The IT industry is known for its ability to innovate and create the next big thing. However, in an era of economic instability and rising interest rates, a significant segment of the tech sector is pursuing one of the least inventive things on the planet: yield.
With U.S. Treasury yields reaching their highest level in more than a decade late last year, consumers and investors can now make returns simply by keeping their money in savings accounts.
Banks are responding by offering higher-yielding offerings. American Express, for example, offers consumers a 3.75% annual percentage yield (APY), and First Citizens’ CIT Bank has a 4.75% APY for customers with at least $5,000 in deposits. Ally Bank, which is online only, is promoting a 4.8% certificate of deposit.
However, some of the highest rates available to depositors are coming from enterprises in and around Silicon Valley, rather than traditional financial organizations or credit unions.
Apple is the most notable new entrant. Last month, the iPhone maker launched its Apple Card savings account with a generous 4.15% APY in partnership with Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs.
Then there’s the entire fintech business, which consists of companies that provide consumer financial services with a focus on digital products and a friendlier mobile experience rather than physical branches staffed by expensive bank tellers and loan officers.
Stock trading app Robinhood has a feature called Robinhood Gold, which offers 4.65% APY. Interest is earned on uninvested cash swept from the client’s brokerage account to partner banks. It’s part of a $5-a-month subscription that also includes lower borrowing costs for margin investing and research for stock investing.
The company lifted its yield from 4.4% on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve approved its 10th rate increase in a little more than a year, raising its benchmark borrowing rate by 0.25 percentage point to a target range of 5%-5.25%.
“At Robinhood, we’re always looking for ways to help our customers make their money work for them,” the company said in a press release announcing its hike.
Citi or Chase, feels like it’s safe. Apple and Goldman aren’t inherently risky, but it’s not the same as Chase.
Renaud Laplanche
LendingClub, an online lender, is promoting an account with a 4.25% yield. The company told CNBC that deposit growth was up 13% for the first quarter of 2023 compared with the prior quarter, “as depositors looked to diversify their money out of traditional banks and earn increased savings.” Year over year, savings deposits have increased by 81%.
And Upgrade, which is led by LendingClub founder Renaud Laplanche, offers 4.56% for customers with a minimum balance of $1,000.
“It’s really a trade-off for consumers, between safety or the appearance of safety, and yield,” Laplanche told CNBC. Upgrade, which is based in San Francisco, and most other fintech players keep customer deposits with institutions backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., so consumer funds are safe up to the $250,000 threshold.
SoFi is the rare example of a fintech with a banking charter, which it acquired last year. It offers a high-yield savings product with a 4.2% APY.
The story isn’t just about rising interest rates.
Across the emerging fintech spectrum, companies like Upgrade are, intentionally or not, taking advantage of a moment of upheaval in traditional finance. On Monday, First Republic became the third American bank to fail since March, following the collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. All three saw depositors rush for the exits as concerns about a liquidity crunch led to a cycle of doom.
Shares of PacWest and other regional banks have plummeted this week, even after First Republic’s orchestrated sale to JPMorgan Chase was meant to signal stability in the system.
After the collapse of SVB, Laplanche said Upgrade’s banking partners came to the company and asked it to step up the inflow of funds, an apparent effort to stanch the withdrawals at smaller banks. Upgrade farms out the money it attracts to a network of 200 small- and medium-sized banks and credit unions that pay the company for the deposits.
Used to be dead money
For well over a decade, before the recent jump in rates, savings accounts were dead money. Borrowing rates were so low that banks couldn’t profitably offer yield on deposits. Also, stocks were on such a tear that investors were doing just fine in equities and index funds. A subset of those with a stomach for risk went big in crypto.
As the price of bitcoin soared, a number of crypto exchanges and lenders began mimicking the banks’ savings model, offering very high yield (up to 20% annually) for investors to store their crypto. Those exchanges are now bankrupt following the crypto industry’s meltdown last year, and many thousands of clients lost their funds.
There is some potential instability for fintechs, even those outside of the crypto space. Many of them, including Upgrade and Affirm, partner with Cross River Bank, which serves as the regulated bank for companies that don’t have charters, allowing them to offer lending and credit products.
Last week, Cross River was hit with a consent order from the FDIC for what the agency called “unsafe or unsound banking practices.”
Cross River said in a statement that the order was focused on fair lending issues that occurred in 2021, and that it “places no limitations on our extensive existing fintech partnerships or the credit products we presently offer in partnership with them.”
While fintechs broadly are under far less regulatory pressure than crypto companies, the FDIC’s action suggests that regulators are beginning to pay closer attention to the kinds of products that high-yield accounts are designed to complement.
Still, the emerging group of high-yield savings products are much more mainstream than what the crypto platforms were promoting. That’s largely because the deposits come with government-backed insurance protections, which have a long history of safety.
They’re also not designed to be big profit centers. Rather, by offering high yields for consumers who have long housed their money in stagnant accounts, tech and fintech companies are opening the door to potentially new customers.
Apple has a whole suite of financial products, including a credit card and payments app, that pair smoothly with the savings account, which is only available to the 6 million-plus Apple Card holders. Those customers reportedly put in nearly $1 billion in deposits in the first four days the service was on the market.
Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment. CEO Tim Cook said on the company’s earnings call Thursday that, “we are very pleased with the initial response on it. It’s been incredible.”
Robinhood, meanwhile, wants more people to use its trading platform, and companies like LendingClub and SoFi are building relationships with potential borrowers.
Laplanche said high-yield savings accounts, while compelling for the consumer, aren’t core to most fintech businesses but serve as an onboarding tool to more lucrative products, like consumer lending or conventional credit cards.
“We started with credit,” Laplanche said. “We think that’s a better strategy.”
SoFi launched its high-yield savings account in February of last year. In its annual SEC filing, the company said that offering checking and high-yield savings accounts provided “more daily interactions with our members.”
Affirm, best known as a buy now, pay later firm, has offered a savings account since 2020 as part of a “full suite” of financial products. Its yield is currently 3.75%.
“Consumers can use our app to manage payments, open a high-yield savings account, and access a personalized marketplace,” the company said in a 2022 SEC filing. A spokesperson for Affirm told CNBC that the saving account is “one of the many solutions in our suite of products that empower consumers with a smarter way to manage their finances.”
Savings products from any source other than a national bank may appear undesirable against the backdrop of a regional banking crisis. Pursuing yield, on the other hand, carries some risk.
“Citi or Chase, feels like it’s safe,” to the consumer, Laplanche said. “Apple and Goldman aren’t inherently risky, but it’s not the same as Chase.”