Chime Financial

Chime posted an 87.6% gross margin and still printed a large per-share loss on a ~$2.2B revenue base in 2025.

If you own CHYM, you own a fast-growing fintech that still has to prove profits are real.

chym

financials mid cap updated jan 30, 2026
$26.07
market cap ~$10B · 52-week range $16–$45
xvary composite: 55 / 100 · below average
our overall rating — combines growth, value, risk, and momentum
Start here if you're new
what it is
Chime sells low-cost banking and payments tools through partner banks, then makes money when you use the card and app.
how it gets paid
Last year Chime Financial made $2.2B in revenue. debit card interchange was the main engine at $1.14B, or 52% of sales.
why it's growing
Revenue grew ~31% last year on about $2.2B. Ignore +193% vs. prior year next to that — it does not reconcile to full-year growth.
what just happened
Quarter revenue near ~$550M (~¼ of $2.2B) — not $1.6B — while losses stayed large.
At a glance
B+ balance sheet — decent shape, but not bulletproof
n/m return on capital — loss year distorts ROC reads
-$0.20 fy2026 eps est
$4B fy2028 rev est
negative operating margin — still investing through the P&L
xvary composite: 55/100 — below average
What they do
Chime sells low-cost banking and payments tools through partner banks, then makes money when you use the card and app.
You stick around because the app is simple, the fees are low, and your paycheck lands fast. Chime had 9.1 million active members by September 2025, which gives it scale. Gross margin was 87.6% in SEC filings, meaning the software layer is cheap to run, so each extra customer should get more profitable over time.
financials mid-cap fintech payments consumer-banking
How they make money
$2.2B annual revenue · their business grew +30.7% last year
debit card interchange
$1.14B
other payments revenue
$0.39B
partner platform fees
$0.40B
platform services
$0.28B
The products that matter
debit and checking
Chime Checking Account
~$1.14B interchange stream
this is the center of gravity. interchange contributes about $1.14B and ~52% of the mix on the revenue bridge above.
core rail
early wage access
Early Direct Deposit
31% company growth
it is a customer-acquisition hook inside a business that said full-year 2025 revenue grew 31%. if engagement slips, the growth story gets thinner fast.
user hook
secured credit product
Credit Builder Card
non-interchange bridge lines
filings split card-adjacent revenue across partner platform fees (~$0.40B) and platform services (~$0.28B) on the bridge above — not a single $0.5B line. Credit Builder–style products are meant to diversify beyond the $1.14B interchange rail.
mix shift
Key numbers
87.6%
gross margin
Gross margin → money left after direct costs → so what: Chime already has software-like unit economics under the hood.
9.1M
active members
That is the audience Chime can monetize with more transactions and more products.
negative
operating margin
Still loss-making at the operating line — the old +47.6% tick contradicted the loss narrative.
$4B
2028 revenue est.
That estimate implies management and analysts still expect Chime to nearly double from the current $2.2B base.
Financial health
B+
strength
  • balance sheet grade B+ — solid but not elite
  • risk rank 3 — safer than 50% of stocks
  • net profit margin negative / n/m — company is still losing money; ignore stale positive net margin placeholders
  • return on equity negative / n/m — not consistent with a loss-making year
B+ — functional but not a standout on the balance sheet.
Total return vs. market

Return history isn't available for CHYM right now.

source: institutional data · return history unavailable
What just happened
missed estimates
Quarter revenue near ~$550M, but the loss was too large to ignore.
Reported EPS about −$5.10 on the print here. Gross margin stayed near 87.6%. Drop $1.6B quarter and +193% vs. prior year — they do not fit a ~$2.2B year up ~31%.
~$550M
quarter revenue (approx.)
−$5.10
eps (Q · print)
87.6%
gross margin (FY)
the number that mattered
87.6% gross margin is the key number because it says the model can be very profitable if Chime ever gets overhead under control.
source: sec filings, 2025

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What could go wrong

the #1 risk is partner-bank and card-network dependency — Chime can improve the app, but The Bancorp, Stride, merchant acceptance, and network rules still decide whether the product works in the real world.

!
high
partner-bank dependency
you do not own the charter. if terms change with The Bancorp or Stride, the economics and the customer experience can change with them.
this sits under the whole model, not one product line.
!
high
interchange concentration
interchange fees are $1.3B and 59.1% of the revenue mix shown here. if card usage slows or fee economics tighten, the largest revenue stream feels it first.
that is direct exposure to swipe activity, not a broad fee base.
med
acceptance and trust friction
Avis has rejected the card since 2021. that sounds niche until you remember the pitch is replacing old-school banking with something easier.
if edge cases keep failing, retention and premium feature adoption get harder.
med
profitability still in progress
q4 EPS was -$0.12 and fy2026 EPS is still estimated at -$0.20. the market tolerates that when revenue grows 31%. it gets less generous if growth cools.
high-margin optics are not the same as finished earnings power.
if partner friction or weaker card usage hits the model, the $1.3B interchange stream — 59.1% of the revenue mix shown here — is where the pressure shows up first.
source: institutional data · regulatory filings · risk analysis
Pay attention to
mix shift
interchange staying above half the model
interchange is 59.1% of the revenue mix shown here. if that stays dominant, the business keeps looking more like a payments tollbooth than a broader finance platform.
rail risk
any change with The Bancorp or Stride
partner-bank agreements are not back-office trivia. they are the operating foundation, and any friction there matters fast.
calendar
next earnings report
the next report needs to show that 31% full-year growth was not a one-quarter flourish. revenue growth and loss narrowing are the two lines to watch.
trend
services mix versus support friction
subscription and services are 22.7% of the mix. that number needs to rise while customer trust holds, or the diversification story stays half-built.
Analyst rankings
long-term target midpoint
$32
the 3–5 year midpoint sits about 25% above today's price. in human-speak, analysts see upside, but not enough to ignore execution risk.
fy2026 EPS estimate
-$0.20
earnings are still expected to be negative next year. that is growth-stage language, not mature-financial language.
fy2028 revenue estimate
$4B
the street is underwriting a much larger business from here. you are being asked to believe scale shows up before patience runs out.
xvary composite
55 / 100
below average overall. translation: there is a real story here, but the risk-adjusted setup is not doing you many favors yet.
source: institutional data
Institutional activity

institutions have been net buying for 2 consecutive quarters — 99 buyers vs. 72 sellers in 3q2025. total institutional holdings: 0.2B shares. net buying for 2 quarters.

source: institutional data
Price targets
3-5 year target range
$25 $40
$26 current price
$32 target midpoint · +25% from current · 3-5yr high: $40 (+55% · 11% ann'l return)
source: institutional data · analyst targets

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