Bangkok Post

Walmart starts fintech firm with backer of Robinhood

- MATT TOWNSEND JENNY SURANE

In a bid to better leverage its millions of customers, retail giant Walmart Inc created a fintech start-up to win more of their spending.

The company has formed a partnershi­p with Ribbit Capital, an investor in stock-trading platform Robinhood, to start a venture that “will bring together Walmart’s retail knowledge and scale with Ribbit’s fintech expertise to deliver tech-driven financial experience­s tailored to Walmart’s customers and associates,” according to a statement.

Financial technology, or fintech, companies aim to give consumers ways to save, borrow and invest online or via phone without dealing with a traditiona­l bank.

Walmart will own a majority of the new venture, but didn’t provide more specific details.

Walmart’s head-to-head competitio­n with Amazon.com Inc means it is increasing­ly growing beyond retail.

The company is trying to reinvent itself, including launching its own lowcost health clinics and getting into the insurance business.

On the tech front, it emerged in late 2020 as a potential bidder for TikTok’s US business after earlier in the year selling its Vudu streaming platform to Comcast Corp’s Fandango.

The goal of Walmart may be to build an infrastruc­ture like Alibaba Group Holding Limited has in Asia, where it’s both an online retailer and a major financial services provider — all in the same platform.

Walmart has long sought to have a bigger foothold in financial services — interests that can be traced back to at least the 1990s.

The world’s largest banks have long rebuffed those efforts, though, arguing that businesses pertaining to finance and commerce should be separate.

Even so, Walmart has its hands in many parts of the financial world.

At Walmart MoneyCente­r locations, consumers can cash cheques, receive tax preparatio­n services and send money overseas.

That, combined with spending in its stores, its credit and prepaid cards, and seeing foot traffic to bank branches in its locations, means Walmart has access to a trove of informatio­n about the ways consumers manage their finances.

Banks in recent months have grown increasing­ly worried that Walmart and other retail giants would get into lending and other areas after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) late last year approved a rule that will allow non-financial firms to seek banking charters.

An effort by the retailer Rakuten Inc to set up its own bank is seen as a major test case in an attempt to break down the traditiona­l barrier between banking and commerce.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Walmart Inc has long sought to have a bigger foothold in financial services — interests that can be traced back to at least the 1990s.
BLOOMBERG Walmart Inc has long sought to have a bigger foothold in financial services — interests that can be traced back to at least the 1990s.

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