⚡ Key Takeaways

PayPal’s stock has crashed 85% from its July 2021 peak of $308.53, and the company fired its second CEO in three years after branded checkout growth decelerated to just 1% in Q4 2025. Full-year revenue grew only 4% to $33.2 billion while competitors Apple Pay and Stripe grew at 21% and 12.3% respectively, eroding the digital payments pioneer’s competitive position.

Bottom Line: Businesses and developers relying on PayPal’s checkout infrastructure should diversify payment providers and monitor the company’s strategic direction under its third CEO, as the platform’s competitive decline shows no signs of stabilizing.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
Medium

PayPal is widely used by Algerian freelancers and diaspora for cross-border payments, and its decline directly affects the tools available to Algeria’s informal digital economy.
Infrastructure Ready?
Partial

Algeria’s fintech ecosystem uses PayPal workarounds (via intermediaries) due to lack of official PayPal support; the company’s strategic direction affects these arrangements.
Skills Available?
Yes

Algerian developers and fintech entrepreneurs have the skills to build alternative payment solutions if PayPal’s relevance continues to decline in emerging markets.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

Algerian fintech companies and freelancers should evaluate alternative payment platforms as PayPal’s product and strategic focus increasingly prioritize developed markets.
Key Stakeholders
Freelancers, e-commerce operators, fintech founders, Bank of Algeria
Decision Type
Tactical

PayPal’s strategic instability creates both risk and opportunity for Algerian digital payment stakeholders who depend on or compete with the platform.

Quick Take: PayPal’s decline is a direct warning for Algerian freelancers and e-commerce operators who rely on the platform for cross-border payments. As PayPal’s strategic focus narrows to developed markets under new leadership, Algerian fintech companies have an opening to build local alternatives for the cross-border payment needs that PayPal increasingly underserves in emerging markets.

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