Digg icon reddit icon Stumbleupon icon
Print Email     Print Edition Stories

Monday, September 8, 2008

Financial tech vets launch LifeYield

A Boston-based financial technology provider focused on serving wealth management firms and advisers has launched. The company, LifeYield LLC, was founded by local tech veterans Mark Hoffman, Paul Samuelson and Michael Benedek.

Previously, those three founded and managed asset management technology provider Upstream Technologies LLC, which was founded in 1999 and acquired last year by Atlanta-based CheckFree Services Corp. for $28 million. Hoffman also founded Lattice Trading Inc., which was acquired by State Street Bank and Trust Co. in 1996.

LifeYield provides web-based tools designed to streamline “decumulation” activity — the process of raising cash from an investment portfolio. The company’s application employs a premium income distribution process that combines a multipoint tax strategy with risk factors when identifying those assets to sell every period in generating a recurring income.

An aging U.S. population combined with the emergence of a larger affluent class are creating a demand for such tools, officials said. A 2005 survey by Fidelity Investments indicated that 43 percent of an adviser’s clients were retired or expected to retire within five years. Cambridge-based Forrester Research and other industry researchers estimate a mass affluent segment that has grown to more than 29 million households and is anticipated to grow to 35 million households by 2020, officials said.
 

Digg icon reddit icon Stumbleupon icon
Contact Editor Latest News

Comments

Please Login/Register to post comments.

No comments have been added or approved.

On the MHT blog now

Despite World Series, local algorithm helps jobless New Yorkers

NPR's Morning Edition reports on job counseling efforts at the state of New York's Department of Labor, and finds it's using an algorithm developed by Burning Glass Technologies, which is based in Quincy Market. Burning Glass develops algorithms that parse resume information and try to match job seekers with companies that will actually hire them. The job seeker in the story, a publishing i...

Read More

Most Popular Stories
EmailedViewed
Stay Informed
Check which newsletter you'd like to receive.
TechFlash (Daily)
FinanceFlash (Daily)
BioFlash (Daily)
GreenFlash (Weekly)
Startup Report (Weekly)
Breaking news, MHT events, local announcements
RSS feeds
Your email:

Affiliate publications: ACBJ.com, Boston Business Journal, Bizjournals.com, Portfolio.com, Wired.com

Web Site Developed by Neptune Web, Inc.

Use of, registration on, this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement. Please read our Privacy Policy (updated) A publishing partner with Portfolio