Showing posts with label sharebuilder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sharebuilder. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Zecco review March 2008

Zecco.com is having sporadic issues today. I intermittently get Service Unavailable errors. I did put in a couple orders, which you can follow on my Cake Financial portfolio.

I recently rolled over my Scottrade account to Zecco. My Sharebuilder account is in progress, as I didn't have the required $50 in cash to process the account transfer fee. Scottrade didn't charge me anything to transfer to Zecco. It's a little dumb, since Sharebuilder sells off all partial shares before transferring, and now my cash balance is almost $200, which would have covered the account transfer fee.

The main reason I was drawn to Zecco is of course the $0 commissions for up to 10 stock trades a month. After that, it's $4.50/trade which is still a damn good deal. However, their website has a lot to be desired. Their ACH checking account transfer page is lame -- doesn't match their site aesthetics at all. This probably has to do with their interface to Penson Financial -- the securities firm behind Zecco.

In this volatile market, Zecco allows me to buy "nibble" positions -- small trades at $100 or $200 at a time, without having to worry about the commission cost, which would definitely add up over time.

For an ACH transfer from my checking account, $5,000 got posted to Zecco within 2 business days. For an ACH transfer of $10,000 and above however, I have to wait 5-7 business days.

Zecco does allow dividend reinvestment, but you must submit the request in writing to their customer service explicitly stating which ticket symbol you wish to reinvest. Zecco does not do partial shares, so you'll have a cash remainder after.

For each trade I've made, however, Penson Financial sends me paper mail of the transaction. I'm not sure how to turn that off. I'll be contacting customer service. Customer service normally takes around 2 days to respond to e-mail. When I called them, the wait time was around 10 minutes.

For the stocks that transferred from Scottrade, Zecco shows them as having a $0 basis, which of course is wrong. I didn't really expect that to transfer, but somehow Cake Financial downloaded the transactions from Zecco and still maintained the original basis. Neat.

I still use my Scottrade account for the Realtime ticker applet, as Zecco charges a fee for that functionality. I would recommend Zecco to any buy-and-hold investor who wants to slowly get into stocks. While Sharebuilder offers the same "nibble" methodology, Zecco is completely free for 10 trades/month if your account is worth $2500 or more.