A process by which accounts are linked for the purpose of combining fees or to ease access for account holders. One form of account aggregation is householding, whereby all the savings, checking and brokerage accounts of a household are linked. In householded accounts, statements and online summaries display all accounts within the household.
Investopedia Says:
Account aggregation may also include credit card accounts that are issued by the institution where the linked accounts are held or which are tied in some way to a particular account. Account aggregation usually only occurs within a single institution, although certain assets held outside a financial institution may be linked if there is a prearranged procedure for doing so.
Aggregating accounts can be particularly useful for families who have multiple financial goals, since the statements give a complete picture of the family's financial assets.
Related Links:
Find out how to get the ball rolling on your future financial security. Then sit back and watch things unfold. Your Financial Life: From Stressful To Stress-Free
You don't need a degree to understand your money, begin saving and pay down debt. Top 5 Budgeting Questions Answered
Determine your net worth by making your own cash flow statement and balance sheet. Evaluating Your Personal Financial Statement
Don't discard these important documents with your junk mail - they may affect your taxes. It's December - Do You Know Where Your IRA Statement Are?
|
|
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.
|
Account aggregation is a method that involves compiling information from different accounts, which may include bank accounts, credit card accounts, investment accounts, and other consumer or business accounts, into a single place. This may include a database or may be provided through "screen scraping" where a user provides the requisite account-access information for an automated system to gather and compile the information into a single page.
Usually this database resides in a web-based application or in client-side software. While such services are primarily designed to aggregate financial information, they sometimes also display other things such as the contents of e-mail boxes and news headlines.
|
Contents
|
One of the first major account aggregation services was Citibank's My Accounts service, though this service ended in late 2005 without explanation from Citibank. Much has been said in the financial services and banking industry as to the benefits of account aggregation – principally the customer and web site loyalty it might generate for providers – but the lack of responsibility and commitment by the providers is one reason for skepticism about committing to those same providers.
The service helps users to manage their money on the Internet (typical desktop alternatives include Microsoft Money, Intuit Quicken etc.) in an easy to use manner wherein they get functionalities like single password, one-click access to current account data, total net worth and expense analysis etc.
Multiple U.S. financial institutions and credit unions are providing the service, however most of the time a vendor, such as Pageonce, CashEdge or Yodlee, is the technology solutions provider. While outside of the U.S. client-side account aggregation, provided by technology solutions provider eWise, has been adopted by financial institutions like Citibank and First Direct (part of HSBC) in the UK, Ping An in China and Westpac in Australia.
Account aggregation has evolved with single sign-on at most major banks such as Bank of America. With SSO (usually implemented via SAML) major financial institutions are now expanding their aggregation services into new areas. Rich Presentment (getting all the information about a bill that you owe) is a service that uses Aggregation extensively, and can be seen at AOL, using AOL Bill Pay. Aggregation also powers applications such as Funds Transfer, New Account Openings, Card Based Bill Pay and so on.
Independent Financial Advisors are another group that account aggregators are beginning to focus their attention. Having seen increasing competition from the wirehouses and breakaway brokers, positioning themselves as their client's primary advisor is not as easy as it once was.
Account Aggregation should be able to help many of these advisors gain the competitive edge by providing a look into their clients held-away, and non-managed accounts. Account aggregation providers such as Advisor Exchange, CashEdge, and ByAllAccounts specialize in working with the advisor industry and provide historical, transaction level data that is normalized and reconciliation ready.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)