Key Takeaways
- Short seller Muddy Waters Research disclosed a short position in SoFi Technologies (SOFI), triggering an intra-day decline of more than 4% on Tuesday, though shares recovered to close down just 1.3%
- Muddy Waters described SoFi as “a financial engineering treadmill,” accusing the fintech firm of concealing at least $312 million in debt
- According to the short seller, SoFi’s EBITDA figure of $1,054 million contains approximately $950 million in inflation
- Following market close, CEO Anthony Noto purchased $500,000 in SOFI shares at approximately $17.32 each
- Analyst firm Keefe Bruyette maintained its Underperform rating with a $20 target, noting the report “raises some new questions” while acknowledging most concerns were already on the Street’s radar
Tuesday proved challenging for SoFi Technologies (SOFI) shareholders. Prominent short seller Muddy Waters Research released a scathing report disclosing a short position in the fintech company, characterizing it as “a financial engineering treadmill, not a healthily growing origination business.”
Shares tumbled over 4% during intra-day trading before staging a partial recovery, ultimately finishing the session down 1.3% at $17.37.
Muddy Waters has built a reputation as an aggressive short seller with a track record of targeting financial services and technology firms. Their research reports frequently trigger immediate market reactions.
The firm’s latest report accuses SoFi of operating a business structure engineered primarily to satisfy management compensation metrics rather than driving authentic organic expansion. The allegations center on the company’s use of loan valuations and off-balance-sheet arrangements to mask borrowings as revenue generation.
Among the most serious accusations: SoFi is carrying at least $312 million in debt that isn’t properly recorded. According to Muddy Waters, this raises concerns about additional misstatements that may remain undiscovered.
Regarding loan performance metrics, Muddy Waters calculated SoFi’s actual Personal Loan charge-off rate at approximately 6.1%. The company publicly reports this figure as 2.89%. The discrepancy is substantial.
The short seller also questioned the strategic rationale behind SoFi’s Student Loan segment, suggesting it functions primarily to generate Fair Value gains that boost management incentive payments rather than serving genuine strategic or economic purposes.
Muddy Waters directed similar criticism at SoFi’s Loan Platform Business, characterizing it as a “wet-funded forward flow transaction” — essentially a disguised borrowing mechanism where loan proceeds are recorded as fee revenue.
Alleged EBITDA Manipulation
Perhaps the most striking assertion: Muddy Waters contends that SoFi’s disclosed EBITDA of $1,054 million contains roughly $950 million in inflation. Under that calculation, actual EBITDA would be closer to $100 million.
The short seller attributes this alleged inflation to various tactics including manipulated charge-off calculations, seller-financed transactions, unrecorded debt obligations, and marketing costs that have been capitalized and excluded from headline metrics.
Muddy Waters further alleged that management has secured $58 million through financial instruments that function economically as stock dispositions, despite public statements claiming no stock sales have occurred.
Noto’s After-Hours Stock Purchase
In the hours following market close on Tuesday, CEO Anthony Noto submitted a Form 4 filing to the SEC documenting his purchase of 28,900 SOFI shares. The transaction averaged $17.3189 per share for a total investment of $500,000.
Shares climbed approximately 1% in after-hours trading following the disclosure.
While Noto’s purchase demonstrates personal conviction in the company’s prospects, it didn’t completely offset Tuesday’s decline.
Keefe Bruyette released commentary Wednesday morning. Analyst Tim Switzer observed that the Muddy Waters report connected information from UCC filings and sales documentation with SoFi’s standard investor disclosures.
Switzer suggested that institutional analysts covering the stock were probably already familiar with the accounting matters highlighted in the report. He indicated that near-term price action might depend more heavily on retail investor sentiment, as these investors are “less aware of the intricacies of SOFI’s accounting/business model.”
Keefe Bruyette reiterated its Underperform stance on SoFi with a $20 price objective. Shares closed Tuesday’s session at $17.37.
