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Strategies & Market Trends : The Final Frontier - Online Remote Trading -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: agent99 who wrote (7709)10/6/1999 6:00:00 PM
From: TFF  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12617
 
Datek Founder Citron Leaves to Start Technology Firm (Update1)

Edison, New Jersey, Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Datek Online
Holdings Corp.'s 29-year-old founder and top executive left the
firm, distancing the Internet brokerage and stock-trading network
from a controversial past as it considers when to go public.

Jeffrey Citron was succeeded as chairman and chief executive
by Edward J. Nicoll, 46, who had been president and chief
operating officer. Nicoll joined Edison, New Jersey-based Datek
eight months ago as head of its brokerage business.

Citron, who began day-trading stocks as a teenager, owns
just under one-third of Datek. He gained control of the firm in
1997 after merging it with a software company he co-owned. That
year he, two associates and Datek were cited for violating
National Association of Securities Dealers rules. All were fined
and suspended for a period.
''It's no secret we've had our controversies in the past,''
Nicoll said in an interview. ''We want to move forward and put
the past in the past.''

Citron said he left because Datek had achieved his goals and
he wants to start a new company and spend more time with his wife
and young daughter.
''We now have 800 people -- we've done it all in 20
months,'' he said. ''Datek's regulatory issues have no bearing
whatsoever on my decision. It just feels right now.''

Datek in July raised $195 million from France's Groupe
Arnault and TA Associates, a Boston venture capital firm. Two
months earlier, Vulcan Ventures, a Seattle-based firm controlled
by Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, opted out of a $300
million private stock sale on the final day, declining to say
why. The New York Times reported Vulcan withdrew because of
concerns about criminal and regulatory investigations of Datek.

SEC Fine

In May, the Securities and Exchange Commission fined Datek
$50,000 for filing false financial reports and illegally using
customer funds to pay bills in the spring of 1998. The firm's
former chief financial officer was also fined and suspended.

In 1997, the securities dealers association fined Citron
$20,000 and suspended him for 20 days for violating rules of the
NASD's Small Order Execution System, aimed at allowing small
investors' orders to receive treatment equal to that accorded
orders from large institutions. Also fined and suspended were the
firm, then known as Datek Securities Corp., and two of Citron's
fellow traders, Aaron Elbogen and Sheldon Maschler.

Maschler once worked for Robert Brennan, the former owner of
now-defunct penny-stock brokerage First Jersey Securities Inc.
who has been permanently barred from the securities business for
illegal sales tactics and price manipulation.

Citron has said he had no business connection to Brennan,
though he bought a jet Brennan once owned as well as a waterfront
mansion, which Citron razed to build a larger home.

Business Sold

In March 1998 Datek sold its professional day-trading
business -- where Citron worked from 1998 to 1992 -- to its
principals so it could focus on its online brokerage, the
industry's fifth largest, and the Island ECN Inc., the second-
biggest electronic order-execution network.

Citron said he isn't selling his Datek stake and has
committed to supporting Datek's board for two years.
''Ed's going to do a great job,'' he said. ''After all, I
hired the guy.''

Nicoll helped found what is now TD Waterhouse Group Inc.,
the fourth-biggest Internet broker by trading volume, in 1978. He
left more than 15 years later to get a law degree after the firm
was sold to Toronto-Dominion Bank.

John Frary, who recently retired as deputy general counsel
of Prudential Securities, succeeds Citron on Datek's eight-member
board.

The firm has enough cash to fund operations, including a
$120 million ad campaign, ''for the foreseeable future,'' Nicoll
said. It needs to go public to keep its best employees, he said.
''Part of our ability to attract and retain new young talent
is by being a pre-IPO company,'' he said. ''We have to at some
point give them a liquidity event.''

Travel, Then Work

Citron declined to disclose plans for his new ''stealth''
Internet start-up, other than to say it ''will change the world
again.'' First, he plans three weeks of family travel.

Datek is really two startups, the brokerage and Island,
that began operations less than three years ago, Citron said. In
that time Citron, and Nicoll, have hired a dozen top executives,
many securities industry veterans. Island has filed to become a
stock exchange while Datek this month starts the ad campaign.
''The private offering gives Datek everything it needs to
kill the world,'' Citron said.



