Stripe spends $1.1 billion to acquire Bridge, betting on stablecoins for what reason?
Original Title: "Stripe acquired Bridge for $1.1 billion."
Author: Yash Agarwal
Compiled by: Deep Tide TechFlow
Stripe has acquired Bridge for $1.1 billion. Let me explain why this company is worth paying attention to, even if you may have never heard of it.
First, Stripe is heavily investing in the stablecoin space
------ Stripe's co-founders demonstrated earlier this year how to accept stablecoins on @solana via @phantom.
------ They have launched payment and receipt features for cryptocurrencies, meaning any U.S. merchant can accept stablecoins like USDC and settle in dollars.
Even during bear markets, trading volumes for stablecoins continue to rise, coupled with support from efficient blockchains like Solana/Base, giving them confidence in the market adaptability of stablecoins.
These will become some of the most iconic statements in financial history:
"Stablecoins are the room-temperature superconductors of financial services."
Why did Stripe choose stablecoins?
Stripe is currently just a payment gateway that relies on networks like Visa and Mastercard:
------ Charging an additional fee of about 1-3%
------ Relying on banks and local partners
------ Low authorization rates
Stablecoins can eliminate all intermediaries, allowing Stripe to control the entire tech stack.
However, to enable Stripe to control the stablecoin tech stack, they need to build:
------ On/Off ramps (converting fiat to cryptocurrency)
------ Stablecoin issuance (for example, Tether makes $10 billion in profit annually)
------ Complex stablecoin infrastructure (involving over 20 blockchains, more than 10 stablecoins, etc.)
They could spend years building these, or achieve it directly through acquisition.
Introducing Bridge
Bridge was founded in 2022 by two successful entrepreneurs (whose previous company was acquired by Square), with the founding team including former Brex Chief Product Officer @zcabrams and Airbnb engineer Sean.
Their vision is to create various types of stablecoin APIs.
Initially, they operated by helping businesses accept stablecoin payments and build stablecoin infrastructure (similar to Stripe's approach in traditional finance).
In 2023, they secured an undisclosed seed funding round (estimated at around $18 million, led by Sequoia).
Over the past two and a half years, they have developed the following APIs:
------ Orchestration (On/Off ramp conversion, i.e., converting any form of dollars into another form, such as converting USDC on Solana to USD)
------ Issuance (minting stablecoins and investing reserves)
They have completed over $5 billion in transaction volume for the following clients:
Stablecoin fintech applications, such as @getdolarapp (virtual accounts provided by Leeds Bank)
Global financial operations (like @SpaceX and the U.S. government)
Payment services (such as @scale_AI paying its contractors)
They support the operation of many on/off ramps and cryptocurrency cards.
Who are their competitors?
There are many!
@ZeroHashX (larger scale but lacks credibility)
@Brale_xyz and @Paxos (stablecoin issuance; Paxos assisted in issuing PayPal's PYUSD)
And any vendor providing on/off ramps and stablecoin infrastructure.
Why choose Bridge?
------ Prioritizing APIs; integrating with Stripe's tech stack
------ Acquiring potential competitors (e.g., integrating stablecoin fintech companies that plan to disrupt Stripe)
------ Offering complementary products (like treasury services with stablecoin issuance, BaaS with cryptocurrency acceptance)
------ Sharing common investors: Sequoia and tech founders in San Francisco
------ Having a concise social media username @stablecoin
Thanks to @gizmothegizzer for the contribution
So, why spend $1.1 billion?
Mainly because of the strong team—founders who have held leadership roles or worked at top startups like Airbnb, Brex, Coinbase, and Square—they are the best candidates to lead "Stripe's crypto infrastructure."
Licenses, products, market appeal, and customer base
I suspect this deal will be primarily equity-based rather than cash-based.
From a strategic perspective, acquiring Bridge helps to:
------ Compete more quickly with crypto-friendly giants like BlackRock, Revolut, and PayPal
------ Achieve 24/7 operations globally; break through the limitations of localized payment systems (Stripe has faced significant challenges in expanding to long-tail markets like Asia and Latin America)
What’s next for Stripe? My guess:
→ Continue supporting on/off ramps and acceptance of cryptocurrencies, while mastering Bridge's APIs
→ Deepen the development of stablecoin infrastructure (enabling global fintech companies to launch stablecoins, and possibly even issuing their own stablecoin STUSD to fully control the ecosystem)
→ Advocate for stablecoin payments, allowing every convenience store to accept stablecoins
As a stablecoin enthusiast, I believe this is good news for the cryptocurrency market:
------ This is the largest cryptocurrency acquisition ever (more M&A activity is expected)
------ It is also Stripe's largest acquisition (showing a grand vision for cryptocurrency)
Will this become a historic great acquisition like Instagram and truly elevate the GDP of the internet?