By Daniel Sparks – May 6, 2026 at 10:03PM EST
Key Points
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s dropped sharply ing the company’s first-quarter update this week.
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Online branded checkout volume grew just 2% on a currency-neutral basis — a sluggish pace for the company’s most important business.
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The stock now trades at roughly 9 times earnings.

Image source: PayPal.
Beneath the surface
Step away from the headline beat, and the picture gets more complicated.
Online branded checkout — the heart of PayPal’s online presence — grew just 2% on a currency-neutral basis. That was technically an improvement from 1% growth in the fourth quarter. But it’s a far cry from the kind of growth investors expect from a company that helped pioneer digital checkout.
Fortunately, PayPal’s other businesses helped pick up some slack. Venmo’s total payment volume climbed 14% year over year, marking the sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. Also helping, PayPal’s enterprise payments processing volume accelerated to 11% from 7% in the back half of 2025.
But profitability is moving in the wrong direction. PayPal’s non-GAAP (adjusted) operating income fell 5% year over year to $1.5 billion, and the adjusted operating margin contracted by 229 basis points to 18.4%. Management attributed the pressure to pulled-forward investments in technology, marketing, and product. But the second-quarter outlook didn’t reassure anyone: PayPal expects adjusted earnings per to decline about 9% in the period, with further investment headwinds and the absence of some one-time benefits from the year-ago quarter.
Adding to the unease, international markets continue to disappoint. PayPal’s international revenue grew just 4% year over year and was flat on a currency-neutral basis.
During the company’s first-quarter earnings call, PayPal chief financial officer Jamie Miller pointed to “slower growth in the travel vertical as well as more muted growth in Europe,” with continued softness in markets the United Kingdom and Germany.
Further, new CEO Enrique Lores may have spooked investors with his candid admission that the company needs to invest heavily in the technology supporting its offerings.
“Due to years of underinvestment, we need to accelerate the modernization of our technology platform,” Lores explained.
And Lores isn’t wasting any time. The company announced a sweeping reorganization into three business lines and outlined a plan to deliver at least $1.5 billion in gross cost savings over the next two to three years through restructuring and AI-driven automation.
Expand

NASDAQ: PYPL
PayPal
Today’s Change
(-0.51%) $-0.23
Current Price
$46.26
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$42B
Day’s Range
$45.76 – $47.45
52wk Range
$38.46 – $79.50
Volume
815K
Avg Vol
20M
Gross Margin
41.78%
Dividend Yield
0.61%
Cheap, but is it cheap enough?
This all leaves the stock looking awfully inexpensive.
PayPal also generated $6.8 billion in adjusted free cash flow on a trailing 12-month basis, returned $6 billion to holders through repurchases over the same period, and recently introduced a $0.14 quarterly dividend.
But there’s a reason the stock is cheap — one that goes beyond some of the concerns highlighted in PayPal’s latest earnings report: The competitive landscape is unforgiving.
Apple‘s Apple Pay keeps gaining ground at digital checkout, while Block‘s Cash App and Stripe are encroaching on Venmo’s and Braintree’s (a PayPal-owned payment processor) turf. Even stablecoin-based payment rails are emerging as a longer-term threat.
Miller herself said during the company’s first-quarter earnings call that the company operates in a “dynamic” and “highly competitive industry.” The branded checkout slowdown and margin compression, on top of persistent international softness, all look symptoms of a company fighting to defend a position that may be eroding rather than expanding.
The transformation plan could change that, but it will take years to play out, and the second-quarter guide suggests things may get worse before they get better.
At its current price, PayPal is undeniably cheap. But cheap isn’t always a buy signal.
The digital payments space is intensely competitive, and I’d rather watch from the sidelines while the company works through its transformation. Of course, I could be wrong. Investors who have conviction in the durability of PayPal’s competitive moat may very well find that today’s depressed price is just the buying opportunity they’ve been looking for.
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About the Author
Daniel Sparks is a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst covering technology, industrials, financials, and consumer goods. Daniel is the owner and chief investment officer of Sparks Capital Management. He holds a master’s degree in business administration from Colorado State University. The Globe and Mail profiled him and his investing philosophy in an article titled, “This stock picker is outperforming nearly everybody else. Here’s how he is doing it.”
Stocks Mentioned

PayPal
NASDAQ: PYPL
$46.26
(-0.51%)-$0.24

Apple
NASDAQ: AAPL
$287.53
(+1.18%)+$3.35

Block
NYSE: XYZ
$70.83
(-0.59%)-$0.42
*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
Sumber Artikel:
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