New PayPal CEO Dealt a Good Elliott Wave Hand

 | Aug 21, 2023 03:03AM ET

To say that PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) has been a volatile investment would be an understatement. The company was spun off from eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY) in 2015 and has been trading as a separate public company for over eight years now. Currently below $60 a share, the stock is up by a 56% from its IPO price of $38. That’s a decent, but far from a great return, especially when measured against the S&P 500’s 111% without the dividends. What actually happened over those eight years is far more interesting, though.

PayPal started climbing almost right away in the summer of 2015, but the stock really took off in 2020. The pandemic, coupled with the Fed’s huge stimulus campaign, gave e-commerce a massive boost. As the biggest fintech player out there, PayPal was among the most obvious beneficiaries. Its sales surged 22.2% in 2020 and then added another 19.3% in 2021.

The market was quick to extrapolate the recent past into the far future, pumping the stock to $310 a share in July, 2021. Alas, when investors realized that the 2020-2021 sales growth rate wasn’t sustainable, the share price started crashing just a fast. Last week, PayPal fell to $57.29, down 81.5% in just over two years. Is there a bottom in sight? Let’s try and find out.