Homepage
AGING Analysis Report
Jun 14, 2026
13 days ago · 100% complete · +8 refreshed

Paymentus Holdings, Inc.

PAY NYSE Categories PDF
Technology · Information Technology Services
Charlotte, WA 98052, United States IPO 2021 paymentus.com Updated Jun 14, 3:00am
Price
$21.12
Market Cap
$2.6B
Employees
1,307
Beta
1.31
Avg Volume
606,992
CEO
Dushyant Sharma
Business Description

Paymentus Holdings, Inc. delivers cloud-native technological solutions aimed at streamlining bill payments. Through its Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform, the company equips organizations (referred to as "billers") with services for electronic bill presentation, digital payment processing, enhanced enterprise customer communication, and self-service revenue collection. Its clientele spans a broad spectrum of industries, including utility providers, financial institutions, insurance companies, government agencies, telecommunications firms, and healthcare organizations. The company was founded in 2004 and is based in Redmond, Washington.

Business History
Generated: Jun 14, 2026 3:03am
Price Overview
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:00am (13d ago)
$21.12
+0.43 (+2.08%)
Day Range
$20.50 – $21.27
52-Week Range
$20.33 – $39.38
50-Day MA
$25.12
200-Day MA
$29.00
Volume
434,304.00
Analyst Price Targets
Low $32.00
Consensus $34.50
High $36.00
(22 analysts)
Share Structure
Outstanding 125,425,171.00
Float 104,681,352.00
Free Float 83.5%
High free float — 83.5% of shares trade freely, ~16.5% held by insiders/institutions
Very liquid — most shares trade freely. Low insider ownership can mean less management alignment, but makes large position sizing straightforward.
Price History (1 Year)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:06am (13d ago)
Revenue & Net Income Trend
The directional story — useful even when net income is negative.
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:06am (13d ago)
Revenue
The top line — total sales before any costs or taxes are subtracted. A measure of how much business the company is doing.
Net Income
The bottom line — profit left after subtracting all expenses, interest, and taxes from revenue. Reflects accounting profitability, but includes non-cash items like depreciation, so it isn't the same as cash earned.
Operating Cash Flow
The real cash generated by the day-to-day business — selling products, paying suppliers, collecting from customers. Calculated from net income by adding back non-cash items and adjusting for timing (unpaid bills, unsold inventory). When OCF consistently lags net income, the reported profit may not be converting to real money.
Period Revenue Net Income Net Margin YoY/QoQ
Key Metrics
API Direct from provider CALC Derived from statements
Industry comparison last run: Jun 14, 2026 3:02am
P/E Ratio (Price per dollar of earnings)
API
Stock Price / EPS (Diluted)
35.85
Stock Price: $21.12
EPS (Diluted): 0.53
P/B Ratio (Price vs net asset value)
API
Stock Price / Book Value Per Share
7.29
Stock Price: $21.12
Total Equity: $560.39M
Shares: 129,375,000
EV/EBITDA (Total value vs operating profit)
API
Enterprise Value / EBITDA
17.55
Market Cap: $2.65B
Total Debt: $6.85M
Cash: $324.54M
EBITDA: $126.33M
Enterprise Value (Takeover price (cap + debt - cash))
API
Market Cap + Total Debt - Cash
$3.8B
Market Cap: $2.65B
Total Debt: $6.85M
Cash: $324.54M
Gross Margin (Revenue left after direct costs)
API
Gross Profit / Revenue
24.8%
Gross Profit: $296.34M
Revenue: $1.20B
Operating Margin (Revenue left after all operations)
API
Operating Income / Revenue
6.3%
Operating Income: $75.54M
Revenue: $1.20B
Net Margin (Revenue left as actual profit)
API
Net Income / Revenue
5.6%
Net Income: $66.94M
Revenue: $1.20B
ROE (Profit from shareholder equity)
API
Net Income / Total Equity
13.5%
Net Income: $66.94M
Total Equity: $560.39M
ROIC (Profit from all invested capital)
API
NOPAT / Invested Capital
11.1%
Operating Income: $75.54M
Tax Rate: 21.5%
Equity: $560.39M
Total Debt: $6.85M
Cash: $324.54M
Current Ratio (Can it pay short-term bills)
API
Current Assets / Current Liabilities
4.46
Current Assets: $441.33M
Current Liabilities: $98.85M
Debt/Equity (Leverage — debt vs equity)
CALC
Total Debt / Total Equity
0.01
Short-Term Debt: $2.29M
Long-Term Debt: $4.56M
Total Debt: $6.85M
Total Equity: $560.39M
Rev/Share (Top-line per share)
CALC
Revenue / Shares Outstanding
$9.25
Revenue: $1.20B
Shares: 129,375,000
Book Value/Share (Net assets per share)
CALC
(Total Assets - Total Liabilities) / Shares
$4.33
Total Equity: $560.39M
Shares: 129,375,000
FCF/Share (Real cash generated per share)
CALC
(Operating Cash Flow + CapEx) / Shares
$1.25
Operating CF: $162.13M
CapEx: -$361,000
Shares: 129,375,000
CapEx is negative (outflow) — added to OCF to get FCF
Div Yield (Annual income from holding)
API
Last Annual Dividend / Stock Price
0.0%
Last Dividend: N/A
Stock Price: $21.12
Payout Ratio (Earnings paid out as dividends)
Dividends Paid / Net Income
Dividends Paid: N/A
Net Income: $66.94M
Dividends paid not available in cash flow statement
Industry Benchmarks
Last run: Jun 14, 2026 3:02am
Compares PAY against LLM-researched typical ranges for its industry. One research call per industry, cached indefinitely — every stock in the same industry reuses the same baseline.
Advanced Analysis Forensic deep-dive · three lenses
Three separate reads — Company Quality (is it a great business?), Valuation (is it mispriced?), and General Sentiment (how macro + narrative are pushing it), kept deliberately apart · 2026-06-14 03:08:32
Delvantic - Cairn AI
Quality — wait for a dip 7/10
Genuinely high-quality compounder (Q83) trading at a full SaaS price (V-70) — right business, wrong entry.
The cruxWhether you get a chance to buy this $21 stock in the $15-17 zone before the growth-and-margin story fully validates the multiple.
Forensic checks Derived mechanically from PAY's filed financials — not from the AI lenses
Liquidity & RunwaySelf-Funding
DilutionModerate Dilution
Earnings QualityHigh Earnings Quality
The three lensesswitch a tab for its full read — score + evidence
Company Quality
+83
Strong
edge √Σ 155 · risk √Σ 72 · conf 8/10

