A wire transfer is an electronic transfer of money between different financial institutions.
How to Request a Wire Transfer
To Wire Money to Your E*TRADE Securities Account
Contact your other financial institution and ask them to wire funds to E*TRADE Securities. You'll need to provide them with information below.
You can complete and print out an easy
If your financial institution is located in the United States:
The Receiving institution information:
E*TRADE Securities LLC
PO Box 484
Jersey City, NJ
ABA Transit Routing Number: 056073573
Your information:
The amount you want to wire
Your eight-digit E*TRADE Securities account number. (Your account number can be found on the Complete View page when you first log in.)
Your name and address
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If your financial institution is located outside the United States:
The receiving institution information:
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
420 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA 94104
Swift Code: WFBIUS6S
FBO: E*TRADE Clearing LLC
Routing Number: 056073573
The amount you want to wire in U.S. dollars
Your eight-digit E*TRADE Securities account number
Please note, your wire should ONLY be routed through the Wells Fargo WFBIUS6S swift code if your international bank does not have a correspondent US Bank. Any attempt should be made by your bank to send directly to aba 056073573 as sending through the additional account may lead to delays in the processing of your wire.
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Funds Availability
New Customer
Same business day if received before 6 p.m. ET
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Existing Customer
Same business day if received before 6 p.m. ET
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For details on how to Wire Money into an E*TRADE Bank deposit account as well as funds availability information for Wire Transfers to and from E*TRADE Bank deposit accounts please click here
Transfer An Account
Transferring an account simply means moving cash or securities from an outside financial institution to E*TRADE. Consolidating assets will simplify your life and make managing your finances much easier with the extraordinary value, tools, and guidance E*TRADE provides.
Great news, another banker jumps.
by jujyiui 28-Year Old Former JPMorgan Banker Jumps to His Death, Latest in Series of Recent Suicides
Not a week seems to pass without some banker or trader committing suicide. Today we get news of the latest such tragic event with news that 28-year old Kenneth Bellando, a former JPMorgan banker, current employee of Levy Capital, and brother of a top chief investment officer of JPM, jumped to his death from his 6th floor East Side apartment on March 12.
Bellando, a former investment bank analyst at JPMorgan, is the son of John Bellando, chief operating officer and chief financial officer at Condé Nast