Cheap Stock Trading...
The Path To Cheap Stock Trading
If you are as old as I am you probably remember when the
term cheap stock
trading was an oxymoron. Prior to the advent of discount
brokerages unless you held a seat on a stock exchange like the
New York Stock Exchange you had to buy your stocks through what
today would be called a full service broker.
The brokers held a virtual monopoly on the buying and
selling of stocks by individuals and if you wanted to buy
stocks you had to purchase through them. This made many brokers
very wealthy over the years as the public had no other options
to buy stock.
Yes, they did offer a full range of services like free stock
reports and free stock picks recommended by their in-house
analysts but like anything else in life these services were
anything but free.
You always paid the piper when you bought or sold any stocks
and these fees were often quite steep with little difference in
commissions between brokers. It really was sort of a oligopoly
kind of like OPEC is today with oil prices.
In those days cheap
stock trading meant buying in volume and in 100 share lots
because if you wanted to buy less than 100 shares you got hit
with an odd lot fee on top of the commissions. Higher priced
stocks also meant higher commissions and it was quite easy to
pay one dollar a share or more in commission costs.
Think of the impact that made on anyone that wanted to trade
for a living. All of those commissions day in and day out added
up to a pretty sizable trading expense which ultimately
impacted the trader’s bottom line.
Forget about day trading in those days as the transaction
costs would eat up any profits you would generate unless you
were a true day trading superstar. Sadly, the days of
cheap stock
trading online were still years away.
Since a stock broker was paid on a commission basis the more
trades they processed the more money they would make so it was
in their best interest to encourage active trading as they made
money on each buy and sell even if you didn’t.
Sometimes a broker would give you a discount commission to
keep you happy but it still wasn’t what I would call
cheap stock
trading by any means. Even a $50 commission on a 100
share lot is quite expensive to an active trader.
The game all changed in the 1980s as a new breed of stock
brokerages sprang up. These were called discount brokers and
they offered less in the way of services but much cheaper
commission structures. Discount stock trading and relatively
cheap stock trades were
finally becoming a reality for many investors.
Of course they became extremely popular as droves of stock
traders flocked to them to save money on commissions. The days
of cheap stock trading were here many thought
but little did they know that in this instance good actually
became great.
With the explosion of the Internet in the 1990s many of the
discount brokers set up sites that allowed you to trade for
very low fees like $15, $12 or even $9.95 a trade. At the time
that was the cheapest
stock trading an individual could hope for.
But it gets even better, as trading platform technology
progressed the deep discount broker came into the market and
finally the idea of getting the cheapest online stock
trading was realized. One online trading platform I use
charges less than .01 a share with a minimum of $1.00 per
trade. I don’t see how you could make stock trading any cheaper
than this!
Another platform I use gives you the option of .01 a share
or $9.95 per trade. That way if you trade small volume you can
opt for the penny a share option but if you are trading size
you can go for the flat rate.
So now traders finally have a choice, they can use full
service brokers if they wish or the can use a discount broker
and pay a flat rate and still receive great service or they can
really indulge in cheap stock
trading and set up an account with a deep discount
brokerage that is geared for active traders.
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