PayPal’s Pay Pal

Paypal’s results update didn’t quite hit the target late last week, but its blossoming tech friendship might bode well for the future.

What Does This Mean?

You don’t have to be a genius to guess that companies like PayPal would suffer when spending’s on the decline, and this time, common sense is on the money: the company processed a disappointing 14% more payments by value last quarter versus the same time the year before. In fairness, PayPal’s focus on marketing towards existing customers was worth the work, with active accounts making 13% more transactions, helping revenue and profit beat analysts’ expectations. But that’s where the good news ends: the firm warned it wasn’t hopeful about US ecommerce this festive season, and slashed its full-year outlook. So although PayPal vowed to cut costs through layoffs and office closures, unimpressed investors still sent shares plunging 11% in the wake of the news.

Why Should I Care?

Zooming in: The Apple of its eye.
PayPal did have one trick up its sleeve to keep investors engaged: it announced a deal with Apple that’ll see each firm integrate the other’s offerings into its own payment systems. That’s a big deal: it means that debit cards issued by PayPal and its offshoot Venmo will now be accepted in Apple Wallet. That’ll let shoppers tap away anywhere Apple Pay is accepted – potentially a lucrative deal for PayPal, given that Apple’s service accounts for an estimated 5% of all card payments worldwide.

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