Office address: 261 Hamilton Avenue, Palo Alto, CA 94301
Website: wealthfront.com
Year established: 2008
Company type: financial services
Employees: 330+
Expertise: automated investing, robo-advisory, stock investing, bond ladders, cash management, retirement planning, tax-loss harvesting, college savings, socially responsible investing, home lending
Parent company: N/A
Key people: David Fortunato (CEO), Andy Rachleff (chair), Daniel Carroll (chief strategy officer), Alan Imberman, CFA (CFO), Julien Wetterwald (CTO), Kal Iyer (VP of engineering), Daniel Slate (head of core product)
Financing status: venture capital-backed
Wealthfront is a financial services company based in Palo Alto with over 1.3 million clients and $90 billion in assets. The company offers automated investing, stock investing, cash accounts, bond ladders, college savings, and home lending. The firm focuses on automation and has a strong presence among tech-savvy investors.
Co-founded by Andy Rachleff and Daniel Carroll, Wealthfront started in 2008 under the name KaChing to offer a unique investment marketplace. Early on, investors could pick portfolios managed by registered investment advisers and asset managers, but the model did not last.
By 2011, Andy Rachleff led a major shift by rebranding as Wealthfront and focusing on automated portfolios designed for individual goals.
The firm moved away from outside managers in 2012 and brought portfolio management in-house. Wealthfront set its advisory fee at 0.25 percent for assets above $25,000, making investing more affordable. Then it started serving employees at large tech companies and introduced direct indexing for high-net-worth clients.
The firm’s real momentum came in 2019 with the launch of interest-bearing cash accounts. These accounts quickly attracted more assets than its investment portfolios as they reached $47 billion in cash and $42 billion in investments.
The company continued to add new products, including automated bond portfolios. Wealthfront also reached $50 billion in AUM by 2023 as it drew more young investors to its platform.
In 2022, UBS planned to acquire the company for $1.4 billion, but both parties ended the deal later that year. UBS instead invested in a convertible note, keeping Wealthfront’s valuation steady.
By 2025, the firm had 1.3 million clients and $90 billion in assets. It filed for an initial public offering as its customer base of tech professionals and Millennials continued to grow.
The firm uses technology to help clients build and manage diverse portfolios. Wealthfront focuses on automation and low-cost investment options:
Wealthfront also offers transparent pricing and digital planning tools. Clients benefit from easy account setup, historical performance data, and a user-friendly platform.
Wealthfront states that its mission is to build a financial system that puts people first, not institutions. The company uses technology to simplify investing and to reach today’s investors.
Employees receive a range of benefits, including the following:
According to Wealthfront, it operates without sales staff or financial jargon and only focuses on simple, client-first solutions. The company values diversity and looks for “big thinkers” who want to improve financial lives.
David Fortunato serves as Wealthfront’s CEO and previously held the role of president. Fortunato joined the company in 2009 as its first CTO and helped launch services in 2011. He earned a bachelor’s degree in computer science and economics from Amherst College.
The key staff at Wealthfront brings a mix of experience and technical skill:
This team includes professionals with various credentials. Many hold Series 7 and 66 registrations and have decades of industry experience.
In 2025, Wealthfront took a major step by privately filing for an initial public offering with the SEC. This move shows the company’s growth as it now manages over $85 billion in assets and serves more than a million clients. The IPO supports the firm’s goal to remain independent and deliver long-term value for clients as financial technology evolves.
After submitting its confidential filing, the firm announced it would list on the Nasdaq as WLTH. The Nasdaq listing will let Wealthfront raise capital, invest in product development, and attract new clients nationwide. Strong financial results, including $339 million in revenue and $123 million in net income, support this next stage of growth.
InvestmentNews' tech reporter, Ryan Neal, joins Bruce on the pod this week to talk through current major fintech deals and the tech conferences on his radar this fall. At the top of the list is the termination of UBS' acquisition of robo-adviser Wealthfront.
A roundup of the week's fintech news includes Cetera's adoption of Broadridge's new digital communications tool, Orion's reorganization and Morningstar's attempt to make sustainable investing more engaging.
The acquisition of the robo-adviser was the centerpiece of UBS CEO Ralph Hamers' focus on broadening the wirehouse's wealth management offering.
Instead, UBS is purchasing a $69.7 million note that is convertible into Wealthfront shares, an investment that values the robo-adviser at $1.4 billion.
The two first quarters of this year showed some robos to be particularly resilient, according to the latest Robo Report from Condor Capital Wealth Management.
This month's roundup looks at Schwab's $187 million settlement with the SEC, Bento Engine's funding round, and RIA In A Box's launch of a RolloverAnalyzer solution.
Hassan, who will succeed Tom Naratil as president of UBS Americas, has served as Morgan Stanley’s chief digital officer and led the launch of Schwab’s robo-adviser.
Morgan Stanley revealed its fully armed and operational adviser fintech ecosystem at a recent media event in New York City.
If the pie keeps growing, wirehouse brokers probably won’t mind getting a relatively smaller slice.
Ten years ago, hiring financial advisers at wirehouses had a hammer and tongs feel. Today, hiring and hanging on to advisers are much more nuanced endeavors.
The wirehouse's Global Wealth Management Americas group reported $12 billion in net new fee-generating assets in the first quarter.
The latest study from the financial services firm found that top advice-oriented providers offer fairly comprehensive planning tools, ranging from online advice only to one-on-one human financial advisers who are just a phone call away.
The Securities and Exchange Commission chairman raised questions about the effect that behavioral prompts — like encouraging clients to trade more often or using algorithms to steer them into high-risk, high-fee products — might have on investing outcomes.
According to a new study published by The Vanguard Group Inc., the vast majority of advised clients aren't interested in totally digital advice.
The latest edition of the Robo Report by Backend Benchmarking tracks 58 accounts at 35 different providers and includes both qualitative factors, such as financial planning features, as well as the performance metrics.