Goto the eInvesting Home Page
Home    Investing Forums    Edit Your Profile    Manage Your Portfolio    View the Rankings    Learn about the Simulator

Welcome to eInvesting! You've found the coolest stock market game on the web. At eInvesting you compete for monthly cash prizes while you interact, make virtual dollars, purchase items, and trade in the realistic stock market simulator. We make investing FUN!

Join now and and start trading right away!
Log In to make this message disappear!

 
  ::  Register  ::  Log in  ::  Log in to check your private messages
Purchase e$ Purchase e$ Virtual Store Virtual Store FAQ  FAQ      Search Search  
 
 
www.eInvesting.com Forum Index » Online Investing and Technology

Do you buy stocks online?


Post new topic Reply to topic Goto page Previous  1, 2
Do you buy stocks online? « View previous topic :: View next topic »
Author Message
Pinkcat
PostPosted: Sun Mar 20, 2005 2:44 am Post subject: Reply with quote

New Poster
New Poster

Joined: 20 Mar 2005

Posts: 6
This Month: 0

6807.23 e$

Net worth: 6,807.23
Portfolio Value: 0.00
Monthly Return:
0.00%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

I recently changed to Investrade Discount for lower fees and so far their service is helpful and friendly.
Back to top
Dave Rathbun
PostPosted: Sun Apr 10, 2005 2:51 pm Post subject: Reply with quote

CFO
CFO

Joined: 10 Apr 2005

Posts: 3690
This Month: 0
Location: Texas
395796.65 e$

Net worth: 557,159.65
Portfolio Value: 0.00
Monthly Return:
0.00%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

signupmoney wrote:
Check the "fine print" with other brokers, especially the "transfer out" and IRA fees.

Yeah, that's a great suggestion. Many online brokers are spending so much money to get a customer that they have to make it "painful" for customers to leave.

I've used eTrade in the past, but all of my accounts are now at Harris Direct. There's not one of the "big names" that you see advertising all the time, but they've been great for me. By having all of your accounts (if you have more than one) aggregated at one broker you can often qualify for better services. If you have individual accounts scattered all over it's harder to do. I get a number of "perks" at Harris because my combined accounts (3 IRA and one investment account) have an aggregate total that meets their minimum. If any one of the accounts were somewhere else, I might not.

At my equity level I pay only $7.95 per trade, and that includes option contracts. They just recently dropped their commission rates (they go into effect April 18th).
Back to top
waltman
PostPosted: Thu May 05, 2005 7:56 pm Post subject: I use Ameritrade and TD Waterhouse Reply with quote

Investing Sr. Associate
Investing Sr. Associate

Joined: 30 Jan 2005

Posts: 83
This Month: 0

91043.39 e$

Net worth: 91,048.39
Portfolio Value: 0.00
Monthly Return:
0.00%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

I have multiple TD Waterhouse accounts (SEP IRA, Rollover IRA, etc) and I'm mostly satisfied with the service. I joined WAY back in the late 90s when they were trying to compete on price. Since then they have gradually raised prices and such to discourage people with small accounts. But in one of the oddest things I've seen, they actually called me at home recently to ask me if I was satisfied and to give me a number to call directly to my 'broker'. I told him they annoyed me by starting to charge for US Mailed statements and he said he would be happy to put me back on the list to get those no charge.

So the bottom line on TD Waterhouse is - no big complaints other than the steadily rising prices and the jury is still out on whether they are providing value but it looks promising.

I also have an Ameritrade account that I opened to get a free Palm Tungsten 3. ($10K to open and get a free Palm). I see the specials now are not as good - you get a much cheaper Palm for the effort. Ameritrade seems to be focusing more on keeping costs down, which I prefer when I actually do a trade.

In general, you get WAY MORE stuff from online brokers for free to next-to-free than you did back in the early days.
Back to top
Shorty
PostPosted: Sun Sep 25, 2005 4:52 am Post subject: Reply with quote

New Poster
New Poster

Joined: 20 Sep 2005

Posts: 4
This Month: 0

5673.35 e$

Net worth: 5,793.35
Portfolio Value: 120.00
Monthly Return:
-21.05%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

I dont buy real stocks at all, i'm not rich enough. Smile
Back to top
waltman
PostPosted: Sun Oct 02, 2005 8:02 am Post subject: Chicken and the Egg Reply with quote

Investing Sr. Associate
Investing Sr. Associate

Joined: 30 Jan 2005

Posts: 83
This Month: 0

91043.39 e$

Net worth: 91,048.39
Portfolio Value: 0.00
Monthly Return:
0.00%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

But if you invested more then you would have money to invest... Wink

FWIW, we opened a Sharebuilder account and are putting in $200 a month into DIVX (an index fund for stocks that pay high dividends)

The $4 charge hurts from the perspective that I immediately lose 2%, but the idea is these are for the long-term.

If you have an IRA plan at work, DO THAT!! (And if not, open a ROTH IRA on your own!!)
Back to top
MrInvestor
PostPosted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 9:06 am Post subject: Reply with quote

Investing Manager
Investing Manager

Joined: 07 Feb 2005

Posts: 253
This Month: 0

15536.89 e$

Net worth: 24,841.89
Portfolio Value: 6,590.00
Monthly Return:
0.38%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

Good advice Waltman!
Back to top
blackfoxtrade
PostPosted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 7:38 pm Post subject: Reply with quote

Associate
Associate

Joined: 24 May 2005

Posts: 338
This Month: 0
Location: Estonia
11453.62 e$

Net worth: 31,776.82
Portfolio Value: 20,323.20
Monthly Return:
-9.88%
Trades this month: 0
Churn Rate: 0.00%

Items

Shorty, I'm not rich and I am still trying to invest/trade. I only have about $600 Laughing but the knowledge I obtain from making mistakes is invaluable for my further success. The cost of mistakes is not important - its the psychological impact that teaches us. I advise you to start investing aswell, even if you aren't rich.
Back to top
Display posts from previous:
Post new topic Reply to topic Goto page Previous  1, 2 Page 2 of 2

www.eInvesting.com Forum Index » Online Investing and Technology » Do you buy stocks online?
Jump to:  




Penny Stock Simulator | What are e$? | Forum Rules | FAQ | Manage Your eInvesting Portfolio | Privacy Policy | Links
PcTechTalk | Club-tC | Lost Discussion | World Class Designs | Xtreme Tuning | Statistical Trading | Advertise with eInvesting!


Before acting on any advice or program you find here at eInvesting.com we strongly recommend that you seek independent & professional legal, tax and investment advice as to whether it is suitable for your particular needs and circumstances. Failure to seek personally tailored, detailed, professional advice prior to acting could lead you to act contrary to your own best interests and could lead to loss of money. eInvesting.com is not responsible for your actions, so do it right!

Powered by:phpBB VERSION 59
© 2005, 2006 eInvesting.com