Planet Money - The hidden world behind your new "banking" app

Episode Date: August 16, 2024

You might have seen ads for online banking services that seem to offer a lot of great stuff — accounts you can open in minutes and without a minimum balance or monthly fees. The ads seem to say: "Th...ese aren't your parents' boring old banks." But the truth is: Even though they might resemble banks, they aren't.These "bank-like" companies are a type of "fintech" or financial technology company. And this is a story about the potential risks of putting your money into these apps.Banks go through a whole regulatory gauntlet in order to exist. But, in the past several years, there has been a rise in fintechs that skirt regulations. And many of these pose a real threat to even the most savvy of depositors.When a little known tech company filed for bankruptcy a few months ago, thousands of people couldn't access the millions of dollars they saved. On today's show, we meet some of the people affected and learn what the fintech industry reveals about banking regulation.Today's show was hosted by Erika Beras and Sally Helm. It was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler and Sofia Shchukina with help from James Sneed. It was edited by Jess Jiang and fact-checked by Kevin Volkl. It was engineered by Valentina Rodríguez Sánchez with help from James Willetts. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 New from Embedded. Who gets to compete as a woman? This question came up in ugly form at the Paris Olympics. But it's not new. If she runs like a man and talks like a man, is she a man? Hear about the long history of sex testing women athletes on Tested, a new series from CBC and NPR's Embedded Podcast. This is Planet Money from NPR. Odds are that you've seen ads for these online banking services that seem to offer all this great stuff.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Accounts that don't have monthly fees, that seem to pay high interest rates, and offer all these fun things that your boring old bank may not offer. This is the story of what can happen when you sign up for one of those services. We're gonna start with Sharinda and Jordan Gonzalez, this couple in Castroville, Texas. They met 11 years ago. He thought I was married at first.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Oh, I did, yeah. Because I gave some kind of vibe. She wasn't, and they got married. Jordan is super into NASCAR, and Sharinda, she loves books. Specifically mysteries, thrillers. I recently read The Intern. That was one of my favorites. And then another one titled When I'm Dead. I can go on, girl. No.
Starting point is 00:01:21 No. Sharinda is a social worker at a middle school, and Jordan's a software tester. For a long time, they were living paycheck to paycheck. They'd occasionally buy a lottery ticket, never won. But in the last couple years, they had started to really get their budget under control, paying off like $5,000 of credit card debt, saving up for emergencies. And then one day, Jordan came across this ad.
Starting point is 00:01:43 This is what you're doing every time you buy a ticket for the lottery. The ad shows a bunch of cash being flushed down the toilet. But here's something wonderful you might not know. You can win the jackpot without ever buying a lottery ticket. Meet Yotta, a banking app that has a weekly drawing just like the lottery, except it's free. This ad's for an app called Yotta, like yada yada yada. And the basic idea is you keep your savings in Yotta. Once a week, the app would randomly draw customers and they'd win prizes.
Starting point is 00:02:16 Most of the prizes were just a few dollars, but people could win thousands. They could even win a Tesla. To Sharinda and Jordan, this was so appealing. Basically, they were talking about gamifying their savings into a lottery-type thing, but at the same time, you're not spending money. You get more tickets by savings. So I was like, hey, that's a neat little deal. There's a name for this idea.
Starting point is 00:02:39 It's called prize-length savings accounts. Governments around the world have used this concept to help motivate people to save money. Jordan and Sharinda, they looked at the app, scrolled through, read some reviews, and to them, Viada looked great. They could get debit cards, monitor their balance, and even directly deposit their paychecks. Basically, Viada seemed like a bank.
Starting point is 00:03:00 It even seemed to have the banking gold stamp of approval, FDIC Insurance. Absolutely. The bank we partner with is FDIC Insured, just like Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and every other bank you can drive to. Then what's the cash? Did someone say cash? There isn't one. Sharinda and Jordan heard FDIC Insured, and to them, that said something. It said this app is legit. So they signed up. They started by depositing $200 a month.
