https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=408692
--- Comment #3 from Jack <ostrof...@users.sourceforge.net> --- First, you don't actually need to create a separate brokerage account for each investment account. The only real absolute requirement is that for any investment transaction that needs or produces cash (buy, sell, dividend, ....) you must specify an appropriate account for the cash to go to or come from. As most investment accounts do hold cash, it makes sense for there to be a dedicated brokerage account. If your 401K never holds cash, then it's not needed at this time. However, for any investment account which CAN hold cash, then the associated brokerage account is the only way to go, until there is enough developer time and motivation to redo all of how KMM deals with investments to allow cash directly in the investment account. In your case, it sounds like you are not purchasing stock, you really are adding shares. An "add shares" transaction requires all the details you list except for the price. I'm not sure why you think the quantity doesn't get entered. You can then do a manual price update to specify the price on the day the shares were added. Yes, it's a minor additional step, and it might be worth allowing an add shares transaction to include the price at the time. (This could be logged as a "wishlist" bug.) In term of how you handle your Roth IRA - yes, you can purchase shares in it with funds directly from your checking account. However, I would personally accept the presence of a brokerage account (transfer frunds from checking to brokerage, then purchase shares) as it more accurately reflects how things work. Even if all purchased in that account use funds directly from your checking account, I believe you will eventually need a brokerage account, if you sell one stock and buy another, or when you start taking withdrawals. That may well be far in the future, in which case it can certainly wait. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.