E Trade
It is a holding company, the major business of which is an online discount stock brokerage service for self-directed investors. Investors can buy and sell securities such as stocks, bonds, options, mutual funds, and exchange-traded funds via electronic trading platforms or by phone.
The company also offers banking and lending products such as checking and savings accounts, money market accounts, certificates of deposit, and credit cards. E*TRADE is regulated and licensed by FINRA.
Stock Commissions
Less than $50,000 in assets and 0-29 trades/quarter $12.99 $50,000+ in assets or 30-149 trades/quarter $9.99 150-1499 trades/quarter $7.99 1500+ trades/quarter $6.99
History
In 1982, William A.
In 1991, Porter founded a new company, E-Trade Securities, Inc., with several hundred thousand dollars of startup capital from PicoTrade. It later reorganized and emerged under the name E-Trade Group, with E-Trade Securities as its principal subsidiary.
In August 1996, it went public with Robertson, Stephens & Company as the lead underwriter.
to E*TRADE Financial Corporation.
In 2003, the Toronto-Dominion Bank held talks to merge its TD Waterhouse discount brokerage with E*TRADE, but the two sides could not come to an agreement over control of the merged entity. In 2005, E*TRADE made an unsolicited offer for Ameritrade, currently the second largest US discount broker. Ameritrade instead purchased TD Waterhouse, with TD Bank holding a 39% stake in the new entity.
In August 2005, E*TRADE Financial acquired Harrisdirect, formerly a discount brokerage service of Bank of Montreal.
Two months later, E*Trade acquired BrownCo, formerly a discount brokerage service of J.P. Morgan for 1.6 billion in cash.
Divestiture of subprime portfolio
E*TRADE Financial Center, San Francisco
On November 29, 2007, E*TRADE announced a deal with the Citadel Investment Group in which Citadel purchased E*TRADE's securitized subprime mortgage investments for $800 million, cash.
The transaction removed the assets with the greatest market risk from E*TRADE's consolidated balance sheet -- their $3 billion asset-backed securities (ABS) portfolio, including its ABS collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and second lien securities. This resulted in a net $2.2 billion reduction in assets on their balance sheet.
In addition to that divestiture, under the terms of the deal E*TRADE received $1.6 billion of capital in exchange for 12.5% senior unsecured notes and 84,687,686 shares common stock (equal to 19.99% of the then currently outstanding shares). Mitch Caplan resigned as CEO on the same day that the deal was announced.
Although E*TRADE's management admits that the deal was costly for E*TRADE, it removed the risk from those subprime investments and resulted in an infusion of $2.5 billion in cash.
Prior to the subprime mortgage crisis, E*TRADE's stock price had reached a 52-week high of $26.08 and had a book value (assets - liabilities / number of shares outstanding) of $9.68 per share.
However, on or about November 12, 2007, Citigroup analyst Prashant Bhatia suggested that E*TRADE Financial could face a run on its bank operations and a bankruptcy filing, causing the stock to drop heavily.
After the sell-off and the Citadel deal, E*TRADE's book value was $4.53 per share (a 52.2% drop), and the shares had reached a 52-week low of $3.46 per share (a 86.7% drop). Bloomberg News reported that E*TRADE had lost between 1-2% of their deposits.
The company implemented a comprehensive turnaround plan at the end of 2007 which included an assessment of its organizational structure, operating expense base and balance sheet transition, along with a customer win-back campaign.
In March 2008, E*TRADE named Donald Layton, formerly JPMorgan Chase vice chairman, as its new CEO. Layton had joined E*TRADE's board of directors in November 2007, at the same time as the Citadel deal.