Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Discussion of the Stock portion of the Permanent Portfolio

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pplooker

Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by pplooker »

This won't help me so much at the moment, but it's something I will be looking into later.

http://personal.fidelity.com/products/t ... ETFs.shtml

Short version: apparently with a small account minimum you can trade IWV or IWB for free.  Assuming there's no other associated fees with your Fidelity account, it seems like this could be an ideal way to hold the stock portion of the PP if it works like I think it does.

Has anyone by chance done this?

It's truly a shame they don't have more iShares funds on the list so you could buy and rebalance all four slices for free.  IAU, TLT, and SHY are all iShares ETFs I believe.
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craigr
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by craigr »

For accumulators it makes more sense to hold their stocks in the traditional open ended index funds because they can make monthly contributions and not have to pay commissions.
pplooker

Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by pplooker »

But if this is commission free, if I'm understanding this offer correctly, what's the difference?
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craigr
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by craigr »

How do you know it's going to stay commission free? :)
pplooker

Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by pplooker »

If it doesn't, sell out and go to whatever's cheapest at that time.  What do you do if your car insurance premium doubles?
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MediumTex
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by MediumTex »

If I was otherwise comfortable using Fidelity, I would take advantage of something like this for as long as it was offered.

If, however, I wasn't comfortable with Fidelity as a general matter, a gimmicky thing like this wouldn't make me want to do business with them.

It looks like Vanguard is doing something similar with selected Vanguard ETFs, so maybe this is an emerging trend.
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pplooker

Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by pplooker »

https://personal.vanguard.com/us/insigh ... s-05042010

Why would you looky there.  The only thing I don't like about this is that it's still a $20 annual fee for small accounts.  That bothers me as very un-Vanguard like.

But considering even then you get all the trades for VTI and EDV you could want, it's still not bad.  I'd rather have VTI over the I shares equivalent just as personal preference.  Doesn't help me any as I use tax advantaged space but there's an easy way to hold your stock and bonds with no comission costs, that's pretty cool.

Hey I'm all in favor of anything that makes it cheaper for people to invest.  I am liking this trend very much.  If someone will just put all four slices in one of these deals that'd rock.
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craigr
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by craigr »

pplooker wrote: If it doesn't, sell out and go to whatever's cheapest at that time.  What do you do if your car insurance premium doubles?
Hard to do for taxable investors. You could have big LT gains locked in that you don't want yet.

I always encourage investors to think out decades if they can before they buy any asset. You never know how long you'll have to hold onto it.
pplooker

Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by pplooker »

Well, transfer it then.  The problem with your argument is this: any brokerage can change its fees at any time, therefore you should never open any account because the fees can be changed to something unreasonable.
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by foglifter »

pplooker wrote: Well, transfer it then.  The problem with your argument is this: any brokerage can change its fees at any time, therefore you should never open any account because the fees can be changed to something unreasonable.
I second that. I have my IRAs in Fido and so far never had any issues with them. I think what we're seeing is a growing competition between the brokerages: Fido's move seems to be an answer to Schwab's similar new offering, except Schwab only offers their own ETFs. I wish they included TLT into the list though.  :-\

BTW, another big move from Fidelity is abandoning the account tiering and introducing one flat commission rate of $7.95 for account of any size (used to be 19.95, 10.95, 8.95).
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by simata »

Zecco has for many years 10 free trades per month for account bigger than $25,000. So the only cost should be fee per year: for VTI 0,07%.
pplooker

Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by pplooker »

Zecco makes me nervous though.  They've gone from 2500 gets you free trades to 25,000 gets you free trades in a very short period of time.

I am thinking about going to Trade King though.  Perhaps this is a good new thread.  I believe I shall make it.
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by HBFan »

I am happy with tradeking.
nomamesbuey

Vanguard

Post by nomamesbuey »

I've been happy with Vanguard Brokerage (VBS) thus far, been customer for 2 months.

I love the "credit union-ish", "customer owned" nature of Vanguard.  I feel it's less likely that Vanguard will do radical changes to their pricing & offerings over time.  Apparently Vanguard, whose founder John Bogle having invented index stock funds (in the 1970s?), has a stable pattern of low pricing for stock index mutual funds going back for decades.

