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1. dmitry+(OP)[view] [source] 2022-05-19 06:50:02
Promising a guaranteed 15% return is fraud. There is no place in reality where you can * guarantee * that kind of return.
replies(6): >>devout+o >>irjust+i1 >>usrn+S4 >>noway4+s7 >>Khelav+d9 >>charci+pk
2. devout+o[view] [source] 2022-05-19 06:54:38
>>dmitry+(OP)
They explain the risks on their website: https://stablegains.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/4402687751...
replies(2): >>ihalip+91 >>bsamue+f1
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3. ihalip+91[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:02:40
>>devout+o
If there are risks, how can the 15% be guaranteed?
replies(2): >>devout+a3 >>cinnta+L4
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4. bsamue+f1[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:03:26
>>devout+o
They explain the risks, while excluding the risk of, you know, the stablecoin depegging.

This is like the 10th algo stablecoin to eat shit. You would think by now, a risk person could adequately describe these existential risks.

Stablegains was a rent collecting middleman. The risks are not characterized adequately on this page, and there ought to be some level of liability.

replies(3): >>Majest+q2 >>smugma+Z3 >>dmitry+J4
5. irjust+i1[view] [source] 2022-05-19 07:03:53
>>dmitry+(OP)
That's a good question. Are you liable for fraud in this case? What about another case?

Say you promise 0.75% because the bank promised you 1% and you skim 0.25%. Is that scenario fraud? Probably not. At what point is it actually fraud?

My guess is it's not the yield but the loss of deposits.

replies(2): >>Ekaros+w1 >>nowher+P1
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6. Ekaros+w1[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:05:44
>>irjust+i1
At the point you don't have capability to pay the 0.75% yourself.
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7. nowher+P1[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:08:20
>>irjust+i1
You are moving the goal post here. 15% is not 0.75%. The probability of returning 15% consistently is significantly lower than 0.75%.

If you guaranteed 0.75% to your customers and do not deliver, then you are liable. What you are describing is arbitrage and not what this scenario is about.

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8. Majest+q2[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:14:02
>>bsamue+f1
Where do they specifically exclude the risk of depegging?

From their website : "As Stablegains is not a traditional US bank, the funds are not secured by the FDIC. While we aim to make every effort to understand and mitigate everything that can possibly go wrong, there is still a non-zero risk you can lose your deposit. Our advice is to diversify and never invest all of your savings in a single place."

Of course they are selling themselves as pretty safe, and I'm sure they thought they were. But as you mention, it's like the 10th stablecoin to drop, so it's not exactly a surprise that crypto is a risky investment in any case.

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9. devout+a3[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:19:38
>>ihalip+91
Where do they say it's guaranteed?
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10. smugma+Z3[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:27:27
>>bsamue+f1
“There is a non-zero risk that the peg does not recover to 100%.”
replies(1): >>nrmitc+R4
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11. dmitry+J4[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:32:22
>>bsamue+f1
They added a much more reasonable risk explanation after the event happened. Click the link that the submission is. Look at the before and after pictures
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12. cinnta+L4[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:32:30
>>ihalip+91
"You can now earn up to 15% APY interest on your cash with Stablegains. This is 30x higher than in your traditional bank*."

Up to

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13. nrmitc+R4[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:33:07
>>smugma+Z3
If you’re taking this from their Twitter thread after this whole situation happened, that is definitely not the same thing as an upfront risk factor when collecting investments from people.
replies(1): >>smugma+b7
14. usrn+S4[view] [source] 2022-05-19 07:33:13
>>dmitry+(OP)
Most marketing is arguably fraudulent. I don't think these scams are good at all but part of me really wishes there were more just to force people to think twice when they see marketing from eg Apple or Tesla.

EDIT: s/advertising/marketing/g I don't really think of them as separate but that's a good point.

replies(1): >>mdemar+z5
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15. mdemar+z5[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:42:38
>>usrn+S4
Tesla doesn't pay for ads.
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16. smugma+b7[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 07:58:09
>>nrmitc+R4
https://stablegains.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/4402680705...

Article is from July 2021 (according to Google), updated 7 days ago

17. noway4+s7[view] [source] 2022-05-19 08:01:09
>>dmitry+(OP)
For the sake of being a pedant, your statement is incorrect: the U.S. federal fund rate was 15% in 1981, making CDs and T-bills yield 15% APY for the products bought that year. So that kind of return has a place in reality. Granted, those were different times, different economic climate and exceptional fed actions. What you probably mean is that promising anything that exceeds SOFR + say 2 percentage points has a risk premium that should be disclosed.
replies(1): >>devout+Pi
18. Khelav+d9[view] [source] 2022-05-19 08:22:57
>>dmitry+(OP)
Credit cards issue debt on promised 15%-24.99% returns all the time..
replies(1): >>throwa+Od
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19. throwa+Od[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 09:09:50
>>Khelav+d9
The fact those returns aren't guaranteed is a big part of why they are so high to begin with. Credit card debt is unsecured (no collateral put up to be seized in the event of a default), creditors can walk away from the debt and the issuer will never receive a cent.
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20. devout+Pi[view] [source] [discussion] 2022-05-19 10:09:36
>>noway4+s7
I remember back the 80s when my regular savings account paid 6%.
21. charci+pk[view] [source] 2022-05-19 10:29:06
>>dmitry+(OP)
From what I can tell they weren't promising a guaranteed return. Although their landing page used to not say "up to 15%" they had a section in their knowledgebase saying 15% APY is just an upper bound.
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