One Zero launches Israeli trading in selected single stocks, but not all shares
One Zero is launching trading in individual stocks in Israel, but the service will not cover every share. The bank is promoting the move under the slogan, “There is no reason to pay custody fees,” signaling a push to attract investors who want cheaper access to the local market.
The article presents the launch as part of a broader financial-news roundup, alongside other market and business developments. Those include a new partnership between Elbit and Diehl to market autonomous loitering munitions, forecasts that the European Central Bank may raise rates because of the Iran war, and a report that Haim Katzman wants to sell Norstar’s G City shares as he moves away from control.
It also notes that governments around the world are issuing bonds at a record pace to fund defense, infrastructure and energy spending, and says U.S. Social Security funds could run out within six years. Other items in the roundup discuss autism in 2025, the dollar shekel exchange rate over the past 30 years, and differences between the TA 35 and TA 125 stock indices.
Additional headlines cover Israel’s real estate market outlook for 2026, complaints from an investor who put 360,000 shekels from a provident fund through Global Net, criticism of a work culture in one company, the collapse of a promising startup from a billion-dollar valuation to mass layoffs, and a company that wants to delist Pioneer for 2.7 billion dollars. The roundup also cites a finance ministry move to push high-tech firms to cut salaries by 20%.