PayPal’s Rough Patch and Why Some Still Believe in Its Comeback

Latin America, India, ChinaMon May 04 2026
PayPal’s journey hasn’t been smooth lately. After hitting its peak in 2021, the company’s stock has struggled, dropping 15% in 2026 alone. Even over the past year, it’s down nearly 23%. The slowdown isn’t sudden—it’s been building for a while, with revenue growth stalling at just 4% last year and cash flow shrinking. Investors aren’t thrilled, and the stock’s decline reflects that frustration. But PayPal isn’t giving up. The company is shaking things up with a major reorganization, splitting its business into smaller units. Venmo, its popular payment app, is getting its own spotlight as a standalone unit, while other branches like Checkout and Crypto Services stay under the PayPal name. Leadership changes are also in the works, with new executives brought in to steer different parts of the business. The big question now? Will these moves actually work, or is it just another attempt to fix what’s broken?
Growth plans are another focus. PayPal is pushing into new markets with PayPal World, a platform aiming to unite digital payments and wallets globally. It’s starting in places like Latin America and India, where competition is fierce but opportunities are huge. Then there’s the stablecoin—a digital dollar that could make transfers cheaper and even pay users 4% just for holding it. AI-driven shopping tools are also in the pipeline, though whether they’ll catch on remains to be seen. Analysts aren’t exactly cheering. Out of 44 covering the stock, most say “hold, ” meaning they’re not ready to bet big on a rally. A few are bullish, with one predicting the stock could double, but the average target suggests only a modest 1% gain from here. Still, the stock’s low price-to-earnings ratio (under 10) makes it look cheap compared to past valuations. If PayPal can turn things around, the upside could be real—but right now, the path forward isn’t clear. One wildcard? A potential buyout. Rumors suggest Stripe might be eyeing PayPal, possibly just Venmo, which has 100 million users and could fetch a premium. If that happens, it might finally give PayPal the fresh start it needs—or at least reward shareholders for sticking around.
https://localnews.ai/article/paypals-rough-patch-and-why-some-still-believe-in-its-comeback-665355a2

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