Picking up where I left off in yesterday's e-mail...

In it, I analyzed PayPal's (PYPL) historical financials. As I said, they look exceptionally strong.

PayPal has high margins, growth, and free cash flow ("FCF"). The company also boasts a strong balance sheet and smart capital allocation.

But despite this, PayPal's stock has been crushed. As I said yesterday:

At [Tuesday's] closing price of $44.53, it trades at a mere 8.4 times this year's consensus earnings estimates of $5.30 per share.

That's a small fraction of the S&P 500 Index's multiple of 22 times. And it's within a whisker of PayPal's all-time low...

This is a low multiple for such a high-quality business, which has caught the eye of many smart investors.

Today, I'll share the bull case made by two of them...

One is my old friend Michael Burry of The Big Short fame.

Burry disclosed a month ago that he had recently doubled his position in PayPal to 6.6% of his portfolio, which I covered in my May 6 e-mail.

As Burry said in a Substack post (for paid subscribers only), he liked the company's May 5 earnings report:

PayPal reported decent earnings today, with 7% revenue growth. PayPal is a float business, but lower interest rates created a headwind. Venmo is growing strong double digits and remains a pawn for value realization. Active accounts are flat, and guidance of a flat 2026 could be table-setting by the new CEO.

Of the buyback program, he wrote:

The buyback is now $6 billion for the trailing twelve months on a now $41 billion market capitalization, and PayPal has essentially no net debt. That $6 billion came roaring out of free cash flow...

Very large buybacks are not a story the market respects in low growth names.

Nevertheless, as recently shown with eBay, when the valuation is compressed over a longer period of significant buybacks, the numbers play out in the share price eventually, especially with a little turnaround/refresh under new management.

Burry also said in his post that he saw opportunity for the new CEO to increase margins and profits via cost cutting:

The new CEO is looking to save $1.5 billion in run-rate expenses the next few years, and news this morning is of 20% layoffs...

PayPal does not need nearly as many people as it has to run its business, and continued deployment of foundation models will accelerate work force reductions.

In addition, someone posting under the handle "BigBrainBear" pitched the stock on my favorite stock idea website, ValueInvestorsClub (membership required), on May 25 when it was trading at $44.23...

In the post, BigBrainBear notes that the consensus view is that:

... this is a declining payments giant which will be eaten away at by new entrants, Apple Pay and Stripe in particular... The implied growth rate [in the stock] tells us that [investors think] PayPal's free cash flow will shrink on average by -9.3% over the next 10 years.

But as the pitch continues:

Let's look at the numbers. In terms of decline/deterioration, it is pretty nonexistent. The business is simply mature – that's a feature, not a bug.

To help show this point, BigBrainBear shared these three charts:

Like Burry, BigBrainBear likes PayPal's massive share-repurchase program:

They are deploying every extra dollar of FCF to buybacks – this company doesn't have to prove itself earnings by earnings, it is already viewed as a zombie. All PayPal has to do is slowly cannibalize itself and return value to shareholders. The investor can wait for a rerating, but assuming nothing changes, with this amount of cash flow, PayPal can retire ~14% of shares every year.

As BigBrainBear concludes in the pitch:

Free cash flow has been $4.2B, $6.8B, and $5.6B for the last three calendar years, compared to a market cap of less than $40B. If you believe these growth projections are even slightly off, there is significant alpha to be had here. My base case share price is $128 and my best case is $146. The assumptions for both of these cases are quite conservative. A no-growth scenario (with a basis of $5.5B TTM of FCF) produces a valuation of $100 a share.

I think Burry and BigBrainBear are right that PayPal's stock is very attractive at today's depressed price.

If my team and I decide the stock looks compelling enough to add to the Stansberry's Investment Advisory model portfolio, subscribers will be the first to know. Find out how to become one – and gain instant access to all of our current open recommendations – as part of a special presentation by clicking here.

Best regards,

Whitney

P.S. I welcome your feedback – send me an e-mail by clicking here.

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About the Editor
Whitney Tilson
Whitney Tilson
Editor

Whitney is the Editor of Stansberry's Investment Advisory, Stansberry Research's flagship newsletter, The N.E.W. System, and Whitney Tilson's Daily. He is also Editor of Commodity Supercycles and a member of the Stansberry Portfolio Solutions Investment Committee.

Whitney spent nearly 20 years on Wall Street. During that time, he founded and ran Kase Capital Management, which managed three value-oriented hedge funds and two mutual funds. Starting out of his bedroom with $1 million, Whitney grew assets under management to a peak of $200 million.

Once dubbed "The Prophet" by CNBC, Whitney predicted the dot-com crash, the housing bust, the 2009 stock bottom, and more. An accomplished writer, Whitney has published four books, the most recent of which is The Art of Playing Defense: How to Get Ahead by Not Falling Behind (2021). And he contributed to Poor Charlie's Almanack: The Essential Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger (2005), the definitive book on Berkshire Hathaway's Vice Chairman Charlie Munger.

Whitney has appeared dozens of times on CNBC, Bloomberg TV, and Fox Business Network, and has been profiled by the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post. He has also written for Forbes, the Financial Times, Kiplinger's, the Motley Fool, and TheStreet.com.

Whitney graduated with honors from Harvard University, earning a bachelor's degree in government. Upon graduation, he helped Wendy Kopp launch the Teach for America program. He went on to earn his Master of Business Administration degree at Harvard in 1994. Whitney graduated in the top 5% of his class and was named a Baker Scholar.

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