{"id":1043,"date":"2009-07-10T08:18:16","date_gmt":"2009-07-10T13:18:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/?p=1043"},"modified":"2009-07-09T13:21:36","modified_gmt":"2009-07-09T18:21:36","slug":"the-best-online-tools-for-personal-finance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2009\/07\/10\/the-best-online-tools-for-personal-finance\/","title":{"rendered":"The Best Online Tools for Personal Finance"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by SHELLY BANJO<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n It\u2019s tougher than ever to plan your finances. But it\u2019s also easier than ever to find help on the cheap.<\/p>\n There are a host of Web sites that help you lay out a budget and track your spending and investments. Some let you set up a plan for a long-term goal, like college or retirement, and others offer advice about where to put your money. And many of these services are free of charge.<\/p>\n To help you wade through all the choices, we scoured the Web to find some of the best online tools and got recommendations from personal-finance pros. Here\u2019s a look at some of the best sites we turned up, in a range of categories.<\/p>\n 1. Budgeting Your Money<\/strong><\/p>\n The first and perhaps most effective step to managing your money online is signing up for basic budgeting sites such as Mint.com<\/a>, from Mint Software Inc. of Mountain View, Calif., Wesabe.com<\/a>, from San Francisco-based Wesabe Inc., or Geezeo.com<\/a>, from Geezeo of Hartford, Conn.<\/p>\n These free sites offer tools to help you keep track of what you\u2019re spending, how much you\u2019re saving and how your investments are performing. You create an account, and the sites automatically aggregate all of your online financial data, letting you keep track of credit cards, home loans and bank and brokerage accounts all in one place.<\/p>\n To help you avoid bank or credit-card fees, these sites can alert you via email or text message when a bank account is low or when a credit card is approaching its limit. And the sites can slice and dice the information to help you budget better. For instance, they will automatically show you how much you spend in any given category, such as restaurants or gas stations, and can compare your spending habits with those of other users, so you can identify areas where you might need to cut back.<\/p>\n Some sites, such as Geezeo and Wesabe, also offer a social-networking element that allows users to share tips and advice on a range of money-management issues.<\/p>\n One big caveat: Many of these sites need usernames and passwords for your various online financial accounts to get access to your data, says Jim Bruene, founder of online-banking research company Online Financial Innovations and Finovate, a conference series showcasing online financial tools and companies.<\/p>\n Some sites, like Wesabe, allow you to download statements from your bank or credit-card company and then upload them manually. This can be more time-consuming but a comfort to those who don\u2019t want to give up their passwords, Mr. Bruene says.<\/p>\n There are other caveats to consider when using the sites. For instance, Mint.com showcases advertisements of financial-services companies and shows ads based on your activity on the site. (If you spend a lot on restaurants and gas, for instance, the site may suggest a reward card tied to those kinds of purchases.) Critics say this may create a conflict of interest, since the site is ostensibly trying to help you save money.<\/p>\n Mint.com notes that users must deliberately choose to click on the \u201cWays to Save Tab\u201d displaying the offers. Donna Wells, the site\u2019s chief marketing officer, says that when users decide to accept an offer, they \u201csave real dollars, the financial institution gets a new customer at a low cost of acquisition, Mint.com sometimes, but not always, receives a small referral fee from the provider. That\u2019s how we keep the Mint.com service free.\u201d<\/p>\n 2. Creating a Financial Plan <\/strong><\/p>\n Moving beyond simple budgeting, a number of Web sites offer tools to help users keep track of and plan for their complete financial life. Experts say this can be a good starting place for jobs such as assessing your retirement goals, and figuring out how to structure your investments, spending and saving to achieve them.<\/p>\n But the pros caution investors to consider carefully before accepting product suggestions and investment advice. \u201cThere will always be a group of hard-core self-directed investors who will try to do it all themselves, but we see most people using these sites as a warm-up tool to financial planning. If they want to seek something more rigorous, they will go to a financial planner,\u201d says David Schehr, a research director with Gartner Inc.\u2019s Industry Advisory Services.<\/p>\n With that in mind, here are some popular sites.