RIA launches its own direct-to-consumer planning and robo-advice technology

RIA launches its own direct-to-consumer planning and robo-advice technology
Bucking industry trends, North Capital thinks evisor can be a low-cost alternative to existing financial planning tools.
MAY 20, 2019

While firms across the advice industry are turning toward financial planning and digital advice technology to reach new clients and assets, North Capital, a registered investment adviser with $244 million in assets under management (according to its most recent Form ADV), is taking a different approach. North Capital is rolling out a new direct-to-consumer financial planner and robo-adviser that it built in-house. The financial planning software, known as evisor.com, is free to use, requiring nothing more than an email address and password. Without committing any assets or even connecting a bank account, users can get a financial review using the same process North Capital takes its traditional clients through. The software will recommend certain actions, such as saving toward an emergency fund or creating an investment account. North Capital CFO Stephanie Holt said that while there are plenty of options for young and mass-market people to get investment advice, there's a gap in the market for actual financial plans. Existing free apps do little more than budgeting, while the functionality of something like MoneyGuide or eMoney requires a relationship with an adviser. Evisor is completely user-guided. (More: MoneyGuide, eMoney battle for financial planning software crown) "Evisor is a solution to the fact that traditional financial planning is costly and painful," Ms. Holt said. "Competing products require a lot of user information before you can get in and start looking around. People don't want to give out Social Security numbers and private information." A single person with a relatively simple financial situation can complete a plan on evisor in about five minutes, while a more complicated plan shouldn't take longer than 10 minutes, she said. Sara Borazan, North Capital's director of business development, added that the financial planning will do more than just recommend a brokage account. "We recognize that a lot of millennials have debt," said Ms. Borazan, adding that it's an area of evisor the firm wants to further develop. "It's not just, 'Hey, you should be saving for retirement,' but baby, actionable steps you can do between now and then." Investors can implement the strategy by opening an account with the robo-adviser for a 25-basis-point management fee, and they can access a human adviser for an additional fee. The robo-adviser has no asset minimum. Assets on evisor are custodied with Charles Schwab via Institutional Intelligent Portfolios, but North Capital founder Jim Dowd says everything used by the clients was developed by North Capital's own technology team. Schwab's IIP does provide some of the back-end functionality, such as rebalancing and connecting with the custodian platform. (More: Next-gen portfolio management tool from Schwab is now live) While user growth at many of the direct-to-consumer robos reportedly has slowed, North Capital believes evisor's financial planning capabilities will resonate with young professionals and the so-called HENRY (high earning, not rich yet) crowd. North Capital also plans to offer evisor as part of its 401(k) business for small businesses as benefit for employees, and eventually license evisor to other RIAs as a low-cost alternative to other tools on the market. While certain clients could eventually move into a more traditional relationship with North Capital's RIA, Ms. Borazan said evisor is intended primarily as a stand-alone product. The adviser fintech field is filled with companies that began as a firm's in-house solution, but don't expect RIAs to abandon B2B technology en masse in favor of building their own tools. Few firms have the resources and wherewithal to develop and maintain software, said Dave Miller, CEO at Portfolio Pathway. Buying a product off the shelf usually makes more sense for firms looking to embrace modern digital advice. Financial planning is also an especially difficult path to forge, said Lex Sokolin, global fintech strategy director at Autonomous Research. North Capital has long been a tech-forward firm, working in both the equity crowdfunding and blockchain spaces, but it's hard to make financial plans that resonate with consumers, Mr. Sokolin said. "If it is a prospecting tool, then the numbers are all very light and high level. They are often an order of magnitude wrong as a result," Mr. Sokolin said. "If it is a workflow tool or an actual calculator, then the interface is almost impossible to simplify." North Capital also faces competition from the Silicon Valley startups increasingly investing in financial planning to expand their functionality. "Wealthfront, I think, has done a nice design job of wrapping financial planning in more relatable terms than just the math," Mr. Sokolin said.

Latest News

Most investors are still positioned for the old environment
Most investors are still positioned for the old environment

Matthew Klein on Rethinking Portfolios in a New Era.

Financial dependence on parents persists as retirement concerns grow, Northwestern Mutual finds
Financial dependence on parents persists as retirement concerns grow, Northwestern Mutual finds

As retirement costs climb, millions of millennials and Generation X adults continue relying on parental support, highlighting obstacles to retirement readiness. 

Former Detroit Tigers prospect moves from Edward Jones to LPL
Former Detroit Tigers prospect moves from Edward Jones to LPL

Les Smith, who once played alongside future MLB stars Eugenio Suárez and Nick Castellanos, says lessons from professional baseball helped fuel his transition to independent wealth management after 11 years at Edward Jones.

Mariner discloses cloud breach impacting nearly 9,000 individuals
Mariner discloses cloud breach impacting nearly 9,000 individuals

A November hacking incident involving cloud apps used by three employee exposed names, Social Security numbers, and other account data, the mega-RIA said.

Merrill broker, whose name was in the Epstein files, has left the firm: Reports
Merrill broker, whose name was in the Epstein files, has left the firm: Reports

Paul V. Morris worked at multiple firms across Wall Street and most recently in Manhattan for Merrill Lynch.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.