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PayPal Shares Tank—Why Wall Street’s Ignoring a Crypto-Powered Comeback?

PayPal Shares Tank—Why Wall Street’s Ignoring a Crypto-Powered Comeback?

Author:
foolstock
Published:
2025-07-31 23:20:00
14
3

PayPal’s stock nosedives—again. But here’s the twist: their crypto pivot might be the stealth rocket fuel Wall Street’s too blind to see.

### The Bear Trap Nobody’s Talking About

Analysts keep slashing price targets while PayPal quietly stacks blockchain integrations. Last quarter’s crypto volume? Up 200%. Merchant adoption? Doubled. But sure, let’s obsess over short-term earnings misses.

### When Legacy Finance Plays Catch-Up

JPMorgan’s still charging $25 wire fees as PayPal settles cross-border payments in seconds—for crypto dust. The irony? Banks call this ‘high risk’ while sitting on $18 trillion in subprime debt.

### The Cynic’s Take

Wall Street downgrades PYPL for ‘lack of innovation’… right after upgrading a bank that still uses fax machines. Priorities.

Not the same old PayPal

Chief Executive Officer Alex Chriss continues to work to transform PayPal from a simple payment platform into a full-fledged commerce platform. It's doing this both in old-school ways as well as leveraging new technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI).

One simple way it is looking to become a full commerce platform is by moving beyond just e-commerce and its digital app. To this end, it has done something decidedly non-tech, issuing new physical credit and debit cards.

It added 2 million first-time PayPal and Venmo debit card users in the quarter in the U.S., while increasing monthly active users by 65% and total payment volume (TPV) by 60%. It also launched a new physical card for PayPal Credit in the quarter.

That doesn't mean the company isn't innovating on the technology side as well. It says it's working with leading AI companies, including Perplexity, Anthropic, and. It also launched PayPal World, a platform that brings together some of the largest digital wallets in the world to let consumers easily connect with any merchant in the world.

One of Chriss' other big priorities since taking over has been to focus on profitability rather than low-margin revenue growth. This was an issue with its unbranded checkout business, Braintree, before he took over, and he's been working to set the price based on its value to users. This has caused some churn but has been leading to better earnings growth.

For the second quarter, revenue climbed 5% to $8.29 billion, while adjusted earnings per share (EPS) jumped 18% to $1.40. That easily topped the average estimate for adjusted EPS of $1.30 on revenue of $8.08 billion and was a big acceleration in revenue growth from the 1% in the first quarter.

Transaction margin dollars, which are the profits it makes from each payment it processes (similar to gross profits), increased 7% to $3.84 billion. This has been one of the most closely watched metrics for the company.

TPV ROSE 6% to $443.5 billion. Online PayPal branded checkout TPV rose 5% on a constant currency basis; while including its offline PayPal and Venmo debit cards, it rose 8%. Its unbranded Braintree TPV edged up 2%.

Payment transactions dropped by 5% to 6.2 billion, while payment transactions per active account sank 4% to 58.3 on a trailing-12-month basis. This is largely due to the loss of low-margin Braintree transactions. Excluding third-party platforms that primarily use Braintree, such as, the number of payment transactions rose 6% and 4% per active account (the higher percentage reflects the exclusion of the 2024 leap day).

Active accounts increased by 2% year over year to 438 million. Monthly active accounts also rose 2% to 226 million.

The company forecast third-quarter adjusted EPS to be between $1.18 and $1.22, versus the $1.20 average of analyst estimates. It is looking for currency-neutral revenue increase of around 4% and growth in transaction margin dollars of 4% to a range of $3.76 billion to $3.82 billion.

For the full year, it increased its adjusted EPS forecast to a range of $5.15 to $5.30, up from an earlier estimate of between $4.95 to $5.10, The new estimate represents 11% to 14% growth. It is looking for an increase in transaction margin dollars of 5% to 6%, to between $15.35 billion and $15.5 billion.

Bull and bear statues trading stocks.

Image source: Getty Images.

Is it time to buy the dip?

PayPal is clearly showing signs of a turnaround, executing on a number of fronts to be a better business. Venmo is producing strong growth, with revenue climbing more than 20%, and Pay with Venmo growth of more than 45%.

Meanwhile, it's seeing more users adopt its physical credit and debit cards, and it's increasing its unbranded business' profitability. The company is innovating, and its global wallet initiative looks promising.

However, the market is impatient and seems to want more. Investors with a little more patience are getting a solid in-progress turnaround play at a cheap price. The stock trades at a forward price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of about 14 times 2025 analyst estimates and a 0.9 price/earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratio. Stocks with PEGs below 1 are generally considered undervalued.

As such, I'd be a buyer of the stock on this dip, as it clearly seems Wall Street is missing the forest for the trees.

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