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Apple Using In-House Lending for New Apple Pay Later Feature

Alongside iOS 16 and macOS Ventura, Apple announced the upcoming launch of a new Apple Pay Later feature, which is designed to allow customers to split ‌Apple Pay‌ purchases into multiple payments.

Apple Pay Later Quick Green Feature
With ‌Apple Pay‌ Later, ‌Apple Pay‌ users can choose to make four payments spread over a six week period instead of paying up front. The ‌Apple Pay‌ Later feature includes no interest or fees so long as customers make the four payments within the allowed period.

Apple has partnered with Goldman Sachs and other companies for past financial ventures, but according to Bloomberg, Apple plans to take on the lending for the ‌Apple Pay‌ Later feature. Apple has launched a subsidiary, Apple Financing LLC, to handle credit checks and make decisions on loans for the service.

Apple Financing LLC operates separately from Apple, and as Bloomberg notes, this is the first time that Apple has opted to deal with financing itself. Goldman Sachs still has a role in the program, however, as it issues the Mastercard payment credential used to complete ‌Apple Pay‌ Later purchases as Apple Financing doesn't have a bank charter.

Bloomberg back in March said that Apple was working on a multiyear plan to bring its financial services in house, cutting out the need for partners like Goldman Sachs. Apple is working on payment processing technology and infrastructure such as lending risk assessment, fraud analysis, credit checks, and dispute handling, plus it is working on tools for calculating interest, rewards, approving transactions, reporting data to credit bureaus, increasing credit limits, and more. The ‌Apple Pay‌ Later feature is its first effort, but Apple may also use Apple Financial to handle other future services like the hardware subscription service that is in the works.

‌Apple Pay‌ Later has been in development for more than a year, and it is similar to PayPal's Buy Now, Pay Later feature that also allows for payments broken down into installments. At the current time, ‌Apple Pay‌ Later is limited to the United States.

Related Roundup: Apple Pay

Top Rated Comments

macfacts Avatar
50 months ago
Or live within your means.
Score: 26 Votes (Like | Disagree)
antiprotest Avatar
50 months ago
This is just the beginning. Eventually Apple will go into weapons and construction, and then establish its own nation.
Score: 24 Votes (Like | Disagree)
iGeneo Avatar
50 months ago
Score neutral

I’ve used them all the time. When i can use someone else’s money for free, I always will. They take payment automatically so I’m never late.
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
50 months ago
Our products too expensive? No problem! We’ve got a payment plan for you!
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
dannyyankou Avatar
50 months ago
I’m sure most of the people criticizing this have a credit card they use themselves. And I’m sure a few of them have even purchased an Apple product with an installment plan in the past. Yes, that includes the iPhone upgrade program.

I wouldn’t use this myself. But let’s not be so judgmental of people that do.
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
50 months ago
Well, this is one productive way Apple can deploy its massive cash holdings. A lot of shareholders, though, might prefer a dividend increase or stock buybacks.

Further, I wonder if Apple Financing LLC is structured so that Apple also avoids repatriating and paying US taxes on all the $$$ it has parked in various non-US jurisdictions.

[S]There is a definite PR benefit. No visible ties to Wall Street investment banks means knee-jerk Goldman Sachs haters can start spreading out purchase payments without any dissonant feelings. ;-)

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ETA: the Bloomberg story says Apple Pay Later uses a Goldman-issued Mastercard number as part of the transaction. This allows Apple to sidestep any state or federal bank regulation (it sounds like Apple Financing LLC is regulated at the state level as either a money transfer service or a payday lender, both of which benefit from much less stringent regulation than banks).

From a strategic perspective, moving into non-bank financial services during a period when capital is no longer chasing yield, due to higher interest rates, VC activity is reduced, and IPOs are difficult could allow Apple to dominate a lot of currently unregulated or lightly regulated fintech sectors relatively cheaply and easily.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)