Revenue compounded from $395.5M (2021) to $1.20B (2025), roughly a 32% CAGR, while operating margin swung from -0.6% in 2022 to 6.3% in 2025 and net income scaled from breakeven to $66.9M. More importantly, FCF inflected hard: -$916K → -$11.4M → $34.5M → $63.2M → $161.8M, with 2025 FCF actually exceeding net income by ~2.4x, signaling genuine cash conversion rather than accounting-driven profits. Earnings quality screens are pristine — Beneish M -3.16, Altman Z 17.91, negative accruals (-6.7% of assets), and OCF materially above NI.

The balance sheet is a fortress relative to the business: $324.5M liquid cash, $317.7M net cash, and $161.8M annual FCF means survival is a non-issue and the company funds its own growth. The one quality blemish is gross margin compression from 30.7% (2021) to 24.8% (2025) — a ~590bp slide even as opex leverage drove operating margin higher. That suggests either mix shift toward lower-take-rate volume (interchange pass-through dynamics common in payments) or pricing pressure; it needs explanation because revenue growth optics can mask deteriorating unit economics in payments businesses.

Dilution is moderate but real: diluted shares grew 118.8M → 129.4M (~2.2% CAGR) with SBC at 1.6% of revenue and zero buyback offset. Insider tape shows no open-market P/S transactions — only awards, tax withholdings, and a large J-Other entry from Accel-KKR (likely a distribution/transfer), so there's no directional read from insiders. Overall, this looks like a genuinely well-run growth-stage operator, not a financial-engineering story.

