The Charles Schwab Corporation
NYSE:SCHW
$ 75.19
$-0.04 (-0.05%)
$ 75.19
$-0.04 (-0.05%)
End-of-day quote: 04/24/2024

Charles Schwab Stock

About Charles Schwab

The Charles Schwab Corporation (CSC) is a savings and loan holding company. Charles Schwab share price history

CSC engages, through its subsidiaries (collectively referred to as Schwab), in wealth management, securities brokerage, banking, asset management, custody, and financial advisory services. As of December 31, 2023, Schwab had 34.8 million active brokerage accounts, 5.2 million workplace plan participant accounts, and 1.8 million banking accounts.

Principal business subsidiaries of CSC include the following: Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. (CS&Co), incorporated in 1971, a securities broker-dealer; TD Ameritrade, Inc., an introducing securities broker-dealer; TD Ameritrade Clearing, Inc. (TDAC), a securities broker-dealer that provides trade execution and clearing services to TD Ameritrade, Inc.; Charles Schwab Bank, SSB (CSB), the company's principal banking entity; and Charles Schwab Investment Management, Inc. (CSIM), the investment advisor for Schwab's proprietary mutual funds (Schwab Funds) and for Schwab's exchange-traded funds (Schwab ETFs).

Schwab provides financial services to individuals and institutional clients through two segments - Investor Services and Advisor Services. The Investor Services segment provides retail brokerage, investment advisory, and banking and trust services to individual investors, and retirement plan services, as well as other corporate brokerage services, to businesses and their employees. The Advisor Services segment provides custodial, trading, banking and trust, and support services, as well as retirement business services, to independent registered investment advisors (RIAs), independent retirement advisors, and recordkeepers. These services are further described in the segment discussion below.

Effective January 1, 2021, CSC changed the designation of its corporate headquarters from San Francisco, California to Westlake, Texas. The company maintains a nationwide presence across a network of branches and operations centers, as well as several international locations, and the company's Westlake location provides a centrally located hub for the company.

Business Strategy Charles Schwab share price history

The company's strategy emphasizes placing clients' perspectives, needs, and desires at the forefront. Because investing plays a fundamental role in building financial security, the company strives to deliver a better investing experience for the company's clients - individual investors and the people and institutions who serve them - by disrupting longstanding industry practices on their behalf and providing superior service. The company also intends to offer a broad range of products and solutions to meet client needs with a focus on transparency, value, and trust. In addition, management works to couple Schwab's scale and resources with ongoing expense discipline to keep costs low and ensure that products and solutions are affordable as well as responsive to client needs. In combination, these are the key elements of the company's 'no trade-offs' approach to serving investors. Following this strategy is the best way to maximize the company's market valuation and stockholder returns over time.

Products and Services

Schwab offers a broad range of products and services through intuitive end-to-end solutions, including robust digital capabilities, to address the company's clients' varying investment and financial needs. Examples of these offerings include the following:

Brokerage - an array of full-feature brokerage accounts with equity and fixed income trading, margin lending, options trading, futures and forex trading, and cash management capabilities including certificates of deposit;

Mutual funds - third-party mutual funds through the Mutual Fund Marketplace, including no-transaction-fee (NTF) mutual funds through the Mutual Fund OneSource service, which also includes proprietary mutual funds, plus mutual fund trading and clearing services to broker-dealers;

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) - an extensive offering of ETFs, including both proprietary and third-party ETFs;

Advice solutions - managed portfolios of both proprietary and third-party mutual funds and ETFs, separately managed accounts, customized personal advice for tailored portfolios, specialized planning, and full-time portfolio management;

Alternative investments - access to a variety of third-party alternative investments such as private equity and real estate on Schwab's alternative investment platforms - Schwab Alternative Investment OneSource and Schwab Alternative Investment Marketplace.

Banking - checking and savings accounts, first lien residential real estate mortgage loans (First Mortgages), home equity lines of credit (HELOCs), and pledged asset lines (PALs); and

Trust - trust custody services, personal trust reporting services, and administrative trustee services.

These investing products and services are made available through two business segments - Investor Services and Advisor Services. Schwab's major sources of revenues are generated by both of the reportable segments, based on their respective levels of client assets and activity.