To: agent99 who wrote (7709)10/6/1999 7:30:00 PM
From: TFF  Respond to of 12617
 
>>>>But the once-clear line between conventional online trading and day trading is blurring.

When was there a clear line? Well nice to see the media figuring it out. Better late than never.

Welcome to the world of "Online Remote Trading" Rebecca.



To: agent99 who wrote (7709)10/7/1999 2:52:00 PM
From: TFF  Respond to of 12617
 
American Express Offers Free Online Trading to Affluent Customers

1.54 p.m. ET (1754 GMT) October 6, 1999
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — American Express Financial Advisors is offering free Internet stock trading to customers with account balances of $100,000 or more.
The company, which has overseen American Express Co.'s online trading business since 1997, announced the move on Tuesday. The perk is being offered as part of an upgrade of the company's online investment services.

It is believed to be the first company offering free online trading, although some businesses have reduced commissions to as little as $4.95 a trade.

Customers with at least $25,000 in their accounts will be able to buy stocks for free, but a sale will cost $14.95. Those with accounts below $25,000 will pay $14.95 to buy or sell stock.

American Express Financial Advisors has been trying to increase its client asset base of $230 billion in an effort to compete against such mutual fund giants as Fidelity and Schwab that have aggressively built online businesses.

"We think by offering this price model, what we in fact will get are people who will want to move significant assets to us," said spokesman Tom Joyce.

The company, which stressed that the upgraded services will include advice from professional financial planners, said new customers will "over time need the help of an adviser, or want to do other things besides simply trading stocks."

The free trading, to be launched this fall, is expected to be a loss leader to bring customers through the doors.

Free trading is not likely to become the norm said analyst, Tim Klein of U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray.

"There may be some followers on this free pitch, but I wouldn't expect it to become a wholesale trend," Klein said.

Klein said a more important trend in the brokerage industry is wrap accounts, in which clients pay a fee equal to a percentage of their assets in exchange for unlimited trading.

Online trading makes up 37 percent of all retail trades, according to Piper Jaffray.



© 1999, News America Digital Publishing, Inc. d/b/a Fox Market Wire.
All rights reserved. Fox Market Wire is a trademark of 20th Century Fox Film Corp.

© 1999 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



To: agent99 who wrote (7709)10/8/1999 10:47:00 AM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 



A Look at Online Trading -- through the Crystal Ball
STREET WISE By Amey Stone October 7, 1999

Will full-service or discount brokers win online? Will Net trading fees vanish? Those were just two of the hotly debated issues at New York's Internet World trade show

As much as trade show organizers endeavor to pack their events with announcements that will generate buzz, such conferences don't typically produce much real news. But they can be an excellent way to get at the big picture in an industry -- to find out what some of the sharpest minds in a field think about where their business is going and what hurdles it must overcome. In fact, a series of panels on online financial services at Internet World in New York City during the week of Oct. 4-8 prompted a surprisingly lively debate over which strategies are most likely to succeed on the Web. Here are the questions that sparked the most intense debate -- and that are most relevant to investors in Web brokerages and related companies.

Will the fees that online brokerages charge eventually fall to zero?
Merrill Lynch Internet analyst Henry Blodget, who doesn't officially cover brokerage stocks, asked this question of the panelists who do. Blodget seemed to think so, calling trading "a commodity" and pointing to announcements of lower fees, such as E*Trade Group's (EGRP) August revelation that it was cutting prices for active traders to as low as $4.95. In another example, American Express (AXP), announced on Oct. 5 that it would offer free Web trading for customers whose accounts exceed $100,000.

There will be a class of wealthy clients who get to trade free online, and some discount brokers may experiment with free trading, but commissions won't go to zero for everyone, argued Credit Suisse First Boston analyst James Marks. That's because of simple economics. He estimates the cost per online trade at $7 or $8, so brokers would suffer a negative return if they went to zero. "Some companies will come out with zero pricing, but I don't think they are going to have staying power," Marks said.

To deflect pricing pressures, companies such as E*Trade will need to broaden their offerings so they manage more money for customers -- through mutual funds, for example -- and become less dependent on day traders, said Jupiter Communications analyst Rob Sterling. "It's going to be a tough business for the next couple of years," he added.

