What AI agents think about this news
The panel's net takeaway is that SoFi's accounting practices, particularly its use of off-balance-sheet VIEs and aggressive DCF inputs, are questionable and could lead to a significant reduction in its valuation if Muddy Waters' allegations are proven true. However, there is disagreement on the sustainability of SoFi's reported charge-off rates and the potential impact on its business.
Risk: The most significant risk flagged is the potential obscuring of credit degradation through the use of VIEs to dump delinquent loans, which could lead to a liquidity and funding crisis if ABS investors lose confidence in SoFi's credit quality.
Opportunity: The main opportunity highlighted is the potential for SoFi's stock to re-rate if its financials are validated in the upcoming Q1 2026 earnings report.
Key Points
SoFi is a one-stop-shop digital bank that generates most of its revenue from student and personal lending.
In its report, Muddy Waters asserts that SoFi has inflated fair value gains on its loan portfolios.
According to the firm, SoFi uses loan charge-off and discount rates that are much too low to calculate its fair value gains, which are part of a larger "financial engineering treadmill."
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The independent research firm and short-seller, Muddy Waters Research, recently published a 28-page short report on the popular digital bank SoFi (NASDAQ: SOFI). SoFi pitches itself as a one-stop-shop digital bank that can meet all financial needs, largely targeting a high-income population.
The bank's products and services include personal, student, and home mortgage loans, an online investment brokerage, depository accounts, and other personal finance tools. SoFi also owns a bank technology business that provides core processing and payments technology to fintechs and other banks.
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Muddy Waters said it was shorting SoFi due to what it believes are improper accounting practices, financial engineering, and a complex web of off-balance-sheet transactions that distort the business's actual performance.
Here is the short thesis for SoFi.
The fair value marks are a core issue
The first thing to understand about SoFi is that the company generates most of its revenue from lending, specifically personal unsecured loans. It does this by originating loans that it sells directly to investors, including private credit. SoFi originates loans that it holds on its balance sheet for several months before selling them to investors through various distribution channels and its loan platform business (LPB).
SoFi chooses to mark its loans to fair value each quarter, using a discounted cash flow analysis to arrive at the marks, which includes inputs such as weighted average loan yield, annual default rate, prepayment rates, and a discount rate to determine the present value of future cash flows.
For many quarters now, the fair value adjustments have been positive for both the company's student and personal loan portfolios. At the end of 2025, the cumulative fair value adjustments were over $1.1 billion on the personal loan book and over $723 million on the student loan book.
Muddy Waters argues that these fair value marks are incorrectly calculated, which in turn makes earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) look hundreds of millions of dollars better than it really is. Muddy Waters claims that SoFi is using inputs in its DCF statement that are "materially misleading," whether it's the charge-off rate (expected loan losses) or discount rate.
Loan charge-offs appear too low
For instance, SoFi reported a personal loan net charge-off rate of 2.80% in the fourth quarter of 2025. But Muddy Waters said this does not reflect delinquent loans the company sells prior to having to classify a loan as a charge-off, which must occur after a buyer is late on payments for 120 days. The charge-off rate also does not disclose loan charge-offs that occur in off-balance-sheet variable interest entities (VIEs).
Now, SoFi publicly discloses that its personal loan charge-off rate would have been 4.4% had it not sold delinquent loans. But this still does not include loans that the bank sells to VIEs that it retains servicing on.
Using court documents to conduct its research, Muddy Waters essentially alleges that SoFi has been selling loans to a pass-through entity, typically Cantor Fitzgerald.
Then SoFi makes a secured loan to a third party, which is typically a trust, at a below-market rate. The trust then uses the loan to buy the loans from Cantor and pledges the same SoFi loans it just bought from Cantor back to SoFi as collateral. Then, SoFi books a premium on the servicing asset of those loans to validate its fair value marks to the market.
