Personal Capital is a financial management software that tracks investments, spending, and net worth in one dashboard. It offers budgeting tools, retirement planning, and portfolio analysis. Ideal for users seeking a clear overview of their finances…
Betterment is an automated investment platform that helps users grow wealth through personalized portfolios. It simplifies investing with goal-based planning, automatic rebalancing, and tax-efficient strategies to maximize returns and manage risks e…
StockMarketEye was a portfolio management tool designed to track investments, monitor performance, and analyze financial assets. It supported stock tracking, watchlists, real-time alerts, and custom reports. Tool is now discontinued and no longer av…
Portfolio Review will analyze your current investment portfolio. It provides data-driven, actionable recommendations to improve net-of-fee, after-tax, risk-adjusted return.
Have a world-class investment team in your corner.
With financial experts such as Burton Malkiel and Charles Ellis, Wealthfront’s investment team accumulates more than 200 years of investment experience and has authored more than 16 investment books.
Do you have the time to invest well?
Wealthfront invests your money for you with a minimal amount of work. We monitor your portfolio every day to look for opportunities to rebalance or harvest tax losses. Are you doing the same?
Wealthfront in the news
"… Wealthfront is an appealing alternative to putting your money with a Goldman Sachs, UBS or other private wealth manager." -TechCrunch
"Mr. Rachleff’s aim is to reach out to that Valley demographic — young, good at math, uncomfortable with professional money managers — and make their money grow." -The New York Time
"Wealthfront will manage money for a fee of 0.25% a year, using sophisticated algorithms that measure risk tolerance and build a diversified portfolio." -The Economist
"Why trust your money to a Wall Street money manager who charges steep fees when well-designed software can do a better job for a lot less?" -CNET