PayPal plummets after 'slower-than-expected' finish to year

Published Wed, Feb 2, 2022 · 09:42 PM

[NEW YORK] PayPal Holdings plummeted after saying growth in spending on its platform continued to slow during the fourth quarter as economies around the world reopened and consumers flocked to in-store shopping. Total payments volume climbed just 23 per cent to US$339.5 billion in the final 3 months of last year as the technology giant's former parent company EBay continues to move payments offerings away from PayPal. That was the smallest increase in 2 years and fell short of analysts' expectations.

"We had a slower-than-expected finish of the year," chief financial officer John Rainey told analysts on Tuesday (Feb 1) in a conference call. That was partly due to the "the more muted end of the year for e-commerce growth, driven by both supply-chain challenges as well as pull-back in spending by lower-income consumers".

PayPal is facing a bevy of headwinds. While online commerce soared in the early days of the pandemic to encompass more than one-fifth of overall retail spending, that share has slipped as supply-chain disruptions hurt shipping times and consumers slowly returned to stores. Consumer spending has also been hindered by once-in-a-generation levels of inflation. EBay has begun to more rapidly move away from PayPal's platform in recent quarters, putting pressure on the payment giant. In the final 3 months of the year, PayPal's revenue climbed 13 per cent to US$6.9 billion, the smallest increase in 2 years. Excluding the impact of EBay, revenue would have climbed 22 per cent, PayPal said in a statement.

"It was a particularly hard year to forecast," chief executive officer Dan Schulman said. "EBay's migration to managed payments happened faster than we anticipated."

PayPal shares tumbled almost 17 per cent to US$146.60 at 7.35 am in early New York trading. They had advanced 2.2 per cent to US$175.80 in regular trading on Tuesday before the company announced its results.

To gin up activity on its platform, PayPal has been adding new services, including a high-yield savings account as well as the ability to buy and trade cryptocurrencies. Those efforts seem to bearing fruit. Transactions per active account jumped to 45.4 in the quarter, topping the 42.9 average of analyst estimates. In recent quarters, PayPal had said it believes it will notch 750 million active accounts on its platform by 2025. To achieve that goal, the company has been spending more on marketing campaigns to lure new customers to PayPal's offerings.

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On Tuesday, the firm abandoned that guidance after a review of its business uncovered 4.5 million accounts it now believes were illegitimately created. Some people were reaping the benefits of the campaigns without ever intending to be ongoing customers, executives said.

PayPal now believes it will add just 15-20 million net new active accounts this year, a significant slowdown from the 49 million it added in 2021. Going forward, the company vowed to focus marketing efforts on encouraging existing users to become even more active.

"Unlike a Netflix or one of these streaming services, a net new active isn't equal to revenue," Schulman said in an interview. "For us, every net new active is only as valuable as the number of transactions they make. Those who make one transaction and never use us again - that gives us no incremental value."

PayPal said it expects revenue this year to climb as much as 17 per cent, compared with a current forecast from analysts of 18 per cent. The company said total payments volume for the year is expected to increase by as much as 24 per cent while adjusted earnings per share may be between US$4.60 and US$4.75.

"Spending money on lower-value net new actives that are not engaged in the base becomes an increasingly expensive proposition over time, and does nothing for our revenue growth," Schulman said, adding that the company is likely to continue to see a drop in inactive customers in coming months. "There is probably going to be about 20 million incremental one-and-done customers that roll off. That is nothing to our revenue." BLOOMBERG

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