Craton
Mostly passive, contrarian.
- Joined
- 6 February 2013
- Posts
- 1,745
- Reactions
- 2,493
One thing the young ones probably pay scant regard to is their credit score because BNPL has an effect on that too.That's the reason I am not keen on those type of stock, still dip in 1k on ZIP to test the water. Lots of ple esp the young ones to get fast money to have things NOW n why worry about the small monthly fee, they never think it will add up.
Well pointed out...but the young one, don't care. Maybe I should said, majority are not at that stage of life that needs to borrow huge sum to buy a house so cr rating would be water off duck's back.One thing the young ones probably pay scant regard to is their credit score because BNPL has an effect on that too.
It's actually pretty nice to not give a @#£& about your credit score.bizarrely in 1975 my credit rating was terrible , because i had never borrowed before ( so had no record of debt repayment )
i bet my credit rating is still terrible after that loan @ 17.5% , i never borrowed again ( or even applied for credit cards or a margin loan )
and just to make you cringe further between 2011 and 2016 i had a great time investing in corporate debt ( despite MY appalling credit rating )
to me the credit game is simply unbelievable ( but popular with the masses )
Thanks for letting us know, that's some pretty big news...The government is releasing its proposal for regulation of BNPL's today.
“The CFPB is concerned about accumulating debt, regulatory arbitrage, and data harvesting in a consumer credit market already quickly changing with technology,” the regulator said in its statement..
“Afterpay welcomes efforts to ensure that there are appropriate regulatory protections for consumers in the diverse BNPL industry, and that providers are meeting high standards and delivering positive consumer outcomes while protecting their data.”
“Afterpay provides consumers with better transparency, lower costs, and better budgeting tools than traditional forms of credit and promotes responsible spending.”
i avoided them all , i couldn't see how they would make regular profits , i expect in time for increased regulationWhich one?
- none of them
Why?
- too risky
KH
And how will the labor government treat the BNPL sector which has largely escaped any regulation or scrutiny from the Liberal* governments? Crushing BNPL with regulation is not going to lose labor any votes and it will make them look 'tough' on dealing with corporations (without actually touching any corporation that matters).If this article is correct, it sounds as though the buy now pay later bubble is bursting, I didn't get onboard because I thought it was a too good to be true story. Missed out on a hell of a profit though.
As the economy tightens up, I wonder if the peer to peer lending will be the next cab off the rank.
If the crunch of cabbage in their KFC burgers was not enough to alert consumers to the tough times ahead, the Reserve Bank shocking the market with its biggest rate rise in 22 years probably did the trick.Buy now, pay later on the brink: ‘The entire market is collapsing’
The buy now, pay later sector’s rising bad debts and losses have become more apparent after pandemic stimulus payments from the government ended last year, and investors are worried.www.smh.com.au
And no sector will be watching the consumer crunch more closely than the buy now, pay later (BNPL) operators. The BNPL outfits have little room to manoeuvre as they try to convince the market that they have a future as a viable stand-alone business and won’t be killed off by a feature on your Apple or Commonwealth Bank app.
BNPL in the US, an earnings miss...
Affirm Cuts 500 Employees, 19% of Its Workforce
The buy now, pay later company expects as much as $39 million in restructuring costs.www.wsj.com
“Growing rapidly over the last few years, and especially through the pandemic, we consciously hired ahead of the revenue required to support the size of the team,” Levchin said, but rising rates have dampened consumer spending levels and upped Affirm’s cost of borrowing.
Affirm had 2,552 employees as of June 30, 2022, according to its latest 10-K filing.
“It is an economic reality that we have to live within our means and match growth of headcount with growth in revenue, but just for the record, what we’ve done is we’ve rolled back six months of engineering hiring,” Levchin said on Affirm’s earnings call, according to a transcript provided by AlphaSense/Sentieo.
Today, it’s a little bit tougher to justify having things that will create the next $1 billion business three years from now built today,” he added on the earnings call. “We’ll have to build it a year from now.”
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?