
Audio By Carbonatix
Apple is discontinuing its buy now, pay later service known as Apple Pay Later barely a year after its initial launch in the U.S., and will rely on companies who already dominate the industry like Affirm and Klarna.
It's an acknowledgement from a company known for producing hit products that building a financial services business from scratch as Apple has been doing for several years is difficult and highly competitive.
Apple Pay Later launched with fanfare in March 2023 as a way for iPhone customers to split purchases of up to $1,000 into four equal payments with no fees or interest. The service was Apple's answer to the growing popularity of buy now, pay later services globally, and considered a sizeable threat to companies like Klarna, Affirm and others.
But Apple Pay Later was only available where Apple Pay was accepted whereas the other buy now, pay later companies had deeply integrated themselves into millions of merchant websites.
In an acknowledgement of how popular buy now, pay later services had become, Apple said at its developer's conference this month that it would start allowing banks to offer buy now, pay later plans to their customers through Apple Pay and Apple Wallet. Affirm would be integrated directly into Apple Wallet, and Apple customers would be able to open an Affirm account directly.
“With the introduction of this new global instalment loan offering, we will no longer offer Apple Pay Later in the U.S.,” Apple said late Monday.
“Our focus continues to be on providing our users with access to easy, secure and private payment options with Apple Pay, and this solution will enable us to bring flexible payments to more users, in more places across the globe, in collaboration with Apple Pay enabled banks and lenders.”
Apple executives as recently as this month had indicated that the company still had plans for Apple Pay Later despite announcing plans to integrate Affirm directly into Apple Wallet.
Apple Pay Later was unique because Apple needed to create its own bank to offer the loans. The Apple Card is issued by Goldman Sachs, which means Goldman ultimately decides who gets approved and what spending limits are for each customer.
Apple has discontinued any new Apple Pay Later loans, but customers who have existing Apple Pay Later loans will be able to manage them inside Apple Pay.
Latest Stories
-
Keep the money in Ghana – Gov’t enforces local cargo insurance
56 minutes -
US Army veteran charged with leaking classified information to journalist
1 hour -
Dr. Dre joins Forbes billionaires list as second-richest hip-hop artist with $1 billion fortune
1 hour -
Trump administration cannot nix legal status of 5,000 Ethiopians, US judge rules
1 hour -
Libya announces new oil and gas discoveries with three major energy companies
2 hours -
Oil rises as investors remain wary US-Iran ceasefire will open supply flow
2 hours -
Police arrest suspect over church threat video
4 hours -
Eight appear in court as police intensify crackdown on illicit drugs in Tamale
4 hours -
Motorist remanded in custody for hitting four-year-old girl
4 hours -
Mobile money vendor robbed at Ziope
4 hours -
Benin’s Finance Minister Wadagni seeks his own mandate in election
4 hours -
GNFS retrieves body of unidentified man from Asylum Down drain
5 hours -
CAF’s Motsepe to visit both Senegal and Morocco amid AFCON fallout
5 hours -
Edmond Boateng takes up secretary role at Honorary Consular Corps of Ghana
5 hours -
Armed men kill 20 and abduct others in northwestern Nigeria villages
5 hours