Venmo launches account and debit card for teens
The account will be rolled out to select customers in June and will be “widely available” in the coming weeks.
The account will be rolled out to select customers in June and will be “widely available” in the coming weeks.
Here’s our pick of five of the top news stories from the world of finance and tech this week.
Visa has partnered with PayPal and Venmo to trial the new service.
It is the first international expansion of the service outside the US.
The fintech says it will soon have 60 million indirect users.
It is understood the services will offer “a built-in wallet functionality” so you can store crypto.
Venmo will now be able to compete with N26 and Chime in the US market
Simplifying the way Uber users can pay with Venmo.
The card’s beta is now closed, and the public roll-out has started.
E-commerce titan could be taking on Visa, Mastercard and PayPal.
FTC reaches settlement over allegations that PayPal provided inaccurate payments information to Venmo users.
Consumers prefer to use P2P payments for retail purchases, paying back relatives and friends, and settling bills—but not so much for contributing to group gifts or paying housing costs, according to a new report from NerdWallet. It also found that that while only 35 percent of U.S. consumers use such P2P products as Venmo, PayPal and Square Cash, 63 percent are interested in the payment technology.
Venmo is planning to introduce a physical debit card to supplement its payments app.
PayPal users in the US will soon be able to speed up money transfers to their bank accounts via eligible debit cards linked to their PayPal account. Bill Ready, EVP, COO, PayPal, says it expects that funds “will typically be available in your bank account in a matter of minutes, although some banks may take […]
As a Gen Xer, I have always had difficulty relating to the obsessive appeal social media has to millennials. Tweeting and Facebook posting of mundane daily events seemed like over-sharing and just a little narcissistic to me. This is not an intellectual problem of understanding the concepts or technologies, but a kind of generational disparity […]