Mainstream investors can now open an account with Goldman
Sachs with $1,000 and a smartphone. After delaying the launch last year, Marcus
Invest solidifies the bank’s goal to bring investing to a wider audience of
consumers.
Goldman Sachs has made its entrance into the robo-advice
space official with the debut of its low-cost digital investing platform for
the masses, called Marcus Invest, as one of the last major firms to enter the
retail digital advice market.
The Wall Street bank raised the curtain on Marcus Invest,
letting the public meet the new robo-adviser via its website on Tuesday. The
investment offering lives under Goldman’s existing consumer-facing banking app
Marcus by Goldman Sachs, joining other offerings such as savings accounts,
unsecured personal loans and budgeting software.
The public launch of Marcus Invest solidifies the bank’s
goal to bring the investing expertise of Goldman Sachs — which used to be
reserved for the ultra-wealthy, defined as investors with more than $10 million
of investible assets — to a wider audience of consumers.
Now, investors can open an account on the mobile app for a
minimum of $1,000. Marcus Invest charges an annual advisory fee of 0.35%, which
covers all trade commissions and transfer fees, plus daily monitoring,
rebalancing and ongoing management.
Marcus Invest is designed to manage portfolios of
exchange-traded funds based on models designed by Goldman Sachs Investment
Strategy Group.
The product also offers both individual and joint investment
accounts, as well as three types of individual retirement accounts: Traditional
IRA, Roth IRA and Simplified Employee Pension Plan IRA.
Goldman’s product is priced competitively, matching Morgan
Stanley, Wells Fargo, and JP Morgan Chase, which all offer digital advice for
0.35%, said David Goldstone, head of research for Backend Benchmarking. “While
Goldman’s pricing structure that rebates the expense ratio of proprietary funds
held in the portfolio may give them a slight price advantage over some
competitors, others like Fidelity Go and JP Morgan Chase You Invest Portfolios
have similar pricing where the 0.35% management fee represents an all-in cost,”
he said.
Fidelity also offers free management for clients with less
than $10,000 on the platform, he said. Meanwhile, Wealthfront and Betterment
offer their digital-only products at 0.25%, and Vanguard Digital Advisor
carries cost capped at 0.20%.
Also, Goldman’s entrance into robo-advice is late, but Chief
Executive David Solomon isn’t concerned that the launch of its first digital
advice platform will be outshined by well-established fintech apps already
dominating the market. Solomon said during Goldman Sachs’ fourth-quarter
earnings call in January that the broader product offerings and scale that
Goldman Sachs has to offer will keep it ahead of the curve.
Moreover, Marcus Invest will also expand to the U.K. in the
second half of the year, Solomon said. Goldman Sachs’ more global reach, too,
is expected to push its robo-adviser to the head of the pack.
“It’s increasingly difficult to compete in this business
unless you’re global at scale,” Solomon said. “Unless you have the capacity to
make very significant technology investments into platforms to better connect
with your clients, so there has been consolidation of wallet share into the
leader players across these platforms.”
The arrival of Goldman’s new robo-adviser has been long
overdue. The bank announced in May it had scrapped plans to launch a digital
wealth offering this year, delaying its ambitious push into the mass-affluent
marketplace.
In 2018, Goldman restructured its four-year-old online bank
Marcus to streamline operations. The firm hoped the addition of a robo-adviser
would help it transform from an elite bank for the ultra-wealthy to more of a
digital platform with an eye toward Main Street investors.
While robo-advice may not be core to the Goldman Sachs
strategy, it would provide an outlet for the distribution of Goldman funds. A
handful of other asset managers have purchased digital platforms in recent
years in part to offer proprietary funds to a larger swath of retail investors.
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