Built by operators, for operators.
Yieli is for investors who already know what a deed sale is, what a federal super-priority lien looks like, and what a botched wire window costs. We built the agent to do the work. You set the policy, approve the rollout, and get your weekends back.
Who runs this.
Yieli is small on purpose. The people writing the code are the same people who will answer your call when a wire is due in 11 hours. No layered support, no account-manager games.
Marcos is the founder of Yieli and its sister company Axiru, a financial decision-control platform governing refund and payout decisions for Stripe-first companies in production today. He writes the code, answers the email, and approves every wire. Based in Miami Beach.
- The agent does the work. You set the rules. You write the strategy once. The agent runs it across every sale, every parcel, every county. That's what unlocks ten times the capital velocity per investor.
- Settlement is the moat. Anyone can pull data. Very few can fire county-correct certified funds inside a 24-hour window, every time, with a receipt for every dollar.
- One vertical, done properly. Tax deeds are too small and too regulated for the big platforms to care about, and too specialized for a generic agent to handle. We only do this. We do it right.
- Compliance is documented, not assumed. For every county we support, we keep a signed record of what's allowed, citing the statute and the platform's own terms. Before any bid is attempted.
Yieli and Axiru share the same engine: an append-only decision ledger, a shadow-before-live rollout, and a signed policy evaluator. Separate companies, separate customers, the same standard for high-value economic actions taken by software.
Axiru governs merchant-side refund and payout decisions on Stripe. Yieli governs investor-side acquisition decisions at county tax-deed auctions. Different worlds, same craft.