Nuvei Corporation, operating under private equity ownership since its $6.3 billion take-private in 2024, announced acquisition of Nasdaq-listed Payoneer for $2.75 billion in cash and stock. The deal marks the Montreal-based processor's first major M&A deployment since exiting public markets eleven months ago.
Payoneer, valued at roughly $3.1 billion at Thursday's close, operates cross-border payment infrastructure serving 5 million business customers across 190 markets. The company reported $881 million in revenue for the twelve months ending September 2024, placing the acquisition at a 3.1x trailing revenue multiple. Nuvei will absorb Payoneer's enterprise-grade API stack and Asia-Pacific distribution network, expanding its addressable SME segment while maintaining its core enterprise merchant relationships. The transaction is expected to close in Q3 2025 pending regulatory clearance in the U.S., Canada, and the European Union.
The consolidation reflects a broader recalibration in fintech M&A after the public-to-private wave that consumed $47 billion in enterprise value across payments infrastructure between 2022 and 2024. Nuvei's sponsors—Advent International and the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec—are betting on a margin arbitrage: Payoneer's 18% EBITDA margin trails Nuvei's 34%, creating a 600-basis-point spread worth approximately $53 million annually at run-rate once integrated onto Nuvei's platform. The deal also positions Nuvei to compete directly with Stripe and Adyen in the SME segment, where it previously lacked distribution muscle. Payoneer's client base skews toward cross-border e-commerce sellers on Amazon, eBay, and Shopify—precisely the cohort Nuvei has struggled to penetrate without burning acquisition costs.
Watch for two near-term catalysts. First, antitrust scrutiny from the U.S. Department of Justice and European Commission, expected to issue preliminary findings by June 2025, will determine whether Nuvei must divest overlapping Asian merchant portfolios. Second, Payoneer's integration timeline—Nuvei has committed to a 12-month full migration onto its core processing rails—will test whether the company can execute without triggering client attrition. Historical precedent from similar fintech integrations suggests a 7-9% customer churn risk during platform consolidation.
The deal trades at a 14% discount to Payoneer's 52-week high of $11.23, set in April 2024. Nuvei is paying $9.65 per share, a 22% premium to the 30-day volume-weighted average price. Advent's willingness to deploy $1.4 billion in new equity—half the purchase price—suggests confidence in a 2026 or 2027 re-IPO window, likely targeting a $12-15 billion enterprise value on combined entity fundamentals.