Strengths 4
m85
FCF inflection is real and accelerating
FCF went from -$916K (2021) to $161.8M (2025), and 2025 FCF is 2.4x net income of $66.9M — operating cash generation is outpacing reported earnings, the opposite of an accruals-driven profit story.
m80
Fortress balance sheet for the growth stage
$324.5M cash, $317.7M net cash, Altman Z of 17.91 — zero solvency or funding risk; the business is fully self-funding its 30%+ growth.
m75
Clean earnings-quality signature
Beneish M -3.16, accruals -6.7% of assets, OCF/NI strongly positive — no mechanical red flags for earnings manipulation.
m70
Operating leverage is materializing
OpM moved -0.6% → 2.9% → 5.1% → 6.3% over four years on revenue tripling from $395M to $1.20B — opex is scaling sub-linearly to revenue.
Concerns 3
m55
Gross margin compression of ~590bps
GM slid 30.7% → 30.1% → 29.7% → 27.3% → 24.8% over five years. In payments, this often reflects interchange/network pass-through as transaction mix shifts, but it could also signal pricing pressure or large lower-margin customer wins — needs clarification.
m40
Steady share-count creep with no offset
Diluted shares grew 118.8M → 129.4M (2.2% CAGR), SBC 1.6% of revenue, and zero buybacks — a persistent per-share headwind even if modest relative to growth.
m25
Large Accel-KKR J-Other transfer
Three identical 155.6K share J-Other entries on 2026-05-27 (Palumbo, Barnds, Accel-KKR Holdings GP) suggest a sponsor distribution/transfer — not directional selling, but worth confirming the sponsor overhang dynamics.
This looks like a genuinely high-quality growth business. The financials hang together — revenue tripling, operating margin inflecting positive, FCF compounding faster than net income, and a clean balance sheet with no need for outside capital. Earnings-quality screens are all in the green, which matters because payments companies have plenty of accounting levers if management wants to use them, and Paymentus appears not to be pulling them. The two things keeping me from calling this Fortress are the gross margin slide (could be benign mix, could be something worse — I genuinely don't know without the 10-K) and the 2.2% annual dilution with no buyback. Insider tape is uninformative — no open-market activity either way. Net: a strong, credible operator; I'd want to understand the GM trajectory before going higher than Strong.
Verify before trusting this (6)
  • Driver of gross margin compression — interchange/network pass-through mix vs. pricing concessions vs. customer mix (10-K segment/disclosure)
  • Customer concentration — bill-pay platforms often have top-5 customers driving outsized share of volume
  • Accel-KKR remaining ownership stake and any lockup/distribution schedule post the May 2026 J-Other transfers
  • Take-rate trend per transaction and transaction volume growth to decompose revenue vs. mix
  • Working-capital dynamics behind the FCF inflection — is OCF being flattered by float/timing on customer funds?
  • Capitalized software vs. expensed R&D treatment given the IT services classification
Valuation / Mispricing
-70
Rich
edge √Σ 25 · risk √Σ 95 · conf 6/10
Price $21.12 vs deserved ~$18-20 — roughly 5-15% above fair, no margin of safety, modestly rich. attractive below $16.00

Paymentus is the right kind of business (Quality 83, clean accounting, FCF inflecting positive, no debt need) but the market already knows. At $21.12 and a ~$2.65B cap on a company doing roughly $900M-$1B revenue with mid-single-digit GAAP operating margins, the stock trades around 2.5-3x sales and triple-digit P/E on trailing earnings — squarely premium SaaS multiples for a payments processor whose net take-rate is structurally thin and whose bill-pay TAM is contested by ACI, Fiserv, and Stripe. The e2e synthesis itself reads 'Reasonable Premium' — i.e. not cheap.

Deserved value, in my book, sits roughly in line with today's price. To justify materially higher you need continued 25-30%+ revenue growth AND sustained operating-margin expansion to 10%+ — that's the bull path, and it's largely what the multiple already embeds. Earnings quality is good so I don't haircut, but I also don't pay up further for a business where share count keeps creeping. Net: this is a 'fairly to richly valued' steady-compounder, not a mispricing. The margin of safety is essentially zero at $21; you're paying for execution to continue without a hiccup.

