![]() While PayPal’s foray into cryptocurrencies represents a potential wild card, I just do not see a way that a PayPal-branded digital token can return the stock to its former glory and its former growth multiple. In the latest quarter, PayPal saw revenue growth of just 7%, a far cry away from the double-digit top-line growth it used to command a few years ago. The stock’s historically depressed multiple suggests the growth days are probably not coming back. ![]() PayPal stock is trading at a historically cheap multiple at 17.7 times trailing price-to-earnings, well below its five-year historical average of 54.64 times. PayPal Stock is Historically Cheap, Though As the company continues to grow its offerings, like Savings, Apple Tap to Pay, Apple Pay Later, Apple Pay, and Apple Wallet, the fintech pioneers (PayPal included) do not seem to have much of an answer as FAANG firms cover more bases in financial services. Undoubtedly, Apple is reinventing how everyday people think about financial services. Why is Apple sacrificing potential profit for the financial health of its users? It wants to beckon new users in a market that’s ripe for disruption. With the Apple Card, the company is fully transparent about how much interest a user would have to pay on outstanding balances, and with the Apple Savings Account, the company is doing what no big banks would dream of doing - offering competitive interest rates at or around market rates. What Apple does differently is it’s able to offer financial services that are more attractive than what currently exists. Late to repay your outstanding credit card balance? The banks are completely fine if you pay the minimum balance and rack up the interest. Indeed, the financial services business typically entails skimming fees off the top of transactions, collecting large sums of interest on loans, and charging rates on deposits well below market rates. Regarding financial services, Apple seems to be doing something unique - it’s tilting the tables in favor of users while helping them improve their financial “hygiene.” The company offers impressive services, including cloud storage, entertainment (video, music, and gaming), and, of course, payments and other financial services. However, as more competitors, most notably FAANG/big-tech companies, spread their wings across the realm of digital (and even point-of-sales) payments, PayPal needs to put its “innovation hat” on to prevent users from doing business with rivals that have superior service ecosystems encompassing more than just digital payments.įor instance, a tech titan like Apple ( NASDAQ:AAPL) has an ecosystem that’s the envy of the tech scene. Undoubtedly, there is value in the PayPal ecosystem. Despite operating in one of the most compelling areas of the tech sector (financial technology), PayPal’s share price has succumbed to macro headwinds hitting payments and competitive pressures. Looking back, it’s clear many investors overestimated the growth potential for PayPal. PayPal’s Ecosystem is Becoming Less Moat-Worthy as Big Tech Targets Payments For now, I have to be bearish on PayPal, as I do not see an easy way out for the former fintech top dog as competitors chip away at its moat. There may be a new bull market in the S&P 500 ( SPX) and Nasdaq ( NDX), but the battered fintech heavyweights still seem to be sinking under their own weight. Indeed, the pain struck many of the fintech darlings months before the broader market rolled over to start 2022. Given mounting competitive headwinds, I’m inclined to believe PayPal isn’t as great a bargain as it seems. Despite the Nasdaq Composite’s remarkable recovery from last autumn’s lows, PayPal stock has not only failed to recover from its historic slump, but it’s preceded to sink even lower than last year’s lows. Back in 2021, few would have thought that PayPal ( NASDAQ:PYPL), a fintech titan, would have lost about 80% of its value over the span of two-and-a-half years.
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