Corporate DispatchPro

Fintech payment pioneers face war

Fintech disruptors are starting to get disrupted. Afterpay, an $18 billion Australian “buy now pay later” company, has lost about 10% of its market value after U.S. payments giant Paypal said it would offer similar products. The faster this funky form of

- KAREN KWOK

Buy now pay later groups let customers get goods upfront but pay for them over time in interest-free instalment­s. Shoppers only go through a loose credit check and pay modest fees if they miss a payment. The BNPL provider makes most of its money by charging the merchant. This new spin on consumer credit has proven remarkably successful among millennial­s and spawned a host of fast-growing competitor­s, from $5.5 billion privately-held group Klarna to Sydney-listed Afterpay. The latter’s shares have risen over 800% since the March low this year.

Success breeds imitation. On Monday the $247 billion transfer group Paypal announced a similar instalment offering for its U.S. customers. Worse, it will bundle the product into the fees it already charges retailers to use its online payments service, currently about 2% of the value of each transactio­n. Afterpay typically charges fees of 4%-5%.

Paypal’s move will make it much harder for the BNPL providers to expand in the United States, one of world’s biggest market for online goods, worth about $600 billion in annual sales. Afterpay’s American business grew threefold in the year to June and accounted for 36% of its total sales. To keep growing, Klarna or Afterpay may have to lower fees, a tall order when both are still lossmaking. And

competitio­n is just getting started: credit card groups Mastercard and American Express have recently announced copycat products. Amazon and Google could follow.

The arrival of competitio­n from bigger players may also prod regulators to look more closely at buy now pay later products. In Australia, Afterpay’s home market, the Australian Securities and Investment­s Commission is considerin­g imposing the same legal obligation­s on BNPL companies as traditiona­l lenders. In Sweden, regulators are increasing­ly worried that the product may drag consumers into debt.

Despite the recent share price fall, Afterpay is still valued at 25 times forward sales, a premium to Paypal’s 10 times multiple, according to Refinitiv data. With both competitio­n and regulatory pressure growing, investors who sell now may avoid paying later.

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