The trade window
Last updated: 19 Jan 2026
How trades work at Fynbos
When you transfer money into an investment account or sell holdings, Fynbos processes these as trades through our investment partner. Unlike instant savings transfers, investment trades follow a settlement cycle.
Trades are batched: Your buy and sell orders are grouped and sent to our investment partner for execution
Settlement takes time: After a trade executes, it takes time for the transaction to fully settle
Prices are confirmed at execution: The final price and number of units are determined when the trade executes, not when you place the order
Understanding this process helps you plan your investments and withdrawals.
The trade execution process
When you transfer money to an investment account or sell holdings, your order goes through several steps.
For buy orders (transferring money in)
You transfer money from your Cash account to an investment account
The system creates a buy order based on your account's investment strategy
Your order is batched and sent to our investment partner
The trade executes at the next available pricing window
Units are allocated to your account once settlement completes
For sell orders (transferring money out or withdrawing)
You initiate a transfer out or withdrawal from an investment account
The system creates sell orders for your holdings
Your order is batched and sent to our investment partner
The trade executes at the next available pricing window
Cash proceeds are available in your account once settlement completes
Settlement times
Settlement is the process of finalising a trade. Different investment types have different settlement periods.
Investment type | Settlement time | What this means |
|---|---|---|
Unit trusts | T+1 to T+3 | 1-3 business days after trade execution |
ETFs | T+3 | 3 business days after trade execution |
Money market | Same day | Effectively instant for internal transfers |
What "T+3" means: The "T" stands for the trade date. T+3 means settlement occurs three business days after the trade executes. If you sell on Monday, settlement completes on Thursday (excluding public holidays).
Important: During the settlement period, your money is in transit. You cannot access it until settlement completes. Plan withdrawals accordingly.
What to expect when transferring to an investment account
When you transfer money to your Tax-Free Savings, Investment Account, or Retirement Annuity, the process works as follows.
Transfer money from your Cash account to the investment account
The transfer appears in your account immediately as "pending"
A buy order is created based on your investment strategy
The trade executes at the next pricing window
After settlement (1-3 business days), your units appear in your holdings
What this means for you:
Your Cash balance decreases immediately
Your investment account shows the pending amount
The exact number of units you receive depends on the price at execution
You will see your confirmed holdings after settlement completes
What to expect when selling holdings
When you transfer money out of an investment account or withdraw from your Tax-Free Savings, the process involves selling your holdings first.
You request a transfer or withdrawal
The system calculates which holdings to sell
You see an estimate of the amount, units, and fees before confirming
After you confirm, sell orders are created
The trade executes at the next pricing window
After settlement (1-3 business days), the proceeds arrive in your Cash account
What this means for you:
The amount shown is an estimate based on current prices
The final amount may differ slightly depending on the execution price
Fees are deducted from the proceeds
Your withdrawal arrives after settlement completes
Estimated vs final amounts
When you initiate a trade, you see estimated values. The final values are confirmed after execution.
Why estimates differ from final amounts:
Price changes: The market price may move between when you place the order and when it executes
Unit rounding: The number of units may be rounded based on the fund's rules
Fee calculations: Final fees are calculated on the actual trade amount
For most trades, the difference is minimal. Unit trusts typically have stable pricing, while ETFs may show slightly more variation.
Trading fees
When you buy or sell ETFs and other exchange-traded investments, the following fees may apply.
Fee type | Description |
|---|---|
Trading fee | Fee charged by the stock exchange for executing the trade |
Settlement fee | Fee for settling the transaction |
Investor protection fee | Levy for the investor protection fund |
Unit trusts (like the Allan Gray Money Market Fund) do not incur trading fees. Fees are built into the fund's total expense ratio instead.
You always see estimated fees before confirming a trade. The final fees are shown in your transaction history after settlement.
How trades work at Fynbos
When you transfer money into an investment account or sell holdings, Fynbos processes these as trades through our investment partner. Unlike instant savings transfers, investment trades follow a settlement cycle.
