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Online Trading in Europe
November 26, 2007 Those notoriously conservative investors across the pond are beginning to experiment with playing the market over the Internet. But don't push them too hard This conservatism helps explain why online trading—an obsessive pastime for some CNBC-addicted Americans—hasn't taken off as much in Europe. According to market researcher IDC, only about 14% of the 318 million people in Germany, Britain, France, Italy, Spain, and Sweden combined are shareholders. In the U.S., by comparison, nearly 55% of the population of 300 million owns stock. Now, attitudes are beginning to change. Thanks to increased use of employee-directed pension plans and a shift in responsibility for retirement from governments to individuals, Europeans are paying more attention to investing. And with the continent's high personal computer and Internet penetration, a growing number of investors are forgoing traditional brokers for online alternatives. That's helping spur Europe's online brokerage sector, which is now adding customer accounts at a 7% annual growth rate, vs. 4% in the U.S. "Customers are gradually becoming aware of the benefits of electronic trading," says Simona Macellari, a research and consulting manager with IDC in Milan. "People didn't have the same financial knowledge as in the U.S., but that's quickly changing." Jumping in to take advantage of the opportunity are online trading outfits such as Boursorama (SOGN.PA) in France, Maxblue in Germany, and the British unit of TD Waterhouse (AMTD). But perhaps no firm is moving faster than Europe's largest online brokerage, Cortal Consors, a subsidiary of French bank BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA) formed through the 2002 merger of French e-trader Cortal and German rival Consors. Now in six Western European countries, the company is expanding into new regions and rolling out such services as wealth management and financial advising. The evolution is welcome news for an industry that until recently was still licking its wounds from the dot-com bust. During the bubble, some 120 brokerages, including U.S. heavyweights Charles Schwab (SCHW) and E*Trade (ETFC), poured into the European market looking to cash in on growing stock ownership after the privatization in the 1990s of many former state-owned monopolies.
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Click here to locate your closest Direct Access Trading Center Continue After the 2001 downturn, though, many individual investors were left holding damaged portfolios, while brokerages lost out on their multimillion dollar gamble that Europeans would embrace online trading. "There are a number of examples of U.S. firms coming over to Europe and getting their fingers burned," says Bruce Weber, professor of financial management at the London Business School. Most Europeans, he says, preferred to stay with low-risk investments like property than roll the dice on the stock market. In recent years, that preference has started to change, especially now that the real estate market has begun to cool. At the same time, the liberalization of Europe's financial-services sector is bringing down transaction costs for institutional and retail investors alike . |