What Do These Exchange Words Mean?
Quick reference for the platform terms you'll run into.
You don't need to memorize all of this. Use it when something doesn't make sense.
Which Stock Broker Should You Use?
Four solid options. Each works. Pick based on what you need.
- Wealthsimple wins for options in Canada; IBKR is the pro standard for stocks.
- Never trade through your bank — high fees and slow execution drain returns.
- Many run two brokers; watch Wealthsimple's FX fee on USD trades.
All four of these brokers are legit. They handle stocks. Most handle options. They all have a free version. The differences come down to interface, fees on active trading, and what country you're in.
Best Canadian platform for options trading. Clean app, $0 stock commissions, options support. Watch out for FX fees on USD trades (~1.5%) — but you can dodge almost all of them with Norbert's Gambit (below).
💱 Skip the FX fee — Norbert's Gambit
Wealthsimple charges roughly 1.5% to convert CAD↔USD. Norbert's Gambit is how you avoid almost all of it.
How it works: buy a security that's dual-listed in both currencies — the common one is DLR on the TSX (bought in CAD). Then you journal those shares over to their USD twin (DLR.U) and sell them for USD, converting at the real market rate instead of paying the 1.5% fee. It works both directions — CAD→USD and USD→CAD.
- Web only: you have to do the journaling on the Wealthsimple website — you can't journal through the app.
- ~2-day process: the journal takes about 2 days to settle. Once it's journaled, you sell the other-currency side (CAD→USD or USD→CAD).
- Net result: near-free currency conversion that pays for itself fast on any sizable USD trading.
Always keep a USD account. If you sell a USD stock without one, Wealthsimple auto-converts the proceeds straight back to CAD — and charges the ~1.5% FX fee again. Hold USD in a USD account and never let it auto-convert.
- Wealthsimple Premium (≥$100k portfolio): USD account is free.
- No Premium: the USD account costs $10/month.
Walkthrough below — the video Johnny used to learn it. (Johnny will record his own version later.)
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Pros
- Best Canadian options platform
- Commission-free stocks & ETFs
- TFSA, RRSP, FHSA, Non-Reg accounts
- Beginner-friendly mobile UI
- Easy CAD-native onboarding
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Cons
- FX fees on every USD trade (~1.5%)
- USD account costs $10/mo or needs $100k Premium
- No Level 2 data
- Basic charting only
- Canada only
Free-trading platform with Level 2 data and decent charts. Generally Webull does this better — Moomoo works fine but feels busier and less polished.
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Pros
- Free Level 2 market data
- Decent charting & screeners
- Options + futures support
- Available in US & Canada
- Strong sign-up bonuses
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Cons
- Webull is generally a better pick
- Interface can feel busy
- Fewer registered account types
- Some features paywalled
- Mobile UX feels dated
The pro standard. Tightest spreads, best execution, full global market access — Korean equities, small-cap options, everything. You pay with time, not money. 2-3 weeks to set up, steep learning curve. Long-term it's the best investment you can make in a broker.
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Pros
- Tightest spreads in the industry
- Global markets (Korea, HK, EU, Asia)
- Most complete options chain
- Small caps & obscure listings available
- Ultra-low commissions on volume
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Cons
- 2-3 weeks to get account approved
- You pay with time, not money
- Massive learning curve up front
- Options UX worse than Wealthsimple
- Dated interface in places
Free-trade platform with solid charting and a decent options interface. The better pick between Webull and Moomoo — cleaner mobile app, smoother UI, more polished overall.
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Pros
- Cleaner mobile app than Moomoo
- Commission-free stocks & options
- Solid charting tools
- Built-in paper trading
- Extended hours trading
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Cons
- Still not best-in-class for serious traders
- Order routing earns PFOF
- Limited account types
- Customer support is mixed
- US-focused
Wealthsimple. The best options platform in Canada — clean UX, simple order entry, no commissions. The catch is FX fees on USD options (covered in 1.5). Worth dealing with for the simplicity.
IBKR. The best platform for stock execution — lowest commissions on volume, deepest market access, used by professionals worldwide. But budget 2-3 weeks for account approval and expect a massive learning curve. Not ideal for options.
Webull is the better pick between the two casual platforms. Cleaner mobile, smoother UI, fewer rough edges. Moomoo works fine as a backup but Webull does most things slightly better. Either way, pick whichever has the better sign-up bonus when you're ready.
