Well, it’s hard to believe but Christmas is literally just two sleeps away. While DIY investors are either busy looking for a deal, a present or are relaxing from the mayhem that is a shopping mall, it looks like Canadian discount brokerages are taking cues from other businesses and putting up deals for DIY investors ahead of Christmas.
In this holiday edition of the roundup, we’ll keep things short so you can get back to enjoying the festivities. We kick off with news that every investor loves to find out about – a new deal being offered by one of Canada’s bank-owned online brokerages. From there we’ll take a look at the highlights from Q3 of 2016 in the third of our 2016 roundup of roundups. As always, we’ll close out by taking a look at what DIY investors were chatting about on social media and on the investing forums.
Gift Wrapped Deal
Just in time for Christmas yet another Canadian discount brokerage is offering up a big gift to DIY investors in the form of a promotion. This past week, National Bank Direct Brokerage crossed our radar with a generous trade rebate offer with a very splashy headline: up to $1000 cash back for individuals signing up for a new account.
While the headline does grab attention, it is important to unpack the clever advertising from the real picture, so let’s drill down on some of the details of their latest offer.
Perhaps the most important component to this offer is that it is actually a commission-rebate offer, meaning that individuals who are eligible for this offer can have their trading commissions reimbursed up to the amount stated in the promotion. Unlike other cash-back offers that provide a payment of a fixed amount up front, this ‘cash back’ occurs after individuals make eligible trades.
The dollar amount that an individual can get credited depends on the value of the account they open with NBDB. In the case of this offer, there are two deposit tiers, the first ranging between $20,000 and $99,999, for which individuals receive up to $500 in commission rebates; and the second for deposits of $100,000 or more for which individuals can receive up to $1,000 in commission-credits.
In looking at NBDB’s latest promotion, it is interesting to see who they are positioning to compete with. On the one hand, their offer is very similar in structure to the TD Direct Investing offer – commission rebates marketed as cash-back promotions. Comparing the two offers side by side, NBDB has the lower threshold to qualify versus TD Direct Investing, however for depositors with more than $50,000, TD Direct Investing is offering more in terms of commission rebates. One very important distinction, however, is that the NBDB offer is eligible for 90 days whereas there is a fixed cut-off date for TD Direct Investing’s offer, so TD’s offer becomes more challenging to fully use up the longer individuals wait to take advantage of it.
The good news for DIY investors is that it appears that online brokerages are once again starting to work harder to try and win new clients – especially heading into the busy RRSP season. Interestingly, this is now the second offer to launch in December (the other was TD Direct Investing two weeks ago) that appears to run until the end of March of next year. This is definitely a bullish signal that bank-owned brokerages are placing their bets early because it will likely motivate both larger and smaller discount brokerages to follow suit.
Discount Brokerage Roundup Recap from Q3 2016
#Hashtag You’re It
TD Direct Investing gets social by hosting their first DIY investing Twitter chat. #FunFact many years ago, SparxTrading was tweeting live from an Investools seminar and helped get the ball rolling on the TD Direct Investing Twitter presence. Since then, TD Direct Investing, has become a very active on social media. Here is a recap of 350+ tweets we put together that covered their #DIYInvesting Twitter Chat.
Eye of the Buyer
Along with the US presidential election race, our eyes were turned stateside to see what was happening with US-based online brokerages and what, if anything, that could mean for Canadian online brokerages. One of the advantages of looking at the US market is that they provide a window into how the online brokerage business works, what challenges they’re facing as an industry and what innovation is taking place. In the case of a couple of July weekly roundups, we learned that Interactive Brokers is crushing it when it comes to profitability per account as well as steady account growth. Anyone watching the space closely can see that they are clearly going to harder to challenge as they grow in size and presence globally. We also learned about consolidation taking place in the US market, with E*trade acquiring OptionsHouse.
Going Back to School
Scotia iTRADE got a jump on the competition and back-to-school season by launching a rebranded educational offering for DIY investors. Their Scotia iTRADE U managed to predate the push later on in the year by Virtual Brokers to get into the investor education game. Interestingly, the biggest player in the space, TD Direct Investing, has seen a shift in how and where it is delivering investor education content – choosing to deliver it via webinar rather than run as many in person seminars. Later in 2016, Virtual Brokers would also roll out its new education centre
Preferred Pricing
In early September, Qtrade Investor took a big step into the commission-pricing battle by offering up a pricing break on commissions for young investors (where was this when I started investing!). The commission rates for younger investors are $7.75 per trade – down from the standard $8.75. That move by Qtrade Investor certainly helped to put them back on the radar of price sensitive DIY investors and arguably helped to maintain their presence atop the Globe and Mail Online Brokerage Rankings for 2016 which came out in December.
Discount Brokerage Tweets of the Week
From the Forums
Icy Conditions
If there’s one thing that winter driving reminds traders of, it’s to always keep an eye out for things that can go wrong. Of course, that’s not always possible for active traders who rely on technology to work the way it’s supposed to – especially with stop losses. In this post from Canadian Money Forum, one user’s experience with stop losses not working with bracket orders is definitely a good reminder or lesson to anyone using these order types.
The People’s Choice
With the latest results from online brokerage rankings now published, there’s one source that DIY investors consult that provides a very different point of view. In this post from reddit’s personal finance Canada thread, one person asking for who the ‘best online brokerage’ would be, gets a very different answer than either of the two recent rankings crowned.
Into the Close
That’s a wrap on the second last weekly roundup for 2016. On behalf of the SparxTrading.com team, happy holidays to all of our loyal readers. Next week’s edition will be the last of the current format – we’ve got some exciting news and changes coming to SparxTrading.com planned for 2017. Stay tuned, stay safe and enjoy the time off from trading to do something fun!

