Wealthfront Launches Its Own 529 Plan

June 02, 2016 at 09:03 AM
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Wealthfront has become the first automated investment service to launch its own tax-advantaged 529 college savings plan, it announced Wednesday.

Wealthfront will be the investment advisor behind the Wealthfront 529 College Savings Plan, and will fully manage all 529 portfolios on behalf of its clients.

Because it's only possible to offer a 529 plan if sponsored by a state, the Wealthfront 529 College Savings Plan will be administered by the Board of Trustees of the College Savings Plans of Nevada, chaired by the Nevada state treasurer.

Ascensus College Savings, a leading administrator of 529 plans, will serve as the program manager.

"We are excited to be the first automated investment service to offer a 529 college savings plan together with Nevada and Ascensus College Savings, who value innovation as much as we do at Wealthfront," Adam Nash, President and CEO of Wealthfront, said in a statement. "Wealthfront exists to push the limits of what is technically possible in the financial services industry and broadly deliver investment strategies that previously were only available to the wealthy."

BlackRock's FutureAdvisor offers free college savings plans on its online advice platform, although it works with a number of state 529 plans that are overseen by Fidelity Investments or TD Ameritrade. FutureAdvisor clients can also set up other vehicles often used for college savings, like Coverdell Educational Savings Accounts, Unified Transfers to Minors Accounts and Unified Gifts to Minors Accounts.

Within the Wealthfront 529 College Savings Plan, Wealthfront plans to use "the power of software technology" to offer the best attributes of both the advisor-sold plan and the direct-sold plan.

"Advisor-sold plans are delivered with financial planning advice and employ portfolio strategies that are typically more sophisticated in nature," writes Ali Rosenthal, vice president of strategic partnerships at Wealthfront, in a blog post. "As a result, they charge higher fees than direct-sold plans, which offer no advice or personalization and portfolios that are less sophisticated."

The Wealthfront 529 plan aims to offer personalized advice that will recommend exactly how much to save and contribute each month at a price that rivals direct-sold 529 plans.

"It's akin to getting boutique-quality product selection and informed recommendations at Amazon prices," writes Rosenthal.

Like all of Wealthfront's other accounts, it will not charge advisory fees on clients' first $10,000 and will charge 0.25% in advisory fees on amounts over that. For Nevada residents, Wealthfront will waive advisory fees on the first $25,000 managed.

Wealthfront says its plan has two key features that makes it different than the typical 529 plan.

The first is more personalized risk tolerance. While typical 529 plans may offer one to three different paths through which a client's investment mix changes over time, Wealthfront will employ 20 different "glide paths" that are tailored to match the risk tolerance of each investor. 

The second is more asset classes for higher returns. Wealthfront will invest a client's 529 account in a portfolio consisting of of up to nine low-cost, index-based ETFs.

"Based on our analysis, we believe nine properly chosen, relatively uncorrelated asset classes should outperform the typical 529 portfolio that consists of only three to four asset classes by approximately 0.60% per year, risk-adjusted, over the long term," Rosenthal writes.

The Wealthfront 529 College Savings Plan will be released this summer, according to Wealthfront.

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