Cheap signals 1
m25
Clean balance sheet and rising FCF lower the risk discount
Self-funding, no leverage, FCF compounding faster than net income — this supports a higher deserved multiple than a typical payments peer and is why I land at 'rich' rather than 'overvalued.'
Rich / priced-in 4
m60
Premium SaaS multiple on a thin-margin payments business
~$2.65B cap on ~$900M-$1B revenue (~2.7x sales) and triple-digit trailing P/E. That is full SaaS pricing for a business whose underlying economics are payment processing, not pure software.
m55
E2E synthesis itself reads 'Reasonable Premium'
The composite valuation doesn't flag undervaluation — it flags a premium that is defensible only if growth and margin expansion both stay on plan. That is the textbook 'priced for execution' setup.
m45
Heroic-but-not-crazy assumptions already embedded
Justifying $21+ requires sustained 25%+ top-line growth and operating margins inflecting into the 10-15% range against ACI/Fiserv/Stripe competition. Plausible, but it's the bull case as base case.
m20
Steady dilution quietly raises the bar
Per-share value creation lags enterprise value creation as share count creeps; the market cap I'm valuing keeps growing on me even if the business performs.
I like the business, I don't like the price. At $21 I'm paying premium SaaS multiples for a payments company that has to keep firing on all cylinders just to hold this valuation. The e2e itself calls it a 'reasonable premium' — that's analyst-speak for 'not cheap.' I need it closer to $16 — roughly 25% lower — before the margin of safety is real. Until then it's a watchlist name, not a buy.
Verify before trusting this (5)
  • Forward revenue growth guidance and any deceleration vs 25-30% expectation
  • Operating margin trajectory — is the inflection durable or one-quarter optics
  • Customer concentration disclosures and renewal terms with top billers
  • Stock-based comp run-rate and net share count growth
  • Take-rate trends — any signs of pricing pressure from larger platform competitors
General Sentiment
-5
Balanced
tail √Σ 62 · head √Σ 67 · conf 6/10

The macro tape is a wash - VIX in the high-teens, S&P just 1.8% off highs, regime score barely positive. For a 1.31-beta mid-cap SaaS name like PAY, a neutral tape is mildly unhelpful (high-beta names need a risk-on bid to outperform), but it is not actively punitive. There is no risk-off mauling here, just an absence of the tailwind this cohort needs to re-rate. The narrative on PAY is a moderate-intensity, moderate-durability 'steady compounder' in bill-pay SaaS - not a cult stock, not a meme, not a disruption target. That means very little narrative pressure either way: no euphoric premium to unwind, no broken story de-rating it. Strong 39.5% revenue CAGR and clean cash generation give the bull story something to point to, and price momentum has been positive. Against that, analyst tone is the soft spot: a 4-buy/6-hold consensus with ZERO target revisions this month signals a tape that has gone quiet on the name even as the price sits well below the $34.5 consensus target. That gap - bullish targets, no fresh advocacy - is classic sentiment limbo.

Tailwinds 3
m45
Strong positive price momentum
39.5% revenue CAGR plus low growth volatility has produced a strong positive momentum tape on the stock itself - the trend is a friend, even if the narrative is quiet.
m35
No narrative damage to defend against
Low-cult, moderate-durability steady-compounder framing means no AI-disruption overhang and no euphoric premium to unwind - sentiment risk is symmetric, not skewed negative.
m25
Target-price gap as latent fuel
Consensus target $34.5 vs spot $20.33 is a ~70% gap; if any analyst breaks the silence with an upgrade or revision, the setup has room to react sharply.
Headwinds 3
m45
Beta 1.31 into a non-confirming tape
A 1.31-beta SaaS mid-cap needs a risk-on bid to work; a neutral regime with VIX above its own one-year median offers no lift and leaves PAY vulnerable to any tape wobble.
m40
Analyst tone has gone silent
Zero target revisions this month and a Hold-skewed split (6 Holds vs 4 Buys) despite a $34.5 target signals fading sell-side advocacy - the desk is not pounding the table for this name.
m30
Rates backdrop still a SaaS drag
10y at 4.48% keeps duration-sensitive mid-cap SaaS multiples capped; PAY sits in the cohort that rerates last when rates relax and first when they back up.
Net read: roughly balanced with a faint defensive tilt. The tape is not pressing this name hard in either direction - the macro is neutral, the narrative is quiet and undamaged, and price momentum is genuinely positive. What is missing is conviction: analysts have stopped revising, the story is not loud enough to attract incremental buyers, and a 1.31 beta means PAY needs the broader tape to lean risk-on before sentiment can do real work. I would call it Balanced - the absence of headwinds is doing more than the presence of tailwinds, and the setup is waiting for a catalyst (an upgrade, a beat, a tape that turns) rather than fighting active negative pressure.
Verify before trusting this (4)
  • Whether any sell-side analyst breaks the revision drought - the first upgrade or PT bump would reignite tone
  • VIX behavior and 10y yield - a move toward risk-on would disproportionately help this 1.31-beta SaaS name
  • Any sign the bill-pay narrative attracts a fintech-disruption angle (Stripe, embedded finance) that could flip durability lower
  • Earnings reaction - a beat-and-raise into a quiet tape is exactly the catalyst this setup needs
The market-wide tape + this name's exposure to it (beta / sector / narrative durability). Context on the non-fundamental pressure — not a call on the business or the price. processId: detail-general-sentiment
Please log in to view trade setups
The Augustus trade-setup read is a members feature.
Log in
Three lenses kept deliberately separate — Company Quality (price-agnostic), Valuation (price-conditional), and General Sentiment (non-fundamental macro/narrative pressure). The scores are not blended. Filing-level items (convertibles, lock-ups, customer concentration) are v2 — see each lens's "verify."
Deep Analysis
Last run: Jun 14, 2026 3:06:11 am

