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Can SoFi Management Be Trusted? Comparing Management Statements with Hard Data
----- TLDR Ticker: SOFI Direction: Down (Short) Prognosis: Buy Puts (Author is holding $12 Puts) CEO's Superpower: Dressing up a bloated, capital-intensive traditional bank in a trendy fintech trench coat. Accounting Vibe: "It's not a lie if we just move the numbers to a different column." The Bear Case: SoFi CEO Anthony Noto is allegedly up to his old Twitter-era metric-fudging tricks. Despite management's narrative that SoFi is diversifying into "fee-based" tech revenue, hard data shows 83% of their income is still just traditional lending. They are quietly shifting loan interest into the "Financial Services" segment to trick Wall Street analysts into applying high-growth tech multipliers, artificially inflating the company's valuation. Furthermore, their "tech platform growth" is largely an illusion fueled by SoFi paying itself internal accounting fees. Compared to peer banks, SoFi's average account balances are tiny ($3.5k), their overhead is massively bloated, and they have a history of ghosting regulators and racking up payroll tax liens. Management's credibility gap is widening, and a rude awakening may be coming for investors. -------- I am short SoFI and this is not financial advice. SoFi presents itself as careful, transparent, open to engaging with investors. In turn, investors generally cite to SoFi's narrative when valuing or discussing the company: SoFi is diversifying beyond lending, SoFi is nimble and more efficient than legacy brick and mortar banks, SoFi's customer base consists of digital first, high potential earners who are a solid foundation for the company, etc. But what if those narratives are simply wrong? And management has been painting an inaccurate picture? I have found data that raises a lot of questions. To start on this topic, you have to go back to 2004, 7 years before SoFi was even founded. In 2004, SoFi CEO Anthony Noto was profiled in the New York Times. The gist of the profile was that Noto was a star internet analyst at Goldman Sachs who had gotten off to a rocky start at his career before turning things around. Several negative performance review comments from Noto's GS superiors hitting the same theme made it in to the profile: https://preview.redd.it/jz8wphmvblrg1.png?width=953&format=png&auto=webp&s=8af5d8ec76c1e2556c52254230504e9c3d1ba966 https://preview.redd.it/rdjzcvmxblrg1.png?width=938&format=png&auto=webp&s=ed37bdec4b04b15ff599e9e53a23b5b0619d99bc Fast forward 10 years. Noto joins Twitter as CFO in July 2014, after being the lead banker from GS on Twitter's IPO. He later is promoted to COO in November 2016, before abruptly leaving in February 2018 to become CEO of SoFi. Throughout Noto's tenure at Twitter, investors were constantly pressing Twitter to disclose the number of Daily Active Users (DAU). Instead, Twitter had only reported Monthly Active Users (MAU). There was ongoing controversy regarding whether Twitter engagement had fallen, and whether engagement was inflated by bots. In February 2015, Twitter acknowledged lower than expected MAU growth at the end of 2014, but stated that its "MAU trend has already turned around and our Q1 trend is likely to be back in the range of absolute net adds that we saw during the first three quarters of 2014." During the Q1 2015 Earnings Call on April 28, 2015, analysts pressed for exact DAU numbers. Noto refused to provide "visibility," giving this specific justification: "It's a measurement that is dependent by market and you could have a mix shift so that could be a little bit misleading." During a July 2015 earnings call, Noto told investors "[W]e do not expect to see sustained meaningful growth in MAUs . . . [for]a considerable period of time." The stock plummeted. During the Q4 2015 earnings call, Twitter management explained that “[t]he one engagement metric that we look at holistically is daily active users," shifting from its prior public focus on MAUs. Twitter's official, audited 10-K and 10-Q reports filed with the SEC during this time period routinely stated: "False or spam accounts represent fewer than 5% of our MAUs." In 2018, Twitter purged tens of millions of bot/spam accounts, causing Twitter stock to drop more. Litigation was filed against Twitter, Noto, and CEO Dick Costolo contending they concealed negative, stagnating or declining user engagement by reporting vague descriptions of user metrics. Twitter, Noto, and Costolo denied all allegations against them. 5 days before trial, in 2021, Twitter paid shareholders $809.5 million to settle. By that point in time Noto was long gone from Twitter. In fact, SoFi had gone public a few months earlier (June 2021) through a deSpac put together by Chamath Palihapitiya's Social Capital Hedosophia. Noto's former boss, Dick Costolo, joined SoFi as a board member. The following are various narratives and claims that SoFi has made over the years, followed by hard data. You can