It all depends, how many trades you will execute in a month, quarter, year? how many share lots typically you buy? Will you be trading pennystocks(unlimited shares is attractive) , mid-cap(fast execution is important) etc.?
Frequent/active trader:
Consider CIBC Edge Advantage as they are the cheapest when it comes to flat rate(unlimited shares) and includes all ECN fee's.
- $395 for 50 trades / year (unlimited shares). Works out to be $7.95/trade for the first 50 trades, and $6.95/trade after
Also their pricing structure allows you to purchase the same stock as MANY times as you like during the day, and you’ll only be charged for 1 trade. This is a dream come true for scalpers that will go in and out numerous times on the same stock to exploit the range, i.e. AAPL, SPY . I don't know any broker that does this.
Alternatively, you can go with TD Waterhouse under the active trader pricing structure.
- 150+ Trades/Quarter $6.99 flat (unlimited shares)
- 30-149 Trades/Quarter $9.99 flat (unlimited shares)
Alternatively you can go with Interactive Brokers with their bundled commission ( includes ECN fee's) if you trade less than 1k shares buy/sell(they charge per share) it's cheap. 100 shares=$1 , 1000 shares=$5, 5000 shares=$25. As you can see, when you increase share lot, you start to pay more commission. IB also has one of the fastest executions out of any broker.
Infrequent trader:
Questrade is the cheapest and you under no obligation to do certain number of trades per quarter, year etc. No inactivity fee. they have pricing structure where 1cent=share however min. is $4.95 and max is 9.95 you will pay and unlimited shares. Keep in mind as well, if you trade US securities in a registered account ( i.e. RRSP, TFSA) you will pay additional 5$ max per day regardless how many times you trade.
ThinkOrSwim Canada can be the next best thing if you get them to lower the pricing to $7.99 flat (upto 5k shares) You just have to ask kindly Also you are under no obligation to do certain number of trades per quarter, year etc. No inactivity fee.
0 comments:
Post a Comment