PayPal's Power Play to Capture Payment Processing Industry

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PayPal Holdings Inc (NASDAQ: PYPL) went to market...and made another merchant-related acquisition. That's right, within weeks of acquiring iZettle, the European-based payment processing company that caters to small merchants, PayPal made another acquisition that augments the overall package it can offer merchants looking for its services. This time, the company acquired Jetlore, an AI-powered platform for retailers. Jetlore takes billions of customer data points, analyzes them, and creates actionable data that businesses can take for each individual customer.

In the press release announcing the acquisition, Harshal Deo, PayPal's Vice President of Commerce Solutions stated:

With Jetlore's talent and AI-powered technology, we will enhance and accelerate PayPal Marketing Solutions, adding new capabilities that continue to expand PayPal's value proposition for merchants beyond the online checkout experience.

Jetlore already boasts some pretty impressive customers, including eBay, Nordstrom Rack, and Uniqlo, a popular Japanese lifestyle-brand apparel retailer. The deal was for an undisclosed amount.

Front of PayPal corporate headquarters.
Front of PayPal corporate headquarters.

PayPal has made two key acquisitions in the past month, iZettle and Jetlore, to help augment its payment processing services. Image source: PayPal Holdings Inc.

PayPal's second major merchant-based acquisition in weeks

What's truly notable about the deal is that it came just two weeks after PayPal announced its $2.2 billion acquisition to acquire iZettle, "the Square of Europe." iZettle represents the largest acquisition in PayPal's history, and at first glance, it appears PayPal paid a pretty penny for the company. iZettle is expected to facilitate about $6 billion in payment volume and generate approximately $165 million in revenue this year. As a stand-alone company, it was expected to be profitable by 2020, which amounts to PayPal acquiring iZettle for a valuation of a price-to-sales ratio in the low teens -- that's high!

However, the deal should not be viewed solely through a valuation lens, because it looks even more compelling from a strategic rationale. For starters, the agreement gave PayPal a payment processing presence in 12 different countries where it previously had no such presence, including Brazil, Mexico, and several European markets. The deal also allows PayPal to approach merchants with what management believes is a best-in-class omnichannel solution and, importantly, enables the company to cross-sell iZettle to existing PayPal merchants and PayPal to existing iZettle merchants.