Stripe Teams Up with Advent to Acquire PayPal in $53 Billion Deal
Taylor Wilson
Stripe and private-equity firm Advent International have jointly bid for PayPal at $60.50 per share, valuing the company at over $53 billion — a roughly 28% premium to PayPal's latest close and one of the largest potential deals the global payments industry has ever seen.
How big is this deal?
The offer is $60.50 per share, implying a total valuation above $53 billion.
That is a roughly 28% premium to PayPal's Tuesday close. This means → the buyers see PayPal's current stock price as materially undervaluing the company and are willing to pay nearly a third more to take it.
Who is buying — and where is the money coming from?
Two parties are acting together: Stripe (one of the world's largest private payment companies) and Advent International (a major private-equity firm).
The bid is backed by roughly $50 billion in committed bank financing. In plain terms = banks have already agreed in principle to lend the money — this is not a speculative proposal but one with a funded backstop.
Where does the deal stand right now?
The offer was submitted earlier this month and remains confidential.
Advent declined to comment; PayPal and Stripe have not responded to Reuters' requests. This means → nothing is publicly confirmed yet — whether PayPal's board will engage, and whether regulators would approve, are both open questions.
Content is for reference only, not financial advice.