Updated Monday, July 25, 2011
Android App Grade: B
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Note: This Android app was tested on the HTC myTouch 4G handset
Overview:
The Schwab Android app interface design is OK but the home page is currently underutilized. Checking basic account information and transferring funds to and from Schwab are both handled well. Stock quote pages are detailed, the charts are top notch and the selection of news articles is extensive. Trading stocks is mostly handled well while we have a few gripes with the options trading functionality. Some features that Schwab has added since releasing the app include funds transfers, check depositing using the phone camera and the addition of user sessions. The Schwab Android app offers one of the top broker mobile trading experiences.
Android Market Facts:
- App Name: Schwab Mobile
- Version: 1.2
- Requires: Android version 2.1 and up
- App Size: 3.1 MB
- User Rating: 4.5 / 5 stars
Details:
Upon opening the Schwab Android app, users must log in to access any of the app features. It would be nice if certain sections, such as stock quotes and news could be accessed without logging in. A feature is available to store user names in the app but it does not seem to be working properly. As of version 1.2, sessions are now maintained so that if users briefly close the app then they will not be prompted for their password upon re-entry.
Menu Structure
Once users are logged in they are taken to the app home page. This page features icons with links to the watch lists, positions, order status, market overview, transfers, a list of forthcoming app updates and an option to call Schwab. We are not sure why Schwab chose this seemingly random collection of icons but we wish they would either expand upon the home page or let users customize the icons themselves. The bottom menu also contains its own list of icons. Let's take a look at some of the major features found in these menus.
Accounts
The Accounts menu contains a list of all accounts held Schwab along with the current balance and daily change in value for each account. Selecting a particular account brings up a detailed balance page with access to position and history pages.
Transfers
Fund transfers to and from outside accounts are available within the app. This has become an increasingly popular feature found in most newer apps.
Deposit Check
New to version 1.1.0.6 of the Schwab Android app is the ability to deposit checks by taking a photo on the phone.
Market Overview
The top of the Market Overview menu shows the latest prices for the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), S&P 500 and NASDAQ along with an accompanying chart. After that there is a breakdown of advancing / declining stocks for the NYSE, NASDAQ and AMEX. Below this is a list of the best and worst performing sectors over the past three months (click on images for larger views):
Market News
The Market News section features articles provided by the Associated Press Online, Reuters and StreetInsider. News can be filtered by sector and by region of the world.
Quotes
The Quotes menu contains three separate pages: a company summary, company news and options chains. The summary page shows a one day chart, stock pricing information such as bid and ask, 52 week high / low and P/E along with a brief description of the company's line of business. The news page shows company relevant news articles. Options chains show the bid and ask prices for all puts and calls for all outstanding contracts.
Turning the phone horizontally anywhere in the quotes menu will load the charts interface. Charts can be viewed for time frames of 1d, 5d, 1m, 3m, 6m, 1y, 3y, 5y, 10y and the max history for that stock / index. Technical indicators available include moving averages, bollinger bands and MACD. Earnings and dividend event indicators can be shown or suppressed. Plot styles available include mountain, candlestick, line and open / high / low / close. A relevant moving average is automatically shown on all charts. The charts are very impressive. Here is a one year candlestick chart for Goldcorp (GG) with bollinger bands and earnings and dividend events:
Watch Lists
Watch lists are user customizable lists of securities shown along with their last price and their current day price change. Selecting any security from within a watch list brings up the quotes menu for that security. Here is a watch list that we created made up of selection of very large oil companies:
Stock Trading
To trade stocks select the Trade icon from the bottom menu and then select Stocks & ETFs from the top trading menu. The order entry screen is very long and requires scrolling down several screens to view everything. We like the extra real estate since it allows for large fonts and selection boxes and should help reduce fat fingering trades. Orders types allowed include market, limit, stop loss and stop limit which is the same selection that is found in the full web based trading platform. Here is an order that we submitted to purchase 1 share of Netflix (NFLX) with a limit price of $80.00 and a timing of Good Until Canceled, which means that the trade is held in Schwab's system for 60 calendar days until it is purged:
We received a warning message because our limit price was below the last trade price. We selected to verify our selected price and our order was submitted. Open orders can be viewed, modified or canceled from the Order Status menu. Once our order executed our new position populated in the accounts positions menu. Strangely enough, there is no easy way to close out positions from this menu. Users have to select the position, which loads the security quote page, then select the Trade button to load the order entry screen. The order entry screen shows the open position size and allows for the quick selection of this quantity but it would be more convenient if the positions page populated all of this automatically.
Options Trading
To trade options select the Trade icon from the bottom menu and then select Options from the top trading menu. Step one is to enter the underlying stock symbol. If users do not know the symbol then the symbol entry box functions as a symbol lookup menu. We entered NFLX for Netflix. This then loaded the relevant option chain. Once we found the contract that we wanted we selected it, which loaded a detailed quote page for that contract.
We decided that this was the contract that we wanted so we selected the Trade button. This brought us back to the options order entry menu with the contract populated. Unlike the full web based trading platform the Android platform does not allow for multi-legged options orders. We selected to buy 1 contract with a limit price of $10.0. When everything was set we selected the Review Order button:
As with stock trading, options open orders can be viewed, modified or canceled from the Open Orders menu and executed orders populate in the Positions menu. Closing out positions from the Positions menu could be handled slightly better.
For a separate trade that we entered, we tried submitting an order with a limit price that was 25% below the last trade price. This generated an error message noting that the limit price was too low and that the order could not be submitted. To make it clear, there is no way to submit certain limit orders for options. It is puzzling why the warning system that is in place for equities is not also done for options. We complained about this in our review of the web based Schwab options trading platform. As it stands, we are not satisfied with the functionality of limit orders for options and do not recommend trading options with Schwab.
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