Fidelity gives BlackRock
an early leg up in robo advice brawl
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[December 17, 2016]
By Tim McLaughlin
BOSTON (Reuters) - Fidelity Investments
unintentionally boosted BlackRock Inc's prospects as a robo adviser with
a small investment in a start-up company that BlackRock bought last year
for an estimated $150 million.
BlackRock and Fidelity are only in the early stages of what is shaping
up as a battle royale to become the go-to provider of cheap automated
financial advice over the Internet.
The stakes are huge. Morgan Stanley analysts describe how robo advising
is an emerging force to provide affordable advice in a $22 trillion
wealth pool that features $5,000 accounts and ones with as much as $5
million.
"Advice is ultimately a vehicle to unify control over client wealth,"
says Morgan Stanley analyst Michael Cyprys.
Although rivals currently dominate the robo advising space, investment
behemoths Fidelity and BlackRock are expected to grow quickly.
BlackRock's FutureAdvisor now has more than $1 billion in assets under
management, while Boston-based Fidelity's digital wealth manager,
Fidelity Go, is still getting off the ground, with only a nominal amount
of assets. Fidelity has yet to launch a full marketing campaign.
Boston-based Fidelity invested in FutureAdvisor during a $15.5-million
funding round in May 2014. It made the investment through a private
venture-capital arm run on behalf of the Johnsons, the billionaire
family that controls the mutual fund giant, and other company insiders.
A Reuters Special Report earlier this year showed how the Johnson
family’s venture capital arm, F-Prime Capital, competed directly with
its Fidelity mutual funds for investments in promising start-ups.
(http://reut.rs/2dwPY6u)
In the case of FutureAdvisor, the Johnsons’ investment helped the San
Francisco-based financial startup build out its technology and catch the
eye of BlackRock.
Fifteen months after Fidelity Chairman Abigail Johnson and her family
made their initial investment, BlackRock agreed to buy FutureAdvisor and
plug it into the world's largest asset management platform.
FutureAdvisor's marketing catchphrase became "Invest like a millionaire
for less than you think."
F-Prime Capital held only a 6.7-percent stake in FutureAdvisor and was
not in position to affect the sale to BlackRock, according to a person
familiar with the ownership structure. F-Prime did not hold a board
seat. The venture arm is controlled by FMR LLC, which also owns Fidelity
Investments.
Sequoia Capital and the founders of FutureAdvisor together controlled a
majority of FutureAdvisor.
Fidelity declined to comment on FutureAdvisor’s sale to BlackRock in
August 2015. Fidelity Chairman Abigail Johnson was not available to
comment.
Analysts say Fidelity likely was not in the hunt for an acquisition such
as FutureAdvisor after agreeing to buy eMoney Advisor several months
before the BlackRock-FutureAdvisor deal. Fidelity paid about $250
million for eMoney, a wealth management software company based in
suburban Philadelphia, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.
"Advice is ultimately a vehicle to unify control over client wealth,"
says Morgan Stanley analyst Michael Cyprys.
QUICKLY GETTING TO BILLIONS
Earlier this month at a Goldman Sachs financial services conference,
BlackRock Chief Financial Officer Gary Shedlin said FutureAdvisor will
drive greater distribution of the company’s iShares exchange-traded
funds and eventually help the asset manager reach a broader group of
clients “that we were never able to touch” on a mass scale.
Still, Fidelity could overtake BlackRock next year because it has a
built-in advantage that many rivals, including BlackRock, do not have:
an online brokerage with 17.4 million retail accounts. Some 96 percent
of those accounts don’t currently have any sort of management and
Fidelity is ideally placed to woo them over to Fidelity Go.
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A sign marks a Fidelity Investments office in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
September 21, 2016. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
"Even if they take only a small share of assets that go on the Fidelity Go
platform, it's going to be billions of dollars pretty quickly," said Alois
Pirker, research director at Aite Group.
John Danahy, head of Fidelity's strategy for digital managed accounts, said the
company is not hung up on any goal for accumulating assets. He said it is
focused on creating a good customer experience that features a combination of
digital automation and some hand-holding from real people.
"We are not crazy about the term 'robo'", Danahy said. "It suggests there are no
humans involved."
That being said, a Fidelity online brokerage customer can open a Fidelity Go
account in 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, the U.S. robo industry's early leader is Vanguard Group. Its robo
business has 60-percent market share with $41 billion in assets. Charles Schwab
Corp, which has 7 million fewer brokerage accounts than Fidelity, is No. 2 with
$10.2 billion in assets after only 19 months since launching its robo product.
Click here for a list of the top U.S. robo advisers: (http://tmsnrt.rs/2hy0z4S)
Robo's allure is rock-bottom fees, which can be less than half what investors
are charged in a traditional brokerage setting. A Fidelity Go account would
charge total annual fees of 0.35 percent to 0.40 percent, which includes the
management fee and underlying fund costs. A taxable account would feature some
of BlackRock's iShares exchange-traded funds. The minimum account amount is
$5,000. FutureAdvisor charges 0.50 percent and the minimum account balance is
$10,000. So far, BlackRock has signed up some big banks as clients, but it
remains to be seen how quickly FutureAdvisor can be integrated into their
digital wealth management platforms.
U.S. Bancorp said in August it signed a deal with FutureAdvisor, but the online
financial advice would not be available to bank clients until the beginning of
2017.
ROBO ROOTS
Bo Lu was a financial hobbyist before co-founding FutureAdvisor in 2010 and
doing his part to disrupt the financial advice industry. He spent his spare time
trying to make sense of his 20-something friends' investment portfolios.
They had small accounts, but real problems with asset allocation and tax
liability issues. The former Microsoft program manager concluded that software,
not a financial adviser, could be a cheap solution to balancing their portfolios
and selling stocks and bonds in a tax-efficient manner.
Fidelity’s F-Prime Capital agreed and invested an undisclosed amount, giving it
a minority stake.
Lu, who is CEO of FutureAdvisor, said the basic premise for starting
FutureAdvisor remains intact.
"We didn't want to move assets to software," he said. "We're moving the software
to the assets."
As an example, BlackRock earlier this year struck a deal with BBVA Compass,
which has nearly 700 bank branches in American Sunbelt states, to offer
FutureAdvisor's digital investment management to that network.
"Our approach is to serve our financial institutions," Lu said. "They already
have the relations with the retail client." Fidelity, meanwhile, likes to
highlight how it is a veteran of managed accounts with $220 billion in assets
under management. "And we are not a start-up," Danahy said.
(Reporting By Tim McLaughlin; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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