Payments giant Stripe has jointly made a $53 billion offer to acquire PayPal amid growing consolidation in the stablecoin sector. The joint move, which includes private equity firm Advent International, would acquire PayPal at $60.50 per share.
If completed, that would be a 28% premium on the value of the share as of the 15th of July. According to the Reuters report, Stripe and Advent would equally own the firm and not break it up.
The report added that the offer was submitted earlier this month but was first floated in April. Already, a $50 billion backing has been committed by banks for the offer.
Although Stripe and Advent are seeking advance discussions in the upcoming weeks, there was no certainty that it would result in a deal. Even so, the odds of a final acquisition deal surged by +50% to 72%, according to prediction site Polymarket.


As Stefan Deiss of the Hashgraph Group told AMBCrypto,
This offer signals that mainstream payments infrastructure is converging around crypto rails in a bigger way than ever.
Stripe’s stablecoin bet
Stripe has doubled down on stablecoin payments. Last year, the firm acquired Bridge for $1.1 billion to enable institutions to accept stablecoins via banks. Effectively, this allowed the firm to begin offering global stablecoin payments at a flat 1.5% fee.
To further avoid fluctuations in blockchain transfer fees, as most chains are used for speculation, Stripe opted to build its own network, Tempo, for enterprise payments.
If the PayPal bid is completed, Stripe will likely scale its retail offerings too (including Venmo) and stablecoin issuance through PYUSD.
Deiss added,
Stripe’s developer-first approach combined with PayPal’s consumer trust could make accepting crypto payments the default for millions of businesses.
Currently, PayPal’s PYUSD offers about a 4% yield but, like broader stablecoins, has seen a sharp decline in market supply from $4.2 billion to $2.8 billion.


Reacting to the Stripe acquisition offer, market analyst Simon Taylor dubbed it the ‘biggest story in the payment industry.’ He stated,
Last year was the first year Stripe’s payment volume passed PayPal’s. $1.9 trillion vs $1.79 trillion. The challenger passed the pioneer on volume, then went straight for the whole company.
He noted that if the deal is completed, Stripe will handle $3.7T in annual volume or 3% of global GDP. That would make it the ‘largest US merchant acquirer by volume.’ PayPal’s stock, PYPL, surged 18.9% to $56.35 in pre-market hours on the 15th of July following the update.
However, Deiss examined the deal from a critical lens.
Regulatory and integration risks are real. Antitrust scrutiny is inevitable given the combined market share. On the crypto side, stablecoin regulation will shape how products like PYUSD and Bridge can operate under unified ownership.
That said, the trend underscores a broader stablecoin race by major payment firms. For example, Mastercard acquired BVNK for $1.8 billion in early 2026 for enterprise stablecoin payouts.
On the other hand, Visa has gone the equity and partnership route as an early BVNK investor and Stripe’s Bridge partner for its stablecoin payments.
Final Summary
- Stripe is pushing for a $53B PayPal acquisition, a move analysts billed as ‘biggest story in payments.’
- Although PayPal was yet to respond to the offer, the market was pricing a 72% chance the deal could be completed.




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