PYPL

PayPal Price

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PYPL
$44.26
-$0.12(-0.27%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-23 04:38 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-23 04:38, PayPal (PYPL) is priced at $44.26, with a total market cap of $39.01B, a P/E ratio of 10.69, and a dividend yield of 0.63%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $43.99 and $44.71. The current price is 0.61% above the day's low and 1.00% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 10.63M. Over the past 52 weeks, PYPL has traded between $38.46 to $79.50, and the current price is -44.32% away from the 52-week high.

PYPL Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$44.30
Market Cap$39.01B
Volume10.63M
P/E Ratio10.69
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.63%
Dividend Amount$0.14
Diluted EPS (TTM)5.54
Net Income (FY)$5.23B
Revenue (FY)$33.17B
Earnings Date2026-07-28
EPS Estimate1.29
Revenue Estimate$8.46B
Shares Outstanding880.71M
Beta (1Y)1.395
Ex-Dividend Date2026-06-04
Dividend Payment Date2026-06-25

About PYPL

PayPal Holdings, Inc. operates a technology platform that enables digital payments on behalf of merchants and consumers worldwide. It provides payment solutions under the PayPal, PayPal Credit, Braintree, Venmo, Xoom, Zettle, Hyperwallet, Honey, and Paidy names. The company's payments platform allows consumers to send and receive payments in approximately 200 markets and in approximately 100 currencies, withdraw funds to their bank accounts in 56 currencies, and hold balances in their PayPal accounts in 25 currencies. PayPal Holdings, Inc. was founded in 1998 and is headquartered in San Jose, California.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryFinancial - Credit Services
CEOEnrique J. Lores
HeadquartersSan Jose,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.paypal.com
Employees (FY)23.80K
Average Revenue (1Y)$1.39M
Net Income per Employee$219.87K

PayPal (PYPL) FAQ

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PayPal (PYPL) is currently trading at $44.26, with a 24h change of -0.27%. The 52-week trading range is $38.46–$79.50.

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Hot Posts About PayPal (PYPL)

MrDecoder

MrDecoder

13 hours ago
**PayPal** (PYPL 0.16%), which owns one of the world's largest digital payment platforms, was once considered a high-growth fintech stock. Yet over the past five years, PayPal's stock plummeted more than 80% as it struggled to grow its user base, revenue, and profits. **Visa **(V 0.41%), which owns the world's largest card payments network, was widely considered a blue chip stalwart rather than a growth stock. But over the past five years, its stock has rallied nearly 50% as it generated predictable growth and expanded its ecosystem. So should investors simply forget about PayPal and buy Visa's stock instead? ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-be5c04ee11-51e88c5202-8b7abd-e5a980) Image source: Getty Images. Why did PayPal's stock plunge? ------------------------------ From 2021 to 2025, PayPal's year-end active accounts only grew from 426 million to 439 million. It originally aimed to reach 750 million active accounts by the end of 2025. As PayPal squeezed more value from its existing users, its revenue still grew at a 7% CAGR from 2021 to 2025. But its transaction take rates -- or the percentage of each transaction it retains as revenue -- continued to decline as it faced tougher competition. Its decoupling from **eBay** (EBAY +0.46%), which replaced PayPal with **Adyen** (ADYEY +1.10%) as its preferred payment provider, also throttled its user and sales growth from 2018 to 2023. Expand ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-b1b42ad51e-9487465e17-8b7abd-e5a980) NASDAQ: PYPL ------------ PayPal Today's Change (-0.16%) $-0.07 Current Price $44.23 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $39B Day's Range $44.22 - $44.71 52wk Range $38.46 - $79.50 Volume 112.3K Avg Vol 18.3M Gross Margin 41.43% Dividend Yield 0.63% As the growth of PayPal's namesake platform cooled, the company relied more heavily on its Venmo, its peer-to-peer payments app, and Braintree, its unbranded payments platform, to drive its top-line growth. However, both of those high-growth platforms operated at lower take rates and margins than PayPal's namesake platform. PayPal recently decided to spin off Venmo as a stand-alone business (which could free it up for a potential sale), but that divestment would further throttle its near-term growth. On the bright side, it's still forging deeper partnerships with credit card companies, launching new products and services for brick-and-mortar stores, and expanding its ecosystem with more crypto trading tools, high-yield savings accounts, and stablecoin-driven cross-border transfers. It's also bundling its payments, financial services, and risk management tools into its unified "PayPal Open" platform to lock in customers and cross-sell more services. From 2025 to 2028, analysts expect PayPal's revenue and EPS to grow at CAGRs of 4% and 5%, respectively. Its stock seems cheap at nine times this year's earnings, and it pays a decent forward dividend yield of 1.3% (with a low payout ratio of 5%). Still, it probably won't command a higher valuation until it meaningfully grows its users and take rates again. Why did Visa generate bigger gains? ----------------------------------- Visa doesn't issue any of its own cards. It generates most of its revenue by charging merchants "swipe fees" (1%-3%) on their transactions whenever consumers use its branded cards. The banks that issue those Visa-branded cards are responsible for managing the actual accounts. Expand ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-f15f3cd008-7605eea51c-8b7abd-e5a980) NYSE: V ------- Visa Today's Change (-0.41%) $-1.36 Current Price $329.76 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $624B Day's Range $329.24 - $333.35 52wk Range $293.89 - $375.51 Volume 71.5K Avg Vol 7.4M Gross Margin 78.28% Dividend Yield 0.79% That asset-light business model enables Visa to generate steady growth, maintain high margins, and expand rapidly into new markets. To squeeze more revenue from its partner banks and merchants, it's rolling out more value-added cybersecurity, fraud prevention, data analytics, and tokenization services. It's also been launching new AI agents that assist consumers in making streamlined purchases and using stablecoins to accelerate its payments. From fiscal 2021 to fiscal 2025 (which ended last September), Visa's revenue and EPS grew at CAGRs of 14% and 16%, respectively. The company has a wide moat, but it isn't completely immune to inflation, which throttles consumer spending, or government regulators, who are pressing it to reduce its swipe fees. Nevertheless, analysts still expect its revenue and EPS to grow at CAGRs of 11% and 18%, respectively, from fiscal 2025 to fiscal 2028. Visa's stock still looks reasonably valued at 26 times this year's earnings, and it recently launched a new $20 billion buyback program (equivalent to 3% of its market cap) after posting its strong revenue growth since 2022 in the second quarter of fiscal 2026. Visa's forward dividend yield of 0.8% might not impress any serious income investors, but its low payout ratio of 22% gives it plenty of room for future hikes. Should you stick with Visa instead of PayPal? --------------------------------------------- PayPal might look tempting as a deep value play, but it faces too many existential challenges to be considered a worthwhile investment. Visa faces some challenges from regulators and merchant groups, but it's growing faster than PayPal and has more irons in the fire. Therefore, I believe Visa will continue to outperform PayPal for the foreseeable future.
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