Trades are batched: Your buy and sell orders are grouped and sent to our investment partner for execution
Settlement takes time: After a trade executes, it takes time for the transaction to fully settle
Prices are confirmed at execution: The final price and number of units are determined when the trade executes, not when you place the order
Understanding this process helps you plan your investments and withdrawals.
The trade execution process
When you transfer money to an investment account or sell holdings, your order goes through several steps.
For buy orders (transferring money in)
You transfer money from your Cash account to an investment account
The system creates a buy order based on your account's investment strategy
Your order is batched and sent to our investment partner
The trade executes at the next available pricing window
Units are allocated to your account once settlement completes
For sell orders (transferring money out or withdrawing)
You initiate a transfer out or withdrawal from an investment account
The system creates sell orders for your holdings
Your order is batched and sent to our investment partner
The trade executes at the next available pricing window
Cash proceeds are available in your account once settlement completes
Settlement times
Settlement is the process of finalising a trade. Different investment types have different settlement periods.
Investment type | Settlement time | What this means |
|---|---|---|
Unit trusts | T+1 to T+3 | 1-3 business days after trade execution |
ETFs | T+3 | 3 business days after trade execution |
Money market | Same day | Effectively instant for internal transfers |
What "T+3" means: The "T" stands for the trade date. T+3 means settlement occurs three business days after the trade executes. If you sell on Monday, settlement completes on Thursday (excluding public holidays).
Important: During the settlement period, your money is in transit. You cannot access it until settlement completes. Plan withdrawals accordingly.
What to expect when transferring to an investment account
When you transfer money to your Tax-Free Savings, Investment Account, or Retirement Annuity, the process works as follows.
Transfer money from your Cash account to the investment account
The transfer appears in your account immediately as "pending"
A buy order is created based on your investment strategy
The trade executes at the next pricing window
After settlement (1-3 business days), your units appear in your holdings
What this means for you:
Your Cash balance decreases immediately
Your investment account shows the pending amount
The exact number of units you receive depends on the price at execution
You will see your confirmed holdings after settlement completes
What to expect when selling holdings
When you transfer money out of an investment account or withdraw from your Tax-Free Savings, the process involves selling your holdings first.
You request a transfer or withdrawal
The system calculates which holdings to sell
You see an estimate of the amount, units, and fees before confirming
After you confirm, sell orders are created
The trade executes at the next pricing window
After settlement (1-3 business days), the proceeds arrive in your Cash account
What this means for you:
The amount shown is an estimate based on current prices
The final amount may differ slightly depending on the execution price
Fees are deducted from the proceeds
Your withdrawal arrives after settlement completes
Estimated vs final amounts
When you initiate a trade, you see estimated values. The final values are confirmed after execution.
Why estimates differ from final amounts:
Price changes: The market price may move between when you place the order and when it executes
Unit rounding: The number of units may be rounded based on the fund's rules
Fee calculations: Final fees are calculated on the actual trade amount
For most trades, the difference is minimal. Unit trusts typically have stable pricing, while ETFs may show slightly more variation.
Trading fees
When you buy or sell ETFs and other exchange-traded investments, the following fees may apply.
Fee type | Description |
|---|---|
Trading fee | Fee charged by the stock exchange for executing the trade |
Settlement fee | Fee for settling the transaction |
Investor protection fee | Levy for the investor protection fund |
Unit trusts (like the Allan Gray Money Market Fund) do not incur trading fees. Fees are built into the fund's total expense ratio instead.
You always see estimated fees before confirming a trade. The final fees are shown in your transaction history after settlement.
How trades work at Fynbos
When you transfer money into an investment account or sell holdings, Fynbos processes these as trades through our investment partner. Unlike instant savings transfers, investment trades follow a settlement cycle.
Trades are batched: Your buy and sell orders are grouped and sent to our investment partner for execution
Settlement takes time: After a trade executes, it takes time for the transaction to fully settle
Prices are confirmed at execution: The final price and number of units are determined when the trade executes, not when you place the order
Understanding this process helps you plan your investments and withdrawals.
