PayPal's doubling down on new products

Management sees lots of opportunities, and it's going after all of them.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

This article was originally published on Fool.com. All figures quoted in US dollars unless otherwise stated.

Online payments giant PayPal (NASDAQ: PYPL) is seeing a surge in new accounts and engagement amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and it's doing everything it can to capitalise on the moment. During its second-quarter earnings call in late July, PayPal CFO John Rainey shared plans to invest an additional $300 million in new products and improvements in the second half of the year.

And the pace of product rollouts has been torrid. CEO Dan Schulman says he expects the number of product releases in the second half of 2020 to equal the number of new products released in the previous six years of his tenure at PayPal. Here's what the company's been up to and what it means for investors.

Accelerating the product pipeline

At the start of the year, Schulman talked about the need for PayPal to increase its presence in stores in order to achieve his aspiration of reaching 1 billion users transacting through PayPal nearly every day. The impact of COVID-19 has accelerated that product pipeline.

The company rolled out QR codes in the PayPal app and cash-transfer app Venmo last quarter. It's since partnered with CVS Health to integrate the QR codes into their POS systems, and it's looking for additional partners.

Schulman views QR codes as the fastest way for PayPal to expand its in-store presence. He also sees an opportunity to grow in-store payments with debit and credit cards. The company is releasing a Venmo credit card later this year. It expanded its partnership with Mastercard to bring the PayPal Business debit card to more countries earlier this month.

Lastly, PayPal also wants to use contactless payments technology to facilitate payments. It already has long-standing deals in place with dozens of global payment card companies to use their tokenization technology. The challenge it faces is overcoming the restrictions on access to phone hardware, which is particularly cumbersome on Apple devices.

PayPal isn't neglecting online payments, either. It launched an installment payment program last month called Pay in 4, which allows merchants to receive funds on a purchase upfront while consumers pay for the purchase in installments. The product moves the company's brand further up the sales funnel from the checkout page to the product page, where consumers can see the option to pay over time.

PayPal is also working on several other online payment services, including more ways for consumers to use PayPal online at more merchants, the ability to pay in different ways (e.g., credit card rewards, digital currency), and deeper integration with Honey, its web browser extension that automatically searches out deals on products and services being searched by the user.

Relying on the network and ecosystem

Most of PayPal's new products aren't actually monetized directly. Pay in 4, for example, doesn't cost merchants anything and consumers aren't paying interest, either. That's a unique proposition that few other companies can offer. That's because PayPal sees increased engagement from users that use Pay in 4 or in-store payment options across its other products, which offsets the costs of those new offerings.

It's this network effect that's enabling rapid development and experimentation with new products and gives PayPal an advantage in pricing. It's the same strategy fellow fintech leader Square (NYSE: SQ) has been following for several years. But Square is only planning to release one or two major new products on its consumer side per year. PayPal just released or expanded three products in the last month: Pay in 4, the business debit card, and Instant Transfer.

PayPal's faster product release schedule is supported by its larger network. It had 346 million active accounts between PayPal merchants and consumers, Venmo, and Honey as of the end of the second quarter. That's far more than Square's 30 million Cash App users and an undisclosed number of Square merchants.

In turn, PayPal's producing tons of free cash flow – $2.2 billion in the second quarter alone. By comparison, Square's free cash flow was sitting around $500 million on a trailing-12-month basis before the impact of COVID-19. As such, PayPal has a lot of room to experiment with new products.

An additional $300 million in incremental product investment will still allow PayPal to grow free cash flow and expand its operating margin, while also taking advantage of one of the biggest periods of opportunity in the company's history.

This article was originally published on Fool.com. All figures quoted in US dollars unless otherwise stated.

Adam Levy owns shares of Apple and Mastercard. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends Apple, Mastercard, PayPal Holdings, and Square. The Motley Fool recommends CVS Health and recommends the following options: long January 2022 $75 calls on PayPal Holdings. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Apple, Mastercard, and PayPal Holdings. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on International Stock News

Blue electric vehicle on a green rising arrow with a charger hanging out.
International Stock News

Boom! Why has Tesla stock rocketed 68% so far in 2023?

It's already been a year to remember for the electric vehicle giant.

Read more »

A male investor wearing a white shirt and blue suit jacket sits at his desk looking at his laptop with his hands to his chin, waiting in anticipation.
International Stock News

How an AI demo erased $140 billion from Alphabet stock

One error made this a costly display of Alphabet's new technology.

Read more »

A man with a beard and wearing dark sunglasses and a beanie head covering raises a fist in happy celebration as he sits at is computer in a home environment.
Share Market News

Meta stock price rockets 19% on $56 billion buyback

Meta stock has just seen one of its biggest jumps in history...

Read more »

woman looking surprised watching netflix
International Stock News

The Netflix share price just popped. Here's one way to buy in on the ASX

Here's one way to get a slice of whatever future Netflix might have.

Read more »

A futuristic view of electric vehicle technology with speeding bright light trails indicating power.
International Stock News

If I'd bought $5,000 of Tesla stock 3 years ago, what would my investment be worth now?

Here's how much mind-blowing money investors have made on Tesla stock in three years...

Read more »

A man and a woman sit in front of a laptop looking fascinated and captivated.
International Stock News

Alphabet stock: A once-in-a-decade opportunity to outdo Warren Buffett?

Is now the time to snap up shares in the global tech giant?

Read more »

Piggy bank on an electric charger.
International Stock News

Aussie investors are buying Tesla shares in droves. Should you?

A beaten-up stock, dramatic price cuts, and a controversial leader -- does investing in Tesla still make sense?

Read more »

Happy woman on her phone while her electric vehicle charges.
International Stock News

Should I buy Tesla stock for 2023 or not?

Is it finally time to buy Tesla stock?

Read more »