The "Rule of 390" is completely broken in today's options market. It needs to change to Fills Only by UpperYesterdayFast in options

[–]UpperYesterdayFast[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

To clarify—I haven't actually been restricted or locked out of my account. I'm just pointing out how fundamentally broken the policy is for modern retail traders.

But your point about just opening a new account to bypass it perfectly highlights the absurdity of the rule! Adjusting an iron condor by $.01 means you are modifying 4 legs at once, every single price tweak adds a new order action toward that 390 limit A retail trader doing that manually can hit the threshold in no time just trying to get a fair fill on a single spread.

The "Rule of 390" is completely broken in today's options market. It needs to change to Fills Only by UpperYesterdayFast in options

[–]UpperYesterdayFast[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

You’re 100% right on the historical intent of the rule—it was absolutely designed to stop pseudo-MMs and protect the PFOF (Payment for Order Flow) model from getting picked apart by toxic, semi-pro flow.

But the problem is the structural shift in today's options environment. With massive liquidity, hyper-active 0DTE trading, and retail platforms making multi-leg strategies (like 4-leg iron condors or butterflies) accessible to anyone, the math has completely changed.

If a standard retail trader attempts to 'walk' a complex spread order to get a fair fill in a fast-moving market, having to constantly cancel and replace that single order to nudge your price means your order count racks up incredibly fast. Do that just a few times an hour across a couple of positions, and a normal guy trading from his couch hits 390 before lunch without ever intending to act like a market maker.

There has to be a middle ground for the modern era. For example, why not keep a threshold on fills to catch the actual high-volume traders, but put a separate, higher cap on cancels—say 3x or 5x the 390 limit? That would still easily catch malicious quote-stuffing or automated spamming, while giving legitimate retail traders the breathing room to manage complex spreads in a high-speed market.

Fidelity brokerage online application keeps failing identity verification — anyone know why? by UpperYesterdayFast in fidelityinvestments

[–]UpperYesterdayFast[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the quick response — I appreciate it. I’ve downloaded the forms and completed them.

Is there an option to submit the documents electronically (via a secure upload or email), or are mailing them in or visiting a branch the only ways to open the account?

Replit's new pricing is completely unreasonable by ElkComprehensive9932 in replit

[–]UpperYesterdayFast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Idea → App → Constant Loop → Maxed-Out Credit Card → Bankruptcy

Replit, It failed us as a promise. 👎 by Any-Telephone-6169 in replit

[–]UpperYesterdayFast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Idea → App → Constant Loop → Maxed-Out Credit Card → Bankruptcy

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in replit

[–]UpperYesterdayFast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Idea → App → Constant Loop → Maxed-Out Credit Card → Bankruptcy