Should You Buy Commission-Free ETFs? | Wealthfront (2024)

Much has been made of the launch of commission-free ETF trading programs at places like Charles Schwab, Fidelity, TD Ameritrade and others. But are these a good deal?

Let’s start with the positives.

If you are a retail investor regularly socking away $100 or $500 or $1,000 (or even $10,000) a month, and you’re buying ETFs and paying a commission on those trades, you’re doing yourself a disservice.

If the average portfolio holds seven ETFs (like most Wealthfront portfolios), and you’re paying a $8.95 commission each time you invest, you’re paying $63.65 to make these trades (7 * $8.95 = $63.65).

That’s 60% of your investment if you’re putting $100 to work each month, which is obviously absurd. But it’s 0.6% of your investment even if you’re putting $10,000 to work. That fee would wipe out any cost savings you get from the ETF structure, and be damaging to your financial health.

Commission-free trading programs solve this problem, and that’s great news for investors.

Except

We all know there is no free lunch, and that’s the case here too. The firms offering these commission-free programs are getting paid somehow, or else they wouldn’t do it.

The easiest way to evaluate how these companies are getting paid is by looking at Charles Schwab. As a publicly traded company, its quarterly and annual filings SEC provide the best window we have into the inner workings of programs like this.

Charles Schwab has been a leader in making money from “free” programs for years. The company dominates the “no-load mutual fund” marketplace with its Mutual Fund OneSource program, which allows individuals to buy mutual funds without paying a one-time fee or “load.” As of June 30, 2015, investors had $245 billion invested in mutual funds on the Schwab OneSource platform.

But here’s the curious thing about this “free” program: Somehow, Charles Schwab earned $200 million from these “no-load” funds in Q2 alone. Here’s the table from its Q2 10-Q filing:

Notice how it even says “Average Fee” despite being a “no-load platform?”

The reason is Charles Schwab charges mutual funds to participate in this program. The amount varies between 0.40%-0.45% per year for new funds, and according to this filing, nets out to 0.33% on average. The funds then wrap this fee into the fee they charge you, and rebate that money to Schwab.

This is actually one of the reasons ETFs were originally so disruptive. Because they were available to be traded like any other stock, distributors like Schwab couldn’t levy rent simply for making them available on a “no-load” basis.

Note that the weighted average total expense ratio of the ETFs used by Wealthfront are just 0.11% — about one-third the fee Schwab charges for mutual fund shelf space alone, even before you get to the part of the fee that goes to the fund company itself!

What About ETFs?

For years, ETF issuers refused to pay these fees for distribution. But in 2013, Schwab announced the launch of its ETF OneSource program, which offered more than 105 ETFs “commission-free” for Schwab customers. These included Schwab’s proprietary ETFs, but also third-party ETFs. ETF issuers couldn’t resist the massive distribution Schwab provides to retail investors and financial advisors, so many caved and agreed to participate.

How does Charles Schwab make money from these OneSource ETFs? The same way it does with mutual funds.

For the Charles Schwab ETFs, the game is simple: Use the commission-free come-on as a way to get new customers in the door, where Schwab can make money from them multiple ways (expense fees on the funds, selling customer trades to high frequency traders, investing cash balances in proprietary, below-market money market funds, etc).

The fee Schwab charges third party ETF providers for being on its platform is listed in this hard-to-find document that details the myriad ways Schwab profits from its customers:

  • ETF providers pay a fixed fee of up to $250,000 per fund per year to participate in the program
  • ETF providers also pay an asset fee of up to 0.20% of total assets.

In other words, the “commission-free” program costs issuers up to $250,000 per fund and 0.20% in fees each year. Not surprisingly, they pass these costs directly on to you, the customer, in the form of higher expense ratios.

Over the long haul, this will mean that funds that participate in the Schwab OneSource program have higher fees than funds that stay independent. It also means that you will see no competition on the OneSource program for low-cost, broad-based ETFs (the kind of ETFs that should dominate your portfolio). Those ETFs typically charge less than 0.20% in total fees (and often less than 0.10%), so they can’t afford to pass Charles Schwab 0.20% of their assets. The only low-cost funds you’ll be able to buy commission-free at Charles Schwab will be Charles Schwab ETFs, which will exist without competition in that marketplace.

What Does That Mean For How You Should Invest?

The rise of commission-free programs is great for do-it-yourself investors without access to scalable ways to execute extremely low-cost trading programs on an independent basis. While you sacrifice choice and probably (by proxy) quality by restricting investments to funds that are willing to hike up their expense ratios to pay Schwab’s rent, you’ll likely be better off paying these higher expense fees than if you paid commissions on your $100-$10,000 investments.

In contrast, automated investment services, like Wealthfront, can take advantage of more modern brokerage platforms and automation to eliminate the human element of investing and thus eliminate commission charges for their clients. Because they offer commission-free trading, automated investment services can choose among the best ETFs in the world and thus populate their portfolios with the type of low-fee funds that could never work in a Schwab commission-free structure.

Without a commission expense, such services can also offer value added services that potentially require frequent trading such as Wealthfront’s Daily Tax-Loss Harvesting and Stock-level Tax-Loss Harvesting– all for an advisory fee below Schwab’s “average fee” for its Mutual Fund OneSource Program.

So, in this case, even though there is no free lunch in investing, modern technology and automation can actually cure many of the ills of traditional brokerage programs.

