Paypal_under100kb

PayPal gets a bidder, but the real prize is trust at checkout

Equities 5 minutes to read

Key takeaways

  • Stripe and Advent see value in PayPal’s scale, brands and consumer relationships.

  • The bid tests whether PayPal is worth more sold today or repaired over time.

  • Investors should separate takeover excitement from the underlying health of the business.


PayPal spent years trying to prove that it could become exciting again. Now a potential buyer has arrived.

Stripe and private equity firm Advent International have reportedly offered 60.50 USD per share for PayPal, valuing the payments company at about 53 billion USD. PayPal closed at 55.52 USD on 15 July, up 17.2%. The shares remained below the proposed offer, which is the market’s polite way of saying: interesting, but not done.

The bid asks whether PayPal is more valuable as an independent turnaround or as part of a larger payments machine.

The old checkout button still matters

PayPal helps consumers and businesses move money online. Its best-known products include the PayPal checkout button and Venmo, its peer-to-peer payments app.

Stripe helps businesses accept and manage payments behind the scenes. PayPal brings a large consumer network, recognised brands and years of transaction data. Combining the two could connect Stripe’s merchant tools with PayPal’s consumer reach.

Advent adds capital and restructuring experience. In theory, Stripe supplies the strategic logic, while Advent supplies financial muscle and operational patience.

The prize is the position between the shopper and the merchant. That position can support checkout services, credit, advertising and loyalty tools. A payment button looks small. The commercial doorway behind it can be much larger.

A bid built on disappointment

The five-year share chart explains why buyers are circling. PayPal traded above 300 USD during the pandemic boom. Since then, growth has slowed, competition has strengthened and investors have questioned whether PayPal can protect its place at checkout.

Paypal (PYPL US Equity) - 5-Year Stock Price Performance

paypal-pypl-us-equity-5-year-stock-price-performance
Source: This chart was generated using ASKB by BloombergAI and is provided for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

The company is now in another reset under chief executive Enrique Lores. Management has reorganised PayPal into three businesses to simplify decisions and improve execution. It also plans significant cost reductions while trying to revive branded checkout growth.

That creates tension. A buyer is approaching when the company looks affordable, but early enough in the turnaround for management to argue that the offer ignores future improvement. Buyers prefer yesterday’s problems to tomorrow’s recovery. Sellers remember tomorrow rather fondly.

PayPal can reject the approach, negotiate a higher offer, attract another bidder or continue alone. None is certain. The bid places a value on control, not only on the existing shares.

What the deal would say about fintech

A successful transaction would suggest that payments are entering a more mature phase. The easy growth years produced many specialised services. The next phase may favour companies combining consumer reach, merchant tools, data and scale.

For Stripe, the transaction could accelerate its move towards consumers. For PayPal, it could provide a clearer home for assets that have struggled to work together. But integration would be demanding. Payments must remain reliable while technology, teams and products are combined. Customers do not enjoy learning that their money transfer is experiencing “strategic synergies”.

Risks: the gap still matters

PayPal may reject the approach or talks may end without a deal. The share-price reaction could then reverse, leaving investors with the same turnaround questions.

A higher offer could weaken the economics for the buyer. Financing conditions, regulatory scrutiny and the complexity of combining major payment platforms also matter. Warning signs include long silence, financing changes or signs of a detailed regulatory review.

The business remains the final risk. New ownership can change costs and incentives. It cannot make customers loyal by administrative decree.

Investor playbook

  • Separate the takeover case from the standalone case. Ask whether the business still makes sense without a deal.

  • Watch the gap between PayPal’s share price and the reported offer. A wide gap signals uncertainty.

  • Follow checkout growth, customer engagement and margins. These show whether the turnaround is gaining traction.

  • Keep position size consistent with the range of outcomes, not the excitement of the headline.

The button and the business

PayPal’s familiar checkout button once represented the future of online money. The five-year chart shows how quickly the market can turn yesterday’s future into today’s repair job. Stripe and Advent now appear willing to pay for the network, brands and trust that remain beneath the damage.

The outcome may be a sale, a higher bid or no transaction. Yet the approach has already clarified the investment question. PayPal is not valuable because its shares once exceeded 300 USD, nor because a bidder has appeared. It is valuable only if its place between consumers and merchants can still produce durable growth. The button is familiar. The business behind it still has to earn the click.

This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.