<\/p>\n SimpliFi.net<\/a>, from SimpliFi LLC in Winston-Salem, N.C., uses a virtual financial adviser named Sophie to guide you through a planning process based on financial goals, such as saving for retirement or reducing debt. The site assesses how much you should spend and save to reach your particular goal and tells you how likely you are to achieve it with a \u201cGoal Point Average\u201d ranging from A+ to F. (You don\u2019t give the site any of your financial-account information, but you do have to input approximate balances.)<\/p>\n The site can provide details on how much you need to save over a certain period to reach your goals and offer recommendations on types of investments to consider. The site is registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which offers investors a measure of protection: Among other things, the site must comply with SEC rules for registered investment advisers and is subject to examination by SEC staff.<\/p>\n Another site, Planwithvoyant.com<\/a>, from Voyant Inc. of Austin, Texas, helps investors forecast the impact of unforeseen events. Step-by-step wizards guide you through the initial preparation of a financial plan, such as identifying your goals and entering income information and expenses. Then charts and graphs show your current financial condition and allow you to test the financial effect of what-if scenarios, such as an unexpected pregnancy or an early retirement. You can also run simulations on how to mitigate those risks, say, by adding insurance or altering your investment strategy.<\/p>\n For specific questions and advice, you can reach out to Voyant\u2019s online community forum or check in with a financial professional in your area. If you choose this free option, you\u2019re presented with a list of local advisers, where you can check out their credentials and choose to ask one of them for feedback. (The site says advisers in this service must be registered with the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or Finra. They pay for subscriptions to the service, and offer help, as a way to drive new business.)<\/p>\n Investors can also try ESPlannerBasic (Basic.esplanner.com<\/a>), from Boston-based financial-software company Economic Security Planning Inc., which offers a free plan developed by Boston University economics professor Laurence Kotlikoff.<\/p>\n You enter your current and projected salary, retirement age and savings, among other things. The site calculates your sustainable living standard and allows you to tinker with how much a job change, housing move or retirement-account contribution can raise or lower your living standard.<\/p>\n Then the program recommends annual amounts of discretionary spending, savings and life-insurance holdings. The program incorporates a lot of the nitty-gritty details other programs tend to leave out, such as federal and state taxes and future Social Security benefits. But the process can be time-consuming\u2014it takes up to 30 minutes to fill out all the necessary information. What\u2019s more, the basic version stores your plan for only 24 hours, so every time you want to run the simulation, you must input the numbers.<\/p>\n \u201cAs you add complexity, it takes more time and effort to use these sites, and most people only want to bite off as much as they can chew,\u201d says Mr. Schehr of Gartner.<\/p>\n 3. Tracking Investments and Getting Advice <\/strong><\/p>\n A growing number of investors are flocking to Web sites that allow them to track their portfolios and compare their choices with others in the community, including financial gurus like Warren Buffett and Jim Cramer.<\/p>\n People are looking for truly objective advice, not suggestions from advisers who are making commissions off trades, says Ron Shevlin, a senior analyst at Aite Group LLC, a Boston research-advisory firm that focuses on the financial-services industry.<\/p>\n He points to SocialPicks.com<\/a>, from FinancialContent Services Inc., a financial-data and business-news company in Foster City, Calif., and New York-based Covestor Inc.\u2019s Covestor.com<\/a>. These sites allow you to keep track of your own investments and compare your portfolio\u2019s performance to that of peers, professional analysts and financial bloggers.<\/p>\n For instance, SocialPicks.com\u2019s Blogtracker feature automatically tracks performance of financial bloggers, various Wall Street legends and professional analysts based on blog posts and other online \u00adinformation.<\/p>\n San Francisco-based Cake Financial Corp.\u2019s CakeFinancial.com<\/a> also allows investors to track investment portfolios but in addition lets them aggregate all of their portfolios in one place, analyze past performance up to 10 years and compare portfolios with other users.<\/p>\n Cake\u2019s comparison tools look at your current investments and find similar replacement funds with lower fees and expenses. In addition, the site lets you create a watch list, or list of positions that you\u2019re interested in tracking, by performance and the number of Cake users who are buying or selling.