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Investment Services for the Mass Market
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Feb 1, 1998
185 Pages - Pub ID: LA484
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I. Executive Summary
The Market
- Full-Service Brokerage Firms
- Discount Brokerage Firms
- Bank Brokerages
- The Securities Act and the SEC
- The Glass-Steagall Act and Bank Brokerages
- 80 Million Brokerage Accounts
- Brokerage Revenues Exceed $100 Billion
- Full-Service Brokers Claim 80% of Revenues
- 79% of Brokers Are Discount
- Discount Brokers Lead in Growth
- Discount Brokerage Commissions Estimated at Over $2 Billion
- Table 1-1: U.S. Discount Brokerage Commissions, 1993-2002 (dollars)
- 45−54 Is Prime Age Bracket for Investors -54 Is Prime Age Bracket for Investors
- Half of 45-54 Householders Hold Stock
- South Is Investment Services Holdout
- Demographic Tidal Wave Until 2008
- Figure 1-1: Percent Distribution of U.S. Population by Age Bracket, 1995 vs. 2005 (percent): From Age 18 to Age 65 and Over
- Surge in Online Investing
- Flight from Individual Stocks
- Pockets of Substantial Growth
The Marketers
- Full-Service Brokers Remain at Forefront
- Merrill Lynch Leads Among Full-Service Firms
- Morgan Stanley and Dean Witter Merge
- Schwab Claims Half of Discount Segment
- Discount Commissions Grow at 18% Clip
- Online Boom for Discount Brokerages
- Charles Schwab and OneSource
- Banks Gear Up as Rules Relax
- Dean Witter Seeks Bank Bedfellows
- Targeting the New Investor
- Brand Identity Increasingly Important
- Fund Supermarkets Become Common Coin
- Schwab Takes Over Top Advertiser Spot
The Consumer
- One-Tenth of Adults Use Financial Planning Services
- U.S. Savings Bonds Are Most Popular Type of Security
- 5.1 Million Investors Make 1—2 Stock Transactions Yearly
- Over One-Sixth of Adults Have a Brokerage Account
- Full-Service Brokerage Firms Are Most Utilized
- Patterns and Variations by Brokerage Type
- Fidelity Investments Has Highest Number of Brokerage Accounts
- Demographic Variations by Brokerage Firm
- Merrill Lynch Has Highest Number of Primary Users
- One-Fourth of Adults Have a Mutual Fund Account
- Majority of Accounts Held Through Mutual Fund Company
- Indicators by Mutual Fund Provider Type
- Fidelity Investments Has Most Accounts
- Profile of First-Time Mutual Fund Investors
Online Services
- $120 Billion in Securities Traded Online
- Online Revenues at $614 Million
- Online Accounts at 3 Million
- 95,500 Daily Trades
- 60 Marketers, and Growing
- Marketers Answer Consumer Demand
- Charles Schwab Controls 33% of Online Volume
- Price Wars Remain Driving Factor
- Profit Centers Old and New
- Multimillion Marketing of Online Services
- Targeting the High-End Investor
- Shakeout Predicted
Scope and Methodology
- Market Parameters
- Report Methodology
II. The Market
Introduction
- Scope of Report
- Market Structure
The Service Providers
- Full-Service Brokerage Firms
- Discount Brokerage Firms
- Bank Brokerages
- Additional Resources
- Mutual Fund Firms
- Third-Party Providers
- Personal Advisors
- Varying Services
The Regulatory Environment
- SIPC and FDIC
- The Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934
- The SEC and NASDAQ Spreads
- SEC's "Cyberforce" Monitors Online Investing
- SEC's "Plain English" Rule for Mutual Funds
- Regulation T and "Minimum Maintenance"
- National Association of Securities Dealers
- Glass-Steagall Act
Market Size and Growth
- Note on Methodology and Market Estimates
- Over $20 Trillion in Investment, Bank Accounts
- Growing Share of Financial Assets for Investment Vehicles
- Stocks Claim 40% of Investment Assets
- 80 Million Brokerage Accounts
- 3 Million Online Accounts
- Brokerage Revenues Exceed $100 Billion
- Top Ten Brokers Claim Half of Revenues
- One-Fifth of Broker Revenues Earned Through Trading Fees
- Full-Service Brokers Claim 80% of Revenues
- 79% of Brokers Are Discount
- Discount Brokers Lead in Growth
- Discount Brokerage Commissions Estimated at Over $2 Billion
- Table 2-1: U.S. Discount Brokerage Commissions, 1993-2002 (dollars)
- Online Revenues at $614 Million
- Bank Brokerage Profits in $1-Billion Range
- $4.5 Trillion in Mutual Funds
- Cash Inflow to Stock Mutual Funds at $231 Billion in 1997
Consumer Composition of Market
- 45−54 Is Prime Age Bracket for Investors -54 Is Prime Age Bracket for Investors
- Half of 45-54 Householders Hold Stock
- Simmons Data on Use of Investment Services by Region
- South Is Investment Services Holdout
- Table 2-2: Regionality of Use of Investment Services by Type of Account and Firm, 1997 (percent): Northeast, Midwest, West, South
Factors Affecting Market Growth
- Boomers Tuned In to Money Management
- Demographic Tidal Wave Until 2008
- Table 2-3: Percent Distribution of U.S. Population by Age Bracket, 1995—2005 (percent): From Age Under 5 to Age 65 and Over
- Surge in Online Investing
- Online Investment and Bank Brokerages
- Online a Two-Edged Sword for Discounters
- The Full-Service and Online Equation
- Gains Through Mergers and Acquisitions
- The "One-Stop Shopping" Advantage
- The Mutual Fund Factor
- Flight from Individual Stocks
- Mutual Funds at Center Stage?
