PayPal Forecasts 2025 Profit Above Estimates as Turnaround Gains Traction

PayPal app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
PayPal app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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PayPal Forecasts 2025 Profit Above Estimates as Turnaround Gains Traction

PayPal app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
PayPal app is seen on a smartphone in this illustration taken, July 13, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

PayPal forecast full-year profit above estimates on Tuesday, fueled by a push to revive growth in branded products, improve pricing and sharpen cost-cutting efforts.

Shares of the digital payments giant swung between gains and losses in volatile premarket trading as investors assessed the results in a pivotal year for the firm. The stock was last down 4.5%.

Since taking over in late 2023, PayPal CEO Alex Chriss has focused on high-margin products and touted 'profitable growth' as the company's new strategy. PayPal has since revamped its pricing approach and shifted away from chasing revenue acceleration.

The upbeat outlook will likely ease worries about increasing competition from big-tech giants and fintech rivals such as Block in the digital payments sector, Reuters reported.

PayPal has worked to defend its dominant position with new products, including a "one-click" checkout feature called Fastlane, and forged lucrative partnerships with companies such as Global Payments and Fiserv.

Transaction margin dollars, a key measure of the profitability of its core business, increased 7% for the full year.

"The improvements we made to branded checkout, peer-to-peer, and Venmo, plus the progress we made on our price-to-value strategy, are beginning to show up in our results," Chriss said.

PayPal expects full-year adjusted profit to grow between $4.95 and $5.10 per share, surpassing Wall Street views of $4.90 according to estimates compiled by LSEG.

However, adjusted operating margins - a key source of investor anxiety - contracted 34 basis points to 18% in the fourth quarter.

SPENDING RESILIENT DESPITE CHALLENGES

Stronger margins and profitability in branded checkout products, which includes PayPal's core payment services, headlined 2024 for the payments company after years of uneven results.

Consumer spending has also remained resilient as Americans brush off concerns over high interest rates and shrinking savings, splurging on everything from travel to online shopping.

PayPal expects transaction margin dollars to grow between 4% and 5% in 2025.

Analysts and investors are optimistic about the outlook for the payments sector this year, though the recent imposition of tariffs by the US President Donald Trump's administration on China are seen as potentially inflationary.

For the first quarter, PayPal expects to post an adjusted profit in the range $1.15 to $1.17 per share, above expectations of $1.14.

The holiday season also lured shoppers as retailers offered deep discounts on Christmas, Thanksgiving, Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

PayPal's net revenue increased 4% to $8.4 billion in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31. Total payment volume climbed 7%, mirroring results at traditional card networks - Visa and Mastercard.

It posted a fourth-quarter adjusted profit of $1.19, topping estimates of $1.12.

PayPal's shares surged nearly 40% in 2024, outperforming broader markets and ending three years of consecutive annual declines.



Major Publishers Sue Meta for Copyright Infringement Over AI Training

Cars drive past a sign of Meta, the new name for the company formerly known as Facebook, at its headquarters in Menlo Park, California, US, October 28, 2021. (Reuters)
Cars drive past a sign of Meta, the new name for the company formerly known as Facebook, at its headquarters in Menlo Park, California, US, October 28, 2021. (Reuters)
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Major Publishers Sue Meta for Copyright Infringement Over AI Training

Cars drive past a sign of Meta, the new name for the company formerly known as Facebook, at its headquarters in Menlo Park, California, US, October 28, 2021. (Reuters)
Cars drive past a sign of Meta, the new name for the company formerly known as Facebook, at its headquarters in Menlo Park, California, US, October 28, 2021. (Reuters)

Publishers Elsevier, Cengage, Hachette, Macmillan and McGraw Hill sued Meta Platforms in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday, alleging that the tech giant misused their books and journal articles to train its artificial intelligence model Llama.

The publishers, as well as author Scott Turow, alleged in the proposed class action complaint that Meta pirated millions of their works and used them without permission to train its large language models to respond to human prompts.

“AI is powering transformative innovations, ‌productivity and creativity ‌for individuals and companies, and courts have rightly ‌found ⁠that training AI ⁠on copyrighted material can qualify as fair use," a Meta spokesperson responded in a statement on Tuesday.

"We will fight this lawsuit aggressively.”

The publishers allege that Meta pirated works ranging from textbooks to scientific articles to novels including "The Fifth Season" by N.K. Jemisin and "The Wild Robot" by Peter Brown for its ⁠AI training.

They asked the court for ‌permission to represent a larger class ‌of copyright owners and an unspecified amount of monetary damages.

"Meta’s mass-scale ‌infringement isn’t public progress, and AI will never be properly ‌realized if tech companies prioritize pirate sites over scholarship and imagination," Maria Pallante, president of the Association of American Publishers, said in a statement.

The lawsuit opens a new front in the ongoing copyright ‌battle between creators and tech companies over AI training, in which dozens of authors, news outlets, ⁠visual ⁠artists and other plaintiffs have sued companies including Meta, OpenAI and Anthropic for infringement.

