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Post-Earnings Dip: 2 Stocks to Buy Right Now

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Earnings season can be volatile. Investors expect some corporations to live up to high standards, and their share prices suffer the consequences when they don't. However, a single quarter rarely changes a company's long-term prospects, so when an excellent stock experiences a post-earnings dip, it can be a great buying opportunity.

Let's consider two stocks that dropped following their latest quarterly updates, but that still look like solid long-term options: PayPal (NASDAQ: PYPL) and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL).

1. PayPal

PayPal, a leading financial services company, delivered strong fourth-quarter results overall. The fintech specialist's revenue was up 4% year over year to $8.4 billion, while its adjusted earnings per share (EPS) came in at $1.19, 5% higher than the year-ago period. Though PayPal isn't growing its top and bottom lines as fast as it once did, it came out ahead of analyst estimates for the period.

However, there was one hiccup. PayPal's fastest-growing segment in the fourth quarter of 2023 was its unbranded card processing unit (which provides an integrated, global payment processing platform to companies). Total payment volume (TPV) growth in this part of PayPal's business dropped off a cliff: It grew by 2% year over year in the fourth quarter versus 29% in the comparable period of the previous fiscal year, prompting the sell-off.

That said, the fact that PayPal posted better results than analysts expected, despite underperforming in this area, means the rest of its business is doing well. Can the company keep that up while fixing whatever issue it has in its unbranded card processing unit?

My view is that it can. PayPal is looking at several growth opportunities, and has introduced various initiatives in the past few years that could help boost the top line.

Consider its new advertising platform. The fintech giant has an ecosystem of 434 million active accounts and plans to use analytic tools to help merchants create targeted ads and increase sale conversions. This initiative could attract more merchants and customers to the company's ecosystem, strengthening its network effect. Elsewhere, PayPal launched initiatives such as FastLane, a speedy checkout option that aims to increase conversions.

PayPal is still looking to implement more changes, including some focused on artificial intelligence (AI), to improve its business. Furthermore, the company is prioritizing profitable growth in unbranded card processing. That's what caused the decline in revenue growth in this unit, but it could pay for itself several times in the medium term if it helps PayPal increase its profits and margins.