I've seen a few articles on the Yotta/Synapse situation that focus on the people that have lost money while completely ignoring any of the prize-linked type of setup. The people are quoted as being told it was FDIC insured, it was a normal bank, etc. Then the articles describing the prize drawings started to surface.
Was the prize-linked stuff part of the fine text or are people twisting the story as an attempt to lessen their shame? I don't trust any of the fintech apps at all, but I've never looked at any of their sites to see how blatant or how hidden their "oh yeah, we're not a real bank" details are.
The prize stuff was front and center, the whole point of it. It functioned mostly like the interest from a savings account, but with a small chance of doing much better. The effective interest rate was quite good even without winning big.
It was quite clear that Yotta was not itself a bank. It was also quite clear that it used real banks to store your funds and your funds were as safe as they would be in a normal account. That last part just turned out to be a lie.
>> It was also quite clear that it used real banks to store your funds and your funds were as safe as they would be in a normal account. That last part just turned out to be a lie.
I dont understand how this would happen, how could a bank claim to be FDIC insured but not actually be FDIC insured? If false claims like this can happen, wouldnt that be fraud...in which case why arent the well capitalized backers and Directors of Yotta in legal trouble?
Also, what prevents any bank from claiming to be FDIC insured and not be FDIC insured? I went on the FDIC site and it isnt even clear how someone would verify they are FDIC insured. It seems customers would run from tiny banks if this were the case, because then nothing could be trusted.
Finally, the entire affair needs to be handled incredibly seriously by the regulators (though it doesnt seem to be the case). Because it makes me question the entire system -- and makes me wonder about any fintech. For example, i'm wondering now -- is Wealthfront actually SIPC insured as they claim (https://support.wealthfront.com/hc/en-us/articles/211004063-...)
My wording was ambiguous. They didn’t lie about storing your funds in real banks. That part was true. The lie was the implication that this made your funds safe.
It’s a subtle thing. It sounds like the money is safe. And it really is safe in the way that the FDIC handles: the depositor is protected in the event of a bank failure. It’s just that the depositor in this case is Yotta, not their customers, and there are potential problems beyond failures of the banks holding the money.
Note that this general scheme of “we’re not a bank but we’re as safe as a bank because we put your money in real banks” is not completely crazy and is sometimes used by serious financial institutions. For example, Fidelity offers a cash management account that works this way. So it’s not an immediate red flag on its own.
More to the point, FDIC insurance covers a BANK failure; but in this instance it wasn't the bank that failed. It doesn't even seem it was Yotta that had the issue, but rather their transaction company, Synapse.
Now if Synapse had created individual accounts for the Yotta depositors, we wouldn't be talking now. But what happened was Synapse had a few account(s) for Yotta and a bit of a records gap, which it seems is making it hard to tie Yotta depositors to their money.
What's unclear is if this is a Synapse issue, a Yotta issue or something else.
But the fact that there is this accounting issue shows that there is a gap in how FinTechs are actually managing cash flows, to the risk and detriment of their customers/depositors.
It’s not just a matter of tying depositors to their money. There’s something like $100 million that’s actually missing. It’s not clear whether it’s just a matter of finding the accounts or whether it’s actually been stolen somehow. Synapse managed the money. They say it’s with Evolve Bank & Trust, but Evolve says they don’t have it. It seems likely that it was moved and they just lost track, but that doesn’t seem to be entirely known yet.
IIRC yota used evolve bank which is fdic insured. The problem it appears is that yota co-mingled funds so evolve doesn’t know who is owed the money. I read that a new reg has been put in place because of this issue.
>> IIRC yota used evolve bank which is fdic insured. The problem it appears is that yota co-mingled funds so evolve doesn’t know who is owed the money. I read that a new reg has been put in place because of this issue.
Thanks for the detail.
Co-mingled funds lose FDIC insurance pretty quickly (via the cap) since the FDIC limits are per depositor per bank, so commingling is the best way to lose protection -- hard to see how anyone in leadership wouldnt see this issue.
