As Layoffs Hit Fintech Lenders, It’s Not All Roses

| By:


Underneath all the good news about hiring sprees, loan volume surges, and profitability, is ironically just the opposite. Some fintech lending darlings of Wall Street have abruptly changed gears over the past few months and are now in a state of self-preservation. Is this a normal business cycle or is something else going on here?

4/19/22 – Better.com lays off 3,900+ workers, a figure that includes a round that began in December 2021.

5/24/22 – Klarna lays off 10% of workforce.

6/15/22 – Coinbase announced plans to layoff 18% of its workforce.

6/21/22 – NextPoint announces end of LoanMe business, citing “market conditions.”

6/27/22 – Amount lays off 18% of workforce.

7/13/22 – Kabbage confirms it is facing two DOJ investigations over its handling of PPP loans.

7/27/22 – Shopify Capital grew originations but Shopify’s parent company announced it was laying off 10% of employees due to lower than expected post-pandemic e-commerce sales.

7/29/22 – Clearco announces major layoffs (125 employees), citing inflation, interest rates, European challenges, and a slowdown in e-commerce growth.

7/29/22 – Amazon shrank its staff by 100,000 employees.

Last modified: August 1, 2022

Category: Business Lending

Home Business Lending › As Layoffs Hit Fintech Lenders, It’s Not All Roses


    Splash Advance

    BizFund

    Capital Domain

    Spartan Capital

    ByzFunder

    Cashyew

    Loan23

    SmartMCA

    Cashable

    Torro

    Merit Business Funding & MeridianBank

    Highland Hill Capital

    Fenix Capital Funding

    Legend Funding

    B2B Finance Expo

    Fundo

    AMA Recovery

    eNoah

    CFG Merchant Solutions

    deBanked CONNECT MIAMI

    In Advance Capital

    1 Stop Cap

    BizFinLaw

    Essential Funding

    ROK Financial

    Cobalt Funding Solutions

    Wynwood Capital Group