Company Description
Wealthfront Corporation (Nasdaq: WLTH) is described as a tech-driven financial platform that helps digital natives turn their savings into wealth. The company focuses on clients who are building wealth and uses software and automation to deliver financial products that are intended to be convenient and low cost. Wealthfront states that it pioneered the automated investing category in 2011 and has since grown into a consumer-focused financial technology company.
According to the company’s public statements, Wealthfront offers a broad suite of products that includes cash management, investing, borrowing, lending, and financial planning solutions. These offerings are designed to address the needs of its clients across different economic environments. The platform’s expanding set of saving and investing products is described as helping clients earn more on their savings, borrow at lower rates, and keep more of their returns.
Business model and platform focus
Wealthfront characterizes itself as a technology company that has built a financial solutions platform for digital natives and wealth builders. The company highlights that its platform is software-driven and uses automation to offer diversified portfolios at low cost. Wealthfront also emphasizes that its platform is structured around two main product categories: Cash Management and Investment Advisory. In its own definitions, it refers to the total value of client assets across these categories as “platform assets.”
The company defines platform assets as the total value of financial assets held by clients in their accounts on a stated date, and further breaks this down into cash management assets and investment advisory assets. Wealthfront also tracks metrics such as “net deposits,” “funded clients,” and “funded accounts” to describe the scale and monetization potential of its platform.
Key products and client focus
Wealthfront’s disclosures describe its clients as digital natives seeking to turn savings into long-term wealth. The company states that its products include:
- Cash management accounts that are intended to provide a high annual percentage yield on deposits, with no account fees and features such as free instant withdrawals and access to paychecks up to two days early.
- Investment advisory services that use automation to offer low-cost diversified portfolios and other investment products.
- Borrowing and lending products that are designed to help clients access funds at lower rates.
- Financial planning solutions that are delivered through its software-driven platform.
The company also notes that it has introduced features such as free instant wire transfers for its cash management account. It describes this account as offering an annual percentage yield on balances starting from low minimums, no account fees, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance up to specified limits through program banks for individual and joint accounts.
Growth metrics and platform scale
In its fiscal third quarter 2026 results announcement, Wealthfront reported that total platform assets, which include both cash management and investment advisory assets, reached a record level. The company highlighted growth in both categories, as well as growth in funded clients. It also reported net deposits as a contributor to the increase in platform assets.
Wealthfront describes net deposits as the value of all assets clients have placed into products on its platform, net of withdrawals, over a defined period, excluding changes in value attributable to financial market performance. The company states that it views net deposits as an important barometer of its ability to scale and grow organically.
Use of non-GAAP metrics
Wealthfront reports both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. In its communications, the company explains that it uses non-GAAP metrics such as Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA Margin, Incremental Adjusted EBITDA margin, Free Cash Flow, Free Cash Flow Conversion, and Adjusted Operating Expenses. It provides definitions for these terms and states that they are used by management to evaluate business performance, allocate resources, and identify trends.
For example, Wealthfront defines Adjusted EBITDA as net income excluding interest expenses, provision for or benefit from income taxes, depreciation and amortization, stock-based compensation expense, changes in fair value of certain financial instruments, and nonrecurring expenses if any. It defines Free Cash Flow as net cash provided from operating activities less purchases of property, software, and equipment and capitalized internally developed software.
Public listing and trading
Wealthfront announced the pricing of its initial public offering of common stock and stated that its shares are listed on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker symbol “WLTH”. The company indicated that the offering included shares sold by Wealthfront and by existing stockholders, and that it granted underwriters an option to purchase additional shares. These communications identify Wealthfront as a publicly traded company whose stock is available to investors through the Nasdaq Global Select Market.
Geographic and historical context
In its press releases, Wealthfront identifies itself as Wealthfront Corporation and provides a location of Palo Alto, California for its corporate announcements. The company states that it pioneered the automated investing category in 2011, providing a historical reference point for the development of its platform and business. This indicates that Wealthfront has operated in the financial technology space for more than a decade, with a focus on automation and software-based delivery of financial products.
Key operating definitions
Wealthfront provides several internal definitions that help explain how it measures its business:
- Platform assets: total value of financial assets held by clients in their accounts on the platform as of a stated date, including both cash management and investment advisory products.
- Net deposits: value of all assets clients have placed into products on the platform, net of withdrawals, over a defined period, excluding changes in value from financial market performance.
- Funded clients: clients with balances greater than zero, or that have had balances greater than zero within a defined recent period, including individuals who share funded joint accounts.
- Funded accounts: accounts with balances greater than zero, or that have had balances greater than zero within a defined recent period, with joint accounts counted as a single funded account.
These definitions are used by Wealthfront to describe its scale, client base, and monetization potential, and they appear in its public communications regarding financial and operating results.
Position within financial technology
Across its public descriptions, Wealthfront consistently characterizes itself as a consumer fintech platform and a tech-driven financial platform. It emphasizes automation, software-driven delivery, and a focus on digital natives and wealth builders. Its product set, as described in its own materials, spans saving, investing, borrowing, lending, and financial planning, with an emphasis on low-cost, high-quality offerings that aim to help clients pursue their financial goals.