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Walmart’s Fintech Ambition: A Super App, Not The ‘Bank Of Walmart’

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BM.GE
08.03.21 19:00
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Giant retailer Walmart has made a couple of big announcements recently regarding its plans to create a financial technology—or “fintech”—business unit:
 
  • Ribbit Capital partnership. In January, Walmart announced a strategic partnership with fintech investment firm Ribbit Capital to “develop and offer modern, innovative and affordable financial solutions.” Ribbit’s investment portfolio includes well-known fintech companies including Robinhood, Credit Karma, and Affirm.
 
  • Goldman Sachs fintech hires. More recently, Walmart hired two key executives away from Goldman Sachs’ fintech unit Marcus to help run the retailer’s new fintech unit. Omer Ismail and David Stark were key players in leading Marcus’ growth to more than $97 billion in deposits.
 
“Modern, innovative and affordable financial solutions” is not much of a clue as to what Walmart actually intends to do with its new fintech unit. One common view is that the retailer is on a path to create the “bank of Walmart:”
 
“Walmart took one step closer to being JPMorgan Chase’s biggest nightmare. The world’s largest retailer is gaining even more heft as it seeks to become a one-stop shop for consumers’ financial needs. The move struck fear on Wall Street, which has been begging regulators to halt recent efforts by retailers and startups to begin offering core banking products to millions of consumers.”
 
This is a misguided perspective:
  1. Walmart’s customer base is predominantly low- to middle- income consumers which is hardly Chase’s sweet spot from a banking or credit card perspective. So forget the whole “nightmare” scenario.
  2. The move did not “strike fear” on Wall Street. Walmart was rebuked years ago in its attempt to obtain a banking license and has found ways to get into financial services anyway.
 
Reality is, the “bank of Walmart” has been around for a long time.
For years now, Walmart has offered prepaid debit cards, domestic and international money transfers, bill pay services, tax preparation, installment financing, and other financial services through its partnerships with Green Dot, NetSpend, American Express, MoneyGram, PayPal, Jackson Hewitt, and other providers.
 
Did Walmart Give Its New Hires the Steve Jobs-John Sculley Speech?
 
It’s hard to believe that Walmart needed to hire Ismail and Stark away from Goldman Sachs just to repackage their existing financial services into a cohesive digital challenger bank-like offering.
 
And it’s hard to believe that Ismail and Stark would jump ship to do that.
Put yourself in Ismail and Stark’s shoes. You just spent the last five years helping Marcus grow to become a major player in the consumer finance space. And now Walmart comes along and says “how would you like to do it all again, but this time with us?”
 
Can’t imagine that’s how it went down.
 
I’m betting Walmart gave them the “John Sculley speech.” Remember when Steve Jobs recruited Sculley away from Pepsi with the question “Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life or come with me and change the world?”
 
Walmart probably made a similar pitch, telling the Goldman Sachs execs, “Congrats, you’ve built a digital bank—now come to Walmart and help us reinvent the economy.”
 
The Coming Walmart Super App?
 
Walmart’s fintech aspiration is a lot bigger than just creating a digital bank—it’s creating a true digital ecosystem in the form of a super app.
Karen Webster wrote this about the “supercenter:”
 
“When Walmart reported its Q4 2020 earnings, CEO Doug McMillon described a very different ‘super’ concept at the center of Walmart’s future: the ‘super app.’ He may not have used those two words, but the Connect concept is the super app notion to a tee.”
 
Walmart’s super app opportunity is a lot bigger than just integrating and digitizing its financial services business or deploying its Connect concept, which will be a self-service advertising platform for Walmart partners to manage digital ad campaigns.
 
The super app opportunity includes integrating Walmart’s: 1) Shopify marketplace; 2) Connect ad platform; 3) health centers; 4) existing investments in eCommerce, logistics, supply chain, and inventory management; and 5) other product and services not currently affiliated with Walmart.
 
Wait, What’s a Super App?
 
While hardly a household term in the US—yet—the “super app” concept is often misused and misunderstood. Just selling a lot of different types of products and services on a mobile app does not make an app a super app.
 
Super apps are ecosystems. They’re enclosed experiences that make it easy to accomplish a wide variety of tasks—as long as the tasks occur within the walled garden.
 
To date, super apps don’t really exist in the US—but they’re dominant in China. A screen shot of one of the leading super apps, WeChat, demonstrates the breadth of services integrated into a single app.
 
Source: Forbes