judge for yourself whether Noto and SoFi have engaged in spreading the same overly upbeat and/or misleading narratives that Noto was accused of disseminating in the past. Narrative: Sofi has been diversifying its revenue base by relying less on capital intensive lending earnings and more on fee based earnings derived through its Financial Services and Technology Platform business segments. Notable Quotables: "Financial Services products drove over 89% of our total product growth. This reflects the deliberate diversification of our business towards more capital-light, fee-based revenue sources, which we expect to continue in 2025. Together, our Financial Services and Technology Platform segments generated $1.2 billion of revenue, up 54% year-over-year. These two segments accounted for 47% of our adjusted net revenue, up from 38% last year. It's safe to say SoFi is not just a lender anymore." Q4 2024 Earnings Call "I do think you'll continue to see us drive revenue streams that are not connected to capital. 56% of our revenue is now coming from our tech platform and financial services business, and that's up pretty meaningfully over time." Q3 2025 Earnings Call Hard Data: This will probably surprise a lot of SoFi investors. Actual lending income reached $3.97 billion in 2025, or 83.1% of all revenue in 2025, higher than the prior years (80.2% in 2024; 82.0% in 2023). Technology income as a share of all revenue decreased each year, declining from 11.12% in 2023 to 7.57% in 2025. Other noninterest income, which generally covers non-lending, non-tech earnings, bounced from 3.24% in 2023 to 4.99% in 2024, and back down to 4.50% in 2025. Remaining earnings were attributed to other interest income, which consists of interest payments made to SoFi on funds held by SoFi in accounts. Those figures jumped around, ranging 3.57% (2023) to 5.47% (2024) to 4.80% (2025). SoFi has three segments: Lending, Financial Services, and Technology Platform. Noto's statements are confusing because he conflates Lending as a business segment, with earnings that are generally thought of as lending based or capital based. It turns out that the vast majority of the earnings within Financial Services are traditional lending type earnings - payments of interest on loans are a big chunk. Another big portion is selling loans through LPB. SoFi calls this "fee" based, but this is just dressing up what is nothing more than a loan sale which is traditional lending activity. SoFi literally supplies the capital to originate the loan, originates the loan, and then has to find/utilize extensive capital from a third party to keep the origination train going. The below chart straight from income statement shows a more accurate breakdown between "kinds" of earnings. https://preview.redd.it/9jwpgpj6glrg1.png?width=1809&format=png&auto=webp&s=87e1b832ead1b20519d3febbc5e4ebcbc228ea83 For 2025, Financial Services reported $1,542 million in net revenue and $792 million in contribution profit. https://preview.redd.it/6x9dy4c7glrg1.png?width=483&format=png&auto=webp&s=9a21e797e5cf807fc2493aa89cbb2b19165c79b9 Of the $1,542 million, $778 million came from interest income (interest received from borrowers, and the remaining portion ($764 million) was noninterest income. Of the $764 million in noninterest income, $496 million consisted of “loan platform business, other.” “Loan platform business, other” refers to earnings associated with loans that SoFi sold on the “loan platform business.” As noted, despite being placed in Financial Services, the Loan Platform Business is functionally no different than the separate whole loan sale business that has always been included in “Lending.” The $778 million alone in interest income is an amount equal to almost the entire contribution profit. This is just traditional lending income. The bottom line is only $278 million (at most) would be allocated to fee based lines of business like securities, wealth advisory, banking fees, interchange fees, etc. Everything else is lending income and capital heavy. This is not just a technicality. Wall Street analysts commonly value SoFi by valuing each of the three component parts individually and adding them up. Lending is valued very conservatively, because banks are subject to regulatory restraints regarding use of capital. Analysts value Financial Services and Technology aggressively, using tech-like multipliers. SoFi has kind of picked up on that and taken advantage of it, by conflating Financial Services with "fee" based and not "lending" or traditional capital intensive based earnings. At least some analysts have not noticed that SoFi literally moved over loan interest income and loan sale income (called LPB fees) to Financial Services. You can see that analysts do not "back out" lending earnings allocated by SoFi to Financial Services when doing valuations. That means their valuations are not internally consistent and inflate valuations, because the traditional lending portion of the bank is basically being double counted: