Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Affirm Holdings Fiscal Year 2022 Q3 earnings conference call. At this time, all lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. Following the speaker's remarks, we will open the lines for your questions. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded and a replay of the call will be available on our investor relations website for a reasonable period of time after the call. I'd now like to turn the call over to Rob O'Hare, SVP of Finance. Thank you. You may begin.
Thanks, operator. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone listening that today's call may contain forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties, including those set forth in our filings with the SEC, which are available on our investor relations website. Actual results may differ materially from any forward-looking statements we make today. These forward-looking statements speak only as of today, and the company does not assume any obligation or intend to update them except as required by law. In addition, today's call may include non-GAAP financial measures. These measures should be considered as a supplement to, and not a substitute for, GAAP financial measures. For historical non-GAAP financial measures, reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in today's earnings press release, which is available on our investor relations website.
Hosting today's call are Max Levchin, Affirm's Founder and CEO , and Michael Linford, Affirm's CFO . With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Max to begin.
Thanks, Rob, and thank you everyone for listening in. We delivered excellent results in fiscal Q3. Active merchants grew by more than 16-fold year-over-year. Active consumers grew by 137% year-over-year, with greater frequency and engagement. Our total transactions increased by 162% year-over-year. Highlighting the trust we're building with consumers, 81% of all transactions were from repeat Affirm users. This is the highest repeat rate that we've ever reported. We accomplished this while another 1.5 million consumers joined our movement to replace confusing, outdated financial products with new, honest ones. Our GMV was up to $3.9 billion, growing 73% year-over-year and almost doubling excluding Peloton. Total revenue was $355 million, a 54% increase year-over-year, and revenue less transaction costs.
A key measure of our unit economics was $182 million or 4.7% of GMV. We continue to grow with our existing partners and add new ones. Just a couple of operating highlights since the beginning of Q3. The travel and ticketing segment has been outperforming expectations and volume more than doubled year-over-year. Our longtime partners, Expedia, Vrbo, and Priceline, were all in the top 10 by volume in Q3. The quarter also marked the general availability of Affirm on American Airlines and the launch of our very first Canadian travel merchant. We are excited to continue growing our network of relationships in this segment. Affirm continues to be the strategic partner of choice for enterprises and platforms. Adding to existing collaborations with Verifone and Adyen, we partnered with Fiserv and Global Payments to make signing and launching new merchants frictionless.
We're also excited to announce a new agreement with Stripe, unlocking streamlined distribution of Affirm's honest financial product to millions of merchants. Since the launch of our partnership with Shopify just a year ago, we have seen significant uptake of Split Pay, our bi-weekly pay-in-four product. We have expanded our agreement with Shopify to bring Affirm's monthly offering to the platform. We plan to start rolling out Adaptive Checkout and simple interest-bearing installments by the end of our 2022 fiscal year. As part of this expansion, I'm also pleased to report that we have extended our exclusive relationship with Shopify. Lots more details in the press release that we have just filed. This marks our fifth straight beat quarter, and proud we are of all of them. That said, we operate Affirm with a longer horizon in mind.
Our goals are to deliver value for our customers and improve the lives of consumers, and ultimately, in doing so, generate cash flow to reinvest in our business and create value for our shareholders. As you will see in Michael's report, we have already delivered profits on an adjusted operating income basis, and this quarter makes it three out of the last five. You'll see in our guide that we still expect to invest in the next quarter, but let me make something very clear. Our plan is to achieve a sustained profitability run rate on an adjusted basis by the end of the next fiscal year. That is to say, we expect to generate revenue that consistently exceeds our adjusted operating expense starting July 1st 2023. We do not expect our plan for reaching profitability to compromise growth, just as we demonstrated this quarter.
We also do not plan to raise any new equity capital because we believe Affirm is fully funded to profitability. We will share our full fiscal year 2023 outlook and full year guidance in our next earnings report. To say a little more here, we do not see network and revenue growth and margin as quantities in conflict with each other. Indeed, our growth combined with strong unit economics is what propels us towards profitability. Consumer demand for our product is significant and we only expect it to increase, and the value we create for our customers goes directly to their bottom line.
Meanwhile, the market penetration in the U.S. is still in a low single digits, and at the growth scale we have already achieved, the increasing rate of repeat transactions at 81% today affords us several advantages. Most importantly, economies of scale and fixed and transactional costs, meaningful underwriting improvements, and opportunities to deliver new products to our consumers and merchant partners at a very low marginal cost. This is why the bookends of this quarter's results are so important. We nearly doubled our network volume ex-Peloton while managing our unit economics to 4.7% of GMV. This is well ahead of our long-term model of 3%-4%. We grow our network GMV responsibly and deliberately with unit economics always firmly in mind. This is especially so because as a vertically integrated network, we manage the risk embedded in our transactions.
We covered our approach to credit underwriting in the past, but I'd still like to speak briefly about our credit risk management. Every time you want to use Affirm to buy something, you have to apply to be approved for that specific transaction. We make it easy and convenient for you to apply, but we will still look at the state of your finances at that very moment, including, among other things, your recent credit usage, and then decide. If we believe you won't be able to pay off your loan, we will in fact decline your application with compassion and transparency without fail. As a reminder, we do not charge late fees or allow revolving.
In other words, we have a structural incentive to decline a transaction that we believe to be a bad financial decision for you because approving it is guaranteed to be a bad financial decision for us. At our scale of transactions, over 10 million last quarter alone, the dials we get to turn to control credit risk are highly fine-grained. Another key structural advantage is the very short weighted average life of our loans, which is about five months. As the economic cycle changes, the loans we made in the past will have a rapidly diminishing impact on Affirm's future financial performance. Given our structural incentives to engage in responsible lending, deep commitment to strong network unit economics, and a high degree of control over risk, we strongly believe we are well positioned for success in a downturn.