Disclosure

Nothing in this article should be construed as a tax advice, solicitation or offer, or recommendation, to buy or sell any security. While the data Wealthfront uses from third parties is believed to be reliable, Wealthfront does not guarantee the accuracy of the information. The analysis uses information from third-party sources, which Wealthfront believes to be, however Wealthfront does not guarantee the accuracy of the information. There is a potential for loss as well as gain. Actual investors on Wealthfront may experience different results from the results shown.

Should You Buy Commission-Free ETFs? | Wealthfront (2024)

FAQs

Why are some ETFs commission-free? ›

A no-fee ETF, or zero-fee ETF, is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that can be bought and traded without paying a commission or fee to a broker. An increasing number of brokerages have been offering investors the chance to buy or sell these securities for free in order to remain competitive with other platforms.

How do zero fee ETFs make money? ›

Zero Expense Ratio Index Funds and ETFs

Zero-fee ETFs and index funds eliminate direct costs to investors primarily to attract more assets. These zero-fee funds can then make money by means other than fees, such as cross-selling other products or lending stock to clients.

How do you know if an ETF is overpriced? ›

Compare the market price to the NAV to determine if the ETF is trading at a premium or discount to its NAV. If the market price is higher than the NAV, the ETF is trading at a premium. If the NAV is lower than the price, the ETF is trading at a discount.

What is a reasonable fee for ETF? ›

Some brokers offer commission-free trading for certain ETFs, while others may charge a flat fee or a percentage of the trade value. A good range for these fees are $10 to $75 per trade. Additionally, bid-ask spreads can impact the overall cost of investing in an ETF, particularly for frequent traders.

How much money should I invest in ETFs? ›

You expose your portfolio to much higher risk with sector ETFs, so you should use them sparingly, but investing 5% to 10% of your total portfolio assets may be appropriate. If you want to be highly conservative, don't use these at all.

What is the best ETF to buy right now? ›

The best ETFs to buy now
Exchange-traded fund (ticker)Assets under managementExpenses
Vanguard 500 Index ETF (VOO)$489.5 billion0.03%
Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG)$80.8 billion0.06%
Vanguard U.S. Quality Factor ETF (VFQY)$345.8 million0.13%
SPDR Gold MiniShares (GLDM)$7.7 billion0.10%
1 more row

What is the ETF loophole? ›

That means the tax hit from winning stock bets is postponed until the investor sells the ETF, a perk holders of mutual funds, hedge funds and individual brokerage accounts don't typically enjoy. The ETF tax loophole works only on capital gains, though.

How do you actually make money from ETFs? ›

How do ETFs make money for investors?
  1. Interest distributions if the ETF invests in bonds.
  2. Dividend. + read full definition distributions if the ETF invests in stocks that pay dividends.
  3. Capital gains distributions if the ETF sells an investment. + read full definition for more than it paid.
Sep 25, 2023

What is a good expense ratio for an ETF? ›

A good rule of thumb is to not invest in any fund with an expense ratio higher than 1% since many ETFs have expense ratios that are much lower. Also, ETFs tend to be passively managed, which keeps the management fee low.

How many shares of an ETF should I buy? ›

Experts agree that for most personal investors, a portfolio comprising 5 to 10 ETFs is perfect in terms of diversification.

Why am I losing money with ETFs? ›

Market risk

The single biggest risk in ETFs is market risk. Like a mutual fund or a closed-end fund, ETFs are only an investment vehicle—a wrapper for their underlying investment. So if you buy an S&P 500 ETF and the S&P 500 goes down 50%, nothing about how cheap, tax efficient, or transparent an ETF is will help you.

Is Voo still a good investment? ›

VOO has a consensus rating of Moderate Buy which is based on 401 buy ratings, 96 hold ratings and 9 sell ratings.

Are ETF fees tax deductible? ›

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have embedded fees like the ones attached to mutual funds, and those fees are not tax deductible directly on your tax return.

How much does Fidelity charge for ETF? ›

Zero expense ratio index funds
Stocks & optionsETFsBonds & CDs
$0 per stock or options trade plus $0.65 per contract on options$0 per trade for ETFs1$1 per bond or CD in secondary trading and free for US Treasuries traded online4 The potential to save an average of $15 per bond5

Does Vanguard charge fees for ETFs? ›

You won't pay a commission to buy or sell Vanguard mutual funds and ETFs online in your Vanguard account. A few Vanguard mutual funds charge fees designed to help cover high transaction costs and discourage short-term trading.

Do you have to pay commissions on ETFs? ›

You'll typically pay a commission each time you buy or sell an ETF—but not always. Keep in mind, the smaller your investment and the more frequently you trade, the more impact these commissions will have on your bottom line.

Are all ETFs commission free on TD Ameritrade? ›

E*TRADE and TD Ameritrade are both commission-free for stocks and ETFs. TD Ameritrade charges $0.65 per options trade, while E*TRADE charges $0.65 with a price breakdown to $0.50 for traders making more than 30 trades per quarter.

Are all ETFs commission free on Schwab? ›

ETFs at Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. ("Schwab") which are U.S. exchange-listed can be traded without a commission on buy and sell transactions made online in a Schwab account. Unlisted ETFs are subject to a commission. Trade orders placed through a broker will receive the negotiated broker-assisted rate.

Are all ETFs commission free at Fidelity? ›

Free commission offer applies to online purchases of select iShares ETFs in a Fidelity brokerage account. The sale of ETFs is subject to an activity assessment fee (from $0.01 to $0.03 per $1,000 of principal). ETFs are subject to market fluctuation and the risks of their underlying investments.

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