Archive for January, 2010

Yodlee Does Taxes – Forms Strategic Alliance With H&R Block

January 28th, 2010

Yodlee and H&R Block entered into a strategic alliance this week to integrate H&R Block’s tax preparation service with Yodlee’s account aggregation platform. This new solution will allow Yodlee users to automatically export expenses aggregated from their online accounts – banking, credit cards, utilities, etc. – into H&R Block’s online tax forms. For the consumer that uses online tax filing software, the integration will help reduce the time spent manually entering information off statements and receipts. And it can be done throughout the entire year, not compressed into the few weeks leading up to April 15th.

Mint.com already integrates with Intuit’s TurboTax, so this isn’t the first account aggregation > online tax solution integration we’ve seen. And it probably won’t be the last. Account aggregation vendors have been focused over the past decade on servicing three distinct markets – consumers, banking, and financial services providers. But the tax prep world, CPAs in particular, is untapped.

Look for the Yodlee / H&R Block integrated solution to be rolled out in time for the 2011 tax season.

You can read the CNNMoney story here.

A “Screaming Need” For Account Aggregation

January 22nd, 2010

Almost four years ago, Mint.com put online personal finance management and budgeting on the map.  A flagship website in the Web 2.0 world, Mint revolutionized how this Facebook generation of users could track their finances across multiple accounts. Mint made it cool, fun and hip. Part social network, part Quicken, Mint helped their users understand where all their money went each month while providing a big picture view, a total view, of all their finances. Mint was a killer application.

Online banking, compared to Mint, was boring and limited. Sure it was revolutionary back in the 90′s, but that was so last century. Today, with the evolution of sites like Mint, Geezeo, and Wesabe, large banks are finally seeing the light and are incorporating interactive budgeting tools and account aggregation into their online banking portals.

There’s a story in the NY Times today which discusses this trend in online banking. The piece highlights some interesting points related to account aggregation which advisors may want to pay attention to. For one, large institutions now understand their clients want to see all their finances in one place. As one analyst in the story puts it,”There’s a screaming need for someone to come through and help them organize, and pull all that account data in one place.”

You can read the NY Times article here.

>>Great to see my pals over at Geezeo get a mention. I know Peter Glyman and Shawn Ward. They’re solid guys, and they’ve built an incredible platform.

ByAllAccounts Awarded Patent

January 19th, 2010

ByAllAccounts, a leading provider of account aggregation to financial advisors and wealth managers, was awarded a patent for their method of aggregating and downloading financial data.

According to the release:

“ByAllAccounts was awarded a patent for the company’s “Financial Portfolio Management System and Method” on December 29, 2009. The patent is directed to ByAllAccounts’ technology for retrieving financial information from various institutions by automatically logging in and downloading the data.  ByAllAccounts can retrieve data from multiple institutions in multiple formats.  The company’s service normalizes the retrieved financial information and generates a financial portfolio, bringing together the status and details of all of the financial accounts associated with an individual investor.”

Congratulations to James Carney and his team. You can read the press release here

As an aside, you may recall Yodlee and CashEdge settled a lawsuit in 2007 after Yodlee claimed CashEdge infringed on their data aggregation and funds transfer patents.

New Aggregation Players In 2010?

January 7th, 2010

Davis Janowski over at InvestmentNews appears to have some info on new players entering the aggregation space in 2010. Be interesting to see who jumps in. I would imagine Yodlee is coming back into the advisor space. And I’ve read in more than a few places that Intuit, remember they purchased mint.com,  is going to offer a solution for financial advisors.