During the very brief recession of 2020, we saw applications nearly quadruple at many of our merchants. We believe paying over time without late fees and gotchas will be in greater demand during a downturn. It is our mission to improve people's lives, and we will be prepared to meet this demand. Again, our approach is only to extend credit that we believe can and will be repaid. The multi-billion dollar business we have today is the result of years of trial and error, ideation, and execution. One of the many attractive properties of operating a network at scale is that it can be very cost effective to deliver new products and services to a large active audience. Not all of our new offerings will result in our next billion-dollar revenue line, but we are committed to finding the ones that do.
Last September, we shared some of our product plans with you. We've continued to execute on this roadmap. Let me briefly run through some of what shipped in Q3. Throughout the quarter, we delivered several iterations of the Affirm SuperApp, the single platform for the growing family of Affirm consumer offerings. Each such iteration delivered results, improving user engagement by about 3% and adding over 1% to our in-app transaction volume. These numbers may seem trivially small in comparison to some of our headline growth metrics, but obsessing over user experience compounds, and we have many more iterations planned. We also rolled out a Chrome browser extension, a convenient way to pay with Affirm at online stores where we're not yet directly integrated using a single-use Visa card while shopping in your desktop browser.
We brought Adaptive Checkout to many new transactional surfaces, including our own Affirm Anywhere product, Chrome browser extension, and as I mentioned, it will be available on Shopify. We also added Bitcoin interest to the popular Affirm Savings account, a super simple way for our savings account holders to hold cryptocurrency by choosing to receive their savings yield in Bitcoin. Debit+. By now, I suspect some of you might actually have the Debit+ app and the companion card that comes with it, so you have already seen what the first version can do. You can split lower value transactions into four payments after the swipe and use the automatic pre-approval button to plan larger transactions and feel confident in your spending power.
There are many more features coming over the summer and beyond, most importantly, longer-term and interest-bearing loans and Affirm Rewards, but the V1 of Debit Plus is here and ready. We know this because even with this minimalist version, we are seeing an order of magnitude higher engagement among Debit Plus users as compared to non-Debit Plus Affirm users, an average of more than two transactions per week. The Debit Plus experience will continue to improve as we release regular updates to our growing user base. We are inviting tens of thousands of users per day to get their cards and expect to exhaust our now sizable waiting list. We appreciate your patience and open Debit Plus to all eligible Affirm users in fiscal Q4. Eligible here means a certain level of usage history and good standing with Affirm.
It is super early, and I'm still neck deep in UX optimizations, but I'm truly thrilled to begin what we think will be the era of Debit+, the simplicity of debit and a flexibility to pay at your own pace with no late or hidden fees. Affirm continues to succeed because of our exceptional team. I've said it before, and I'll say it again, it is a privilege to lead this company, and I would like to thank all Affirmers for marking another waypoint in our journey, and to thank you, our shareholders, for your continual support. As you can see, we remain focused on what ultimately matters, results. Now over to Michael to review those in detail.
Thanks, Max, and good afternoon, everyone. Our Q3 results, and really our performance over the last several quarters, demonstrate our ability to deliver impressive growth and attractive unit economics despite a volatile market environment. Once again, we outperformed our outlook for both growth and profitability, and our unit economics were strong. We continued to grow both sides of our network. Active consumers increased 137% year over year, while active merchants increased to nearly 210,000. Total transactions grew 162% year over year, and more than 80% were from repeat users. Transactions per user, our key frequency metric, increased 19% year over year, while more than doubling our active user base. Along with that growth, we achieved profitability on a non-GAAP basis, delivering $4 million in adjusted operating income.
We grew GMV 73% and nearly doubled GMV when excluding Peloton. Our revenue increased by 54%, and our measure of unit economics, revenue less transaction costs, reached 4.7% of GMV. This was a particularly strong result and well above our long-term targeted range of 3%-4% of GMV. Our outperformance was driven by strong revenue growth, excellent capital markets execution, and better than expected credit performance. While the provision for credit losses increased year-over-year, as a reminder, last year's provision was net negative given the release of excess COVID-related loan allowance. We also continue to drive greater capital efficiency gains across our funding program as equity capital we use to fund our loans decreased to 2.4% of our platform portfolio versus 4.9% last year.
With the strong growth of our business and continued momentum, we are raising our outlook for fiscal year 2022, which I'll discuss more in a moment. Before I do that, let me walk you through our Q3 results in greater detail. Unless stated otherwise, all comparisons refer to our Q3 of fiscal 2022 versus Q3 of fiscal 2021. We had another great quarter for consumer growth. Active consumers increased 137% to 12.7 million and increased nearly 1.5 million sequentially from fiscal Q2. This growth helped drive 10.5 million transactions in the quarter, a 162% year-over-year increase. Despite adding users at this aggressive pace, we also saw frequency increase as transactions per active consumer grew to 2.7, up 19% year-over-year.
In the third quarter, active merchants grew to nearly 210,000 from just 11,500 last year, thanks to the continued scaling of our partnership with Shopify. On a sequential basis, active merchants, which we calculate over a trailing twelve-month time frame, grew by 39,000 or 23% from the December ending quarter. Turning to GMV. We grew GMV 73% to $3.9 billion in our Q3 , a $1.7 billion increase from last year. As a testament to the increasing depth and breadth of our network, no single merchant accounted for more than 10% of either revenue or GMV for both the three and nine months ending March 31. This demonstrates the continued diversification of our business, which we believe is a key area of strength and resilience for Affirm. Shifting to GMV by vertical.
Travel and ticketing increased to $390 million, up 122% from last year, topping last quarter's high mark. With the recent easing of mask mandates and travel restrictions, we see extraordinary demand to book travel now and pay over time with Affirm. We also remain enthusiastic about consumer demand for live events. General merchandise grew to over $670 million, 448% above last year, driven by our deepening relationships with the world's largest retailers, which also increases the seasonality of our business. We saw roughly a $200 million sequential decline in GMV within the category, which was in line with our expectations given the seasonally strong holiday shopping season in the December quarter.