Start with Wealthsimple if you're Canadian. The interface won't overwhelm you and the options support is enough to grow into.
Stay where you are. Switching brokers is a hassle and they all execute trades. The platform doesn't make you profitable. The trades do.
Most active traders run two brokers. One for the bulk of long-term holdings (often Wealthsimple or IBKR), one for active trading (often Moomoo or Webull).
The reason: registered accounts (TFSA, RRSP) work best at one platform you trust. Active trading needs different tools — charting, fast execution, level 2 data. Splitting them lets each broker do what it does best.
1.4Never Use Your Bank for TradingDo not use your bank's trading platform.
RBC Direct Investing, TD WebBroker, BMO InvestorLine, Scotia iTRADE — all of them. They are the worst possible choice for active traders. Fees, slow execution, terrible interfaces, missing features. Avoid them all.
Most Canadian banks charge $5–$10 per trade. Some bank platforms still charge $9.95 per stock trade as of 2025. Compare that to Wealthsimple, Moomoo, Webull — all $0 commission.
Real-world math: if you make 30 trades in a month, that's $300 in fees at $10/trade. Over a year, $3,600 in commissions just to participate. On a $50k account, that's a 7% drag on returns before you've made a single dollar.
Banks aren't trying to attract active traders. They want long-term holders buying mutual funds. Their trading platforms are an afterthought built to upsell you into advisor services. Everything is intentionally slower, more expensive, and less feature-rich than the dedicated brokers above.
- Commissions — $5-$10 per trade adds up fast
- Options support — most banks charge $1-$1.50 per options contract on top of base commissions
- Order types — usually just market and limit. No advanced bracket orders, no trailing stops on most platforms
- Execution speed — bank platforms route slower than dedicated brokers
- Data quality — delayed quotes on free tiers, paid Level 2 add-ons
- UI — clunky, slow, mobile experience often broken
- Reporting — basic statements only. No tax-optimized reports, no realized gain/loss summaries that actually help
If you only buy and hold a couple of ETFs once per year and never trade individual stocks, a bank account is fine. The fees are negligible at that frequency. But if you're reading a Nefarious education artifact, that's probably not you.
For anyone trading actively — switch to a dedicated broker. Wealthsimple is the easiest move for Canadians since it's also CDIC-protected for cash. Moomoo and IBKR for serious trading. Bank trading platforms cost you thousands per year for nothing in return.
1.5 Wealthsimple's FX Fee Problem (And the Workaround) ▼
Wealthsimple is the best Canadian options platform. But it has one specific catch you need to know about: every USD trade includes an FX conversion fee of around 1.5%. Most options worth trading are on US underlyings (NVDA, TSLA, SPY, etc.) — which means almost every options trade you make on Wealthsimple eats this fee.
You buy a $500 USD options contract. Wealthsimple converts $675 CAD to $500 USD with a ~1.5% spread. You paid about $10 in hidden FX fees on the buy alone. Sell the contract for $700 USD? Another ~$10 to convert back. $20 round-trip on a $500 trade — 4% in fees before commissions or P&L.
Over 30 options trades a year, that's $600+ in FX bleed.
Norbert's Gambit is a method to convert CAD to USD at essentially no cost. Here's how it works:
- Buy DLR.TO (a CAD-denominated USD currency ETF) on the Toronto Stock Exchange
- Journal those shares yourself to DLR.U.TO (the USD-denominated version of the same ETF) — you do this in the Wealthsimple website, no need to call or message support
- Sell DLR.U.TO on the US side — now you have USD with no FX conversion fee
You can do the whole thing yourself — it's all in the web app. It takes about 2 days to settle, then you sell the USD (or CAD) side.
Same ETF, just denominated in two currencies. The conversion saves you the ~1.5% spread. On a $10,000 conversion that's $150 saved.
To benefit from Norbert's Gambit, you need a place to hold the USD after converting. On Wealthsimple, that means a USD account. Two ways to get one:
- Pay $10/month for the USD account add-on
- Hold $100,000+ in assets on Wealthsimple — Premium tier includes USD account free
- Active options trader on Wealthsimple: the $10/month USD account pays for itself in saved FX fees within a few trades
- Premium tier ($100k+ assets): USD account is free — use Norbert's Gambit every time you fund USD trades
- Casual trader doing 1-2 trades a month: probably not worth the hassle — just pay the FX fee
Same $500 USD options contract. You pre-converted $1,000 CAD to ~$735 USD via Norbert's Gambit (basically free). Buy the contract. Sell for $700 USD. Total FX cost: $0. Versus $20 the standard way.
