Stripe

Stripe Is Building the Toll Road Above the Toll Roads

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Based on 52 related nodes across 17 research explorations, 330 connections, finance sector


What Stripe Actually Does

Most people think of Stripe as “the thing that handles payments on websites.” That is true but undersells it enormously.

Here is a better way to think about it: imagine there are dozens of different roads across a city, each owned by a different company — Visa owns one highway, Mastercard owns another, Brazil has its own road called PIX, India has UPI, the US just built FedNow, and now there are new crypto-based roads called stablecoins. Every merchant who wants to accept money from customers has to figure out which road to put their customers on, negotiate access to each road, and manage all the different rules.

Stripe does not own any of these roads. Instead, Stripe built a routing system that sits on top of all of them. When a customer pays, Stripe figures out the cheapest, fastest, most reliable road to use — in real time, invisibly. Merchants just plug into Stripe’s system, and Stripe handles the complexity underneath.

That positioning — above the roads, not owning any of them — is Stripe’s core structural advantage. And it gets stronger the more roads there are, because the complexity of managing all of them grows, and so does the value of having someone smart do it for you.

In 2025, Stripe processed roughly $1.9 trillion in payments. For context, that is more than the GDP of Canada, handled in a single year by a single company’s infrastructure.


The Bridge Acquisition: Stripe’s Big Bet

In early 2025, Stripe paid $1.1 billion for a company called Bridge. This is the most important thing Stripe has done in recent years, and it is worth understanding why.

Stablecoins are a type of digital currency designed to hold a steady value — typically $1 per coin. Think of them as digital dollars that can move over the internet as fast as sending an email, at a fraction of the cost of a traditional wire transfer. Businesses are starting to use them to pay suppliers in other countries, settle transactions instantly, and build new financial products.

The problem with stablecoins is the “last mile.” Getting stablecoins back into regular local currency in the real world — with all the required legal checks, anti-money-laundering controls, and bank relationships — is technically nightmarish. Most companies wanting to use stablecoins hit a wall here.

Bridge built an API (a software interface) that handles all of this complexity. Any company can use Bridge to issue its own stablecoin, accept stablecoin payments, and convert them back to local currency, with all the compliance handled automatically. Stripe bought Bridge to own that abstraction layer — the same role Stripe plays for traditional payments, now extended to the stablecoin world.

This is not about Stripe becoming a crypto company. It is about Stripe becoming the infrastructure that makes stablecoins useful for boring, normal business operations.


Why Stripe Is Hard to Replace

Stripe’s strongest moat is not technical — it is organizational depth. When a company builds on Stripe, they write Stripe’s logic throughout their entire codebase. Payment rules, fraud checks, subscription billing, tax calculations — all of it becomes intertwined with Stripe’s APIs. Switching to a competitor is not like changing phone providers; it is closer to rewiring the plumbing of your entire building while it is occupied.

There is also a more structural advantage: Stripe benefits from fragmentation in a way that is genuinely unusual. Every time a new country builds its own national payment system, that increases the complexity any global merchant faces — and increases the value of Stripe’s routing intelligence. Stripe is one of the few companies whose market opportunity grows as the world becomes more complicated, not less.


The Vulnerabilities That Matter

The pricing problem. Stripe charges 2.9% plus $0.30 per transaction. That works fine for a $50 purchase. But imagine paying an AI assistant one cent per question, or a writer two cents per article read. At those prices, Stripe’s $0.30 flat fee consumes the entire payment and then some. As AI systems start making thousands of tiny transactions per day — buying compute time, accessing data, paying for API calls — Stripe’s traditional pricing structure simply cannot work. This is a real problem that stablecoin-based competitors are positioned to exploit.

The Western Union threat. A company called Western Union launched a stablecoin product in May 2026 that does exactly what Bridge does — converts stablecoins back into local currency at the last mile — but with one advantage Stripe cannot easily replicate: 200 years of physical cash distribution relationships in 200+ countries. In places like the Philippines or Mexico, where a worker might receive a stablecoin payment and need actual local currency in their hands, Western Union’s network of agents and retail locations is irreplaceable by an API. Bridge solves the technical problem; Western Union solves the human distribution problem. Whether those are the same problem in practice is still unresolved.