Investor Services

The company has expanded offerings over time in response to client needs, aiming to provide a compelling and often disruptive solution in the marketplace. The Investor Services segment includes the following business units: Retail Investor; Workplace Financial Services, which includes Stock Plan Services, Retirement Plan Services, and Designated Brokerage Services (formerly included in the Compliance Solutions business unit, a portion of which was sold to a third-party in 2022); Mutual Fund Clearing Services; and Off-Platform Sales.

Through the Retail Investor business unit, the company offers individual investors access to a broad set of products, tools, education, trading, and advisory solutions. The company provides advice and guidance through various relationship models. And the company offers award-winning and 24/7 service to all the company's clients, regardless of asset levels, via a multi-channel service delivery model, which includes online, mobile, telephone, and branch support.

At the core of the company's offer is its broad set of relationship models that help personalize the investing journey for the company's clients and offer them the choice of where, when, and how they do business with the company. Financial Consultants, Active Trader Financial Consultants, and Wealth Consultants in Schwab's branches and regional centers focus on building client relationships. The company also has a range of roles to support clients with a broad set of specialized needs, including financial planning, managed investing, estate management, equity compensation and lending. Additionally, the company has teams focused on supporting the advice and education needs of all the company's clients irrespective of asset levels at Schwab. To better meet the differentiated needs of the company's more affluent clients, the company offers Schwab Private Client Services for clients with $1 million - $10 million and Schwab Private Wealth Services for clients with $10 million or more in total assets. Clients enrolled in these offerings have access to a dedicated relationship and service team, specialists, expedited processing, pricing discounts and product access.

The company's advisory solutions span a broad range of discretionary and non-discretionary choices, with minimum investments starting as low as $5,000, making it accessible to a broad set of investors. The company's premier advisory solution, Schwab Wealth Advisory, features a personal advice relationship with a dedicated Wealth Advisor, supported by a team of wealth management professionals who provide individualized service, financial planning, a customized investment strategy developed in collaboration with the client, and ongoing guidance and execution. The company offers referrals to independent RIAs in the Schwab Advisor Network for clients seeking personalized portfolio management, financial planning, and wealth management solutions. The company provides investors access to professional investment management in a diversified account that is invested exclusively in either mutual funds or ETFs through the Schwab Managed Portfolios and the Windhaven Investment Management Strategies, or equity securities and ETFs through the ThomasPartners Investment Management Strategies. Through the company's acquisition of Wasmer Schroeder in 2020, more than 20 fixed income strategies and separately managed account offerings have been made available to retail clients beginning in 2021, including two positive impact strategies and a multi-sector income strategy. The company also refers investors who want to utilize a specific third-party money manager to direct a portion of their investment assets to the Schwab Managed Account program. Schwab Personalized Indexing takes index investing a step further by allowing clients to own individual stocks that reflect the characteristics of an index in a professionally managed solution, enabling greater customization and tax efficiency. Schwab Intelligent Portfolios is available for clients who are looking to have their assets professionally managed via a fully automated online investment advisory service. Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Premium, a hybrid advisory service, offers clients an advisory service which combines the company's robo-advice technology with unlimited guidance provided by a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER to make financial and investment planning more accessible to investors. Schwab Intelligent Income is a low-cost solution designed to offer a simple, modern way to generate income from existing investment portfolios.

Further, given the company's belief in the importance of financial planning, the company offers a broad set of planning capabilities addressing a variety of planning needs. The company's solutions include simple, free digital retirement calculators, the company's complimentary digital Schwab Plan available to all Schwab clients, as well as more complex planning solutions that are delivered by a Schwab representative who takes into account a client's personal and financial goals to build a tailored financial plan.

To meet the specific needs of trading clients, Schwab offers integrated web-, mobile-, and software-based trading platforms, real-time market data, options trading, premium research, and multi-channel access, as well as sophisticated account and trade management features, risk management tools, and dedicated service support - all at highly competitive pricing. For example, clients that trade more actively can use these channels to access expert tools and extensive service capabilities - including experienced, knowledgeable teams of trading specialists, and integrated product offerings. In 2023, the company introduced Schwab Trading Powered by Ameritrade, which brings together the best of Schwab and Ameritrade's trading platforms, comprehensive education and specialized service.

