![]() Investing Club holding PayPal reported mixed results with its fiscal third quarter earnings release on Monday, after the closing bell. While revenue of $6.18 billion (+13% YoY) missed the $6.23 billion consensus, earnings of $1.11 (+4% YoY) per share were better than the $1.07 expected.
Management also announced with the earnings release that PayPal is “teaming up with Amazon to enable customers in the U.S. to pay with Venmo at checkout. Starting in 2022, customers will be able to make purchases on Amazon.com and the Amazon mobile shopping app using their Venmo accounts.” That should certainly add to Venmo’s upside, which now has over 80 million customers, is on track to deliver over $900 million in revenue this year and is at a total payment volume run rate of $240 billion, putting its scale on par with the entirety of PayPal’s U.S. franchise in 2016.
CEO Dan Schulman commented on the release: “Our third quarter results show solid growth on top of a record year. The strength of PayPal’s two-sided platform and ubiquity in our core markets has set us up to grow at scale, expand our work with existing merchants and attract new partners. We’re thrilled that we are teaming up with Amazon to enable customers in the U.S. to pay with Venmo at checkout.”
CFO John Rainey added: “Our third quarter performance demonstrates the strength of our diversified platform, our global reach, and the scalability of our business. The powerful and accelerating secular tailwinds of increasing ecommerce penetration and cash displacement have helped to advance our leadership position.”
In addition to the headline numbers:
Looking ahead, guidance was also disappointing as management is forecasting:
While the results and guidance were disappointing, we believe them to have largely been priced in at current levels with shares down ~30% off all-time highs.
That said, given the miss and greater than expected eBay headwind, the stock is in the penalty box for now as the eBay headwind is a clear focus point for investors and we still have another quarter or two until it is behind the company.
Management spent a good deal of time on the conference attempting to explain the dynamics of the unwind, commenting: “The back half of 2021 was always going to be the low point of our revenue growth this year, and we are appropriately cautious as we enter Q4 and as we think about 2022. We are seeing the impact of global supply chain shortages in our merchant base. Consumer confidence has weakened with the absence of stimulus payments. And with the economy reopening, more people may be likely to do their holiday shopping in-store as confidence in delivery logistics is depressed from last year. And of course, we still feel the impacts of eBay's managed payments migration over the next few quarters, although at a lessening rate. Almost all of these issues are temporal. And consequently, we expect our revenues will accelerate throughout next year, and we remain confident in our medium-term guidance.”
While the team anchored 2022 revenue growth to around 18%, they added that “due to the cadence of eBay's Payments migration, as well as the stimulus measures earlier this year, [they] expect the first quarter next year to have more difficult comps and be [PayPal’s] lowest growth quarter. [Their] plans are for revenue growth to then accelerate through the year, and to exit 2022 at a revenue growth rate in line with or ahead of [their] medium-term guidance.” Importantly, the team added that their medium-term growth outlook does not rely acquisitions.
So, while the near-term is going to be a bumpy ride, longer-term there is reason for optimism. We were encouraged by the engagement management is seeing as a result of the new and improved PayPal app — a core pillar of our long-term investment thesis. On the call, the team commented that while it is still early, initial results point to a 25x increase in consumers exploring deals and offerings. Additionally, the team has seen a 15% increase in first-time users transacting in crypto an driven a 35% increase in cash card enrollments.
Though the initial data is doing little for the stock in the after hours session, it is certainly something we will keep an eye on as more engagement means more monetization opportunities — be it via advertising revenue opportunities or the ability to drive more purchase activity as merchants seek to have their business featured in the app. In fact, Schulman noted that “the average revenue per account from digital wallet users is twice that of checkout-only users.”
We look forward to seeing what other features management has planned for the app as core to our longer-term investment thesis is the view that PayPal can add more revenue streams as consumers seek out digitally native banking solutions and merchants seen to enhance their omni-channel offerings. On that note, while we didn’t get much detail, the team did highlight intentions to add equity investing capabilities to the app.
All in, to be clear, we are not happy with the results we received this evening. The stock is in the penalty box and we are in wait and see mode for the time being as management works through the eBay unwind. That said, the ex-eBay growth rates are encouraging and merchant adoption remains supportive of longer-term growth as PayPal checkout is now available at 75% of the top 1,500 North American and European retailers — not to mention the Venmo/Amazon partnership announced today.
Oftentimes, expectations are more important that the actual results and while hindsight is 20/20, the stock was clearly forecasting these results. Given the decline we’ve seen over the past few months we are inclined to believe that the worst of the selling pressure is behind us and that we are nearing a bottom as management has reset expectations and we appear to be nearing a trough in growth rates. That said, we would not step in just yet as we will no doubt see a few more late sellers show up in the next few trading sessions. We will continue to monitor for management updates, assess the price action and keep members updated on our thoughts about how best to approach the stock.
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