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PayPal receives $53B takeover offer from Stripe, Advent: Report

CryptopolitanJul 15, 2026 8:50 AM
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Stripe and Advent reportedly made an offer to acquire PayPal for more than $53 billion, which may be regarded as one of the biggest acquisitions in the payment industry’s history. According to a report by Reuters, the proposal has set the value of PayPal at $60.50 per share, with about $50 billion to be covered by bank financing. None of the parties has disclosed information about the offer.

If the acquisition goes through, then it will join two companies that have emerged as major players in the world of online trading within the past 20 years. PayPal operates in more than 200 countries, whereas Stripe has established itself as one of the largest payment infrastructure providers in the world. Together, they will emerge as a payment behemoth, which will handle merchant processing, consumer wallets, cross-border payments, and digital assets.

The scale of the transaction also implies regulation. Antitrust regulators in both the United States and Europe have become increasingly bold about regulating major tech mergers in particular, where platform acquisitions with network effects are concerned. The DOJ and FTC Merger Guidelines caution about transactions that might lead to monopoly formation and removal of competition from the market. European regulators, too, will certainly do their homework in this case.

Stripe meets PayPal

Although Stripe and PayPal compete in the same field, they both have something to offer uniquely to the market.

Stripe is well-known as an intermediary enabling payments via the Internet. But it has also developed in the fintech field by developing stablecoins, crypto wallets, and its Crypto Onramp product line and positioning itself as an “economic infrastructure for AI” offering specific solutions for startups and internet companies focused on artificial intelligence.

PayPal, on the other hand, has established a broader ecosystem around its checkout brand. PayPal owns Venmo, Braintree, and PYUSD – a dollar-linked stablecoin, thus being present not only in payments but in merchant services, P2P money transfers, and cryptocurrencies.

A merger would therefore expand the reach of the future merged company into nearly all areas of online commerce instead of simply boosting its position in one particular sector. That breadth would draw a lot of scrutiny from regulators evaluating if the merger would limit consumer options, give greater pricing power, and create additional hurdles for newcomers.

Regulators take center stage

According to a Reuters report, the merger of two of the largest payment networks in the world could turn the approval terms from regulators into one of the biggest uncertainties related to the acquisition.

The price of the acquisition will also rank among the largest acquisition proposals in global payments. Advent will take control of PayPal alongside Stripe, indicating that the acquisition would not affect the integrated nature of the company’s services if the deal pushes through.

This acquisition news comes as PayPal is going through a significant reorganization internally as it continues to seek growth opportunities.

In April, it reorganized itself into three distinct business divisions – Checkout Solutions and PayPal; Consumer Financial Services and Venmo; and Payment Services and Crypto. The purpose of this reorganization is to simplify operations while ensuring better execution of its core operations.

The Payment Services and Crypto unit incorporates Braintree, merchant payment processing, value-added services, and PayPal’s cryptocurrency divisions, including PYUSD, into one entity that serves business clients.

Additionally, PayPal has named Frank Keller to run its checkout segment and has appointed interim managers in Venmo and Payment Services and Crypto after the exits of senior staff members Diego Scotti and Michelle Gill.

“To accelerate growth and unlock our full potential, we need to recommit to our fundamentals,” said PayPal President and CEO Enrique Lores, explaining the reorganization strategy. He added that the firm was restructuring so as to focus on its “three strong businesses,” enabling it to improve execution and accountability.

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