PayPal closed Friday at $56.89, hovering just above its 12-month low of $55.85. The stock has dropped more than 20% over the past six months. Wall Street Zen downgraded the payment giant from Buy to Hold over the weekend, adding to a growing list of cautious calls from analysts.
PayPal Holdings, Inc., PYPL
The downgrade came despite PayPal beating third-quarter expectations in late October. The company reported earnings per share of $1.34, topping the consensus estimate of $1.20. Revenue reached $8.42 billion, exceeding the $8.21 billion analysts expected. Year-over-year revenue grew 7.3%.
PayPal set full-year 2025 guidance at $5.35 to $5.39 in earnings per share. Analysts expect the company to post $5.03 earnings per share for the current fiscal year. The company carries a market capitalization of $53.23 billion.
The analyst community remains split on PayPal’s prospects. Twelve analysts rate the stock a Buy while 27 assign it a Hold rating. Four analysts recommend selling. The average price target sits at $76.05, implying roughly 30% to 35% upside from current levels.
Royal Bank of Canada raised its price target from $88 to $91 in late October, maintaining an Outperform rating. Macquarie lifted its target from $95 to $100 the following day, also keeping an Outperform rating. Those bullish calls stand in contrast to recent cuts from other firms.
Stephens lowered its price target from $75 to $65 in mid-January, keeping an Equal Weight rating. Robert W. Baird dropped its target from $83 to $66 in December while maintaining a Neutral rating. Evercore ISI cut its target from $75 to $65 in early December with an In-line rating.
PayPal now trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 11.40 and a forward P/E under 10. The broader financial transaction services peer group commands roughly 21 times forward earnings. That discount reflects investor concerns about slowing growth and competitive pressures.
The company carries a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.56 with a current ratio of 1.34. Its 50-day moving average sits at $60.57 while the 200-day average rests at $66.82. The stock’s beta of 1.42 indicates higher volatility than the broader market.
Management is pushing into higher-margin products including buy-now-pay-later services and Venmo monetization. Buy-now-pay-later volumes are growing at over 20% quarterly. Internal projections suggest this product line could reach $40 billion in transaction volume during 2025 if adoption trends continue.
PayPal is also investing in what it calls “agentic commerce” through partnerships with OpenAI and Google. These initiatives aim to position the company at the intersection of AI-driven shopping and digital payments. The investments, however, require capital that could pressure operating margins in 2026.
Insider activity has tilted toward selling in recent months. Suzan Kereere sold 4,162 shares in November at an average price of $59.84, reducing her stake by 11.84%. Executive Vice President Diego Scotti sold 3,838 shares in late October at $68.97 per share, cutting his position by 18.43%. Over the past 90 days, insiders sold 36,156 shares worth approximately $2.43 million.
Institutional investors made several moves in the third quarter. Nordea Investment Management increased its position by 7.9% to 4.29 million shares valued at $291.3 million. Ariose Capital Management lifted its stake by 347% to 193,100 shares worth $12.9 million. Institutional investors and hedge funds own 68.32% of the company’s outstanding stock.
Analysts cite concerns about cooling consumer spending and rising competition as reasons for estimate revisions moving lower. The market is waiting for proof that new product initiatives can reignite revenue growth. The company must demonstrate its strategic investments will deliver durable acceleration before the stock receives a higher valuation multiple from investors.
The post PayPal (PYPL) Stock: Insiders Sell $2.4M in Shares as Price Targets Drop appeared first on CoinCentral.



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