The spread is the gap between the highest price a buyer is willing to pay (the bid) and the lowest price a seller is asking (the ask). Every trade you make crosses this gap — and every broker handles it differently.
Say a stock has a bid of $50.00 and an ask of $50.05. The spread is $0.05. If you buy at $50.05 and immediately sell, you'd sell at $50.00. You lost $0.05 per share — the spread — before the stock moved at all.
On 100 shares, that's $5. On 1,000 shares, $50. On 10 trades a day, the spread adds up to real money. Wider spreads = more friction = lower returns.
Two things drive what spread you actually pay:
- Order routing — where the broker sends your order. Better routing = better fills inside the spread
- Market maker relationships — pro brokers have direct access to wholesalers and dark pools that retail brokers don't
IBKR routes through SmartRouting — an algorithm that scans every exchange and dark pool simultaneously to find the best execution price. You frequently get filled inside the displayed bid/ask spread, not at it.
- Retail brokers (Wealthsimple, Moomoo, Webull) often route through one or two venues. You get the displayed bid/ask.
- IBKR routes intelligently across 100+ venues. You frequently save a few cents per share.
- Compounded over a year on an active account, the spread savings alone can pay for IBKR's commissions many times over.
This is why IBKR is the pro standard. The commission discount on volume gets the attention. The spread advantage is the real edge.
"$0 commission" does not mean free. The broker still makes money — just somewhere you don't see on the trade ticket. Watch for all of these:
- The spread — the bid/ask gap (above). A wider spread is a hidden cost on every fill.
- PFOF (payment for order flow) — free-trade apps like Webull and Moomoo sell your order to market makers, which can mean a slightly worse fill.
- FX fees — about 1.5% to convert CAD↔USD on Wealthsimple. This is the big one for Canadians trading US names — dodge it with Norbert's Gambit (1.5).
- Options per-contract fees — even "commission-free" stock brokers charge a fee per options contract. On IBKR this is why you keep the contract count low.
- Data fees — real-time Level 2 data is often a paid monthly add-on.
- Account / inactivity fees — e.g. Wealthsimple's USD account ($10/mo without Premium).
The cheapest-looking broker isn't always the cheapest. Real cost = commissions + spread + FX + data fees.
A few dollars per trade feels harmless. Over years it quietly eats a huge chunk of your account — and the smaller your portfolio, the more it hurts, because every dollar is supposed to be compounding for you, not the bank.
- Per-trade commissions. A big bank charges ~$9.95 a trade. Two trades a week is ~$1,000 a year — about $10,000 over 10 years, on top of the spread. On a $5,000 account that's brutal, and a $9.95 commission on a $100 trade is a ~10% loss before the trade even moves.
- Fee drag (MER). A typical bank mutual fund charges ~2% a year; an index ETF charges ~0.06%. On $10,000 growing 7%/year, that 2% costs you about $3,400 over 10 years — and the gap widens fast with more money and more time.
| Broker | Stock comm. | Transfer-in reimbursement | FX / notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wealthsimple | $0 | Up to $200/account (per $25k transferred in) | ~1.5% FX — use Norbert's Gambit; per-contract options fee |
| Moomoo | $0 | ~$100 (transfers ≥ $10,000) | FX fee on USD; free Level 2 data |
| IBKR | ~$0.005/share | None — but charges no transfer-out fee either | Lowest FX + tightest spreads; per-contract options fee |
| Webull | $0 | Up to $150/account (min $2,000; up to 2) | FX fee on USD; commission-free stock |
Promotions and exact fees change often — confirm the current numbers on each broker's site before you commit.
1.9Options Approval LevelsYou can't just start buying options — brokers gate them behind approval levels you apply for when you open (or upgrade) the account. They're roughly:
- Level 1 — covered calls, cash-secured puts (lowest risk).
- Level 2 — buying long calls and puts. This is what you need to follow most alerts.
- Level 3 — debit / credit spreads.
- Level 4 — naked / uncovered options (highest risk, rarely approved for retail).
To follow Nefarious options alerts you typically need Level 2. The application asks about your experience, income, and risk tolerance — answer honestly, but don't undersell your experience or you'll get a lower tier. Denied or capped low? Reapply once you've got more screen time. (Level names vary slightly by broker.)
