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12 votes
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Debanking (and debunking?)
8 votes -
Rupert Murdoch’s attempt to change his family’s trust over Fox News media empire control rejected by court
23 votes -
US teen creates memecoin, dumps it, earns $50,000
18 votes -
Closing asset loophole can raise $100 billion in taxes, US Treasury now says
10 votes -
Is Wise bank safe?
With the recent news about Synapse, I am a little on edge with the safety of my money. I am currently living in France for school, and am hoping to immigrate here permanently. All of my savings is...
With the recent news about Synapse, I am a little on edge with the safety of my money. I am currently living in France for school, and am hoping to immigrate here permanently. All of my savings is in USD, so I need a way to easily and cheaply convert between USD and EUR, and be able to spend EUR locally. After a ton of research, I decided to move almost all of my banking to Wise. They don't offer traditional banking features like in-person branches or checks, but I didn't use those anyway. I can get a local bank number in any of the many countries they support. The savings account APY is insanely high (higher than I have seen from even the best high yield savings accounts. I have a debit card that allows me to spend directly from any one of my bank account currencies, and auto convert to other supported currencies. And the USD account is insured by FDIC passthrough insurance.
In the thread about the Synapse collapse, people were saying that passthrough FDIC insurance doesn't always mean that the customer's money is actually insured. And apparently some fintech services will just lie about what is covered by FDIC insurance. I am not a lawyer, and I have no idea how to validate Wise's claims about passthrough FDIC insurance.
I was recently able to open a France bank account, which was surprisingly difficult. (To open a bank account you need proof of address, like a cell phone or electricity bill. I don't pay for utilities in my school apartment, and to get a cell phone plan I need a bank account. That was fun to try and navigate.) I have these bank accounts currently: my Wise account with US USD, Belgium EUR, and UK GBP, a US Credit Union account, and a French EUR bank account. My US credit union and French banks give a very low or zero APY, so keeping my money in my Wise accounts is preferable for that reason. But I also can't afford to loose all my savings if Wise collapses. My question is this: Is Wise safe enough for general money storage, or should I use it just for converting between currencies and keeping a small amount for spending? If Wise isn't safe, what about another similar product? I have heard of Revolut, but I didn't do much research since Wise seemed better for my use case.
22 votes -
The affordable housing shortage is reshaping parts of rural America
32 votes -
Thousands of Americans see their savings vanish in Synapse fintech crisis
51 votes -
US office Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities delinquency rate spikes to 9.4%, highest since worst months after the financial crisis
20 votes -
Key inflation rate hits 2.1% in September, as expected, closing in on US Federal Reserve target
21 votes -
No, raising the minimum wage does not hurt US fast-food workers
29 votes -
US mortgage rates back to 7%
26 votes -
Non-college educated White men used to be ahead in the American economy. Now they’ve fallen behind.
31 votes -
The perverse consequences of tuition-free medical school
14 votes -
What’s behind the sudden surge in young Americans’ wealth?
21 votes -
New experimental evidence shows lack of employment effects of guaranteed income
20 votes -
The secret Internal Revenue Service files: Trove of never-before-seen records reveal how the wealthiest Americans avoid income tax
43 votes -
Intuit asked us to delete part of this Decoder episode
26 votes -
From "anti-core" to "felt inflation": Or how I calmed my populist demons
25 votes -
99 Cents Only Stores | Bankrupt
3 votes -
Crook made millions by breaking into execs’ Office365 inboxes, US law enforcement says
9 votes -
US DOJ sues Visa, alleges the card issuer monopolizes debit card markets
39 votes -
Up to a quarter of US rental inflation could be due to price-fixing
65 votes -
Development finance done right
3 votes -
Navient reaches $120 million settlement with Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for misleading US student loan borrowers
21 votes -
Small grocers feel squeezed by suppliers, and shoppers bear the pain
30 votes -
Monopoly round-up: Price gouging vs price fixing vs price controls
13 votes -
Debit card that matches the protection of a credit card?
So, I'm debating switching to a debit card for daily purchases, since the mental accounting gets confusing with a credit card and it's easier to overspend. The only thing holding me back is the...
So, I'm debating switching to a debit card for daily purchases, since the mental accounting gets confusing with a credit card and it's easier to overspend. The only thing holding me back is the fraud protection that comes with a credit card. Are there any (US) checking accounts/debit cards that match the level of protection you can expect from a credit card? Is such a thing possible?
8 votes -
Dow Jones drops 864 points, and Japanese stocks suffer worst crash since 1987 amid US economy worries
50 votes -
Japanese stocks rebound after global sell-off; US futures edge up
19 votes -
The Cost Of Thriving Index
24 votes -
"Why you feel poorer than ever: " (Spoiler) "The problem is getting what we need"
31 votes -
GameStop, Nvidia short seller Andrew Left and Citron Capital hit with US Securities and Exchange Commission and criminal fraud charges
11 votes -
Private equity firms should prepare for increased US government scrutiny over healthcare investment
9 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission targets Mastercard in major investigation into AI-based surveillance pricing
17 votes -
Sam Altman's basic-income study is out. Here's what it found.
39 votes -
US appeals court blocks all of Joe Biden's SAVE student debt relief plan
45 votes -
A handful of US grocery stores now have ammo vending machines
24 votes -
US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau takes action against Fifth Third Bank for wrongfully triggering auto repossessions and opening fake bank accounts
20 votes -
Patelco makes minor restorations but no end near for crippling credit union cyber attack
21 votes -
Synapse collapse reveals lack of FDIC protection for US fintech depositors
15 votes -
Working title (insurance)
5 votes -
Inside a violent gang's ruthless crypto-stealing home invasion spree
12 votes -
US congressional testimony on the impact of climate-related disasters on the solvency of homeowner's insurance
18 votes -
Berkshire was too cheap, then too pricey
9 votes -
State Farm asks for huge California home insurance rate increase, signaling financial distress
15 votes -
Any good auto or renters insurance companies?
Well, maybe not good, but any that suck less than the others? I'm in Wisconsin if that matters.
11 votes -
The Tesla party was fun; now comes the lawsuit driven hangover
24 votes -
Elon Musk wins Tesla shareholder vote for $56 billion pay package
23 votes -
US economists report on an intervention that helps low-income families beat the poverty trap
17 votes