This post was originally published on this site
https://i-invdn-com.investing.com/news/LYNXNPEC0E0NG_M.jpgShares in Affirm, which had been falling for the past four sessions and were on course for their worst day since the company went public in January, jumped more than 27% in extended trading.
Affirm’s expanded partnership will allow all eligible U.S. purchases of $50 and more on Amazon to be split into simple monthly payments, which was earlier available to only select customers.
Amazon will also receive multiple tranches of warrants to purchase shares of Affirm’s Class A common stock, the company said, adding that it would be the e-commerce giant’s only third-party, non-credit card, BNPL service provider in the United States through January 2023 as part of the amended agreement.
Additionally, Affirm will also be embedded as a payment method in Amazon Pay’s digital wallet in the country.
The BNPL industry took off last year, as homebound consumers opted for online shopping and used pay later options to make purchases easier on their wallets.
BNPL firms charge merchants a fee for offering their customers small, point-of-sale loans which are paid back in interest-free installments, bypassing credit checks in the process.
The company now expects current-quarter revenue in the range of $320 million to $330 million, above estimates of $296.09 million.
Total revenue rose to $269.4 million in the first quarter from $173.9 million a year earlier. Analysts on average were expecting revenue of $248.23 million, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
Affirm’s active consumers more than doubled in the past quarter to 8.7 million, while merchants on its platform rose to 102,000 from just 6,500 a year earlier.