@ar I will say that more than a decade ago, Schwab did work in the best interest of its customers/clients. Schwab didn't sell sub-prime loans prior to 2008 because they weren't in the best interest of its real clients and Schwab didn't accept TARP, and layoffs were rare. In fact, when the company laid off 2,000 employees between 2001 and 2003, Schwab expanded severance and transition assistance, created an education / retraining support program for laid-off employees, partnered with universities and training programs, and covered tuition assistance and retraining costs for many of those laid off. Today, the "clients" are the largest shareholders - those who sit on the Board and approve the EC's comp. CEOs are now simply hired to extract value, not build companies or provide "best in class" products and services to customers. For example, in Rick's recent interview where he seemed to be critical of prediction markets, he stated that Schwab won't offer them … unless they have to from a competitive standpoint. Not, if we determine that it's in our clients' best interest to do so, but if they need to keep up the stock price for the largest shareholders. And those stupid Trump accounts are awful for this country. They are a backdoor subsidy to financial institutions who will collect the fees. For the American people, they will weaken social support systems like social security, public education, and universal healthcare. It's a benefit only for the wealthy who will have yet another vehicle to stash funds in a tax-advantaged account vs. those who won't be able to afford additional contributions and who will likely need to use the nominal funds earlier than "retirement." Baby bonds are 100% better for the country - they're progressive vs. regressive as the Trump accounts, results are guaranteed and not tied to market performance.