once from TBV, and then again, from the multiplier applied to Financial Services. None of the lending income held within Financial Services should valued with a multiplier, if an analyst is valuing the bank portion/lending traditionally. Narrative: The Technology Platform was growing revenue throughout 2025 by bringing in new deals and monetizing clients. Notable Quotable: (from CFO Chris Lapointe): "Revenue growth was drive by continued monetization of existing clients, along with new deals signed in new segments." (Identical words uttered by Lapointe during Q4 2024 through Q3 2025 earnings calls). Hard Data: Each quarter, SoFi was quietly allocating more and more "intercompany tech platform fees" as a subcomponent to the Technology Platform's segment level profit. These are basically an internal accounting allocation of technology expenses. These fees do not flow up into the income statement (it's SoFi "paying" itself), but they do boost the optics of the Technology Platform. This is permitted under accounting rules at a high level, although SoFi does not explain how the fees are calculated, which violates GAAP (ASC 280). https://preview.redd.it/a748tr09glrg1.png?width=1504&format=png&auto=webp&s=f13e7ee840cdacd2adea89162faa18a098aa1bb9 Even though this allocation is permissible, it is hard to fathom that a reasonable investor would equate an increasing internal accounting allocation of expenses with "revenue growth" or "continued monetization," which is how the Technology Platform's overall performance was characterized during the calls. These intercompany fees were basically keeping the Tech Platform afloat as a segment. By Q4 2025, the Technology Platform would have lost money if you had backed them out, along with a one time cancellation fee paid by SoFi's customer Chime. Narrative: SoFi's banking customers are high quality, with lots of potential. They are deeply engaged with SoFi, and their quality will result in cross buy opportunities which will drive earnings as more banking customers are signed up. Notable Quotables: "[T]he bank contributes to high-quality deposits and great levels of engagement. This has led to higher average account balances even as average spend has increased." Q3 2023 Earnings Call "SoFi Money products have increased 54% year-over-year or by nearly 1.2 million to 3.4 million accounts. As important is the quality of these members with a median FICO of 744 for our direct deposit portfolio, and hence, we see ample opportunity for cross-buy." Q4 2023 Earnings Call "Our rapid pace of innovation and brand building are fueling significant member and product growth. The growing size of our member base and the number of products they use impact the results we're reporting today. But more importantly, they are the leading indicators of our potential revenue growth and profitability in the future." Q2 2024 Earnings Call Hard Data: Data submitted by SoFi to federal banking regulators (FFIEC) show that average non-retirement bank accounts at SoFi are far smaller relative to a number of peer banks, including other newer, digital only banks. As a representative comparison, the average is $3.5k at SoFi vs $17k at Synchrony, $24k at Ally Bank, $38k at Lending Club, and $43k at American Express. To drill down more specifically, as of year end 2025, SoFi had about $39.8 billion in non-retirement deposit accounts spread across 11,136,000 accounts, which results in the $3.5k average. SoFi has never disclosed granular account level data (i.e. average account size) in its SEC filings regarding average bank account sizes that I've ever seen. In addition, according to data reported to the investment advisor division of the SEC, SoFi’s investment management arm SoFi Wealth has an average account size of $5,200, more akin to a micro-brokerage like an Acorns ($2.1k) than full-service brokerages (e.g. Betterment: $47k, Wealthfront $66.8k). Narrative: SoFi is more efficient and innovative than traditional banks, and is not weighed down by wasting money on rent on physical locations. Notable Quotable: "People want innovative solutions delivered seamlessly and digitally, yet most traditional financial services firms are encumbered by physical locations, internal bureaucracy and outdated technology. They've struggled to evolve. Since day one, technology and innovation have been part of our DNA." SoFi FY 2024 Earnings Call Hard Data: Federal Reserve Data (as of Q3 2025) shows that SoFi’s profitability and efficiency ratios and overhead burden are far worse than the bottom 5% of all banks with over $10 billion in assets (41 banks, consisting of the bank holding companies in BHCPR Peer Group 1). This makes SoFi, a $50 billion bank, just about the most bloated, least efficient, and least profitable (on an asset ratio basis) big bank in the country. SoFi calling out "bureaucracy" at other banks lands oddly, given this data. SoFi spends 86 cents to bring in a dollar, when the average is 60 cents, and the 95th worst percentile is 77 cents. SoFi’s gross overhead