Starting point is 00:03:29 They won a couple of cash prizes, even a few free coffees. Sharinda buys about three or four books per month. One month, she got a notification that Yara had randomly covered all of her book purchases. After about a year, Jordan and Sharinda started depositing their entire paychecks. It was easy.
Starting point is 00:03:47 All they needed was their phones. Even a, I don't know, maybe a middle schooler can use the app. Yeah, it was really good. Yeah. Did it like feel like the bank of the future? It really did. Yeah. It definitely felt like something that like, why are the old banks, why aren't they doing
Starting point is 00:04:04 stuff like this? This bank of the future was helping them save money. They managed to put away six thousand dollars. But then one day in mid-May, Sarinda is where else? At a bookstore and she goes to pay using her Yada debit card. And so at first they're like, oh, well, you know, it's been declined. Weird. OK, whatever, you know, there's glitches that go on. So I tried again it's been declined. Weird. I look at whatever, you know, there's glitches that go on. So I tried again and still it was declined.
Starting point is 00:04:27 She knew she had thousands of dollars in her account. I was just frustrated, you know, a little embarrassed too. And then people are behind you waiting for you to go in and pay next. Like, why is it like hard working? The problem wasn't just with shedding this account. It wasn't even just a problem with all Yara accounts. It was way bigger than that. Thousands of people could not get access to their money.
Starting point is 00:04:52 And since that day, Sharinda has felt like a character in one of those mysteries she loves so much. It's kind of like, wow, like I feel like I'm in a book where... It's surreal. Yeah, it was surreal. Like, maybe you were dreaming, hoping you were dreaming, but it wasn't actually a dream. It was actually real life.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Hello, and welcome to Planet Money. I'm Erika Behrs. And I'm Sally Helm. That was more than three months ago. Sharinda and Jordan still haven't been able to access their money. Not because they got scammed. This is a much more complicated story about what a bank is and what it is not.
Starting point is 00:05:32 Today on the show, how the banks of the future may not be living up to their promise. We've got unreachable accounts, finger pointing, and a regulatory scramble. And a big question for all of us, are you banking with a real bank? Because it turns out that matters quite a bit. ["The Real Banking of the World"] On Wait Wait, we ask very well-known people about things that people don't know about them, like what was Malala Yousafzai doing when she heard she'd won the Nobel Peace Prize?
Starting point is 00:06:12 I went to my physics class. I said, I have to finish my school day because when you get the Nobel Peace Prize for education, you have to finish your school day. I'm Peter Segal. For the real secrets of the rich and famous, listen to Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me podcast from NPR. If you think the economy makes no sense right now, you are probably right because even economists can't explain it lately. But our podcast, The Indicator from Planet Money, we're a little dose of clarity on the
Starting point is 00:06:40 biggest economic questions of the day and about the forces that affect your life in 10 minutes or less every weekday. And about the forces that affect your life. In 10 minutes or less, every weekday, the indicator from Planet Money from NPR. Yara had tens of thousands of customers. In total, people had deposited over $100 million. And suddenly, all that money was frozen. And to figure out what exactly happened here, we called up Hillary Allen, a law professor at American University.
Starting point is 00:07:10 And I am also the author of the book Driverless Finance, Fintech's Impact on Financial Stability. Driverless finance like a driverless car? Yep, there are cars crashing on the front cover. Hillary's book is about fintech. See, Yara is what's known as a fintech, a financial technology company, like a tech company that does something with money. Think Fenmo or Square. Fintech started to take off in the late 2000s because of smartphones,
Starting point is 00:07:40 and also because of the 2008 financial crisis. People lost their homes and their savings. And they also lost some trust in the big banks. Unsurprisingly, there was a lot of distrust of traditional banks and other financial institutions. And that sort of created a market to provide equivalent services, but not be the traditional financial institutions. So in the years since, a whole industry, hundreds of fintech companies have popped up. Fintechs can do a bunch of different things. This episode is about the ones that do the banking-like services.
Starting point is 00:08:17 So companies where you can keep money in an account or use to pay for things. Right. And look, there can be benefits to these fintechs. There are lots of people that can't afford to use banks. For the unbanked or the underbanked, fintechs like Yara can help give people a place to put their money and save money. And Yara promised to be better, faster, easier to use.