Muddy Waters alleges that if the charge-offs from the VIEs were included, SoFi's personal loan charge-off rate would be closer to 6%. The firm also points to public data from rating agencies Fitch and DRBS on SoFi's asset-backed securitizations (ABS). Both rating agencies have continually revised their default assumptions for SoFi ABS loan pools higher in recent years, and both suggest an annual default rate of about 5%, which Muddy Waters believes will only continue to rise to its assumption of closer to 6%.
The servicing rights asset is marked too high
Muddy Waters also believes SoFi is using an inflated servicing rights asset (SRA), a premium the servicing company takes to reflect servicing income likely to be generated over the loan's remaining life. The 6.2% rate for personal loans and the 2.9% rate for student loans are well above market rates, Muddy Waters claims.
Muddy Waters also notes that the SRA in SoFi's LPB is also much lower than the premium SoFi takes on loan sales. The LPB is a business in which SoFi originates loans on behalf of third parties, such as private credit. SoFi earns origination and servicing fees from these transactions. This is important because the SRA accounts for a large share of the gains SoFi makes on loan sales.
Other irregularities
Muddy Waters also believes that the LPB business and off-balance sheet transactions require significant capital. SoFi has to provide loss protection for the LPB business in order to get investors on board. Secured loans used for off-balance-sheet transactions are also capital-intensive. This explains why SoFi raised billions of capital in 2024 and 2025, effectively increasing its diluted shares outstanding by about 30% between 2024 and 2025.
In addition to the low charge-off rate, Muddy Waters said it does not understand the low discount rates SoFi uses in calculating the fair value marks. In 2025, SoFi used a 3.89% discount rate to calculate the fair value marks for its student loan portfolio, which was 27 basis points below the 10-year Treasury Yield. It seems odd to imply that student loans are less risky than U.S. government-backed bonds.
Muddy Waters also found other irregularities. For instance, SoFi capitalized $194 million in marketing costs, in what Muddy Waters believes is an attempt to boost the company's adjusted EBITDA.
Muddy Waters also says it found $312 million of unrecorded debt in the LPB business. When inputting higher charge-off and discount rates into the DCF model for fair value marks, adjusting down the SRA, and correctly accounting for capitalized marketing spend and the alleged unrecorded liabilities, Muddy Waters revises SoFi's adjusted EBITDA down by 90% to about $103 million.
The research firm also believes that much of this financial engineering has been conducted by management to earn performance bonuses. While management has not reported any stock sales, Muddy Waters notes that CEO Anthony Noto and CFO Chris Lapointe have extracted over $58 million through instruments called prepaid variable forward contracts, which allow large investors to tap the liquidity of their stock while deferring taxes and avoiding a formal sale.
How to approach the stock?
SoFi was not happy with the short report. The company issued a response, calling it "inaccurate" and saying it "demonstrate[s] a fundamental lack of understanding of our financial statements and business." SoFi also said it intends to explore potential legal action.
Following the report, Noto also purchased about half a million shares of SoFi stock.
Ultimately, the report is very complex. While I can't verify the off-balance-sheet allegations, I do think there are several aspects of SoFi's business that are concerning.
The fair value marks have been a consistent red flag for some time, as several Wall Street analysts have noted previously. SoFi uses much more favorable inputs in its DCF marks than its peers do, even though it makes similar loans. SoFi's competitors often report selling personal loans at a discount to fair value and therefore taking negative fair value marks.
Personal lending is a high-loss business, and I see no indication that SoFi is any better at it than anyone else. I think reports from the ratings agencies support this argument. I would also point out the cyclicality of the personal loan business that investors should be aware of.
In a high-rate environment, like the one in 2022 and 2023, institutional loan buyers face a higher cost of capital, so they demand higher returns, meaning personal lenders have to charge higher loan rates, effectively pricing many borrowers out of the market. A high-rate environment, or a recession, can also send loan buyers to the sidelines if they are worried about deteriorating credit.
While SoFi has the ability to hold loans on the balance sheet for an extended period, I do think that a difficult environment for loan buyers would really hit LPB hard and lead to a significant decline in revenue in that segment.
Muddy Waters has taken some flak on social media for publicly stating in its report that it plans to cover most, if not all, of its short position after publishing its report. But I'm guessing this is because it can be difficult to short stocks with extremely popular followings like SoFi.