Pre-flight intelligence scans the company first, then routes to the right analytical methods.

0 Company Classification — What type of company is this?
1 Industry Landscape — Where is the industry headed?
2 Company Momentum — Where is this company trending?
3 Forward Projection — 1Y & 2Y projected metrics (requires Layer 1 + 2)
4a DCF Valuation — Present value of future cash flows
4b Earnings Power Value — Floor value — worth with zero growth
4c Anchored PE — Industry PE adjusted for growth differential
4d Reverse DCF — What growth is the market pricing in?
4e Revenue-Based DCF — For growth/narrative companies (skip if mature earner)
Not applicable for High Growth Profitable companies
4f Anchored P/S — Price-to-Sales peer comparison (skip if mature earner)
Not applicable for High Growth Profitable companies
4g Scenario Analysis — Bull / Base / Bear (skip if mature earner)
Not applicable for High Growth Profitable companies
4h Dividend Discount Model — For dividend/income stocks only
Not applicable for High Growth Profitable companies
4i Book Value Analysis — For deep value / turnaround stocks only
Not applicable for High Growth Profitable companies
4j Insider Activity — Are insiders buying or selling?
4f Cash Flow Quality — How trustworthy is the FCF?
4g Debt Maturity Risk — Can it handle its debt?
4h Macro Environment — Rates, market valuation, volatility
4i Sector Intelligence — How does this company compare within its sector?
4j Revenue Confidence — How reliable is the growth projection?
4k Sensitivity Analysis — How fragile is the fair value estimate?
4l Sector Demand Cycle — Is the sector in a boom, steady state, or contraction?
5 AI Investigation — Adaptive research engine (Claude)
5b Thesis Evaluation — What does the market believe? (narrative/platform stocks only)
Not applicable for High Growth Profitable companies
6 Valuation Synthesis — Weighted verdict from all methods (requires Layer 4)
Income Statement (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:06am (13d ago)
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Revenue $395.5M $497.0M $614.5M $871.7M $1.2B
Cost of Revenue $274.1M $347.3M $432.1M $633.6M $900.2M
Gross Profit $121.4M $149.7M $182.3M $238.2M $296.3M
Operating Expenses $111.0M $152.7M $164.2M $193.3M $220.8M
Operating Income $10.4M -$3.0M $18.1M $44.9M $75.5M
Net Income $9.3M $-513,000 $22.3M $44.2M $66.9M
EBITDA $23.7M $8.1M $55.7M $90.4M $126.3M
EPS $0.06 $0.00 $0.18 $0.36 $0.53
EPS (Diluted)
Balance Sheet (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:00am (13d ago)
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Cash & Equivalents $168.4M $147.3M $179.4M $205.9M $324.5M
Total Current Assets $256.4M $229.0M $270.3M $345.6M $441.3M
Total Assets $472.9M $461.5M $504.9M $576.2M $667.9M
Current Liabilities $74.4M $51.5M $62.8M $81.6M $98.8M
Long-Term Debt $0 $0 $0 $0 $4.6M
Total Liabilities $86.8M $64.4M $75.2M $90.7M $107.5M
Total Equity $386.1M $397.2M $429.6M $485.6M $560.4M
Retained Earnings $29.9M $29.4M $51.7M $95.9M $162.9M