Sporting goods and outdoors declined to $425 million, down 21% from last year or 20% sequentially from fiscal Q2, driven by a roughly 40% decline in Peloton, offset by growth with other connected fitness merchants. PayBright, which we acquired on January 1, 2021, nearly tripled GMV, posting annual growth of 198%. We are excited about our prospects and the success we're driving in Canada, as well as other expansion opportunities currently on our roadmap. Now, turning to the financials. Total net revenue grew 54% to $355 million, well above our outlook of at least $335 million. Network revenue grew 29%, while interest income increased 42%, and gain on loan sale increased 221%.
Revenue as a percentage of GMV contracted 116 basis points to 9.1%, driven by product mix away from longer duration zero percent loans and towards shorter-term Split Pay loans. Split Pay GMV grew over 215% year-on-year and accounted for roughly 20% of GMV in the Q3 , compared to just over 10% last year. In our earnings supplement posted to our IR website, you will see that merchant revenue take rates have remained relatively constant for each of our offerings despite our hypergrowth. Our strong top-line growth and the leverage we achieved on non-provision transaction costs drove a 37% increase in revenue less transaction costs to $182 million or 4.7% of GMV, well above our 3%-4% long-term target.
Total transaction cost of $172 million grew 78% year-over-year compared to revenue growth of 54%. Excluding provision for credit losses, which was negative in the prior year period, transaction costs as a percentage of GMV declined 1.6 points to 2.7%. Shift away from longer duration 0% APR loans, loss on loan purchase commitment declined 24%, while improvements in our capital programs helped limit the growth in funding costs to just 8%.
Funding costs were an area of considerable leverage in the quarter, declining to 0.4% of GMV, down from 0.6% in the prior year period. Provision for credit losses grew from -$1 million a year ago to $66 million, as the year ago figure included a significant release of excess COVID-related loan allowance, while this year's figure reflects the intentional normalization of credit that we've discussed over the past several quarters. Credit performance was better than expected across all credit segments, as small optimizations across our Split Pay and large enterprise programs yielded very favorable outcomes. This led to lower allowance rates on new originations across a large percentage of our GMV. Allowance for losses as a percentage of loans held for investment declined for the second consecutive quarter to 6.4%.
The outperformance in revenue less transaction costs and greater operating leverage allowed us to drive better than expected adjusted operating income in the period. Our non-GAAP technology and data analytics expense reflects lower than expected personnel costs. Affirm has a robust pipeline that calls for more talented engineers than we have the ability to hire in the period. However, we were able to partially address this need from technical talent in early Q4 with the hiring of over 100 engineers for Affirm, primarily from Fast in early April. We also continued building our brand through sales and marketing investments, but a majority of these expenses were non-cash in nature.
Excluding these non-cash expenses that are fully outlined in our GAAP reconciliation tables hosted on our IR website, our sales and marketing expense decreased by $1.7 million or 5% year-over-year, which represents an annual decrease of five points as a percentage of revenue. Excluding transaction costs, non-GAAP operating expense grew by $48.9 million or 38%. Adjusted operating income was $4 million in the quarter or 1.1% of revenue, which was significantly above our outlook. GAAP total operating expenses, excluding transaction costs, grew by $66 million or 19%, driven by a $102 million increase in warrant expense, partially offset by an $80 million reduction in stock-based compensation. GAAP operating loss was $227 million, which compares to a loss of $209 million last year.
The $227 million operating loss number includes $217 million of equity-related costs stemming from our previously granted warrants to enterprise partners in stock-based compensation. Before I move to our raised outlook, I'd like to discuss our funding program. We fund the business to optimize for stable, consistent access to deep and diverse pools of capital. We ended the quarter with nearly $9 billion in funding capacity across our three main channels, warehouse lines, forward flow agreements with whole loan buyers, and ABS securitizations. 53% of the capacity is off balance sheet, and all of our bilateral relationships are fully committed and generally in multi-year agreements, with only 31% of this capacity maturing in the next twelve months.
Since the beginning of the fiscal year, we have brought on $2.5 billion in new funding capacity from new and existing capital partners. In addition to that $2.5 billion, subsequent to the quarter end, we closed our $500 million 2022-A revolving ABS transaction. Last week, we also added a new multi-year $500 million forward flow partnership with a large Midwest-based insurance company. We expect to continue to add capital through both scheduled commitment increases from existing partners and onboarding new partners. Our capital program is structured to be resilient, flexible, and generate increased velocity as we scale. Let me quickly recap each of our channels.
Our warehouse lines are on-balance sheet facilities with spreads ranging from 1.65% to 4%, and we are able to advance up to nearly 90% against the loans we pledge. These bankruptcy remote facilities are non-recourse to our parent company and generally used to fund shorter duration collateral. They also serve as a loan aggregation mechanism for our ABS securitization program. We generally maintain these facilities at low utilization rates. This stood at 37% at the end of the quarter, providing us significant excess capacity. Our forward flow program represented close to half of the overall capacity across a range of diverse partners and provides highly efficient off-balance sheet funding. These programs allow us to earn most revenue up front and additional revenue over time via servicing income.
Further, loans sold to third parties via the forward flow program do not require an allowance for credit losses on the balance sheet or any related provision expense on the income statement. Finally, in terms of our ABS securitization program, we have closed nine securitization transactions that represent roughly $8 billion of volume since launching the program in mid-2020. Our deals have performed really well, and we just achieved our first triple A rating as part of our most recent transaction. Just as we've attracted many leading e-commerce merchants and platforms to Affirm, we have also attracted a diverse set of blue-chip investors to our capital program. This is a real competitive advantage for Affirm. We believe our scale and asset quality will ensure that this advantage continues into the future.
Affirm is strongly positioned to continue to drive outsized growth in the ABS market, which is highly liquid with over $1.5 trillion outstanding across all asset classes. Now let me share some color on our outlook, which you can see on slide 26 of our earnings supplement. We expect the progress we've made thus far in fiscal year 2022 to continue to drive strong growth in our fourth quarter. Consistent with the public guidance issued earlier this week, we expect the trends observed in Peloton GMV in fiscal Q3 to continue through Q4. We now expect our Split Pay offering to contribute at least 20% of fiscal year 2022 GMV, with the largest contributor of this volume coming from Shop Pay Installments.
