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MercadoLibre stock drifts after earnings hit; MELI traders focus on margins and credit costs
26 February 2026
2 mins read

MercadoLibre stock drifts after earnings hit; MELI traders focus on margins and credit costs

New York, Feb 26, 2026, 14:39 (ET) — Regular session

  • MercadoLibre shares slipped roughly 0.7% in afternoon trading, following a sharp, earnings-fueled decline the previous day.
  • Q4 profit came in below forecasts, weighed down by higher outlays on credit and logistics. Revenue, though, topped estimates.
  • Investors want clarity: When will margins steady, and just how quickly can the credit book expand before losses start climbing?

MercadoLibre stock edged down roughly 0.7% to near $1,755 Thursday afternoon, with investors still digesting the quarterly profit miss that rattled shares earlier this week.

Why does it matter now? MercadoLibre’s bull thesis has always been straightforward: maintain rapid growth, don’t let margins crack. This quarter, though, the company ramped up spending on shipping perks and broadened its credit offerings—putting investors’ patience for such investments under pressure.

MercadoLibre reported net revenue and financial income up 45% to $8.8 billion in the fourth quarter, according to its shareholder letter accompanying results. Net income landed at $559 million. The company logged $889 million in operating income, with the operating margin slipping to 10.1% as spending ramped up on free shipping and fulfillment. Gross merchandise value hit $19.9 billion, and the credit portfolio surged 90%, reaching $12.5 billion. “By maintaining a bold yet disciplined approach to investments, we are strengthening our competitive moats,” CFO Martin de los Santos said. Business Wire

Leandro Cuccioli, who heads investor relations at MercadoLibre, pointed to shrinking margins driven by the company’s long-term plays: issuing extra credit cards, expanding free shipping options, and ramping up first-party, or “1P,” direct sales alongside its core marketplace. “In soccer terms, we are still in minute 15 of the first half of the market development,” Cuccioli told Reuters. Reuters

The stock took a hard hit out of the gate, tumbling over 6% right after the numbers dropped. By the close on Wednesday, shares had sunk 8%, according to Bloomberg data.

Investors are eyeing whether expenses tied to attracting customers—think cheaper shipping, increased advertising, expanded delivery—start to ease as order volumes scale up. Credit’s a similar story: growing the loan book can drive revenue higher quickly, but that typically means booking larger loan-loss provisions, funds earmarked for potential defaults, even before any losses materialize.

MercadoLibre finds itself squeezed between two intensifying battles. In Latin America’s e-commerce race, Amazon and Sea Ltd’s Shopee are laser-focused on rapid deliveries and aggressive promos. On the fintech front, rivals are scrambling for a slice of consumers’ wallets, as people navigate inflation and patchy growth throughout the region.

MercadoLibre reported its quarterly results on Feb. 24, according to a securities filing in Form 8-K.

But here’s the risk: margins stay tight for longer than bulls are banking on, or credit losses pick up as the company accelerates into higher-risk customers. And if all that spend fails to drive lasting, repeat purchases, selling the “growth now, profit later” story gets tougher.

Investors are set to focus on margin and credit updates as management speaks at a Morgan Stanley event in New York on March 24. First-quarter results are tentatively scheduled for May 7, the company has signaled.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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