Hard Dollars
What are hard dollars?
Hard dollars are explicit cash payments a client makes to a brokerage or financial service provider in exchange for services. These are fixed, out-of-pocket charges that are known and recorded up front, such as transaction fees, monthly account maintenance charges, or direct payments for research and advisory services.
How hard dollars work
- The client pays cash (via check, bank transfer, or invoice payment) directly to the firm for a specific service.
- Fees are typically disclosed and billed separately from trading activity.
- Because they are actual cash payments, hard dollars are reflected on statements and invoices and are straightforward to track and audit.
Hard dollars vs. soft dollars
- Hard dollars: cash payments made directly by the client for services.
- Soft dollars: indirect payments made using brokerage commission credits or other non-cash arrangements, where commission revenue generated from trades is used to pay for research or services.
- Key difference: hard dollars are explicit cash outlays; soft dollars are paid through commission allocation or similar arrangements tied to trading activity.
Example
A client wants proprietary equity research from a brokerage. If the client has no trading relationship with that broker, they can pay for the research by sending a check — this is a hard dollar payment. Alternatively, if the client has commission credits with another broker, they might instruct that broker to use those commissions to pay for research instead — that would be a soft dollar arrangement.
Why it matters
- Transparency: Hard dollar payments are clear and easy to document, which helps with expense tracking and regulatory reporting.
- Conflicts of interest: Soft dollar arrangements can create incentives to trade more to generate commissions; hard dollars reduce that particular conflict because services are paid for directly.
- Budgeting: Firms and investors can budget more predictably when costs are paid in hard dollars.
- Record-keeping: Hard-dollar transactions are simpler to reconcile and audit.
Key takeaways
- Hard dollars = direct cash payments for brokerage or research services.
- They are distinct from soft dollars, which use commission-based or indirect payment mechanisms.
- Hard dollars improve transparency and ease of accounting, while soft dollars may introduce incentive-related conflicts.