PayPal doesn’t have a growth problem – it has a positioning problem
- At a time when payment winners must command either infrastructure or interface, PayPal is awkwardly positioned between the two.
- The questions now are: Where does PayPal sit in the payments ecosystem, and does that position still matter? What unique role does it play in a stack that increasingly bypasses middle layers?
And the market is no longer willing to wait for it to figure that out…
For a company that helped define digital payments, PayPal now finds itself in a new reality: ubiquity no longer guarantees relevance at the checkout moment. The market has moved on from asking whether PayPal can grow. The pressing questions now are: Where does PayPal actually sit in the payments ecosystem, and does that position still command value? What role does PayPal actually play in a payments stack that no longer needs a middle layer?
The cumulative numbers don’t look broken on paper. That’s what makes it harder.
PayPal’s earnings for Q4 2025, which ended December 31, 2025, show a company that grew – but not where it counts. Net revenues increased 4% to $8.7 billion, below Wall Street expectations, while total payment volume (TPV) climbed 9% to $475.1 billion. Active accounts ticked up only 1.1% to about 439 million.
The crux, and the part that roiled markets, however, was branded checkout volume, the segment that carries the highest take rate and has historically driven both conversion and margin. In Q4, branded checkout grew only 1% year‑over‑year, barely a heartbeat ahead of stagnation and well below analysts’ expectations of roughly 2–3% growth for PayPal’s premium commerce driver. Whereas, lower-margin Braintree (unbranded processing) continued to expand. Jamie Miller, Interim CEO at the time, noted on the Q4 earnings call, “We are seeing strong growth in unbranded processing… but branded checkout remains a key focus area for us.”
Basically, the engine that scales isn’t the engine that monetizes.
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