We expect a sequential increase in total operating expenses outside of transaction costs, driven by the recent hiring of the engineering team from Fast in April and marketing campaigns currently planned the latter half of the quarter.
As always, our outlook assumes the current forward interest rate curve. Finally, our outlook does not assume a material impact from the rollout of Debit+. For our Q4 ending June 30, 2022, we expect GMV of $3.95 billion-$4.05 billion, revenue of $345 million-$355 million, transaction costs of $185 million-$190 million, revenue less transaction costs of $160 million-$165 million, adjusted operating margin of -15% to -11%, and a weighted average share count of 290 million.
For our fiscal year ending June 30, 2022, we now expect GMV of $15.04-$15.14 billion, revenue of $1.33-$1.34 billion, transaction costs of $692-$697 million, revenue less transaction costs of $638-$643 million, adjusted operating margin of -7.6% to -6.6%, and a weighted average share count of approximately 283 million. Now I'll turn it over to Max for some closing remarks.
Before we open for Q&A, I thought it would be helpful to quickly recap the state of play and our plans for Affirm. First, we are laser-focused on scaling the network, increasing our consumer reach and frequency, going deeper with our existing partners and adding new ones. Our opportunities remain vast, with significant under-penetrated markets to reach. Second, we will continue investing in our technology, people, and brand, and doing so with discipline. We have roughly $3 billion in dry powder, and we firmly believe that we are among the most efficient allocators of capital in the industry. Third, as I already mentioned, with excellent unit economics, consistent focus on risk management, and a diversified capital access strategy, our plan is to achieve a sustained profitability run rate on an adjusted basis by the end of the next fiscal year.
Finally, at our core, we are builders, excited by the prospect of solving problems and improving lives. We will leverage our scale and reach to introduce brand-new concepts to our merchants and consumers, like Debit Plus, as we continuously expand our product and revenue lines. While the macro environment is uncertain, at Affirm, the picture has never been clearer. We are a category leader with massive growth and rapidly expanding market opportunities as the secular trend towards honest, transparent financial products continues. Affirm is in an enviable position given the depth and breadth of our partner network and our unwavering commitment to financial responsibility. As the category begins to go mainstream, the opportunities we can capture are only expanding. We have an incredible team and an inspiring mission. We will continue to scale, drive attractive unit economics, and deliver on our mission to improve lives and focus on results.
We will now open the line for questions.
At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary for you to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Moshe Orenbuch with Credit Suisse. You may proceed with your question.
Great. Thanks. You know, I think that, you know, Max, the comments that you made about the success with respect to, you know, with respect to the large merchants and the impact that that's had, maybe you could kind of expand on that because obviously you've got things that are going on that would, you know, potentially be, you know, able to add others, and yet you've also got things like what you mentioned with respect to the Chrome browser that, you know, could allow for situations where, you know, where Affirm is not, it doesn't have a kind of dedicated relationship with the merchant.
I guess as we look out over the next several years, you know, how should we think about, you know, the biggest areas for growth, for the company?
First of all, thank you for the question. Sorry. We've been listening to ourselves talk for a while. Great question. The thing about building a network is you have to continuously balance the consumer side and the merchant side. If we are signing on more and more consumers, we're implicitly adding more places where they might want to go shopping. It's essential for us to continue launching direct-to-consumer payment products because if someone says, "Hey, I'm a big fan of brand X, and I came from a store," e.g., Peloton, "where I'm not likely to repeat over and over," we have to offer them coverage, otherwise they will churn. They will.
Right.
An active consumer. The browser extension and the app, which has a marketplace feature in it and the card itself, you know, all the things we're building on the consumer side, they're all fundamentally about retaining consumers and meeting them where they want to go, where they want to shop. That will continue happening, and we see that as both an engagement driver and a revenue driver. Obviously, the products are a little bit different where we don't have a direct integration with the merchant, but it does not in any way reduce our commitment and just attention to innovation on the merchant side. We have a whole bunch of stuff.
I purposely kept my remarks a little bit shorter this time around, but there's a long list of things that we shipped that have to do with merchants, and I really did not give any credit to those teams just because I wanted to keep it quick. We're continuously rolling out really interesting stuff like Adaptive Checkout is a really good example of. It's just a very, very fundamental piece of tech that we put together. It is the future of this buy now, pay later industry. Consumers do not need to go through many different funnels. They just need to pick the right product for them. Better yet, we should be there helping them pick the right product. That's what Adaptive Checkout does. It literally figures out what is the best way of paying for something.
that will continue happening. You know, part of why we need to continue hiring engineers, you only maintain strong unit economics if you're able to offer something that no one else can sell. Competition on price sucks if you have a commodity that everybody else has. If you're building stuff that no one else got, you can actually sell it at a good price and not worry about someone undercutting you.
Got it. Thanks. As a follow-up question, Michael, one of the questions that we get most often from, you know, from investors is, you know, in the face of a rising rate environment, you know, obviously you have some, you know, some products where the consumer is the primary one that's been charged, and the other that's merchant, you know, charged to the merchant, particularly, you know, the zero percent category. Could you talk a little bit about your plans as to how to, you know, kind of manage the rising interest rate environment for each of those products and, you know, maybe what you've also done to date, if anything?
Yeah. We really haven't had to take any action to date. If you look at the merchant fee rate slide in our supplement, you'll see again relatively constant merchant fees. We view that as a real mark of success that in the face of pretty heavy competition, we're able to maintain and even grow, in some cases, the merchant fee side. Of course, as we talk a lot about on the APR side and the consumer side, those rates are strong enough to allow us to deliver really compelling unit economics. That's the lens through which we look at this question. It is true that as rates go up, there is pressure on our funding side of our business. It is a mistake to think about that as a full flow-through on a linear basis.
We have many different funding channels with staggered maturities and very different structures. As I mentioned, for example, we just onboarded a new forward flow partner, who's an insurance company, has a very different view of rates and how they think about that, versus, say, access to quality assets over time. That allows us to manage it in the nearer term. I think in the very long run, going out more than a year, you would expect us to need to start to take action, but that's more of a long-term thing than anything we deal with tactically in the near term.