- The Direct Option
- Risk and Return
Projected Market Growth
- Investment Pool to Surge
- Pockets of Substantial Growth
III. The Marketers
Marketer Overview
- Marketers of Investment Services
- Full-Service Brokers Remain at Forefront
- Multiple and Overlapping Options
- Table 3-1: Selected U.S. Marketers of Investment Products and Services (172 Marketers and Their Firm Type)
The Competitive Situation
- Merrill Lynch Leads Among Full-Service Firms
- The Full-Service Scene
- The Internet Challenge
- Morgan Stanley and Dean Witter Merge
- Merrill Lynch Not Trading Places
- Schwab Claims Half of Discount Segment
- Discount Commissions Grow at 18% Clip
- Online Boom for Discount Brokerages
- Subdividing the Discounters
- Shopping Among the Discounters
- Charles Schwab and OneSource
- Fidelity Focuses on Brokerage Accounts
- Toronto Dominion Aligns Against Schwab
- Banks Gear Up as Rules Relax
- Clearing up Confusion Over FDIC
- Luring Bank Customers
- Banks Face Internet Brokerages
- Schwab Rents Fund Supermarket
- NationsBank Launches Fund, Teams with Schwab
- Dean Witter Seeks Bank Bedfellows
- Banks Expand Offerings Through Mergers
Competitive Profile: Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc
- Corporate Overview
- Entrance Into Supermarkets
- Rewarding the Consumer
Competitive Profile: Morgan Stanley, Dean Witter, Discover & Co
- Corporate Overview
- The Merger
- The Buy Back
- Dean Witter: Low Marks for Pushing Proprietary Funds
- Discover: Top Grade Among Online Brokerages
Competitive Profile: Charles Schwab Corp.
- Corporate Overview
- A Brief History
- Supermarket Investing
- Online Investing
- The Total Customer Access Promise Program Charles Schwab Enhances Services
- Good Relationships with Independent Advisors
- Future Plans
Competitive Profile: Fidelity Investments (FMR Corp.)
- Corporate Overview
- Loosening Grip on Retirement Cash
- Fresh Focus on Consumers
- An Image Makeover
- A Push Towards Online Services
Competitive Profile: Quick & Reilly Group, Inc.
(Fleet Financial Group, Inc.)
- Corporate Overview
- Fleet and Quick & Reilly Acquisition
- Suretrade May Stem Online Slip
Competitive Profile: NationsBank Corp
- Corporate Overview
- Growth Through Mergers
- The Brokerage Business
- A Link with Schwab
- An Internet Alliance
Competitive Profile: First Union Corp.
