The $350 Billion Opportunity JPMorgan Says Stripe Could Seize Next

Stripe launches its Tempo blockchain and acquires Bridge and Privy as it expands deeper into crypto, stablecoins, and next-generation global payments.

The $350 Billion Opportunity JPMorgan Says Stripe Could Seize Next

Stripe is making another major move into digital assets. The company has launched its own Layer-1 blockchain, Tempo, while also acquiring the stablecoin platform Bridge and crypto wallet provider Privy, according to a JPMorgan report.

The bank says Stripe now sees digital asset infrastructure as a core driver of its next phase of growth.

The payments giant became profitable in 2024 and processed more than $1.4 trillion in total transaction volume. JPMorgan estimates Stripe’s potential addressable market at over $350 billion, calling the company a “beneficiary of borderless financial services.”

Source: Capital One Shopping
Source: Capital One Shopping

Analysts also noted that Stripe’s early alignment with AI startups has given it an advantage as agentic commerce — transactions initiated and executed by AI agents continues to rise.

Tempo, Stablecoins, and AI Give Stripe a New Edge

Through the acquisitions of Bridge and Privy, Stripe is expanding deeper into stablecoins, payments, and on-chain infrastructure. CEO Patrick Collison describes Tempo as a payments-focused Layer-1 blockchain built for real-world financial use cases, not experimental crypto hype.

“These initiatives position Stripe to benefit from the integration of AI agents, stablecoins, and programmable money into global commerce,” JPMorgan noted.

However, analysts also point to risks tied to scale and regulation, especially around stablecoins in the United States and under MiCA in Europe.

Earlier this year, Stripe also introduced stablecoin subscription payments, reinforcing its strategy of blending traditional finance with blockchain-based rails.

With Tempo, stablecoins, and programmable money, Stripe is signaling that the future of payments will be faster, borderless, and increasingly on-chain. Whether regulation slows or accelerates that vision remains the biggest question.