Vanguard has fully embraced the "race to zero," allowing its brokerage clients to trade all stocks and options with no commissions. The news comes three months after rival Charles Schwab made such a move, which caused a series of larger changes in the competitive landscape, leading up to the announcement that Schwab planned to purchase TD Ameritrade for $26 billion.
Vanguard launched its first commission-free platform — including all of its mutual funds — in 1977. That was expanded to encompass Vanguard's ETFs in 2010 and many other ETFs in 2018.
Reflecting on the lead-up to Thursday's development, popular blogger and financial planner Michael Kitces tweeted (in a thread): "As Zero-Com trend continues, Vanguard's today announcing their no-transaction-fee ETF platform becomes a no-transaction-fee for stocks, options, AND ETFs platform. (And better-yielding cash.) Amazing outcome to war Vanguard fought for 2 years…"
Kitces reminded financial advisors and others in the industry about the origins of the no-transaction-fee battles and related platform issues: "Have to view this in the broader context, though. Was fall 2017 that TDA changed its NTF ETF platform, removing virtually all Vanguard funds & inserting State Street ETFs b/c Vanguard wouldn't pay to play. [Vanguard] Wasn't in Schwab's NTF platform for same reason."
On Oct. 16, 2017, TD Ameritrade eliminated about 84% of exchange-traded funds in its Market Center lineup, much to the chagrin of many advisors and their next-gen clients, Kitces commented at the time.
"In the summer of 2018, Vanguard fired back at TDA (& Schwab) by launching a no-pay-to-play zero-commission ETF platform. As we wrote at the time, this destabilized pay-to-play NTF platforms, & would lead to ZeroCom ETFs," Kitces said in another Tweet on Thursday.
"The rest," as they say, "is [recent] history."
"Sure enough, a year later Schwab announced ZeroCom on all ETFs (and stocks & options) to match (and one-up on stocks & options) what Vanguard had done," Kitces continued.
"Now Vanguard is matching Schwab's ZeroCom with no-commission stocks & options. But that's not really why people go to Vanguard in the first place. It's a 'check-the-box' adjustment for good competitive optics with Schwab, TDA, etc.," the blogger explained in a tweet.