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Are commission-free brokerages ripping you off? The SEC doesn't think so: Morning Brief

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September 23, 2022

Today's newsletter is by Julie Hyman, anchor and correspondent at Yahoo Finance. Follow Julie on Twitter @juleshyman.

Who else is sick of talking about the Fed? Of course, the Federal Reserve and its battle against inflation using higher interest rates is vitally important. But I need a break.

So, on to another crucial question: Are zero-commission brokerages ripping you off?

The Securities and Exchange Commission is apparently deciding they are not — or at least that the SEC isn't going to do anything about it even if they are. Bloomberg reports the agency has decided not to ban payment for order flow, known as PFOF. That’s a practice in which brokerages process customers’ trades through wholesalers, in a way that critics say saddle individual traders with hidden fees.

The argument against PFOF is that the practice poses a conflict because, in theory, brokerages should be aiming to make money for their customers — not market makers like Citadel Securities. In reality, it's tough to find many in favor of an all-out ban on PFOF aside from meme stock aficionados who populate Twitter and Reddit. Rather than banning PFOF, the SEC would be wise to focus on price transparency and requiring brokers to execute trades at the best price possible at the time.

“The SEC does not have to ban payment for order flow or other specific anti-investor, conflict-ridden market practices if it requires best execution to be the best available price at the time given order characteristics and market conditions," Dennis Kelleher, head of investor advocacy group Better Markets, told Yahoo Finance in an email. "If it does that, the SEC won’t have to play whack-a-mole with an industry that is relentless in creating new wealth extraction practices that avoid yesterday’s rules and require new rules tomorrow."

A crucial revenue stream for commission-free brokerages

In a PFOF model, a commission-free brokerage like Robinhood or Schwab processes an investor’s order for a stock purchase and passes it on to a wholesaler, like Citadel Securities or Virtu Americas. These market makers then execute the transaction and pay brokerage firms for routing the trade through them.

When the market maker can purchase a stock at a lower price than the customer asked for, the brokerage and the market maker split the savings. The money pocketed by the brokerages, the "payment for order flow," can finance its commission-free business.