Cash Flow (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:06am (13d ago)
Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Operating Cash Flow $19.5M $19.9M $68.8M $63.6M $162.1M
Capital Expenditure -$20.4M -$31.3M -$34.3M $-457,000 $-361,000
Free Cash Flow $-916,000 -$11.4M $34.5M $63.2M $161.8M
Acquisitions (net) -$57.4M -$3.3M $0 $0 $0
Debt Repayment
Dividends Paid
Stock Buybacks $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Net Change in Cash $155.2M -$52.1M $33.5M $26.2M $115.1M
Analyst Estimates (Annual)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:00am (13d ago)
Metric 2025 2026 2027 2028
Revenue $1.2B
$1.2B – $1.2B
$1.4B
$1.4B – $1.4B
$1.7B
$1.7B – $1.7B
$2.0B
$2.0B – $2.0B
EBITDA $88.7M
$87.6M – $89.4M
$107.9M
$106.5M – $108.6M
$127.4M
$124.4M – $128.1M
$150.2M
$150.2M – $150.2M
Net Income $85.3M
$80.9M – $89.7M
$104.8M
$89.2M – $120.3M
$129.6M
$116.0M – $143.3M
$171.2M
$156.5M – $185.9M
EPS
Growth Trends (YoY %)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:06am (13d ago)
Metric 2022 2023 2024 2025
Revenue Growth +25.7% +23.6% +41.9% +37.3%
Gross Profit Growth +23.3% +21.8% +30.6% +24.4%
Operating Income Growth -128.7% +708.0% +147.9% +68.4%
Net Income Growth -105.5% +4,451.3% +97.9% +51.5%
EBITDA Growth -66.0% +591.8% +62.3% +39.7%
Insider Trading (Recent)
Last updated: Jun 14, 2026 3:06am (13d ago)
Type codes PPurchase SSale AAward / grant MOption exercise FIn-kind (tax) CConversion GGift DReturn to issuer
All SEC Form 4 codes
Open market
P Purchase
Open-market or private purchase of shares.
S Sale
Open-market or private sale of shares.
Compensation (Rule 16b-3)
A Award / grant
Grant or award of securities (RSUs, options, etc.) under Rule 16b-3.
D Return to issuer
Securities disposed back to the company under Rule 16b-3.
F In-kind (tax)
Shares withheld or delivered to pay the option-exercise price or tax — not an open-market sale.
I Discretionary
Discretionary transaction under an employee plan — Rule 16b-3(f).
M Option exercise
Exercise or conversion of a derivative (option/RSU) into shares — exempt.
Derivatives
C Conversion
Conversion of a derivative security into the underlying shares.
E Short expiration
Expiration of a short derivative position.
H Long expiration
Expiration or cancellation of a long derivative position with value received.
O OTM exercise
Exercise of an out-of-the-money derivative.
X ITM exercise
Exercise of an in-the-money or at-the-money derivative.
Other exempt
G Gift
Bona fide gift of securities.
L Small acquisition
Small acquisition under Rule 16a-6.
W Inheritance
Acquisition or disposition by will or the laws of descent.
Z Voting trust
Deposit into or withdrawal from a voting trust.
Other
J Other
Other acquisition or disposition (explained in a Form 4 footnote).
K Equity swap
Transaction in an equity swap or similar instrument.
U Tender / buyout
Disposition via tender of shares in a change-of-control transaction.

Compensation-plan codes (A, D, F, M) are routine and rarely directional. Open-market P (buy) and S (sale) carry the most signal.

