As more fintechs expand their digital offerings, Bolt is preparing to launch a platform positioned as an all-in-one super app.
Originally founded as a checkout solution for merchants, the company has faced shortfalls and leadership changes. Now, it is pivoting into the digital wallet space, where it will face stiff competition from leading financial services players.
The super app is set to include digital banking, crypto trading, and peer-to-peer payments, among other features. It will also incorporate agentic commerce powered by an artificial intelligence agent that can shop, make recommendations, and complete purchases on behalf of users. To further drive engagement, the platform will integrate a rewards program directly into the app.
Not a Novel Concept
The super app model is not a novel concept. Platforms like China’s Alipay and WeChat Pay have long offered unified solutions that combine users’ financial lives with non-financial services such as messaging.
Bolt is not alone in its ambitions to bring a similar approach to the rest of the world. Buy now, pay later (BNPL) leader Klarna recently signaled its intentions to beef up its app into an all-encompassing platform. It has steadily added financial services, forged partnerships to extend its footprint, and even launched mobile phone plans in the U.S.
A Fragmented Space
Interestingly, Klarna also recently inked a deal with Bolt to integrated its BNPL service into the websites of merchants using Bolt’s checkout platform, CheckoutOS.
With the super app launch, Bolt now finds itself in direct competition with Klarna—as well as several others. Both PayPal and Block have added substantial features to their platforms aimed at keeping users engaged within their ecosystems.
This creates a challenging competitive environment for Bolt, which has previously struggled to hit its targets and justify its valuation.
“Bolt’s adjusted strategy has it expanding horizontally as a consumer wallet that travels across merchants and will support stablecoins, etc., but the digital wallet space is just as crowded for consumers as the checkout space is for merchants,” Don Apgar, Director of Merchant Payments at Javelin Strategy & Research told PaymentsJournal. “It’s hard to tell whether this is a cohesive strategy or just a larger product roadmap that attempts to justify the $14 billion valuation.”
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