The new unit

Published: 6 October 1999 y., Wednesday
American Express Co., the financial services firm that owns the signature green charge card, said Tuesday it will turn its flagging online brokerage into a new Web broker with lower commissions and free stock trades for wealthy clients later this autumn. The new unit, which is called American Express Brokerage, will charge customers $14.95 a trade for up to 3,000 shares per order. For customers with more than $25,000 in their accounts buy orders are free, and those with account balances over $100,000 will pay nothing to trade stocks. All customers will pay 3 cents a share for orders of more than 3,000 shares. American Express_ share price Tuesday gained 4-1/2, or 3.3 percent, to 142-1/16 in trading on the New York Stock exchange around noon. The shares Monday had gained 6-3/16, or 4.7 percent, to close at 137-9/16. The new unit will offer more mutual funds, customer service and financial planning tools than its existing Web brokerage, Financial Direct. Company officials declined to pinpoint an exact launch date for the new unit, which will be run by the Minneapolis-based American Express Financial Advisors division, other than saying this autumn. For customers with more than $100,000 in their accounts the free stock trades come with no strings attached, unlike the $1,500 annual full-service broker Merrill Lynch and Co. Inc. will charge customers for free online trades. The company hopes, though, that these clients will bring in fee income when they turn to American Express_ 9,300 financial planners for other advice, American Express executives said in a conference call.
Šaltinis: Netscape News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Putin reassures Russia on economy

Vladimir Putin appeared on live television and radio for his annual question-and answer session with the public. more »

EUFISERV Payments, ATM Scheme comply with SEPA; separate from processing biz in Europe

EUFISERV Payments announced today that the separation of the EUFISERV ATM Scheme from EUFISERV's former processing business is now complete, and is in line with the SEPA requirements of the European Central Bank and the European Commission. more »

Detroit impacts Mexico's economy

600,000 Mexicans work in the auto and auto parts industries, and U.S. automakers run around a dozen plants. more »

Time for Britain to join euro?

The President of the European Commission Jose Barroso says some British politicians are considering signing up to the euro more »

U.S. officially in a recession

It's official. The U.S. economy is in a recession. more »

Credit crunch – the EU at work

The crisis that started in the US over a year ago has sent shock waves around the globe. more »

Kick-starting the economy

Offering a coordinated response to the EU’s deepening economic crisis, the Commission is proposing €200bn in measures to boost purchasing power and generate growth and jobs. more »

UK promises billions in stimulus

The two men charged with keeping Britain's economy afloat moved on Monday to ward off a deepening recession. more »

An aging Europe - MEPs call for social security reform

European citizens are getting older and greyer. By 2050 it is estimated that the average age in the European Union will be 49, up from 39 now. more »

Obama's economic stimulus plan

Addressing U.S citizens, Barack Obama spoke of plans to revive the economy. more »