Square agrees to £21 billion deal for buy now, pay later firm Afterpay

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Square Agrees To £21 Billion Deal For Buy Now, Pay Later Firm Afterpay
Jack Dorsey, with a long beard, appears on a screen
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By Alex Veiga, AP

Digital payments company Square Inc says it has agreed to acquire Australian buy now, pay later company Afterpay in an all-stock deal valued at about 29 billion dollars (£20.8 billion).

Square, whose chief executive officer Jack Dorsey is also the founder of Twitter, allows retailers to process credit card transactions using devices that plug into tablets or smartphones.

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The San Francisco-based company said it plans to integrate Afterpay into its services, enabling merchants to offer customers the option to pay for goods later without relying on a credit card. Afterpay users would be able to manage their installment payments directly in Square’s cash app.


“Square and Afterpay have a shared purpose,” Mr Dorsey said in a statement.

Some 70 million people use Square’s cash app, while as of June 30 Afterpay was serving more than 16 million users and nearly 100,000 merchants, including major retailers, the company said.

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Instalment plans are popular with retailers because they encourage customers to spend more money and enable those with insufficient funds or credit at the time of purchase to walk out of a store with the item they want.

Payments are made in multiple instalments over time, without interest — unless customers are late, in which case additional fees or interest may kick in.


“Afterpay is deeply committed to helping people spend responsibly without incurring service fees for those who pay on time,” the companies said in a joint press release announcing the transaction.

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Square said it agreed to buy all of the company’s shares. Afterpay shareholders will get 0.375 shares of Square Class A common stock for each share of Afterpay, a 31% premium above its closing price on Friday.

The transaction is expected to close in early 2022.

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