Millions of new investors have flocked to online investing apps during the pandemic, and now one fintech startup is playing matchmaker.
Lasso, a social networking app, is hoping to land those retail investors with financial advisers to help construct short- or long-term financial plans. The gamified platform helps users create custom plans in minutes, according to the firm, and then helps those users find suitable financial advisers to continue the planning process.
A point system helps clients stay on track with their investing goals.
“We are seeing a new wave of empowered retail investors being lured by risky investments such as meme stocks without necessarily understanding how these investments help them reach their financial goals,” said Lawrence Davanzo, former president of Wilshire Associates Inc. and an adviser to Lasso’s parent company, GoalBased Investors. “Lasso can appeal to these investors through a more frictionless planning and advice discovery experience that lowers the barriers for people to access expert advice.”
The app was created by former BlackRock managing director Chip Castille, along with a team that includes veterans from Alphabet Inc., BlackRock Inc. and Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America.
“Finding a financial advisor has historically been a complicated process and felt like a luxury reserved for the wealthy or for the financially savvy individual,” Castille said in a statement, citing data that shows 60% of Americans say that they need help with their finances, but only 1% can leverage a financial professional.
Matchmaking tech tools are gaining popularity. Edward Jones launched a similar platform last year based on online dating apps like Tinder and Bumble. In addition to matching clients based on location and preferred language, Edward Jones Match asks questions about more personal priorities, like living a healthy lifestyle or paying for education.
Zocks has inked an exclusive partnership with mega-RIA Hightower, while Jump becomes the choice AI operating system for Equitable Advisors' field force.
The agency's proposal to rescind the contentious 2024 Biden-era mandate opens up a 60-day public comment period.
The Carmel, Indiana RIA grew nearly 150% in assets since severing ties with its first backer following a FINRA dispute.
Meanwhile, Raymond James' employee arm adds a defector from D.A. Davidson, and South Carolina-based RIA Ballast Rock Private Wealth recruits a new advisor.
A FINRA arbitration panel sided with a former wealth manager fired over a $642 deli platter and a disputed client event.
As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.
In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.