
In brief
Early discussions have reportedly begun, but the talks remain exploratory.
Stripe has reached a $159B valuation alongside $1.9T in annual payment volume.
If completed, the deal could unify stablecoin and on-ramp rails, Decrypt was told.
Stripe is reportedly exploring an acquisition of PayPal, a move that could consolidate two of the most active traditional payments firms in crypto and stablecoin infrastructure under one roof.
Early discussions between the two have reportedly begun, though the proposal remains exploratory and no formal offer has been made, according to a Bloomberg report on Tuesday.
It comes as Stripe has made a $159 billion employee tender offer to buy back employee shares, which followed its Tuesday posting of $1.9 trillion in annual payment volume and the approval of a U.S. national bank trust charter for Bridge, its stablecoin subsidiary.
The moves place Stripe further inside regulated stablecoin infrastructure as digital asset settlement becomes more central to global payments, and raises questions about how a PayPal deal could shift control over crypto payment rails.
“Structurally, this is a vertical integration of legacy infrastructure and modern API stacks,” Ryan Yoon, senior analyst at Tiger Research, told Decrypt.
Unlike PayPal, which operates under public market scrutiny and quarterly earnings pressure, Stripe remains privately held, giving it greater flexibility to pursue long-term infrastructure bets in crypto without immediate shareholder constraints.
The deal ostensibly “offers PayPal an exit from public market scrutiny and Big Tech competition, while giving Stripe immediate access to massive enterprise liquidity,” Yoon said.
What could catalyze the deal is “their combined stablecoin and on-ramp infrastructure, which could unify fragmented digital asset payments,” he noted, while cautioning that the costs of “integrating two different technical debts” remain as major constraints.
Over the years, Stripe has steadily deepened its presence in crypto payments, supporting stablecoin transactions for merchants, integrating digital asset on-ramps, and acquiring infrastructure firms focused on wallet and settlement tools.
Stripe is also developing Tempo, a purpose-built blockchain designed to enable stablecoin settlement and programmable payments directly within its core payments infrastructure.
PayPal, meanwhile, has taken a more consumer-facing route into crypto, enabling digital asset trading within its app and launching its own U.S. dollar stablecoin, PYUSD, as it seeks to integrate on-chain settlement into its existing wallet and checkout ecosystem.
In April last year, the SEC dropped its probe into PYUSD without any enforcement action, as initiatives to regulate the sector advanced and crystallized with the signing of the GENIUS Act into law by July, opening what Stripe’s founders have called a “stablecoin summer.”
Decrypt has reached out to PayPal but has not yet received a response. Stripe declined to comment.
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