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

How do zero fee ETFs make money? ›

Understanding a No-Fee ETF

Brokers offer to complete these trades for free in the hope of attracting new clients, who will also conduct more profitable trades with the same broker. No-fee ETFs can also make money by lending stock or offering lower interest on cash funds.

What are the cons of using Wealthfront? ›

The main con of Wealthfront is that its required $500 minimum deposit is higher than other free robo-advisors like SoFi Invest and Betterment Investing.

Does it make sense to buy multiple ETFs? ›

Experts agree that for most personal investors, a portfolio comprising 5 to 10 ETFs is perfect in terms of diversification. But the number of ETFs is not what you should be looking at.

What is a reasonable ETF fee? ›

How to find the best ETF expense ratio. High fees can turn any investment into a poor one. 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.

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? ›

Traders and investors can make money from an ETF by selling it at a higher price than what they bought it for. Investors could also receive dividends if they own an ETF that tracks dividend stocks. ETF providers make money mainly from the expense ratio of the funds they manage, as well as through transaction costs.

What is the Wealthfront controversy? ›

An SEC order found that Redwood City, California-based Wealthfront Advisers LLC (formerly known as Wealthfront Inc.), a robo-adviser with over $11 billion in client assets under management, made false statements about a tax-loss harvesting strategy it offered to clients.

What happens to my money if Wealthfront goes out of business? ›

Wealthfront Brokerage is a member of SIPC, which insures Cash Balances swept into Money Market Funds as follows: Customers are protected up to the applicable SIPC limits if Wealthfront Brokerage were to go out of business and there were customer securities or funds unaccounted for.

What happens if Wealthfront fails? ›

We protect your investments with SIPC insurance.

This protects assets up to $500,000 (including $250,000 in claims for cash). As with all securities firms, this coverage provides protection against the failure of a broker-dealer, not against a decline in the market value of your securities.

How many S&P 500 ETFs should I own? ›

SPY, VOO and IVV are among the most popular S&P 500 ETFs. These three S&P 500 ETFs are quite similar, but may sometimes diverge in terms of costs or daily returns. Investors generally only need one S&P 500 ETF.

Is 10 ETFs too many? ›

Generally speaking, fewer than 10 ETFs are likely enough to diversify your portfolio, but this will vary depending on your financial goals, ranging from retirement savings to income generation.

How much should a beginner invest in ETFs? ›

For beginners, the vast array of index funds options can be overwhelming. We recommend Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) (minimum investment: $1; expense Ratio: 0.03%); Invesco QQQ ETF (QQQ) (minimum investment: NA; expense Ratio: 0.2%); and SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust (DIA).

Are ETF fees worth it? ›

ETFs are popular with investors for a number of reasons, but investors often find the lower operating expenses most appealing. Most ETFs have low expenses compared to actively managed mutual funds. ETF expenses are usually stated in terms of a fund's OER.

What is the average fee for an actively managed ETF? ›

With 1425 ETFs traded on the U.S. markets, Active Management ETFs have total assets under management of $643.20B. The average expense ratio is 0.71%. Active Management ETFs can be found in the following asset classes: Equity.

Is spy better than voo? ›

Over the long run, they do compound—those fee differences—and investors have been putting a lot more money into VOO versus SPY. That is the reason why we view VOO slightly better than SPY. And that is just the basic approach, which is the lower the investor can pay, the better the investment is.

How do no fee brokerages make money? ›

Commission-free brokers typically receive payment (in the form of rebates) from market makers, who pay for the privilege of buying what you sell and selling what you buy. Market makers profit from the bid-ask spread (when you buy from a market maker, it's at the “ask” price, and when you sell, it's at the “bid” price).

How does Fidelity make money on free trades? ›

So, with the favorable low or no-fee structure, how does Fidelity make money? Fidelity makes money from you via: Interest on cash: Fidelity makes money from the difference between what it pays you on your idle cash or through money market mutual funds and what it earns from the cash balances.

How do ETF issuers make money? ›

The ETF issuer will hedge exposure to the swap by buying the underlying index components in the index being tracked. This means the ETF provider has these assets on its balance sheet and can generate revenue from them, through certain activities.

Are Fidelity Zero funds really free? ›

“There are no hidden fees,” says Robert Beauregard, a spokesman for Fidelity, which introduced these products. “Investors will not pay any expenses.”

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