Waterhouse Bans Web Trades Of Some Bulletin Board Stocks
By STACY FORSTER THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION
If you're a customer of TD Waterhouse and like to trade OTC Bulletin Board stocks in your online brokerage account, you may be in for a bit of a surprise.
Just ask Joe Prugh.
He recently tried to sell a block of shares in an OTC Bulletin Board-traded stock through Waterhouse (www.waterhouse.com), but when he tried to confirm the trade all he received was an error message telling him he couldn't trade the stock electronically. So, he contacted Waterhouse's customer service by telephone.
After consulting with a representative, he was shocked to learn the brokerage firm had instituted a new policy that bans online trading in certain OTC Bulletin Board stocks. The OTC Bulletin Board is an electronic quotation system that is operated by the National Association of Securities Dealers, which also runs the Nasdaq Stock Market.
Mr. Prugh, who hails from Stafford, Va., says Waterhouse never notified him about the change in policy. Waterhouse, the online brokerage arm of Canada's Toronto-Dominion Bank, says it instituted the new policy the first week of March to restrict online trades of certain thinly-traded OTC Bulletin Board shares in an effort to protect customers from price volatility. The list of companies that are restricted is available on Waterhouse's Web site.
The new policy also could hit investors' pockets. In order to buy or sell OTC stocks through Waterhouse, customers must place a trade with a broker over the phone. The broker-assisted rate cost $45, as opposed to $12 through Waterhouse's online-trading system, WebBroker.
Waterhouse has taken heat in the past from customers who complain about waiting 45 minutes to an hour to speak to a customer-service representative. With the rapidly changing prices of some OTC Bulletin Board shares, investors could be out of luck if they have to wait that long to place an order.
John Chapel, an executive vice president at Waterhouse and head of U.S. operations, says Waterhouse's call-center capacity has improved and customers now may spend only five minutes waiting to place a trade.
At the time he called Waterhouse, Mr. Prugh says he was incorrectly informed by a representative that Waterhouse customers were banned from trading all OTC stocks online. In actuality, says Mr. Chapel, the ban only affects 36 of the nearly 5,000 OTC shares traded there.
Waterhouse says it is making an effort to notify customers of the change through its Web site, when they place their orders and when a customer contacts an associate. Mr. Chapel attributes the confusion in Mr. Prugh's case to kinks in a new system and miscommunication between customers and customer-service representatives.
Like many complaints about online brokerages, word about Waterhouse's new policy quickly spread through Internet message boards, and many customers aren't happy about the change.
"I'm upset that they will not allow me to sell existing positions," wrote one participant on a Silicon Investor message board devoted to Waterhouse customer service.
By forcing customers to go through a live broker, Waterhouse says, customers can receive up-to-date quotes on the rapidly changing prices of the stocks on the restricted list.
"We needed to step in and protect the customers to ensure they're getting the best information possible when making these trades," says Lou Giacalone, head of Waterhouse's risk-management department.
The reputation of OTC Bulletin Board stocks has been battered in recent years amid accusations of fraud and manipulation. OTC Bulletin Board companies usually are too small to be listed by a recognized exchange, such as the New York Stock Exchange, or quoted on Nasdaq's national or small-cap markets. Trading in most OTC Bulletin Board stocks is dominated by individuals because institutional investors, such as pension and mutual funds, often are prohibited by their charters from owning issues that tiny and illiquid. And because the shares have small floats and trade for less than $5 a share, they are prone to volatility and easily can be hyped and manipulated.
Analysts suggest Waterhouse is making a smart move by looking out for their customers in what is becoming an increasingly risky and speculative market.
"Some investors will argue that they're being shut out, but [Waterhouse is] trying to protect the investors and themselves," says Dan Burke, an analyst at Gomez Advisors, based in Lincoln, Mass. He says investors are better served by being aware of this risk and knowing the potential for rapid swings in prices of these shares.
Surprisingly, it's exactly this reason that has attracted speculative investors to the thousands of stocks that currently are traded on the OTC Bulletin Board.
The OTC Bulletin Board reported record volume of 24.2 billion shares traded last month, soaring from 5.2 billion in February 1999. Dollar volume of trading also is rapidly expanding, reaching $24.6 billion in February compared with $3.9 billion in the year-earlier period. The Nasdaq Stock Market recorded an average of 1.8 billion trades a day in February, compared with 1.2 billion trades a day on the OTC Bulletin Board.
"OTC Bulletin Board stocks had become very popular and very volatile and subject to broad movements without merit," Waterhouse's Mr. Chapel says.
Clark Yingst, vice president and market analyst at Prudential Securities, says his firm has seen "frenzied and unprecedented levels of activity in the Bulletin Board stocks over the last few to several weeks," including trades made by some of the firm's most conservative clients. "Based on our experience, that's a sign of an unhealthy willingness to speculate," he says.
The stock Mr. Prugh was attempting to sell, 21st Century Technologies, a Fort Worth, Texas, firearms-technology company, is one of the 36 stocks that Waterhouse has identified as volatile and has banned from trading online. Waterhouse says it has no plans to greatly expand the universe of stocks on the list. The brokerage firm will make decisions about which stocks to add or remove from the list based on information it receives from market makers -- the traders who maintain bid and offer prices in a given security, Mr. Chapel says.
Mr. Chapel looked at a positive side of the new policy. He says the most up-to-the-minute information about a share's price can't be provided online because of the nature of the OTC Bulletin Board, which isn't automated and therefore doesn't provide real-time quotes.
"When a customer is out there buying on the Internet, [he] may not be as familiar with a OTC Bulletin Board stock," Mr. Chapel says. "When we take a customer off-line, we also tell them about the risks inherent in trading these kinds of stocks. We do a lot more for our customers than is necessary because it's in their best interest."
But Mr. Prugh resents the move. "To take a particular stock out of the air and say, 'O.K., we're not going to trade this particular stock.' I'm not sure how that can protect a customer," Mr. Prugh says. "[If they're going to do it], they need to take the whole family of them. Almost every [OTC Bulletin Board stock] is as volatile as the ones we're trading."
Mr. Prugh says he's received no response from Waterhouse to his complaints about the policy, and he's planning to transfer all of his assets to another discount broker that will allow him to make online trades of OTC stocks.
He's likely to find one. E*Trade Group, Fidelity Investments and Charles Schwab, Waterhouse's biggest online rivals, all say they haven't experienced problems providing real-time quotes for OTC Bulletin Board stocks, nor do they have similar policies in place that restrict trading in these shares.
Mr. Chapel says Waterhouse is investigating Mr. Prugh's case and will contact him shortly.
Mr. Burke of Gomez Advisors says although Waterhouse is the only online brokerage to change its policy for trading OTC Bulletin Boards, it's likely that others will soon follow. "At some point it comes down to a business decision," he says.
Write to Stacy Forster at stacy.forster@wsj.com |