Buy-Now-Pay-Later Tech Pioneers Squeezed as Big Banks Muscle In

Buy-Now-Pay-Later Tech Pioneers Squeezed as Big Banks Muscle In · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Tech mavericks who made buy-now-pay-later an option for shoppers worldwide are grappling with mounting losses and investor skepticism. Now big finance is on their tail.

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British retail giants NatWest Group Plc, HSBC Holdings Plc, Barclays Plc and Virgin Money as well as Visa Inc. and Mastercard Inc. have recently launched new ways to spread the cost of purchases as they cater to the gradual shift from credit cards to the kinds of services offered by newcomers Klarna Bank AB, Affirm Holdings Inc. and Afterpay.

“Even though banks are just getting started, they are well positioned to scale fast,” said Dilnisin Bayel, a managing director who specializes in credit in Europe at Accenture Plc. “Although the concept of paying in installments is more than a century old, the real-time delivery of BNPL on any card is new and convenient for users. Banks have an opportunity to put their unique stamp on the offer.”

This growing competition adds to pressure on buy-now-pay-later providers, which allow customers to split online purchases via their own apps or an extra button on retailers’ checkout pages. After several years of rapid growth, rising borrowing costs risk eroding their margins just as soaring inflation makes credit more tempting -- and more dangerous -- for many customers across Europe and the US.

And investors, who viewed Klarna as more valuable than some of Europe’s banks last year, are rethinking their enthusiasm. Klarna’s latest fundraising in July slashed its valuation to $6.7 billion from $45.6 billion, while in the US, Affirm’s market capitalization has dropped more than 70% this year to $8.4 billion.

Traditional credit providers tend to have more funding and longstanding relationships with millions of customers, giving them a headstart in challenging the newcomers. They also have experience of the sort of regulatory clampdown that’s on the horizon for BNPL in the UK and elsewhere, with large firms encouraging stricter rules in future, to the chagrin of some startups.

There’s lucrative business at stake: Barclays, for example, made £541 million, or about 16% of its UK income, from its Barclaycard UK consumer lending arm in the first half of the year. To be sure, it’s smaller than its business lending or mortgage operations, but it would be painful to lose this customer base.