I looked at WellsTrade from Wells Fargo, which currently is a better deal than Vanguard since one gets 100 annual free trades.  However, brokerage is not WF's core business, so I was worried that they could randomly nix this feature at any time.  Plus, with the inadequate bipartisan Financial Industry (non) reform of 2010, where not much changed, I worry that a 2B2F bank could possibly using one's assets as collateral in their own house account leveraged speculation in "toxic assets" such as "CDO squared" of mortgage related bonds or some such.  AFAICT Vanguard does not use customer assets as collateral for their own house account speculation; Vanguard does not do house account speculation period.

With Vanguard, worst case scenario based on minimum assets, you're paying $20 per year annual account fee (if < $50K in Vanguard funds, whether mutual fund or ETF) & $7/trade of non-Vanguard stock, up to 25 trades in a calendar year, which should suffice for HBPP-type investors, even those with a variable port (VP).

Vanguard mutual funds & ETFs do not charge a trading fee.

For traditional HBPP
stock - VTI - free trade (note if you diverge from traditional Harry Browne/craigr approach, there are US subsectors, such as VBR for small value, etc.  If you want international, VEA for non-US rich countries, VWO for emerging countries, & VSS for non-US mid/small cap should meet your requirements).  One could alternatively use the index mutual funds, VTSMX instead of VTI.

bond - per the MediumTex suggestion, 50% EDV & 50% VUSTX approximates, in bond duration & maturity, TLT or direct purchase of a 30 yr US Treasury bond.  EDV & VUSTX have no trading fee.  Note, when rebalancing from another asset into a Vanguard mutual fund like VUSTX, one needs to wait 3 trading days for the trade to settle & the funds to enter the sweep account VMMXX, then 1 addl trading day to "Exchange" the funds out of VMMXX & into VUSTX.  This is a minor inconvenience that would negligibly effect your returns, yet it should still be stated.

OTOH - 1 can buy the TLT for $7 fee, or the US 30 yr Treas bond (or ladder of bonds) directly, apparently $10 to buy new bond, & $40-75 to buy existing bond, & $40-75 to sell bond.  I would guess that US Treas bond would be considered a non-Vanguard asset in terms of counting your $50K in Vanguard assets, similar to the treatment of say TLT or SGOL.

cash - SHY for $7 fee.  Vanguard does have some funds that are mostly short term US treasuries, but have some "junk" like Freddie Mac or Tennessee Valley Authority bonds, which would be diverging from HBPP/craigr approach.  Also one could choose to hold part/all of the cash outside of Vanguard, for instance using I-Bonds US Savings Bonds.

gold - SGOL (or GLD, IAU, etc) for $7 fee.
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by herbgoat »

I've got accounts at thinkorswim and zecco. I'm happy with both. Zecco has had some growing pains. I'm still satisfied.

At thinkorswim I get 3 free mutual fund trades/month + free gainskeeper

At zecco I get 10 free stock/etf trades/month. I pay for gainskeeper (~$50/year)

For my Roth IRA, I have it at thinkorswim because they don't charge an account fee for an IRA where zecco does.

If they change fees to the point that you want to leave, you can do an ACAT transfer to a new brokerage and not incur the taxes from selling.
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by SmallPotatoes »

I've always heeded the adage 'you get what you pay for'. While Lowering costs is chief among investors these days I'm okay paying an institution like Vanguard a little more for the reputation they hold in the investment world. Anyhow, no brokerage firm is absolutely free. They make ends meet somewhere and I'm happy to have it up front in the open.
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Re: Free Brokerage For the Stock Portion?

Post by herbgoat »

For some reason, when I was comparing brokerages about 2 years ago, I decided to go with zecco and thinkorswim (as I mentioned previously) instead of Vanguard. Because of this thread I was just reviewing their cost structure and it does look very appealing. Probably not enough difference to justify switching right now but maybe with future funds.

How is the tax/cost basis tracking at Vanguard? Do they allow you to sell specific lots of shares or only first in first out? The tax tracking is a major consideration for me, second only to total cost.
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