- Stripe and Advent International submitted an offer to acquire PayPal for approximately $53 billion.
- The companies plan to own the payments giant jointly, each holding an equal stake.
Stripe, a global financial services platform, and Advent International, a leading private equity firm, have jointly proposed acquiring PayPal Holdings, Inc., a major payments network. The offer, disclosed earlier this month, values PayPal at $53 billion.
Stripe and Advent Seek to Acquire PayPal at $60.50 per Share
According to sources, the bid prices PayPal shares at $60.50, a 27.72% premium to its $47.37 closing price on Tuesday. This valuation reflects strong investor confidence in the deal.
The proposal includes $50 billion in committed financing from banks, with negotiations expected to progress in the coming weeks. Stripe and Advent intend to maintain PayPal’s existing structure rather than restructuring it.
PayPal has not yet commented on the offer. Despite this, the companies remain optimistic about advancing the talks soon.
PayPal’s Headwinds
While PayPal reported a 7% rise in net revenue to $8.4 billion in Q1 2026, representing 5% currency-neutral growth, the company faces challenges. Transaction margin dollars increased by 3% to $38 billion, though this could decline in Q2. Non-GAAP EPS is projected to fall from $1.34 in Q1 to a high-single-digit drop.
PayPal’s market cap has dropped significantly from a peak $360 billion in 2021 to $41.79 billion, amplifying investor scrutiny. Transaction volume rose 11% to $464 billion, but per-account payment activity declined 1% to 58.7 points over 12 months.
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