Got it. Thanks very much.
Our next question comes from the line of Dan Perlin with RBC Capital Markets. You may proceed with your question.
Good evening, lots of good stuff here. I wanted to just touch on, and I suspect you're gonna kind of tread lightly on it a little bit, but I wanted to touch on this path to profitability, you know, on an adjusted operating income basis. My question is, when you think about it or when you kind of lay this plan out, how much of this is really a function of some of the scale-driven benefits that you've been able to accrue, you know, over the past several years versus really management's desire to kind of reach profitability sooner? Then the second piece of that is there anything in the macro environment that's compelling you to want to pull that forward?
Is this really in line with your long-term plan that we may or may not have been, really aware of? Thanks.
Good question. So first of all, the most important thing to take away is that it really is the scale that's allowing us to get there. I mean, if you look back a few quarters, you'll see that we're sort of dangerously flirting with profitability without ever saying it out loud. I think it was a useful and intelligent thing to do to tell the market, "Hey, we know exactly when it's gonna happen. Here's a date." It's not the same thing as saying, "Oh, ouch, we gotta get there fast, so let's pull some tricks and do unnatural things." Not at all. In that sense, it really is the function. The difficult thing was to build a product that commands a price and maintains a good margin and to be disciplined about credit.
You can grow 10x faster if you just approve everyone, and some of our competitors do that. It's a lot easier, but you then have to deal with bad losses. We are not okay with bad losses or losses that we can't control. Those are all things that we've always done, and that's the scale advantage that we have today is the variable revenue or adjusted. I'm gonna trip up on my accounting terms. Michael will correct me later. At a certain scale, your fixed costs get overwhelmed by your variable revenue, is basically what's happening here. The statement about profitability is fundamentally about telling the market we've always had a plan. We know where we're going. Here's a save the dates. We'll continue to invest. We are not doing unnatural things to get there.
Yep. No, that's fantastic. Just a quick follow-up on the engagement. Here again, very impressive. I think you said 2.7 the current quarter. Last quarter was 2.5. That's all happening at the time that you've had this massive, you know, active customer increase. The question I have here is, are you finding that in that repeat usage, the 81% versus kind of 75% last quarter, are the consumers using the same product again?
As in they come in as a Split Pay user, and they're always a Split Pay user, or are they finding that within that 81%, there's some diversification, and they may even mature into other products, and are you able to not steer them, but, you know, incentivize them, I guess, or maybe educate them into other options that may even be better for them? Thank you.
It's a great question. There's definitely a lot more to unpack there than I suspect the time allows. Here's just, like, bullet points that are sort of easy to rattle off. The probability of repeating at the same store is, generally speaking, highest for a majority of stores. There are some unique stores where you're just not going to come back because you already have a Peloton. Vast majority of the time, especially for some of the largest partnerships, it is highly likely that you will repeat at the store where you came from. Two, there is definitely propensity to repeat on the same product initially, but as each cohort matures and we have more opportunities to teach them what else Affirm can do for them, it widens.
Three, there's a fundamental difference between the behavior of people that have our app and the ones that don't. Like, that is just a profoundly different behavioral pattern, and I could write a small science paper on that one. Once you're using the app, you're basically starting to think of Affirm as a replacement for your purchasing device. You know, let's use that in quotes. Let's see, what else can I say very quickly? The last thing that's worth knowing, Adaptive Checkout, which I sort of bragged about a little bit earlier, is basically you can think of it as a router for financial tools. Like, we have sort of unpacked the credit card, the idea of like, "Hey, just swipe your card, we'll figure it out later." It's actually a really convenient user interface.
It's terrible for you as a sort of financial decision personally, but it's a really, really nice user interface. The big thing that we have to accomplish here is we have to continue offering you the choice, but we kind of have to guide you to a good decision because there, you know, already we have a lot of choices and you are used to the no choice at all version of the credit card. Adaptive Checkout is that idea. It's this canvas where you say, "Hey, here's three choices. This one is no interest at all. This one is a little bit longer term, but has some interest," et cetera. As we deploy that across more and more surfaces, you will see more product cross-pollination. We're right in the middle of just pushing that very, very hard.
Like, literally, I'm watching the first numbers coming in from some of the deployments outside of our own products, and probably next quarter we'll start talking about what that cross-pollination really looks like.
That's great. Thank you so much.
Our next question comes from the line of James Faucette with Morgan Stanley. You may proceed with your question.
Thank you very much. Thanks for all the details today, guys. Wanted to ask about on your credit performance, you said it had been a little bit better than you'd thought, Michael. Can you talk a little bit about how you're managing that right now, especially with the changing environment? Are you being more restrictive at different points or are you finding that isn't necessary yet? Just wondering if you can give a little color in terms of how you're managing the credit applications and doling out of credit right now.
I'll start, and Michael will probably give a more precise answer. We always manage it exactly the same way. Like, we have not at all changed our approach. We look at both vertical and horizontal slices. We ask the question, how is this component of American societies doing, or Canadian or Australian? How are they overall in terms of their job security and sort of the policy set, sort of this horizontal slice? Then vertically, we ask the question, how are the sales in this merchant category? We know what folks are selling. We know if it's selling better or worse, which means that the advertising campaigns that drive consumer demand can reach audiences that are potentially overextended already and maybe shouldn't be borrowing. All of that feeds into the policy setting.
We tune it, but we tune it all the time. It's not a thing that we sort of get together and say, "All right, you know, it's been a quarter, let's talk about it." Like, we talk about it literally every Monday morning. There is a triage conversation about credit with our head of risk in the room with the executive team, and we review all of our numbers and say, "Hey, how do we feel about the American consumer at the highest level?" We dive deep into, here's this product. It's called Split Pay. How's it doing on Shopify? That's what we're doing. Then it's performing a little bit better typically means that the precautionary steps we took were slightly less necessary than we expected. It's one or two degrees to the right or to the left.
