Flat Dollar

  

Categories: Trading, Banking

When brokers charge fees on trades, those fees are usually calculated one of two ways. One way is by charging a percentage of the overall trade amount; i.e., a 10% fee on a $100 trade would be ten dollars. The other way is via a flat dollar fee, which is the same regardless of the trade amount. So if our broker charges a flat dollar fee of $5 per trade, we pay $5 per trade, regardless of whether we’re trading five bucks or five million bucks.

Obviously, if we’re only trading five dollars, a flat dollar fee of five dollars isn’t our most economical choice. But if we’re trading a lot more than that in a given transaction, a flat dollar fee might end up saving us a ton of commish over a percentage fee.

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Finance: What is Compensation: Advisory ...2 Views

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Finance a la shmoop what are advisory fee limits? well they're basically a

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price ceiling above which financial advisors can't go yeah I can't go they [Financial advisors in an elevator and hit price ceiling]

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can't touch that ceiling you know like hammer time, can't touch this...

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so when you invest in a mutual fund you pay two fees there's a commission

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and there's an annual management fee usually based on the assets you have

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with them under management like maybe it's one percent on the first hundred [Asset rises]

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grand that you have and then half a percent above a million or whatever

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but there is a third and insidious fee element in the world called advisory

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fees like how do you choose which fund to buy well if you have a financial

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advisor they'll walk you through the lists of mutual funds out there and [Ice cream flavors appear]

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index funds and all other set of funds as well well they're like a gazillion of

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them and then that advisor will charge you for their time in some form right

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someone's got to pay for their beach house well if you start adding up all

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the fees you're paying for arguably no better performance than had you just [Itemized list of fees appear]

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logged onto schwab.com or fidelity.com and bought an index fund hmm

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well then you're gonna start to pause here it starts to be a big number in

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those fees that eat meaningfully into your investment returns most buyers of [Pacman fees eating up money]

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mutual funds are not financial gurus yeah not like that they're doctors and

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lawyers and plumbing parts distributors and they really don't have a

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sophisticated understanding of just how badly they could get taken by

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unscrupulous financial advisors so the industry placed a series of structured

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limits to keep the non gurus safe from the financial predators when it comes to

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compensation and fee limits you know on advisory services and predators like [Tiger walking by]

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this guy

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