Alternate name: Safekeeping fees
Unless you request a paper stock certificate or insist upon the use of the direct registration system, you will typically have the securities placed in a global custody account of some sort. Custodians also collect your dividend and interest income for you, give you an account statement, and handle any corporate actions. These could include receiving shares of a spin-off or making an election for cash or stock following a merger. The custodian also performs a host of other tasks that could become overwhelming if you had to deal with the duties yourself.
How Custodial Fees Work
If a person living in the U.S. owns securities but is not a member of a stock exchange, they own the securities through a chain of registration. This often involves one or more custodians. The process works this way because it would be impractical to register traded shares or other securities in each holder’s name. Rather, the custodian is registered as a holder, which keeps them in an arrangement with a fiduciary responsibility to the real owners. Special custodial banks safeguard assets for people or companies. These entities do not engage in typical commercial or retail banking; they focus on holding assets for safekeeping, including stocks, commodities, bonds, currency, and precious metals. These types of companies also help make certain types of transactions, such as forex, settlements for security or currency buying and selling, and different actions related to securities. These actions could include stock splits, bond calls, stock dividends, and business mergers. In exchange for these services, your firm will probably withdraw a custodial fee on a regular basis. It could be quarterly or annually. These fees are usually automatically deducted from your account and reflected on your statement.
Alternatives to Custodial Fees
This term “safekeeping fees” has become rare, but it may be used to refer to a service, often by bank trust departments, for handling custody on behalf of a client who wants to keep their stock certificates on hand at the bank. It’s usually in their name rather than a street name. A street name is the name of the bank, dealer, or firm that holds the stock or other assets on behalf of the owner. When an asset is placed in safekeeping, the investor receives a receipt proving that they own it. The asset does not belong to the institution holding it. Even if it were to go bankrupt, its creditors couldn’t go after the securities; they would be returned to their rightful owner. If the investor places a sell order, the bank trust department would hand over the stock certificate to the broker prior to the settlement date. The custodian would also add any other certificates received from spin-offs to the vault to ensure that the investor receives their entitled share.
How Much Do Custodial Fees Cost?
Fees vary quite a bit. It depends on the firm you are working with and the services it offers. Many people place their assets in the custody of their broker in a brokerage account. This is an easy, convenient option. It’s handled so seamlessly that many people don’t even realize they serve a different function. Unless special treatment is requested, these assets will almost always be held in a street name. Firms do this to attract as many people as they can, in the hopes of getting more trading commissions. As a result, many firms waive custody fees. You may not even notice that you’re paying them; the costs are rolled into the commissions on trades. It isn’t unusual for some firms to charge minimum annual fees, which is common if you don’t have a certain amount of money in your account. It’s also common if you don’t engage in any trades for a certain length of time; it needs to help offset the expense of servicing the account. For instance, look at a trading platform such as Interactive Brokers (IB). Suppose a customer of the firm has less than $100,000 in an account that generates less than $10 in trading commissions per month. A makeup fee of the differential is applied; each account pays at least $120 per year to cover IB’s costs, which includes custodial fees. IB focuses on large, wealthy clients who want economies of scale. Customers get to choose between a fixed-rate fee schedule and a tiered fee schedule. On the tiered schedule, the commission is $0.0035 per share for U.S. stocks; it has a maximum commission rate of 1% of the trade value.
Types of Fees
Specialty custodians who agree to deal with non-standard assets often charge higher fees. These assets could be hedge fund investments held in the form of LLC membership units or limited partnership units. The same goes for rarer types of self-directed retirement plans, such as a self-directed IRA or Roth IRA. These fees can run up to thousands of dollars per year, but they can be worth it for the right investor under the right circumstances. For instance, wealthy investors who want to buy assets such as an entire apartment complex under a tax shelter may benefit from these services. It would often be impossible for them to use this unique strategy to produce so much passive income without the help of a specialist.
What It Means for Individual Investors
Custodial fees are one of the things that make up your personal expense ratio, along with any other fees and costs you incur while managing your portfolio. When looking at your expense ratio, be sure to consider the broader picture. If you are using a robo-advisor for your investments, you might be charged a percentage of the assets under management or a monthly subscription. Find out whether the brokerage related fees and an expense ratio of funds are included or excluded from the robo-advisor fees to know the total fees of your investment portfolio. Perhaps you’re dealing with specialty products and services. These could have all-inclusive costs on portfolios larger than $1 million. That focus on all-inclusive costs is important. In some situations, the fees are set up in such a way that a firm charging 1.5% is assessing lower fees than one that charges only 0.75%. This is due to the way they treat certain cash and asset classes. You cannot look at the sticker rate alone; you must understand the total fees on your entire portfolio.