It's never let's pull a handbrake and oh you know we overtightened or something like that. We really do not run it like a bank would. This was very evocative. Michael probably has better numerical answers.
No, I think the other thing, guys, is we look at the unit economics in the business, whether you measure that through the financial statements like we do in the revenue less transaction costs or you look at it on a horizontal basis, and we make sure that there's enough economic content, and we make sure that we make credit decisions consistent with that. The things we're always looking at is based upon prior originations, how are they trending against the forecasted numbers? Given the very short duration of our asset, we're able to get that signal very quickly and feed it back into decisioning. If you just look at where we're at right now, we did better on the revenue less transaction cost line in large part because we performed better.
This is a bit of a counter signal to what you're seeing in a lot of other companies right now, and we attribute that mostly to the fact that we're pretty careful on the front end, and we're very diligent about managing it, as Max alluded to.
Got it. Appreciate that. When we look at you're adding additional capital partners and commitments, et cetera, how are you feeling about where you're positioned now with kind of those commitments versus your growth targets? Is there a lot of cushion there? I know you haven't given guidance for next year, but obviously I would assume that those carry into next year, et cetera. Just wondering if you can give a little bit of nuance and color of where you're at versus where you wanna be on both capital commitment and how that relates to your growth ambitions generally.
I think the easiest way is we feel really, really good. We ended the quarter with $9 billion. We actually have over $10.1 billion as we sit here today. Additional capital that we talked about the call, both the 2022-A deal and the ABS market, as well as the onboarding of the new forward flow partner. Both of those two are just, we think massive endorsements of the product. I think it's just a good time to remind everybody that there is widespread support for the asset we generate in the capital markets, and we have not seen that be a real difficulty. We have seen the overall macro market change, so that changes rates, it changes spreads.
The asset underneath it, the asset we create, continues to be something that all of our capital partners both understand and value, and even the rating agencies value, as I talked about the AAA rating on the senior tranche in our last ABS deal. That suggests we're producing really quality assets, and it's linked back to the credit question. If we keep our eye on the ball and produce good assets like we have been and will continue to do, we feel really good about it. We're not giving guidance, like you said, for fiscal 2023, but we feel very good about where we stand. If anything, I think you're gonna see us continue to be slightly larger on capacity or lower in utilization, because of the macro concerns, even though we actually don't have those as a management team.
Got it. Thanks for that input, Michael.
Our next question comes from the line of Jason Kupferberg with Bank of America. You may proceed with your question.
Thanks for all this, guys. Yeah, just a couple of things. Maybe I'll come back to the sustained profitability messaging. Just wondering if you can quantify that at all. I'm just thinking back to the Analyst Day last year, when I think you guys had said that adjusted operating margin would get to the 0%-10% range once revenue growth had slowed to 20%-30%, GMV to 30%-40%. Is that the right way to think about where you may exit fiscal 2023? Just wondering how we should view that in light of the Analyst Day, or do you feel like this is a little bit of a updated messaging just given how much the macro environment has changed?
Yeah. Thanks for the question and appreciate the way you word it. This is definitely, as we say, an and. This does not replace our prior and nor is it meant to suggest that we think growth will slow. Quite the opposite, as Max talked about. To be, you know, brutally clear, we do not think that the decisions we'll take in order to get us to that break even or better adjusted operating income will result in any sort of slowdown in growth period. In fact, the growth will allow us to achieve it, and the focus on unit economics will get us there from there, you know, inevitably. Please don't read into us suggesting that the growth rates will slow. Quite the opposite. We feel very good about the growth into next year.
While we're not giving any guidance today, I think there are a few trends that are worth highlighting. The first is that, remember, we'll be experiencing the full year for both Shopify and Amazon, and not just the full year with those deals, but the full year with expanded product rollouts. We talked about the expansion on Shopify to new products, including Adaptive Checkout, but also all the optimizations that Max talks so often about, whether it's the sum of a lot of little things that we're doing with these large partners. That's gonna be a key avenue for growth for us. As always, we talk about Debit+ as a thing that will continue to be very incremental to any of the current run rate in the business. We feel really good about growth into next year.
We're not giving any guidance, but please don't hear our profitability target as any indication that we expect to slow down. Quite the opposite.
Very helpful. Just on gross profit on revs less transaction costs, you know, you're gonna exit this year. I mean, based on your Q4 guide, just, you know, at or maybe a hair above the top end of the 3%-4% longer term range. I know we'll have to wait till next quarter to get a full complement of guidance, but is there any reason to believe sitting here today that you won't be able to comfortably stay in that range next fiscal year?
Absolutely not. We feel very strong about our ability to deliver that in any market environment, and we'll continue to use that as the range to talk about in the business. This quarter saw us, you know, pretty materially above that range. Again, I would characterize that as being a little bit warmer than we want it to be. 3%-4% is a very good range for us. This is the fifth straight time we've hit our commitments, and we would expect to continue to do that, and we're committed to do 3%-4%.
Good to hear. Thanks for the comments.
Our next question comes from the line of Ramsey El-Assal with Barclays. You may proceed with your question.
Hi. Thanks for taking my question this evening. I want to follow up on Jason's last question in terms of the timing of the ramp of the Shopify expansion and also of the Stripe deal. Should we think of that as just hitting 2023 rather than having an impact later this year? And in addition, how long is the Shopify renewal for? I think I saw in the press release multi-year. I'm not sure if you can tell us exactly how long it was for.
Yeah, last question first. It's all the way through June of 2025. The timing, we are in the midst of rolling out additional products to Shopify right now, as Max mentioned. It's, you know, uncertain if it'll have any material impact in the next, you know, six weeks of the quarter, but feel good about it. I think that and the Stripe deal are much bigger going into fiscal 2023. You know, Max, maybe you can provide some color on the Stripe deal.
