New to Investing? Here’s Everything You Need To Know About Stockbrokers
RichVintage / Getty Images/iStockphoto
RichVintage / Getty Images/iStockphoto

If you’re new to investing and you’re just now planning to put some money in the stock market, you’re in luck. For the first time in history, virtually anyone can start investing for free, no matter how little money or knowledge they have.

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Until fairly recently, even the most bare-bones discount online brokers charged profit-snatching per-trade commissions — and those commissions were rarely discounted for anyone who wanted to trade in real time. Even that was a huge step up from the old days when a call from a stockbroker was a status symbol reserved for people who could afford to pay a broker’s fees and still have money left over to invest.

Thankfully for the common investor, those days are over, but one thing hasn’t changed. In all but a few circumstances, the only way to invest in the stock market is through a stockbroker — although today, there’s no need ever to talk to one if you don’t want to pay for the privilege.

Here’s what you need to know about stockbrokers.

Read: What Is a Brokerage Account and How Does It Work?

Stockbrokers Are the Gatekeepers of the Market

It is possible to acquire stock without a broker through fairly obscure channels like dividend reinvestment plans and direct stock purchases. But if average investors want to turn the money in their savings accounts into ownership shares in publicly traded companies, they’ll need a licensed stockbroker to make those transactions on their behalf.

Stockbrokers have to pass an exam called the Series 7 before they can earn the necessary license. Once they do, they’re qualified to buy and sell securities like stocks on behalf of their clients — that’s you — through exchanges like the Nasdaq composite and the New York Stock Exchange.

See: How To Invest In Stocks: A Beginner’s Guide

What a Stockbroker Can and Can’t Do

A Series 7 license qualifies stockbrokers to trade not only stocks but also:

  • Municipal securities

  • Variable contracts

  • Options

  • Mutual funds

A Series 7 license does not qualify them to broker trades in:

  • Real estate

  • Insurance products

  • Commodities

  • Futures

Find Out: The Economy and Your Money: All You Need To Know

Stockbrokers Are Salespeople Who Can Also Advise

The Series 7 is a comprehensive exam that covers things like retirement plans, taxation, investment fundamentals, options, packaged securities, equity and debt instruments and much more. Those who pass it have demonstrated a broad knowledge base and are allowed by law to advise their clients. Just like in the old days before online investing, many people today still check in with their broker from time to time, ask for advice and bounce ideas off them, just as lots of brokers still call their clients with tips and opportunities.