Commission Broker

Commission Broker

A commission broker is an employee of a brokerage company who gets remunerated for the number of trades they execute. Tying a commission broker's earnings to the level of business a customer does can often lead to unethical practices, such as churning, whereby a broker trades excessively in a client's account just to generate commissions. A broker who charges a flat fee for their services rather than earning a commission based on order size has more incentive to put the customer's best interest first because they earn the same amount regardless of how much business that client does. When a customer pays a commission to buy or sell a security, it gets split between the brokerage company and the commission broker. For example, a dishonest commission broker may engage in a practice called churning, which means they execute multiple trades in a customer's account for the sole purpose of generating more commissions.

A commission broker is an employee of a brokerage firm who receives payment for the number of trades they execute for clients.

What Is a Commission Broker?

A commission broker is an employee of a brokerage company who gets remunerated for the number of trades they execute. The commission structure can encourage unethical behavior by unscrupulous commission brokers. For example, a dishonest commission broker may engage in a practice called churning, which means they execute multiple trades in a customer's account for the sole purpose of generating more commissions. The additional trades do not benefit the customer.

A commission broker is an employee of a brokerage firm who receives payment for the number of trades they execute for clients.
These types of brokers typically earn a percentage of the client's assets traded, meaning the more a client trades, the more money they make.
A commission broker can sometimes put their own interests above that of their clients in order to earn more money.
Unethical practices that commission brokers may engage in include churning and bucketing.

Understanding Commission Brokers

Brokers can be paid in a variety of ways, the two most common being a flat-fee broker and a commission broker. A fee broker charges a flat fee for providing services to a client, regardless of how much business that client does.

A broker who charges a flat fee for their services rather than earning a commission based on order size has more incentive to put the customer's best interest first because they earn the same amount regardless of how much business that client does.

A flat-fee broker does not have an incentive to push a customer into certain securities just to make a sale. Instead, they have an incentive to place the customer into the best-performing investments, so they remain loyal and continue to provide a steady source of business.

A commission broker, on the other hand, earns their money based on the volume of business that a client does. If a client doesn't trade at all, a commission broker will not earn any income. If a client trades more and more, a commission broker will earn more.

Tying a commission broker's earnings to the level of business a customer does can often lead to unethical practices, such as churning, whereby a broker trades excessively in a client's account just to generate commissions. A broker may also engage in bucketing, whereby they buy or sell a security at a better price than the client expected but do not pass on that value to the client, keeping the profit for themself.

Commission Broker Duties

Commission Broker Earnings

When a customer pays a commission to buy or sell a security, it gets split between the brokerage company and the commission broker. Typically, brokers who execute more trades receive a larger share of commission from their brokerage company.

For example, a broker who generates $500,000 in commissions may receive a 60%/40% split, meaning they earn $300,000 and the brokerage company takes $200,000. A broker who makes $100,000 in commission may only receive a 30%/70% split, meaning they receive $30,000 and the brokerage company pockets $70,000. Brokerage companies increase a broker's commission splits as they produce more revenue to provide an incentive and generate more business.

Being a commission broker can be a demanding and stressful job as your take-home pay depends on how much business you sell. This can result in varying amounts of income every week, month, or year. In down markets, when investment activity can be lower than average, commission brokers can suffer financially.

Related terms:

Bucketing

Bucketing is an unethical practice whereby a broker generates a profit by misleading their client about the execution of a particular trade. read more

Churning

Churning is excessive trading by a broker in a client's account in order to generate commissions. Discover more about the practice of churning here. read more

Commission

A commission, in financial services, is the money charged by an investment advisor for giving advice and making transactions for a client. read more

Customer

A customer is an individual or business that purchases the goods or services of another business. read more

Deep Discount Broker

A deep discount broker handles buys and sales of securities for customers on exchanges at even lower commission rates than regular discount brokers. read more

Overtrading

Overtrading refers to excessive buying and selling of stocks by either a broker or an investor. read more

Suitable (Suitability)

An investment must meet the suitability requirements outlined in FINRA Rule 2111 prior to being recommended by a firm to an investor. read more

Two-Dollar Broker

A two-dollar broker is a floor broker who executes orders for other brokers and historically receives two dollars per trade, so the name has stuck. read more