Payment platforms provider PayPal Holdings, Inc‘s stock PYPL has significantly declined from its previous all-time high in mid-2021. Despite the overall tech rally observed since the beginning of the year, the stock has failed to gain momentum, languishing at lows last seen in September 2017.
Not A Good Payoff For Investors: San Jose, California-based PayPal, co-founded by Peter Thiel, came into being in March 2000. It had its origin as Confinity Inc., a software company founded by Max Levchin, Thiel and Luke Nosek. Confinity launched PayPal in late 1999 and later merged with Elon Musk co-founded online bank X.com.
Following the merger, the company came to be called PayPal, which was acquired by eBay, Inc. EBAY for $1.5 billion in 2002. Thirteen years later, in 2015, eBay spun off PayPal as an independently-traded public company.
PayPal has a namesake branded checkout unit and a suite of unbranded solutions, including PayPal Braintree and PayPal Complete Payments, or PPCP. Braintree provides enterprise-grade processing for merchants and PPCP is an end-to-end, full-stack payments platform serving SMBs and partners.
PayPal’s stock did not take off in a big way until the pandemic, and along with other COVID-19 plays, it took off in a big way and rallied to an all-time high of $310.16 (intraday basis) on July 26, 2021.
This marked a strong increase from an $82.07 (intraday) trough reached on March 23, 2020 — a 278% rally in a year and four months.