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> buy-and-hold investors can move in and out of a position for much less than they could in the 80s In other words, brokerage fees, or the equivalent, should be lower, so the overhead to execute a trade is lower. That has some value, yes, but not a lot, because a buy-and-hold investor, of course, doesn't execute many trades, so the overhead cost of executing trades is already pretty small for him. Also, most "buy-and-hold" investors hold mutual funds, not stocks, which changes things. See below. > costs...can be very important even to value investors when there is some extrinsic prompt to trading Yes, but as I just noted, most "buy-and-hold" investors are holding mutual funds, not stocks, so they aren't paying the direct costs of stock trading anyway. When I want to rebalance my 401k, I don't trade stocks, I trade mutual fund shares, and they're all shares of different funds offered by Fidelity or Vanguard or whoever my 401k provider is. (And with most 401k's, certainly with the ones I have, as long as you don't rebalance too often there is no fee for rebalancing.) So decreasing the overhead cost of trading will only appear to me, if at all, as a decrease in mutual fund fees; but with most 401k's the individual doesn't see those anyway, because they're provided through employers. I don't know how much the fee question affects the negotiations between employers and mutual fund providers for setting up 401k's, but in any case that's at least two layers of indirection between me as a retirement investor and the overhead cost of executing individual stock trades. So I can see some small benefit, yes, but is it enough to offset the high social cost of having so many smart people doing HFT instead of something more productive? |
Whatever you pay to your brokerage, you pay on top of the spread. The spread is what you pay to place a market order.
In exchange for the privilege of buying right now, you pay the best offer price. In exchange for the privilege of selling right now, you pay the best bid price.
It's a commission you pay per share; the more shares you try to move, the more you pay whoever's providing you the liquidity.