top of page

Studentengruppe

Öffentlich·106 Mitglieder
Isaiah Bennett
Isaiah Bennett

How Much Does Edward Jones Charge To Buy Stock


Buying and selling CDs on the secondary market (i.e. the stock market) is something Edward Jones does because it is a broker. These CDs, known as secondary CDs, have already been issued. So if you make a transaction with a secondary CD, you are not the first person (or firm) to buy or sell it. Secondary CDs are useful because you have the ability to get your principal investment back. For example, if you invest $2,000 in a two-year CD but something happens after one year and you need to use that $2,000, you can sell your CD to someone else and attempt to recoup your money.




how much does edward jones charge to buy stock


DOWNLOAD: https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Ftinourl.com%2F2uidyz&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AOvVaw2fdXDKGFNyvMPEx6twCisc



WallStreetZen does not provide financial advice and does not issue recommendations or offers to buy stock or sell any security.Information is provided 'as-is' and solely for informational purposes and is not advice. WallStreetZen does not bear any responsibility for any losses or damage that may occur as a result of reliance on this data.


In 2019 I wrote a check for $100,000 TWICE (200,000) and for just this one account the fee was over $17,000, and that does not include selling fees and other accounts, they told me that is the way it is and they were in the same range as other advisors, NOT TRUE, plus on top of that we had lost about $359,000 in stock market, and they don't care they are making a REAL good living, before I gave them these checks I asked them to help me with fees a few times. I wish I had left them years ago as I'm 75yo, people you can get is S%P 500 if you don't know anything about stocks and save a lot of money


In less than 8 months I lost 10% of my portfolio despite steady rises in interest rates, recession fears and a declining stock and bond market. EJ answer was that it will come back, it always does. There are tons of old adages they use to excuse their passive management of portfolios. I expected an advisor who was charging me 1% of my portfolio to help me, not sit on their hands and not move a dime into a better or less risky fund. EJ philosophy is to sit and wait and wait until hopefully their dartboard picks return to at least what you paid for them. They did not and would not calculate an RMD for an account. EJ website is very low tech, you cannot research funds histories, trends, etc. I quit, I could not see ANY benefit for me, only EJ was profiting. I have no plans to use a paid "advisor" again. Take a class or read a book about saving money and investing, know your risk tolerance, do your research, invest confidently and sleep well.


My parents did business with Edward Jones for over 20 years before their death in the 1990s. Edward Jones at that time was a consumer oriented, locally managed, franchise based company. Consequently, when the opportunity arose, I also chose Edward Jones to oversee and manage part of my investment portfolio. I do business with Fidelity, Schwab, and Merrill Lynch as well. Of all of these brokerage houses, I can say that Edward Jones is the least consumer friendly, has the poorest website and Internet services, and the most expensive fees of any of the investment companies. If you want a brokerage house that charges extraordinary fees, in my case $400-600 for a stable, non-traded stock portfolio, to warehouse your stock portfolio, and a poorly designed website that makes determining your profits and losses an exercise of futility, then I would recommend Edward Jones.


Ever wonder how much wealth management companies like Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Charles Schwab, Fidelity, and Ameriprise charge in annual advisory fees? Well look no further. My old client, Personal Capital has put together a white paper ranking the most and least expensive brokerage firms by advisory, mutual fund, and total fees.


When the smoke cleared and asset distribution was complete I rolled my share to a financial adviser of my choosing, who then set me up with a Schwab account. He charges a 1% fee but gets nothing from Schwab. My main goal was to transfer the overwhelming collection of stocks and funds as tax-efficiently as possible into a reasonable set of low cost funds and ETFs that mirrored my eventual retirement goals and risk tolerance. 041b061a72


Info

Willkommen in der Gruppe! Hier können Sie sich mit anderen M...

Mitglieder

bottom of page