This App Makes Investing As Easy As Swiping Your Debit Card (2024)

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Investing is complicated.

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Acorns is not.

The app from California-based father-son team Walter and Jeff Cruttenden aims to take the anxiety, deliberation, and intimidation out of investing by boiling it down to a matter of cents.

The company, which just released its app on Android in addition to the existing iPhone version (available in the US only), was founded in 2012 and has raised $9 million in three rounds of funding.

Here's how Acorns works: You connect as many debit or credit cards as you'd like along with a checking account, and the app rounds every purchase made on those cards up to the next dollar, investing the difference in low-cost ETFs. For example, if you spend $10.49 on lunch, that remaining 51 cents is invested.

It doesn't sound like much, but Acorns says that its current users invest $30 to $180 a month in "round ups" alone.

This App Makes Investing As Easy As Swiping Your Debit Card (1)

Acorns

"Even though, legally, a person can open an investment account at 18, most don't start into their 30s and miss out on years of compounding returns," explains cofounder and CEO Walter Cruttenden. "We're hoping by making the amount small enough, we can get people started earlier."

You can also choose to invest larger sums of money directly from your checking account, or set up automatic deposits on a regular basis.

"You can invest up to $20,000 or $30,000 in a lump sum investment," explains CFO Mark Dru, "so we're not only attracting investors interested in doing the roundup, but more sophisticated investors as well."

No matter how much a user invests, they can use the app to estimate how much their money will grow in future years. "That peace of mind is really cool, because people are really worried about their future and what they're going to do with their savings," says Dru.

Of course, caveats Cruttenden, "past performance isn't a guarantee of the future, but at least it's a place to start."

Acorns was created to make setting up an investment account something you can do in a few minutes, and investing something you can do in a matter of seconds.

After inputting your basic information and answering a few quick questions about your time horizon and risk tolerance, the app recommends one of six portfolios created by Nobel-prize winning Dr. Harry Markowitz, one of the company's advisors.

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This App Makes Investing As Easy As Swiping Your Debit Card (2)

Acorns

You can use the recommended portfolio, or choose to invest with another one. "Basically, you swipe left for a more conservative portfolio — fewer stocks, more bonds — and right for a more aggressive portfolio — more stocks, fewer bonds," explains Cruttenden. "It's the same on the withdrawal screen: Swipe up to put money in, down to take money out. It's definitely a new interface in the financial services industry."

Acorns says that 35% of its 60,000 users are in that 18 to 32 range, and that it's on track to have 1 million by the end of its first year. The app costs $1 a month, and 0.25% to 0.5% of your investment annually — you can estimate how much you'll pay in fees on the site.

If you think the service sounds a lot like a robo-advisor, you're right. While Acorns is primarily app-based — its web app is still in progress — it operates using a lot of the same principles as online investment platforms like Wealthfront and Betterment: conservative investments with minimal investor input, meant not to make investors millionaires, but simply to get their money into the market.

Because it's not the most aggressive investment model out there, users should expect to leave their money with Acorns for a while. "If people are going to build a long term financial nest egg, we encourage them to stick at it," says Cruttenden. "Our name is Acorns, and it generally takes 20-plus years to become a mature oak tree."

Libby Kane, CFEI

Executive Editor, Personal Finance Insider

Libby Kane, CFEI, is the Executive Editor for Personal Finance Insider, Business Insider's personal finance section that incorporates affiliate and commerce partnerships into the news, insights, and advice about money Insider readers already know and love. She holds the Certified Financial Education Instructor (CFEI) certification issued by the National Financial Educators Council. Previously at Business Insider, she oversaw teams including Strategy, Careers, and Executive Life.Her team at Insider has tackled projects including:Women of Means, a series about women taking control of their financesInside the Racial Wealth Gap, an exploration of the causes, effects, and potential solutions of the racial wealth gap in the US (finalist, Drum Award, "Editorial Campaign of the Year," 2021)Strings Attached, a series of essays from people who have left insulated communities and how that journey affected their relationship with moneyMaster Your Money, a year-long guide for millennials on how to take control of their finances (first runner up, Drum Award, "Best Use of Social Media," 2022)The Road to Home, a comprehensive guide to buying your first house (silver award winner, National Association of Real Estate Editors, "Best Multi-Platform Package or Series – Real Estate," 2022)Personal Finance Insider also rates, explains, and recommends financial products and services.Outside of personal finance, she's written about everything from why Chinese children are so good at math to the business of dogs to hard truths about adulthood.In September 2016, she helped launch Business Insider Netherlands in Amsterdam.She also spent three years as a member of the Insider Committee, a cross-team focus group working on making Business Insider an even better place to work.She's always interested in research, charts, and people: new and interesting research, compelling charts and other visuals, and people who are willing to share the details of their impressive financial accomplishments and strategies.Before joining the company in March 2014, she was the associate editor at LearnVest, covering personal and behavioral finance.If you have something to share, please reach out to lkane@businessinsider.com.

This App Makes Investing As Easy As Swiping Your Debit Card (2024)
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