Confirmed collectibles Chairman and CEO Max Lifchen told CNBC that despite the market’s poor performance this year, American consumers — and Affirm customers — are spending healthily.
“The American consumer is alive and well. They’re shopping and buying and paying their loans, at least to be sure well. Overall, things are going according to plan, and the turmoil in the stock markets doesn’t seem to have a real impact on our core business doing really well.” “Mad Money”.
company shares rose more than 20% to around $22.50 on Friday, the day after the lender’s last quarterly earnings report, Buy Now Pay Later, which saw a lower-than-expected loss. Affirm also beat the highest estimates and said it is expanding its partnership with Shopify.
“We’ve been the partner of choice, if you will, for all of these really great companies that fuel American e-commerce and we’ve done really well there. And that’s where all our growth comes in, and yet we also have a program that’s growing fantastically…merchant self-service,” Livchin said, noting that Affirm also has partnerships with Walmart And Amazon.
Affirm opened Friday near $25 per share. But that is still down 85% since its all-time high of $176.65 in November.
Affirm hasn’t released its full-year fiscal 2023 outlook or full-year guidance yet. It plans to present these numbers in the company’s next earnings report.
However, Affirm’s founder, Livchin, sounded optimistic about the company’s growth prospects.
“Some of our competitors recently posted 15% annual growth rates, some of them aren’t public so I really don’t know. You can see from my numbers that we’re doing really well and we’re doing it, really good quality returns and the economics for a really good year.” “Everyone should switch to buy now, pay later.”
“Web maven. Infuriatingly humble beer geek. Bacon fanatic. Typical creator. Music expert.”
More Stories
Bank of Japan decision, China PMI, Samsung earnings
Dow Jones Futures: Microsoft, MetaEngs Outperform; Robinhood Dives, Cryptocurrency Plays Slip
Strategist explains why investors should buy Mag 7 ‘now’