The San Francisco 49ers lost their pre-season debut game at Levi's Stadium this weekend 34-0 to the Denver Broncos. But their employees and former players are being given the chance to score some financial gains thanks to the team's new partnership with robo-advisor firm Wealthfront.
"As of today, they are the first professional sports team to help secure the financial health of their front-office employees and alumni with free, automated investment services," explained Wealthfront CEO Adam Nash in a blog post last week.
"With more than $1.3 billion under management from clients in almost every imaginable profession living in all fifty states, we're excited to be working with the San Francisco 49ers to extend the benefits of automated investing to an even broader millennial audience," Nash noted.
As part of the deal, the 49ers will cover advisory fees on the first $100,000 each individual invests with the automated investment service, Nash says. For its part, Wealthfront will provide financial education for both current employees and team alumni.
"The NFL is an unbelievable experience for any young athlete," said Ronnie Lott, who played for the 49ers from 1981-1990, in a statement. Lott, who is a Wealthfront investor, said players "make a lifetime's worth of money in a short time period, but they need help planning for the long term. I think Wealthfront can be a huge part of the solution."
Complex Game
According to advisor Gerard Klingman, who runs Klingman & Associates, an RIA affiliated with Raymond James in New York, the key word in this arrangement is "part."
"Young, professional athletes need all types of financial planning advice from budgeting from buying and owning real estate to estate planning, prenuptial agreements and tax planning," Klingman said in an interview with ThinkAdvisor.
"Investing is only one part of financial planning for professional athletes," explained the advisor, who has worked with some 40 current and former football and hockey players over the past 25 years. "It's just one small part. Professional athletes need significantly more financial-planning services."
(The NFL itself announced an advice-by-phone deal with Financial Finesse last year. See Help for NFL Players Suddenly Rich or Suddenly Retired)
Still, he adds, there's some positive takeaway from the 49ers-Wealthfront news. "The athletes are not being exposed to [those] motivated to put them in high-commission or fraudulent investments," Klingman said. "They will have transparent fee-based investments…and could do worse than work with a robo-advisor. At least, the investments are liquid."