Klarna to cut staff, growth plans after losses mount

 

Bloomberg

Klarna Bank AB, months after announcing major job cuts and taking a $39-billion hit to its valuation, is planning to restructure parts of its business further to suit a slower-growing, smaller operation.
In a meeting this week, a manager in the internal engineering unit of the Swedish buy-now-pay-later company told staff, some of whom were about to lose their jobs, that Klarna will be less focused on growth and will have fewer employees by the end of 2022. While that means cuts for this unit and others, the productivity and platforms business will still need to “keep the lights on.”
The lender makes interest-free, short term loans to customers who use the service to spread payments on purchases — from gas and groceries to clothes and electronics — over a number of months. It collects fees from its retail partners, including brands such as Nike, H&M and Samsung.

A Klarna spokesperson confirmed that Giesecke was making changes in her new role and said that the company is “constantly evaluating and making adjustments to the structure of its organisation.”
Giesecke’s announcement to the “impacted teams” will be followed with one-on-one conversations with managers and Klarna is looking to re-deploy people to other parts of the organisation, the spokesperson said.

The presentation followed comments on Monday from newly promoted Chief Operating Officer Camilla Giesecke, who took the role in August. In a video meeting, Giesecke had announced that employees who work in internal support functions would be reduced to accommodate a smaller workforce following dismissals earlier in the year, when Klarna said it would cut 10% of its approximately 7,000 employees.
“With a leaner organisation to support, I have come to the conclusion that we need to restructure the COO domains to mirror the more focused nature of today’s Klarna,” Giesecke said, according to a memo seen by Bloomberg.
The productivity and platforms manager’s follow-up presentation was “intended to be illustrative to help provide further context. They do not reflect validated Klarna data,” the spokesperson said. The Klarna spokesperson said the manager’s comments were “colloquial phrases” that “do not represent the wider views of the business.”
Swedish newspaper SvD reported that the company was considering reorganising some of its departments, citing a staff memo.
Klarna, once Europe’s most valuable startup, has been hit with expanding losses at a time when investors are becoming more skeptical of growth at the expense of profit.
When Chief Executive Officer Sebastian Siemiatkowski announced the 10% reduction in workers in May, he told employees that “Klarna does not exist in a bubble.” The war in Ukraine, inflationary pressures and the prospect of a recession in many of its markets had pushed the company to cut costs. Two months later, Klarna’s valuation was slashed to $6.7 billion from $45.6 billion as part of a fundraising round.
The lender makes interest-free, short term loans to customers who use the service to spread payments on purchases — from gas and groceries to clothes and electronics — over a number of months. It collects fees from its retail partners, including brands such as Nike, H&M and Samsung.
Klarna’s losses tripled in the first half of the year. Siemiatkowski has said that Klarna can’t afford to be “as forward leaning” while investors are becoming more cautious on the industry, and said he aimed to bring the business back to profitability. The company’s model makes it vulnerable to rising costs that might force customers to cut spending or affect their ability to repay their loans.
Net credit losses rose to 2.85 billion kronor in the first half, up from 1.85 billion kronor a year earlier, which Klarna said was due to overall loan growth. Spending using the company’s service is expanding, with gross merchandise volume increasing 24% from a year earlier in the period. Klarna said it has 150 million customers across 45 markets.
Klarna employees who lost their jobs this week were given handouts that showed what severance affected workers would be offered — as much as six months with four months of paid notice for the longest-serving employees.

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