PayPal is having a rough December. Morgan Stanley downgraded the payment giant to Underweight from Equalweight on Thursday, cutting its price target to $51 from $74.
PayPal Holdings, Inc., PYPL
This marks the third analyst downgrade for PayPal this month. Bank of America Securities and J.P. Morgan previously reduced their ratings on the stock.
Morgan Stanley analyst James Faucette pointed to specific concerns driving the pessimistic outlook. The firm believes PayPal’s branded checkout integrations face slow and complex improvement processes.
These challenges aren’t going away quickly. Morgan Stanley expects sluggish transaction margin dollar growth to persist through 2028.
The investment bank also highlighted ongoing struggles with Venmo monetization. The person-to-person payment platform’s young user base has proven difficult to convert into revenue.
PayPal faces mounting pressure on multiple fronts. Morgan Stanley expects the company to lose market share to competitors in the crowded digital payments space.
Take rate degradation adds another layer of concern. This means PayPal is collecting smaller fees per transaction, which directly hits profitability.
The firm also mentioned “agentic narrative” would remain an overhang for the company. This refers to emerging commerce technologies that could disrupt traditional payment flows.
Morgan Stanley revised its margin and earnings per share expectations downward as part of the analysis. These cuts reflect a more cautious view of PayPal’s financial trajectory.
PayPal reported revenue of $32.86 billion with a three-year growth rate of 12.7%. The company maintains solid profitability metrics with a 19.16% operating margin and 14.96% net margin.
The company’s balance sheet shows financial strength. PayPal has a current ratio of 1.34 and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.56.
PayPal trades at a P/E ratio of 12.03, near its 10-year low. The stock’s P/S ratio stands at 1.79 and P/B ratio at 2.8.
The company had 434 million active accounts at the end of 2024. Institutional ownership remains strong at 75.63%, showing continued confidence from large investors.
Insider activity tells a different story. Six insider sell transactions occurred over the past three months, totaling 36,156 shares.
PayPal shares dropped 0.8% in premarket trading following Morgan Stanley’s announcement. The new $51 price target represents a massive cut from the previous $74 target.
Analyst sentiment across Wall Street shows caution. The consensus target price sits at $80.02 with a recommendation score of 2.6.
Technical indicators suggest the stock approaches oversold territory. The RSI reading of 39.51 points to potential downside exhaustion.
PayPal maintains a Piotroski F-Score of 7, indicating strong financial health. The company’s Beneish M-Score of -2.54 suggests no signs of financial manipulation.
PayPal’s market capitalization stands at $56.16 billion. The stock carries a beta of 1.49, indicating higher volatility compared to the broader market.
The post PayPal (PYPL) Stock: Third Analyst Downgrade This Month Hits Payment Giant appeared first on Blockonomi.