1.10Is Your Money Safe? (CIPF)In Canada, regulated brokers are members of the CIPF (Canadian Investor Protection Fund). If your broker goes insolvent, CIPF returns your property within limits:
- Up to $1 million combined for general accounts (TFSA, non-registered, margin).
- Plus up to $1 million combined for registered retirement accounts (RRSP / RRIF).
Two things it does not do: it doesn't cover crypto assets, and it doesn't protect you from market losses — if your stock drops, that's on you. CIPF only makes you whole if the firm fails, valued at the insolvency date. This is exactly why a regulated broker beats leaving cash on an unregulated crypto exchange. (US equivalent: SIPC, up to $500k.) Always confirm your broker is a CIPF member.
1.11Funding, Withdrawals & Switching BrokersFunding: most Canadian brokers take Interac e-Transfer (fast, smaller limits) or bank EFT/wire (larger, 1–3 days). Withdrawals go back to your linked bank — give it a few days.
Switching brokers (in-kind transfer): you can move your holdings from one broker to another without selling — an "in-kind" transfer. Your old broker usually charges a transfer-out fee (~$135–150), but the receiving broker often reimburses it:
- Wealthsimple — up to $200 per account, for every $25,000 you transfer in (automatic).
- Moomoo — about $100 for transfers of $10,000+.
- Webull — up to $150 per account (min $2,000; up to two reimbursements).
- IBKR — doesn't reimburse, but it charges no transfer-out fee either, so there's nothing lost leaving it.
Never feel stuck at your first broker. An in-kind transfer keeps your positions intact, and the reimbursement usually covers the exit fee. (Reimbursement promos change — verify the current offer.)
Where Do You Trade Perps?
Perpetual futures are how most crypto trading actually happens. The exchange you pick matters a lot.
- Spot means you own the coins; perps are leveraged contracts with no expiration.
- Hyperliquid leads the DEXs; Binance and Bybit are the deepest centralized exchanges.
- Never keep more on any single exchange than you'd be comfortable losing.
Spot crypto exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken) let you buy and hold actual coins. Perp exchanges let you trade leveraged contracts — bigger size, no expiration, but with funding fees and liquidation risk. Most serious crypto traders use perps for short-term moves and hold spot for long-term positions.
The leading decentralized perp exchange. Deep liquidity, trustless, transparent order book. You keep custody of your funds — no exchange holding your money.
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Pros
- Fully decentralized (you hold keys)
- Deep liquidity for a DEX
- Transparent on-chain order book
- No KYC, no withdrawal limits
- Fast execution
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Cons
- Requires crypto wallet setup
- Smaller selection than Binance
- Gas costs for deposits
- More technical for beginners
- USDC-focused, less spot
The largest crypto exchange globally. Deepest order books in the industry, lowest spreads, massive pair selection. Some regional restrictions apply.
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Pros
- Deepest liquidity in crypto
- Lowest standard fees (0.1%)
- Hundreds of trading pairs
- Strong perp + spot support
- Good charting tools
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Cons
- Region-restricted in US & Canada
- Centralized — they hold custody
- KYC required
- Regulatory scrutiny ongoing
- Withdrawals can be slow
The next-best alternative to Binance. Similar liquidity and feature set, fewer regional restrictions. Good UI, solid mobile app, widely used worldwide.
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Pros
- Available where Binance isn't
- Deep perp liquidity
- Clean UI, solid mobile app
- Copy trading built in
- Good promotional bonuses
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Cons
- Centralized custody risk
- KYC required
- Smaller selection than Binance
- Slightly higher fees
- Still region-restricted in some areas
Newer exchange with CAD on-ramping for Canadian traders. Useful for getting Canadian dollars into crypto without going through Binance's restricted process.
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Pros
- CAD fiat on-ramp for Canadians
- Available where Binance isn't
- Decent perp selection
- Lower fees on volume tier
- Active development
-
Cons
- Newer, less proven track record
- Thinner liquidity than Binance
- Smaller pair selection
- Customer support is mixed
- Don't keep large balances on it
Other smaller exchanges (Ourbit, Aster) only matter if you're chasing specific pairs they uniquely list. For 95% of perp trading, the four above cover everything.
