A direct competitor to IB targeting active traders

Quote from blah12345678:

The requirements are pretty extensive...
A brokerage has one of the best business models one could wish for.

You are a gatekeeper controlling access to somebody else's sandbox, and you get to hit your customers coming and going for each and every transaction.

The capital and technology requirements are pretty extensive if you want to challenge IB. Probably looking at a 2-3 year development window before you flip the open sign, and 5-10 years to gain enough market share to become stable and profitable.

Building an IB challenger would be no different than starting Amazon back in the late 90s. It took Amazon 8 years to become profitable (opened in 1995, first profitable year was 2003), and 11-12 years to have more cash than long-term debt...

With the right banking connections, one could presumably issue junk bonds to fund most of the growth. Without, you'd need serious investor cash.

useful response thanks.

But no one has mentioned the minimum capital required to become a broker dealer yet, I am sure it must be substantial sum - maybe 25 Million or more -- just a guess??
 
You can open a broker dealer with much, much less than that but competing with a firm like IB is way beyond just being a B/D.

Quote from gmst:

useful response thanks.

But no one has mentioned the minimum capital required to become a broker dealer yet, I am sure it must be substantial sum - maybe 25 Million or more -- just a guess??
 
Quote from blah12345678:

A brokerage has one of the best business models one could wish for.

This is completely wrong. Brokerages are suffering because of price competition, total loss of float income due to ZIRP, and increasing regulatory and compliance burdens. You can buy an FCM for almost nothing these days -- they're all looking for an exit door. If you think it's a great "business model," then pick one up and give it a go.
 
Quote from gmst:

useful response thanks.

But no one has mentioned the minimum capital required to become a broker dealer yet, I am sure it must be substantial sum - maybe 25 Million or more -- just a guess??

it never ceases to amazes the nonsense people post.
ever hear of the verb to google?
 
Quote from gmst:



So, what kind of investments (in terms of financial capital, manpower & time to rollout) it will take in above 5 fields to launch a direct competitor to IB targeting active clients?!? I wonder!



now u want to open a brokerage? what happen to your idea of opening a prop firm? or your idea to open a trading educational school (penny stock pumper)?
 
Quote from zdreg:

it never ceases to amazes the nonsense people post.
ever hear of the verb to google?

i couldnt find exact requirements. Do you have a authoritative link? thanks.
 
Quote from gmst:

i couldnt find exact requirements. Do you have a authoritative link? thanks.

Broker dealer requirements are not specified in terms of capital in the GAAP sense, but rather a regulatory definition known as "net capital" which is essentially a working capital measure, albeit much more conservative than that defined under GAAP. It deducts from one's net worth assets deemed illiquid and assesses deductions for operational inefficiencies (e.g., under margined accounts, delivery fails) and haircuts the value of investment and/or trading positions held by the broker.

Here's the SEC rule which specifies the minimum net capital required of a broker dealer an which you can search: Exchange Act Rule 15c3-1(a), 17 C.F.R. § 240.15c3-1(a).

Note that the requirement varies depending upon the type of business the broker dealer is registered to conduct and can be as low as $5,000 if the broker does not receive/hold client assets and does not carry or clear accounts. Most broker dealers of scale will carry client accounts on their own books (rather than introduce them to another broker dealer) and will self clear those trades as well, thereby availing them and their clients of lower costs. For this type of broker, the minimum dollar requirement is higher ($250,000) but the actual net capital required scales upward based upon measures (aggregate indebtedness or aggregate debit items) which tend to increase somewhat proportionately as the client base increases.

The IB LLC (US broker dealer) financial statements are available on the website and as of 6/30/13 it reported capital of $2.21 billion and regulatory net capital of $1.91 billion, which was $1.66 billion in excess of that required.
 
Quote from IB-AN:

...
The IB LLC (US broker dealer) financial statements are available on the website and as of 6/30/13 it reported capital of $2.21 billion and regulatory net capital of $1.91 billion, which was $1.66 billion in excess of that required.


...and that's why....although I bitch and moan...I ain't going nowhere
 
Quote from Rodney King:

This is completely wrong. Brokerages are suffering because of price competition, total loss of float income due to ZIRP, and increasing regulatory and compliance burdens. You can buy an FCM for almost nothing these days -- they're all looking for an exit door. If you think it's a great "business model," then pick one up and give it a go.

This particular example, at this point in time, may seem to be "dying", but the model itself still works...

All things travel in cycles... I'm willing to bet the idea is fermenting in the mind of someone who disagrees, and sees a great opportunity.

Riches pass to the risk-takers. Long live the risk-takers!

Similar to businesses that fit the model:

Exchanges (stocks/futures/currency/options)
Bookmaking (legal or otherwise)
Insurance in all forms
Currency exchanging (airports, not Forex)
Money transfer (Western Union, PayPal, etc)
eBay
Banking (before the 1970s when they were focused on safekeeping customer funds and content with making the spread)
 
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