Fintech giant PayPal confirmed on Friday it’s reached a deal to buy payments start-up iZettle for US$2.2 billion — the biggest acquisition in its history.
U.S.-based PayPal already operates in more than 200 countries around the world but is working to expand its offerings.
IZettle provides mobile card readers and other digital payment products to small businesses. A merger would catapult PayPal into hundreds of thousands of brick-and-mortar storefronts globally in an effort to bring its digital payments tool into physical retailers and compete with companies, like Square.
PayPal hopes the transaction will close in the third quarter, the company announced. IZettle expects to generate US$165 million in revenue in 2018, and process about US$6 billion on its platform.
iZettle, which is based in Sweden, said last week it would list an IPO on the Nasdaq in Stockholm sometime this year, and said at the time it would not be pursuing a sale as alternative to an IPO.
“We believe that the listing will support our continued growth, our strategy and provide us with improved access to capital markets,” CEO Jacob de Geer told reporters.
Shares of PayPal gained 1.8 percent during regular trading, and continued edging up near 1 percent after the bell.
Shares of PayPal gained 1.8 percent during regular trading