2.2What to Look For in a Perp Exchange- Liquidity — deeper books = less slippage on bigger orders
- Funding rates — the fee you pay (or receive) every 8 hours for holding positions
- Fee tiers — most exchanges drop fees as your volume grows
- Order types — TWAP, scaled orders, post-only — the more options, the better
- Withdrawal reliability — can you actually get your money out?
- Jurisdiction — some exchanges block US/Canada IPs
- Spot: long-term holds, no leverage, you own the actual coins
- Perp: short-term trades, leverage available, just contracts
Most active crypto trading happens on perps. Most long-term storage happens off-exchange entirely.
Which Account Type Should You Trade In?
Canada has multiple account types. Picking right can save thousands in taxes.
- The TFSA grows tax-free for life — the most powerful account for traders.
- Day trading inside a TFSA risks CRA reclassification as taxable business income.
- Keep active trading in a non-registered account to protect the TFSA.
If you're trading in Canada, you have options most countries don't. The wrong account can cost you 25-50% of your gains. The right one is tax-free for life. Most beginners use the wrong one because nobody told them otherwise.
The most powerful account for retail traders. Every dollar you make inside a TFSA is tax-free, forever.
- 2026 annual contribution limit: $7,000 (third year at this amount)
- Total room if you've been 18+ since 2009: $109,000 (through 2026)
- No tax on capital gains, dividends, or interest — ever
- Can withdraw anytime — but withdrawn room only restores the next year
The most common myth: "you can't trade in a TFSA." That's wrong. You absolutely can trade in a TFSA — buying and selling stocks, ETFs, and options is exactly what it's designed for. The gains are tax-free.
What the CRA actually cares about is whether you're operating it like a business instead of an investment account.
Two things draw CRA attention to a TFSA:
- High trading frequency — making 10+ trades a day, day after day, signals day trader rather than investor. Holding positions for minutes or hours instead of days/weeks is the pattern they look for.
- Outsized returns over time — this is the biggest one. If your TFSA grows from $50k to $500k in a couple of years, that growth is hard to explain as passive investing. The CRA reads it as professional trading income.
The CRA will treat your TFSA gains as business income — taxed at your full marginal rate (up to ~53% combined federal/provincial), not tax-free. They can also reassess past years and charge back-taxes plus interest. There have been real cases where Canadians got hit with six-figure tax bills after the CRA flagged their TFSA activity.
- Hold most positions days to weeks minimum — not minutes or hours
- Keep day trading and scalping out of the TFSA entirely — that's what the non-registered account is for
- Don't try to maximize returns through pure high-frequency activity — let positions compound over time
- If a swing trade becomes a great winner, fine — it's the pattern of behavior they look at, not single trades
Tax-deferred, not tax-free. You get a tax deduction when you contribute, then pay full income tax when you withdraw in retirement.
- Annual contribution: 18% of last year's income (capped)
- Best if you'll be in a lower tax bracket in retirement
- Withdrawals before retirement are taxed heavily
- Better for long-term holds than active trading
The regular trading account. No contribution limits. Gains are taxed.
- Capital gains: only 50% of profit is taxable (if held as investment)
- Business income: 100% taxable at your marginal rate (if CRA rules you a trader)
- Losses can offset gains
- No restrictions on trading frequency
The CRA can classify your trading as either:
- Investment income — 50% taxable at capital gains rate (good)
- Business income — 100% taxable at full rate (bad)
Factors that lean toward "business income":
- Very frequent trading (day trading, scalping)
- Short holding periods
- Trading is your main income
- You use leverage heavily
- You have a structured approach (trading plans, journals — yes, this can be used against you)
Long-term holds, swing trades, anything you want to keep tax-free. Don't day trade here — CRA reclassification risk.
US dividend-paying stocks (no withholding tax in RRSP), long-term ETFs, retirement-focused holdings.
Active trading, options trading, anything where CRA reclassification would be expensive in a TFSA.
If you're saving for a first home — same tax-free benefits as TFSA, but only for that purpose.
What's in Johnny's Personal Stack?
The exact platforms and accounts Johnny uses to trade.
- Wealthsimple holds long-term registered money; IBKR handles active trading and options.
- Hyperliquid for perps; spot crypto moves to cold storage once sized up.
- Separate buckets for separate risk profiles — don't copy a stack one-to-one.
This isn't a recommendation. It's a reference for how a working trader actually splits his accounts. Your setup should match your own situation — country, account size, what you trade.
Want to go deeper? These are the books we lean on, especially for charts and patterns:
