Stripe co-founder John Collison says company may allow staff to cash in on shares again

Tipperary-born billionaire says the payments firm is in no rush to float

Stripe co-founder and president, John Collison

Adrian Weckler

Stripe co-founder John Collison says employees at the online payments company will likely be allowed to cash in some of their shares in the future, as speculation continues to simmer over the company’s eventual IPO.

Tipperary-born Mr Collison, who founded the jointly headquartered Irish-American company with his brother Patrick in 2010, said the move is a repeat of what it has done in recent times.

“We did that last year, we did that this year, and we’ll probably do it again in the future,” he told Bloomberg Television.

Last year, Stripe processed payments in excess of a trillion dollars

To fund it may require further cash from the company’s existing investors, as Stripe has done before.

The cash-out mechanism is seen as a way of rewarding employees in an industry where stock options are considered a valuable part of staff incentives.

Unlike publicly-quoted companies, Stripe’s private status means trading shares is less straightforward.

Mr Collison also said that, despite intense speculation about a possible stock market flotation, the company is in no rush to trigger an IPO.

He said many companies make the decision to go public too early.

“We still see tons of opportunity to change and grow the business quite a lot,” he said.

Instead of focusing on an IPO, Mr Collison said he remains focused on products.

‘We still see tons of opportunity to change and grow the business quite a lot’

Stripe was founded in San Francisco where the firm’s biggest base remains. However, it counts its Dublin offices as a joint headquarters.

Stripe is currently valued at $65bn (€60.5bn), which is up on recent valuations but below its high valuation of $95bn (€88.5bn) in 2022.

It processed payments in excess of a trillion dollars (€930bn) last year as online payments continued to grow.

The company, which is in competition with rivals such as Adyen, Braintree and PayPal, has a regular pipeline of deals with retail and commercial brands.

Earlier this month, it announced that the hotel group Accor had chosen Stripe as a payment provider. In Ireland, that includes hotel properties such as the five-star Carton House and the Ibis, Dublin.

In the US, Stripe also offers a range of financial products and services, including business loans, corporate credit cards and fraud prevention.