E*Trade Buys CyberWorks, J.P. Morgan Online Clients (Update2)
E*Trade Buys CyberWorks, J.P. Morgan Online Clients (Update2) (Adds comment from E*Trade's Lord in third paragraph, number of online accounts in H.K., E*Trade's H.K. staff.)
Hong Kong, Dec. 13 (Bloomberg) -- E*Trade Group Inc. said it's buying the clients of 2Cube Securities Ltd., the online trading business that Pacific Century CyberWorks Ltd. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. set up 13 months ago.
The No. 4 Internet broker by client assets said it will buy 8,000 accounts -- 4,600 of which traded at least once in the past six months -- for an undisclosed sum. An executive at one of the companies said E*Trade paid about $1.4 million -- that's $300 per active account, or 18 trades per client before it breaks even.
Competition among Internet-based securities trading firms increased as more brokers entered the market during the past year. The government plans to scrap minimum trading commissions in April, increasing competition for the city's 500 brokers. ``We're taking a leadership position in a market that's consolidating,'' said John Lord, vice president Asia-Pacific at E*Trade Group Inc. ``There's a concern that not all brokers are going to survive.''
Hong Kong has 115 registered online brokers -- about 20 percent of all brokers in the city -- and about one million retail accounts. Online trading has risen to 11 percent of stock exchange trading, from 4 percent last year.
CyberWorks and J.P. Morgan said a year ago they would invest a combined $34 million in 2Cube. The Hong Kong-based unit, which has 29 employees, will end operations Jan. 14, 2Cube said in a statement. The purchase was reported earlier by the South China Morning Post.
E*Trade, which said it has 65 employees in Hong Kong, will allow the customers it transfers from 2Cube to pay either a flat fee of HK$130 ($16.66) -- the same as all E*Trade customers in Hong Kong -- or a 0.18 percent commission with a minimum of HK$88 on each trade for a period of six months.
In an effort to attract all customers to sign up, E*Trade is also offering 2Cube customers access to J.P. Morgan research for six months.
CyberWorks, Hong Kong's biggest phone company, has been retreating from non-telecommunications services while J.P. Morgan has been focusing on its institutional business.
2cube was one of 12 members of the Hong Kong Association of Online Brokers. |