<\/p>\n What other people do isn\u2019t necessarily right, but at least it gives people context to make a more informed decision, Mr. Shevlin says.<\/p>\n For investors who want more advice, Mr. Shevlin suggests Portfoliomonkey.com<\/a>. At the site, from San Francisco-based Portfolio Monkey Inc., you enter your portfolio\u2019s ticker symbols and number of shares, and the site analyzes your current allocation\u2019s expected return and losses, based on analytics evaluating historical volatility and performance.<\/p>\n The site can help you reallocate your portfolio, or offer recommendations for stocks that have a low correlation with your portfolio and high expected returns. You can go through those stocks and see how adding them would affect the portfolio.<\/p>\n Mr. Shevlin cautions, though, that the site is fairly new. \u201cIt\u2019s promising to provide guidance. Whether or not they can actually deliver that is left to be seen,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n Jay Liao, co-founder of Portfolio Monkey, says, \u201cThere is a line between recommendations and investment advice, and that\u2019s a line we don\u2019t want to cross at this point, but there are suggestions we can make for a user\u2019s portfolio that can be informative and data-driven.\u201d<\/p>\n Mr. Liao says Portfolio Monkey is bringing analytics and simulation tools to investors that previously were available only to financial professionals. \u201cAt the end of the day, the user gets a more diversified portfolio that produces more return at lower risks,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n 4. Checking for Fraud<\/strong><\/p>\n For investors spooked by recent financial scams and scandals, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority offers tools to monitor stockbrokers and identify and avoid fraud.<\/p>\n At Finra.org\/BrokerCheck<\/a>, you can check the professional background of current and former Finra-registered securities firms and brokers, as well as find any regulatory complaints or customer disputes.<\/p>\n You can also see a listing of the broker\u2019s current registrations, licenses or exams passed. The Securities and Exchange Commission offers a similar check for information about investment-adviser firms at Adviserinfo.sec.gov<\/a>.<\/p>\n Finra.org\/Investors\/ToolsCalculators<\/a> offers Risk Meter and Scam Meter tools, which walk you through a series of questions aimed at identifying vulnerable individuals and investments. For instance, the Risk Meter asks you if you have checked with a securities regulator to see whether an investment professional is licensed. Based on the responses, the tool offers suggestions on how to combat fraud.<\/p>\n Likewise, the site\u2019s Scam Meter allows you to check if an investment is too good to be true, asking questions such as: How did you learn about the investment opportunity, and what have you been told about it? From your answers, the site offers warnings and \u00adadvice.<\/p>\n \u201cIt\u2019s not the most gee-whiz slickest thing out there, but it\u2019s helpful for investors who are afraid of getting into investing because of recent scandals and the economic meltdown,\u201d Mr. Shevlin says.<\/p>\n 5. Keeping Track of Credit<\/strong><\/p>\n With credit scores determining everything from car-insurance rates to getting a mortgage, \u201cunderstanding and managing your credit score is incredibly important to your entire financial life these days,\u201d Mr. Shevlin says. He suggests CreditKarma.com<\/a>, \u201cwhich offers a truly free score and advice on how to improve it,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n You don\u2019t have to give the site your credit-card information, as you do with a traditional credit bureau. But CreditKarma, from San Francisco-based Credit Karma Inc., will ask you for your address, phone number and Social Security number. (The site says it doesn\u2019t store the number.)<\/p>\n Once you submit that information, the site will give you your score\u2014but not the entire credit report\u2014and show you how you stack up against other users in various categories, such as overall users, or those in your state or age group.<\/p>\n Starting tomorrow, the site will help users identify major influences on their score, such as credit-card utilization and on-time payment history. The site uses scores generated by credit-reporting bureau TransUnion LLC.<\/p>\n Mr. Shevlin cautions users to be prepared to see credit-card and other product offers on the site. But he notes that users can rate the offers on whether or not they are helpful, and the site adjusts ad placement based on feedback.<\/p>\n 6. Managing Loans<\/strong><\/p>\n One site claims it can smooth out a potentially tricky financial arrangement: borrowing money from friends and family.<\/p>\nConsumers are paying closer attention to what they buy, how much they save, and where they invest. These resources can be a huge help. Even better, most of them are free.<\/h3>\n