Barron's - USA (2021-03-01)

(Antfer) #1
March1,2021 BARRON’S 27

“We’re making investing less scary,


more accessible, personal, and easier,


and offering features and tools that


are optimized for mobile,” said a Rob-


inhood representative in response to


our survey questions.


Barron’srecognizes that, given the


size of the user base, the fintech trad-


ing apps have become significant


forces, and certainly bear close watch-


ing. And like many of their users, they


haven’t been at this very long. The


full-service brokers were once rela-


tively rudimentary themselves.


F


or the full-service brokers, the


year featured nonstop chal-


lenges. They had to suddenly


adjust to pandemic-induced


remote working while reassuring exist-


ing clients and absorbing millions of


new clients, not to mention maneuver-


ing through the GameStop affair.


Barron’sranked 11 online broker-


ages that offer a broad range of tools


useful to mainstream, self-directed


investors of various stripes. Three


brokerages did not participate (as


they did not last year): Firstrade,


Vanguard, and You Invest,JPMor-


gan Chase’s (JPM) self-directed


brokerage.


In this year’s survey, Interactive


Brokers again leadsthe pack,with


Fidelity close behind. This echoes our


2019 survey; last year, the two tied for


first. This year, it was close enough


that we awarded them both five stars.


TD Ameritrade came in a strong


third, E*Trade was fourth, and


Charles Schwab(SCHW), which


now owns TD Ameritrade, came


immediately behind in fifth place, as


it did last year. That marked a one-


position rise for TD Ameritrade,


while E*Trade dropped one position.


Some of this is a function of rejigger-


ing the relative weights in a few cate-


gories, although it also reflects some


impressive improvements by TD


Ameritrade and Schwab.


Tastyworks and Merrill Edge tied


for sixth place, with just a single point


separating the two.


These full-service online broker-


ages have long attempted to cater to


investors of all stripes. In 2020, the


pandemic provided both time and


opportunity, and boatloads of new


investors came aboard. Many of these


were younger. Ally Invest, for exam-


ple, says that millennials drove about


half of its overall growth last year.


But this phenomenon extends further.


Ally reported that the growth rate of


women overall outpaced men.


The industry’s stunning growth put


these platforms under great pressure.


Fidelity says that it hired more than


5,000 new customer-facing personnel


to handle the increased volume, while


other brokerages scampered to find


and train enough new employees to


service them.


The brokerages didn’t just tread


water. Many are actively transforming


themselves, both functionally and


aesthetically. They’re becoming more


welcoming and less an amalgam of


words, numbers, and line graphs that


require endless clicks. Brokerages are


layering ease of use and contemporary


graphics on ever-more powerful and


sophisticated investing and trading


engines. In some ways, Merrill Edge


led the way with its reimagined site


stressing “stories” that theBank of


America(BAC) unit rolled out over


the past three years. Merrill’s empha-


sis on context continues, while others


are refashioning their sites, as well.


“We’ve definitely seen a movement


toward simplification in design,” says


Jennifer Butler, the director of asset


management and brokerage research


at consulting firm Corporate Insight.


Brokerages, she says, have begun to


rethink site architecture and labeling


to make everything more intuitive.


The top online brokerages marry


clarity and sophistication, which is


no small feat. This allows latitude


for both expert traders and novice


investors.


One big goal of these brokerages is


to gain clients and keep them for


the long term, not just entice them to


sign up until the next cool app comes


along. That includes a migration to


different products, such as advisory


services, which in turn provides addi-


tional revenue.


“What a lot of brokerage firms are


trying to do is deliver on a promise of


comprehensive financial management


that addresses not just a consumer’s


every product need, but also kind of


a lifetime evolution of those needs,”


explains Butler.


A more thoughtful and intuitive


approach to news, information, and


research marks another aspect of this


endeavor, and one that’s particularly


important this year. Brokerages ap-


proach this differently. But at heart,


this involves two separate realizations.


