MercadoLibre is the dominant commerce and financial services ecosystem across Latin America, operating in 18 countries with 84,207 employees.3 The critical insight is that MELI is not an "e-commerce company." It is three distinct businesses generating compounding network effects within a single platform.
The marketplace plus Mercado Envios logistics network. Items sold grew 45% YoY in Brazil in Q4 after MELI lowered the free shipping threshold -- the third time they have done this, each time with the same result: frequency acceleration, new buyer acquisition, and conversion rate records.4 A parallel slow-shipping network drove 11% unit cost declines in Brazil. The 1P (first-party retail) business is variable-cost profitable and scaling.
Mercado Pago includes payments acquiring, credit (consumer loans, merchant loans, credit cards), AUM/savings products ($19B, +78% YoY), and insurance.5 MELI holds the leading Net Promoter Score among financial institutions in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, and Chile. Monthly active users grew approximately 30% for 10 consecutive quarters. They issued 3 million credit cards in Q4 alone (vs 1.5M in Q2, 2M in Q3).6
The emerging high-margin segment. Ads as a percentage of GMV is still low versus Amazon (which generates approximately $50B per year from ads). AI-powered bidding, campaign automation, and a scaled affiliate program (6x YoY growth in Brazil affiliates) are driving adoption.7 This is the business that funds margin expansion as commerce and credit investments mature.
The Flywheel. More buyers attract more sellers. More sellers attract more payment volume. More payment data improves credit underwriting. Better credit drives higher purchase frequency. Higher frequency drives logistics density. Logistics density drives lower unit costs. Lower costs fund free shipping. Free shipping attracts more buyers. MELI is the only player in LatAm running all of them simultaneously at scale.
| Segment | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commerce | 492 | 839 | 702 | 1,199 | 2,560 | 4,635 | 9,442 | 9,885 | 12,159 | 16,294 |
| Fintech | 353 | 559 | 737 | 1,097 | 1,414 | 2,434 | 1,095 | 5,222 | 8,618 | 12,599 |
| Total | 845 | 1,398 | 1,440 | 2,296 | 3,974 | 7,069 | 10,537 | 15,107 | 20,777 | 28,893 |
Source: FMP revenue-product-segmentation. Pre-2021: Marketplace/Nonmarketplace. 2022 Fintech dip = segment reclassification. Advertising (~$1.5B, +67% YoY) embedded within Commerce.8
| Geography | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brazil | 455 | 831 | 866 | 1,462 | 2,194 | 3,910 | 5,666 | 7,595 | 11,406 | 15,201 |
| Mexico | 46 | 86 | 109 | 275 | 575 | 1,172 | 1,864 | 2,985 | 4,664 | 6,475 |
| Argentina | 262 | -- | 377 | 456 | 980 | 1,531 | 2,500 | 3,240 | 3,818 | 5,962 |
| Other | 44 | 67 | 88 | 103 | 224 | 456 | 507 | 653 | 889 | 1,255 |
| Total | 845 | 1,398 | 1,440 | 2,296 | 3,974 | 7,069 | 10,537 | 15,107 | 20,777 | 28,893 |
Source: FMP revenue-geographic-segmentation + 10-K FY2025 SEGMENTS. 2017 Argentina data not available from FMP. Brazil = 53%, Mexico = 22%, Argentina = 21% of 2025 revenue.9
E-commerce penetration gap. Brazil online retail penetration is approximately 12-14% vs 22% in the US and 30%+ in China/Korea. Apply even the US penetration rate to Brazil's roughly $500B retail market and you get $50B+ in incremental online GMV -- and MELI has dominant share. Mexico's penetration is even lower at approximately 8-10%, implying an even longer runway.10
Credit card issuance at escape velocity. 3 million cards in Q4, scaling in all three major markets simultaneously. Credit cards drive marketplace purchase frequency, increase NPS, and create cross-sell vectors for insurance, savings, and investment products. Brazil cohorts 2+ years old are NIMAL-positive. Mexico and Argentina are following the same curve.6
Advertising monetization. Ads revenue grew 67% FX-neutral and remains a small percentage of GMV. If MELI reaches even half of Amazon's ads-to-GMV ratio (3-4%), the advertising business alone could reach $3-5B in revenue at 50%+ operating margins.7
AUM compounding. $19B in assets under management growing 78% YoY. While MELI is "not doing fractional banking" today, eventually deposits could partially fund the loan book, dramatically reducing funding costs.5
Analyst estimates imply 25%+ revenue CAGR through 2029. Consensus expects revenue to reach approximately $70B by 2029 and net income of $8.1B (EPS of approximately $160), implying approximately 42% EPS CAGR over four years ($39.39 to ~$160).11
FMP reports $10.77B FCF against $2.0B net income -- a 5.4x ratio that is not normal. The reason: Mercado Pago's fintech operations generate massive operating cash flow because customer deposits and funding sources flow through operating activities, while loan originations are netted within working capital.2 The headline 12.4% FCF yield is inflated by fintech liability inflows, not free cash from selling goods.