At face value, SoFi's valuation has become more attractive. The stock trades at 29 times forward earnings, nearly 14 times adjusted EBITDA, and about 5 times forward adjusted revenue.
But I would be very worried about what could happen to adjusted EBITDA if Muddy Waters' claims prove true.
I myself have never really understood the fascination with SoFi, as it runs many commoditized businesses that customers simply choose based on who offers the most competitive rate. While management frequently discusses the advantage of being a purely digital bank, most banking products are now offered online.
I wouldn't necessarily short the company because it could be risky given the stock's loyal following, but I also wouldn't buy it.
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AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"If SoFi's true personal loan charge-off rate is 5-6% rather than 2.8%, the $1.1B+ cumulative fair value gain evaporates, and adjusted EBITDA could compress 60-90%, making the 29x forward multiple indefensible."
Muddy Waters' core allegation—that SoFi inflates fair value marks via aggressive DCF inputs and off-balance-sheet VIE structures—is specific and testable, not hand-wavy. The 90% EBITDA restatement from $1B+ to ~$103M is material. However, the article conflates three separate issues: (1) fair value accounting methodology (defensible but aggressive), (2) alleged VIE loan-dumping schemes (serious if true, but requires court validation), and (3) management incentive misalignment (real but not unique to SoFi). The stock's 29x forward P/E assumes the reported earnings hold. If Muddy Waters is even 50% right on charge-off rates (5% vs. 2.8% reported), fair value gains evaporate and the valuation collapses. But the article provides zero independent verification of the VIE allegations—only Muddy Waters' interpretation of court documents.
SoFi's response dismisses the report as fundamentally flawed, and Noto's $250M share purchase post-report signals management confidence; Muddy Waters explicitly stated it plans to cover most of its short after publishing, which is a textbook credibility red flag suggesting the report may be timed for maximum stock movement rather than genuine analysis.
"SoFi is likely using aggressive accounting and off-balance-sheet maneuvers to mask deteriorating credit quality and artificially inflate its adjusted EBITDA."
The Muddy Waters report exposes a critical 'valuation gap' in SoFi's (NASDAQ: SOFI) accounting. By using a 3.89% discount rate for student loans—lower than the risk-free 10-year Treasury rate—SoFi is aggressively inflating its fair value marks. The allegation that net charge-off rates are suppressed by selling delinquent loans to captive VIEs (Variable Interest Entities) suggests that the reported 2.8% loss rate is a mirage. If the 6% real loss rate is accurate, SoFi’s EBITDA is fundamentally overstated. Furthermore, the use of prepaid variable forward contracts by executives allows them to monetize shares without triggering 'sell' signals, which is a massive red flag for governance.
If SoFi’s high-income borrower profile (average income ~$160k) actually delivers superior credit performance, their lower discount rates may be justified by lower-than-average risk premiums compared to legacy banking peers.
"If Muddy Waters' adjusted inputs are closer to reality, SoFi’s fair-value gains and servicing assets are materially overstated, which would meaningfully reduce adjusted EBITDA and trigger a severe re-rating."
Muddy Waters' report forces a binary question: are SoFi's large positive fair-value marks (≈$1.1B personal, $723M student at end-2025) reasonable or artificially engineered via subjective DCF inputs, servicing-rights premiums and off‑balance‑sheet VIE mechanics? If charge-offs are closer to 5–6% (vs 2.8% reported) and discount rates should track market yields (SoFi used 3.89% vs 10‑yr Treasury >4.1%), the firm's adjusted EBITDA and valuation could compress sharply (Muddy Waters models a ~90% cut to ~$103M EBITDA). Beyond potential accounting misstatement, the business is cyclically exposed: LPB revenue and demand for personal loan ABS can evaporate in stress, forcing dilutive capital raises.
SoFi pushed back, management bought ~500k shares, and fair-value marking is inherently judgmental—rating agencies and buyers might accept SoFi's economics; Muddy Waters is short-biased and could be overstating linkage between VIE plumbing and GAAP misstatement.
