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MercadoLibre Stock Has Been Left For Dead. Here’s Why Investors Should Consider Buying More.


The market is soaring, but MercadoLibre (MELI +1.27%) is down 30% over the past year. Investors have soured on the Latin American financial technology and e-commerce player because of its aggressive investments, which are eroding profit margins.

It has been left for dead, with shares up only 10% over the last five years, while the broad market S&P 500 index is up close to 100% over the same timeframe. However, it’s at this moment that MercadoLibre looks like a fantastic investment for anyone with a time horizon longer than next quarter. Here’s why you should consider buying even more of MercadoLibre as the stock inches lower.

Today’s Change

(1.27%) $22.12

Current Price

$1764.31

Playing the long game

MercadoLibre operates in two sectors with some strong overlap: financial technology and e-commerce. In e-commerce, it is building an “everything store” similar to Amazon in Latin American countries, investing in fast delivery, a wide selection, and a bundled subscription offering.

Its current crop of investments in free delivery for close to all orders in Brazil has temporarily reduced profit margins. At the same time, it has accelerated revenue growth in the country. In Q1 2026, total commerce revenue grew 47% year over year last quarter in constant currency, on top of 57% growth in the same quarter a year ago.

More buyers, more shopping volume, and more revenue are being spent on MercadoLibre’s e-commerce marketplace. This will mean a short-term hit to margins, but it should also lead to a long-term competitive advantage for the business. The same can be said for its MercadoPago consumer finance segment. MercadoPago is accelerating its acquisition of credit card customers to deepen its relationship as a banking application and drive more spending on the MercadoLibre online marketplace.

When a credit card customer is acquired, it requires the bank — in this case, MercadoLibre — to allocate loan losses over the life of the customer relationship, which means an upfront hit to margins if many customers are acquired. With all these new credit card customers, MercadoLibre’s fintech revenue grew 54% year over year last quarter.

Overall, MercadoLibre’s revenue is growing 46% year over year in constant currency, making it one of the fastest-growing large-cap technology players today. However, investors are still not happy because of the short-term hit this accelerated growth has had on profit margins.

A person looking at a phone and holding a cardboard box.

Image source: Getty Images.

Why MercadoLibre’s stock is cheap today

Last quarter, MercadoLibre’s overall operating margin fell to 6.9%, and it may fall further in the quarters ahead due to the upfront investments discussed above. This has investors very nervous, but it should not be misconstrued as MercadoLibre losing its lead in e-commerce and consumer finance in Latin America.

Long-term, MercadoLibre should be able to regain or surpass its previous high profit margin of 16%, if not exceed it, due to increased scale, higher-margin fintech revenue, and faster-growing advertising revenue (which is growing faster than the overall business). Combined with a business with a long history of growing revenue at a fast, double-digit rate, it is plausible that the company’s revenue of $31.8 billion could climb to $100 billion over the next five years or so. A 15% profit margin would equate to $15 billion in earnings for MercadoLibre five years from now.

Today, MercadoLibre’s stock trades at a market cap of $88 billion. Assuming the stock trades at 20x earnings five years from now — which is a reasonable level for a fast-growing stock, if not a discount — then MercadoLibre will have a market cap of $300 billion within five years. Buying at today’s market cap would deliver north of 20% annualized returns before dividends or buybacks, likely beating the market. This makes MercadoLibre an easy stock to buy on the dip right now.

U.S. Eagle Federal Credit Union $90 Referral Bonus


Update 7/4/26:T&Cs now state it has been extended until 12/31/26 but referral links still say 6/30/26

“2. Promotional Period. The Promotional Period for the Company’s 90 Year Anniversary Referral Program is between September 1, 2025 and December 31, 2026.”

Hat tip to reader Bedu

Offer at a glance

The Offer

Direct link to offer, don’t share your referrals in the comments below. You can share them in this linked post. 

