Income&’s Brad Walker on building a better mousetrap for retirement investing using marketplace lending

income& and retirement investing

Brad Walker is CEO of Income&

What is Income& and where did the inspiration to create the company come from?

Brad Walker, Income&
Brad Walker, Income&

Income& is a marketplace investing platform for PRIMOs, a new fixed-income product backed by high quality, prime-rated mortgages.

The idea behind Income& began when Ben Strub and I were working for a large alternative asset custodian where one of the most popular asset classes was hard money lending, both secured and unsecured. We realized that hard money lending seemed to be more understandable to investors regardless of their level of sophistication.

It was about this time that Lending Club and Prosper were experiencing explosive growth. They were scaling unsecured lending to an unimaginable level. We loved what they were doing in the unsecured space but realized, while they were offering a really great yield proposition, that unsecured consumer debt would not fit the risk characteristics of the largest yield-seeking population: retired people.

That was when we decided to create Income& and to offer hard asset-backed notes that outperform the safer end of the spectrum in traditional fixed-income options from a yield standpoint but also maintain similar risk characteristics to those same options. It was critical for us to create a product that our parents needed and, just as importantly, one that we would be comfortable selling to them. Soon after, we put together the core team of founders, including Keith Meyer to run marketing and Vincent Phillips to run technology, and we hit the ground running

Why is investing for retirement so hard for most people?

The extended low rate environment that we have been experiencing for the last decade has made it difficult for Baby Boomer investors to find decent returns with yields at historical lows. A majority of retirees and pre-retirees are looking for investments that are safe, outpace inflation, and return enough after inflation that they can have a comfortable life without eating into their principle.

What’s the PRIMO and how is it a better alternative than other options out there for fixed income investors?

A PRIMO is a note backed by an individual high credit quality prime-rated mortgage. As an investor, you have a great deal of transparency into the borrower’s credit statistics, the geography of the collateral property, and more. Using our technology platform, investors will easily be able to buy across our inventory of PRIMOs or customize a portfolio that fits their exact needs. We believe PRIMOs are better than other fixed-income investments through a combination of higher yields, lower risk, transparency and no on-going management fee.

Is this a dual-sided marketplace? Where does your supply of mortgages come from? Are there challenges in creating a vibrant marketplace that you see for Income&?

We are a two-sided marketplace. However, unlike other peer-to-peer platforms and marketplace lenders, we are not involved in the origination of loans. Instead, we work with well-established mortgage lenders by providing a place to sell their high credit, high quality prime-rated mortgages and through that liquidity, expand their lending operations. We then take those mortgages and create PRIMOs.

Our biggest challenge is really an educational one. The residential mortgage market still has a bit of a black eye after the downturn. We need to help people to understand that fixed-rate prime mortgages have historically been very safe and that we are working very hard to use the residential mortgage debt market responsibly to create a product that people need and that they can trust.

How do you intend to go to market with an electronic product for baby boomers? Are there challenges there?

Selling to an older demographic through a technology platform can be a challenge, although we have found that many Baby Boomers are comfortable interacting with their finances online and more will continue to gain comfort. Early on, we will largely be selling through Registered Investment Advisors (RIAs) partially as a way to get over the technology adoption hurdle but also more as a way for early adopters to gain comfort with PRIMOs as a new product, by having a trusted professional vet the product.

Getting good advice (finally) for your 401k — with Chris Costello

retirement investing with Income&

Why is it so hard to know what to do with your 401k? Why is it hard to understand what you’re invested in and get advice on how to improve it?

Chris Costello, co founder of Blooom, joins Zack Miller on the Tradestreaming Podcast to discuss retirement planning and investing and how his firm is addressing the problem with an easy-to-use, affordable investing tool.

Listen to the FULL episode

About Chris

Chris Costello of BlooomA co-founder at Blooom, Chris has been working with clients and building portfolio allocations for almost two decades. He also co-founded and runs another investment advisory firm managing over $500 million for clients.

Resources mentioned in this podcast

Even more resources

 

Successful investment advice for retirement assets — with Brian Murphy

retirement investing

Getting good investment advice for your retirement portfolios isn’t easy and the industry doesn’t make an investor’s work any easier in this respect.

Brian Murphy, CEO and Co-founder of Kivalia, has found a better way. Through an innovative use of crowdsourcing, he’s able to determine the investment universe within any given retirement plan. From there, investors receive periodic retirement advice from Kivalia.

And the results speak for themselves. Brian joins us on Tradestreaming Radio to discuss the struggles investors face when investing for retirement, how the market is changing, and the resources people can use to improve their investing results.

Listen to the FULL interview

About Brian Murphy

CEO and cofounder of KivaliaBrian is the CEO and Co-founder of Kivalia. He also runs Registered Investment Advisory firm, Pariveda.

Learn more

Even More Resources

Investment risk: what is it and how a two-headed hyrdra monster can ruin your investment returns

Been talking to a lot of investing people about Risk recently: what it is, how to measure it, how to control it.