Date Insider Type Shares Price Value
2026-06-08 INGRAM WILLIAM A-Award 8,280.00 $0.00 $0
2026-06-08 DAVIDS JODY R A-Award 8,280.00 $0.00 $0
2026-06-08 OBEROI ARUN A-Award 8,280.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-27 Palumbo Robert J-Other 155,574.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-27 Barnds Thomas J-Other 155,574.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-27 Accel-KKR Holdings GP, LLC J-Other 155,574.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-15 Sharma Dushyant F-InKind 27,054.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-15 Kalra Sanjay F-InKind 19,494.00 $0.00 $0
2026-05-15 Portocalis Gerasimos (Jerry) F-InKind 4,329.00 $0.00 $0
2026-04-07 Sharma Dushyant A-Award 480,000.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-13 Portocalis Gerasimos (Jerry) F-InKind 4,644.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-13 Kalra Sanjay F-InKind 7,372.00 $0.00 $0
2026-03-13 Gerber Andrew A. F-InKind 1,456.00 $0.00 $0
2026-02-15 Gerber Andrew A. F-InKind 3,900.00 $0.00 $0
2026-02-15 Sharma Dushyant F-InKind 27,427.00 $0.00 $0
2026-02-15 Portocalis Gerasimos (Jerry) F-InKind 2,989.00 $0.00 $0
2026-02-15 Kalra Sanjay F-InKind 19,816.00 $0.00 $0
2025-12-10 Klein Jason J-Other 145,596.00 $0.00 $0
2025-12-10 Malinowski Adam J-Other 13,277.00 $0.00 $0
2025-12-10 Palumbo Robert J-Other 3,602,968.00 $0.00 $0
Narrative Economics
The story the market is telling about this stock — the intangible X-factor (founder mythology, cult dynamics, TAM-of-imagination) that moves price beyond what cash flows alone explain. After Shiller, Narrative Economics.
No narrative profile yet for PAY — it's generated by the pipeline (market-narrative step).
Delvantic AI Findings
Independent analyst synthesis · Delvantic - Cairn AI · generated 2026-06-14 03:06:50
Reviews the pipeline's own verdicts
Verdict Fairly valued, not a bargain — fair value $19-24 on sober reverse

The raw quarterly cadence is the most important thing in this file, and it tells a more nuanced story than the headline 39% CAGR suggests. Sequential revenue growth has been: Q2'24→Q3'24 +17%, Q3→Q4 +11%, Q4→Q1'25 +6.7%, Q1→Q2 +1.8%, Q2→Q3 +10.9%, Q3→Q4 +6.4%, Q4'25→Q1'26 +8.4%. That's not a clean compounding curve — it's lumpy, and the Q2'25 near-stall (+1.8% sequential, then a re-acceleration) is the kind of pattern that either reflects large-customer onboarding timing (Paymentus's known model) or early TAM friction. YoY for the most recent quarter is still 56% ($358M vs $231M), but a lot of that is the easy comp from the $197M base in Q2'24. Underneath, net margin has compressed from 6.2% (Q3'24) to 5.8% (Q1'26) despite scale — operating leverage is not really showing up in net income at the cadence the bull case requires. Revenue confidence flag "decelerating" is correct.

On valuation: 35x TTM P/E, ~16x EV/FCF on $162M trailing FCF and roughly $2.3B EV (market cap $2.65B less $325M cash, no disclosed debt). The EV/FCF number is the one that actually defends this stock — it's not demanding for a business growing revenue 37% YoY with positive FCF conversion >100% of net income. The 17.5x EV/EBITDA is reasonable. P/B of 7.3x and P/S of 3.4x are unremarkable for the category. The synthesis verdict of "Reasonable Premium" with 39% implied FCF growth is defensible but the implied growth bar is high — FCF tripled off a tiny base ($60M-ish to $162M), and extrapolating 39% forward is exactly the kind of mistake investors made with payment names in 2021. A more sober reverse-DCF using 20% FCF growth fading to 10% over a decade gets you closer to $18-22/share, i.e., the current price already pays for solid but not heroic execution.

Where I diverge from the prior models: the Market Forces "Strong Tailwinds" verdict and the narrative engine's "durable moat" framing both lean harder on the secular bill-pay digitization thesis than the unit economics justify. Gross margin is 24.8% — this is not a SaaS business in any meaningful sense, it's a payments processor with software wrapping. Compare to Adyen (~55% net take rate-adjusted) or even Fiserv merchant solutions. The "high-margin SaaS layer" bull story in the narrative section is misleading; revenue is dominantly transaction-based interchange pass-through, and gross margin has been stuck at 24-25% for years with no expansion. That structurally caps the operating leverage thesis. The insider activity is also worth flagging — the 480,000 share award on 2026-04-07 plus the three identical 155,574 share J-Other transactions on 5/27 suggest concentrated insider grants/transfers, not buying conviction; "No Insider Transactions" in secondary signals is just wrong.

