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Non-Tech : timberhill.com's limit/market goes for $0.01/sr

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To: Marty Rubin who wrote ()10/30/1999 11:13:00 PM
From: Marty Rubin  Read Replies (1) of 7
 
here's wsj article from friday (29th) c13 (top-right column).

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Timber Unit Offers Online
Penny-a-Share Trading


By a WALL STREET JOURNAL Staff Reporter

GREENWICH, Conn. -- The steady drop in online trading commissions shows no signs of slowing.

Interactive Brokers, a unit of options and derivatives market-making firm Timber Hill, announced Thursday it will offer online trading at just a penny a share. Translation: A 100 share order would cost investors just $1, even if it is a "limit order," or a request to buy or sell a stock at a certain price.

The rate structure at the firm is aimed at high-roller traders, including former market professionals and highly sophisticated individual investors, because it is most competitive for trades of 5,000 shares and more.

The move comes amid a broader decline in some online commissions. One firm, Chase Manhattan Corp. unit Brown & Co., charges as little as $5 a trade. Many brokers, however, charge more for limit orders and orders to buy more exotic products, such as stock options.

There's no reason small investors can't use the one-cent trading service. Indeed, there is a $1 minimum trading commission, meaning investors can route trades of 100 shares through Interactive Brokers, for instance. To sign up, an investor needs to open an account with a minimum of $2,000 for both stocks and options, fill out a form and go through an "educational review" to determine whether the investor understands the securities he or she intends to trade.

Copyright © 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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