Welcome to Power E.TRADE. Our app is designed to help you trade options, stocks, futures, and ETFs with ease and speed. From basic orders to advanced strategies, navigate the complex world of trading with simple-to-use tools—all from the palm of your hand. Download now to get started. Power E.TRADE Pro is a Shareware software in the category Miscellaneous developed by Power E.TRADE Pro. The latest version of Power E.TRADE Pro is currently unknown. It was initially added to our database on. Power E.TRADE Pro runs on the following operating systems: Windows. Power E.TRADE Pro has not been rated by our users yet.
I spend quite a bit of time trading … I buy and hold some stocks, but I spend more time trading options (naked, covered, spreads). For a long time I used Schwab for my primary trading account, but switched about a year ago because I discovered E*Trade (NYSE: ET) offers what I would call a trading platform (software) for OS X. Power E*Trade Pro runs very well on a faster Mac (Intel and PowerPC). If you have an older Mac, it’s not worth using it … It was bearable on my G4 PowerMac (duel), but unbearable on my PowerBook G4. Now I have a new Mac Pro desktop (standard configuration) and it works very well.
Etrade Pro For Mac
The E*Trade platform is Java based, but it’s not an Applet (which can be buggy imho), it’s a Java Application that is launched using Java Webstart. If Sun needs a poster child for how and why Java Webstart can be and is so powerful, this is it!
Schwab launched a new multi-platform Java based product recently called Streetsmart.com, it runs great on OS X, but it really doesn’t compare to E*Trade Pro. E*Trade allows you to completely configure the screen(s), whereas on Schwab it’s more like going to a static page … very limited customization. The differences would take up a whole new post …
Etrade App For Mac
OptionsXpress has a platform that runs on OS X called Xtend, but it’s not nearly as customizable and useful as E*Trade Pro. Notwithstanding the lack of a great trading platform, OptionsXpress has some great Options screening tools that allow you to filter a universe of stocks and then subsequently filter down to (for example) a set of Options that are good candidates for put selling (i.e. out-of-the-money, certain return assuming no assignment, volume, open interest, implied vol etc…). Very nice. And OptionsXpress has some pretty nice Java Charting and Technical analysis tools that work well on OS X … they license this technology from Prophet.Net .. which is owned by a public company called INVESTools (NASDAQ: IEDU) … hhhmm.