Frank Keller, an executive vice president at PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL), sold 3,478 shares of the company's common stock on February 6, 2026, at $40.20 per share. The transaction totaled $139,815, according to a Form 4 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Following the sale, Keller's direct ownership in PayPal stands at 51,567 shares.
The filing notes the sale was carried out under a pre-established Rule 10b5-1 trading plan adopted on October 30, 2025, indicating the transaction was scheduled in advance rather than executed opportunistically.
Separately, PayPal has faced a series of operational and market-performance headwinds that have prompted several brokerages to revise their outlooks. The company reported Branded Checkout growth of only 1% year-over-year, a deceleration that management and analysts expect will translate into lower transaction margin dollars in the first quarter and across 2026.
That slowdown has led to multiple changes in broker recommendations and price targets:
- RBC Capital lowered its price target to $59.00, citing an abrupt CEO change and tepid growth in Branded Checkout total payment volume.
- Wells Fargo reduced its target to $48.00, attributing the move to execution-related concerns after PayPal missed earnings and revised guidance.
- HSBC downgraded the stock from Buy to Hold and cut its price target to $47.00, pointing to worries about losses in e-commerce market share.
- Canaccord Genuity shifted to a Hold rating and sharply lowered its price target to $42.00, even as it acknowledged the company’s strong cash flow.
- Citizens downgraded PayPal from Market Outperform to Market Perform, citing the slowdown in Branded Checkout volumes and anticipated declines in transaction margins.
The combination of an insider sale executed under a planned trading program and a cluster of analyst downgrades underscores heightened scrutiny of PayPal's near-term growth trajectory and margin profile. Market participants will be watching upcoming results and guidance for confirmation that branded checkout volumes and transaction margins stabilize.