Starting point is 00:08:39 It seemed like a bank of the future. But we should make it clear, Yara is not a bank of the future. But we should make it clear, Yada is not a bank. Erica, no, it is not a. Yada is not a bank. And that is a key part of this story. But to customers, it might not have been totally obvious. It's the, like, if it walks like a duck argument,
Starting point is 00:09:02 you know, it seems to do all the things that a bank does Why wouldn't it be a bank? You know often These will market themselves with the word bank in their marketing, you know, and there there might be an asterisk after the bank But you know and then in tiny print we're not actually a bank Because what is an actual bank? A bank does three main things. It holds deposits, makes loans,
Starting point is 00:09:30 and allows customers to make payments. And to become a bank, there is a whole arduous process. Banks have to meet a bunch of regulations. They gotta have reserves. They need to apply for a charter. And these bank-like fintechs have not done any of that. But in their marketing materials, they often make that less than obvious.
Starting point is 00:09:51 I was looking at one the other day. Hillary pulls up the page for a popular fintech company called Cash App. So it says, do more with your money, send and spend, comma, bank bank asterisk. And it's not entirely clear where the asterisk links to. Oh, here it goes. In tiny print, it then says, cash app is a financial services platform, not a bank. But that's in small print. It's got bank and bigger print asterisk.
Starting point is 00:10:21 And then in tiny print, cash app is not a bank. Hillary says, if you have questions about the company you're using, just look at the fine print. Does it literally say it is a bank? If it doesn't, it probably is not a bank. But remember, it might look like a bank and even quack like a bank. And in order to market themselves as bank-like and to do all these bank-like things, these fintechs need a whole financial ecosystem behind them.
Starting point is 00:10:52 And this ecosystem is key to understanding what happened to Sharinda and Jordan's money. Bit of a wild ride, so stay with me here. Yara would take deposits from customers, but they were not legally allowed to hold the deposits. So Yara would send the customer money to a real bank, but they did not send the money directly to the bank. They used a middle company.
Starting point is 00:11:14 And the whole problem, the reason Sharinda and Jordan couldn't access their money, it has to do with this middle company. That company is called Synapse. Okay, like essentially the company that is like the connective tissue. And I think that's how they came up with the name. That makes a lot of sense, doesn't it? Right, because synapses are nerve connectors? What is actually is a synapse?
Starting point is 00:11:38 Nerve connectors. It's like what connects all the neurons and helps them talk to each other. And Synapse's sell to Yada was, you just give us the money. And this is important, we will deposit the money for you at a real bank. Synapse promised to deposit the money at a bank called Evolve Bank and Trust. Evolve's been around for about 100 years,
Starting point is 00:11:58 and in the last decade or so, they've worked with a bunch of different fintech companies. And when Synapse sent the money to Evolve, the money got crucial protection that banks provide. This is where the money is FDIC insured. The FDIC usually insures individual accounts of up to $250,000. So if the bank fails, customers will get up to that amount back.
Starting point is 00:12:20 So when customers put money in Yotta, it would go from Yotta to Synapse to Evolve. That is how it was supposed to work. But a few months ago, Synapse failed. It filed for bankruptcy. And this revealed an accounting nightmare. Yada had thought Synapse was keeping track of their customers' deposits, and how much money people earned through rewards and bonuses. But no, according to some of the bankruptcy documents, Synapse wasn't keeping good records. And also, Synapse had dropped much of the money into one big account at Evolve.
Starting point is 00:12:57 LESLIE Which is wild. All this Yotta customer money was going into one single huge account. That ended up making it almost impossible to know how much money should go to which customers. Also, Synapse had moved some of the money to other banks too, so it was really a whole big mess. And this is why Yotta customers like book-loving Sharinda and her husband Jordan couldn't access their accounts.
