Showing posts with label eMoney Advisor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eMoney Advisor. Show all posts

eMoney founder Walters will lead new competitor (Update) #fintech #appriselabs

Tom Paine




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Edmond Walters / LinkedIn


Edmond Walters, founder of eMoney Advisor, the Radnor-based financial planning software firm that Fidelity acquired four years ago, is back in the business with a startup that will compete against his old firm.

Walters sold eMoney to Fidelity in 2015 for $250 million.

Apprise Labss was introduced today at the T3 Advisor Conference in Dallas. The company is backed by Walters and two of eMoney's biggest rivals: Envestnet and PIEtech.

"This technology allows the advisor to show their value. The next generation of tools are going to enable both the advisor and clients to co-create and co-design their plans live and interactively" Walters said in a statement.

eMoney has grown considerably since the Fidelity buyout, and is among the largest tech employers in the region.

PIETech runs the MoneyGuide suite of products, while Envestnet runs Logix. But they are missing the financial planning capabilities of eMoney.

Walters is now free of non-compete restrictions, but one can only imagine a thicket of legal issues that his competing against eMoney might create.

A press release says that Apprise Labs is located in the suburbs of Philadelphia ,

A full rollout of Apprise Labs' new software will take place later in 2019.



Update: From a phone discussion with Apprise Labs:


Apprise Labs is currently located in Berwyn.

Apprise's software has been in development since July 2018.

They employ 11 people right now. However, they say that they're are always looking for more talent and would be interested in Software Engineers and Senior UX/UI Designers (email: careers@appriselabs.com).

Apprise is privately held and funded by Edmond Walters, PIETECH and Envestnet(33% equity each).






Links 10/18: Leaked email shows Salesforce once had Adobe on its target acquisition list; Qlik and Veeva Systems also on it



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Leaked email shows Salesforce once had Adobe on its target acquisition list
(Business Insider)
Qlik and Veeva Systems also on list.

Fidelity to Launch Digital Advice Platform for Advisors (T3 Technology Hub)
Joint Fidelity/eMoney development.

Uber, Lyft closing in on permanent approval in Pennsylvania (PennLive)SsSs

IBM Falls Despite Cloud Growth: Margins Undermine ‘The Transition’ (Barron's Tech Trader Daily)

Tech Companies Expect Free High-Speed Internet for Poorer Americans to Pay Off Later (NY Times)

Layer3 TV conducting pre-launch tests in D.C., Boston and Houston (FierceCable)

Baobab Studios Lands $25M ‘B’ Round
(Multichannel News)


SAP to make SuccessFactors employee-management service available on Microsoft's Azure (ZDNet)

Zenefits is trying to move past controversy with the launch of its new HR platform (Recode)
Speaking of SuccessFactors, its founder, Lars Dalgaard, took considerable criticism for the Zenefits meltdown as its key sponsor at Andreessen Horowitz, and has a big investment in its attempted recovery.




Links 8/5: SAP CFO Says Software Development Cycle Is Four Times Faster; Mercer, Accolade collaborate on new healthcare advocacy platform






Links 5/27: Latest on Fidelity's eMoney Advisor, Monetate, Dell Boomi



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eMoney Experiencing ‘Explosive’ Growth (Think Advisor)


Fidelity’s Big Bet Unveiled (Financial Advisor)


Apple Proposed Buying Time Warner, May Consider Netflix (Fortune)

Salesforce Partners Surprised By Fast-Moving AWS Relationship, But See Synergies Between The Cloud Vendors (CRN)

Monetate rebuilds (Philly.com)

SAP Partners See Opportunities, Challenges In New HANA Releases (CRN)


Dell Boomi Revamps Online Community for iPaaS, MDM and API Management (Integration Developer News)

Verizon Strike Appears Over; Workers Expected Back Next Week (Investor's Business Daily)



Walters steps down as CEO of eMoney Advisor


Tom Paine



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Edmond Walters, the Main Line investment advisor who founded eMoney Advisor, the Conshohocken-based invetment management software firm that was sold to Fidelity for an estimated $250 million in February, has resigned effective immediately, Fidelity announced today.
Edmond Walters / LinkedIn

Michael Durbin, the president of Fidelity Wealth Technologies, will serve as interim CEO.

The publication Investment News cited sources suggesting that Walter's resignation was not the typical post acquisition, pre-planned succession, but rather a decision by Walters based upon fundamental differences in strategic vision. One of them could be Walter's desire to maintain an open architecture in which eMoney's tools would continue to be available to Fidelity competitors, versus Fidelity desiring to keep the product more to itself.

eMoney's website says it now has 328 employees.


Fidelity Investments to acquire Conshohocken wealth planning software company eMoney Advisor






Tom Paine



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Boston-based Fidelity Investments announced this morning it had agreed to acquire Conshohocken-based eMoney Advisor, a leading wealth planning software company. Terms were not disclosed.

Founded in 2000 by former financial advisor Edmond Walters, eMoney Advisor was owned for a few years by Commerce Bancorp before returning to private ownership under Walters' leadership. Today, eMoney Advisor's software is used to track more than $1.4 trillion in client assets managed by 25,000 financial professionals, the company says.

