>> Yes, a financial planner can do all of this (although most don't). But when they do, they just use automated software to do it. It would be impossible to implement these strategies manually. So why even go with a financial planner when Wealthfront does the same thing, but better/cheaper?
Thats the 100$B question right? Because fear. Because unfamiliarity. Also because 1% seems small, but its really more like 14% (if the average return is 7%, you're giving up 1/7 of your return!)
What's funny is... whenever you call an FA (financial advisor) in a moment of panic... they answer always is "don't act emotionally and stick to the plan". Maybe a real "robo-advisor" should just be a chatbot that responds to any message it gets with "HODL".
>> Because unfamiliarity.
This one is going to be interesting to watch evolve and I see it becoming less of an edge for financial advisors. More and more, we are seeing retail investors gain familiarity (not saying knowledge... but at least familiarity) with financial markets through blogs, social media, etc. I think we are moving to a world of more self-directed investors than advised investors.
> What's funny is... whenever you call an FA (financial advisor) in a moment of panic... they answer always is "don't act emotionally and stick to the plan". Maybe a real "robo-advisor" should just be a chatbot that responds to any message it gets with "HODL".
My robo-advisor did, during the giant tumble the markets took during the beginning of this pandemic, put up a message on the site & send a pro-active communication saying, essentially, to HODL. (In more eloquent terms, of course.) I presume a human had a hand in it, ofc., as they likely understood the fear most people would feel looking at the graph.
(My mistake, really, was not buying more at the bottom.)
I do recall that one of the features that Wealthfront had was to design their UX in a way that discouraged behaviors like frequently checking the valuations, making it annoying to make emotional transactions, etc, etc. Rather than having a human tell you to be calm, they tried to mediate behavior through UX patterns.
That's interesting. I did notice that the Wealthfront UX was really well done.
For example, during the onboarding they direct you to set up recurring investments and they show you in real time what that small investment might become by retirement age. That simple mechanic, which nobody else seems to do in that way during onboarding, makes it really obvious that you need to set that recurring deposit to be as high as you can possibly afford.
The difference between 7% & 6% (1% fees) is in fact a LOT higher if one takes compounding into effect.
By Year 40:
* >$500K &
* ALMOST a quarter of the portfolio
When I was starting out, someone in my company's 401k forum mentioned this # (at that time the # was almost 40%, fees have gone down a lot since the early 2000's). And I am glad I paid attention.
I try and pass on this wisdom everytime I can. Now, you can too.
Thanks for the great elaboration on my note. FEES KILL!
All the discussion on this thread of "oh just go with a mutual fund" is insane to me. Even if funds have dropped in price from 1.5% to 1% to .7%, that is a huge number over the course of your life. The only realistic approach is super-low-cost ETFs, but those arent friendly to use or make a portfolio from. So the WealthFront layer is pretty critical IMHO.
You have $1m and on average it will earn 7% per year.
The fee is 1% of the $1m ($10k), but it is 14% of your expected gains per year (1%/7%). After fees your portfolio will go up by 6% per year instead of 7%, which is a substantial reduction.
Thats the 100$B question right? Because fear. Because unfamiliarity. Also because 1% seems small, but its really more like 14% (if the average return is 7%, you're giving up 1/7 of your return!)