T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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521.1 | I say go for it! | KYOA::BOYLE | Dirty Jobs Done Dirt Cheap | Fri Jul 09 1993 11:04 | 14 |
| I use schwab for my accounts for both individual equities and mutual
funds. The no load feature is nice, the one statement feature is nice.
However, for me, the best feature is having a common cash account to
sell into and buy from allowing purchases of equities or mutual funds
typically the day you call.
In addition, many transactions can be handled via the phone for a 10%
commission savings. Of course, their commissions are higher than some,
bu I feel the quick response and some of the touchtone phone features
are worth it!
For what its worth,
Jack Boyle dtn 323-4448
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521.2 | More questions. | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Drink DECAF: Commit Sacrilege" | Fri Jul 09 1993 11:20 | 16 |
| Re. .0
I was under the impression that Schwab does not handle 20th Century
yet. Is that a recent addition? Do they also handle Scudder?
Does Schwab charge anything for transferring current accounts in
mutual funds to them? Of course, I can always close the current
accounts and open new ones, but that will involve some capital gains.
Also, can you DCA into the mutual funds via Schwab?
While the idea of consolidating everything into one account is
appealing, they charge about 10-15$ more for stock and options trading
than my current broker (Waterhouse). At my usual 30-50 transactions
per year, I'm wondering is the loss of $400-500 is worth this
simplification.
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521.3 | NO DCA | ASDG::MISTRY | | Fri Jul 09 1993 12:18 | 8 |
|
>> Also, can you DCA into the mutual funds via Schwab?
This it seems to me is the main disadvantage. As far as I know, one
cannot DCA into individual funds in the account.
Kaizad
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521.4 | I talked to Charles Schwabb... | MKOTS3::COUTURE | Gary Couture - NH Sales Support | Fri Jul 09 1993 12:36 | 30 |
| I just met with a broker at Charles Schwabb in Mancherster NH this morning and
picked up all the forms. There are no fees for the 90+ no-load funds they
currently carry. They are adding a bunch more next week. There is no charge
for transfering funds you currently own from the fund family to their control.
There is also no fee if you choose to transfer them back. Some fund families
do charge for the transfer but I think that was mostly loaded fund families.
20TH Century is one of the no fee funds. They have also just added Berger,
Montgomerry Emerging Markets (Bob Brinker's favorite), Kauffman (a super
aggressive great performing fund), Janus Mercury, etc.
You can Dollar cost average into multiple funds within each account (IRA,
SEP IRA, or individual)! They have whats called a Automatic Investment Program
with a minimum of 50$/month per fund.
In addition, if your bi-weekly/monthly automatic investments aren't enough to
meet the minimum investment for a particular fund, they will park it in a
money market until it builds up.
After looking everyhting over the only drawback I can see is the fine print
which says they reserve the right to cancel the no-fee program and start
charging for transactions. But based on the fact that this program has been
extremely successfull for C.S. I don't think they will do it. The broker told
me that they had to beg funds to join up with them initially (1 year contracts)
but this year they had funds banging on their door to join. Some funds said
that they grew their business enormously since allowing CS to sell for them.
I've got all the data in the car if anyone has any questions.
gary
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521.5 | UGMA? | ASDG::WATSON | Discover America | Fri Jul 09 1993 13:39 | 4 |
|
Will Schwabb also handle UGMA accounts?
Bob
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521.6 | yes | SAHQ::ROSENKRANZ | C'mon baby, drive south! | Fri Jul 09 1993 13:55 | 1 |
|
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521.7 | | SFC01::SFC01::SMITHP | Written but not read | Fri Jul 09 1993 16:25 | 2 |
| This seems to be a trend. Fidelity Investments is adding this feature in a week
or two.
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521.8 | its the trend | MKOTS3::COUTURE | Gary Couture - NH Sales Support | Fri Jul 09 1993 16:53 | 12 |
| Its just like the computer business,
brokering is becoming a commodity business, customers are getting smarter and
making their own investment decisions and choosing no-loads at a frantic
rate. so you either join the herd or become a dinosaur!
I expect that Schwabb will have most popular no-loads within a couple years.