What will happen to the online brokers in the event of a stock market crash?
Clearly they will suffer, the panelists agreed. "At the bottom of the cycle, everyone is at risk," says Bill Burnham a former e-commerce stock analyst who is now a general partner at Softbank Capital Partners. But as long as the market doesn't implode and the firms monitor risks carefully, "they should be able to survive a market downturn," he says.

In fact, online brokers may be in better shape to weather a downturn than the big investment banks, says Marks. That's because they don't have major costs such as high-paid analysts and bankers, and they don't engage in risky trading of the firm's own capital or make large loans that can get them in deep trouble.

Still, says Marks, it's hard to tell how exposed the discount brokers are to margin risk (basically, the risk that their customers won't be able to cover margin calls if stocks plummet). "I spend a lot of time asking them how they assess risk, and they all say the right things," Marks added. "But until it actually happens, you don't know."

Who will win online -- discount or full-service brokers?
"I think full-service brokerages will get their clocks cleaned online," said Softbank Capital's Burnham. He argued that full-service firms won't be able to offer discounted online trading without angering, and losing, their full-service brokers. Dealing with the inherent conflict in the sales channel will be so daunting, Marks thinks, that an investment bank like Goldman Sachs has a better opportunity to expand into online trading than a Merrill Lynch.

Blodget, sticking up for his firm, disagreed. He argued that trading is a commodity that simply takes time away from the primary job of a stockbroker -- matching investment opportunities with clients and disseminating ideas.

The market has been so strong that it has been a great time to be a broker -- full-service or discount, Marks said. The real battle will come when the market turns south and the amount of money to be made in the brokerage business shrinks.

Can financial Web portals compete with online brokerages?
Burnham doesn't seem to think they can. He argued that brokerages, which generate revenues from trading, can provide richer investing content than sites such as Yahoo! Finance and Microsoft MoneyCentral, which rely on advertising and sponsorships. A key, he said, is that discount brokers can afford to buy Wall Street research from the top brokerage houses and use it as a loss leader to attract more clients. For this reason, he sees a 60%-to-70% chance that TheStreet.com (TSCM) will be acquired by a brokerage house.

Where are the online banks?
They're coming, said Marks. He thinks that WingspanBank.com, a spin-off of Bank One (ONE), is the most exciting player. Sterling argues that while brokerages are popular during a bull market, online banks will have the advantage in a stock market downturn. But Marks doesn't think that online brokerages need to rush to buy up banks to get into the highly regulated industry. For example, he thinks it was unwise for E*Trade to buy Telebank for $1.8 billion in stock when, he calculates, it could have built its own bank for less money.

Is VerticalOne onto something?
The site, which launched on Aug. 2 with a few partners ("In Online Bill Paying, It's BankOne vs. VerticalOne," BW Online, Aug. 26), plans eventually to offer consumers one place where they can pay bills, check bank balances, monitor credit-card accounts, and review their frequent-flier miles. Security First Corp. (SONE) announced in late September that it was buying the company for $166 million in stock. Burnham called VerticalOne "the biggest thing to hit financial services." Panelists from Microsoft MoneyCentral and Quicken.com agreed that they were keeping an eye on it.

Still, Jupiter Communications analyst Rob Sterling thinks financial-services companies can easily keep customer data from being distributed to VerticalOne, as well as to other sites that try to do the same thing. "It's going to be a battle," said Sterling. Burnham didn't believe financial companies could legally block customer data when the customer had requested that it be passed along. But Marks said that doesn't matter since anyone who legally or technically blocked the flow of data would alienate customers.

What will be the next big thing to hit online financial services?
Bill payment and presentment (allowing consumers to review bills online), is coming, although it has been slow out of the gate, panelists said. Financial Web sites are eager to offer the service since it is "sticky," meaning that it will keep customers coming back.

Also on the way are online insurers. Most insurance sites today, including InsWeb (INSW) and Quotesmith.com (QUOT), compile information from multiple carriers and refer customers to the insurance company with the best price. But a new site called E*Coverage is the first true online underwriter and worth watching, said Marks.

How do the three key online financial services stack up when it comes to taking advantage of the power of the Internet? Marks rated discount brokers way out in front of the trends, followed by mortgage lenders, and then insurers.

Amey Stone is an associate editor at Business Week Online