Updated 2019 with new transfer bonus links.
Commission-free ETFs. Here is the
(For posterity, here is the
Current providers include AGFiQ QuantShares, First Trust Portfolios, iShares ETFs, J.P. Morgan Asset Management, PowerShares by Invesco, ProShares, State Street Global Advisors’ SPDR, and WisdomTree Investments.
The bad. Unfortunately, this move also puts TD Ameritrade more firmly into the pack of brokerage with ETF/mutual fund “supermarkets” based on who will pay them for shelf placement:
TD Ameritrade receives remuneration from certain ETFs (exchange-traded funds) that participate in the commission-free ETF program for shareholder, administrative and/or other services, generally ranging from the equivalent of approximately 15% to 30% of the ETFs’ annual net operating expense ratio.
This is a common arrangement and you’ll see the same thing at Schwab and Fidelity, but in my opinion you end up a bigger list of less-attractive products. They also tend to have higher expense ratios. In my opinion, the quantity has gone up, but the quality has gone down. Here are some examples that I’ve never even heard of before:
- First Trust Alternative Absolute Return Strategy ETF
- iShares Fallen Angels USD Bond ETF
- PowerShares Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity Strategy No K-1 Portfolio
- QuantShares US Market Neutral Anti-Beta Fund
The good. To be fair, there are still some iShares Core ETFs (though not the broadest ones) and some SPDR ETFs that cover broad indexes (though with lower asset size and trading volume). There are maybe 15-20 ETFs that I could see as part of a low-cost, long-term portfolio. A few examples:
- SPDR Dow Jones Total Market (SPTM)
- SPDR S&P World ex-US (SPDW)
- SPDR Lehman Aggregate Bond (SPAB)
- iShares 0-5 Year TIPS Bond ETF (STIP)
- iShares Core International Aggregate Bond ETF (IAGG)
- iShares Core U.S. REIT ETF (USRT)
- iShares Global REIT ETF (REET)
However, I still don’t like that they changed it. You might have built up a position with $0 trades, and now it costs $6.95 per trade to buy more. You can try and switch to the closest approximate ETF, but what about next time they shake up the list? TD Ameritrade won “#1 for Long-Term Investing” in the
The competition. If you want to construct a low-cost, broadly-indexed ETF portfolio, I would compare with the offerings from Schwab, Vanguard, and Fidelity. None of those are an independent brokerage like TD Ameritrade, but they do offer commission-free trades on low-cost, broad ETFs. You could also look into the free trade offers from
Current New Account Promotions. TD Ameritrade has various promotions that vary between 90 days of free trades on up to $2,500 depending on how in assets you bring over. Here are what I have found are the best bonuses for any given asset level:
- Fund with $3,000: Get 90 days of free trading
- Fund with $25,000: Get $100 cash + 90 days of free trading
- Fund with $50,000: Get $200 cash + 90 days of free trading
- Fund with $100,000: Get $500 cash + 90 days of free trading
- Fund with $250,000: Get $1,000 cash + 90 days of free trading
- Fund with $500,000: Get $1,200 cash + 90 days of free trading
- Fund with $1,000,000: Get $2,500 cash + 90 days of free trading
Bottom line. TD Ameritrade has shifted the nature of their commission-free ETF program. Overall, the widely-held, broad ETFs from Vanguard and iShares have been removed. In their place, many niche/sector ETFs and smaller, newer ETFs have been added. If you like specialized ETFs, check to see if it is on their newly-expanded list of 296 ETFs.
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