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I am looking for a company like e-trade or TD Ameritrade that allows customers online banking including savings and checking accounts?

2007-07-10 15:29:50 · 6 answers · asked by Travis F 1 in Business & Finance Investing

6 answers

Most major US banks will have brokerage and bank services.

HSBC, JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Wells Fargo and Bank of America all provide online banking (checking, savings, etc)as well as separate (non-FDIC insured) brokerage services through their broker-dealer.

2007-07-10 15:36:58 · answer #1 · answered by PK 5 · 0 0

Yes, most online retail brokers also have online banking features tied directly to your account, Schwab and Etrade for instance will issue a debit card and checks and you can use just like a regular bank/credit. It also puts your the cash you have on the sidelines in a money market until you need to draw upon it. Typically they pay 4.5% or higher which is way better then most banks.


www.schwab.com
www.etrade.com

2007-07-10 15:43:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Charles Schwab has a nice package. But you're better off having your checking, savings and brokerage at different companies.

All accounts can be linked electronically.

Some ideas are;
www.EverBank.com
www.GMACBank.com

As far as a broker is concerned. You should look at that for your needs and what the broker has to offer.
I have used:
Charles Schwab (great for beginners)
Scottrade (basic, no frills trading @ $7.00) good for experianced traders.
ThinkOrSwim (Software based trading): Great for the very experianced... or soon to be very experianced.

Good luck.

2007-07-10 15:51:56 · answer #3 · answered by Common Sense 7 · 0 0

Don't open any brokerage account until you understand the basics of trading and investing. 98% of brokers have a 3 day settlement period. If you use all the cash in your account.... and you sell the stock in an hour..... you'd have to wait three days before you could by more. If you have a margin account... you don't have to worry about "settlement". There are other rules regard "pattern day trading".... which require $25,000 in your account to day trade. But if you attack trading correctly..... you'll need a few years to learn the basics of this skill before it becomes an issue. Don't just jump into this..... it's a bit crazy to ask strangers about which broker to pick... especically since you don't know what's important to you....... commisions should be one of the last things you look at in making this choice.

2016-05-19 00:56:54 · answer #4 · answered by tamika 3 · 0 0

E*trade (http://www.etrade.com) and Ameritrade (http://www.ameritrade.com)

are both reputable:

I like E*trade.

1. They have many different types of brokerage accounts with a great selection of mutual funds:
https://us.etrade.com/e/t/investingandtrading/mutualfundsandetfs?fundfamily=0&fund_fee_code=0

2. They have a Complete Savings account you can link with your current checking account, or E*trade's own checking account. It is getting 5.05% right now:

3. https://us.etrade.com/e/t/jumppage/viewjumppage?PageName=CSAlanding&tb=3979&WT.mc_id=3979&SC=002FA6EF00654DCA000DA7CF&sourceCode=002FA6EF00654DCA000DA7CF

4. They have free Bill pay

5. ATM access is available.

6. They have a max-rate checking account (read fine print) that gets 3.25%:
https://us.etrade.com/e/t/welcome/maxratechecking

7. They have good CD rates:
https://us.etrade.com/e/t/banking
1 yr is getting 5.25% right now.

8. They have many other services.

Do read about any fees they may have though.

2007-07-10 15:47:20 · answer #5 · answered by TechFarm 3 · 0 0

wellsfargo.com is the best on line and they have full online banking. Hope this helps

2007-07-10 15:35:07 · answer #6 · answered by Etta P 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers