> Cool, two companies, one (Shopify) which saw a huge bump in revenues during COVID thanks to a rise in internet purchasing and is seeing the numbers slump back to normal as shopping habits revert to the mean, and the other (Lyft) that's in an industry that declined throughout COVID due to pandemic concerns and hasn't surged back in the face of competition from both Uber and traditional cabs.
Why would your explanation matter?
The conclusion still remains. Their revenue slows down. Therefore, stripe's revenue slows down.
For sure, it is not growing faster.
You didn't contradict my point at all.
> Again: I have data about the entire economy. That data tells a story that's mixed but relatively positive
Stripe's revenue growth does indeed slows down. There is no dispute of that.
If Stripe was making 1 trillions USD more, they wouldn't have laid off people, obviously.
Now I or the founders claim it is because the macro economic is bad. You might contradict this part.
Well you have been taunting it for 2 comments now. Can you share your evidence? Or we should continue quibble a bit more first?
Why would your explanation matter?
The conclusion still remains. Their revenue slows down. Therefore, stripe's revenue slows down.
For sure, it is not growing faster.
You didn't contradict my point at all.
> Again: I have data about the entire economy. That data tells a story that's mixed but relatively positive
Stripe's revenue growth does indeed slows down. There is no dispute of that.
If Stripe was making 1 trillions USD more, they wouldn't have laid off people, obviously.
Now I or the founders claim it is because the macro economic is bad. You might contradict this part.
Well you have been taunting it for 2 comments now. Can you share your evidence? Or we should continue quibble a bit more first?