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    > Fintechs also often put out the fake promise that deposits are FDIC insured
Does this still happen?


Many fintechs are not licensed to hold funds and work with bank partners who hold your actual funds. That allows them to say they're insured because they're not co-mingled with the corporate funds in the event of insolvency. This doesn't stop them from making accounting errors.


The FDIC said you can't do this anymore starting Jan 1, 2025. So I expect it to stop in about 30 days. The FDIC will probably find a few laggards and throw some fines at them, and the process will then probably completely stop.


the problem is the discrepancy between what the Fintech means when they say fdic insured, and what the customer hears when they're told fdic insured. the customer (erroneously) assumes it means that if the Fintech or anyone else has problems, the customer is covered up to the 250k fdic limit. what the Fintech means, is that there's someone they're partnered with that is a bank and is fdic covered. How the money is deposited into the bank is up for interperation. if there Fintech is being dishonest, they have one bank account at a bank, and all of the customers money goes into that one shared account, they're not technically lying - the money is fdic insured. unfortunately for the customers, that's not the same as each of them being fdic insured is the Fintech goes under. fdic doesn't seem to want to clarify this issue either, which is a problem.




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