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Stripe and Advent Bid $53 Billion for PayPal in a Stablecoin Consolidation Play

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The bid lands as stablecoin legislation faces a critical Senate vote, and as Wall Street and fintech giants increasingly view on-chain payment rails as the next frontier. Stripe and Advent International have offered roughly $53 billion to acquire PayPal, a deal that would fuse two of the world’s most influential players in regulated crypto payments. The offer of $60.50 per share represents a 28% premium to PayPal’s latest closing price and is backed by about $50 billion in committed financing, according to the original report sourced by WuBlockchain .

The parties are aiming to reach an agreement by the end of July, though there is no certainty the deal will be completed. Still, the proposal immediately draws attention to the quiet accumulation of stablecoin infrastructure inside traditional payment networks. PayPal launched its PYUSD dollar-pegged token in 2023 and has since grown into one of the largest regulated stablecoin issuers. Stripe, meanwhile, has pushed deeper into stablecoin infrastructure and crypto payment acceptance, after re-entering the space following a years-long pause.

A $53 Billion Bet on the Future of Money

The numbers are large but the logic is straightforward: combine two companies that already control a massive share of digital payments and layer their growing stablecoin operations on top. Stripe’s developer-first tooling and PayPal’s 400 million active accounts would create a single entity with the power to route fiat and stablecoin payments across consumer and merchant networks at immense scale. The premium being offered signals conviction that this combination will accelerate a shift the market has long anticipated—bringing crypto-native settlement into everyday commerce.

It also comes amid a broader institutional push into on-chain assets that has seen major tokenization deals and real-world asset experiments moving from proof-of-concept to live settlement. In that context, a combined Stripe-PayPal would not just be a payments giant—it would be a dominant gateway between the banking system and the blockchain economy.

Stablecoins and the Consolidation of Payment Rails

Both companies already sit at the center of the regulated stablecoin market. PayPal’s PYUSD has secured trust company charters and operates under New York’s stringent framework. Stripe has integrated USDC and other stablecoins into its merchant acceptance stack. Together they would control issuance, custody, acceptance, and settlement—a vertically integrated stablecoin loop that few competitors could match.

That concentration raises an immediate question about market structure. If one firm processes a large chunk of global e-commerce and simultaneously issues the stablecoins used to settle those transactions, the payments rail becomes less an open network and more a controlled stack. The underlying blockchains—Ethereum, Solana, and other networks that continue to dominate developer activity —might still provide the settlement layer, but the economic flows would be heavily weighted toward a single private operator.

Regulatory Hurdles and the Antitrust Question

Whether the deal can cross the finish line is far from certain. The size and scope would trigger intense antitrust review, and the stablecoin angle could complicate things further on Capitol Hill. The bid arrives as banking lobbyists are fighting to reshape landmark crypto legislation just days before a Senate vote. A merger of this size, combining two major stablecoin issuers, could spook lawmakers already anxious about the concentration of power in digital payments and the systemic risks posed by private-sector stablecoins.

Advent’s involvement as private equity sponsor also raises execution questions. A deal structure backed by $50 billion in financing suggests significant leverage, which could pressure the combined company to prioritize fee income and cost-cutting over long-term infrastructure investment. For developers and users betting on open payment rails, that is not a neutral consideration.

The offer signals that the race to own the intersection of fiat and blockchain has entered a new phase—one where the largest players are no longer experimenting but willing to commit tens of billions of dollars. Right now, the bid is a proposal. If it moves forward, it will force regulators to decide just how concentrated the crypto-payments stack is allowed to become.

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