Venture capitalists bet big on the $1.9 trillion payments industry
Venture capitalists bet big on the $1.9 trillion payments industry · CNBC

In This Article:

  • Tech firms from Stripe to GoCardless are all trying to grab a slice of the same $1.9 trillion industry.

  • Upstart payment firms have attracted big corporate clients and billions of dollars in venture capital money.

  • Last year saw Adyen go public and iZettle get bought by PayPal, fueling speculation over the next big exit.

Technology firms from Silicon Valley's Stripe to United Kingdom -based GoCardless are all trying to grab a slice of the same $1.9 trillion industry .

Payments, a sector long dominated by cash, has gone digital as a number of start-ups enter the fray looking to make it easier to pay for things online as well as in stores.

Upstart payment firms have attracted big corporate clients and billions of dollars in venture capital money. According to Pitchbook, investors pumped $18.5 billion into the sector in 2018 — a near-fivefold increase from the previous year.

That was a huge amount of money, but spread over a smaller number of investments, with 235 deals being signed last year compared to 258 in 2017. China Ant Financial was the biggest driver of the numbers, Pitchbook says, raising a whopping $14 billion in 2018.

"High level the deal count fell a bit in 2018 but (was) still very healthy and I wouldn't read anything into that small decline," said Paul Condra, lead emerging technology analyst at PitchBook.

"Companies that can simplify payments for SMBs (small and medium-sized businesses) or focus on the complexity of cross-border payments have received tremendous attention."

In the last few months alone, there have been massive deals in the sector:

  • Stripe raised a total of $345 million in its latest investment round at a $22.5 billion valuation.

  • Try-before-you-buy payments firm Klarna recently closed a $100 million internal round.

  • GoCardless got a $75 million cash injection from Alphabet GOOGL and Salesforce CRM .

Pitchbook says the sector has attracted about $2 billion so far into 2019 already.

Sky-high valuations

Then there's little-known U.K.-based firm Checkout, which raised $200 million at a $2 billion market value, automatically signing it up to Europe's unicorn club — unicorns being private tech firms valued at $1 billion or more.

Checkout's fundraising came as a particular surprise, as the seven-year-old company had previously been entirely owned by its founder and CEO Guillaume Pousaz.

The firm's boss said the reason it steered clear from the private markets for so long was because it wanted to take a "bootstrap" approach to growing the business — in other words, relying on the resources it had access to — rather than tapping external investment early on.