Tapping the Brakes on BNPL Lending or a Credit Card Option?

BNPL: Soon to Be a Market Shakeout?

BNPL: Soon to Be a Market Shakeout?

There is no question about the popularity of Buy Now Pay Later Lending (BNPL). If you did your holiday shopping online this year, you would have encountered BNPL at major retailers. But as a payment option, is BNPL a viable, sustainable offering?

Although BNPL provides easy lending options, we see credit quality issues brewing. Our view, expressed in Mercator’s most recent Viewpoint, draws data from the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. Aggressive lending is generating very high default rates.

There is an essential calculus to lending. Based on the loan type, you attract customers who pay for their borrowing needs.  The loan principle plus the incurred interest becomes the total cost of the loan. Additional revenue comes from the merchant who pays interchange or discounts the goods and services.

Revenue offset lender costs. The costs cover marketing, acquisition, funding costs, credit risk, and servicing.  The remainder is profit.  Before those profits are realized, the lender must pay the expenses for bad credits–those customers who do not repay. In typical cases, one bad debt can negate the profit generated from 25 accounts.

That is the concern of AISC. If delinquencies run high, losses will be linear. Creditors will assume risks that they will not be able to cover or have to generate high fees to cover the risk.

Now, consider today’s read, which comes from The (Canadian) Chronicle Herald. The article announces, “Capital One Stops’ Risky’ Buy-Now Pay Later Credit Card Transactions.  Bankers, take note!

Several top U.S. banks built their versions of BNPL Lending. Instead of aggressive lending, credit card companies such as American Express (Plan It, Pay It), Chase (My Chase Plan), and Citi (Flex Pay) use a model described in this Harvard Business School Study, titled ‘”Repayment-by-Purchase” Helps Consumers Reduce Credit Card Debt.’

The model is different than BNPL because it works within the consumer’s credit card account and allows cardholders to isolate a transaction and achieve the same result as BNPL. The difference is that these consumers are credit qualified.

The BNPL space is exciting because it brings easy credit for consumers. But for banks, there is a need to be prudent about lending.  And, with this comes structure and ensuring the consumer has the ability to repay.

Overview provided by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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