With 'no visa' you are a tourist. As a tourist you can open a stock-trading account in your home jurisdiction. If it's a decent/broad-geography broker, you will be able to trade many markets via it, including Singapore ones. In this respect residency physical status in SG does not impact your ability to trade SGn stocks, at all.tiebushan wrote:Hi, Are foreigners with no visa allowed to purchase Singapore stocks and government/corporate bonds in SIngapore? thanks
In addition to the above, "Not for Americans".tiebushan wrote:Hi,
Are foreigners with no visa allowed to purchase Singapore stocks and government/corporate bonds in SIngapore?
thanks
It might be simpler if you list your circumstances and what you're trying to do, rather than seek a reply for every possible iteration thereof. The T+C's associated with banking/trading accounts are constantly changing, and no one here can give you a broad view based upon current actual offerings available.tiebushan wrote:so, in short, foreigners (except Americans) are allowed to invest in SIngapore stocks and bonds even without any valid visas?
And to do this, do we need to open a special type of bank account, or will any bank account do? or even better, do these Singaporean entities that sell said securities allow us to transfer fund from overseas bank account in my home country to their Singapore account to start investing (is there any law prohibiting this or is this not common practice)?
thanks
Per the previous reply to the other chap:tiebushan wrote:I'm an Australian and I want to invest in Singapore stocks / bonds since they have higher yield than Australian bonds, so need to know if there are any law prohibiting me from doing so.
Thanks
tiebushan wrote:I'm an Australian and I want to invest in Singapore stocks / bonds since they have higher yield than Australian bonds, so need to know if there are any law prohibiting me from doing so.
Thanks
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