PayPal (PYPL +0.20%) processed $1.8 trillion in total payment volume in 2025. It has 439 million annual active users. And its services are offered in over 200 markets across the globe. Those data points demonstrate that this is a leader in the digital payments industry.
But the fintech stock has been a wildly disappointing investment. If you invested $1,000 in PayPal 10 years ago, here's how much you'd have today.
Image source: PayPal.
PayPal shares are up just 12% in the past decade (as of March 20). A $1,000 starting capital outlay would be worth just $1,120 today. This pales in comparison to the S&P 500 index's total return of 282% during the same time.
This wasn't always a losing investment. In the five years leading up to their peak in July 2021, shares skyrocketed 724%. Today, they trade a gut-wrenching 86% off the record.

NASDAQ: PYPL
Key Data Points
The market hasn't been happy about the company's dramatically slower growth. Revenue increased by just 4% in 2025. And it's projected to rise at a compound annual growth rate of 4% over the next three years, according to consensus analyst estimates. This is PayPal's new reality, far from the fantastic 15% to 20% gains from earlier in the decade.
Competition in the payments industry has never been more intense. PayPal has a lot of work to do to win back the investment community's confidence.





