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by newguy1234
2040 days ago
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I don't see it as a problem. Innovation is accelerating with new business models and so on. Adoption curve for new technologies could be occurring quicker as well thanks to social media (easier to "spread the word" about new products/services/technologies). I don't see it as a problem because all of these companies have legitimate products/services, legitimate customers and legitimate cash flows. This isn't another dot com situation we are in. There are very few companies going IPO with just an idea. ("we're going to use the proceeds from this offering to build an online pets store called pets.com") It is easy to say "its the stimulus" or "its the fed" but I think there is more going on at a fundamental level. |
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Before: Alice wants to buy a chair that costs $100 from Bob. Alice saves $10 a month and buys a chair. Bob got $100. Alice can buy a new chair every 10 months. She may also conclude after 10 months, that she doesn't want the chair that badly, and would instead save the $100 for retirement, or pay it into the house mortgage, reducing the amortization by a week.
Now: Alice wants to buy a chair from Bob. She gets a loan, paying $10 over 12 months. Bob gets $100, Affirm gets $20. Alice can now buy a chair every 12 months. Affirm's founder buys a supercar.
Slightly later: Alice's job gets cut due to COVID. She can now only pay $5/month. She gets a $100 stimulus check, but instead of paying off the chair, she buys Affirm stock and remortgages the chair to 24 months. Now Affirm gets $40 in interest and $100 in fed money routed through Alice.
Net effect: Alice's purchasing power has reduced 2.4 times, Affirm's founder buys 50 new yachts and starts a company that lets people get loans to buy food.