Outrageous Predictions 2026

01 /

  • A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO

    Outrageous Predictions

    A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Can AI be trusted to take over in the boardroom? With the right algorithms and balanced human oversi...
  • Dollar dominance challenged by Beijing’s golden yuan

    Outrageous Predictions

    Dollar dominance challenged by Beijing’s golden yuan

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Beijing does an end-run around the US dollar, setting up a framework for settling trade in a neutral...
  • Dumb AI triggers trillion-dollar clean-up

    Outrageous Predictions

    Dumb AI triggers trillion-dollar clean-up

    Jacob Falkencrone

    Global Head of Investment Strategy

    Agentic AI systems are deployed across all sectors, and after a solid start, mistakes trigger a tril...
  • Quantum leap Q-Day arrives early, crashing crypto and destabilizing world finance

    Outrageous Predictions

    Quantum leap Q-Day arrives early, crashing crypto and destabilizing world finance

    Neil Wilson

    Investor Content Strategist

    A quantum computer cracks today’s digital security, bringing enough chaos with it that Bitcoin crash...
  • SpaceX announces an IPO, supercharging extraterrestrial markets

    Outrageous Predictions

    SpaceX announces an IPO, supercharging extraterrestrial markets

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    Financial markets go into orbit, to the moon and beyond as SpaceX expands rocket launches by orders-...
  • Taylor Swift-Kelce wedding spikes global growth

    Outrageous Predictions

    Taylor Swift-Kelce wedding spikes global growth

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    Next year’s most anticipated wedding inspires Gen Z to drop the doomscrolling and dial up the real w...
  • Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026

    Outrageous Predictions

    Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026

    Saxo Group

    Saxo Group

    Read Saxo's Outrageous Predictions for 2026, our latest batch of low probability, but high impact ev...
  • Despite concerns, U.S. 2026 mid-term elections proceed smoothly

    Outrageous Predictions

    Despite concerns, U.S. 2026 mid-term elections proceed smoothly

    John J. Hardy

    Global Head of Macro Strategy

    In spite of outstanding threats to the American democratic process, the US midterms come and go cord...
  • Obesity drugs for everyone – even for pets

    Outrageous Predictions

    Obesity drugs for everyone – even for pets

    Jacob Falkencrone

    Global Head of Investment Strategy

    The availability of GLP-1 drugs in pill form makes them ubiquitous, shrinking waistlines, even for p...
  • China unleashes CNY 50 trillion stimulus to reflate its economy

    Outrageous Predictions

    China unleashes CNY 50 trillion stimulus to reflate its economy

    Charu Chanana

    Chief Investment Strategist

    Having created history’s most epic debt bubble, China boldly bets that fiscal stimulus to the tune o...

This content is marketing material.

None of the information provided on this website constitutes an offer, solicitation, or endorsement to buy or sell any financial instrument, nor is it financial, investment, or trading advice. Saxo Bank A/S and its entities within the Saxo Bank Group provide execution-only services, with all trades and investments based on self-directed decisions. Analysis, research, and educational content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered advice or a recommendation.

Saxo’s content may reflect the personal views of the author, which are subject to change without notice. Mentions of specific financial products are for illustrative purposes only and may serve to clarify financial literacy topics. Content classified as investment research is marketing material and does not meet legal requirements for independent research.

Saxo partners with companies that provide compensation for promotional activities conducted on its platform. Some partners also pay retrocessions contingent on clients investing in products from those partners.

While Saxo receives compensation from these partnerships, all educational and research content remains focused on providing information to clients.

Before making any investment decisions, you should assess your own financial situation, needs, and objectives, and consider seeking independent professional advice. Saxo does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any information provided and assumes no liability for any errors, omissions, losses, or damages resulting from the use of this information.

Please refer to our full disclaimer and notification on non-independent investment research for more details.


Business Hills Park – Building 4,
4th Floor, office 401, Dubai Hills Estate, P.O. Box 33641, Dubai, UAE

Contact Saxo

UAE
UAE

All trading and investing comes with risk, including but not limited to the potential to lose your entire invested amount.

Information on our international website (as selected from the globe drop-down) can be accessed worldwide and relates to Saxo Bank A/S as the parent company of the Saxo Bank Group. Any mention of the Saxo Bank Group refers to the overall organisation, including subsidiaries and branches under Saxo Bank A/S. Client agreements are made with the relevant Saxo entity based on your country of residence and are governed by the applicable laws of that entity's jurisdiction.

Apple and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the US and other countries. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc. Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google LLC.