Quote from jonkry:
IBâs software is untrustworthy. I placed 2 stop loss trades that werenât executed.
One day, I bought 5 SPY calls. I was watching the quote screen and when the options lost 20 cents, I entered a bracket order to buy another 5, and to sell 10 (both positions) if the option dropped another 10 cents, or gained 40. The system accepted the order, and I checked that the order was active on the option trading screen and general order screen. They were. The trade went against me, and I watched as nothing appeared to happen. No execution. I immediately called IB customer service to make sure that the order was being reported correctly (as a non-execution; I didnât want to place a duplicate order.) I got through in 2 minutes, and the tech confirmed that my position wasnât closed and that I should âmanage my risk.â I closed the position while I was on the phone with him for more than double the loss I should have taken. I asked him what had happened. We went through a vebal checklist, and he couldnât figure out what happened till he saw that I enetered one order for 5 contracts and then another order for 5 with a bracket order to sell 10. He said that the order being unbalanced had screwed things up. (Sounded hokeyâ¦no other broker does this, but OK.) I asked why the system reported the orders as being active. He didnât know. The order log showed me entering the orders, and the system immediately deactivated the orders (without telling me, or giving an error message why), yet the orders showed as accepted and active on my screensâ¦and even more strangely, when my stop price was hit, the log showed the orders being activated and deactivated a second time (and not executed.) The tech said he would investigate, I never heard back from him. (What a surprise.)
Well, I got burned on that one. The IB manual hadnât mentioned anything about not being able to do an unbalanced order, but I figured in the future I would just enter 2 identical bracket orders, so they wouldnât be unbalanced. (I sell one order off at double the risk so I can have a free trade.)
Nope. The same thing happened again: my orders showed as being accepted and active on TWO screens (the option trading screen and general order screen-a separate window.) This time, one order was executed, and another wasnât. I modified the orders 3 times, and each time it reported no problems. Yet on the logs, it shows the orders accepted and immediately deactivated. If they were deactivated, how was I able to modify them? How was one identical order executed, and the other wasnât?
IBâs system is buggy, period. I lost confidence in their system. When I took this up with their tech, he was as dull and unhelpful as a butter knife. I told him what happened, looked at the trade logs, and he seemed unable to even see a problem. He seemed to think that they proved I had made a mistake, and I asked âAre you kidding? LOOK AT THEM. They show exactly the opposite!â (How two people can look at eactly the same thing and draw opposite conclusionsâ¦) I got the idea that whatever I pointed out about the trade in the logs made no difference to him. He was looking out for his job, and his job was to try to bamboozle customers and get rid of them, NOT help. They absolutely refused to take any responsibility. (*I* do when *I* mess up.)
Well, he succeeded: I took my money and ran. I figure it this way:
1. If their manual says you can do a trade and you canât, how can I have confidence in them?
2. Their system is screwy. How can I have confidence in it?
3. If their customer service is so inept, how can I have confidence in them?
4. If they absolutely refuse to take responsibility for bad tradesâ¦well, you get the idea.
The only good thing is that these problems showed up before I lost any big money with them.
A few good points about IB:
1. Despite what other IB customers have claimed about waiting a long time on the phone to get through, I always got through in a few minutes, whether for account information, or for customer no-service.
2. They have many order types-you might be able to customize the best for yourself.
3. Aftermarket trading platforms are available, if you trust IB to execute your order.
4. Their commissions are cheap, though if you trade a lot, you can get any broker to lower their commissions. If they screw your order up, though, it can be a very expensive way to save money.
Hope this helps someone.