Schwab Cuts ETF Fees to 0.03%, Sparking Debate on Crypto ETF Growth

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ETF news broke as Schwab Asset Management cut fees on four equity index ETFs, including SCHM and SCHA, to 0.03%, effective June 11. The move brings 16 of Schwab’s 24 market-cap weighted index ETFs to three basis points, intensifying competition with Vanguard and BlackRock. Analysts say the shift could boost Bitcoin ETF news, with higher-margin crypto products like BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), which charges 0.25%, gaining traction.

Schwab Asset Management rolled out ETF fee cuts on four equity index funds Thursday. Its US mid-cap and small-cap ETFs fell to 0.03%, with international small-cap and emerging markets funds at 0.06%.

The move deepens a price war with Vanguard and BlackRock that has driven the cost of core index investing close to zero.

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Schwab ETF Fee Cuts Deepen the Race to Zero

According to Schwab’s announcement, the reductions took effect June 11 and cover SCHM, SCHA, SCHC, and SCHE.

As a result, 16 of the firm’s 24 market-cap weighted index ETFs now charge three basis points.

Schwab Slashes ETF Fees Again, Showing Why Competing in Core Investing Is Getting Harder
Schwab Slashes ETF Fees Again, Showing Why Competing in Core Investing Is Getting Harder

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The scale behind the cuts matters. Schwab Asset Management ran roughly $1.6 trillion in discretionary assets as of March 31, 2026.

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Lipper data ranks it the fifth-largest US ETF provider, and the reductions arrive as equity ETF inflows run at a record pace.

An investor with $10,000 can now hold a globally diversified Schwab portfolio for $3 to $8 a year.

In emerging markets, SCHE’s new 0.06% fee sits three basis points below the 0.09% charged by BlackRock’s IEMG.

Yet Eric Balchunas, Senior ETF Analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, noted that the cuts tie, rather than beat, the cheapest rivals.

“Schwab lowering fees on four of its ETFs to rock bottom levels. Believe it or not this only ties them for cheapest in each category. That’s how cheap everything has gotten and why ETF market is so brutal and why you see so many hot sauce launches bc who wants to compete against this,” Balchunas wrote in a post.

Will New ETF Launches Go Crypto Instead?

The margin math explains the “hot sauce” pivot Balchunas describes.

A fund charging 0.03% needs massive scale to cover its costs, while crypto wrappers still command premiums.

BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) charges 0.25%, and it became the firm’s biggest moneymaker among its ETFs.

Meanwhile, record-breaking ETF flows into crypto funds and the SEC’s generic listing standards have lowered the barrier for altcoin products.

Together, they give issuers a higher-margin growth lane that core indexing no longer offers.

A handful of giants already control Wall Street’s crypto exposure. Therefore, the question everyone may be asking is whether fee compression follows them there.

If crypto wrappers trace the path of core indexing, 0.25% may become the next fee to fall.

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