PayPal Holdings Inc. (PYPL) caught a break Wednesday afternoon when President Donald Trump hit the brakes on what looked like another round of transatlantic trade drama. The fintech giant's shares climbed after Trump announced he wouldn't impose tariffs on Europe that had been scheduled to kick in February 1st.
The Greenland Deal That Moved Markets
Trump's social media post described a "very productive meeting" with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte that produced a framework for a Greenland and Arctic security deal. More importantly for investors, he explicitly stated he would "not be imposing the Tariffs that were scheduled to go into effect on Feb. 1st."
The announcement came after Trump had spent the morning at Davos doubling down on acquiring Greenland, calling it a "core national security interest" and warning Europe "we will remember" if it refused. That language had rattled markets already on edge about tariff risks, making the afternoon reversal all the more welcome.
Why PayPal Actually Cares About Greenland Politics
Here's the thing about PayPal: it's deeply embedded in European commerce. The company processes a significant chunk of its total payment volume in Europe, handling online checkout for small merchants, marketplaces and large enterprises through PayPal, Braintree and PayPal Complete Payments platforms.
But the real money maker is cross-border commerce. PayPal monetizes both the transaction flows and FX spreads when European consumers pay U.S. and U.K. merchants, and vice versa. Any new U.S.-EU tariff regime, particularly one targeting digital or financial services, could hammer cross-border volumes, squeeze take-rates and create a regulatory headache.
By signaling a cooperative security arrangement on Greenland and explicitly canceling near-term tariffs, Trump removed what had become a genuine overhang on transatlantic trade. For PayPal, that means one less thing to worry about.