| Unit | Revenue | Op Income | FCF / Earnings | Margin | Valuation Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commerce | $14,794M | $964M | ~$234M FCF | 1.6% | Cash FCF (after $1.1B logistics capex) |
| Fintech | $12,599M | $1,719M | ~$1,223M earnings | 9.7% | Earnings-based (financial institution) |
| Advertising | $1,500M | $591M | ~$474M FCF | 31.6% | Cash FCF (capital-light) |
Margin assumptions validated against 10-K geographic direct contributions (within 1.2% of reported $5,903M).12
Commerce is in peak investment mode. PP&E doubled from $1.4B to $2.3B. ROU assets doubled from $1.1B to $2.2B. This is Amazon circa 2014 -- building the logistics moat. At a mature 6% FCF margin, normalized Commerce FCF would be approximately $888M.13
Fintech must be valued on earnings, not FCF. A bank that stops growing its loan book can generate infinite "FCF." The correct metric is net earnings power: $1,223M after allocating corporate costs proportionally.
Advertising is the gem. $474M FCF at 31.6% margin on a $1.5B business growing 67% FX-neutral. First-party commerce data, captive buyer audience, near-zero incremental cost.
| Unit | Metric | Value | Multiple | EV | Comparables |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commerce | Norm FCF (6% margin) | $888M | 30x | $26.6B | Amazon retail, Sea/Shopee |
| Fintech | Net Earnings | $1,223M | 20x | $24.5B | Nubank (24.6x), StoneCo (7.4x) |
| Advertising | FCF | $474M | 38x | $18.0B | Amazon Ads, Meta (36x) |
| Total EV | $69.1B | ||||
| Net Debt | ($5.1B) | ||||
| Equity Value | $64.0B | ||||
| Per Share (50.7M shs) | $1,263 |
| Scenario | Assumptions | Commerce | Fintech | Ads | Equity/Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bear | 4% margin, 15x PE, 30x | $17.8B | $18.3B | $14.2B | $892 |
| Base | 6% margin, 20x PE, 38x | $26.6B | $24.5B | $18.0B | $1,263 |
| Bull | 8% margin, 25x PE, 45x | $35.5B | $30.6B | $21.3B | $1,623 |
Current EV approximately $91.8B. Backing out fintech ($24.5B at 20x earnings) and ads ($18B at 38x FCF): Implied Commerce EV: $49.3B = 3.3x revenue = 55.6x normalized FCF. The market is either pricing commerce at Sea Limited-level multiples (requires sustained 28% growth at scale) or pricing fintech at Nubank premiums (requires 30%+ earnings growth for years). Both are possible but neither offers margin of safety.14
| Company | Market Cap | FCF | FCF Yield | Rev Growth | FCF Multiple |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon | $2.1T | $38B | 1.8% | 12% | 55x |
| Nubank | $69B | ~$3B | 4.3% | 50% | 23x |
| Sea Limited | $50B | ~$3B | 6.0% | 25% | 17x |
| MELI (headline) | $87B | $10.8B | 12.4% | 39% | 8x |
| MELI (adjusted) | $87B | ~$1.9B | 2.2% | 39% | 45x |
The adjusted FCF of approximately $1.9B (Commerce $234M + Ads $474M + Fintech $1,223M earnings) puts MELI at 44.9x (~45x) adjusted earnings -- comparable to Amazon, but with higher growth and higher risk.15
| Metric | FY2024 | FY2025 | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Loans Receivable | $6,346M | $11,912M | +88% |
| Credit Risk Exposure | $2,872M | $9,001M | +213% |
| Allowance for Doubtful Accounts | -- | $3,057M | 25.7% of gross |
| Credit Card NPLs | -- | 4.4% | All-time low |
| Consumer NIMAL | -- | High 30s% | Improving QoQ |
| Merchant NIMAL | -- | High 40s% | Improving QoQ |
| Collateralized Debt | -- | $2,852M | 31% of total debt |
| Total Loans Payable | -- | $9,193M | -- |
| Loans Sold | -- | $5M | Retaining risk |
| Unused CC Commitments | -- | $36M | No hidden OBS exposure |
Source: 10-K FY2025, LOANS RECEIVABLE; Q4 2025 Earnings Call.16
The 25.7% reserve is extremely conservative -- major US banks reserve 1-2% and even high-yield consumer lenders rarely exceed 10-15%. MELI's underwriting advantage lies in real-time transaction data on both sides of the marketplace: merchant sales, cash flow patterns, buyer reviews, purchase history, payment behavior, and cross-platform engagement. Credit model accuracy improvement was the primary driver of credit card issuance acceleration.17
Credit blowup (PRIMARY). A synchronized LatAm recession could drive NPLs past the 25.7% reserve buffer. Mitigation: short loan duration (can tighten in one quarter), geographic diversification across different macro cycles, demonstrated discipline (Argentina pullback during 2024 elections).16
Currency. FX losses were $337M in 2025 (1.2% of revenue) and could worsen in a dollar-strengthening environment. This is a permanent feature of LatAm operations, not a new risk.9
Competition. Amazon and Shopee (Sea) are investing aggressively in Brazil and Mexico. However, MELI's logistics network, fintech integration, and local market knowledge create structural advantages that are expensive and time-consuming to replicate.
