Yotta does not hold any funds themselves. You connect your bank and ach/wire money into an Evolve bank account.
The problem is that unbeknownst to users, Evolve had no record of what belonged to which user—it all came via Synapse on behalf of Yotta. And when Synapse went bankrupt, everyone pointed fingers about where the money is and who it belongs to.
OTOH, some users seem able to talk to Apex about their shares that had been via an "app", and are still frustrated… with Apex:
> My own personal experience with Apex - I transferred measly GME positions out of Stash app (Apex) to Fidelity in June. My Apex/Stash account is still locked from this transfer. My CS requests have been escalated to the broker (Apex) repeatedly. Finally today, Apex confirmed they will unlock my account in 4 business days. That’s 34-36 calendar days after share transfer. All this DD is much smarter than me, but even in little ways these big explanations offer a simple reason for these shenanigans. I have NEVER had my account locked for share transfer past the confirmed transfer date for any other position. They had the gall to tell me today that they needed to speak with Fidelity directly to confirm receipt and Fidelity “received” my shares 3 weeks ago, which was 3 weeks after I initiated it. Why all the runaround?
Will reply directly to your comment, as I started the concern in this thread, and I think it's important to point out that the situation is materially different based on what jjmaxwell4 has responded.
With Evolve, money was just pooled into an "FBO" ("for benefit of") account, and not ledgered directly to individual users. This is apparently not the case with Apex since you can verify your balance with them directly. They report your balance, so if any money goes missing, you should have an insurable case with them directly.
Yep. The bank has to require reconciliation of the accounts that are active in the FBO. Oddly enough, there is zero standardization in banking regulations and recon is an afterthought and rarely done. Doubly so if you are talking B2B.
Reconciliation costs a lot of money. They typically just watch the balance and and bark at the fintech for more money when it runs out. There are people at every bank calling partners every day demanding wires for overdrawn FBO accounts. Buyer beware.
The problem is that unbeknownst to users, Evolve had no record of what belonged to which user—it all came via Synapse on behalf of Yotta. And when Synapse went bankrupt, everyone pointed fingers about where the money is and who it belongs to.