Should You Invest With a Robo-Advisor?

Robo-advisors offer a cost-effective solution for passive investors, but you can forget about buying individual stocks such as Canopy Growth Corp. (TSX:WEED).

| More on:
The Motley Fool

These days, you simply have to sign up for a self-directed brokerage on any internet-capable device. You’ll have immediate access to a variety of equity, fixed-income, and derivative instruments at a fraction of the cost of a human broker. But for those who simply don’t have time to monitor their portfolios or any inclination to do so, a recent advancement that might pique their interest are robo-advisors.

Robo what?

Robo-advisory, in a nutshell, is investment management entirely through an automated program based on your risk tolerances and investment horizon. After determining the investor’s profile, the program, or “robot,” will create an investment policy statement and place the investor in a pre-configured portfolio set around some sort of mandate, such as growth, income, balanced, or any other combination.

The biggest draw of robo-advisors is, of course, their low cost; thanks to the instruments the platforms use (primarily ETFs), robo advisors can get away with charging fees of about 1% or less of an investor’s portfolio, which is significantly cheaper than what a human advisor might charge. We are also beginning to see robo-advisors offer valuable features such as automated tax-loss harvesting, which were once solely in the domain of human advisors.

According to research from Morgan Stanley, the robo-advisor market could reach $6.5 trillion in global assets under management (AUM) by 2025. Furthermore, growth in the industry has been averaging a breakneck 86% year over year, while over 70% of firms with greater than $15 trillion AUM and other financial companies surveyed by Morgan Stanley have either introduced robo-advisory as part of their services or are planning to do so in the next 12 months.

This competitive landscape bodes well for investors. We will begin to see more features rolled out for robo-platforms, while fees are kept under pressure. There is also a high possibility that robo-advisory will eventually cannibalize or encroach upon mutual funds and human advisory services, which, combined with the changing landscape of fiduciary regulation in Canada, will also begin to see pressure on their fee structures.

Should you invest with robo-advisors?

Ultimately, the answer lies entirely with your degree of customization. Generally, robo-advisors have little to no contact/feedback with the client once the initial policy statement has been established. While you can track your portfolio’s progress, you can give zero input on its direction, nor will robo-advisors offer anything more complex than the most liquid of ETFs.

Obviously, those of who wish to invest in actual stocks like Canopy Growth Corp (TSX:WEED), for example, or are students of the markets (Foolish readers should check out our Pro 2017 Survival Guide to turbocharge their portfolios) should stick with self-directed investing.

However, the low-cost structure of robo-investing is quite tempting. With most places charging just 1% of AUM, there is no reason to not consider a well-balanced portfolio that’s managed by an emotionless program at a fee equal to that of an index fund. Currently, robo-advisory’s appeal lies with the under-40 crowd with less than $100 thousand worth of investable assets. So, if you’re young, tech savvy, and looking to start a small, low-maintenance retirement account, then robo-advisory might be the way to go.

Fool contributor Alexander John Tun has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Investing

engineer at wind farm
Dividend Stocks

TFSA Investors: 1 Top Canadian Stock Worth Buying With $7,000

An outperforming, defensive dividend stock is worth buying with $7,000 for a TFSA portfolio.

Read more »

ETF stands for Exchange Traded Fund
Dividend Stocks

The #1 Index Fund I’d Hold in My Portfolio Forever — No Hesitation

Anchor your portfolio forever with the XDIV ETF – a low-cost ETF that delivered 13.6% in annual returns and pays…

Read more »

ETF is short for exchange traded fund, a popular investment choice for Canadians
Investing

Why I’m Buying This ETF Like There’s No Tomorrow and Never Selling

The Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets Index ETF (TSX:VEE) is a great value.

Read more »

Train cars pass over trestle bridge in the mountains
Dividend Stocks

A Reasonably Priced Safety Stock That Canadian Retirees Might Want to Know About

CN Rail (TSX:CNR) is starting to get too cheap to pass up for value investors.

Read more »

Map of Canada showing connectivity
Dividend Stocks

Don’t Buy BCE Stock Until This Happens

BCE stock clearly has attractive qualities, but I believe patient investors may get a better opportunity ahead.

Read more »

TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account) on wooden blocks and Canadian one hundred dollar bills.
Retirement

The Ideal Canadian Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever in a TFSA

If you use your TFSA wisely, you could save over $185,000 in tax! Here are the ideal stocks to help…

Read more »

a woman sleeps with her eyes covered with a mask
Dividend Stocks

The ETFs That Canadians Are Sleeping on But Shouldn’t Be Right Now

Canadians are sleeping on as these ETFs that offer income diversification and long-term potential right now.

Read more »

concept of real estate evaluation
Stocks for Beginners

The Bank of Canada Held Rates Again – Here’s the 1 TSX Stock I’d Buy in Response

Strong infrastructure demand and rental growth are helping power this TSX stock higher.

Read more »