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Wealthfront Eliminates $100k Minimum For Tax-Loss HarvestingWealthfront Eliminates $100k Minimum For Tax-Loss Harvesting

Ryan W. Neal, Associate Editor

March 25, 2015

1 Min Read
Wealthfront Eliminates $100k Minimum For Tax-Loss Harvesting

Ryan W. Neal

Wealthfront announced Wednesday that it would extend its tax-loss harvesting feature to all taxable accounts, not just those with at least $100,000 invested.  

The Silicon Valley company first added the feature to its automated investment service in 2012, and has since added intelligent recovery, optimized harvesting triggers, predictive deposits and tax-sensitive withdrawals. In the last six months, accounts with tax-loss harvesting have realized over $23 million in tax losses, potentially saving them over $9.8 million in taxes, said CEO Adam Nash on the company blog.

“There was only one problem with it. It wasn’t available to all Wealthfront clients,” Nash said. “At Wealthfront we believe everyone deserves sophisticated financial advice, and this brings us one step closer to that that goal.”

 

 

The feature will be included in Wealthfront’s standard advisory fee of 25 basis points.

“We know this will make our competitors uncomfortable. But their comfort isn’t out concern, nor is their bottom line,” Nash said.

Charles Schwab recently released a competing robo-advisor, Schwab Intelligent Portfolios, which doesn’t charge advisory fees and offers tax-loss harvesting for accounts over $50,000. In the blog post, Nash referenced “gimmicks and ‘gotcha’-based pricing” used by the investment industry and linked to an article he penned criticizing Schwab.

About the Author

Ryan W. Neal

Associate Editor, WealthManagement.com

Ryan W. Neal is an associate editor for WealthManagement.com. Originally from Sacramento, Calif., Ryan studied English and philosophy at UC Santa Barbara and found his way into journalism. After spending a few years in the Colorado Rockies as a freelance writer and full-time snowboarder, Ryan moved to New York to earn a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University. He’s written for The Santa Barbara Independent, Sacramento News & Review, Forbes Sports Money, International Business Times, Newsweek, Motherboard and Mic