Question is whether they can get the giants like Vanguard and Price.
g.
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521.9 | Yes, they do. | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Fri Jul 09 1993 17:34 | 6 |
| re: .8
They do carry Vanguard and T. Rowe Price. But, I am not sure if they
carry all of their funds.
Mike
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521.10 | must be NTF | MKOTS3::COUTURE | Gary Couture - NH Consultant - Sales | Sat Jul 10 1993 09:16 | 10 |
| you ar right. Schwab does carry many funds like Vanguard and Price but they are
not part of their "No Transaction Fee" NTF program. They will sell you just
about any no-load fund, but if its not listed as a NTF fund then they charge
a tranaction fee which is based upon a % of the transaction amount with a
minimum charge of about $40. Currently they ���have about 130 no-load funds
which ase NTF, no fees to buy��/sell, including 20th, janus, berger, invesco,
etc.
gary
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521.11 | | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Mon Jul 12 1993 11:46 | 11 |
| re: .10
When I talked to the Schwab rep. I specifically asked him if there's
going to be any charge for transferring these accounts over. And, he
told me no. He said Schwab will not charge anything for transferring
the accounts. But, you have to check with your individual fund family
to see if "they" would charge anything for doing so. He didn't mention
anything about NTF. I'll call them again when I get a chance.
Mike
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521.12 | TRANSFER FEE FOR REGULAR ACCOUNT??? | JUPITR::KRAJ | | Mon Jul 12 1993 13:40 | 10 |
|
DOES ANYBODY KNOW SPCIFIC DEATILS OF WHO CHARGES TRANSACTION FEE FOR
TRANSFERING THE ACCOUNT TO CHARLES SCHWABB.
I AM PARTICULARLY INTERESTED IN JANUS,INVESCO AND 20TH.
THANKS
=== RAJ
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521.13 | Don't the NTF fund kick .25% back? | SFC01::SFC01::SMITHP | Written but not read | Mon Jul 12 1993 19:55 | 8 |
| re: .0
The current issue of Money talks about this. If I recall correctly the
no-loads that schwabb/fidelity/etc... handle as NTF funds kick .25%
of funds invested back to schwabb/fidelity/etc... The .25% gets rolled
into the general fund expenses and is reported as part of the expense
ratio.
|
521.14 | One more question. | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Drink DECAF: Commit Sacrilege" | Fri Jul 16 1993 16:24 | 2 |
| Can you place limit orders when buying mutual funds?
I would find this very useful, personally.
|
521.15 | Have a cup of Sanka, then decide | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Sat Jul 17 1993 21:36 | 4 |
| The Benham group (1-800-4SAFETY) allows limit orders on many of their
mutual funds. Most families don't.
John
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521.16 | Limit orders on funds - nice idea - but ... | BRASS::KRIEGER | Think positive, make a difference every day | Mon Jul 19 1993 09:20 | 12 |
|
limit orders on mutual funds implies a short term trader .vs. long term
investor mentality that most mutual fund managers perfer. Yes it would
be nice if you could buy/sell a mutual fund if it hits a specific
price. I personally can not see a fund manager wanting to do this in
terms of the increased overhead and volatility ( buys/sells ) this
would cause ... your mileage may differ ...
BTW - Fidelity does not allow limit orders on ANY of their funds ...
jim krieger
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521.17 | They just added.... | SPECXN::KANNAN | | Mon Jul 19 1993 10:57 | 11 |
|
...a whole bunch of new families of funds:
Janus
20th century
Newberger & Berman
....about 20 more families
Check them out!
Nari
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521.18 | | BROKE::SHAH | Amitabh "Drink DECAF: Commit Sacrilege" | Mon Jul 19 1993 11:58 | 11 |
| Re. .16
Oh, I understand that. Indeed, many MF's also limit the number of
switches one can do in or out of a fund in a calendar year. Perhaps
the limit orders can also be restricted as such. I would still find
this feature quite useful.
PS. Are there a lot of Waterhouse customers here? If so, and if you
find the Schwab scheme appealing, would you call the Waterhouse
customer service and let them know that they should do it too? :-).
(I find the idea of getting junk mail from only one place very good.)
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