Fidelity Investments’ retail-facing online brokerage platform now supports fractional share trading.
Beginning Wednesday, investors using Fidelity’s mobile app can now buy or sell in increments as small as 0.1% of a share of an exchange-traded fund or equity. Fractional trading, which Fidelity also calls “dollar-based investing,” will be available in retail brokerage accounts, individual retirement accounts and health savings accounts.
The feature will not be available immediately to financial advisers using Fidelity Institutional’s custody and clearing platform. Fidelity vice president of communications Nicole Abbot said in an email that the company is “currently gauging demand for this capability from advisers and working with them to address how we can meet their specific trading needs.”
Scott Ignall, head of Fidelity’s retail brokerage business, said dollar-based investing will make investing more accessible. For example, someone with just $500 to invest can buy a piece of the most popular, and most expensive, stocks, like Apple or Amazon. Or they can diversify by putting just $100 into five different stocks.
“Customers can now own a piece of their favorite companies and ETFs based on how much they want to invest, independent of share price,” Mr. Ignall said in a statement.
Fractional share trading, in combination with commission-free trading, which Fidelity implemented in October, allows investors to take advantage of dollar-cost averaging, which divides the total amount a person wants to invest across periodic purchases of a stock or ETF. A person could have $50 from each paycheck automatically directed into a brokerage or retirement account.
Fractional trading is the latest trend sweeping through the brokerage industry as firms look to bring on smaller, younger investors. Charles Schwab announced plans for fractional trading in late 2019, though it has not specified when it plans to make it available.
Several digital startups, which have proven popular with millennial investors, already support fractional trading. Robinhood, a mobile brokerage app that topped 10 million accounts in 2019 and offered commission-free trading long before firms like Schwab or Fidelity made the move, began supporting fractional share trading in December. Competing digital brokerage Motif Investing offered fractional trading even earlier.
Several robo-advice startups, including Betterment, Acorns and Wealthfront, also use fractional shares in order to offer managed portfolios with low or no minimum account requirements.
To differentiate its offering from what is already available on the market, Fidelity said fractional trades will be executed in real time during market hours, as opposed to other firms that execute fractional trades at the end of a trading day or wait for multiple orders to add up to a full share.
Fidelity also pointed out that it has a higher cash sweep rate than other online brokerages and forgoes payments-for-order flow. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. recently said it plans to probe cash sweep programs at brokerages, and, in December, fined Robinhood $1.25 million for order-flow procedures.
“Fidelity’s size, private structure, and leading positions across various marketplaces (including retail, institutional and intermediary) are unmatched in our industry and put us in a unique position to deliver greater value to our customers,” Mr. Ignall said. “In addition, customers have access to unmatched stock and ETF research to confirm or generate new investing ideas.”
A new survey finds that many women prioritize financial security but continue to leave savings in accounts that may not keep pace with inflation.
Roundhill, Bitwise and GraniteShares funds remain on hold while the agency weighs how novel ETFs should be regulated.
"Shares of alternative assets managers have lagged this year as investors grow wary of private-credit exposure."
The fintech platform is touting a new AI-free Planning Observations feature, which draws on IRS tax records to uncover opportunities for advisors.
The Omaha, Nebraska-based RIA's latest acquisition expands its Rocky Mountain footprint after two prior Colorado deals last year.
Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income
Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.