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It sounds suspicious tho. So who takes the risk?



You think Apple is lying about this? Or you think that they are hoping that you miss payments and then they (a three trillion dollar company) are going to make a material amount of money on an interest penalty?


> You think Apple is lying about this?

No of course not. I'm not saying Apple is lying.

> Or you think that they are hoping that you miss payments and then they (a three trillion dollar company) are going to make a material amount of money on an interest penalty?

Maybe? I don't know how much banks make from this kind of thing. That "(a three trillion dollar company)" comment is so irrelevant that it's almost laughable tho. Banks are huge companies too, and they still make money from interest.


Yes, banks are large precisely because they make money this way. The point is that Apple makes huge amounts of money by selling tech products and services, and by having a loyal following. It would be surprising if they decided to trade some of that goodwill for a relatively (in their world) amount of cash.


Essentially, Apple. Goldman is getting their pay in transaction fees. Apple is hoping to increase the number of purchases made on Apple's products. You get cash back on each transaction, Goldman gets a percentage of each transaction, Apple just loses a tiny bit of their profit on the sale, but they still made the sale. The only issue then is that debt collection is more expensive. The truth, however, is that most people pay their debts.


Miss one of those interest free payments and I suspect it gets expensive very quickly.




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