Affirm CFO is building the business around strong labor data

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Shares of Affirm (AFRM) are trading lower Friday after the company reported second-quarter revenue that jumped 48% but provided full-year guidance that fell short of Wall Street expectations.

Affirm CFO Michael Linford joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the company's performance as well as the state of the consumer in the current economic environment.

"From our perspective, we've really retooled the business to operate in this [interest] rate environment in a way that's pretty powerful," Linford says. "We were able to serve a lot of consumers last quarter and feel very well-positioned to continue to do that in this environment. The consumer is still out spending, highly engaged, and we think the most important thing to point to there is just really strong employment data, and so while the consumer is fully employed, we feel like they're going to be engaged in the economy, and we're there to support them with financial products."

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

SEANA SMITH: Affirm shares under pressure this morning. Off nearly 10% after its full year guidance for gross merchandise volume fell short of the Street's expectations. But the buy now pay later company did see revenue jump 48% from a year ago.

We want to bring in Michael Linford. He is the CFO of Affirm. Michael, it's great to have you. Thanks so much for joining us here on Yahoo Finance this morning.

MICHAEL LINFORD: Thanks for having me.

SEANA SMITH: So let's talk about the results that you guys just put out. I guess it did disappoint the Street in some metrics, but revenue growth was still up 48% on a year-over-year basis. What do you think your results tell us just about the state of the consumer right now and the resilience of the consumer?

MICHAEL LINFORD: Yeah, we had an exceptionally strong quarter. We were able to grow GMV 32%, which is about four times the rate of e-commerce growth. As you mentioned, we had 48% growth in revenue.

Our unit economic measure of the revenue less transaction cost was up 66% year on year, posting really, really great results in the top part of the P&L. And that growth is reflective of the long-term trend we've been talking a lot about. Consumers are voting with their wallets, finding honest financial products that allow them to get the things they want and need without all the traps of other credit products.

And the thing that I'm most excited about is that we were also able to do that while driving real operating leverage in the business. We had $188 million growth in operating income because we were really focused as a team on the outcomes that we were trying to drive. And we did all that while keeping a really tight eye on credit.