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Australia’s Zip Co tanks over 34% in decade’s worst session on earnings miss

By Thomson Reuters Feb 18, 2026 | 7:52 PM

By Sneha Kumar and Roshan Thomas

Feb 19 (Reuters) – Australian buy-now, pay-later firm Zip Co logged first-half operating earnings below analyst expectations on Thursday, sending its shares tumbling over ​34% in their worst session in more than a ‌decade.

The digital payments firm reported cash operating earnings of A$124.3 million ($87.61 million) for the six-month period ended December 31, up 85.6% from a year earlier but below the Visible Alpha consensus estimate of A$128.4 million.

The ‌company ​also said it expects its second-half group ⁠cash earnings to broadly ⁠match the first six months.

Zip Co shares closed 34.4% lower at A$1.85 in their worst session since mid-November 2014. The stock dropped as much as 39.2% earlier in the ​session to hit its lowest since early May 2025.

The firm, which thrived during the Covid-19 pandemic due to ultra-cheap money, ⁠was the biggest loser on the ⁠benchmark index, which ended 0.9% higher.

“Although Zip delivered ​solid first-half cash earnings, guidance for flat growth in the ​second half caught investors off guard, signalling a dramatic ‌deceleration in momentum,” said Marc Jocum, senior product and investment strategist at Global X ETFs.

“In this (earnings and rate hike) environment, even minor disappointments in growth, guidance, or operational efficiency can trigger ⁠outsized reactions, explaining why Zip became the most punished stock on an otherwise strong ASX 200 today.”

Weaker momentum in adding U.S. customers and ⁠higher credit losses ‌weighed on Zip Co’s results, UBS analysts ⁠said. Net bad debts in the half year ​increased ‌to 1.73% of the total transaction volume, ​up from 1.56% ⁠a year earlier.

Zip Co said it would monitor conditions and consider a dual listing on a U.S. stock exchange only when it aligned with shareholders’ best interests.

($1 = 1.4188 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Sneha Kumar and Roshan Thomas in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu ​and Sherry Jacob-Phillips)