If there was any doubt that winter is coming, it’s pretty much been buried at this point underneath a pile of snow. The infamous game of thrones reference seems more appropriate than ever, not just for markets, but also for the tough times to come for Canada’s discount brokerages.


It looks like 2016 is not about to go quietly. With new all-time high for the Dow and markets generally buoyant after the US election, bulls are still driving the bus. Good thing for them they’ve got snow tires. Also not slowing down heading into the end of the year: some Canadian discount brokerages who are hoping to hit the ground running (as it were) in January.

Every now and then, the real world throws an interesting case study in the uncertainty factor of markets. The air miles reversal on letting their points expire is a great example of why in markets, just as in life, the scenario of the ‘unknown’ needs to be priced into assumptions. Perhaps the best way to sum it up is that the future always has some degree of uncertainty to it. For DIY investors, this is now the territory they find themselves in with regards to the Canadian online brokerage space heading into 2017.




For investors, every day in the markets feels like Black Friday. From the opening bell through to the close and into the night, there’s no shortage of folks looking to capitalize on a great deal. Fortunately for DIY investors, there’s at least one place that pulls together the deals and promotions from Canadian discount brokerages to make shopping around much easier (shameless plug much?).


With shipping, tripping and champagne sipping, it was another wild week in the markets. There was volatility galore which always makes for exciting times for both traders and the business news media. And, even though this wacky week has come to a close, another very big week is close at hand with ‘Black Friday’ sales and deals already starting to spring up in advance of the infamous shopping weekend. Of course, while many businesses have wised up to the fact that when consumers are out looking for deals, it may be good to start offering them up, Canadian discount brokerages are definitely holding out.
If the world were to go to hell in a handbasket, the market would respond by going bullish on basket makers and transportation. Such is the lens of a trader. Despite the volatility and uncertainty attached to a Trump presidency, the sell-off in the moments following the Trump election quickly corrected by the time markets opened. For observers of the market, it was a unique lesson in how quickly the great voting machine that is the stock market can recalibrate to figure out where the opportunities lie and where they don’t. What does a ‘Trump’ world look like for Canadian online brokerages and DIY investors? There may not be a simple answer, but the simple lesson seems to be: be prepared for the unexpected.
Patience is a virtue. Or for some, it’s a way of life. Cubs fans can finally celebrate winning the world series, somewhat ironically on a week when market bears were also cheering their recent victories. For Canadian discount brokers, more than a handful have decided that they’re done playing the waiting game and are going to be chasing the prize of getting new clients as we head into the final stretch of 2016.