  • U.S. Eagle Federal Credit Union is offering a $90 referral bonus to both parties. To receive the bonus the person signing up must meet one of the following requirements:
    • Any checking account with direct deposit
    • A share certificate ($1,000 minimum)
    • A loan or credit card

The Fine Print

  • While each shareable link provided may be used for up to 25 simultaneous referrals, the number of referrals you may make is limited to 5 ($450 total). 
  • Each new member, however, may only be referred once. But then they’ll have referral sharing, too after their first 30 days of membership.
  • All bank account bonuses are treated as income/interest and as such you have to pay taxes on them

Avoiding Fees

Monthly Fees

Life essentials checking has a $5 monthly fee. This is waived with e-statements, or if the primary account holder is under 18 or over 65.

Early Account Termination Fee

Wasn’t able to find a fee schedule so unsure. 

Our Verdict

Normally we won’t post a bank bonus unless it’s for $100+ but given there is a referral element we made an exception. Just keep in mind you won’t be able to share referrals for 30 days after you sign up and the promotion ends 6/30. Don’t share your referrals in the comments below. You can share them in this linked post. 

Hat tip to ShawntheShawn

Useful posts regarding bank bonuses:

Spotify slashes streams of hit after suspicious Kalshi activity


Spotify has removed more than 500,000 registered streams from Malcolm Todd‘s Earrings, after the song’s rise to No. 1 on the platform’s daily US chart was tied to bets placed on the prediction market Kalshi.

Kalshi is a US prediction market, regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, on which users stake real money on future events – including which song will be the most-streamed on Spotify in the US in a given month.

This appears to create a troubling incentive: a trader holding a large enough position on a track hitting No. 1 could attempt to profit by buying artificial streams to push it there, with the potential winnings dwarfing the cost of the fake plays.

The surge in plays of Earrings was first reported by the Financial Times, which said streams of the track had climbed around 70% in a single day to reach No. 1 on Monday (June 29) for the first time.

Bloomberg reported that Spotify spotted and removed more than 500,000 artificial streams that it did not believe came from genuine listeners, citing a person familiar with the matter, with the track falling back to No. 4.

“All streaming services face ever-changing stream manipulation,” Spotify said in a statement. “Spotify has best in class detection and mitigation practices for manipulated streams, and we don’t pay out associated royalties.”

There is no suggestion that Todd or his team was involved in the manipulation.

Spotify has also demanded both Kalshi and Polymarket remove its logo from their sites, in a drive to make clear that neither company has a partnership with the streaming service.

Kalshi‘s COO and co-founder, Luana Lopes Lara, told Billboard in late April that, at that point, trading on the platform’s music ‘contracts’ had already topped USD $400 million in 2026.

By the time the streams for Earrings were stripped, the inflated figures had already been used to settle a Kalshi market on the most-streamed Spotify song in the US in June – a ‘contract’ that had attracted around USD $3 million in trading, according to Bloomberg.

Kalshi had already paid out bettors on the market based on the flawed figures before the manipulation was confirmed.

“We’re in touch with Spotify and are actively investigating this matter,” a Kalshi spokesperson said.

Earrings had sat inside the top five of Spotify‘s daily US chart for weeks before the one-day spike.

The suspicious activity was reportedly flagged to Spotify by a Kalshi trader who analyzes the service’s streaming data to place bets on its charts, and who questioned how Earrings could have topped them.

Earrings originally appeared on Todd‘s 2024 mixtape Sweet Boy, and was released as a single to US pop radio on April 14 by Columbia Records, part of Sony Music, following a resurgence on TikTok.

A source at Spotify told The Hollywood Reporter that the company would begin “adding additional checks to the charts before they’re published.”

Spotify has taken similar action before, removing tracks uploaded via the AI music app Boomy in 2023 after detecting artificial streaming.

In June, a US federal judge dismissed a proposed class action that accused Spotify of allowing “billions” of fraudulent streams to inflate the play counts of Drake and other artists.

Kalshi currently lists dozens of ‘contracts’ tied to Spotify and Billboard chart results.Music Business Worldwide

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This video is for educational purposes only and not financial advice.

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What “Higher for Longer” Really Means for Small Landlords


Real estate investors hoping new Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh would wave a magic wand and cut interest rates have been in for a rude awakening.

With the Iran war still not concluded and inflation high, Warsh’s demands for rate cuts while his predecessor, Jerome Powell, was in office have come head-to-head with reality. He simply cannot do it in the current economic environment. In fact, Warsh has made a 180-degree turn from his previous proclamations that cast him in a favorable light with the president.

