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AJ Bell raising cap on shares custody charge

masonic
Posts: 26,418 Forumite


https://www.youinvest.co.uk/isa/charges-and-rates
Currently a maximum of £7.50 per quarter (£30 per year)
From 1st January will be maxiumum of £3.50 per month (£42 per year, 40% increase)
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Comments
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It also puts them just below Hargreaves Lansdown. I only hold a LISA there, and don't have the option to transfer it elsewhere as there are no other providers I could transfer to.
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Assuming this applies to ETFs ?If so I need a cheaper home for my LISA which has ~£22k in VWRP ETF, anyone ?0
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masonic said:https://www.youinvest.co.uk/isa/charges-and-ratesCurrently a maximum of £7.50 per quarter (£30 per year)From 1st January will be maxiumum of £3.50 per month (£42 per year, 40% increase)
I doubt the extra £20 a year on a pension of that sort of size is going to result in people running for the exits although the extra £12 a year on an shares or ETF / investment trust -based ISA of £17k+ is a relatively bigger hike.Alistair31 said:Assuming this applies to ETFs ?If so I need a cheaper home for my LISA which has ~£22k in VWRP ETF, anyone ?
Yes it would apply to ETFs but there is relatively scant competition in the S&S LISA market (the biggest of the rivals, Hargreaves Lansdown, has a higher percentage and a a few pounds higher cap on the fees, and more expensive transaction fees for ETFs).
The extra £12 a year that they'll now be charging on your £22k LISA is about 0.05%, so although this is a moneysaving site it barely seems worth moving to dodge the extra fee.2 -
Alistair31 said:Assuming this applies to ETFs ?Yes, shares, ETFs and Investment Trusts.Alistair31 said:If so I need a cheaper home for my LISA which has ~£22k in VWRP ETF, anyone ?2
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As interest rates fall then platforms have to find other ways to generate revenues. Likewise exit fees are being abolished. There's no free lunch to be had.
Must be lots of new smaller accounts to adminster as well. Probably not profitable in the overall business model.0 -
Thrugelmir said:As interest rates fall then platforms have to find other ways to generate revenues. Likewise exit fees are being abolished. There's no free lunch to be had.
Must be lots of new smaller accounts to adminster as well. Probably not profitable in the overall business model.EDIT: Exit fees have been reduced significantly though.0 -
Alistair31 said:If so I need a cheaper home for my LISA which has ~£22k in VWRP ETF, anyone ?3
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masonic said:Alistair31 said:Assuming this applies to ETFs ?Yes, shares, ETFs and Investment Trusts.Alistair31 said:If so I need a cheaper home for my LISA which has ~£22k in VWRP ETF, anyone ?
As HL cap is £45 annually on EFTs within the LISA, it barely seems worthwhile transferring to AJ Bell for £42 annually. I know trading costs are higher with HL but I would move to 2 trades a year so again is a very small difference.
I guess it saves me the hassle of transferring at least.0 -
Thrugelmir said:As interest rates fall then platforms have to find other ways to generate revenues. Likewise exit fees are being abolished. There's no free lunch to be had.
Must be lots of new smaller accounts to adminster as well. Probably not profitable in the overall business model.
With the FCA saying that exit costs were a barrier consumers exercising their free choice and stifled competition, the bigger platforms that charge percentages on funds administered (e.g. HL and Youinvest etc) were happy to be seen to embrace the dropping of account closure costs in the hope that it came across as a 'customer friendly' sounding measure, while hurting the smaller fixed-fee rivals who had a model of charging for the services consumed rather than the number of 0s on the end of the account balance.
If you can't charge to take a customer on from a rival at acquisition (because your marketing team would get angry that you were putting customers off) and you can't charge to eventually hand them off to a rival on exit, theoretically everyone will have to up their service game to minimise customer exits. Inevitably though, the admin will still need to be done, so the ongoing costs (whether max £ per month, or max per £ invested or whatever) is going to end up rising - whether for all, or just for some cohort of customers who might be more easily able to bear it.
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Alexland said:Alistair31 said:If so I need a cheaper home for my LISA which has ~£22k in VWRP ETF, anyone ?
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