Monday Sep.19, 2022

🛍️ Buy now, pay never? Regulators aim to crack down on BNPL giants like Klarna and PayPal

A case of the BNPL blues (Daniel Harvey Gonzalez/Getty Images)
A case of the BNPL blues (Daniel Harvey Gonzalez/Getty Images)

Hey Snackers,

The lightest Bud isn’t Light: it’s Zero. AB InBev-owned Budweiser is set to promote its booze-free beer at the World Cup in Qatar this November/December, aiming to reconcile its role as the official beer sponsor of a tournament being held in a majority-Muslim country with strict alcohol laws.

Stocks had their worst week since June after a disappointing inflation report and an ominous warning from FedEx heightened economic concerns. The techy Nasdaq index plunged a whopping 5.4% for the week. FedEx shares tanked 21% on Friday (its worst daily loss ever) after it announced major cost-cutting measures on softening demand.

BNPL

Regulators announce plans to crack down on BNPL giants, threatening their path to profits

“Buy now” is the easy part… It’s the “pay later” that gets tricky. Buy now, pay later companies help you sport that $400 Aritzia coat now and pay for it later in monthly installments. BNPLs gained popularity by positioning themselves as trendier credit-card alternatives for Gen Z — with fewer strings attached (think: no interest, just late fees). Now they’re facing serious heat, and they can’t deal with it later:

  • Regulated: Last week the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau outlined plans to regulate BNPL businesses like Klarna, Affirm, PayPal, and Block-owned Afterpay.
  • Risky business: Regulators said BNPLs pose risks to consumers because they lack protections, harvest data, and encourage over-borrowing.
  • Credit rules: Officials plan to regulate BNPLs like credit-card companies, which means BNPLs may have to add pricey safeguards and do more credit checks.

Boom earlier, crash later… BNPL giants thrived during the pandemic when interest rates were low and stimmy cash was flowing. BNPL loans jumped from $2B in 2019 to $24B last year (a 12X increase). But as the economy soured and IOUs increased, so did BNPL’s blues:

  • Gucci to grapes: Mid-pandemic, stimmy-flushed shoppers used BNPL for luxuries like Balenciaga bags. Now 15% of BNPL users are “buying now, paying later” for gas and groceries.
  • Missed payments: ’Flation-stressed folks are increasingly struggling to pay for necessities up front, and more BNPL users are racking up late fees — and failing to repay their loans.

Pain now can mean gains later… BNPL’s looser-than-credit rules helped attract users. But now its lax policies are hurting the bottom line: despite soaring revenues, Affirm’s still unprofitable and Klarna’s losses tripled in the first half as bad debts mounted. Affirm shares are down 75% this year, while Klarna’s valuation dropped 85% in July. Now that BNPL staples face stricter rules (read: higher costs), it may be even more difficult for them to reach profitability short term. But regulation could help them reduce bad debt long term.

Events

Coming up this week...

No Powell pause… aka: Pow-se. On Wednesday the Fed is expected to hike interest rates by a “jumbo” 75 basis points (or even 100) after August inflation came in hotter than expected. Though it slowed from July, inflation was still up 8.3% from last year. The spooky numbers sent stocks tumbling to their worst day in two years. Analysts expected better results since gas prices fell, but food and rent kept rising. Now investors predict even more pain from the Fed chair, who’s committed to fighting #flation with aggressive hikes.

Up in smoke… Cannabis sales are sparking upward worldwide, but not all sellers are feeling the high. Last quarter, Canadian pot giant Aurora Cannabis saw its revenue drop 8% while losses 5X’d as it struggled to cut costs. In the US, canna-fans are starting to trade down for cheaper greens as inflation kills the buzz. Shares of Canadian cana-rivals Tilray and Canopy are down 50%+ this year as US legalization slows, while Aurora’s down 80%. We’ll see whether Aurora’s sales slumped (as analysts forecast) when it hashes out results tomorrow.

Zoom Out

Stories we’re watching...

The Merge went smoothly… but there could be bumps ahead. Ethereum successfully shifted from proof of work (energy-guzzling) to proof of stake (efficient) last week, eliciting relieved cheers from crypto fans. Now investors can stake their ETH to earn yield (think: interest), creating added incentives for crypto titans and hedge funds to hold ether. But there could be trouble ahead: ethereum devs are warning of post-Merge bugs, and the SEC said Thursday that a crypto that allows people to stake coins and earn yield might be a security.