expense as a percentage of average assets is 7.37%, three times higher than average, far higher than the worst 5% of peers, and more than double even the worst 10% of peers (peer 95th percentile 4.20%, peer 90th percentile 3.13%, average 2.38%). SoFi’s overhead burden (net overhead/assets) is equally negative. This metric accounts for SoFi’s fee income and after deducting such fees, SoFi’s remaining overhead still amounts to 4.11% of total assets – roughly double the worst 5% of peers (peer 95th percentile 2.20%, average 1.36%). This metric, sometimes called the burden ratio, underscores how much operating expense load SoFi carries relative to its size. This track record extends even to SoFi’s occupancy expenses, where SoFi surprisingly performs poorly. Its occupancy expenses, as a percentage of average assets sits at 0.46%, also far below the median (0.23%) and 95th worst percentile (0.41%). Even without any branch locations to operate, SoFi's basic occupancy expenses are more burdensome than the legacy banks which are encumbered by physical locations. How could SoFi have such high occupancy expenses? SoFi has an extensive 14 city-wide office network, situated in multiple countries around the world. Narrative: As a chartered, audited national bank, SoFi maintains strong compliance and controls. SoFi approaches its business in a careful, conservative manner. Notable Quotables: "To scale this business as rapidly as we have, we've invested significant capital to build the strong operational and regulatory capabilities that are required to have a nationally regulated bank with insured deposits as well as earn the trust of our members." SoFi Q1 2025 Earnings Call "In 2024, we took a very conservative stance at the same point last year relative to others based on interest rates, the economy, inflation, geopolitical, et cetera, and because we took that very conservative stance, we drove margin expansion at the expense of revenue growth." SoFi FY 2024 Earnings Call Hard Data: SoFi's subsidiary Social Finance Inc. has racked up 20+ payroll liens over the years (according to a public record search), including several in the past two years, including Washington, DC, California, and a $3.3 million federal payroll tax lien. Payroll taxes are considered "trust funds" of the government and failure to remit as owed could even lead to criminal consequences for the taxpayer. SoFi lost its Florida mortgage license for several months (October 2025-January 2026) because SoFi repeatedly and inexplicably ghosted the OFR (state financial regulators) in Florida, the third largest state in the country and home to a large SoFi office. SoFi requested a renewal for its license, and then ignored all follow-ups the OFR. It then literally ignored (i.e. did not participate in and did respond to) an administrative legal proceeding before the OFR which resulted in the loss of the license. This situation was not remedied for several months, until January, when SoFi had to apply for a brand new license. Narrative: SoFi has $3 billion in the bank from its 2025 raises, which have not been spent and are available on hand for whatever use SoFi wants, which could include debt paydown, M&A, or growing lending. Notable Quotable: (In response to question on CNBC regarding dilution of stockholders, during Squawk Box interview on FY 2025 earnings day): "We could also reduce debt and improve our cost of funding. … There’s no specific use, but it gives us a lot of optionality… we have the optionality to grow the business in any direction as it relates to lending that we like in addition to things like M&A or reducing the cost of debt.” Hard Data: About $2 billion of the equity raise was immediately used to pay down warehouse lines down to zero. This was acknowledged during the past two earnings calls, including the one from the same morning of the CNBC interview. "This opportunistic raise significantly increased our capital levels and allowed us to reduce our higher cost debt by $1.2 billion, making our balance sheet even stronger and giving us great flexibility to pursue growth opportunities." Q3 2025 Earnings Call: "Over the past two quarters, we fully paid down our warehouse lines." Q4 2025 Earnings Call Bottom Line: Draw your own conclusions about whether you have confidence in SoFi's management to accurately convey all material information about its financial condition. There could be legitimate explanations on all of these things. On the other hand, there is a track record of accusations against Noto that he has been too optimistic or upbeat in the past, or not fully transparent. Position: https://preview.redd.it/ybzixt2tclrg1.png?width=640&format=png&auto=webp&s=61e5e12b450aebf18a113bff85dfceb3be91b1b7 submitted by /u/bnewhard to r/wallstreetbets [link] [comments]
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bnewhard |
Mar 27, 2026 |
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The SoFi Fair Value Debate: Why SoFi Could End The Debate Right Now By Complying with GAAP
