TLDR
- PayPal drops sharply after hours despite strong earnings and cash flow
- Revenue rises, dividend launches, yet PayPal stock sinks after close
- Investors punish PayPal stock even as annual performance improves
- Strong financial year fails to stop PayPal’s after-hours plunge
- PayPal growth can’t offset market fears, shares tumble late
PayPal (PYPL) shares faced sharp pressure as its stock closed at $52.33 and then dropped to $44.30 in after-hours trading. The company reported growing revenue and higher annual earnings, yet the sharp decline highlighted a wide reaction to its execution challenges. PayPal outlined solid performance across core operations as it prepared for new leadership.
Revenue Growth and Margin Trends Strengthen Core Results
PayPal increased fourth-quarter net revenue by 4% to $8.7 billion, and the company also raised full-year revenue to $33.2 billion. The firm expanded GAAP operating income to $1.5 billion in the quarter, while annual GAAP operating income reached $6.1 billion. PayPal improved GAAP margins on a yearly basis and continued to lift non-GAAP earnings.
Transaction margin dollars rose 3% in the fourth quarter and climbed 6% for the full year, which supported steady platform activity. PayPal reported non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.23 in the quarter and $5.31 for the year. The firm also acknowledged weaker momentum in branded checkout as market conditions shifted.
Results:
📊 Adj. EPS: $1.23 🔴
💰 Revenue: $8.68B 🔴
📈 Net Income: $1.44B
🔎 Strong transaction margin dollars and solid cash generation supported profitable growth pic.twitter.com/2xHeP0s0jI— EarningsTime (@Earnings_Time) February 3, 2026
Total payment volume increased 9% in the fourth quarter and 7% for the year, and the platform processed $1.79 trillion across 2025. PayPal recorded 6.8 billion transactions in the quarter and maintained stable performance in its core payment flows. Yet trailing transactions per active account slipped 5%, even as active accounts rose to 439 million.
Cash Flow Strength and Liquidity Bolster Long-Term Position
PayPal generated $2.4 billion in operating cash flow during the fourth quarter and produced $6.4 billion for the full year. Free cash flow reached $2.2 billion for the quarter and totaled $5.6 billion for the year. Adjusted free cash flow aligned with strong BNPL activity throughout 2025.
The company ended the year with $14.8 billion in cash and investments, and total debt stood at $11.6 billion. PayPal also repurchased 23 million shares in the fourth quarter and spent $1.5 billion on buybacks. Additionally, the firm returned $6.0 billion to shareholders over the last twelve months through continued repurchases.
PayPal introduced a quarterly dividend of $0.14 per share and confirmed plans for ongoing payouts. The new dividend program marked a strategic shift as the company emphasized steady capital returns. Furthermore, PayPal positioned the distribution as part of a broader long-term financial framework.