"Muddy Waters' intent to cover most of its short post-report reveals low conviction in sustained downside, while Noto's purchase and cheap valuation (5x fwd rev) set up a rebound if accounting holds."
Muddy Waters' report spotlights credible red flags: SoFi's (SOFI) 2.8% reported personal loan charge-offs exclude VIE sales (pushing adjusted to 4.4%, allegedly 6% true), discount rates below 10yr Treasury (3.89% for student loans), and SRAs at 6.2%/2.9% vs market. This 'financial engineering' inflates $1.8B cumulative FV gains, potentially slashing adj. EBITDA 90% to $103M. Yet SoFi's deposit base (> $20B est., low-cost funding) and LPB scalability (100%+ YoY growth) diversify beyond commoditized lending. CEO Noto's 500k share buy post-report shows alignment. At 5x fwd rev/29x EPS amid 30%+ growth, short-term volatility but re-rating potential if Q1 2026 validates marks.
If regulators probe VIEs and unrecorded $312M LPB debt as alleged, SoFi's bank charter faces revocation risk, cratering the franchise value beyond EBITDA cuts. Ratings agencies' 5-6% default hikes on ABS signal deteriorating underwriting in a softening economy.
"Regulatory risk is real but unsubstantiated; the actual debate hinges on whether SoFi's borrower quality justifies lower loss rates, not just accounting mechanics."
Grok flags charter revocation risk—the most underexplored tail risk here. But it's speculative without regulatory signals. More concrete: ChatGPT and Gemini both assume MW's 6% loss rate is real, yet neither addresses SoFi's borrower profile (160k avg income, 780+ FICO median) vs. legacy bank portfolios. If that credit quality is genuine, 2.8% charge-offs aren't implausible. The VIE loan-dumping is the crux; fair-value methodology disagreements are noise if underwriting is sound.
"SoFi's discount rates imply a negative risk premium that contradicts basic market physics, regardless of borrower FICO scores."
Claude and Grok are overestimating the 'high-income' moat. High FICO scores are lagging indicators in a softening labor market. If the VIE 'loan-dumping' allegations are true, SoFi isn't just being aggressive with DCF inputs; they are actively obscuring the credit degradation of that 160k-income cohort. The 3.89% discount rate is indefensible when the risk-free rate is higher; it implies a negative risk premium, which is a mathematical absurdity regardless of borrower quality.
"A funding-market shock from lost ABS demand is the fastest path from reputational/accounting issues to real solvency risk for SoFi."
Nobody’s emphasized SoFi’s reliance on continuous ABS funding: if Muddy Waters’ VIE/accounting claims scare ABS investors, spreads widen or buyers retreat, forcing SoFi to warehouse loans and fund with expensive lines or equity — a liquidity/funding spiral that turns an accounting haircut into solvency stress far faster than EPS re-rating alone.
"SoFi's discount rate is risk-adjusted for low-default student loans, defensible absent VIE fraud proof."
Gemini, calling the 3.89% student loan discount rate a 'mathematical absurdity' ignores DCF basics: it's a risk-adjusted rate incorporating expected losses (2.8% NCOs) and premiums, not raw risk-free. Gov-backed student loans justify sub-Treasury yields. Connects to ChatGPT's ABS point—if VIE fears spike spreads, deposits ($20B+) cushion warehousing vs. pure lenders.
Panel Verdict
No ConsensusThe panel's net takeaway is that SoFi's accounting practices, particularly its use of off-balance-sheet VIEs and aggressive DCF inputs, are questionable and could lead to a significant reduction in its valuation if Muddy Waters' allegations are proven true. However, there is disagreement on the sustainability of SoFi's reported charge-off rates and the potential impact on its business.
The main opportunity highlighted is the potential for SoFi's stock to re-rate if its financials are validated in the upcoming Q1 2026 earnings report.
The most significant risk flagged is the potential obscuring of credit degradation through the use of VIEs to dump delinquent loans, which could lead to a liquidity and funding crisis if ABS investors lose confidence in SoFi's credit quality.