M1 Finance
M1 Finance
Type of site | Private |
---|---|
Headquarters | Chicago, Illinois |
Key people | Brian Barnes (Founder, CEO) |
Industry | Financial services |
Products | Investing Asset management Lending |
URL | https://https://www.m1finance.com/ |
Launched | 2015 |
Overview
M1 Finance is an online financial services company with headquarters in Chicago, IL. The company is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission as a broker dealer and is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC).
M1 Finance is a robo-advisor. In December 2017, it eliminated fees on its platform. As of March 2019, the company had $500 million in assets under management (AUM).Cite error: A <ref>
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History
M1 Finance’s founder, Brian Barnes, said on the company blog that he has been investing since he was in fifth grade [1]. When his teacher assigned his class a mock-investing project, his parents offered to give him a small sum to invest in real markets.
As an adult, Barnes wanted an easy way to invest earnings from his first job. When he couldn’t find the features he wanted on any investing platforms currently on the market, he decided to create his own. He launched M1 Finance in 2016 with the ability to automate monthly deposits, maintain a preset portfolio allocation, and make funds easily withdrawable.
A critic of the fees charged by investment advisors [2], Barnes has stated that one of M1 Finance’s goals is to keep investing costs as low as possible to enable platform participants to grow wealth. The platform initially charged investors a .25% fee to invest [3] but eliminated that fee in December 2017 [4], which Andy Rachleff, CEO of competitor Wealthfront, called a “desperate move by a late entrant”[5].
After eliminating its fees, M1 Finance’s user base doubled within two months to nearly 25,000 and its AUM rose to $100 million [6]. Barnes has said that financial services companies that hope to attract users from the millennial generation [7]must offer convenience, automation, and low costs [8].
Current Operations
M1 Finance currently offers three products: M1 Invest, its original investment product, M1 Borrow, which lets account holders borrow against their accounts, and M1 Spend, a checking account and debit card.
M1 Finance earns revenue from fees from lending customers’ money and securities, fees from the M1 Borrow product, and payment for order flow (PFOF), a practice that has been somewhat controversial [9] [10].
In 2017, M1 Finance was named one of Student Loan Hero’s 10 Best Investment Advisors to Help You Grow Your Money [11].
References
- ^ Barnes, Brian (27 March 2017). "Why I Founded M1". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Divine, John (29 September 2016). "How Will Robo Advisors Impact the Future of Investing?". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Li, Jinman (21 March 2018). "M1 Finance Users Double After Firm Ends Trading Fees". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Barnes, Brian (13 December 2017). "M1 Is Now Free". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Chaparro, Frank (15 January 2018). "M1 Went Free and Now It's Facing a Backlash". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Li, Jinman (21 March 2018). "M1 Finance Users Double After Firm Ends Trading Fees". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Keeley, Colin (10 September 2017). "Brian Barnes of M1 Finance, Stanford on Reinventing Millennial Investing". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Carlozo, Lou (14 February 2017). "The Paradox of Millennail Investors". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Pellecchia, Ray (30 December 2008). "Payment for Order Flow: Madoff's Earlier Days". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Pisani, Bob (5 June 2014). "SEC Chief Wants to See Changes in Trading". Retrieved 2019-04-04.
- ^ Marquit, Miranda (17 April 2017). "Best Investment Advisors". Retrieved 2019-04-04.