For the rest of your portfolio, when youre buying indices, you can custom construct an index such that those individual stocks are left out. While it only makes sense to do this if your portfolio exceeds a certain amount, the net result is that your overall portfolio is better balanced because you dont have to own Google again, for instance, both in the index and in individual holdings.
Whats the portfolio level at which this makes sense? At one point, the only solution was Parametric Portfolio Associates, at a minimum of $5M. However, today, Wealthfront has dramatically lowered the entry level to $500,000. Once youve got such a custom index built, as Wealthfront has detailed, you can now do tax-loss harvesting at an individual level, bringing your tax loss harvesting potential up even further. This is a huge incentive for high networth individuals to use Wealthfront, as their fees are substantially lower than Parametrics, for instance. In fact, once you build a custom index, you no longer have to pay Vanguards management fee, for instance, so Wealthfronts equivalent portfolio costs come close to Vanguard, and the additional tax-loss harvesting delta will tip the edge in Wealthfronts favor.
In How to Interview a Financial Advisor, I explain why most Googlers who were offered the opportunity turned down Parametrics offer. The problem is that if you fire Parametric, now youre stuck with a portfolio of 499 individuals stocks, and now you have to either manage that portfolio yourself, or find someone willing to do it for you. As you can imagine, unless youre about to write your own software to do this, that effectively makes Parametric/Wealthfront a roach motel, where you can always check in, but you can never leave.
When I spoke with Wealthfront about this latest feature, I proposed a solution to this issue. Its very much technically feasible, and I look forward to seeing if Wealthfront will implement it. The nice thing about being a Silicon Valley startup is that they can move forward far faster than the stodgy banks on Wall Street used to big fat margins.
As for myself? I will continue to move more assets over to Wealthfront as they free up elsewhere. The additional bonuses from what theyre doing at higher asset levels is just too much even for this DIYer to pass up.
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