Construction disruption… The pandemic housing boom has gone bust, and it could hit homebuilders hard. In July, new-home construction fell 10% as soaring mortgage rates and high prices make homes less affordable. US home sales have fallen for six months straight, and homebuilder confidence has dropped for eight months (the worst slump since 2007’s collapse). But homebuilding giants Lennar and KB Home, both of whom report Wednesday, posted rising sales last quarter and upheld their growth forecasts. That could be because inventory’s still tight.

ICYMI

Last week's highlights...

  • Photoshop: Adobe agreed to buy design-software startup Figma for $20B — its largest acquisition by far. Cue: Adobe stock had its worst day since 2010, as investors worry that it’s overpaying to quash competition.
  • Searched: The EU ordered Google to pay a record $4B after it lost its appeal to an Android-related antitrust ruling. Crackdowns abroad could increase pressure in the US, where tech regulation has stalled.
  • iCharge: Goldman Sachs’ loss rate on Apple Card loans is the worst among major US credit-card issuers (read: problems with bad FICO scores). Banks with more subprime exposure would feel the hit of a recession first.

What else we’re Snackin’

  • Yikes: Mortgage rates surpassed 6% for the first time since 2008, pushing many hopeful homeowners out of the market. The typical monthly mortgage payment is now roughly $2.3K — up 66% from a year ago.
  • VChina: Chinese investments in US venture-capital funds are on pace to hit $880M this year, the second-highest level in over a decade. President Biden’s urging greater scrutiny of Chinese involvement, especially in chips and AI.
  • Fix: The superrich are hiring “fixers” (aka: luxury-lifestyle managers) to fulfill wild requests. Think: a one-of-a-kind Mercedes, impossible dinner reservations, or even an expedition to explore the Titanic.

This Week

  • Monday: Earnings expected from AutoZone
  • Tuesday: Earnings expected from Stitch Fix and Aurora Cannabis
  • Wednesday: Fed’s interest-rate decision. Earnings expected from General Mills, Lennar, Trip.com, H.B. Fuller Co., and KB Home
  • Thursday: Jobless claims. Earnings expected from Costco, Accenture, FactSet, FedEx, and Olive Garden owner Darden
  • Friday: National Great American Pot Pie Day

Authors of this Snacks own: ethereum and shares of Aurora Cannabis, Block, Canopy Growth, Apple, and Google

ID: 2430617

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The Federal Trade Commission has sued to block big tech, big grocery, big vacuum, and now, big… “affordable luxury handbag.”

Yesterday, the FTC sued to block Tapestry Inc’s $8.5B acquisition of Capri holdings. The agency is worried that a merger between Tapestry, which owns the Coach and Kate Spade brands, and Capri, which owns Michael Kors, would eliminate competition in the market.

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While Capri and Tapestry are two of the largest players in this market, winning an antitrust case won't be so straightforward, as consumers have other options at similar price points, including Marc Jacobs (owned by competitor LVMH), Tory Burch, Cuyana, and Mansur.

The crux of the FTC's argument lies in the scope of the "accessible luxury" handbag market, where Tapestry competes with Michael Kors, with the FTC saying the following:

Where Tapestry and Capri most vigorously compete against one another – mainly between Tapestry’s Coach and Kate Spade brands against Capri’s Michael Kors brand – is in the “accessible luxury” handbag market. Today, Coach, Kate Spade and Michael Kors continuously monitor each other’s handbag brands to determine pricing and performance, and they each use that information to make strategic decisions, including whether to raise or lower handbag prices.

The deal would eliminate fierce head-to-head competition on many important attributes including on price, discounting, and design. Tens of millions of Americans that purchase Coach, Kade Spade, and Michael Kors products could face higher prices

While Capri and Tapestry are two of the largest players in this market, winning an antitrust case won't be so straightforward, as consumers have other options at similar price points, including Marc Jacobs (owned by competitor LVMH), Tory Burch, Cuyana, and Mansur.

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Adding fuel to the fee fire was the launch of Runes, a new protocol that lets developers create memecoins on top of the bitcoin blockchain. The debut was so popular that fees popped as traders fought for limited block space.

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