Klarna's playbook is deceptively simple but highly effective. The fintech company accumulated $13B in customer deposits by offering competitive interest rates around 3% at its Swedish banking arm. Smart move—it created a stable, low-cost funding source. Then comes the revenue generation: those deposits get deployed as consumer credit for purchases. Merchants pay a 3% transaction fee to Klarna on each sale. This closed-loop model is brilliant because it monetizes both sides—savers get returns, merchants pay for the infrastructure, and consumers get instant credit. It's a direct challenge to the traditional credit card model, which relies on interchange fees and consumer interest. Klarna essentially reimagined consumer lending for the e-commerce era. The real test: can they scale this profitably while managing credit risk across millions of transactions?

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DeFiCaffeinatorvip
· 6h ago
Karna's logic is really brilliant, turning itself into a small central bank... attracting deposits on the deposit side, making money on lending, and collecting merchant fees in the middle, creating a perfect closed loop. That said, the 13B in deposits sounds impressive, but when it comes to risk management... can it really hold up?
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LiquidationKingvip
· 12h ago
Klarna's approach, to put it simply, is just moving money from one pocket to another, but it's indeed impressive... 13 billion in deposits, it really has some strength.
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LiquidityWhisperervip
· 01-02 22:51
Carnar's gameplay is indeed fierce; 13B in deposits is like real estate, and a 3% interest rate puts traditional banks to shame...
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LeekCuttervip
· 01-02 22:51
The closed-loop model is indeed powerful, but can 13B in deposits withstand several bad debt cycles?
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Rugman_Walkingvip
· 01-02 22:47
Klarna's approach is basically about making money more liquid—taking deposits with the left hand, issuing loans with the right, and then profiting from merchant fees in the middle. Clever.
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Blockchainiacvip
· 01-02 22:46
Carnar's gameplay is truly awesome; with just 13B in deposits, it's been revitalized like this—an art of middlemen earning the spread.
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GateUser-e51e87c7vip
· 01-02 22:46
NGL, Klarna's strategy is really brilliant—using bank deposits as low-cost capital and then re-lending... Definitely a financial arbitrage. It's just that how long this risk management can hold up remains uncertain.
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GateUser-7b078580vip
· 01-02 22:43
Data shows that the bad debt rate is the key... 13B in deposits sounds impressive, but what does that 3% interest rate really mean? The 3% fee earned from financing costs at historic lows, although the closed-loop model is well-designed, how much will actual risk control costs eat up? Let's wait and see a few quarterly financial reports.
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