Since dropping commissions for online exchange-listed stock, domestic and Canadian exchange-traded funds and option trades Oct. 3, TD Ameritrade experienced a 49% increase in average daily new account openings compared with what was seen in the quarter ending Sept. 30 prior to the change, according to the firm.
At the same time, according to Tim Hockey, its CEO and president, the firm has seen a "wave of price-sensitive" customers "coming home" to TD Ameritrade after transferring some or all of their assets to rivals over the years, he said Tuesday in his commentary on the quarter's results that were posted on the firm's website. Those clients ranged from smaller accounts to those with multimillion-dollar portfolios, he noted.
Hours after Schwab announced plans to eliminate commissions on online trades for stocks, ETFs and options starting Oct. 7, TD Ameritrade said Oct. 1 that it planned to do the same, albeit four days earlier, on Oct. 3. Like Schwab, TD Ameritrade is now charging 65 cents per contract for options trades.
While it's "possible that the lower price point could have an impact on trading volumes," Hockey said Tuesday it was "too soon to identify any definitive trends."
TD Ameritrade had an offering in the late 1990s and early 2000s called Freetrade, whose clients were "significantly more active than our core client population," he pointed out. But that was a "very different value proposition in a very different time, so it's not likely that we'll see exactly what we saw back then," he predicted. The firm will, however, "monitor it closely," he noted.