For example, when you're traveling abroad and can't buy a service online with your card, you can be 95% sure that Stripe is the payment processor.
Stripe doesn't want to reject anyone, but their banks/underwriters do not have a limitless appetite for risk.
I'm trying not to be snarky here, but I really can't believe anyone can truly believe this.
They almost blew up the global financial system. About once every two decades. What's the risk of accepting some transactions related to weed? (They can always charge more to offset the risk)
It's not about financial risk, it's simply an attempt to exert control over what people could do with their own money.
"Sorry, your Stripe account got closed because of 'crowdfunding' because you dared link it to a Ko-Fi account."
And that's how I lost my Stripe account...
Wow! This is the quality of reporting from CNBC? The $1B ARR number is just for Stripe's Revenue products (Billing, Invoicing, etc). That doesn't include their main business (payments-related products).
Still a rich multiple at 40-70x
I feel like PayPal is slowly degrading, I hope Stripe would find a way to modernize it.
There's a Munger quote that I don't quite remember, but it went something like this: "When good managers are put into a terrible culture, it's the culture that wins."
I was disappointed.
PayPal is also used for transferring money between friends and family quite frequently
I think the reasoning was to be less dependent on the US. I hope to see it exceed – more competition is great.
I pay p much everywhere with my phone using the Sparkasse apps NFC payment. Maybe it's a north/south divide (assuming the dutch are mostly visiting the north, as I am in the south).
Best case scenario: Stripe gets larger, gets bloated, slower, eats some competitors, becomes their competitors. The street presses down on their valuation as their growth races toward single digits. Congratulations.
Block is fetching ~13 times op income. PayPal is fetching ~7 times op income.
Maybe Stripe sees the end writing on the wall and they're going for it while the bubbly action is there.
I am curious what changed in 2 years to reach $159 valuation and assuming deal goes through, how they fund PayPal buyout.
I would wager that Stripe has already put together a consumer-cash platform, and is weighing whether to deploy it as "Stripe Cash" or "Paypal 2.0". The former strategy would require a slow rollout that would compete with Paypal, Apple Cash, whatever Google and Samsung’s offerings are called… The latter branding would make them the dominant player overnight.
What is the mounting competition? Does Paze factor into any of this?
No cost instant financial transfers between US financial users is coming over the next decade. The Fed has 1,400 banks onboard so far, up from 900 the prior year (that's 1,400 in two years). Half of PayPal's business goes away over the coming decade.
Zelle is the one that is doomed since they are bank-run instant transfers that FedNow directly replaces.
Stripe valued at $159B, 2025 annual letter