Regulation. Mexico considered interchange caps (postponed). Brazil's central bank could impose new rules on fintechs. None are existential, but they create headline risk.20
Margin recovery timing. If credit card, 1P, and cross-border investments take 3+ years to reach profitability instead of 1-2, the stock could remain range-bound. Management quantified the drag at 5-6 percentage points but gave no specific profitability date.21
| Indicator | Reading | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Trend (D/W/M) | Bearish / Bearish / Bearish | ALL BEARISH |
| Moving Average Structure | MA10 < MA20 < MA50 < MA100 < MA200 | Bearish Fan |
| RSI(14) | 47.8 | Neutral, bullish divergence |
| MACD | Bullish crossover, histogram expanding | Early reversal |
| 52-Week Range | $1,593 – $2,645 | Current near lows (-35%) |
| Fibonacci | Below 23.6% retracement | Deep pullback zone |
| Key Support | $1,643 (algo, 2 touches), $1,593 (52w low) | |
| Key Resistance | $1,841 (Fib 23.6%), $1,902 (algo, 4 touches) |
Source: Workflow Capital technical analysis, 280-day daily bars, April 6, 2026.
RSI bullish divergence and MACD crossover are early reversal signals, but the trend is still fully bearish. The right play is patience.
| Level | Action | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| $1,200-1,300 | Full position | Base SOTP fair value |
| $900 | Aggressive overweight | Bear SOTP |
| Weekly > $1,902 | Smaller position | Trend reversal confirmed with volume |
Invalidation: NPLs above 8% or revenue growth below 20% for two consecutive quarters.
| Metric | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue ($B) | $0.8 | $1.2 | $1.4 | $2.3 | $4.0 | $7.1 | $10.8 | $15.1 | $20.8 | $28.9 |
| Gross Profit ($B) | $0.5 | $0.7 | $0.7 | $1.1 | $1.7 | $3.0 | $5.2 | $7.6 | $9.6 | $12.9 |
| Op Income ($B) | $0.2 | $0.1 | ($0.1) | ($0.2) | $0.1 | $0.4 | $1.1 | $2.2 | $2.6 | $3.2 |
| Net Income ($B) | $0.1 | $0.0 | ($0.0) | ($0.2) | ($0.0) | $0.1 | $0.5 | $1.0 | $1.9 | $2.0 |
| EPS | $3.09 | $0.31 | ($0.82) | ($3.53) | ($0.01) | $1.67 | $9.53 | $19.46 | $37.69 | $39.39 |
| FCF ($B) | $0.1 | $0.2 | $0.1 | $0.3 | $0.9 | $0.4 | $2.5 | $4.6 | $7.1 | $10.8 |
| Gross Margin | 63.6% | 59.2% | 48.4% | 48.0% | 43.0% | 42.5% | 48.2% | 50.2% | 46.1% | 44.5% |
| Op Margin | 21.4% | 4.6% | -4.8% | -6.7% | 3.2% | 6.2% | 9.9% | 14.6% | 12.7% | 11.1% |
| ROIC | 16.6% | 1.9% | -3.2% | -4.7% | 0.0% | 2.8% | 8.9% | 15.9% | 17.7% | 11.8% |
| Int Coverage | 7.4x | 2.1x | -1.2x | -2.3x | 1.2x | 1.9x | 3.9x | 12.5x | 17.2x | 21.6x |
Source: FMP 5-year financials, ratios, and key metrics.22