“Persistently high prices are a burden for the American people, but the recent past need not be prologue,” Warsh told reporters as quoted by MarketWatch. He later added, “This committee will deliver price stability.” He could have been reading quotes from his predecessor.

Though Warsh chose to keep rates steady at the most recent Fed meeting, there was also talk of a rate hike at the next meeting—the exact opposite of what many real estate investors were hoping for.

Rate Malaise Meets a Cooling Market

For small landlords looking to get loans to buy more properties, the interest rate malaise is the last thing they want to hear. Most media outlets, including Homes.com and MarketWatch, predict ongoing pain for potential property buyers.

“We’re in a new era, and it’s going to take a while for markets to figure out exactly how to react,” Chen Zhao, head of economics research at real estate platform Redfin, told MarketWatch. “But one thing is clear: The committee as a whole is taking inflation very seriously, which means mortgage rates are unlikely to retreat much in the near future.”

However, the one bright spot for investors is that house prices are falling. According to May’s 2026 housing trends from Realtor.com, the national median listing price has fallen for seven straight months, dropping 2.4% year over year to about $429,500 in May. That was the sharpest annual decline in Realtor.com’s data going back to 2017, as sellers faced a reality check regarding buyers’ affordability.

We are undoubtedly in a buyer’s market, with sellers willing to negotiate. However, finding affordable financing is proving to be a conundrum for investors.

Investors Need to Throw Out the Old Playbook

In the current unpredictable environment, the old playbook of “date the rate and marry the house” needs to be thrown out because you might find yourself in an extended engagement with the interest rate, with no refinance in sight to bail you out.

Things were looking good until the Iran war threw a spanner in the works, hiked up geopolitical tensions, and increased the cost of living even further in the U.S. However, the problematic housing market is affecting all investors, while additional expenses from higher gas prices, materials, insurance, and taxes are further complicating matters.

Falling house prices mean investors can’t even bank on selling at a profit, at least not in the short term. Those able to buy with cash will be the clear winners, which means if you have assets to liquidate, this is the market to snag a deal.

Rate Hikes in September?

With Bank of America and Deutsche Bank expecting the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates sometime this year, possibly by 25 basis points in September and likely in October and December as well, according to Reuters, it would mark the most aggressive rate increase since inflation spiked after the pandemic.

“June Summary ?of Projections and Warsh’s comments indicate that the Fed’s reaction function is much more hawkish than we thought,” analysts at BofA said in a note, quoted by Reuters.

If that proves true, it will bring housing sales to a halt, with sellers growing increasingly desperate and property owners caught in the mesh of high rates and hoping to unload their properties, presenting even more of an opportunity for cash-rich buyers.

Plan for the Long Game, Choose Markets Carefully, and Stick to Fundamentals

Every market is different, and choosing those with the highest rents and the lowest comparable prices—with taxes, insurance, local economies, and salaries also factored in—will yield the best returns for investors. Most of these are currently in the Midwest. However, low-priced real estate can only do so much when rates go up.

The silver lining for investors is that rising rates will affect prospective buyers, too, meaning affordability concerns will keep tenants in your rentals. According to a recent survey from 2-10 Home Buyers Warranty, 44% of current renters view renting as a long-term rather than a short-term situation, with 34% stating that affordability was the main reason they were unable to make the switch from renter to homeowner.

For investors, the low levels of competition to buy deals and high demand for rentals mean there’s never been a better time to invest and negotiate your way to a deep discount.

Practical Ways to Buy Rentals in the Current Market

Here is a list of ways to circumnavigate the high-interest-rate era. There is no “one-size-fits-all” approach but rather a combination of many of these strategies to suit your specific market:

  • Choose affordable markets: Affordable markets (often in the Midwest) with a decent chance of cash flow help minimize risk.
  • Supersize cash flow: Practical ways to increase cash flow include adding ADUs, converting attics and basements, and renting by the room.
  • Find a cash partner: Cash is always king, and it is the ideal way to avoid those pesky banks and their interest rates.
  • House hack: It’s always a good move, whether you’re a newbie or a seasoned investor, because turning your personal residence into an investment helps with taxes and the bottom line.
  • Make a bigger down payment and boost your credit score: If you’re going to get a loan, make sure you’re in the best financial shape to qualify for the lowest rate by having a sizable down payment and a good credit score.
  • Look into rate buydowns: These are more prevalent when dealing with builders with new construction. There are different types of buydowns, from permanent to temporary. Each discount point costs 1% of the loan amount and can reduce the rate by 0.25%, which adds up over time.

