ETrade’s Sale Is the Death Knell for Discount Brokerages In an age of zero commissions, trading is just a way to draw in customers for other products. By Annie Massa February 20, 2020, 3:18 PM EST ILLUSTRATION: XAVIER LALANNE-TAUZIA FOR BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK Throw dirt on it. The era of independent online brokers is over. It was Charles Schwab Corp. that plunged the knife in, but the sale of ETrade Financial Corp. was the last gasp. Schwab’s purchase of TD Ameritrade Holding Corp. to create a $5 trillion monster serving customers who trade stocks in their pajamas for free made it impossible for ETrade to continue as it was. Morgan Stanley swooped in, and for $13 billion in stock it gets to clothe itself in ETrade’s digital street cred, attracting younger, tech-savvier clients to a bank whose reputation is staid even by Wall Street standards.
IB is not your typical online broker. Its range of products exceeds any other online broker. Its ability to react to changing circumstances exceeds any other independent broker. How do you know the co. is not for the sale?
Conditions change - zero commissions, possible FTT. You never asked a woman out on a date more than once before she finally said yes?
Thomas Peterffy more of a buyer than a seller. Looked at E-Trade. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/b...a-deal-but-decided-it-wouldnt-work-2020-02-20