In its latest quarterly report, Affirm delivered earnings per share of $0.37, exceeding Wall Street’s $0.28 forecast by $0.09. The company posted $1.12 billion in revenue, representing 29.6% year-over-year expansion and surpassing the $1.06 billion analyst estimate. The firm achieved a 7.6% net margin with return on equity reaching 8.83%.
Yet even with impressive quarterly results, the stock has faced headwinds. AFRM shares have declined 20% during 2026 amid escalating consumer delinquency rates and challenging market conditions for financial technology companies. That’s why Wednesday’s upward movement caught investor attention.
Shares advanced 6.7% during the session, building on a 7.4% increase from the previous trading day. The momentum stemmed from research commentary by Citi analyst Bryan Keane, who designated AFRM with an “Upside 90-Day Catalyst Watch” classification in advance of the company’s investor day scheduled for May 12.
Keane anticipates management will utilize the presentation to update medium-term guidance initially established in 2023 — projections the company has, according to his analysis, “since sustainably outperformed.”
Keane projects management will announce medium-term revenue growth expectations surpassing 20%. He further anticipates Affirm will narrow its revenue less transaction costs (RLTC) margin forecast to a 3.5% to 4% range of gross merchandise volume, refined from the previous 3% to 4% outlook.
During the most recent earnings discussion, CFO Rob O’Hare indicated RLTC take rates should surpass 4% throughout both the third and fourth fiscal quarters of 2026.
Keane additionally forecasts GAAP operating margin guidance between 18% and 20%, coupled with an assumed GAAP tax rate approximating 20%. He maintains a Buy recommendation with a $100 price objective on the shares.
The overall analyst sentiment remains supportive. Among 28 analysts providing coverage, one rates it Strong Buy, 19 recommend Buy, and eight suggest Hold. The consensus stands at “Moderate Buy” with an $85 mean price target. Cantor Fitzgerald maintains an $85 target; Oppenheimer holds an $83 objective with an “outperform” stance; Compass Point carries a $68 Buy target.
Goldman Sachs downgraded AFRM from Buy to Hold during February.
The stock’s advance occurred even as new LendingTree research highlighted increasing credit stress within the BNPL sector. The study, surveying over 2,000 consumers, discovered 47% experienced late BNPL payments during the past year, escalating from 41% in 2025 and 34% in 2024.
Over half of survey participants indicated they depend on BNPL financing “to make ends meet.” Nearly one-third reported utilizing BNPL services for grocery purchases.
Affirm COO Michael Linford challenged the BNPL categorization in February remarks to Barron’s, characterizing the company as “at its core, a software company” and suggesting that grouping Affirm within the broader BNPL sector represents “a bit of a shortcut.”
The stock currently trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 72.82, a PEG ratio of 3.60, and maintains a beta of 3.63. The 50-day moving average stands at $49.42, while the 200-day moving average sits at $64.17. Institutional ownership accounts for 69.29% of outstanding shares.
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