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June 20 (Reuters) - Private equity firm KKR (KKR.N) has agreed to purchase a substantial portion, or up to 40 billion euros ($43.71 billion), of payments company PayPal's (PYPL.O) buy now, pay later (BNPL) loans in Europe, the companies said on Tuesday. After the deal closes, PayPal expects to allocate roughly $1 billion to incremental share repurchases in 2023, contributing to an updated outlook of about $5 billion in total share repurchases so far this year. PayPal last year processed more than $20 billion of BNPL payment volume globally, up nearly 160% from 2021. Since launching its BNPL service in 2020, PayPal has issued more than 200 million loans to more than 30 million customers globally. The company said it will continue to remain responsible for all customer-facing activities, including underwriting and servicing associated with its European BNPL products.
Persons: BNPL, Brett Horn, Horn, Manya Saini, Hannah Lang, Arun Koyyur, Will Dunham Organizations: KKR, PayPal, Morningstar Research Services, Thomson Locations: Europe, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, Bengaluru, Washington
June 20 (Reuters) - Private equity firm KKR (KKR.N) has agreed to purchase a substantial portion, or up to 40 billion euros ($43.71 billion), of payments company PayPal's (PYPL.O) buy now, pay later (BNPL) loans in Europe, the companies said on Tuesday. After the deal closes, PayPal expects to allocate roughly $1 billion to incremental share repurchases in 2023, contributing to an updated outlook of about $5 billion in total share repurchases so far this year. PayPal last year processed more than $20 billion of BNPL payment volume globally, up nearly 160% from 2021. Since launching its BNPL service in 2020, PayPal has issued more than 200 million loans to more than 30 million customers globally. The company said it will continue to remain responsible for all customer-facing activities, including underwriting and servicing associated with its European BNPL products.
Persons: BNPL, Brett Horn, Horn, Manya Saini, Hannah Lang, Arun Koyyur, Will Dunham Organizations: KKR, PayPal, Morningstar Research Services, Thomson Locations: Europe, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, Bengaluru, Washington
While most companies struggled during the pandemic, digital-payment companies including PayPal thrived as consumers were forced to depend more on online transactions. But as pandemic restrictions began to ease, PayPal's stock growth started to fall off. And while PayPal's total payment volume has seen continuous gains, its stock growth has slowed, with rising competition in the digital-payment space being a major contributing factor. "There's a positive and a negative to the fact that PayPal is so focused on e-commerce," said Brett Horn, an analyst at Morningstar. Watch the video to find out more about how Paypal makes its money and why it has been struggling in recent years.
The San Jose, California-based digital payments company said on Tuesday it would lay off 7% of its workforce, or around 2,000 employees, a move in line with analyst expectations and the firm's previous commitment to rein in costs. PayPal has been under pressure for most of last year, as surging inflation and fears of a recession limited digital payments and e-commerce spending. Some analysts suspect the latest job cuts were under pressure from Elliot, which took a stake in the company in August. PayPal still has potential to "meaningfully improve margins over time," Horn added, indicating the company has further room to cut costs. The company cut its annual revenue growth forecast when it reported its third-quarter results in November.
Jan 27 (Reuters) - Mastercard Inc (MA.N) and Visa Inc (V.N) will rely on China reopening to give travel spending a boost, Wall Street analysts said, as the pace of growth in other parts of the world eases from a post-pandemic boom. Executives at the payments companies on Thursday pointed to further room for travel recovery in China, which earlier this month reopened its borders after dropping its stringent COVID-19 control measures. "However, the reopening of China should act as a modest boost." Shares of Visa climbed nearly 3% on Friday, while Mastercard was up nearly 1% in choppy trading. "Consumer spending has remained surprisingly resilient, but reopening has not been worked through in earnest – especially in Asia where there is pent-up travel demand post China reopening," said Macquarie Group analyst Paul Golding.
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