Why Risk matters

Risk is one of those things you don’t realize you have too much of until it’s too late. Being able to manage risk effectively is essential in the investment process.  Get it right and you hit your goals. Get it wrong and the potential for catastrophic losses is immense.

I don’t agree with the buy-and-holders who believe holding forever erases risk. Risk is always there, lurking around the corner.

There are huge issues and ones that many academics and entrepreneurs are beginning to tackle in meaningful ways. Imagine if we can get to a point where we can personalize risk — with financial advisors and with DIY investing tools.

Continue reading “Investment risk: what is it and how a two-headed hyrdra monster can ruin your investment returns”

Tradestreaming’s Best Retirement Book of 2011: Less Risk, More Return

I don’t know about you, but most of the retirees have only one requirement for their investments:

Make some money and try not to lose any…

Come to think of it, I think many of us now have that same investing mindset.

Most investment managers — particularly, mutual fund managers who judge their performance against an arbitrary benchmark — are subject to the whims of the market.  Sure, they’d like to limit losses but if they’re an emerging market find manager and the BRICs get slammed, the fund is going to get slammed.

For do-it-yourself investors who practice buy-and-hold, the theory is that by manning the hatches during poor investment periods and holding tight, returns will be better than if we attempted to buy and sell our way through the investing storm.

That may be true but the trip is really nauseating, as we ride the ups and downs of the market.

This year’s best book on retirement planning plots a different course.

Continue reading “Tradestreaming’s Best Retirement Book of 2011: Less Risk, More Return”

Tradestreaming Cascade: All the news you need to know (Week of October 30, 2011)

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Every week, I send out an email (free) to my subscribers summarizing the must-see events of the past week. It’s everything about the intersection of technology, social media and investing.

Sign up in the sidebar, at the end of this post, or by going here.

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Investment Products

Personal Capital ventures into online advice arena (Investment News)
Posted October 30, 2011

Personal capital is taking the traditional advisory model and delivering through the online channel.  Taking aim at the technology-empowered hybrid of DIY investor looking for professional advice.

Eliminate leveraged ETFs (Aleph Blog)
Posted October 29, 2011

Part of a growing trend rejecting leveraged ETF products, David Merkel believes they should be banned because they don’t provide any long term value.

I have never pushed a taxi medallions…on anyone (Metafilter)
Posted October 24, 2011

Two taxi medallions sold for over $1m a piece this week.  This posting has links to the current flurry of activity surrounding an asset that’s returned 16% a year for the past 60 years. Continue reading “Tradestreaming Cascade: All the news you need to know (Week of October 30, 2011)”

401(k) “re-enrollments”: Nudging employees to make bad decisions

Far be it from me to argue with behavioral economist, Richard Thaler (Nudge was awesome, bro) but 401(k) re-enrollment is only good for the sponsors of such plans like T. Rowe Price ($TROW).

The WSJ is reporting this morning on a growing trend for employers to choose something called “re-enrollment” for their employees’ retirement plans.  It goes like this:

Employees have the options of sticking with their current investment selection, if it’s still offered, or choosing another mix. But in a re-enrollment, unless the participant specifically opts out, his or her 401(k) will be re-allocated to the company’s chosen default investment.

Thaler was concerned that employees don’t have enough time/brainspace to make better decisions so it sounds like he likes this approach

“Many [participants] never change their asset allocation or contributions over their working lifetime, meaning that their asset allocation as they get older can be quite different than the one they intended,” says Richard Thaler, professor of economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business

Listen, I’m all for nudging children towards better eating habits by the strategic placement and display of such foods in school cafeterias but forcing employees to a made-up allocation for exposure to the stock market…well, not only is that paternalistic, that’s just bad investing.

Digging deeper into target date funds

I understand where the companies are coming from.  The data show that rarely — if ever — do employees change their asset allocations.  Fine — but what target date funds do is determine exactly how much allocation investors in such funds should have to the market.  The hope is that returns will be X over a certain time period (the target date).

But guess what?  These things always had too much exposure for most investors to the broad stock market and remain badly markets, explained and disclosed (and that’s the dig by industry rag, Morningstar).  Another market plummet and wham, a lot of employees who didn’t even realize they had been re-enrolled will wake up with a lot less $$ in their retirement accounts.

The truth is that target date funds are a flawed product for a genuine problem: helping guide retirement investors to make better decisions.  The answer isn’t ensuring they max out on equity allocations.

Only thing this is good for is the stocks of the mutual fund companies who run 401 (k) plans.  This smacks of being “the industry solution” for the vast build-up of cash in most retirement accounts.

Well, O retirement investor, consider yourself (re)warned.

As for actionable investment ideas? I’d love to see exactly how much cash there is on the sidelines and expectations for re-enrollment.  This could be a good catalyst for Franklin ($BEN) and T. Rowe Price ($TROW) as this cash gets crammed into mutual funds.

Read more

  • Your employer knows best. Perhaps. (WSJ)
  • New Problems with 401(k) Target Date Funds (Institutional Investor)
  • A new 401(k) default? Moving money into target funds (Nudge Blog)
  • Morningstar 2010 Target Date Fund Survey (Morningstar)