create such indicators without any programming experience by setting specific parameters. For instance, you could tell the AI to color trading volume in bright orange if the number of traded stocks is double its value during the previous 30 days. Then you can integrate the code generated by the program into your trading platform to find such signals easily while assessing charts.

Historical data tests

To test the viability of a trading strategy, stock traders usually conduct a practice known as backtesting. Here, AI can help simplify the process and prioritize historical periods according to how closely they resemble the current state of the market. The tool may also offer options for scenarios, i.e., testing different assumptions regarding interest rates, inflation, and market volatility.

Asset Allocation Suggestions

AI algorithms can offer a specific investment portfolio consisting of stocks, bonds, and funds based on the risk profile and other preferences. For those who want to invest in index funds, some AI solutions will allow users to select suitable mutual funds or ETFs that correspond with their preferred asset allocation and offer re-balancing advice.

Performance Evaluation

Certain types of AI applications can create various performance metrics depending on the portfolio information or trade history entered by the user. For example, the system can analyze your risk/reward ratio, average profit per trade, win/loss ratio, and others.

AI-Fueled Investing Applications

There are plenty of stock trading and investing applications that leverage various AI tools in order to assist traders in selecting assets for their portfolios. Some examples of these AI-powered stock trading applications include AInvest, Magnifi, Streetbeat, Trade Ideas, and TrendSpider.

Advantages and disadvantages of AI trading stocks

While AI offers faster research and automation capabilities for trading, there is nothing perfect about it. Advantages and disadvantages of AI trading are listed below.

Advantages

Saves time on research – AI is capable of rapidly analyzing large volumes of information about market trends and providing useful conclusions, saving your time and effort to conduct research.

24×7 operation – Some AI applications are able to conduct trades automatically without your constant presence and intervention, even when you sleep or are not near a computer or phone.

More economical – There are AI-based applications that do not require expensive payments and are included into free apps or robo-advisors.

Disadvantages

Garbage in, garbage out – AI algorithms rely on inputs from company balance sheets, stock market feeds, and other external sources. If these inputs happen to be incomplete, outdated, or incorrect, the output will not be trustworthy enough to base trading decisions on.

Lack of judgment – AI can assist in minimizing emotional decision making, but it does not take the place of experience and instinct, particularly when dealing with unusual market conditions.

Security risks – Adopting an AI algorithm for trading purposes does not necessarily ensure that there will be no hacking attempts. Many such solutions might even gather sensitive information about your activity and make it available to third parties without fully disclosing their policies on data protection.

Risk factors that should be considered while trading using AI

Although technology may help traders, there is no sure way to ensure profits. Although some software can analyze markets and make suggestions, it might still end up in bad deals or investments which do not fit one’s profile. It is important to know how much risk one is willing to take regardless of the trading method.

AI software can make automatic transactions based on certain criteria that were set beforehand. This may sometimes be helpful, but at the same time, traders might find themselves buying stock they did not want to by default. Since automatic transactions can be made, it becomes necessary for people to understand what the criteria are if they decide to go for more complicated trading methods like options.

Data security may also become an issue, just as it is with other technologies.

Conclusion

Artificial intelligence is capable of aiding in several aspects of trading from stock screening and indicator construction through strategy testing and portfolio re-balancing. However, it is not a means for getting superior results easily and effortlessly since the outcome will depend greatly on the underlying information and principles involved, and you have to take responsibility for what you choose to do.

If you want to explore how AI could be used to improve your trading, begin with small steps and don’t believe any tall stories.