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Baby boomers could take Millenials' lead with online investing

As baby boomers become increasingly comfortable with the internet, robo-advisers that provide low-cost portfolio management could see a spike in popularity.

A laptop is seen on a desk in Tokyo, Japan.

Thomas Peter/Reuters/File

July 29, 2016

A decade ago, people 50 or older were nearly nonexistent on social media. Today, about half of those ages 50 to 64聽, presumably by cat memes and baby pictures like the rest of us. There鈥檚 a 99% chance my mom is sharing this post on Facebook right now.

Jon Stein, CEO of Betterment, hopes a similar story might be told of聽聽one day 鈥 minus, I suspect, the cats. These services, which manage investor portfolios via computer algorithm, have largely targeted 鈥 and attracted 鈥 millennials thus far. But Stein has reached out repeatedly to older age groups, including聽.

鈥淚n a sense, it鈥檚 similar to how Facebook was seen as a platform for millennials to stay in touch after college, but in reality, today their audience is a much wider span,鈥 says Stein, who recently聽聽for calling baby boomers his company鈥檚 鈥渂iggest opportunity.鈥

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He鈥檚 in an uphill battle. In a聽, only a quarter of baby boomers indicated some interest in working with an online advisor. Combined with Generation X, seven in 10 flat-out said they don鈥檛 trust online financial advice. Those findings jibe with reality at many of these companies: Though Stein says 30% of Betterment鈥檚 assets are from clients over 50, the average client age is just 36. At competitor Wealthfront, 90% of customers are under 50.

But the key service that robo-advisors provide 鈥 very low-cost portfolio management 鈥 is valuable at any age, and reducing fees can make a significant difference in the things that matter most as retirement approaches: how much was saved and how long that money lasts.

Online advice isn鈥檛 for everyone

Let鈥檚 be clear: This kind of relationship, if you can call it that, isn鈥檛 a good fit for every investor. Most robo-advisors take humans out of the equation almost completely, save for customer service representatives and behind-the-scenes investment committees. (Wealthfront鈥檚 team is led by Burton Malkiel of 鈥淎 Random Walk Down Wall Street鈥 fame.)

That means these advisors are generally not for people who have complicated financial situations, want comprehensive planning advice 鈥 covering, say, insurance and estate planning in addition to investment management 鈥 or need a real, live person to talk them off a ledge during a market rout or help guide them through decisions. A lot of baby boomers fall into the last bucket, which is one reason Wealthfront doesn鈥檛 specifically target them as Betterment has, says Kate Wauck, a company spokeswoman.

鈥淲e know that the majority of this group still feels most comfortable sitting down with a person,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n contrast, our audience [is] those who are digitally native, trust technology end-to-end and would prefer not to speak to someone.鈥

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Still, the perks are many

Those willing to bend on some or all of the above will get a lot of what they鈥檇 receive from a human advisor at a fraction of the cost.

Many robo-advisors build, manage and rebalance portfolios for less than 0.50% of the client鈥檚 assets, including the expense ratios of the investments used, typically low-cost exchange-traded funds. That鈥檚 about half the cost of the typical financial advisor鈥檚 management fee, which is charged on top of investment expenses.

Tax-loss harvesting, a practice that uses investment losses to offset capital gains in taxable accounts, is often included at an online advisor, as is retirement planning advice 鈥斅燼lbeit from a computer 鈥 and, with some services, distribution strategies for retirees. Baby boomers in or near retirement are steered toward an appropriate asset allocation for their goals; those who want to take more or less risk can adjust that recommendation.

Importantly, many of these services are fiduciaries, which means they鈥檙e bound to keep their clients鈥 best interests in mind. That鈥檚 not the case for every investment advisor, though the聽聽is set to change that in 2017 for advisors who have their hands in retirement assets, assuming it survives聽.

There鈥檚 a middle ground

If the idea of working exclusively with a computer doesn鈥檛 feel natural 鈥 and that鈥檚 reasonable 鈥 there are several services that pose a compromise, using computers to shoulder some of the burden but also offering clients access to financial advisors.

One such option is Personal Capital, the online advisor founded by former PayPal and Intuit CEO Bill Harris. The company has a base that skews older 鈥 an average age of 45 鈥 likely in part because each client gets at least one dedicated advisor. (Personal Capital in general targets higher net worth investors; its tiered management fee schedule starts at 0.89% for balances under $1 million.)

Finally, don鈥檛 be surprised if robo-technology works its way onto the computers of most financial advisors soon. Vanguard and Charles Schwab now have online-advisory arms that operate as human-computer hybrid services like Personal Capital. Fidelity, which is piloting its own online advisor, recently reported in a study that financial advisors who use technology have 40% more assets under management than those who don鈥檛, with 55% more clients.

Arielle O鈥橲hea is a staff writer for NerdWallet, a personal finance website.聽Email:aoshea@nerdwallet.com聽Twitter:聽.

This article first appeared at .