Commission costs for scaling out?

Discussion in 'Order Execution' started by GotherL, Nov 14, 2018.

  1. GotherL

    GotherL

    Say if my broker charges .005 cents per share but a minimum of $1 commission is required per trade. If I bought 1000 shares of a company than scaled out 100x would I end up paying $100 or just $5 for 1000 shares total?
     
  2. Robert Morse

    Robert Morse Sponsor

    GotherL,

    It is a little confusing the way you asked. Every time you hit "buy" or "sell", your broker will charge you $0.005/share, but each order require a min commissions of $1. So 100 shares is $1.00. 200 shares is $1. 300 shares is $1.50. Your position size is not relevant, only the order size for each order.

    Does that help.

    Bob
     
  3. IAS_LLC

    IAS_LLC

    Pretty sure you'd pay $100 for your 100x10 trades. If u do this sort of thing often, you may want to looked at the tiered fee structure....$0.35 min commission (it appears you're using IB fixed)
     
  4. Robert Morse

    Robert Morse Sponsor

    Why would anyone exit 1000 shares with 10 share orders?
     
    murray t turtle and IAS_LLC like this.
  5. IAS_LLC

    IAS_LLC

    Thats the better question.
     
    murray t turtle and MoreLeverage like this.
  6. Speaking of "scaling", an anecdote.

    Years ago when I ran my mutual fund timing service, I had a customer service person at some fund tell me about one particular shareholder... who called up and "moved 1% of his money EVERY day". Like he was accomplishing something.??
     
    Last edited: Nov 15, 2018
    murray t turtle likes this.
  7. Dizaj

    Dizaj

    Commission rates can vary by brokerage and financial product. For stocks, there are two primary commission structures: per-trade (buffet) or per-share (ala-carte). The per-trade rates are also known as flat-rate commissions.These are flat-rate commissions that charge per trade, up to a specified maximum share size