Final Thoughts

As Charles Dickens once wrote, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” It’s a great time to buy an investment property, but if you plan to get a loan to do it, it could be very risky.

The importance of adopting a conservative approach to investing can’t be emphasized enough if you are going the lender route. That means having ample cash reserves to bail you out of difficult circumstances, buying in markets that make sense, shopping around for lenders and insurance companies, and contesting taxes when appropriate.

It also means implementing every strategy possible to maximize cash flow. If we’ve learned anything over the last few years, it’s that we can’t rely on the Fed to lower rates—so don’t bank on refinancing to get you out of hot water. If you can’t afford to keep the home over the long term, don’t buy it.

Mortgage Rates Face Big Week of Jobs Data


If you’re watching mortgage rates, keep a close eye on the abundance of jobs data being released this week.

There are three key reports being released, including the all-important Employment Situation on Thursday, a day early due to the July 4th holiday.

We’ve also got the job openings report Tuesday and the ADP jobs report on Wednesday.

In other words, it’s going to be jobs, jobs, jobs for mortgage rates and the wider market over the next few days.

At the same time, we’ve still got fragility in the Middle East to consider as well thanks to a tenuous ceasefire.

Employment Data Is Always a Big Factor for Mortgage Rates

As noted, it’s a big week for jobs data, more condensed than usual due to the holiday-shortened week.

We’ve got JOLTS (job openings) on Tuesday, ADP (private payrolls) on Wednesday, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Employment Situation (nonfarm payrolls) on Thursday.

And for good measure, initial jobless claims as well, which are released weekly.

So it’s going to be an action-packed week for labor, which tends to be one of the biggest drivers of mortgage rates.

The other piece is inflation, which has also been top of mind lately, largely due to the spike in oil prices.

But because of a supposed peace deal there, the pressure has been lifted to some degree.

However, we’ve already seen that peace deal breached after a series of strikes took place over the weekend.

That could continue for who knows how long, keeping upward pressure on oil prices, gas prices, and mortgage rates.

Taken together, while the jobs data is crucial to mortgage rates as always, it’s already got a little extra pressure thanks to the Iranian conflict.

Hot Jobs Data Could Act as a Pile On for Mortgage Rates

Given we’re still grappling with this new wave of oil-driven inflation, anything better-than-expected on the jobs front won’t be good for mortgage rates.

This means cool jobs data can help rates, but might be limited in its impact with the backdrop of the Middle East situation.

Conversely, if jobs data comes in hotter-than-expected, you might get even more negative impact than usual.

There’s already been a lot of chatter about rate hikes due to renewed inflation concerns.

And if labor is also running hot, it makes the case for hikes even more compelling.

It would basically reinforce the need to hike rates as opposed to cut or stand pat.

So those hoping for lower mortgage rates will want the data to come in at consensus or below.

Ultimately, these reports might be more about avoiding an upside surprise than anything else, essentially allowing investors to breathe a collective sigh of relief.

Jobs Data Might Not Help Much, But It Could Hurt

Put another way, the jobs data might not help mortgage rates much either way, but has the potential to hurt them more than usual.

You could argue we’re at a crossroads of sorts with regard to the direction of the economy. Do we overheat again or continue to normalize?

The various reports this week might provide some insights there, which can also determine if rates keep improving and head back toward early 2026 levels. Or get worse.

Long story short, you want to make it through this week unscathed on these data reports to avoid any hiccups.

Then hope the Middle East situation continues to show signs of progress, thereby allowing inflation concerns to retreat.

Assuming that all happens, we can improve upon the recent (downward) gains for the 30-year fixed, which seemed to peak around 6.75% a month ago.

It has since fallen to around 6.50%, with the possibility for more improvement if the aforementioned transpires as expected.

Colin Robertson
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Citi Strata Premier℠ Card Review (2026.7 Update: 60k Offer + Additional $100 Bonus From Rakuten)