The shame is the consumer putting savings into a space bank lottery scheme instead of t-bills or whatever. If Yotta passed the sniff test of being a real bank, people are less likely to shame the people who lost their savings.
Yotta claimed to be functionally equivalent to having a normal interest-bearing account with an excellent interest rate, and using a small portion of the interest to buy some lottery tickets. Buying lottery tickets might be dumb, perhaps even shameful (although I disagree as long as it’s not to excess), but it by no means implies that you deserve to lose your savings.
Yotta’s funds were backed by the US government. The trouble is that the link between Yotta’s funds and Yotta’s customers’ funds was somewhat more tenuous than they implied.
Is a space bank lottery really worse than t-bills?
Like is the average utility gained from a depositor from their $1000 turning into $1001 for 1000 depositors greater than the utility gained from a single depositor turning $1000 into $2000 while the other 999 depositors utility remains flat?
Saving is disciplined, forward-thinking, and virtuous, in a sober, Puritanical way.
Gambling is degenerate, chaotic and immoral.
Yotta is a savings account for gamblers. The moral argument is "Gambling is bad, these people tried to bet their cake and eat it too, on some level they got what was coming to them".
The general idea of Yotta at the time appears to be sound [1]. Research has shown that prize-linked savings accounts tend to result in people getting and using savings accounts who otherwise would not have done so.
Just make sure to get it from an actual bank or credit union where your account will be directly FDIC or whatever the equivalent for credit unions is insured, instead of going through some fintech company where you account is with the fintech company where they store your money (commingled with other people's money) in a (hopefully insured!) bank but as far as the bank is concerned its all the fintech's money and you have no relationship with the bank.
If it was fully disclosed that this was "gambling", then I might agree.
But it seems that it was more positioned as "a safe investment with okay returns and a lottery chance at winning above average returns". Gamblers don't need to know about FDIC insurance and the like.
There was shady goings on that wasn't clear to depositors -- what isn't clear is WHERE that shadiness was happening, but that doesn't mean they "got what was coming to them".
...First, when there is somewhere to go to get away from religious persecution, that is a more or less a rational gamble.
Second, are you really condescendingly equating compulsive gambling with escaping societal scale persecution or strife resulting from incompatibilities of religious belief with the State religion?
It's a wrong argument. "what was coming to them" was not winning but still keeping their money. Gambling is different because you risk losing what you put in.
It's not exactly irrelevant, as it does signal someone gamifying finance which just raises all sorts of red flags for me. At that point, I'd be much more suspicious of anything else they said. This isn't a free toaster. This is someone playing with money in a way that is just suspect.
After all of that to then find out that the company isn't a bank yet claims FDIC insured while using a 3rd party to handle to the money because they aren't actually licensed for that while still claiming to be a bank? It's so bewildering I'm typing run on sentences
The money is insured by the FDIC against bank failure. The actual banks holding the money didn't fail. The money is still there. The problem is its in a big unlabeled pile so they don't know whose money is whose and how much each person has.
Note that fail here has a very specific meaning - as in the banks doesn't have the funds to give you your deposit back. Not fail as is "something went horribly wrong".
Prizes as interest aren't uncommon or scammy in themselves. My bank used to have a savings account like that https://www.westpac.co.nz/accounts-cards/savings-accounts/sa... . I inherited a UK government bond from my dad that had cost 1 pound many decades ago and would go into an annual prize draw. Turned out it never won a prize and the bank/government sent a cheque for 1 pound.
The prize-based thing is quite common in some countries, for instance https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premium_Bonds (in countries which don't tax gambling winnings, it's a tax dodge; if you have a choice between a bank account that pays 4% taxable interest or a prize bond scheme which in the long term pays an average of 3.5% in untax-able winnings, you might take the prize bonds.)
I'm not sure that it should necessarily be seen, in _itself_, as a major red flag.
Was the prize-linked stuff part of the fine text or are people twisting the story as an attempt to lessen their shame? I don't trust any of the fintech apps at all, but I've never looked at any of their sites to see how blatant or how hidden their "oh yeah, we're not a real bank" details are.