Connect with us

Affirm CEO Levchin Feels Good About Buy Now, Pay Later

Affirm Holdings CEO Max Levchin talks about the company’s latest earnings report. The buy-now, pay-later firm’s 2024 forecast for annual transaction volume came in below expectations. He joins Ed Ludlow and Caroline Hyde on “Bloomberg Technology.” ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube: Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde…

Published

on

Affirm Holdings CEO Max Levchin talks about the company’s latest earnings report. The buy-now, pay-later firm’s 2024 forecast for annual transaction volume came in below expectations. He joins Ed Ludlow and Caroline Hyde on “Bloomberg Technology.”
——–
Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube:

Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow here:

Get the latest in tech from Silicon Valley and around the world here:

Connect with us on…
Twitter:
Facebook:
Instagram:

Continue Reading
Advertisement
11 Comments

11 Comments

  1. @foenix8094

    February 9, 2024 at 1:50 pm

    Imagine feeling good about burying people in debt. I could never be wealthy because i wouldn’t feel comfortable about exploiting people.

    • @tvm73836

      February 9, 2024 at 2:00 pm

      Completely agree with you. But unfortunately in the US decent values is not a requirement for business success.

    • @g.o.9513

      February 11, 2024 at 5:04 pm

      Affirm makes payments more honest based on financial history and other criteria. Affirm will say no and not approve your for a loan. You’d be surprised they actually deny people often and prevent delinquencies. A credit card has hidden fees and will never say no as long as you can keep spending, even past your credit card limit in some cases. Also, credit card companies do not have dynamic spending limits. Usually credit card limits are fixed and don’t change even if you loose your job or financial circumstances change that credit limit will remain the same. Ask yourself if that is honest. The best way to clarity is to question what you think of that past, and credit cards have truly never been as honest with the consumer as Affirm – the leader of payments. @@tvm73836

  2. @TROUROCKS

    February 9, 2024 at 3:08 pm

    bottom feeder

  3. @christinejoybautista6875

    February 9, 2024 at 4:01 pm

    Because of god…all my blessing share all nation

  4. @christinejoybautista6875

    February 9, 2024 at 4:03 pm

    From november 2023 until now 2024 working my account…how many year i didnt open…

  5. @commonsense504

    February 9, 2024 at 4:28 pm

    H. Weinstein, J. Epstein, W. Allen, M. Zuckerberg, A. Derschowitz, B. Gates, M. Bloomberg…

    See any patterns emerging yet?

    • @ipdavid1043

      February 10, 2024 at 7:34 pm

      Spot on

    • @ipdavid1043

      February 10, 2024 at 7:34 pm

      Khazars J

  6. @ipdavid1043

    February 10, 2024 at 7:33 pm

    This duche bag only encourages more ppl into debt

  7. @g.o.9513

    February 11, 2024 at 5:04 pm

    Affirm makes payments more honest based on financial history and other criteria. Affirm will say no and not approve your for a loan. You’d be surprised they actually deny people often and prevent delinquencies. A credit card has hidden fees and will never say no as long as you can keep spending, even past your credit card limit in some cases. Also, credit card companies do not have dynamic spending limits. Usually credit card limits are fixed and don’t change even if you loose your job or financial circumstances change that credit limit will remain the same. Ask yourself if that is honest. The best way to clarity is to question what you think of that past, and credit cards have truly never been as honest with the consumer as Affirm – the leader of payments.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Science & Technology

Eclipse Ventures Co-Founder Lior Susan’s Insights Into a $1.3B Bet on Physical AI | StrictlyVC

Fresh off raising a $1.3 billion fund, Eclipse Ventures is doubling down on what it calls physical AI. In this StrictlyVC interview from our 2026 event in San Francisco, co-founder and managing partner Lior Susan discusses robotics, manufacturing, autonomous systems, and what it takes to build enduring companies where AI meets the physical world. Plus,…

Published

on

Fresh off raising a $1.3 billion fund, Eclipse Ventures is doubling down on what it calls physical AI. In this StrictlyVC interview from our 2026 event in San Francisco, co-founder and managing partner Lior Susan discusses robotics, manufacturing, autonomous systems, and what it takes to build enduring companies where AI meets the physical world. Plus, you can get a peek into Susan’s perspective about the SpaceX IPO.

Subscribe for more on YouTube:

Follow TechCrunch on Instagram:
TikTok:
X: tcrn.ch/x
Threads:
Facebook:
Bluesky:
Mastodon:
Read more:

Continue Reading

Science & Technology

The OpenAI vs. Elon Musk Trial Is Getting Messy Fast | Equity Podcast

Elon vs. Altman is just getting started, and Musk’s own tweets are already working against him in court. Shareholders, take note 👀 Catch the full breakdown on the latest Equity podcast episode:

Published

on

Elon vs. Altman is just getting started, and Musk’s own tweets are already working against him in court. Shareholders, take note 👀

Catch the full breakdown on the latest Equity podcast episode:

Continue Reading

Science & Technology

Campbell Brown on Going From Anchor to Facebook to Founding Forum AI | StrictlyVC

Campbell Brown has seen the information ecosystem from every angle — as a journalist, as Meta’s former head of news, and now as founder and CEO of Forum AI. In this StrictlyVC interview from our 2026 event in San Francisco, she discusses trustworthy AI, misinformation at scale, and what it takes to build reliable information…

Published

on

Campbell Brown has seen the information ecosystem from every angle — as a journalist, as Meta’s former head of news, and now as founder and CEO of Forum AI. In this StrictlyVC interview from our 2026 event in San Francisco, she discusses trustworthy AI, misinformation at scale, and what it takes to build reliable information systems in the age of AI.

Subscribe for more on YouTube:

Follow TechCrunch on Instagram:
TikTok:
X: tcrn.ch/x
Threads:
Facebook:
Bluesky:
Mastodon:
Read more:

Continue Reading

Trending