PayPal (PYPL) stock has crashed 85% from its 2021 peak. With weak Q4 results, new leadership, and sluggish growth, is it a buy or avoid? The post PayPal (PYPL) PayPal (PYPL) stock has crashed 85% from its 2021 peak. With weak Q4 results, new leadership, and sluggish growth, is it a buy or avoid? The post PayPal (PYPL)

PayPal (PYPL) Stock Plunges 85% From Peak: Value Play or Falling Knife?

2026/03/17 02:27
3 min read
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TLDR

  • PYPL shares trade 85% beneath their July 2021 peak, hovering around the $45 mark
  • Late February saw a sharp 25% surge on Stripe takeover speculation, which has since pulled back roughly 10%
  • Branded checkout transaction volume expanded only 1% year-over-year in Q4, falling from 6% growth previously
  • New CEO Enrique Lores, previously with HP, took over from Alex Chriss on March 1
  • Analysts from Bank of America and KGI Securities maintain Neutral stances with targets of $48 and $55 respectively

PayPal (PYPL) experienced a fleeting rally during late February. Market chatter suggesting Stripe might acquire the payments giant—either entirely or in pieces—drove shares upward by as much as 25% from multi-year lows.


PYPL Stock Card
PayPal Holdings, Inc., PYPL

The enthusiasm proved short-lived. As the acquisition whispers faded without confirmation, shares retreated approximately 10% and currently trade near $45—remarkably close to price levels not seen since 2017.

With a forward P/E multiple hovering around 8, the valuation appears attractive on the surface. However, this compressed multiple signals deep skepticism about any meaningful growth acceleration on the horizon.

PayPal closed 2025 with 439 million active users—a mere 13 million increase compared to five years prior. Annual revenue climbed just 4%. These metrics hardly suggest a company operating at peak performance.

Fourth Quarter Results Triggered Concerns

The company’s branded checkout segment, traditionally a high-margin revenue driver, posted disappointing Q4 payment volume growth of merely 1% year-over-year. This marked a significant deceleration from the 6% expansion recorded in the comparable quarter twelve months earlier.

The quarterly weakness proved particularly troubling given the timing. Fourth quarter encompasses the critical holiday shopping period, making underperformance during this window especially concerning for market participants.

PayPal’s latest quarterly disclosure compounded investor worries. Both top-line revenue and bottom-line earnings missed Wall Street consensus estimates. Forward-looking commentary for 2026 struck a cautious tone, which markets interpreted as acknowledgment of intensifying competitive pressures.

Adding to investor anxiety, a class action complaint alleging that PayPal misrepresented the growth trajectory of its payment infrastructure has introduced additional legal risk into the equation.

CEO Transition Compounds Uncertainty

March 1 brought an abrupt leadership shake-up. Alex Chriss departed the chief executive role, with Enrique Lores—HP’s former leader—assuming command. The unexpected nature of this transition surprised market observers.

Mid-course leadership transitions during turnaround efforts typically fail to inspire immediate investor confidence. Market participants will be watching closely for early strategic signals from Lores before recalibrating their outlook.

The upcoming May earnings announcement now represents the next critical inflection point. PayPal must demonstrate that its growth trajectory is finding a floor and that management possesses a viable strategic blueprint.

From a financial strength perspective, the situation looks more reassuring. PayPal produced $5.6 billion in free cash flow throughout 2025 and maintained $14.8 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities at year-end, offset by $11.6 billion in outstanding debt.

The platform continues to leverage powerful network effects—expanding merchant and consumer adoption creates increasing value for all ecosystem participants.

Wall Street analysts at Bank of America and KGI Securities both assign Neutral ratings to the equity. Their price objectives stand at $48 and $55 respectively, modestly above current trading levels but hardly suggesting strong conviction.

PYPL’s near-term trajectory depends heavily on whether the May quarterly results provide investors with tangible evidence of stabilization and recovery.

The post PayPal (PYPL) Stock Plunges 85% From Peak: Value Play or Falling Knife? appeared first on Blockonomi.

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