Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski spoke at a Fintech event held in London on Monday, April 4th, 2022.
Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg via Getty Images
Swedish fintech company Klarna became an exclusive provider of buying now, paying for a loan after Walmart, robbing the partnership away from rival affirmation, CNBC learned.
Klarna, who has just revealed her intention to make it public in the US, will provide loans to Walmart customers in stores and online through onePay, a majority of retailers, according to people with knowledge of the situation they have been refused to talk about the partnership.
OnePay, which has updated its brand name since 1 this month, processes the user experience through the app, with Klarna making loan underwriting decisions ranging from 3 to 36 months, with annual interest rates ranging from 10% to 36%, people said.
The new products will be released in the coming weeks and will be expanded to all Walmart channels by the holiday season.
The move will raise the conflict between Affirm and Klarna, two of the world’s biggest BNPL players, as set to be exposed. Both companies claim to offer better alternatives to borrowers than credit cards, but Affirm is more US-centric and has been available since 2021, while Klarna’s network is more global.
This deal is the perfect time for Klarna as it prepares one of the most anticipated IPOs of the year. Since 2021, after a shortage of large-scale technology lists in the US, the Klarna IPO will become a key test for the industry. The private market valuation was a roller coaster. It surged to $46 billion in 2021, then crashed 85% the following year amid a wider decline in high-flying fintech companies.
CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski has been working to improve Klarna’s outlook. The company returns to profitability in 2023, and its valuation is currently around $15 billion, analysts say it roughly matches its positive public market value.
To declare, the move could be seen as a blow at a time when tech stocks are particularly vulnerable. The company’s stock, run by CEO Max Levchin, who co-founder of PayPal, has surged since its 2021 IPO and collapsed. The lender’s shares fell 18% this year.
Positive executives frequently mention their partnership with Big Merchants as a key factor in purchasing volume and customer acquisition. In November, AFFIRM’s Chief Revenue Officer Wayne Pommen referred to Walmart and other partnerships, including Amazon, Shopify and Target, as “Crown Jewel Partnerships.”
A positive spokesman declined to comment.
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The deal was equally consequence for Walmart One Pay, surged to a previous valuation of $2.5 billion just two years after rolling out a series of products to its customers.
The startup currently has over 3 million active customers and earns revenue at run rates of over $200 million per year.
As part of pushing it to penetrate areas adjacent to its core business, Walmart executives are promoting OnePay’s potential to become a one-stop shop for Americans who are not serviced by traditional banks.
Walmart is the world’s largest retailer and says it has 255 million weekly customers. It offers a startup, another company backed by Walmart and Ribbit Capital.
Last year, Walmart-backed Fintech began offering BNPL loans on Aisles and Walmart’s checkout pages, CNBC reported at the time. That led to speculation that it would eventually drive away Affirm, which has been Walmart’s exclusive BNPL loan provider since 2019.
The move that OnePay will partner with Klarna rather than doing it alone shows that it sees its advantage by going with a provider of seasoned scales rather than using its own solutions.
The Walmart logo appears outside the store near Bloomsburg.
Paul Weaver | Lightrocket | Getty Images
OnePay’s push towards consumer financing is expected to accelerate Walmart customers’ conversion into Fintech app users. Cash-bound consumers are increasingly relying on loans to meet their needs, and installment loans are considered wedges that provide users with the banking, savings and payment capabilities that OnePay already has built.
Americans held a record $1.21 trillion in credit card debt in the fourth quarter last year, about $441 billion more than their 2021 balance, according to data from the Reserve Bank of New York.
Next is a One-Pay branded credit card offered with the help of a new bank partner after Walmart successfully concludes its partnership with Capital One.
“We look forward to this new path to not only provide installment credits, but also revolving credits,” Walmart CFO John David Rainey told investors in June.
– Mackenzie Sigalos and Melissa Repko of CNBC contributed to this report.
