Stripe and private equity firm Advent have reportedly made a $53 billion bid to acquire PayPal, a deal that would combine one of fintech’s fastest-growing companies with one of digital payments’ largest consumer networks.
The acquisition, which has been rumored for months, would rank among the largest fintech deals on record. According to Reuters, Stripe and Advent would share equal ownership of PayPal.
In February, PayPal appointed Enrique Lores as CEO. Since taking the helm, he has focused on cutting costs and realigning the company’s product portfolio. He also reorganized PayPal into three business units: Checkout Solutions, Consumer Financial Services, and Payment Services.
“With all of the recent moves to divide and reorganize PayPal’s business units amid financial troubles, it really seemed like the company was being prepared for some kind of major change,” said Ben Danner, Senior Analyst, Debit at Javelin Strategy & Research. “Stripe and Advent see strategic value here, and integrating the two would be trillions of dollars in total payments value on the table. Stripe would become one of the largest fintech merchant acquirers with PayPal, creating a major industry shakeup.”
Integration Concerns
While the acquisition would create a payments behemoth, significant questions remain about how the two companies would be integrated. A deal of this scale would almost certainly involve substantial integration costs and could slow execution as the combined business digests the transaction. Stripe also lacks a consumer-facing business, raising questions about how it would manage assets like Venmo and PayPal’s digital wallet.
“Some may look at Stripe’s capabilities and think that at that price, couldn’t Stripe build something wildly better?” said Don Apgar, Director of Merchant Payments at Javelin. “Is it worth $53 billion to not have to beat them up in the market for a couple years and buy the defeated PayPal for parts in 2030? That’s a valid argument, especially at this price point.”
Stripe’s Sense of Urgency
Timing may also have played a role in Stripe’s decision to act now. The company unveiled more than 200 new products at its Stripe Sessions conference in April and would likely prefer to roll them out into a payments landscape it helps shape.
“Given that the ship date is one of the first milestones in a product’s development cycle, they likely have a resource issue in trying to build PayPal functionality with any degree of urgency,” Apgar said. “By the time Stripe ships, they could wind up in an uphill battle against a reinvigorated PayPal that they may not win.”