Starting point is 00:13:26 And actually the problem is much bigger than just Yada. Synapse worked with about a hundred different fintechs and four different banks. In total, customers couldn't access about $265 million. And up to about a hundred million of that is missing. And look, it's still not clear if synapse did anything illegal. But Hillary says, in general, fintechs can be very good at skirting regulation. Yeah, so, I mean, not all of this is illegal
Starting point is 00:13:55 because they have absolutely hewed to the letter of the law, getting as close to the line as they possibly can. And they have violated absolutely the goals and the spirit of the law, but they have not violated the letter of the law most of the time. After the break, we go to the regulators to find out what this cautionary tale tells us about what kind of new rules we might need going forward. Wailin, how much do you think it would cost to buy one of those big digital billboards in Times Square to promote our show, the indicator from Planet Money and Big Lights?
Starting point is 00:14:36 In this economy? I mean, you're probably right, but this question is the exact kind of thing that we find answers to on our show. We take one big economic idea, make it understandable, and you know, even fun. That's the indicator from Planet Money and NPR. On the TED Radio Hour, legendary soccer player Abby Wambach remembers exactly what was going on in her mind at a crucial moment during the 2011 World Cup. As soon as the ball came off of her foot, I knew that that ball was coming to
Starting point is 00:15:05 my head. The only thing in my mind was don't screw this up. How to apply sports psychology to everyday life on the Ted Radio Hour podcast from NPR. They're all over the internet and bumping out of people's cars. They're the songs of the summer. And this year includes the domination of Charlie XCX and Brat Summer. She's really tapping into this moment where we are all chronically online but also chronically outside. We are talking about the songs of the summer and why they're so catchy and inescapable. Listen to the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast with NPR podcasts? Money. Power. Tacos. White-collar crime.
Starting point is 00:15:47 Green parts. Black reparations. More of the perspectives that make your world a more vibrant place. NPR podcasts. More voices. All ears. Find NPR wherever you get your podcasts. In reporting out the story, we have reached out to so many angry, frustrated, and confused Yata users.
Starting point is 00:16:06 They have a lot of questions. And the overwhelming sense is they don't know where to find answers. I've messaged every single entity, like House representatives, senators. The White House, the FDIC, the SIPC, the NFCP, the Fed, the Federal Bank of St. Louis. What's that Spider-Man meme where he's just pointing at himself, pointing at himself, pointing at himself? That's what it feels like. Rachel Vecchio, David Schulzinger, and Candace Russell all just want to know how this was allowed to happen. To answer that question, we went to a longtime regulator named Mike Hsu.
Starting point is 00:16:47 How often do you have to explain to all of your like normie friends, like how exactly this whole system works? It depends on how nerdy they are. We asked Mike to go full on nerd. He says banks in the US are regulated by three different entities. The Federal Reserve regulates some banks, the FDIC regulates others, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the OCC, regulates the rest. Mike has done stints at the Fed, the Treasury.
Starting point is 00:17:18 He's now at the OCC. He's been there for a few years. His job is to oversee the banking regulators. There are about 2,000 people who examine the banks. And he's been thinking about fintechs, like Yara and Synapse, because they're everywhere. You know, my kids are teenagers. When they got jobs, they want to just have a fintech app. I said, no, you need a banking account. And here's why. Mike basically tells his teens, if the app is not FDIC-insured and something goes wrong,
Starting point is 00:17:44 you could lose your money. If you keep your money in a bank, it'll be protected. And afterwards, they're like, yeah, that's a good idea. Were they like, dad? Yes, I mean, but they're like that with me on everything. And look, if you're a teen whose entire life is on their phone, you can totally see why FinTech is appealing. It is easy to swipe or click.
Starting point is 00:18:06 It can even be fun. And Erica, I am not even a teen, and I also understand this. Like, adults also want their banking to be simple and digital. And Mike says, look, there are ways that FinTech and banks can work well together. Like, the app makes a nice streamlined experience and then the bank actually takes care of the deposits. And they're both clear about who is responsible for what. But that actually gets to the heart of the problem
Starting point is 00:18:34 for these Yada users. Everyone in the system was depending on Synapse, but Synapse maybe wasn't doing what it was supposed to be doing. Again, not clear if they did anything illegal, but at the very least, they weren't keeping good records. And no one was really watching them. I think we on the regulatory side really need to start thinking about this through this lens of supply chain. We regulate the banks, but if you've got a long supply chain, we can't reach all the way through. Yeah, supply chains have all of these
Starting point is 00:19:03 individual moving parts working together. And when things are going well, the individual parts can become kind of invisible. But when one of them breaks, suddenly the whole thing falls apart. In the case of Yad and Synapse, it just wasn't clear which agency would be responsible. We reached out to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the CFPB. They said, nope, not us. We have authority over a bunch of different types of financial products. But right now, this type of fintech is not one of them.
