JPMorgan undercuts discount brokerages on trades

Reuters  |  NEW YORK 

(Reuters) - & Co, in a bid to lure customers from the discount brokerage industry, said on Tuesday it will begin offering free stock trades for self-managed accounts through its Chase app starting next week.

The service will be part of a new suite of called "You Invest" through which customers will get at least 100 free trades of stocks and exchange-traded funds in their first year, a said on Tuesday.

As part of the You Invest offering the also plans to launch online managed portfolios early next year, the said.

The industry had been anticipating some sort of dramatic move by JPMorgan for several years. In April 2017 said in his annual letter that an "inexpensive" was coming by the end of that year. He also has talked adding free services as part of a bigger consumer package, much like he has seen do with its Prime service.

Still, the amount of price-cutting, coupled with the bank's widely-used app, makes the move by the biggest U.S. potentially disruptive to the discount brokerage industry pioneered by Corp.

"While this has been telegraphed for some time, JPM entering the discount brokerage market is not your given its size, scale and global brand," equity analysts at Jefferies said in a note on Tuesday.

Shares of were down 2.35 percent to $50.21 Tuesday afternoon, while shares of were down 7.53 percent to $55.62. E*Trade Financial Corp's stock was down more than 4.25 percent to $58.63.

The move follows other disruptive actions by JPMorgan in what analysts have called a "scorched earth" strategy against competitors to take market share in profitable business across and finance--from credit cards to commercial lending to securities custody.

The new are being offered to so-called "mass affluent" customers with no minimum initial investment size, as well as to wealthier clients.

After one year of free trades, the bank expects to add some charges, with pricing depending on the type of account.

In comparison, Schwab currently charges $4.95 on stock trades while TD Ameritrade charges $6.95 per trade.

JPMorgan's new service will also compete with startups like Robinhood, an which offers commission-free U.S. stocks and ETFs trading.

(Reporting by and in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, August 22 2018. 01:22 IST