Klarna Group PLC's (NYSE:KLAR) "buy now, pay later" promise is colliding with a harsh public-market reality. Just months after its 2025 IPO, Klarna reported its first billion-dollar revenue quarter — but investors focused on the losses.
Revenue surged 38% year-over-year to $1.08 billion, beating expectations, yet the company swung to a $26 million quarterly loss and issued weaker-than-expected guidance, triggering a sharp stock selloff.
The earnings shock comes as Klarna faces mounting legal pressure, with Feb. 20 marking the deadline for investors to seek lead plaintiff status in a securities class-action lawsuit tied to its IPO disclosures.
Klarna Earnings Raise Credit Risk Concerns
The core issue isn't revenue growth — it's credit quality. Klarna's provisions for loan losses surged, with credit costs rising sharply as the company expanded lending and installment financing products.
At the same time, Klarna projected first-quarter revenue below analyst expectations, reinforcing concerns that growth may be slowing even as risks rise.
The result: shares plunged as much as 25% following the earnings release, reflecting investor unease over profitability, credit exposure, and forward outlook.
Klarna IPO Lawsuit Deadline Hits
The securities lawsuit alleges Klarna failed to fully disclose risks tied to loan losses and credit reserves in its IPO filings. Investors now have until Feb. 20 to seek lead plaintiff status, a critical milestone that could shape the legal battle.
The timing is notable. Klarna went public in September 2025 at $40 per share, but the stock has fallen sharply since (trading at around $14/share currently), as rising credit losses and weaker guidance reshaped investor expectations.
Q4 Earnings Shift IPO Narrative
Klarna's latest results confirmed strong user growth, with active consumers reaching 118 million and gross merchandise volume hitting $38.7 billion. But the shift from profit to loss — combined with rising credit costs and ongoing litigation — has fundamentally changed the post-IPO narrative.
"Interest-free" may still apply to Klarna's customers. But for investors, the real cost of growth is now coming into focus.
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