See my profile on eMoney Advisor from 2013.

In mid-2013, eMoney Advisors told me it had about 200 employees. There are now 281 employees on its LinkedIn site.

The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, which held a majority stake in eMoney Advisor (if I understand the wording in the press release correctly), will retain a minority stake.

While it expects to expand its footprint under Fidelity, eMoney Advisor says it will also maintain its current offices in Pennsylvania and California.

The trade pub Investment News has more information on the deal.

Walters told Investment News that the firm had more than 40 potential suitors, but none stood a chance against Fidelity.

“Who can compare with Fidelity,” said Mr. Walters. “I didn't tell them at the time, but they were a clear winner.”

The Inquirer's Joe DiStefano cited two sources who indicated that Fidelity paid a "sum north of $250 million, which works out to more than 4 times the company's revenues."

Fidelity is the nation's No. 2 mutual fund company behind The Vanguard Group.


Links 1/17/2014: Roberts seen as kingmaker in Time Warner Cable battle






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Comcast’s Roberts Seen as ‘Kingmaker’ in Time Warner Cable Chase (Bloomberg)


Comcast considers a deal for Time Warner Cable (Philadelphia Inquirer)



Comcast Dropping ‘AnyPlay’
MSO To Discontinue In-Home Streaming Device On March 31 as Other Video Options Rise Up
(Multichannel News)

IBM Commits $1.2 Billion To Cloud, Adding 15 Global Data Centers (Data Center Knowledge)


Health IT moving to critical step (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Dropbox Closes Roughly $250M Round At $10B Valuation, WSJ Says (TechCrunch)


Filing: IGM should be sold in Pa. (AP via Philly.com)

eMoney and Firefly Give Financial Advisors Remote Meeting Capabilities (PR Newswire)

Oracle builds a bridge to Salesforce.com with new adapter (PC World)









Conshohocken's eMoney Advisor an important (but quiet) Philly software firm




Tom Paine



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I hadn't heard much about eMoney Advisor, the Conshohocken-based provider of web-based investment management software for financial advisors, recently. Founded by Edmond Walters in 2000, eMoney Advisor was acquired by Vernon Hill's Cherry Hill-based Commerce Bancorp for $32 million in stock in 2006, at which time its revenue was reported to be $10 million, but was sold back to Walters and other investors some time before or around the time of Commerce Bancorp's acquisition by TD Bank in 2008. While there has been plenty of coverage of eMoney Advisor in the investment management trade press, locally there hasn't been much.

So I got an update on some of what's been going on from Mark Constan, Vice President of Recruiting at eMoney Advisor. He told me during a phone interview that headcount was now around 200, up from about 120 at the beginning of 2011. Some 50 of those are considered tech employees, including a group of 30 engineers. While he didn't have precise figures, he said revenue had been growing at about 20% annually. eMoney Advisor's architecture is built around the Microsoft .Net framework, though Constan said that in recruiting engineers the company is less concerned with an applicant's narrow field of experience than in the versatility and talent the individual possesses. And yes, they are looking for people.

Until now virtually all of eMoney Advisor's employees, except for a small number in the field, have been based in Conshohocken. But eMoney Advisor has just opened a California office in La Jolla, a toney San Diego suburb on the ocean. Philadelphia tech firms sometimes open offices in places such as San Diego in order to recruit more engineering talent, but Constan said that wasn't part of the company's current plans. Rather, the office will house a west coast customer contact (call) center that will give eMoney Advisor more time zone flexibility and ease the burden on call center personnel in Conhohocken, as well as other client-facing personnel to serve its growing California customer base. A few are moving west from Conshohocken, and some were already out there or are being hired.

eMoney Advisor recruits at the major tech schools in the Philly area, and Constan says they are able to fulfill their needs through the local talent base, though he says eMoney's high standards make it more challenging.

eMoney Advisor has a strong Philadelphia pedigree. Walters, a Villanova graduate, ran a Main Line investment advisory firm before starting eMoney. Looking through profiles of senior management, several worked for BtoB online pioneer VerticalNet and some came from another local financial planning software startup, Reality Online (acquired by Reuters).

eMoney Advisor's recently released version 8.0 of its flagship 360 Series web-based software. Another area where the company has made progress in recent years is in building its enterprise business, gaining more accounts with major financial services institutions, although smaller, independent financial advisors remain an important part of its customer base. eMoney Advisor's offices are in what might be considered Conshohocken's tech corridor on East Hector Street, not far from companies such as Monetate and NextDocs, and Constan says there is a real sense of community in the tech scene there.

Walters apparently holds a large stake in eMoney and there are other investors, although its something eMoney Advisor has been quiet about. I couldn't find a single news citation about the sale of eMoney Advisor by Commerce Bancorp/TD Bank.

While eMoney Advisor may be well known to many in the investment advisory trade, outside of that area its identity may be less clear. Some may think it is more of a financial services business. While knowledge of that domain is obviously essential to eMoney Advisor's success, the company wants more people to recognize that it is also a technology-driven enterprise, Constan says.