PayPal: A Decade of Disappointment

Right. So, PayPal. It processes, apparently, $1.8 trillion in payments annually. 439 million active users. Operates in over 200 markets. Numbers, numbers. Sounds… impressive, doesn’t it? One would think it would be a solid investment. One would be… mistaken. I’ve been doing some research, and frankly, it’s a bit depressing. A proper post-mortem, really. It’s like that dress you thought would be perfect, then you try it on and realize it just… doesn’t suit.

I started wondering, what if I’d put a grand into PayPal ten years ago? A thousand dollars. A reasonable sum. Enough for a nice weekend away, or, you know, a potentially life-changing investment. The result? A paltry $1,120. Yes, you read that correctly. Twelve percent gain in a decade. It’s enough to make you question all your life choices. Units of hope lost: countless. Hours spent staring at a screen: far too many.

It wasn’t always like this, of course. There was a golden period, apparently. A five-year stretch leading up to July 2021 where shares actually went up. By 724 percent! A brief, shining moment. Then… well, then it plummeted. It’s currently trading 86% off its peak. It feels… personal, somehow. Like watching a promising friend make a series of increasingly questionable decisions.

The market, unsurprisingly, isn’t thrilled. Growth has slowed to a crawl. A mere 4 percent increase in revenue in 2025. And analysts predict a compound annual growth rate of 4 percent over the next three years. Four percent! I could get that leaving it under the mattress, probably with less emotional turmoil. It’s a far cry from the 15-20 percent gains they were boasting about earlier in the decade. I’ve started a list: Things I could have bought with the lost potential earnings: a small island, a lifetime supply of coffee, therapy.

Competition is, as they say, fierce. Everyone wants a slice of the digital payment pie. PayPal needs to do something – anything – to regain investor confidence. It’s like that friend who keeps promising to turn things around, but never quite manages it. You want to believe in them, you really do, but… well, you’ve learned to manage your expectations. Number of times I’ve checked my portfolio today: 17. Number of times I’ve considered selling everything and becoming a shepherd: 3. It’s a work in progress, let’s just say.

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2026-03-24 15:32