Made With Teen Fidelity

Made With Teen Fidelity




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Now teenagers can trade stocks with Fidelity’s new youth investing accounts
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Now teenagers can trade stocks with Fidelity’s new youth investing accounts
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Now teenagers can trade stocks with Fidelity’s new youth investing accounts
Published Tue, May 18 20219:08 AM EDTUpdated Tue, May 18 20211:41 PM EDT
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Fidelity said Tuesday it is launching the Fidelity Youth Account, an investing and savings account for 13- to 17-year-olds.
The no-fee account will allow teenagers to buy and sell stocks, ETFs and Fidelity mutual funds.
The accounts are only available to teenagers with a parent who also has a Fidelity account.
A Fidelity Investments location in New York.
Fidelity Investments is lowering the barrier to entry into the stock market for a new cohort: teenagers.
The investing firm is launching the Fidelity Youth Account, an investing and savings account for 13- to 17-year-olds. The no-fee account will allow teenagers to buy and sell stocks, ETFs and Fidelity mutual funds.
The accounts, which Fidelity calls the first of their kind in the industry, are only available to teenagers with a parent who also has a Fidelity account. Fidelity is pitching the venture as an educational opportunity, where parents can monitor their child’s activity.
Younger investors have been entering the stock market in droves in the past year as the Covid-19 pandemic created a unique climate for retail investors. Millions of new clients traded the epic market comeback from the coronavirus recession in 2020 and stuck around for an epic short squeeze in GameStop in January.
The rush of new young investors has not come without negative implications, though, critics argue. The popularity of stock trading app Robinhood — which requires investors to be 18 or older to use its services — has been criticized as helping to start bubbles in the so-called meme stocks such as GameStop, as well as cryptocurrencies. However, Robinhood is not the only brokerage going after younger generations.
How memes, Reddit and retail investors flipped Wall Street upside down
Of the 4.1 million new accounts that Fidelity added in the first quarter of 2021, 1.6 million were opened by retail investors 35 and younger, an increase of more than 222% from a year prior.
Fidelity’s new youth account, which was first reported by The Wall Street Journal, will offer clients a debit card with no minimum investment at account opening.
Young investors are not allowed to trade options and are not allowed to trade on margin, according to Fidelity chief marketing officer David Dintenfass.
Dintenfass said during the pilot program about 30% of teenagers were trading stocks. The group that traded, invested in bigger equities like the S&P 500 index fund, Apple and Tesla.
“Our goal for the Fidelity Youth Account is to encourage young Americans to learn through action and foster meaningful family conversations around financial topics,” said Jennifer Samalis, senior vice president of acquisition and loyalty at Fidelity Investments, in a press release.
When the teenager reaches the age of 18, the account will transition to a standard brokerage account.
As of the first quarter, Fidelity has 83.4 million total accounts and $10.4 trillion assets under administration.
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Firm will let 13- to 17-year-olds trade stocks, mutual funds
The Fidelity Youth Account will let parents monitor activity
Fidelity Investments is giving teenagers access to financial markets with a new type of brokerage account.
The fund manager will provide investing and savings accounts and debit cards to 13- to 17-year-olds whose parents are clients, Boston-based Fidelity said Tuesday in an emailed statement. They will be able to trade U.S.-listed stocks, Fidelity mutual funds and most exchange-traded funds, with no account fees or commissions.
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“Fidelity is committed to responsibly supporting young investors,” said Jennifer Samalis, senior vice president of acquisition and loyalty at Fidelity. “Our goal for the Fidelity Youth Account is to encourage young Americans to learn through action and foster meaningful family conversations around financial topics.”
A wave of young retail investors in the U.S. are exploring trading for the first time, galvanized by social media and the stock market’s sharp rebound from its pandemic lows in 2020. A rush of retail trading buoyed Fidelity and other brokerages, including Robinhood Markets, which popularized commission-free trading. Major brokerages including Charles Schwab Corp. and Fidelity followed suit, eliminating commissions in late 2019.
The new generation of investors has seized on the free-trading frenzy. At Fidelity, investors 35 years or younger opened 1.6 million retail accounts in the first quarter, more than triple the number from a year earlier, according to a report.
Fidelity is now offering an even earlier entry point, although its accounts for minors will allow parents to monitor their investing activities. When a customer turns 18, the account will switch to a standard brokerage format.
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