A contrarian would say: this is a transaction processor masquerading as SaaS, growing fast because it's winning RFPs in a fragmented utility/government biller market where ACI, Fiserv, and increasingly Stripe will compete on price as the cohort matures. The 24% gross margin gives almost no room to defend against pricing pressure. The 46% drawdown from highs is not market overreaction — it's a re-rating from an unsupportable ~70x multiple toward something defensible. The Q2'25 sequential stall could repeat. And the implied 39% growth in the reverse-DCF is the kind of number that breaks abruptly, not gently, when biller onboarding lumps disappoint. My read: fair value is roughly $19-24 depending on whether you weight the FCF trajectory or the gross margin ceiling more heavily. At $21.12 you're paying fair price for a real business with a real (if narrower than narrated) moat, but there's no margin of safety and the deceleration risk is asymmetric to the downside. I dissent mildly from the synthesis "Reasonable Premium leaning constructive" — I'd call it fairly priced with downside skew, not a buy.

GPT Critique
Second-opinion review · gpt-4o · generated 2026-06-14 03:06:57
Reviews the Opus findings above
Verdict I concur with Opus — Paymentus is fairly valued at $21.12, with a fair value range of $19-24. The growth outlook is promising but faces significant execution risks, and the current valuation offers no margin of safety against potential deceleration.

Upon examining the raw data, Paymentus Holdings, Inc. displays significant growth in revenue, increasing from $395.5 million in 2021 to $1.20 billion in 2025, marking a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 24%. This growth trajectory is impressive; however, it's essential to note the quarterly revenue growth's variability. The most recent quarters show sequential growth rates that fluctuate, with a notable near-stall in Q2 2025 at just +1.8% before rebounding. Net income margins hover around 5-6%, which indicates moderate profitability for a tech company. The gross margin is consistently around 24.8%, signaling limited room for operating leverage expansion. The company’s cash flow is robust, with a free cash flow conversion exceeding 100% of net income, highlighting good cash generation capabilities. However, these factors must be weighed against the modest net margin and gross margin constraints.

I agree with Opus's observation that Paymentus's growth is not a simple compounding curve. The lumpiness in the quarterly revenue growth suggests potential timing issues in customer onboarding or early signs of market saturation. This aligns with the potential risks Opus identified regarding transaction processing margins facing structural compression and growth deceleration as TAM saturates. The 35x TTM P/E ratio and 16x EV/FCF seem reasonable given the company's growth rate, but I concur with Opus that these figures imply a high growth bar that may not be sustainable long-term. The comparison of Paymentus’s gross margin to that of Adyen and Fiserv supports Opus’s argument that Paymentus operates more like a payment processor with software elements, rather than a pure high-margin SaaS business.

Where I diverge from Opus is in the interpretation of the market forces and narrative. Although Opus argues that the strong market tailwinds and durable moat are overstated, I believe the structural trend toward digital payment solutions does provide a significant tailwind for Paymentus. The secular shift toward digitization in bill payments is a long-term positive, even if the competitive landscape tightens. However, I do agree with Opus's critical view on insider transactions — the large share awards and identical transactions suggest strategic insider movements rather than strong insider confidence in stock value.

A careful skeptic might argue that Paymentus’s growth is primarily driven by market expansion rather than competitive differentiation, raising questions about sustainability once the market matures. The skeptic would likely emphasize the limited gross margin as a crucial bottleneck, constraining profitability in a competitive environment. Additionally, they might argue that the current valuation already factors in the optimistic growth outlook, leaving little room for error or negative surprises.

Community AI Feedback
No community reviews yet for PAY. Be the first — hit How to Contribute, have any AI review this page, and paste its take back here.
My Notes personal — only you see this
Data via Financial Modeling Prep · Cached for performance · fmp
v1.1.352 · d1100787 · 2026-06-26 11:39:30