TLDR:
- The PayPal takeover bid values the payments company above $53 billion and offers shareholders $60.50 for each share they hold.
- Stripe and Advent secured about $50 billion in committed bank financing and would each hold an equal ownership stake.
- PayPal has not responded to the approach, while people familiar with the talks said no completed transaction is certain.
- A combined company would bring together PayPal consumer products, Stripe merchant tools, Bridge infrastructure, and PYUSD.
A reported PayPal takeover bid has placed the payments company back at the center of fintech dealmaking. Stripe and Advent International offered $60.50 per share, valuing PayPal above $53 billion.
The proposal carries a 28% premium to PayPal stock’s Tuesday close of $47.37. The buyers also secured about $50 billion in committed bank financing. PayPal has not responded, while the parties want to advance talks during the coming weeks.
PayPal Takeover Bid Offers 28 Percent Premium to Shares
The PayPal takeover bid arrived earlier this month after an initial approach in April. Stripe and Advent would take equal ownership stakes under the proposal. They plan to keep PayPal intact rather than separate its operating businesses. The offer does not guarantee a transaction, and the companies declined public comment.
PayPal stock has struggled as competition increased across online checkout and mobile payments. Its market value reached about $360 billion in 2021 before falling sharply during the following years. The company now faces stronger pressure from Apple Pay, Google Pay, Shop Pay, and other payment services.
Enrique Lores took over as chief executive in March and started a broader turnaround effort. PayPal reorganized its operations into checkout, Venmo and consumer financial services, and payments and crypto. Management also outlined cost savings of about $1.5 billion over two to three years, with plans to reinvest those funds.
The business still reports large payment volumes. First-quarter revenue rose 7% to $8.35 billion, while currency-neutral payment volume increased 8% to about $464 billion. Those figures give PayPal a broad consumer and merchant network, even as investors question its future growth rate.
Stripe and PayPal Bring Different Payments Strengths
The PayPal takeover bid would combine Stripe’s merchant infrastructure with PayPal’s consumer-facing brands. Stripe provides payment acceptance, payouts, billing, and financial automation tools. PayPal operates its checkout service, Venmo, Braintree, and a crypto business serving consumers and merchants.
Stripe completed its acquisition of stablecoin platform Bridge in February 2025. Bridge provides tools for businesses to receive, store, convert, issue, and spend stablecoins. Its Open Issuance platform also lets companies create and manage their own digital currencies.
PayPal already operates PayPal USD, or PYUSD. The dollar-backed stablecoin can move across PayPal, Venmo, external wallets, and supported blockchains. PayPal states that users can redeem PYUSD at a one-to-one rate for U.S. dollars.
That product overlap could place stablecoin infrastructure within the wider deal discussion, although the reported offer does not identify crypto as its main reason. A combined group would hold merchant tools, consumer wallets, stablecoin issuance infrastructure, and an existing branded stablecoin. This is an inference based on the companies’ current product portfolios.
The PayPal takeover bid also joins a wider run of payments-sector acquisitions. Global Payments agreed to acquire Worldpay in a $24.25 billion transaction during 2025. Nuvei also agreed to buy Payoneer for $2.75 billion.
PayPal has not indicated whether its board will engage at the proposed price. Stripe and Advent have not received a formal response, and sources cautioned that the approach may not produce a completed deal.



