Envestnet MoneyGuide continued to widen its MyBlocks financial wellness ecosystem Wednesday, this time introducing a Risk Number block that's part of the firm's expanded partnership with the fintech firm Riskalyze.
It's the 31st block of information available to advisors as part of the MyBlocks ecosystem, Envestnet MoneyGuide said.
Also planned, by the end of 2019, will be the launch of its previously discussed Kickoff block targeted at high school-age children of advisors' clients as part of Envestnet MoneyGuide's ongoing efforts to offer advice to young people about their education and career options, as well as educate them about college loans and student debt, according to Tony Leal, Envestnet MoneyGuide president.
The new Risk Number block is part of a MyBlocks integration with Riskalyze's platform that allows advisors to "pinpoint an investor's Risk Number in an effort to build a portfolio containing an appropriate amount of risk," the companies said in a joint announcement. The integration — one of the first outside of the Envestnet network — "creates a seamless connection between a client's Risk Number and the other blocks available on the MoneyGuide platform," they noted.
The new block "will walk the investor through" a Riskalyze questionnaire assessing a client's Risk Number and then import into MoneyGuide's platform as a risk tolerance score, the companies said. The advisor can then assign an appropriate risk score for a household and streamline the investment decision-making process, they said. Based on that, the advisor can opt to create a new financial plan or rework the current plan, using the Risk Number to determine the appropriate investments to help reach the client's goals, according to the companies.
Discussing risk of a somewhat different type during a phone interview with ThinkAdvisor, Leal pointed to the massive cumulative student debt crisis we're facing in the U.S. and explained how MyBlocks can be used as one way to help students and their families be more aware of the impact of taking out college loans — importantly, before they take out those loans.