Yes, my name is Brian Smith, so what? Anyway - he
Post# of 96879
TD Ameritrade Apex <apexclientservices@tdameritrade.com>
11:23 AM (0 minutes ago)
to me
Hello,
Here is the thread that you asked for.
Tina Huynh
General Pool for General E-mail Queues
TD Ameritrade, Inc.
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I apologize - someone out there is trading over 100,000 shares on the
market somehow - and I just haven't been able to find any business
anywhere on the planet that will do anything other than say no. So
why have shares of stock in a business if nobody will touch them?
Certainly you can understand the frustration. These do have value,
just, you know. What you tell me makes no sense as I have verified
you do in fact deal with this stock, you're just telling me no as some
sort of policy. Stocks are risky, and the customer takes all the
risk. They put sell orders in and if they don't sell then the stock
sits, which doesn't cost you anything more than you already incur by
keeping the numbers in your computer, so you do not risk a penny as a
business.
Sincerely,
Brian Smith
On Sun, Apr 29, 2018 at 7:52 AM, Brian Smith <destruk@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks for the reply. What if I told one of your brokers to buy the
> shares for me on the open market with your paid commission, would you
> do that? Are you sure you trade stocks as your business?
>
> What do you do when a client who somehow actually has shares of NTEK
> with your company and their account already tells you to sell the NTEK
> shares? Do you refuse to do what your own customer asks you to do on
> a regular basis or what?
>
> Sincerely,
> Brian Smith
>
> On Sun, Apr 29, 2018 at 3:10 AM, TD Ameritrade - New Accounts
> <starting@tdameritrade.com> wrote:
>> Hello Brian Smith,
>>
>> If you were an existing client, we still would not be able to accept the shares of NTEK for deposit. If the shares were in book form, we still would not accept them from the transfer agent.
>>
>> Sincerely,
>>
>>
>> Tovunya Craig
>> New Accounts, TD Ameritrade
>> TD Ameritrade, Inc.