The regulatory dependency. A major US law called the GENIUS Act is currently moving through Congress. It would establish clear rules for USD-denominated stablecoins — who can issue them, what they need to hold in reserve, how compliance works. Bridge’s enterprise business is significantly dependent on this law passing. If it does not, or passes in a weakened form, the window of opportunity Stripe is trying to capture closes or narrows considerably. Europe has its own competing regulatory framework (MiCA) that conflicts with the US approach, meaning Stripe may need to operate two different compliance architectures — one for each major market.


The Non-Obvious Finding: AI Agents Need to Pay for Things

Here is something most people have not thought through yet. AI assistants — the kind that can autonomously book meetings, order supplies, or manage workflows — need to pay for things. But AI agents cannot open bank accounts. They cannot hold credit cards. They need programmatic access to money.

In May 2026, Amazon Web Services launched an infrastructure product called AgentCore that allows AI agents to make real payments. Stripe is embedded in this infrastructure as a core provider. This is not theoretical — it is live and in production.

This matters because AI agent deployment is growing extremely fast. As companies deploy more AI systems that operate autonomously, those systems need payment infrastructure. Stripe is positioned as one of the primary providers of that infrastructure. It is a new category of customer that did not exist three years ago.


Bull Case: The Infrastructure Wins Argument

The strongest argument for Stripe’s future goes like this: Stripe will be to the money layer of the internet what Amazon Web Services is to the computing layer. Not because they own everything, but because they make the complexity manageable for everyone else.

If US stablecoin legislation passes and enables enterprise adoption of programmable dollars, Bridge becomes the default infrastructure for a multi-trillion dollar market still running on paper checks and wire transfers — that $18.9 trillion in business-to-business payments that still flows through slow, expensive legacy systems. If AI agents become a major economic force, Stripe has a head start as their payment infrastructure. If payment systems keep fragmenting globally, Stripe’s routing intelligence keeps getting more valuable.

The bull case requires three things to go right: the GENIUS Act passes in a form that enables Bridge’s business model, AI agent deployment continues at current speed, and no competitor builds an equivalently developer-friendly stablecoin API layer before Stripe solidifies its position. All three are plausible. None are guaranteed.


Bear Case: The Middleman Gets Squeezed

The strongest argument against Stripe is that it is a middleman between powerful players who both have incentives to eliminate it.

From below, Visa and Mastercard are building their own tokenization layer — a way to make their payment identity infrastructure mandatory for every digital transaction, including AI agent payments. If they succeed, Stripe becomes a processing layer that operates under their rules, with no ability to route around them. The independence that defines Stripe’s value proposition shrinks to near zero.

From above, the platforms Stripe helped build — Shopify, Toast, others — are increasingly building their own payment infrastructure for their largest merchants. Stripe’s developer-friendly model made this possible by demonstrating that payments could be an API. The companies that learned this lesson are now becoming Stripe’s competitors.

And in the middle, if stablecoin settlement technology keeps maturing and simplifying, the technical complexity that makes Bridge’s abstraction valuable today may simply disappear. When the problem is easy, the person who made it easy is no longer needed.

The bear case does not require any of these threats to fully materialize. It only requires that Stripe’s $159 billion valuation was priced on assumptions about stablecoin, agentic, and enterprise growth that prove slower or more competitive than projected.


Bottom Line

Stripe is making a coherent and ambitious bet: that the payment infrastructure of the next decade will be more fragmented, more programmable, and more dependent on intelligent orchestration than the last decade was — and that whoever builds the best abstraction layer above that complexity will capture disproportionate value.

The bet is structurally sound. The risks are real and specific: a single law in Washington that may or may not pass, a pricing model that breaks at the scale of AI-native transactions, and incumbents with physical distribution advantages that APIs cannot replicate.

What makes Stripe unusual is that its core structural advantage — being useful precisely because everything around it is complicated — tends to compound rather than decay. Every new national payment system, every new stablecoin protocol, every new regulatory framework makes Stripe’s routing intelligence more valuable, not less. That is a rare property for a business to have, and it is worth taking seriously even when the valuation gives you pause.

The open question is not whether Stripe’s position is valuable. It is whether the value accrues to Stripe, or whether the card networks capture the AI payment layer and the stablecoin issuers commoditize the off-ramp problem that Bridge currently solves. The graph suggests both outcomes are structurally possible. The next twelve months of US stablecoin legislation will do more to resolve that question than almost anything else.