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Swell Investing Shuts Down

Impact inve🌌sting provider closed on August 30, 2019

Swell Investing, a California-based automated investing service backed by , sent an email to its customers informing them that they were "not able to achieve the scale needed to sustain operations in the current market." Beginning Wednesday, July 24, 2019, Swell no longer accepted new clients or deposits, and any accounts💃 with a $0 or negative balance were closed. 

Swell was founded with a noble mission: to help its clients invest in firms that are worki🦂ng towards at least one of the United Nations' They had curated lists of publicly-traded companies organized into themes, including Green Tech, Renewable Energy, Clean Water, and Disease Eradication꧃.

The minimum to open an account was $50, and their management fee was 0.70% per year for assets under management. That's a higher fee than most robo-advisors or automated investing platforms charge, but the firm put a lot of work into selecting the stocks for their clients. Companies were screened to make sure that their businesses create a positive impact, and which envirᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚonmental or social issues the firms were addressing. "Our portfolios are made up of the companies that we believe to be the cream of the crop," Swell says about how stocks are chosen.

Clients were instructed to withdraw their funds by August 30, 2019, and that their cash and securities would be transferred to&n🎐bsp;, unless instructions to tran﷽sfer to a different brokerage were specified by the customer.

If you're looking for impact-oriented portfolios that are built out of individual stocks, check out and♌ . These firms don't have the vetting methodology in ꦡplace that Swell used, but they allow fine-tuning of a portfolio built according to your specifications and a wide range of other possible investments.

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