(Bloomberg) — PayPal Holdings Inc. shares tumbled late Wednesday after the company said it expects earnings to be flat this year as it continues to cut costs and streamline its operations.
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Shares of the fintech firm slid 7.9% to $58.24 at 6:28 p.m. in New York. The stock had gained 3% this year through the close of regular trading.
Fourth-quarter payments volume climbed 15% to $409.8 billion, beating analysts’ estimates of $403.6 billion, while adjusted earnings totaled $1.48 a share, topping the $1.36 average forecast. For all of 2024, PayPal expects adjusted earnings of $5.10 a share, unchanged from last year, the San Jose, California-based company said in a statement.
PayPal announced last month that it will cut about 9% of its workforce, part of Chief Executive Officer Alex Chriss’s efforts to boost profits. In November, he blamed PayPal’s slow progress on its cost base and complex structure.
The company still has ample expenses that can be reevaluated beyond its headcount as it works to become more efficient, Chriss said in an interview. “We’re continuing to look across the entire organization.”
The firm plans to buy back at least $5 billion of its stock this year, Chief Financial Officer Jamie Miller said on a conference call with analysts.
Fourth-quarter net revenue totaled $8.03 billion, up 8.7% from a year earlier. Transaction margin dollars — or revenue minus transaction costs and transaction and credit losses divided by net revenue — was $3.67 billion. That metric, a key indicator of expense control, was little changed from a year earlier.
Read More: PayPal CEO Says Firm Bought Too Much, Will Focus on Profitability
PayPal plans to stop providing annual revenue guidance in favor of doing so quarterly, Miller said during the conference call.
“We are just doing too many things,” she said. “We have to make decisions to stop doing things, and just focus.”
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