Author:Bankless
Translation: Shenchao TechFlow
Shenchao Intro: Stripe has spent years quietly building almost every layer of a stablecoin empire — acquiring Bridge for the issuance platform, buying Privy for wallets, incubating Tempo for the L1, joining the OUSD alliance — but one thing was missing: users. Now, it's offering $53.4 billion to acquire PayPal's hundreds of millions of active accounts and Venmo. This could be a landmark moment signaling the shift of the stablecoin war from a "technology race" to a "customer battle."
Friends of Bankless, has the technological race in cryptocurrency finally given way to the battle for customers?
Stripe's reported offer to acquire PayPal for $53 billion might be a manifestation of this dynamic in the stablecoin space. If this deal goes through, it holds immense potential for Stripe's Tempo L1.
Let me break down what this could mean.
Stripe Wants to Acquire PayPal
According to reports, Stripe, in partnership with private equity firm Advent International, has made an offer of $60.50 per share, valuing the total deal at $53.4 billion. PayPal's board could meet to discuss this offer as early as next week.
Of course, nothing is final yet. This could be a non-starter. The board might directly reject it or demand a higher price.
But if a deal is struck, it would become the largest fintech acquisition in history, making the cryptocurrency dimension even more fascinating.
If you recall, Stripe has quietly built nearly every layer of a stablecoin empire over the past few years.
The heavyweight company acquired the stablecoin issuance platform Bridge for around $1.1 billion; bought top embedded wallet provider Privy; incubated the payment-focused L1 network Tempo in collaboration with Paradigm; and recently joined over 100 companies in backing Open USD (OUSD), an upcoming alliance-backed stablecoin that plans to distribute reserve yield to distributors rather than the issuer.
So what's missing? Users. Until now, Stripe has been a B2B company — providing infrastructure for merchants, developers, and the like. It lacks mainstream consumer relationships, no significant mainstream applications.
In contrast, PayPal boasts hundreds of millions of active accounts, the Venmo app, and its stablecoin PYUSD launched in 2023.
Currently, we only know about this acquisition offer from Reuters reports citing anonymous sources. We still need to wait for Stripe to publicly state its rationale for the bid. Could purchasing a distribution channel for its stablecoin tech stack be a reason, or perhaps one of the reasons?
Stablecoins are now crypto's killer app, and the ensuing infrastructure arms race — with projects like Tempo, Circle's Arc, Plasma, etc. — is predicated on the assumption that better infrastructure wins. This PayPal bid suggests Stripe has internalized a different lesson: the infrastructure is built, and the war has moved to the on-ramps.
Think about what this combination could enable. Stripe handles the merchant side of transactions, PayPal and Venmo handle consumers, and together they use a stablecoin settlement layer, creating a closed loop. Funds flow from consumer wallets to merchants without passing through card networks like Visa and Mastercard and their associated fees. Stablecoins would also make this process cheaper, not just vertically integrated.
That said, many questions remain unanswered. Would the current $2.8 billion market cap PYUSD, issued by Paxos, migrate to Tempo? Would it be folded into OUSD once that launches? Would Venmo become the consumer wallet for Stripe's chain?
On its own, PYUSD currently has less than 1/20th the market cap of Circle's USDC and isn't the huge draw. The real prize is likely the accounts on the PayPal app that hold PYUSD — the user base, the app's reach, the mainstream recognition.
Furthermore, it's entirely possible the deal goes through but doesn't become a major catalyst for Tempo. Advent would hold an equal stake, and private equity firms optimize for cash flow. In other words, a reshaped, cost-discipline-focused PayPal could equally de-prioritize its on-chain experiments.
There's also an interesting detail to watch: Block, the Bitcoin-centric parent company of Cash App and direct Venmo competitor led by Jack Dorsey, is reportedly also contributing to the $17 billion equity portion of the deal alongside Stripe and Advent. What Block wants from this arrangement is unclear for now, but we'll see how things develop.
It's noteworthy that this bid comes at a time when Robinhood Chain is rising with strong retail penetration, Base is doubling down on onchain capital as Coinbase's chain, Solana is heating up, and more. A Stripe acquisition of PayPal would have major traditional finance implications. But if it, in some way, becomes a frontend for the Tempo network, it could also significantly bolster Tempo's position in the public chain competition, which in turn would push Tempo further into the mainstream.
That's the main thread to watch for now. There's something poetic about this possibility. PayPal once dreamed of building an internet-native currency but ended up as a middleman on top of card networks. Now Stripe is bidding $53 billion, perhaps in part to finish that original job with cryptocurrency infrastructure.
Indeed, the deal could fall apart next week. Or the price could be raised before approval. Regardless, its emergence alone hints at what Stripe might be thinking, and that thinking could be significant for Tempo's future payments prospects.
So PayPal on the frontend, Tempo on the backend? Only time will tell. Whatever happens, the mere ambition of Stripe suggests its stablecoin empire is undoubtedly just getting started.





