Why the Apple Card Move Matters for Big Banks
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The deal brings significant financial implications for both banks involved. JPMorgan Chase is set to acquire more than $20 billion in Apple Card balances, strengthening its already massive credit card portfolio. According to reporting from the Wall Street Journal, Goldman Sachs is exiting the partnership at a roughly $1 billion discount.
Goldman Sachs expects a sizable financial hit, including a $2.2 billion provision for credit losses tied to the transition in late 2025. The shift marks the end of a high-profile partnership that began in 2019, when Apple and Goldman launched the Apple Card with consumer-friendly terms like no late fees and daily cashback—features that helped redefine how tech companies and banks collaborate.
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Consumer-friendly terms met credit-cycle reality.
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Apple optimized for adoption, not loss curves.