Apple is a colossus. Some of us might remember back when it was doomed and nearly bankrupt, but these days, it generates hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue every day and has a market capitalization of more than three trillion dollars. And yet even the most powerful companies are fallible.

Often they have a hubris that suggests that their success in one area means they can easily extend it to others–often with disastrous results. This week, Apple got another reminder that even its mighty power might not be able to make it succeed at all its ambitions. Don’t be embarrassed, Apple.

Even the world’s most beautiful models still get pimples from time to time. Money isn’t banking , a split-payment service that it announced two years ago and launched in the spring of 2023. It was a loan service backed by an Apple-owned financial entity, .

Yet it turns out that despite Apple’s ambitions, which were so great that the company basically set up its own bank, the whole thing was a flop. Apple says it will recalibrate this fall with buy-now-pay-later schemes using partners. These events shouldn’t really be surprising, though.

Despite its overall success with Apple Pay, Apple has shown that it gets bogged down when it wades into deeper financial waters. Apple Card was an attempt to innovate credit cards, with unique features and Apple Wallet integration. But for years now, stories have abounded that Goldman Sachs is trying to get out of its deal and that Apple is .

Apple .