Schwab's international business offers clients outside the U.S. the ability to invest in the U.S. markets. For clients living inside the U.S., it offers multicurrency and foreign exchange trading. For all clients, it offers trading in foreign stocks. In addition, Schwab serves both foreign investors and non-English-speaking U.S. clients who wish to trade or invest in the U.S. dollar-based securities.

The company also offers clients a range of self-service education and support tools, providing quick and efficient access to a broad lineup of information, research, tools, and administrative services, which clients can access according to their needs. Educational tools include online and in-person workshops, live and on-demand webcasts, podcasts, interactive courses, and online information about investing. Additionally, the company provides various online research and analysis tools that are designed to help clients achieve better investment outcomes. As an example of analysis tools available to clients, Schwab Equity Ratings is a quantitative model-based stock rating system that provides all clients with ratings on approximately 3,000 stocks, assigning each equity a single grade: A, B, C, D, or F. Schwab Equity Ratings International, an international ranking methodology, covers stocks of approximately 4,000 foreign companies. Another example of expanding access to investing includes Schwab Stock Slices, a service which enables investors to purchase a single stock slice, or up to 30 different stock slices at once, from the S&P 500, commission-free through the company's online channels. The company also offers Schwab Investing Themes, a thematic investing offer that uses proprietary research and technology to identify trends, opportunities, and relevant companies and group them into themes in which clients can invest in just a few clicks.

The company also offers equity compensation plan sponsors full-service recordkeeping for stock plans, stock options, restricted stock, performance shares, stock appreciation rights, and a full range of participant support services through the company's Stock Plan Services business unit. Specialized services for executive transactions and reporting, grant acceptance tracking, and other services are offered to employers to meet the needs of administering the reporting and compliance aspects of an equity compensation plan.

Retirement Plan Services offers a bundled 401(k) retirement plan product that provides retirement plan sponsors with extensive investment options, trustee or custodial services, and participant-level recordkeeping. Retirement plan design features, which increase plan efficiency and achieve employer goals, are also offered, such as automatic enrollment, automatic fund mapping at conversion, and automatic contribution increases. In addition to an open architecture investment platform, the company offers access to low cost index mutual funds and ETFs. Individuals investing for retirement through 401(k) plans can take advantage of bundled offerings of multiple investment choices, education, and third-party advice. This third-party advice service is delivered online, by phone, or in person, including recommendations based on the core investment fund choices in their retirement plan and specific recommended savings rates. Services also include support for Roth 401(k) accounts, profit sharing, defined benefit plans, non-qualified plans, and Schwab Personal Choice Retirement Account, a self-directed brokerage offering for retirement plans administered by Retirement Business Services within the company's Advisor Services segment.

Lastly, Mutual Fund Clearing Services provides open-end mutual fund trading, settlement, and related transactional services to banks, brokerage firms, and trust companies, and Off-Platform Sales offers proprietary mutual funds, ETFs, and collective trust funds (CTFs) outside the company and not on the Schwab platform. They are included within the Investor Services segment given their leveraging of the products and services offered to individual investors.

Advisor Services

Through the Advisor Services segment, Schwab has become one of the largest providers of custodial, trading, banking, and support services to RIAs and their clients. The company also provides retirement business services to independent retirement advisors and recordkeepers. The company can maintain its competitive position primarily through the efforts of the company's sales, support, technology, and business consulting teams, which are dedicated to helping RIAs grow, compete, and succeed in serving their clients. In addition to focusing on superior service, the company utilizes technology to provide RIAs with a highly-developed, scalable platform for administering their clients' assets easily and efficiently. Advisor Services sponsors and hosts a variety of national, regional, local, and virtual events designed to help RIAs of all sizes and complexities identify and implement better ways to expand and efficiently manage their practices.

