Latest news
07.20.2020
Here’s how being denied for a credit card impacts your credit score
Being denied for a credit card doesn’t hurt your credit score. But the hard inquiry from submitting an application can cause your score to decrease.
What New Parents Should Know About Life Insurance
Having a baby can bring the gaps in your financial plan into sharp focus. New parents often feel they need to find ways to provide financial security...
Why Searching for Cheap Stocks Is the Wrong Investing Strategy
The premise makes more than enough sense: For the same reason consumers want more bang for their buck at the stores they regularly shop...
Private credit lenders seek protection in minimum liquidity protocol
Private credit firms are requiring their borrowers maintain a strong liquidity cushion as the coronavirus pandemic forces middle market companies...
Consumer credit fell at a slower 5.3% in May as the economy began to recover
The use of credit cards fell at a much slower pace in May as the economy began to recover and the government provided financial relief to households...
Latest news
07.20.2020
The volcano method
for understanding
the fintech revolution
By Alex Wilhelm, Senior Editor at TechCrunch.
The Department of Justice moved to block the long-impending Visa-Plaid deal today.
The transaction was announced in early 2020, making the decision by the government to try and scuttle its consummation in November a large irritation to both parties. The pair spent nearly the entire year operating in the gray area between having struck a deal and being granted its approval, and may now have endured all that misery for no reason.
But regardless of what happens next with the deal, inside the government’s suit itself was a simply epic piece of art. That’s something you don’t say much about antitrust, sure, but in 2020 everything is possible.
Here’s the drawing, with context:
As you can read from the accompanying text, Plaid is the volcano and, we suppose by analogy, Visa is somewhere else above the water doing business, worried that Plaid may erupt and change the climate in which Visa currently operates. That would work.
A less interesting explanation of the Magic Volcano — a far better conceptual framework than a magic quadrant — is what former Visa Ventures founder Peter Berg said about the doodle:
By Peter’s analogy, the volcano is really more of an iceberg. That would make Visa the Titanic or some similar boat, right?
It would be fun to close by saying “all aboard the S.S. Visatanic,” but it appears the government is trying to ensure that Plaid cannot berth aboard the boat.
Sticking to our nautical riff, if the Volcano-Iceberg Deal is killed, will Plaid raise the Jolly Roger and go hunt some other ships? There’s one in particular that comes to mind.
This article was originally published By Alex Wilhelm techcrunch.com.
VantageScore 3.0: What's a Great
Credit Score?
Why an Excellent
Credit Score
Matters
MONEY • BEST • CREDIT CARDS • SCORE
We updated our privacy policy as of June 03, 2020. Learn about our personal information collection practices here.