I have a negative position in SoFi and this is not financial advice. We've heard a lot of back and forth over the years regarding the validity of SoFi's fair value adjustments. One critical piece that has been overlooked is that SoFi has long had the ability to effectively resolve the debate, through the disclosure of information regarding gains/losses attributed specifically to fair value adjustments. In fact, this disclosure is required by ASC 820-10-50-2(c), a part of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) which public companies must comply with presumptively under SEC regulations. Under ASC 820-10-50-2(c), a reporting entity is required to provide a rollforward table for recurring Level 3 measurements disclosing separately the "[t]otal gains or losses for the period recognized in earnings." Crucially, to ensure investors can evaluate the nature of those gains, ASC 820-10-50-2(d) strictly requires the disclosure of: "The amount of the total gains or losses for the period in (c)(1) included in earnings... that is attributable to the change in unrealized gains or losses relating to those assets and liabilities held at the end of the reporting period..." The purpose of ASC 820-10-50-2(d) is to facilitate investor understanding of earnings "quality," specifically as it relates to Level 3 "modeled" fair value adjustments. Realized gains represent actual, verified cash received when an asset is sold or settled (higher quality). In contrast, unrealized gains are entirely attributable to management's internal valuation models, representing purely paper-based markups on assets still held on the balance sheet (lower quality). If a company persistently reports positive unrealized gains, but negative realized gains, that combination would strongly suggest that the company’s fair value models are persistently overstating the fair value of assets, with the losses on persistent overvaluations “bleeding back” as realized losses, as the overvalued assets are sold or amortized. Without the explicit delineation required by the rule, investors cannot track the historical pattern of positive or negative discrepancies between these realized and unrealized marks. This historical discrepancy is the critical metric used to determine if prior unrealized gains were artificially inflated by the model, or if the model accurately reflects economic reality. Right now, SoFi does not disclose the breakdown between unrealized gains and realized gains. That means investors do not have an understanding as to whether the model's track record has been correct. This disclosure rule is not ambiguous or complicated. Deloitte (SoFi's auditor) has a publication called Deloitte Accounting Research Tool has an illustrative example showing how to comply with the rule: https://preview.redd.it/n6vocvdhp7rg1.png?width=970&format=png&auto=webp&s=2950033ba71c096a64296f20c12bc67a6c9e649b In this you can see that $7 of the gains were unrealized - in the case of SoFi that would mean such gains were model based. SoFi's rollforward table has an "impact on earnings" column is essentially an aggregation of all the gains or losses attributable from changes in the other columns. There is no detail provided regarding what gains were realized or not realized. https://preview.redd.it/7aphkt8tv7rg1.png?width=1765&format=png&auto=webp&s=82c7d31c22e425bfe1d97db3ae4338560c42eb37 This contrasts with other banks, like Chase Bank, who disclose the amount of unrealized gains or losses relating to assets still held at the end of reporting period. https://preview.redd.it/182417mhihrg1.png?width=1017&format=png&auto=webp&s=5dba951dae30188f35a555e5a3d1e04f4002124a SoFi has a note under its table that basically explains the "Impact on Earnings" column is an aggregation: https://preview.redd.it/chrxg3qlv7rg1.png?width=958&format=png&auto=webp&s=9c395d1db7ae7a3a29111527226d2c1f67e541f6 This GAAP issue has been conveyed by me to SoFi multiple times over the last month, without correction. Under SEC rules, once a company is aware of a material deficiency in its reporting, it needs to essentially cure it within 4 business days (i.e. through a corrective amendment). The lack of a cure could only be legally justified if SoFi thinks its disclosure follows GAAP. Assuming SoFi thinks its presentation is GAAP compliant, it will be in serious trouble with the SEC the longer it fails to correct the issue. I personally find the lack of correction very concerning: the rule is fairly black and white. This is not one of those accounting rules where there is a lot of grey area or judgment calls. It is a simple mathematical disclosure. If you go by Deloitte's own handbook, compliance seems straightforward. Importantly, making the disclosure does not require any judgment calls about the validity of the model - it just would show investors whether the model's "predictions" on fair value have been validated as gains are realized with loan sales or loans amortizing The fact that Sofi is audited does not somehow absolve this mistake. Mistakes