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Paypal valued at almost $50 billion with Nasdaq return

July 21, 2015
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Paypal valued at almost $50 billion with Nasdaq return
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PayPal has been valued at almost $50bn (£34bn) after splitting from eBay and relisting on Nasdaq.

The online payment firm formally separated from parent company eBay on Friday, 10 months after the move was first announced.

Analysts said the split had enabled investors to evaluate the two companies’ growth prospects separately.

Shares in PayPayl rose 6.5%, or $2.51, to $40.90 in New York.

Paypal’s revenues rose 16% in the second quarter – more than double eBay’s 7% increase in the same period.

The separation will give Paypal the freedom to work with other potential partners, such as marketplaces like Amazon or Alibaba and increase its market share.

Paypal chief executive Dan Schulman said its status as an independent company was a “tremendous opportunity”.

‘Gorilla’
“We are focused on leveraging our strengths to drive long-term growth for our company and shareholders,” he said.

JP Morgan analysts described Paypal as a “gorilla” in the online payments marketplace and said its “global scale and brand recognition” would help its growth.

However, this may not translate easily into new areas.

“User engagement is changing, and the competitive advantages PayPal enjoyed in the traditional online commerce channel do not necessarily carry over into the mobile and offline worlds, in our view,” JP Morgan added.

PayPal, which was founded by a group of investors including venture capitalist Peter Thiel and Tesla Motors boss Elon Musk in 1998, first listed on Nasdaq in 2002 and was bought later that year by eBay.

The decision to split the two companies came after activist investor Carl Icahn last year pushed for the separation – a move initially resisted by eBay.

EBay chief executive John Donahoe subsequently said a “thorough strategic review” had shown the board that keeping the two companies together was becoming “less advantageous to each business strategically and competitively”.

The two businesses will continue to have some links, with eBay agreeing not to reduce the volume of transactions it puts through PayPal for the next five years.

–

Source: BBC

Tags: Dr. Akwasi Osei
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