PayPal entry punishes Australia's pricey buy-now-pay-later stocks
[SINGAPORE] Shares in Australia's Afterpay and its smaller consumer lender rivals tumbled for a second day on Wednesday, as the entry of US giant PayPal into the buy-now-pay-later sector sent investors scrambling to re-price its frothy stocks.
Afterpay fell as much as 12.4 per cent, before paring losses, and has shed about A$2.4 billion (S$2.40 billion) in market capitalisation in the two trading sessions since PayPal Holdings said it would offer small, short-term loans to US customers.
"Having such a large customer base already in the US, PayPal certainly throws a spanner in the works for their expansion plans," said James Tao, a market analyst at CommSec in Sydney.
Rivals also tumbled, with Zip Co Ltd dropping as far as 17.7 per cent and Sezzle Inc 15.5 per cent before both trimmed losses. They have each lost more than 23 per cent in two days. Openpay Group and Splitit each fell about 9 per cent.
Afterpay and other alternative credit firms, which offer small instalment loans to shoppers and make money by charging merchants a commission, are riding the boom in online shopping that has been sparked by the coronavirus pandemic.
The US is regarded as the sector's largest growth market and is a key focus for most of the Australia-listed buy-now-pay-later companies.
GET BT IN YOUR INBOX DAILY
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
PayPal's US offering is a fee and interest-free loan for purchases between US$30 and US$600, repayable in four instalments over six weeks.
That is broadly similar to Afterpay's product, which has proven popular enough among millennials to convince investors of its growth potential.
A 900 per cent rally in the share price since March has catapulted the company into Australia's top 20 largest listed firms, even though it has never turned a profit.
Afterpay, Zip Co, Sezzle, Openpay and Splitit did not immediately respond to emailed requests for comment. Zip Co's chief executive officer was quoted in the Australian Financial Review as saying his firm expected and is prepared for more competition.
REUTERS
KEYWORDS IN THIS ARTICLE
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Banking & Finance
AI risks to financial stability are already a central bank worry
DBS CEO Piyush Gupta sells S$2.7 million worth of bank shares
Over S$646,000 spent to store, maintain, safeguard assets in money laundering case
Philippines eyes US$2 billion in its first global bond this year
UniCredit jumps past 60 billion euro market cap to join elite club
New Thai finance minister downplays row with central bank