The trade execution process
When you transfer money to an investment account or sell holdings, your order goes through several steps.
For buy orders (transferring money in)
You transfer money from your Cash account to an investment account
The system creates a buy order based on your account's investment strategy
Your order is batched and sent to our investment partner
The trade executes at the next available pricing window
Units are allocated to your account once settlement completes
For sell orders (transferring money out or withdrawing)
You initiate a transfer out or withdrawal from an investment account
The system creates sell orders for your holdings
Your order is batched and sent to our investment partner
The trade executes at the next available pricing window
Cash proceeds are available in your account once settlement completes
Settlement times
Settlement is the process of finalising a trade. Different investment types have different settlement periods.
Investment type | Settlement time | What this means |
|---|---|---|
Unit trusts | T+1 to T+3 | 1-3 business days after trade execution |
ETFs | T+3 | 3 business days after trade execution |
Money market | Same day | Effectively instant for internal transfers |
What "T+3" means: The "T" stands for the trade date. T+3 means settlement occurs three business days after the trade executes. If you sell on Monday, settlement completes on Thursday (excluding public holidays).
Important: During the settlement period, your money is in transit. You cannot access it until settlement completes. Plan withdrawals accordingly.
What to expect when transferring to an investment account
When you transfer money to your Tax-Free Savings, Investment Account, or Retirement Annuity, the process works as follows.
Transfer money from your Cash account to the investment account
The transfer appears in your account immediately as "pending"
A buy order is created based on your investment strategy
The trade executes at the next pricing window
After settlement (1-3 business days), your units appear in your holdings
What this means for you:
Your Cash balance decreases immediately
Your investment account shows the pending amount
The exact number of units you receive depends on the price at execution
You will see your confirmed holdings after settlement completes
What to expect when selling holdings
When you transfer money out of an investment account or withdraw from your Tax-Free Savings, the process involves selling your holdings first.
You request a transfer or withdrawal
The system calculates which holdings to sell
You see an estimate of the amount, units, and fees before confirming
After you confirm, sell orders are created
The trade executes at the next pricing window
After settlement (1-3 business days), the proceeds arrive in your Cash account
What this means for you:
The amount shown is an estimate based on current prices
The final amount may differ slightly depending on the execution price
Fees are deducted from the proceeds
Your withdrawal arrives after settlement completes
Estimated vs final amounts
When you initiate a trade, you see estimated values. The final values are confirmed after execution.
Why estimates differ from final amounts:
Price changes: The market price may move between when you place the order and when it executes
Unit rounding: The number of units may be rounded based on the fund's rules
Fee calculations: Final fees are calculated on the actual trade amount
For most trades, the difference is minimal. Unit trusts typically have stable pricing, while ETFs may show slightly more variation.
Trading fees
When you buy or sell ETFs and other exchange-traded investments, the following fees may apply.
Fee type | Description |
|---|---|
Trading fee | Fee charged by the stock exchange for executing the trade |
Settlement fee | Fee for settling the transaction |
Investor protection fee | Levy for the investor protection fund |
Unit trusts (like the Allan Gray Money Market Fund) do not incur trading fees. Fees are built into the fund's total expense ratio instead.
You always see estimated fees before confirming a trade. The final fees are shown in your transaction history after settlement.
Frequently asked questions
Why does it take 2-3 days to sell my investments?
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Why does it take 2-3 days to sell my investments?
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Why does it take 2-3 days to sell my investments?
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Can I cancel a trade after placing it?
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Can I cancel a trade after placing it?
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Can I cancel a trade after placing it?
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Why is my final amount different from the estimate?
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Why is my final amount different from the estimate?
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Why is my final amount different from the estimate?
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Why do unit trusts settle faster than ETFs?
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Why do unit trusts settle faster than ETFs?
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Why do unit trusts settle faster than ETFs?
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When will my withdrawal arrive in my bank account?
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When will my withdrawal arrive in my bank account?
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When will my withdrawal arrive in my bank account?
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