SoFi Technologies is one of those stocks that make investors a little crazy. It was up about 3% in a single day and up 2.5% over the previous week, but it was down about 19% over the previous month and another 19% over the previous three. The image becomes even more bizarre when you zoom out: a year-to-date decline of almost 43%, a one-year total return of 22.6%, and a three-year return that has nearly doubled the money of early investors. Few stocks, depending on where you start the clock, tell so many different stories.
Nowadays, you’ll probably come across a stadium or billboard bearing SoFi’s name if you stroll through any midsize American city. Over the past few years, the company that started out as a specialized student loan refinancer has subtly transformed into something more ambitious: a vertically integrated digital bank that offers mortgages, credit cards, checking accounts, and investing tools all through a single app. The long-term return figures might be precisely reflecting this transformation. The market may also be waiting to see if the execution holds up after pricing in that vision.
Despite a recent close of $15.69, the most popular valuation narrative for the stock places its fair value at $14.00. According to that calculation, SoFi is roughly 12% overpriced—not significantly so, but enough to make a cautious buyer think twice. However, the average analyst price target is about 34% higher than the current share price. The tension between those two figures is, in a sense, the entire narrative.
Balance-sheet ownership is what sets SoFi apart from the previous fintech wave. The majority of its app-first rivals rely on partner banks to book loans and hold deposits. SoFi doesn’t. It uses its own deposit base to fund its lending, assumes the credit risk, and attempts to cross-sell members a growing range of products. That is a more capital-intensive and slower method of expansion. It may also be more resilient. The chart may be explained by investors’ tendency to believe this, forget it, and then remember it again.

It’s okay for skeptics to resist. If interest rates move in the wrong direction, net interest margins—the difference between what SoFi makes on loans and what it pays on deposits—may shrink. Fintechs that resemble banks more and more have drawn the attention of regulators. Additionally, it is more difficult to carry out the cross-selling narrative in real life than it is in a slide show, which is meant to convert a student loan customer into a mortgage customer into a brokerage customer. There’s a sense that these uncertainties finally caught up with the share price in 2026.
Even so, it’s difficult to ignore the similarities with other businesses that were misinterpreted for years before the market eventually caught on—or didn’t. Ten years ago, Tesla was subject to similar skepticism. Block and PayPal did the same in their early years. A few of those wagers were very profitable. Some didn’t. In all honesty, SoFi could go either way, and anyone who says otherwise is selling something.
The question for a long-term investor is whether the underlying company is actually increasing revenue, improving margins, and compounding earnings at the rate that bulls anticipate. For a new buyer, the question is whether more suffering is ahead or if a 43% drawdown has done enough. The stock continues to attract large crowds on both sides of the trade because neither question has a clear solution. The dispute will probably be resolved over the next few quarters, at least until the next one begins.