RIAs who custody client accounts at Schwab may use proprietary software that provides them with up-to-date client account information as well as trading capabilities. The Advisor Services website is the core platform for RIAs to conduct daily business activities online with Schwab, including viewing and managing client account information and accessing news and market information. The website provides account servicing capabilities for RIAs, including account opening, money movement, transfer of assets, trading, checking status, and communicating with the company's service team. The site provides multi-year archiving of statements, trade confirms, and tax reports, along with document search capabilities. The company also provides access to integrations with third-party platforms, which support a variety of advisor needs including client relationship management, portfolio management systems, trade order management, and financial planning. As an example, the company offers Schwab Advisor Portfolio Connect, a simplified portfolio management solution that is available free of charge to advisors to manage Schwab accounts. It delivers core capabilities and features through an intuitive modern experience, without the need to download and reconcile data.

The Advisor Services website also provides interactive tools, educational content, and thought leadership for advisors turning independent. The company offers a variety of services to help RIAs grow and manage their practices, including business, technology, and operations consulting on a range of topics critical to a RIA's success, as well as an annual RIA benchmarking study to help firms understand key business metrics relative to peers. The company also offers an array of services to help advisors establish their own independent practices through a robust prospect consulting offer. To support them throughout their transition, the company offers access to business start-up and transition consultants, technology engineers, and dedicated service teams.

Schwab provides extensive educational materials, programs, and events to RIAs seeking to expand their knowledge of industry issues and trends, as well as sharpen their individual expertise and practice management skills. The company conducts industry research on an ongoing basis, and hold a series of events and conferences every year to discuss topics of interest to RIAs, including business strategies and best practices. Schwab sponsors and hosts the annual IMPACT conference, which provides a national forum for the company, RIAs, and other industry participants to gather and share information and insights, as well as a multitude of smaller events across the country each year.

RIAs and their clients have access to the company's broad range of products and services, including individual securities, mutual funds, ETFs, fixed income products, managed accounts, cash products, bank lending, and trust services. By functioning as the custodian, Schwab earns revenue associated with the underlying client assets, predominantly through net interest revenue and asset management and administration fees. In this capacity, the company do not charge the RIA or end client a custody fee.

As part of the company's integration of TD Ameritrade, the company have successfully added some of the best features from TD Ameritrade into the company's ongoing offerings. The company recently launched the thinkpipes trading platform, which offers real-time charting and efficient trading and allocation, into its ongoing offerings, as well as the company's customizable portfolio rebalancing solution, iRebal, as part of the company's offering for RIA clients.

The Advisor Services segment also includes the Retirement Business Services business unit. Retirement Business Services provides trust, custody, brokerage, and software services to independent retirement plan advisors and independent recordkeepers. Through Retirement Business Services, retirement plan assets are held at Charles Schwab Trust Bank (Trust Bank) or trusteed by a separate, independent trustee, or through brokerage accounts at CS&Co. Retirement Business Services also offers the Schwab Personal Choice Retirement Account, a self-directed brokerage offering for retirement plans. The company and independent retirement plan providers work together to serve plan sponsors, combining the consulting and administrative expertise of the administrator with the company's investment, technology, brokerage, trust, and custodial services.

Sources of Net Revenues

Schwab's largest sources of net revenues are net interest revenue, asset management and administration fees, trading revenue, and bank deposit account fees. These revenue streams are supported by the combination of the company's bank, broker-dealer, and asset management operating subsidiaries, each of which brings specific capabilities that enable the company to provide clients with the products and services they are seeking.

Net interest revenue is the difference between interest generated on interest-earning assets and interest paid on funding sources. Schwab's primary funding source for interest-earning assets is uninvested client cash balances held on the company's balance sheet as part of clients' overall relationship with the company. Schwab's interest-earning assets are primarily consisted of high-quality fixed income securities, margin loans, and bank loans.

Asset management and administration fees are primarily earned from proprietary money market mutual funds, proprietary and third-party mutual funds and ETFs, and fee-based advisory solutions.

Trading revenue includes commissions earned for executing trades for clients in certain individual equities, options, futures, fixed income securities, and certain third-party mutual funds and ETFs; order flow revenue; and principal transactions revenue earned primarily from actions to support client trading in fixed income securities.

