Riskalyze launches multi-custodial trading tool

Company said software will reduce time advisers spend trading by 80%.
OCT 03, 2019
Riskalyze continued expanding beyond its roots as a digital risk assessment tool with the reveal of new automated trading technology on Thursday at the fintech firm's annual Fearless Investing Summit in Boston. Built in partnership with Flyer, a trading tools and infrastructure provider, Connected Trading digitally delivers trades across client portfolios to multiple custodians without spreadsheets, order file uploads or manual account allocations. Rather than looking like a spreadsheet, Connected Trading looks more like an inbox of trades, surfaced by Riskalyze's Autopilot investment management technology, that advisers can swipe or click to make account decisions. It can account for legacy positions an adviser can't sell, blend multiple models together, or it can simply use a client's current holdings as the target for the account. Rather than using asset allocation targets to propose trades, as most rebalancing tools do, Connected Trading uses the "Risk Number" that Riskalyze assigns to clients to spot when accounts drift. Riskalyze CEO Aaron Klein called Connected Trading the "worlds first end-to-end trading automation platform for advisers" that will "change everything" about trading. [Recommended Video: Riskalyze's Klein: Putting risk at the center of conversations] While a quarter of advisers outsource investment management to turnkey asset management platforms, the rest manage trades in-house, often hand typing trades into custodial platforms, Mr. Klein said. "This is why studies show that the average adviser spends 14 hours a year per client doing manual operational work managing accounts," Mr. Klein said. Even advisers using rebalancing software aren't using it effectively or can't get it to work. "It's like a VCR in the era of Netflix," he said. "It is time for our industry to leave the 'be kind, please rewind' phase behind." Flyer CEO Brian Ross said Connected Trading can help advisers save 80% of the time they now spend on trading for clients. Trade orders are processed as blocks at the same time to ensure each account gets the same price and the technology provides real-time visibility into orders across all accounts, asset classes and custodians. "Now you can turn seven steps into one," Mr. Ross said. At launch, Connected Trading is supported by Fidelity, Schwab, TD Ameritrade, Pershing and RBC. Independent registered investment advisers can license Connected Trading, which is a now a part of Riskalyze's digital investing platform Autopilot, directly. Advisers operating under a corporate RIA at a broker-dealer must get the technology from the broker-dealer. United Planners and Sigma Financial are the first broker-dealers partners, Mr. Klein said. Beyond trading, Riskalyze executives also demonstrated a redesigned user experience for its core risk assessment tool and a new marketing kit that gives advisers personalized client videos, social media images, templates for brochures and presentations, and best practices around compliance. [More: Riskalyze adds fintech veterans to leadership team with eye on aggressive growth] Riskalyze also updated its Portfolio Stats product to give advisers deeper portfolio analytics — such as benchmarking, asset classification, regional exposure and risk-reward scatterplots — from within the Riskalyze platform. Advisers can now look up analytics on individual securities and model portfolios, and a new Portfolio Sandbox tool lets advisers preview the impact that changes will have on a portfolio before they execute trades. The fintech, which Mr. Klein said is now a "comprehensive wealth management platform," also restructured its pricing. Smaller firms can get the basic features for $250 per month per adviser, while the expanded risk and analytics platform and marketing kit are part of Riskalyze Elite, which costs $350. Costs won't change for existing Riskalyze clients unless they choose to upgrade. [Register today for the InvestmentNews Future of Financial Advice event on Nov. 20.] Autopilot is an additional cost, but the new Connected Trading features are included within it for no additional fee.

Latest News

Edward Jones facing more race bias claims in new lawsuit
Edward Jones facing more race bias claims in new lawsuit

A private partnership, Edward Jones is a giant in the retail brokerage industry with more than 20,000 financial advisors.

Advisor moves: LPL recruitment momentum continues with $815M Northwestern Mutual team
Advisor moves: LPL recruitment momentum continues with $815M Northwestern Mutual team

Meanwhile, Raymond James and Tritonpoint Partners separately welcomed father-son teams, including a breakaway from UBS in Missouri.

SEC chief Atkins signals caution on prediction market ETFs amid broader rethink of novel fund structures
SEC chief Atkins signals caution on prediction market ETFs amid broader rethink of novel fund structures

Paul Atkins has asked staff to solicit public comment on novel ETFs, pausing the clock on as many as 24 filings linked to the booming event contracts market.

Private capital's $1 trillion bet on the American retirement account
Private capital's $1 trillion bet on the American retirement account

From 401(k)s to retail funds, Deloitte sees private equity and credit crossing into mainstream investing on two fronts at once.

Advisor moves: Wells Fargo Advisors pulls in $9.6b in fresh talent during first half of May
Advisor moves: Wells Fargo Advisors pulls in $9.6b in fresh talent during first half of May

Big-name defections from Morgan Stanley, UBS, and Merrill Lynch headline a busy two weeks of recruiting for the wirehouse.

SPONSORED Are hedge funds the missing ingredient?

Wellington explores how multi strategy hedge funds may enhance diversification

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management