Affirm CFO on stock price plunge: 'We’re in control'

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Affirm CFO Michael Linford joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the buy now, pay later company's outlook amid stock volatility.

Video Transcript

JARED BLIKRE: Welcome back. Volatile market conditions are rocking the derivatives world. Buy now, pay later lender Affirm delayed an asset-backed security deal that would have offloaded some of its consumer loans. That's after a major investor reportedly pulled out of the deal due to market volatility on Friday. The stock has been under pressure recently, down 82% from its November peak. But only this morning, the company raised its full-year and third-quarter financial outlook.

And joining us now is Affirm CFO Michael Linford. So, Michael, thank you for joining us here today. I know that you believe there might have been some confusion by market participants reacting to this news on Friday and today. Just break it down for us. What's going on?

MICHAEL LINFORD: Yeah, thanks for having me. Look, we're seeing very strong momentum in our business. And we raised our outlook this morning to reflect that progress that we're delivering for shareholders. We believe that our stock price does not reflect the company's performance, which remains strong by virtually every measure.

You're seeing us really step up the rate at which we're scaling the network for users, which grew 150% last quarter, and we believe will continue to grow strong this quarter. You're seeing GMV growth and revenue growth. And that's actually why we've been maintaining very strong unit economics. And one of the things we wanted to communicate to the shareholders today is that despite the volatility in the market, our outlook for our unit economics remains very robust.

BRIAN SOZZI: Michael, we've been talking to Affirm a good bit of late. Now, the stock was at $101 in November of last year. It's now at $30. When you talk to shareholders, what are some of the biggest concerns?

MICHAEL LINFORD: When we talk to shareholders, we like to remind them that the thesis for Affirm, the reason that investors have and will continue to invest in us has remained intact. And today the management team has more conviction than even we did a month ago, especially a year ago, as our business has scaled, we think, quite well. We're committed to executing on our strategy and we're delivering great progress there. We continue to believe that we can generate massive scale, deliver leading unit economics, and in the long run generate really strong cash flow, with adjusted operating margins in the 20% or 30% range at scale.

In the short term, we're going to keep investing, and in doing so responsibly and with discipline, as we retain conviction. And the thing that generates the largest shareholder return in the long run is building a massive network. And I think the thing to know is that Affirm is built for times like this.