Payments unicorn Stripe contends it has the financial power to apply its technology to coronavirus medical care, remote telework, business funding, and easier onboarding for companies that have been suddenly thrust into an internet existence.
Stripe on Thursday said it raised a fresh $600 million from Andreessen Horowitz, General Catalyst, GV and Sequoia, under the same terms and valuation as its existing Series G funding. Stripe in the past several years has drawn a series of investments from these and other VCs that have helped its valuation skyrocket to more than $36 billion.
As part of the investment, Stripe said it has enabled a bundle of coronavirus-related programs, such as "fast access" to funds via instant payouts, Stripe Capital, Stripe Corporate Card and other measures to help small businesses access government aid.
Stripe's new investment comes less than a week after
These moves come as the U.S. government’s small business lending facility under the
“Being able to originate a lending facility digitally matters,” said Richard Crone, a payments consultant, adding firms like Square and PayPal have demonstrated the scale to support fast lending to small businesses. “Square and PayPal allow you to press a button and, if you qualify, get credit against your future receivables. … Stripe is going to have to move at PayPal’s speed.”
Beyond that investment, Stripe made several other moves, such as fast-tracking support for telemedicine providers such as Solv, which is working with Stripe to provide physician-assisted forms of coronavirus testing and same-day urgent care. The payment company has elastically scaled capacity for businesses that are already using Stripe to process payments, noting that some, such as Instacart, have seen as much as a 300% increase in customer demand year over year.
Stripe has also reduced the work involved in launching a business on its platform, including enabling farmers to sell produce online, working with mall operator Westfield to support a platform to help retailers move online in Australia, a partnership with U.S. restaurant technology firm ChowNow to launch a loyalty product and a deal with French B2B farmers market RungischezVous to use Stripe to sell directly to consumers.
Stripe reports it has more than $2 billion on its balance sheet, and in 2020 has added Caviar, Coupa, Just Eat, Keap, Lightspeed, Mattel, NBC and Paid as clients. On Thursday, Stripe said telemeeting firm Zoom, which has jumped in usage over the past few weeks, will use Stripe to modernize its payments system and expand internationally.
As businesses recover from the pandemic's economic toll, Stripe will be in competition with other fintechs and traditional merchant acquirers.
Stripe also competes with
“Stripe has to move fast here, and they’re going big,” Crone said.
Stripe has incrementally added to its core base of enabling businesses to sell online. The company earlier this year partnered with
More recently Stripe made a Series A investment in