Bank deposit account fees are primarily recognized pursuant to the company's IDA agreement with the TD Depository Institutions. Under the IDA agreement, uninvested cash within eligible brokerage client accounts is swept off-balance sheet to deposit accounts at the TD Depository Institutions. Schwab provides recordkeeping and support services to the TD Depository Institutions for bank deposit account fees.

Regulation

CSC is a savings and loan holding company and is regulated, supervised, and examined by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal Reserve).

CSC's three depository institution subsidiaries are CSB, CSC's principal depository institution subsidiary, Charles Schwab Premier Bank, SSB (CSPB), and Trust Bank. CSB and CSPB are Texas-chartered savings banks headquartered in Westlake, Texas, and Trust Bank is a Nevada-chartered savings bank. Effective September 30, 2022, Trust Bank relocated its main office to Westlake, Texas and became a member of the Federal Reserve system. CSB and CSPB are regulated, supervised, and examined by the Federal Reserve, the Texas Department of Savings and Mortgage Lending (TDSML), the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Trust Bank is regulated, supervised, and examined by the Federal Reserve, the Nevada Financial Institutions Division, the CFPB, and the FDIC. CSC, CSB, CSPB, and Trust Bank are also subject to regulation and various requirements and restrictions under state and other federal laws.

The CRA requires the primary federal bank regulatory agency for each of Schwab's depository institution subsidiaries to assess the subsidiary's record in meeting the credit needs of the communities served by the bank, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods and persons.

CSC and its subsidiaries are subject to the Volcker Rule, which generally prohibits proprietary trading or acquiring or retaining an ownership interest in, sponsoring, or having certain relationships with hedge funds and private equity funds, subject to certain exemptions, in each case as the applicable terms are defined in the Volcker Rule and the implementing regulations.

CSC and its subsidiaries that conduct financial services activities are subject to the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 (BSA), as amended by the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, which requires financial institutions to develop and implement programs reasonably designed to achieve compliance with these regulations. In addition, CSC and various subsidiaries of the company is subject to the U.S. sanctions programs administered by the Office of Foreign Assets Control.

The company's principal broker-dealer subsidiaries, CS&Co, TD Ameritrade, Inc., and TDAC, are each registered as a broker-dealer with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC or Commission), the fifty states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. CS&Co, CSIM, and certain of the company's other subsidiaries are registered as investment advisors with the SEC. Charles Schwab Futures and Forex LLC (CSFF) is registered as an FCM and FDM with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

Much of the regulation of broker-dealers has been delegated to SROs. The company's principal broker-dealers are each members of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (FINRA) and the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB). In addition, CS&Co and TDAC are members of Nasdaq Stock Market, Cboe EDGX, and MEMX LLC. In addition to the SEC, the primary regulators of the company's principal broker-dealers are FINRA and, for municipal securities, the MSRB. The National Futures Association (NFA) is the primary regulator for CSFF's futures, commodities, and forex trading activities.

The company's principal broker-dealer entities are subject to Rule 15c3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Uniform Net Capital Rule) and related SRO requirements. The CFTC and NFA also impose net capital requirements. The Uniform Net Capital Rule specifies minimum capital requirements intended to ensure the general financial soundness and liquidity of broker-dealers. CSC itself is not a registered broker-dealer and it is not subject to the Uniform Net Capital Rule.

In addition to net capital requirements, as a self-clearing broker-dealer, CS&Co, and as a clearing broker-dealer, TDAC, are subject to cash deposit and collateral requirements with clearing houses, such as the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation and Options Clearing Corporation.

As a result of the company's operations in countries outside the U.S., the company is also subject to rules and regulations issued by certain foreign authorities, including the Financial Conduct Authority in the United Kingdom, the Securities and Futures Commission in Hong Kong, the Monetary Authority of Singapore in Singapore, and the Ministry of Finance in the People's Republic of China.

History

The Charles Schwab Corporation was founded in 1971. The company was incorporated in 1971.

Country
Industry:
Founded:
1971
IPO Date:
09/22/1987
ISIN Number:
I_US8085131055

Contact Details

Address:
3000 Schwab Way, Westlake, Texas, 76262, United States
Phone Number
817 859 5000

Key Executives

CEO:
Bettinger, Walter
CFO
Crawford, Peter
COO:
Martinetto, Joseph