Sure. Stripe deal is super cool. Basically one of the sort of common delays, if you will, when we sign a merchant to launch them, the conversation is always say, "Hey, how long is it gonna be before we can go live?" Say, "Hey, we got to put two lines of JavaScript into your checkout and on your product page and off you go." And then we have to integrate with your payment system and, you know, plumb, if you will, the settlement and money transfer and everything. If you have a deal with an existing-
Payment provider for that merchant, e.g. FIS or Global Payments or Adyen or Stripe, which is the latest one. You can literally replace that whole back-end integration with, "Oh, yeah, we'll just route Affirm transactions on the rail that has already been put in there by Stripe." That's literally flipping a switch to an enormous number of merchants that have partnered with Stripe. It's literally millions in their case. We also have a bunch of really interesting projects planned with them that probably are beyond the scope. Again, I would want you to not think of them as an immediately accretive thing, but it is a vast market opportunity that we're very, very excited.
You know, as a longtime friend and fan of Stripe and a full disclosure investor in the company, we are very happy with the partnership there.
Great. Sounds like a pretty.
It's all about creating these avenues for more growth for many years forward. That's what this is all about.
Perfect. Follow-up from me. Sales and marketing expense was down quarter-over-quarter quite a bit. I guess, first, how should we think about that line going forward in terms of where it might stand as a percentage of revenue? In addition, as you ramp with the larger platforms and brands like, you know, Amazon, Shopify, et cetera, will that have a positive impact on your marketing spend? Can you rely on their brand and their, you know, their marketing spend effectively to kind of take some of the pressure off your P&L?
Yeah. First, on a non-GAAP basis, you did see sales and marketing come down quite a bit, sequentially and, you know, really even on a year-on-year basis. That is mostly due to the timing of some marketing campaigns that we run. We talk a lot about this, but our marketing activity isn't tied to, in-quarter revenue or GMV generation. The kind of investments that we've been making over the past year have really been around building a brand and building awareness in the consumer, which has a less direct and less tied to in-quarter performance measure. That's why you're able to see in this quarter a really strong growth despite, you know, pretty substantially less amount of sales and marketing on a non-GAAP basis.
I think going forward, we're not prepared to give you any indication about the shape of the P&L or where we expect those lines to be. Obviously, as we work ourselves towards, you know, breakeven or better on an adjusted operating income line, we would expect leverage across all of our fixed cost lines.
Great. Thanks.
Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Jeffrey with Truist Securities. You may proceed with your question.
Hi, good afternoon. Certainly appreciate you taking the question, and appreciate the conviction, Max, as usual. Michael, you know, we get a lot of questions about the fin side of the business, not as much the tech side of the business. A couple things stand out to me and I wanted to ask first about just the platform portfolio and funding mix, slide 19. The fact that equity capital required is actually down to 2%. There was a lot of talk about a securitization that didn't get done inter-quarter, for example. Is that a sustainable level? To me, that's super impressive given, especially given all the concerns about liquidity that seem to be swirling around the market and around Affirm in particular.
Appreciate the question. Yeah, I think we've said that we'd like to be below 5% on a sustainable basis and feel like that's a good range to be at. You'll see it ebb and flow quarter to quarter based upon how much forward flow or one-time deals might happen. This last quarter saw a securitization happen early in the quarter, which I guess folks weren't really anticipating. That actually allowed us to move quite a bit of our zero percent paper off the balance sheet, and you can see that as the top bar on that chart there on that slide. That will continue to be the way we wanna operate. We wanna be both durable in the quantum of capital that we have access to.
We wanna deliver the unit economics that we've signed up for and be very efficient with the shareholders' capital. We definitely never wanna let growth be impacted by our capital program, so we're always gonna be overfunded with excess capacity. You've seen us do that this past quarter, and we'll do that into the future, while still delivering really strong units. Would say that we'd be below 5%. Don't know that we'd stay in the 2% range sustainably. Again, I just would reiterate that I think our team is doing a very good job executing in these pretty volatile markets. We're pretty proud of the access to capital that we enjoy right now because we generate a high-quality asset.
Yeah. That's clear. I appreciate that. Then Max, you know, maybe a question I know it's early, you know, on Affirm Debit+, but can you talk about any learnings or thoughts about inflows and the ability to drive direct deposit attach and what you think the opportunity is for, you know, for growth from more recurring spend on that product?
Let's see. I promised myself and Michael that I will not jump out with a bunch of cool stats, and yet as I as an engineer, I'm prone to them. Here's a cool one. The number one most visited physical retail used by Debit+ consumers right now is Walmart Groceries, which I think is probably true for a lot of America, but it's, to me, super anecdotal, so just ignore it, if you will. But
It tells you that a subset of consumers that we have given the card to have now used it to buy groceries, which I think that's probably the sort of warmest, fuzziest news I've heard about the product so far. It's super infant. You know, this is a very, very baby product. It has on the current UX rev is 180-something, and it it's gonna be in the thousands before we're satisfied here. But the fact that people are using it to buy food is the best indicator I've heard. Like that we want it to be top of wallet. We want it to be the thing that people pick to go shopping for their family, to give them financial flexibility.
You know, I have a lot of miles and a lot of commitment to this product to go. In terms of shareable statistics, it's growing at ridiculous rates right now, but it's also completely, you know, self-stimulated in the sense that we're finally opening up to a bunch of waitlist users. Of course, it's gonna grow at crazy rates. At some point, it's gonna even out, and then we'll know what the natural growth rate looks like. We will open it up to the entire Affirm base. Once the wait list is cleared out, you'll just have a button in your Affirm app saying, "Hey, do you want your card?" We just need a little bit more time to scale. My team's alerting me that I misspoke.
The security issue we had earlier in Q3 was an interest-bearing, not a 0%. In any event, it got off sheet and proud of the execution. Wanted to make sure that got read in so I don't get attacked.
All right. Well, very, very cool. Appreciate it. Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Dan Dolev with Mizuho. You may proceed with your question.
Hey, guys. Thanks for letting me ask my question. Just really quick, can you give us a sense of sort of the interplay between the reserves and the charge-offs? You know, charge-offs are rising, reserves seem to be coming down. Like, how much of it is, you know, Michael, like denominator/Split Pay difference, mix difference? And then I have a quick follow-up. Thank you.
