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While eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY) posted solid fourth-quarter results, the big news with its earnings release was that the company will end its payment processing agreement with PayPal Holdings (NASDAQ: PYPL).
The transition from PayPal to eBay's own system, backed by Adyen, will take some time. It expects to complete the move shortly after its existing operating agreement with PayPal expires in the middle of 2020. In the meantime, eBay is able to intermediate 5% of transaction volume in two select markets this year, a figure that increases to 10% next year.
eBay's goal with the transition is to simplify "the end-to-end experience for buyers and sellers," according to a press release announcing the change. It also expects to lower the costs for sellers while keeping more revenue for itself. As such, it should make eBay more attractive to third-party merchants looking to diversify away from Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN).
Image source: eBay
eBay's competition with Amazon isn't for buyers; it's for sellers
eBay isn't short on customers. The company counted 170 million buyers on its platform in the fourth quarter. That's well short of Amazon's 310 million customers it last reported nearly two years ago, but it's certainly enough to create a thriving ecosystem.
But the amount of sales taking place on Amazon.com far exceeds sales on eBay, particularly in the United States. Amazon sold an estimated $197 billion worth of goods to U.S. customers last year. eBay sold about $31 billion, based on estimates from eMarketer. That gap indicates that sales are about much more than attracting buyers; eBay needs more sellers and product selection to compete.
Amazon has over 2 million third-party sellers on its platform. While that's significantly fewer than eBay's 25 million, the barriers to become a seller on eBay are considerably lower, attracting a lot more casual sellers. Amazon is dominating the market for small businesses and even attracting large third-party vendors thanks to its Fulfilled by Amazon service, as well as its other third-party seller services. Amazon brought in over $10 billion in revenue from third-party seller services in the fourth quarter alone -- more than eBay's full-year 2017 revenue.
How ditching PayPal can help
eBay expects the migration away from PayPal to benefit sellers in three ways.
First, it sees room to lower the overall costs for sellers. PayPal currently charges a relatively high processing fee compared with a roll-your-own solution eBay can put together with the help of a back-end provider like Adyen. In addition, eBay will be able to combine its payment processing fees into its seller fees, making it more streamlined for sellers to do business on eBay. And since payments will go through eBay, sellers will have more predictable access to their funds.