Starting point is 00:19:33 And the bank regulators are like, well, not us either. This is not actually a bank. But we can try to do something by regulating the entities that we do have authority over, namely the real actual banks, like the bank that Yada and Synapse worked with, Evolve. Last month, Jerome Powell, the head of the Fed, actually testified about all of this in a Senate hearing. Jerome Powell, Federal Reserve Chairman, Yada & Synapse We do supervise the bank.
Starting point is 00:19:58 We don't supervise Synapse, let alone the fintechs that feed into Synapse. And we're strongly encouraging Evolve to do whatever it can to help make money available to those depositors. The FDIC has also been doing what it can. And it can tell fintechs, look, you are not a bank, you cannot say you are a bank, you cannot use some of the specific language that banks use. Like if you look really carefully at Yada's marketing materials, you'll see they don't say they pay a high interest rate.
Starting point is 00:20:28 They call it a, quote, savings reward. The FDIC even reviewed the language Yada used back when they launched in 2020, and suggested changes to try and make it clearer that Yada wasn't a bank and couldn't protect your money like a bank. So you can see these regulators trying to use the tools that they have to protect fintech customers. But that is not really what these tools were made for. I think the synapse bankruptcy and the turmoil around it
Starting point is 00:20:58 has really highlighted, okay, this is what happens if we don't get this right. Was this a regulatory failure? So it depends on how you define regulatory failure. Industry is very enterprising slash creative slash innovative. And on the one hand, that's a good thing. That's how we get improvement and progress and all that. However, they'll always find a weak spot in the regulatory regime to do something to push the boundaries.
Starting point is 00:21:28 Mike says it's hard for regulators to keep up. He thinks it's actually a job for Congress to pass legislation and give some federal agency the authority to regulate these types of fintechs. We did reach out to spokespeople for Synapse, Yada, and Evolve. They didn't respond or declined an interview. All the customers at Yada that we've spoken to have not gotten their money back. It is not clear if or when they will get access to their money, including that couple in Texas, Jordan and Sharinda Gonzalez, who wanted to save money and win prizes. Jordan and Sharinda are fighting back.
Starting point is 00:22:04 Jordan filed a lawsuit against Evolve Bank. But even despite all this, he's not out on fintechs. I'm for trying new things, I really am. We probably do need to read those documents a little bit better, but I'm not against fintechs. I might take a pause from it, but if Yoda and his glory days, I'd quickly go back. Sharinda, Not so much.
Starting point is 00:22:25 I was like, you know what? This is why people put their money under their mattresses. Like, you know, this is why people don't trust in banks. I was just, you know, going off on that. What are you guys doing now? I am curious, like, are you keeping your money under your mattress or do you have it, like, at a good old fashioned brick and mortar bank?
Starting point is 00:22:44 Brick and mortar because my trust in the financial system itself really hasn't changed. Their regular bank doesn't pay out savings rewards, comp their book purchases or give away any Teslas. But these days, it's where they're keeping their money. keeping their money. Today's show was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kessler and Sophia Shukina with help from James Neid. It was edited by Jess Jang.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Engineering by Valentina Rodriguez Sanchez with help from James Willetts. Fact checking by Kevin Volkl. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. Thank you to Catherine Judge, Sejal Patel, and to Jason Mikula, whose Substack Fintech Business Weekly has been chronicling the ins and outs of this saga. Check it out. Also, thank you to the other Yada users who shared their stories with us.
Starting point is 00:23:38 Krish Nibley, Alisa Weiss, and Andrea Calagieri. I'm Erika Bares. And I'm Sally Helm. This is NPR. Thanks for listening. The Constitution, our founding document, says a lot about how our country has evolved and who we want to be.
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