All of the pending cases will likely revolve around whether AI systems make fair use of copyrighted material by using it to create new, transformative content.

The first two judges to consider the matter issued diverging rulings last year.

Amazon- and Google-backed Anthropic was the first major AI company to settle one of the cases, agreeing last year to pay a group of authors $1.5 billion to resolve a class-action lawsuit that could have cost the company billions more in damages for alleged piracy.


Microsoft, Google and xAI to Give US Govt Early Access to AI Models for Security Checks

A Google logo is seen at a company research facility in Mountain View, California, US, May 13, 2025. (Reuters)
A Google logo is seen at a company research facility in Mountain View, California, US, May 13, 2025. (Reuters)
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Microsoft, Google and xAI to Give US Govt Early Access to AI Models for Security Checks

A Google logo is seen at a company research facility in Mountain View, California, US, May 13, 2025. (Reuters)
A Google logo is seen at a company research facility in Mountain View, California, US, May 13, 2025. (Reuters)

Microsoft, Google and Elon Musk’s xAI agreed to give the US government early access to new artificial intelligence models for national security testing, as US officials grow alarmed by the hacking capabilities of Anthropic’s newly unveiled Mythos.

The Center for AI Standards and Innovation at the Department of Commerce said on Tuesday that the agreement would allow it to evaluate the models before deployment and conduct research to assess their capabilities and security risks.

The agreement fulfills a pledge the Trump administration made in July 2025 to partner with technology companies to vet their AI models for “national security risks."

Microsoft will work with ‌US government scientists ‌to test AI systems “in ways that probe unexpected behaviors,” ‌the company ⁠said in a statement. ⁠Together they will develop shared datasets and workflows for testing the company’s models, the company said. Microsoft signed a similar agreement with the UK’s AI Security Institute, according to the statement.

Concern is growing in Washington over the national security risks posed by powerful AI systems. By securing early access to frontier models, US officials are aiming to identify threats ranging from cyberattacks to military misuse before the tools are widely deployed.

The development ⁠of advanced AI systems including Anthropic's Mythos has in recent weeks ‌created a stir globally, including among US officials ‌and corporate America, over their ability to supercharge hackers.

"Independent, rigorous measurement science is essential to understanding ‌frontier AI and its national security implications," CAISI Director Chris Fall said in ‌a statement.

The move builds on previous agreements with OpenAI and Anthropic, established in 2024 under the Biden administration when CAISI was known as the US Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute.

Under former President Joe Biden, the institute focused on developing AI tests, definitions and voluntary safety standards. It ‌was led by Biden tech adviser Elizabeth Kelly, who has since joined Anthropic, according to her LinkedIn profile.

CAISI, which serves ⁠as the government's ⁠main hub for AI model testing, said it had already completed more than 40 evaluations, including on cutting-edge models not yet available to the public.

Developers frequently hand over versions of their models with safety guardrails stripped back so the center can probe for national security risks, the agency said.

xAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Google declined to comment.

Last week, the Pentagon said it had reached agreements with seven AI companies to deploy their advanced capabilities on the Defense Department's classified networks as it seeks to broaden the range of AI providers working across the military.

The Pentagon announcement did not include Anthropic, which has been embroiled in a dispute with the Pentagon over guardrails on the military's use of its AI tools.


Samsung Electronics Appoints New TV Chief amid Mounting Competition

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at the company's store in Seoul, South Korea, April 15, 2025.   REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at the company's store in Seoul, South Korea, April 15, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo
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Samsung Electronics Appoints New TV Chief amid Mounting Competition

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at the company's store in Seoul, South Korea, April 15, 2025.   REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Samsung Electronics is seen at the company's store in Seoul, South Korea, April 15, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

Samsung Electronics, the world's No. 1 TV maker, has replaced its TV head for the first time in more than two years, as it faces mounting competition from Chinese rivals at home and abroad.

Samsung said in a statement on Monday that it has appointed Lee Won-jin, who was previously head of the Global Marketing Office, ⁠as the new ⁠head of its Visual Display Business, succeeding Yong Seok-woo, who will serve as an adviser.

Samsung usually carries out its annual management reshuffle around December, and the company did not disclose the ⁠reason for the replacement.

A Samsung Electronics official told Reuters the new leader is expected to bring a fresh perspective and the change needed for the TV business, which is facing intensifying market competition.

In March, China's TCL Electronics and Japan's Sony signed binding agreements for a strategic partnership in the home entertainment field, increasing pressure on rivals.

The ⁠Nikkei ⁠newspaper previously reported Samsung was considering discontinuing sales of home appliances and TVs in China within this year in the face of competition from Chinese companies that have undercut rivals.

Samsung said last month its TV profit declined in the first quarter because of stagnating demand and rising raw-material costs. Lee had previously worked at Google before moving to Samsung in 2014.