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Charles Schwab Drops Service, Order FeesCharles Schwab Drops Service, Order Fees

In a nod to the smaller investors who gave the firm its early success, Charles Schwab Corp. has eliminated its remaining account service fees and its $3-per-order handling charge on equity trades.

John Kador

September 16, 2005

1 Min Read
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John Kador

In a nod to the smaller investors who gave the firm its early success, Charles Schwab Corp. has eliminated its remaining account service fees and its $3-per-order handling charge on equity trades.

The decision affects about 650,000 Schwab account holders with balances below $25,000. Average service fees ranged from $120 to $180 annually per account. (Some customers still may be charged if they don’t keep at least $2,500 in brokerage accounts, or a minimum of $2,000 in retirement accounts.)

Schwab’s strategy of reducing fees—this is its seventh price cut since 2004—puts pressure on rivals, including E*Trade Financial and Ameritrade, to differentiate themselves beyond offering cheaper trades.

When combined with the cost of a new national advertising program, relinquishing the fee income is expected to reduce fourth-quarter earnings by about $40 million pretax, or 2 cents per share.

Such cuts are a hallmark of founder Charles Schwab, who recently returned as chairman and CEO. Historically Schwab has been happy to exchange one-time earnings hits for the opportunity to expand market share. In 1986, for example, the firm pioneered the no-annual fee IRA.

Schwab is in a position to eliminate the fees because it has substantially eliminated the high overhead structure that demanded the fees in the first place. The company has shed more than $300 million in annual expenses since mid-2004. The company projected that its earnings for the current quarter will range between $195 million and $205 million, the second highest three-month profit in the San Francisco-based company’s history.

About the Author

John Kador

John Kador is a business author focused on leadership, finance, and technology.  He is the author of over 15 books and has been a contributing editor to Wealth Management since 1995.  He received an MS degree in public relations from The American University and a BA in English from Duke University.  He lives in Lewisburg, PA.  Contact him on his website, www.jkador.com.