I mean, the allowance is always the current estimate as a percentage of loans held for sale, the current estimate of future losses. That 6.4% where we're in it at, that's where we'd expect it to be on a percentage basis. If you want more of a kind of backward-looking measure, that's where we show the delinquency performance, and you see that's trending on, I guess it's slide 21 of the supplement. You can see where that's trending. Charge-offs are a bit difficult to get too much information out of, given that we charge off at 120 days. It's pretty difficult to really get a sense of how credit performance is reflected through the charge-off line.
Again, the short duration of our asset makes that doubly true.
Got it. Just one last data point, if I may. I don't know if I missed it, but can you give us, like, some GMV estimates for Shopify and Amazon?
Yeah. Unfortunately, I can't. No. What we did say on the call was.
No one's listening. It's okay.
Dan, you and I both know that's not true. The thing we said on the call, the prepared remarks, which is true, is that no partner was more than 10% of GMV or revenue on a three- and nine-month basis. You can get some sense there. We also showed you the general merchandise category, which is inclusive of some of the largest retailers in the world, grew to over $670 million. Those are the stats we can share.
Okay, great. Thank you. Great quarter.
Our next question comes from the line of Rob Wildhack with Autonomous Research. You may proceed with your question.
Hi, guys. Thanks for fitting me in. Just as a percentage of funding debt, the funding costs in the quarter were quite a bit lower. Can you talk about what's going on there?
Yeah. I think that reflects a number of factors, actually, Lisa, which is execution. Remember, we've been talking about this a lot, but rates moving does impact us, but not in the near term. Most of our is locked in and committed. Very little of it is truly floating. If you look at our warehouse, that limits the amount of funding rate exposure that we have. Just generally, we have a lot of very well-executed capital markets activity over the past 18 months that reflects in really strong performance.
Got it. Thanks. Bigger picture, you know, I think the Adaptive Checkout seems to be a real linchpin of all the deals that you've announced recently, specifically from the enterprise partners. Max, you talked about it a little bit, but anything to add on why that product kind of stands out as being particularly interesting to those partners?
Sure. A couple of different reasons. We talked about this before, so I apologize if this is sort of old news. Vast majority of large enterprise partners that we have, one, picked us because we span the entire gamut of products possible. If you are just a Split Pay specialist, it's great, but if you sell both bicycles and bicycle tires, you will need two providers. If you are, you know, picking a technology partner, and you want them to scale, you want them to be good at underwriting, you want them to have good capital markets, you don't want them to go out of business, and we fit all those criteria really well. The one thing that we do have is we have excellent well-performing products that meet the price point and the consumer need. That doesn't.
You know, we have multiple products, that's great, but you still may have to integrate those products multiple times. Adaptive Checkout was this idea that what if we gave you just one single integration, and we will guide the consumer to the right financial choice for them so that the consumer satisfaction actually accretes to both us and the brand, that, you know, we are literally helping the person live a healthier financial life. It's only resonated with our partners. It certainly really resonated with us because it's extremely on mission, and it allows us to just continue driving savings in terms of, you know, paid interest to consumers and better conversion to the merchants. It's almost a meta product. It's an infrastructure for multiple products that we've built in the past to live together in harmony in a single page.
It has been really well received by the market. You're right in that sense. Some merchants, by the way, are not really appropriate. If you only sell apparel within sort of a very tight $30-$50 price range, you might not care about the ability to pay for things over 12 months. But if you are Walmart or an Amazon or many, many, many other merchants that sell multiple SKUs in a fairly wide range of price points, then Adaptive Checkout is the ideal product 'cause you only integrate it once. It has all the same properties of Affirm, and it self-changes to meet the consumer need on the spot without the merchant having to configure anything.
By the way, it also supports things like 0% deals and all the stuff that we're famous for that we've done so well with for the last 10 years. It's all baked inside a single integration.
Very helpful. Thank you.
Our last question comes from the line of Bryan Keane with Deutsche Bank. You may proceed with your question.
Hi, guys. Just a couple quick ones. I guess just thinking about the tightening of the credit market. Has your guys' transaction acceptance rate changed at all, given kinda where we are in the market? Secondly, when we look at delinquencies, is there a reason why it's excluding Split Pay now on the slide on 21? Maybe I missed that piece. Where do you expect delinquencies to track at these levels kinda through the fiscal year? Thanks.
Sorry, I'm completely blanked on the first part of the question, but of course it's written in front of me. Sorry. The transaction approval rate has not changed very much at all. Again, like, we really manage this at a merchant to merchant and sort of basket of risk level to basket of risk. There's multiple different acceptance rates, and they're really, really quite different. Like, it's just really important to think of Affirm as a... If you need one number, it's a weighted average, and the weights are quite dramatically different from bucket to bucket. That said, the weighted average right now is roughly the same.
The reason for it isn't because there aren't people paying more or less of their bills, but because the application rates that we have, the number of people asking us for a loan vastly exceed the ones that we're actually going to approve. Vastly is a little strong, but the approval rates have remained pretty good and remained the same. The point there is our job is to rank risks. We've been quite good historically and intend to remain in the future very, very good at rank ordering applicants that come through. We approve the ones we believe can pay their bills, and then after that, we stop. The number of people that ask that can't pay their bills does not seem to be changing very much, and so the approval rates therefore have remained roughly the same. Or the acceptance rates have remained roughly the same.
Since I've tongue-tied my way through this one, I'll let Michael take care of the other half.
Yeah. The DQ chart does not exclude Split Pay. The vast majority of our balances on a total platform portfolio basis are not Split Pay. The Split Pay asset's a 50-day asset, and we have a 120-day charge-off policy. As you can imagine, the way that actually works with respect to the delinquency calculation doesn't really make sense to look at on a DQ 30 basis. We think it's pretty misleading to look at it that way. In terms of where it's going, we would expect to continue to track at or below the 19 levels on a portfolio basis based upon our current projections.
Great. Thanks for taking the question.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of today's question and answer session. This does conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation. Enjoy the rest of your day.