Stockchase Insights
PayPal Holdings Inc.
PYPL-Q
DON'T BUY
May 05, 2025
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research
The company has some challenges, no doubt, but these are starting to be reflected in the valuation, now at just 13X earnings. EPS did beat estimates in the Q1, by 15%. PayPal is making progress with sustainable transaction-margin dollar gains, up 7% in 1Q, driven by branded checkout, Venmo and a deceleration in Braintree. The EPS beat in 1Q and maintained 2025 guidance of high-single-digit adjusted EPS gains leave room for absorbing tariff pain and allow for strategic reinvestment in growth initiatives in 2025. Adjusted operating margin widened 270 bps sequentially, paving the way for further efficiency gains. Despite fading interest-income tailwinds and slowing unbranded volume gains (2% FX neutral in 1Q), higher-margin branded transaction growth remains steady (6%). PYPL plans to buy back $6 billion of shares in 2025, with $6-$7 billion in free cash flow, after 1Q repurchases of $1.5 billion. Exposure to China is limited to under 2% of volume. While still not a favourite of ours, we think there is enough here at the right valuation now to give it some more time. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free
Buying value in technology is often a misstep, but this one came through. Has resurrected growth in a few areas. Venmo has helped. Had a nice move, so he took his $$ off the table.
He likes this company and chart. The 4-year chart shows a base, then break out. One of the best tech charts, because it's not overdone. The company is making strides in getting its business into different venues.
It reports Tuesday. The new CEO is returning PYPL to solid growth. Once dominant, PYPL sank to the buy-now, pay-later companies, but seems to be returning.
Horrible experience owning it, and hasn't looked at fundamentals lately. Facing competition from so many angles. Good business, but not great. Valuation kind of attractive, but it's in the "too hard" pile.
We like that the financial payment company is trading at 13x earnings and supporting a 20% ROE. Cash reserves are growing, while the company aggressively buys back shares and debt is retired. We recommend setting a stop-loss at $57, looking to achieve $94 — upside potential of 32%. Yield 0%
We reiterate PYPL, a leader in online payment systems, as a TOP PICK. The company is introducing AI into its platform for payments that could well be a game changer and renew their position as the market leader. It trades at 15x earnings (half its historical valuation), 3.2x book and supports a ROE of 22%. Cash reserves are once again growing while shares are aggressively bought back. We continue to recommend a stop at $57, looking to achieve $81 -- upside potential of 18%. Yield 0%
The company has some challenges, no doubt, but these are starting to be reflected in the valuation, now at just 13X earnings. EPS did beat estimates in the Q1, by 15%. PayPal is making progress with sustainable transaction-margin dollar gains, up 7% in 1Q, driven by branded checkout, Venmo and a deceleration in Braintree. The EPS beat in 1Q and maintained 2025 guidance of high-single-digit adjusted EPS gains leave room for absorbing tariff pain and allow for strategic reinvestment in growth initiatives in 2025. Adjusted operating margin widened 270 bps sequentially, paving the way for further efficiency gains. Despite fading interest-income tailwinds and slowing unbranded volume gains (2% FX neutral in 1Q), higher-margin branded transaction growth remains steady (6%). PYPL plans to buy back $6 billion of shares in 2025, with $6-$7 billion in free cash flow, after 1Q repurchases of $1.5 billion. Exposure to China is limited to under 2% of volume. While still not a favourite of ours, we think there is enough here at the right valuation now to give it some more time.
Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free