Stripe, in partnership with private equity firm Advent International, has reportedly offered to acquire PayPal for over $53 billion. This significant proposal, first reported on July 15, 2026, could dramatically accelerate the broader shift towards blockchain-based money, particularly stablecoins.
Polygon Labs CEO Marc Boiron views the potential acquisition as a “tipping point” for mainstream payments infrastructure to embrace blockchain rails. The news of the bid spurred a nearly 17% surge in PayPal’s stock, signaling market interest in the proposed union.
Fintech giants eye a blockchain-powered future
The offer from Stripe and Advent International values PayPal at $60.50 per share. This represents a roughly 28% premium over PayPal’s previous closing price as of July 13, 2026, just before the news emerged.
The acquisition proposal is backed by approximately $50 billion in committed bank financing. Stripe and Advent International would each own a 50% stake in PayPal, with no plans to break up the company.
Stripe, a privately held company, was recently valued at around $159 billion following a tender offer in February 2026. In contrast, PayPal’s pre-bid valuation stood near $42 billion, a notable drop from its peak of approximately $360 billion in 2021.
Stefan Deiss, Co-Founder and CEO of The Hashgraph Group, sees the offer as a clear signal. He noted it indicates that “mainstream payments infrastructure is converging around crypto rails in a bigger way than ever.”
Stablecoins at the core of payment evolution
Both Stripe and PayPal have aggressively expanded their stablecoin initiatives in recent years. PayPal, a household name in digital payments, launched its U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin, PYUSD, in 2023.
Earlier this month, on July 9, 2026, PayPal announced a crucial expansion for PYUSD, confirming it would be natively issued on the Polygon network. This move aimed to enhance cross-border payment efficiency through a network upgrade.
PayPal also broadened PYUSD’s reach to 70 countries beyond the U.S. earlier in 2026. Despite its established brand, PYUSD currently holds a market cap of about $2.8 billion, according to The Block’s data.
This is dwarfed by Circle’s USDC, the world’s second-largest stablecoin, which boasts a supply of over $70 billion, as per The Block’s data. Still, PayPal’s initiatives mark a significant push for digital dollar adoption.
Stripe, meanwhile, is a key backer of Open USD (OUSD), a fee-free stablecoin expected to launch this year. More than 140 firms, including Visa, Mastercard, and BlackRock, have joined Open Standard to launch OUSD.
The OUSD stablecoin is built around a “pass-through” model. It routes nearly all reserve yield to distributors while retaining a small management fee, a structure analysts believe could challenge established stablecoins like USDC and PYUSD.
Stripe plans to make OUSD the default stablecoin across its platform, further cementing its commitment to blockchain payments. The company also acquired Bridge, a stablecoin infrastructure provider, for $1.1 billion in 2024.
Polygon Labs positions for mass adoption
Polygon Labs is actively positioning itself at the forefront of this digital money revolution, especially under the leadership of CEO Marc Boiron. Boiron firmly believes a deal like this could be a “tipping point” for widespread adoption.
He articulated his conviction, stating, “Within the next few years the majority of money will live and move on blockchain in one form or another.” This vision underpins Polygon’s strategic pivot towards payments.
This focus has been strengthened by key hires, including John Egan, formerly Stripe’s head of crypto, who joined Polygon Labs as chief product officer in September 2025. Polygon is also building its “Open Money Stack,” a set of infrastructure tools for practical blockchain-based payments.
Stripe already settles stablecoin transactions on Polygon’s network, highlighting existing operational ties. To further bolster its payment infrastructure, Polygon acquired CoinMe and Sequence earlier in 2026 in two deals totaling $250 million.
The company is also raising up to $100 million to fund its stablecoin payment initiatives throughout 2026. Polygon’s network has seen significant stablecoin activity, settling over $2.6 trillion in total stablecoin volume to date.
It continues to process more than $2.5 billion in stablecoin volume daily, with the current stablecoin supply on the network standing at approximately $3.4 billion. Boiron emphasized the utility of stablecoins, particularly PYUSD on Polygon.
He stated, “PayPal is a well-known brand, it’s GENIUS Act compliant, and the desire for enterprises and businesses to use PYUSD is higher than most stablecoins. It gives us another option.”
Boiron added that bringing PYUSD natively into the Open Money Stack would mean “a business can take money in, move it across borders, and cash it out in one integration, with compliance built in.” This frictionless cross-border capability is a core driver for Polygon.
Analyst views and broader market implications
While industry figures like Boiron and Deiss see immense potential, not all analysts share the same level of optimism regarding the immediate impact of a Stripe-PayPal deal. William Blair analysts took a more measured view.
They questioned the strategic logic behind such a significant acquisition. In a note from Wednesday, William Blair analysts said, “It is possible that a combined entity could have more stablecoin heft, but PayPal USD is just 4% of USDC’s market cap.”
They also suggested that “Bridge is an interesting stablecoin issuing platform, but Stripe does not need to own PayPal to advance its stablecoin ambitions.” This indicates some skepticism about the necessity of such a large merger for stablecoin advancement.
Stripe has expressed interest in acquiring PayPal before. Mizuho analysts previously noted that Stripe, primarily a business-to-business payments provider, would gain a scaled consumer business by acquiring PayPal, which also owns popular peer-to-peer payment network Venmo.
Regardless of these differing views, the proposed merger underscores a larger trend: the accelerating convergence of traditional finance and blockchain technology. A combined Stripe-PayPal entity would create one of the largest crypto-enabled payment ecosystems globally.
This could potentially give hundreds of millions of consumers and millions of merchants seamless access to blockchain infrastructure, often without needing to understand the underlying technology. Deiss also suggested that Bitcoin adoption could benefit from this expanded reach.
He noted this would happen particularly as PayPal’s existing crypto trading features reach a wider merchant and consumer base via Stripe. Deiss believes Bitcoin stands to benefit as “the reserve asset in this ecosystem, particularly as merchant adoption follows consumer access.”
Ultimately, this deal highlights how major financial players are seeking greater scale and exploring cross-border transfers, business payments, artificial intelligence, and blockchain settlement, with stablecoins playing a pivotal role in this evolving landscape.
