• 3 years ago
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Originally slated to go public in late 2020, Affirm, the financial services company created by PayPal co-founder Max Levchin that lets customers “buy now, pay later,” pushed its IPO to the new year. That decision was said to have been heavily influenced by the scorching debuts enjoyed by DoorDash and Airbnb, which saw both companies end their first day of trading markedly above projected prices. Although neither of those firms is complaining about how their IPOs performed, Affirm’s leadership seems to have taken the position that given the market’s enthusiasm, going public at their original price would amount to leaving money on the table. The company recently revised its price range in an updated SEC filing (from $33–$38 to $41–$44), and was reported late yesterday to have raised that to $49 a share, which would value the company at close to $12 billion. …
Medium.***

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