Home Technology Facebook e-Payment Service Could Act As WhatsApp Springboard

Facebook e-Payment Service Could Act As WhatsApp Springboard

Advertisement Disclosure: When you purchase through our sponsored links, we may earn a commission from our partners. By using this website you agree to our T&Cs.

According to recent reports, Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) is in the early stages of building an electronic payments service. The rumored focus on emerging markets suggests that this service may have a tie-in with Whatsapp. More importantly, an e-payment service could meet one of two possible goals with respect to Facebook’s (or Whatsapp’s) business model.

Facebook e-Payment Service Could Act As WhatsApp Springboard

Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB)’s current, advertising-based revenue model relies on access to — (1) engaged users, (2) advertisers, and (3) customer data to improve targeting. In contrast, Whatsapp as a product does not currently generate meaningful revenue (subscriptions are not scalable) or data (privacy commitments) for Facebook. My hypothesis is that an electronic or mobile payment service is likely to leverage Whatsapp’s scale, simplicity and engagement to tackle one of these problems.

Facebook’s e-payment service scenario-1: Mobile payments as a profit center

In this scenario, the payment service would become a revenue model for Whatsapp. WeChat has already proved that payments through messaging apps are not just viable, but a natural extension of the platform. This is because messaging is ubiquitous with respect to time, location and context, i.e. everyone uses it everywhere. Therefore, it would not be difficult for Whatsapp to find contexts where payment services are relevant.

The problem here is that even large e-payment companies like PayPal have been facing margin pressures because of competition and increasing bargaining power at adjacent points of the value chain (credit card fees, implementation cost at the point-of-sale). In order to overcome these challenges, PayPal has been eyeing transaction data to boost profitability.

Scenario-2: Mobile payments as a cost center

In this scenario, the payment service would become a cost center making it much cheaper than competing products like PayPal. Combining a low-cost approach with the ubiquity of messaging use cases would speed up user adoption and allow Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) to collect valuable transaction data (this also explains Google’s interest in mobile payments).

With their access to advertisers and consumers, Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) is in an ideal position to maximize the value of this data — it would have a direct impact on the effectiveness of Facebook ads, as well as potential brand-to-customer communications on Whatsapp. Given Facebook’s business model, I think this is scenario is much more likely and would constitute an asymmetric threat to existing payment providers.

This article first appeared at Tech-Thoughts

Our Editorial Standards

At ValueWalk, we’re committed to providing accurate, research-backed information. Our editors go above and beyond to ensure our content is trustworthy and transparent.

Editor
Investing

Which Stocks Should You Buy, and Sell, in 2026?

Dave Kovaleski6 months

Also, the 3 sectors that Wall Street analysts are most bullish about. The usual suspects dominated in 2025 as both the Communication Services and Information Technology sectors helped boost the...