Hartford Courant (Sunday)

A smarter app is watching your wallet

Personal-finance programs offer you tailored advice

- By Alina Tugend

They promise to nudge you into saving more, negotiate your bank fees, cover overdrafts and help you pay down your debt. They’ll even cheer you on when you spend wisely and remind you your bills are coming due.

These are the newest evolution of personal financial-management tools, with the emphasis on personal.

Such money-management software is not new; Quicken, the granddaddy of the industry, started in the 1980s to make bill-paying and budgeting easier and evolved as the industry did. Two of the top apps, Mint and Credit Karma, are more than 10 years old.

But as artificial intelligen­ce has become ever more sophistica­ted, these tools — almost all of which are apps — have proliferat­ed; it’s almost impossible to say how many there are, but new ones seem to be coming on the market almost daily.

They are “more intuitive, more developed,” said Chanelle Bessette, a banking writer at NerdWallet, a personal-finance website that also offers its own budgeting app. “These apps are getting to know their users a lot better — users are feeding them informatio­n about how they spend, and that helps the prediction­s become even better.”

The apps are essentiall­y looking to become almost as good as a live personal adviser, but one that you don’t pay much for and that can live in your pocket. Some charge a monthly or annual subscripti­on; others are free and make money through referral fees they collect when a user buys the financial products or services promoted on the site.

“Their mission before was to make it easier for consumers to budget, but now they’re really creating features that enable consumers to buy stocks, apply for loans and autosave all on one platform,” said Anisha Kothapa, a fintech analyst at CB Insights, which tracks business trends.

Companies are trying to stand out in a crowded marketplac­e, and while some are bundling more features to attract users, others aim to specialize.

Such apps are particular­ly popular for budgeting and setting goals; in this area, Mint, PocketGuar­d and You Need A Budget often top “best of ” lists.

Like all these tools, they require a user’s credit card, banking and other financial informatio­n to track spending and income levels and then automatica­lly sort them into categories.

Each offers something a little different. Mint provides free credit-score checks as often as you like (it’s a “soft” check, so it won’t hurt your credit score). You Need a Budget, also known as YNAB, relies on a system called zerobased budgeting, where every dollar is put into an account — such as holiday spending, emergency fund and so on — so that you end up with zero.

“We really want people to be proactive, rather than reactive,” said YNAB founder Jesse Mecham. “People think that budgeting means they forecast what they’re going to make and what they’re going to spend; we teach people to budget only with the money you have on hand right now. We want people to change their behavior, and that comes with changing their thinking.”

Other tools are more focused on automatic savings and investing; they have become increasing­ly creative and like a game. Qapital connects with a web-based service, If This Then That, which allows users to set up rules for saving and investing.

If you want something that actively helps reduce your costs, some companies have services that look for ways to lower your payments or lop off pesky fees. Trim is one of the better-known tools — a rare one that is website based, not an app — that, among other things, identifies recurring charges, such as subscripti­ons, to make sure you still want them. It can also negotiate with your internet, cable and phone company to lower your payments.

Cushion scans users’ downloaded credit card and bank statements, looking for overdrafts and extra fees, said company founder and CEO Paul Kesserwani.

Cushion then negotiates with the financial institutio­ns, either through the secure bank portal (if the customer gives permission), through online chat on the bank’s website or, if needed, through traditiona­l mail.

“Bank and credit card terms of service are so complex that’s it’s often easy for people to accrue fees,” Kesserwani said.

It took four years, he noted, to build up the data set and technology stack to accurately detect bank fees, figure out which ones to negotiate, determine how to approach each negotiatio­n and then communicat­e with the bank automatica­lly on the consumer’s behalf.

The bells and whistles may be nice, but the benefit of these apps lies in forcing users to face how much they’re truly spending and where it ends up.

Personal financialm­anagement tools can make it easier to budget, save and invest, but you do have to actually use them. According to a report by CB Insights, after one day, retention hovers around 23% and falls to just under 6% after one month.

And while users can jump around and test various apps — and try a combinatio­n of them to cover specific needs — Bessette noted that there are benefits to staying with one app for years. “I’ve used Mint for about eight years, and it has all my historical data, which makes it much easier to see trends,” she said.

Because users are giving away some of their most valued financial informatio­n, security and privacy are critical.

Read the apps’ privacy policy — it’s best to look for a policy that promises it will never sell your informatio­n to a third party, said Paul Bischoff, editor of Comparitec­h, a tech research and comparison site with an emphasis on cybersecur­ity and consumer privacy.

And although all the personal financial-management companies will promise your data will be held in a virtual Fort Knox, “all apps are secure until they’re not,” Bischoff said.

It’s not that these apps are in any greater danger of being hacked than, say, your bank or any other institutio­n, but “the more people who have the informatio­n, the greater the risk,” he said. “I wouldn’t just sign up for apps willynilly.”

 ?? JAMES YANG/THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
JAMES YANG/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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