- Corporate Overview
- The Cap Account
- The Schwab Connection
- Expansion Plans
- A Brand Marketing Crusade
Competitive Profile: KeyCorp
- Corporate Overview
- The Charles Schwab Alliance
Marketing and Advertising Trends
- Targeting the New Investor
- Brand Identity Increasingly Important
- Fund Supermarkets Become Common Coin
- Investment Advertising Tops $1 Billion
- Schwab Takes Over Top Advertiser Spot
- Media Trends: Magazines Dominate
- Charles Schwab: "Independent, Objective"
- Fidelity: "Where 12 Million Investors Put Their Trust"
- Banks Stress Makeover, Regional Expansion
- Samples of Consumer Advertising
IV. The Consumer
Introduction
- Simmons Consumer Survey
- Simmons Data on Investment Services
Consumer Overview: Investment Patterns
- One-Tenth of Adults Use Financial Planning Services
- Indicators and Resisters to Use of Financial Planning Services
- Table 4-1: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Financial Planning Services, 1997 (U.S. Adults)
- U.S. Savings Bonds Are Most Popular Type of Security
- Table 4-2: U.S. Adult Investors by Type of Security Owned, 1997 (total number, median age, and median household income)
- 18.6 Million Adults Own Securities Valued at Under $5,000
- Table 4-3: U.S. Adult Investors by Value of Securities Owned, 1997 (total number, median age, and median household income)
- Indicators for Holding Securities Under $10,000
- Indicators for Holding Securities Over $10,000
- Table 4-4: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Ownership of Securities: By Investment Level: Under $10,000 vs. $10,000+, 1997 (U.S. Adults)
- 5.1 Million Investors Make 1—2 Stock Transactions Yearly
- Table 4-5: U.S. Adult Investors by Annual Number of Stock Transactions, 1997 (total number, median age, and median household income)
Consumer Focus: Brokerage Accounts
- Over One-Sixth of Adults Have a Brokerage Account
- Indicators to Use of a Brokerage Account
- Table 4-6: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts, 1997 (U.S. Adults)
- Full-Service Brokerage Firms Are Most Utilized
- Patterns and Variations by Brokerage Type
- Table 4-7: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Type, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Full-Service Brokerage Firm, Discount Brokerage Firm, Discount Brokerage Through Bank
- Fidelity Investments Has Highest Number of Brokerage Accounts
- Demographic Variations by Brokerage Firm
- Table 4-8a: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Charles Schwab, Dean Witter Reynolds, Dreyfus (Mellon)
- Table 4-8b: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): A.G. Edwards, Fidelity Investments Ids/American Express
- Table 4-8c: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Kemper Financial, Kidder Peabody, Merrill Lynch
- Table 4-8d: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Paine Webber, Prudential Securities, Quick & Reilly
- Table 4-8e: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Shearson Lehman Brothers, Smith Barney
- Table 4-8f: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Brokerage Accounts: By Brokerage Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Other Full-service Firms, Other Discount Brokerage Firms
- Less Than One-Tenth of Accounts Were Closed
- Merrill Lynch Has Highest Number of Primary Users
- Table 4-9: U.S. Adult Investors by Primary Firm Brokerage Accounts, 1997 (total number, median age, and median household income)
Consumer Focus: Mutual Fund Accounts
- One-Fourth of Adults Have Mutual Fund Account
- Indicators for Mutual Fund Accounts
- Table 4-10: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Mutual Fund Accounts, 1997 (U.S. Adults)
- Majority of Accounts Held Through Mutual Fund Company
- Indicators by Mutual Fund Provider Type
- Table 4-11a: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Mutual Fund Accounts: By Type of Firm, 1997 (U.S. Adults): Full-Service Brokerage Firm, Discount Brokerage Firm
- Table 4-11b: Demographic Characteristics Favoring Use of Mutual Fund Accounts: By Type of Firm, 1997 (U.S. adults): Bank, Bank Discount Brokerage, Mutual Fund Company
- Fidelity Investments Has Most Accounts
- Table 4-12: U.S. Adult Investors in Mutual Fund Accounts: By Specific Firm, 1997 (total number, median age, and median household income)
- Profile of First-Time Mutual Fund Investors
- Table 4-13: U.S. Adults Making Their First Investment in a Mutual Fund Account, 1997 (5 Factors)
V. Online Services
Basics of Online Investing
- Advantages to Online Investing
- Value-Added Services
- Dollar Savings as Bottom Line
- Drawbacks to Online Investing
- The SEC and Online Fraud
- Security and Fund Transfer Issues
- Mixed Returns, Bright Future
The Online Market
- $120 Billion in Securities Traded Online
- Online Revenues at $614 Million
- Online Accounts at 3 Million
- 95,500 Daily Trades
The Online Marketers
- 60 Marketers, and Growing
- Range of Marketers
- Table 5-1: Selected Marketers of Online Investment Services (45 Marketers and Their Websites)
The Competitive Situation
- Marketers Answer Consumer Demand
- Charles Schwab Controls 33% of Online Volume
- Datek an Emerging Player
- Price Wars Remain Driving Factor
- Profit Centers Old and New
- Multimillion Marketing of Online Services
- Targeting the High-End Investor
- Full-Service Brokerages Meet the Threat
- Shakeout Predicted
Competitive Profile: Ameritrade Holding Corp
- Corporate Overview
- Ameritrade Consolidates
- "The Way To Trade. Period."
- Teaming Up with Internet Services
- Future Strategy
- Survival of the Fittest
Competitive Profile: E*TRADE Group, Inc.
- Corporate Overview
- "Someday, We'll All Invest This Way"
- Fighting the Competition
- Advertising Target
- E*TRADE Mutual Fund Center
- Future Options
- Stock Surge at WebTV Alliance
The Online Consumer
- Early Adopters
- Under-25s Among the Online Investors
- Online Investors and High-Tech Portfolios
- Online Brokerages Earn Good¾Not Excellent¾Ratings
Appendix I: Examples Of Consumer Advertising
Appendix II: Addresses Of Selected Marketers
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