First, with all of the new participants


in the market, brokerages must put


investing into some kind of educa-


tional context, or risk losing the very


people they want to keep and nurture.


Second, more-experienced investors


demand both thoroughness and acces-


sibility. Rummaging around for infor-


mation just doesn’t cut it anymore.


Brokers must offer a wide array of


material: entertaining tutorials, plain-


language cues, portfolio builders, and


useful financial planners for the nov-


ice investor; profit-and-loss algo-


rithms, trading heat maps, advanced


charting strategies, and graphically


represented research for the more


experienced. It’s a tricky balance,


providing necessary content without


information overload for a wide range


of trading expertise.


“Part wizard, part content cura-


tion,” is how Bob Leavitt, TD Ameri-


trade’s director of content strategy and


development, describes one of his


firm’s educational efforts.


W


e examined all of these and


dozens of other elements in


online brokerage offerings


for this year’s survey.


Both Interactive Brokers and Fidel-


ity demonstrated just how extensive


and contextual these services can be.


Each excels in multiple facets of the


online trading universe. However,


Interactive Brokers scored higher in


three of the six scoring categories—


information, trading, and interna-


tional, a category that it easily won.


It also won first place in active trad-


ing. (For more on how we ranked the


brokerages, see page 29.)


Some brokerages do a much better


job than others in key segments. For


example, tastyworks offers a superb


platform for active options and fu-


tures traders, but its strengths and


trading prowess would be lost on


more-occasional investors, and it


lackssome of the foundations that


we believe a novice investor needs.


Tastyworks is also the latest exam-


ple of high stakes industry consolida-


tion. In late January, the brokerage


firm’s parent, tastytrade, announced


that it would be sold for $1 billion to


the United Kingdom fintech and trad-


ing companyIG Group Holdings


(IGGHY). According to Tom Sosnoff,


tastytrade’s co-founder, there were


five offers on the table for the com-


pany. Sosnoff and his partners chose


IG Group, he says, because tastyworks


has designs on a global presence. With


licenses in 17 countries, IG Group


will make that process quicker and


simpler.


“I wanted an opportunity for us


to take the world by storm,” Sosnoff


says.


The tastytrade acquisition followed


two blockbuster deals. In early 2020,


Morgan Stanley(MS) announced the


acquisition of E*Trade for $13 billion,


demonstrating how well-heeled insti-


tutional firms have their sights on the


retail trade. A few months earlier,


Schwab and TD Ameritrade Holding


announced a $26 billion merger, con-


structing a mammoth operation that


rivals Fidelity in the number of clients.


The deal for TD Ameritrade closed


on Oct. 6, but Schwab says it will take


another 18 to 36 months for integra-


tion to be complete. Schwab isn’t say-


ing a lot more about what a future


combined platform will look like,


although Jeff Chiappetta, Schwab’s


vice president of trading and educa-


tion, notes that the merged company


would definitely embrace TD Ameri-


trade’s groundbreaking active-trad-


ing platform, thinkorswim, as well


as what he calls “the whole thinkor-


swim ecosystem.”


Last year, Schwab also acquired


the fintech Motif for an undisclosed


amount. Motif specializes in technol-


ogy that crafts customized thematic


portfolios, underscoring two more


developments in the industry—


thematic investing and direct indexing.


For instance, E*Trade offers


themes that range from the tradi-


tional, such as undervalued large-


caps or emerging markets, to ones


that might resonate more with youn-


ger investors, including cybersecurity


and videogaming.


These are beginning to migrate


from themed exchange-traded funds


“You’ve seen over the past year that


retail has had a meaningful impact


on market movements.”


Christopher Larkin, managing director, E*Trade


Consolidate,


Integrate


In late 2019,


Schwab agreed


to a merger with


TD Ameritrade,


joining two


online brokerage


powers in the


sector’s biggest


deal yet.


$26


Billion


In 2021,


Schwab’s two


platforms con-


tinue to operate


separately, and


may stay that


way for another


year.

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