get made in audited financial statements. An audit opinion is not an absolute guarantee of perfection. There is a well established protocol and rules dealing with corrections after the fact, which are fairly routine. The crucial thing is that everyone has to act quickly once the error has been flagged. In all events, investors should want SoFi to comply with ASC 820-10-50-2(c): It is legally required. If realized gains are flat or positive, it would show that SoFi's models are accurate, because SoFi has not been experiencing losses that were not baked into the model. This would give investors peace of mind if they have even a little bit of concern about the Muddy Waters report. One other bit of information that is relevant regarding fair value adjustments that is not in SoFi's SEC filings is the total amount of fair value adjustments that actually flow into earnings. That number is impossible to find, and impossible to extrapolate accurately, with the information provided just in SEC filings But that information is disclosed in SoFi's Federal Reserve filings. For 2025, fair value adjustments, net of associated hedges, was $538 million. https://preview.redd.it/4i6se9cwv7rg1.png?width=1150&format=png&auto=webp&s=d946c7d2d66661e12bfc4f5751270edf319b9d0d The associated hedges appear to have been -$164 million in 2025 (this is taken from FY 2025 10-k, page 200). Based on these two pieces of information, it looks like somewhere between $538 million and $702 million in earnings were attributed to "adjustments" out of total gross revenue of $4.7 billion ($3.4 billion in interest income, $1.4 billion in noninterest income). Obviously fair value adjustments are important in the grand scheme of things, as that is between 10-15% of total revenue. So that only kind of emphasizes why SoFi should be complying with ASC 820-10-50-2(c) - if realized gains are negative, and unrealized gains are positive, that would mean even though fair value adjustments is a big number, the positive portion of it may not be "real." I have two final comments regarding some good questions I have seen in the wake of the Muddy Waters report. One is how could SoFi could even be experiencing fair value losses, considering its loan default rate is fairly low, and given that SoFi borrowers are generally super prime. The question is certainly reasonable. How could a loan lose value if the borrowers are paying it back? The reason is because "fair value" is defined very technically: it represents the market value of the loan - the amount a third party would spend to purchase the loan. Fluctuations in market interest rates depress the value of pre-existing loans originated under prior market conditions when interest rates were lower. That makes economic sense: why would someone buy a treasury bond paying 2% interest over 10 years from a third party if the same person could purchase a 4% interest bond over 10 years straight from the government? The treasury department maintains a daily database of marketplace prices of treasury bonds/notes, so you can see how bonds are doing against par on a daily basis. If the bond/note is trading above par, that means there is a premium associated with it - buyers are paying more than the face value of the loan to purchase it. If less than par, that means, buyers are expecting a discount to purchase the note/bond. Importantly, this is actual marketplace data - not a model. When you review actual treasury marketplace data on various notes, you can see that, as expected, they have declined in value when interest rates rose. In contrast, SoFi's personal loans and student loans kept a premium, even though there is no reason why those loans are immune to the inevitable economic impact of hikes in interest rates decreasing intrinsic value. The below charts compare market based valuations of treasury notes (2 and 5 years over time) with model based valuations of SoFi's loan inventory (note that some of the 2 year notes amortized during the time period, so their marketplace values do not go to the end). https://preview.redd.it/4bk7pfz9d7rg1.png?width=3474&format=png&auto=webp&s=b50a2c448dd186adfb31bba2c0c3726f0926f7cf https://preview.redd.it/zcdinztad7rg1.png?width=3474&format=png&auto=webp&s=8419dcbfe9d2eace07f0bdb8b4edbb8f0a3aca5d You can see a similar phenomenon when comparing SoFi's fair value models to those of other banks/lenders. Below chart is through Q3 of 2025. SoFi's fair values show a persistent premium, when everyone else fluctuated, and went down hard in 2022/2023. Note the comparisons are mostly to mainstream banks like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, PNC, etc. https://preview.redd.it/vu8yrvagd7rg1.png?width=1045&format=png&auto=webp&s=c986a355b892510b487fd38e914032955a8f9dbd So regardless of what you think about the debate, the hard data is this: SoFi's models treat SoFi loans are being essentially unaffected by interest rate fluctuations that caused large and marketplace demonstrated changes in the value of risk free debt (government notes). SoFi's models treat SoFi loans are intrinsically more valuable to the marketplace than how other banks treat their loans, including secured commercial and residential mortgages. You often hear that SoFi's valuations are validated by the marketplace, but that is inaccurate. SoFi's loan sales collapsed in 2022 and only have partially recovered, going by the metric of loan sales as a percentage of originations. In fact, a very small percentage of student loans are sold to this day. https://preview.redd.it/d66u76kld7rg1.png?width=992&format=png&auto=webp&s=4ed2ec97fb9da3dbb0e42eebdc69389534b135ea One final common sense comment you hear is that SoFi's financial statements do not show unexplained losses or surprise defaults. People have been criticizing SoFi's fair value modeling for years, and yet everything seems fine. Wouldn't we know by now if there was some horrible flaw? The answer is this: just because SoFi's financial statements haven't reported fair value losses on overvalued loans doesn't mean that losses haven't occurred. It could just mean that SoFi's accounting presentation is set up in a way they don't show up. Fair value adjustments are not reported as a specific line item anywhere in SoFi's financial statements. Instead, they are aggregated among a number of other items on the income statement in a line item called Loan Originations, Sales, Securitizations, and Servicing. Within the footnotes, SoFi does not provide much additional detail on a number of key components of this line item. The only breakdown that is provided is as follows: https://preview.redd.it/swud34jpd7rg1.png?width=646&format=png&auto=webp&s=fcf2f5e220ad28540c8018ac3d1434e71ad17cc0 Because of aggregation and due to the lack of information regarding realized/unrealized gains discussed before, investors don't know if unrealized gains (model based) are cancelling out realized losses that occur which reverse prior inflated overvaluation based gains. It could be happening now and in the past, and you could never tell just from the filings. One thing that you can tell, by comparing the filings with SoFi's Federal Reserve reports, is that SoFi has historically changed its SEC financial statement presentation of certain line items as those line items turned negative or were about to turn negative. This is only knowable because SoFi does not have discretion to modify presentation on its Federal Reserve filings, whereas it has discretion with its SEC Filings. https://preview.redd.it/ujfa4i4sd7rg1.png?width=604&format=png&auto=webp&s=b3593c556af28db202f69827e49a913030ed2857 Servicing and securitization are reported as standalone items in Federal Reserve filings. SoFi historically provided the same information in its SEC filings, but stopped, instead aggregating that information into the larger Loan Originations, Sales, Securitizations, and Servicing line item, and not providing detail in the notes. What has gone on with servicing and securitization is similar to what I believe has gone on with fair value adjustments. The fact that SoFi's SEC filings do not show negative servicing or securitization income does not mean losses are not occurring. It simply means that the loss is obscured by aggregation, as those losses are cancelled out by other gains. https://preview.redd.it/opd4w8nc08rg1.png?width=1382&format=png&auto=webp&s=29398a179e0271008c9c62fced976ecdabbb521f The decline in servicing income over time is an indicator that something is off with SoFi's loan fair value modeling. SoFi's gross servicing income increased by 50% into 2024 from 2025; consistent with that servicing volume increased. Yet net servicing income has trended downward, going negative in 2025. That result makes no sense. Even if SoFi was discounting servicing, you wouldn't expect the entire line item to be negative. The most logical explanation I can come up with is that the losses are attributable to SoFi's fair valuation model on servicing assets. Just like loans, the value of SoFi's servicing assets are model generated. Sofi books earnings on its income statement as the servicing assets are originated. If a servicing asset ultimately is overvalued (i.e. a servicing asset did not result in the income projected by the model) a loss has to be taken when the servicing asset is amortized. The above chart is pretty much exactly what you would expect to see, if servicing assets are overvalued by modeling - a big mismatch, getting worse over time, as overvalued servicing assets amortize. To reiterate, whether you agree or disagree with this analysis, SoFi could do one thing, right now, to really help clear the air: Comply with ASC 820-10-50-2(c), and show the change in unrealized gains or losses for both personal loans and student loans. Position: https://preview.redd.it/41gltr55t7rg1.png?width=646&format=png&auto=webp&s=49ee3e18409516f8160da05f72ef4e87cc60e8f8 submitted by /u/bnewhard to r/wallstreetbets [link] [comments]
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bnewhard |
Mar 25, 2026 |