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Why Stripe’s $53 billion PayPal bid is a high-stakes play to own the future of digital payments

If Stripe acquires PayPal, the real prize could consumer wallets, stablecoin issuance or the infrastructure powering the the next generation of digital payments.

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Why Stripe’s $53 billion PayPal bid is a high-stakes play to own the future of digital payments
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If Stripe acquires PayPal, the real prize could consumer wallets, stablecoin issuance or the infrastructure powering the the next generation of digital payments.

Why Stripe’s $53 billion PayPal bid is a high-stakes play to own the future of digital payments

Finance

Stripe’s $53 billion PayPal bid is a high-stakes play to own the future of digital payments

If Stripe acquires PayPal, the real prize could be consumer wallets, stablecoin issuance or the infrastructure powering the next generation of digital payments.

By

Jamie Crawley

,

AI Boost

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Edited by

Stephen Alpher

Jul 16, 2026, 4:37 p.m.

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Paypal headquarters in the Silicon Valley, San Jose, California. (Getty Images)

Summary

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Industry commentators say a Stripe acquisition of PayPal would be driven less by PYUSD than by PayPal's consumer distribution and payments network.

Analysts are divided on whether Stripe would gradually replace PYUSD with OpenUSD, but agree infrastructure ownership is the real strategic prize.

Any deal would face significant antitrust scrutiny while raising new questions under the emerging U.S. stablecoin regulatory framework.

A potential

$53 billion acquisition of PayPal (PYPL) by payments rival Stripe

has reignited debate over what holds the keys to the next generation of digital payments.

While both companies are giants in the fintech and payments industries, the strategic logic behind the acquisition is particularly compelling through the lens of stablecoin and blockchain.

Stablecoins are digital tokens pegged to the value of traditional financial assets like fiat currencies and have become one of the most prominent areas in which cryptocurrency has pushed further into the mainstream in recent years, partly because of companies like Stripe and PayPal, as well as the introduction of formal regulatory regimes in the U.S. and elsewhere.

PayPal has more than 400 million active consumer accounts, owns mobile payment service Venmo and is one of the world’s most recognizable checkout logos. Between them, Stripe and PayPal would unite merchant acceptance and consumer reach, potentially sending mainstream stablecoin acceptance into another stratosphere.

While PayPal still has to publicly respond to the takeover offer, digital asset industry commentators see the underlying infrastructure consolidation as the most significant angle in the acquisition if it comes to pass.

"The name on the front of the wallet means far less than whose infrastructure clears the payment behind it," Torab Torabi, CEO of stablecoin infrastructure firm Movement Labs, told CoinDesk.

Stripe has been active in expanding its provision for stablecoin infrastructure in recent years, first through

the acquisition of Bridge for $1.1 billion

in 2024 and, more recently, the introduction of

its own blockchain network Tempo

last year.

It is also one of many major firms to

join the stablecoin consortium Open USD

last month. The digital dollar project, which also involves Coinbase (COIN), Mastercard (MA), Visa (V) and BlackRock (BLK), is built to rival Circle’s USDC as the stablecoin of choice for financial institutions and businesses.

Fate of PYUSD

One immediate question raised by a potential acquisition of PayPal is the fate of

PYUSD, the dollar-backed stablecoin

of which PayPal is the primary distributor.

“The incremental addition of PYUSD would produce the first fully vertically integrated private digital dollar stack in the market, encompassing issuance and reserve management, settlement and movement rails and enterprise merchant processing,” Citi said in a research note.

“Stripe has previously

committed to OpenUSD

as its default checkout stablecoin for its merchant base. A consolidated PYUSD deployment could challenge that commitment, establishing a proprietary commerce-layer stablecoin with simultaneous captive supply-side (millions of Stripe merchants) and demand-side (440 million consumer wallets) distribution.”

If Stripe sees the distribution on offer from PayPal’s user base as the big prize, it begs the question of how aggressively Stripe would direct users towards assets native to its own ecosystem.

"People forget PYUSD is issued by Paxos, not PayPal," said James Brownlee, CEO of institutional payments platform t-0. "My expectation is PYUSD holders get incentivized options to swap for OpenUSD, because Stripe has no reason to pay Paxos for issuance when Bridge does it in-house and OpenUSD is designed to be the default asset across its network."

Move’s Torabi takes a different stance.

"Start with what PayPal actually brings," he said. "It isn't PYUSD. It's the distribution PayPal has. A regulated dollar already reaching tens of millions of people across dozens of countries. You don't pay billions for that reach and then switch off the stablecoin people already hold in their wallets."

‘Strategic importance’

Many observers, however, think the conversation is broader than whether PYUSD or OUSD will emerge as the more dominant token, or if either will come close to biting a hole in the combined

market share of 84% that USDC and Tether’s USDT boast

.

“It’s who controls the pipes,” Louisa Bai, head of stablecoins at Mysten Labs, the main developer of layer-1 blockchain Sui, which grew out of Meta’s abandoned Diem project.

If Stripe owns PayPal, Bridge becomes the shared infrastructure layer under PYUSD, OpenUSD and Tempo. That's infrastructure consolidation, not token competition, and it's a much bigger deal than the acquisition headline suggests."

That sort of infrastructure scale could allow Stripe to introduce lower settlement fees and checkout incentives for PYUSD, while Tempo could gradually steer users toward OUSD.

"This potentially strengthens Tempo considerably," said Niamh Byrne, chief commercial officer at blockchain developer platform Alchemy. "If OpenUSD gains meaningful traction, it could increase the strategic importance of Tempo and position it as more than another blockchain."

However, even if Stripe does combine multiple prominent stablecoin projects under one roof, commentators do not foresee major disruption to the stablecoin sector in the immediate future.

“Circle’s cross-chain interoperability is operationally proven at institutional scale, whereas Tempo is an unproven layer-1 still in early development,” Citi said in its note. “It is our understanding that Bridge/Tempo relies on third parties for interoperability capabilities.”

Tether’s USDT, meanwhile, holds a 60% share of the stablecoin market, dwarfing even USDC, let alone PYUSD, which is in itself something of a “mic drop” to suggestions of a threat from distant competitors. Notwithstanding that, USDT derives its prominence from the retail sector and emerging markets rather than institutions and corporates.

"Circle and Tether don't lose share overnight,” Bai said. "Their moat is liquidity depth, years of exchange listings that a shared governance model can't force its way into on day one."

She instead expects the greatest pressure to fall on mid-tier users - stablecoins lacking the liquidity advantages of USDT and USDC or the commercial distribution and revenue-sharing incentives a Stripe-backed token could offer.

Stripe

Stablecoins

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to

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.

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CoinDesk's full AI Policy

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Original YayaNews editorial coverage, published for informational purposes.

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