"BNPL sector harmed from reduced availability of funding, higher funding costs and reduced demand as unemployment spiked...face an even harder hit b/c of reliance on young consumers -~40% of Afterpay’s millennial customers are vulnerable to unemployment"
To stay that POS lending is "having a moment" is a misnomer. Of course retailers want to curb plummeting sales volume by partnering with affirm, sezzle, afterpay, etc to boost conversions
Ultimately dont see how this is beneficial for any party invovled
Affirm seeing merchant signings up 40% from March 1-April 30 vs. Jan 1-Feb 29%
Retail POS lending market opportunity in AU / US / UK from APT
"Total US outstanding balances originated through POS installment lending solutions stood at $94B in 2018. Those balances are expected to exceed $110B in 2019 and to account for around 10% of all unsecured lending."
Australian BNPL lender Zip is buying QuadPay for $270M
"The combined company would have ~3.5M customers and more than 26K merchants, with annual revenue of over A$250 million, Zip said, closing on Afterpay which claims ~5M customers"
"Afterpay’s most-recent financial results—covering 6 months thru Dec 2019—showed late fees, which are $8 in the US and capped at 25% of the transaction size, accounted for 15% of $152M in revenue, or 0.7% of $3.31B in goods / services bought on platform"
Good point by @bradsling in his latest newsletter on networks disintermediation threats to issuers
POS lending is a good example. $MA acquired Vyze last year, partnered with TSYS. $V launched API-based installment solution for issuers. No reason to think this won't continue
$ADS acquiring Bread for $450M to expand into installment lending and BNPL business. Somewhat of a hedge against declining PLCC purchase volumes.
Interested to see if $C, $COF, $SYF makes a similar move
“America’s top 3 lenders — WFC, JPM, BAC — have seen their share of home loan origination fall from 49% in 2010 — 19% in the first half of this year. Quicken became the US’ largest mortgage lender last year. It closed a record $32bn of loans in Q2’19.”