Fintech Checkout.com’s valuation falls to $12 billion

Fintech Checkout.com’s valuation falls to  billion


Guillaume Pousaz, CEO and founder of payment platform Checkout.com, speaking at the annual Web Summit technology conference in Lisbon, Portugal, in 2022.

Horacio Villalobos | Getty Images

LONDON — Fintech unicorn Checkout.com is giving staff a way of cashing in their shares: buying them out.

The London-headquartered payments platform said Friday that it plans to launch a share buyback initiative for employees to “provide them with a path to liquidity.”

The share buyback program is based on a new internal valuation of $12 billion, Checkout.com said. Although internal, the valuation marks a significant drop from its last fundraising round.

Checkout.com was valued at $40 billion in a $1 billion funding round in 2022. However, it was said to have lowered its internal valuation to $11 billion later that year, according to reports. Checkout.com says it regularly monitors the value for its employees in its share incentive program.

The fintech competes with payment service providers such as Stripe, Adyen and PayPal. The company processes billions of dollars in transactions every year for the likes of Coinbase, Pizza Hut and H&M.

Such share sales have proven an increasingly popular way for startups to offer longtime employees and other investors liquidity, particularly as tech companies stay private for longer amid a multi-year decline in initial public offerings.

Checkout.com says it is now on track to exceed a target of 30% core net revenue growth this year and is forecasting $300 billion in annual e-commerce payment volume.

“We are relentlessly focused on growth and innovation, particularly with the impact of AI and the expected rise of agentic commerce,” said Guillaume Pousaz, the company’s CEO and founder, in a press release.

Several other private fintechs have opted to allow employees to sell shares in recent months.

In February, Stripe announced a tender offer allowing early investors and employees to sell shares at a valuation of $91.5 billion. Revolut, meanwhile, earlier this month offered staff the chance to sell shares on the secondary market at a $75 billion valuation.

WATCH: CNBC and Statista name the top UK fintechs of 2025

CNBC and Statista name the top UK fintechs of 2025



Source

SpaceX could be the biggest IPO ever next year. How investors can play it right now
World

SpaceX could be the biggest IPO ever next year. How investors can play it right now

When SpaceX eventually goes public, the long-anticipated offering is expected to be the largest IPO ever, reshaping valuations across the aerospace industry and delivering a rare blockbuster deal for Wall Street. The Elon Musk -led space launch company is preparing to go public next year, reportedly targeting a valuation of about $1.5 trillion , potentially […]

Read More
High cost of goods is causing consumers to spend less for the holidays, CNBC survey finds
World

High cost of goods is causing consumers to spend less for the holidays, CNBC survey finds

Inflation looks to be sapping some of Americans’ holiday cheer as they head out to buy gifts this Christmas season, according to the CNBC All-America Economic Survey. The survey found the high cost of goods has emerged as a major factor affecting how much shoppers spend and where they spend, suggesting inflation of the past […]

Read More
India goods exports rise in November despite U.S. tariffs
World

India goods exports rise in November despite U.S. tariffs

An employee works inside a textile mill at Bhilwara in India’s Rajasthan state, on July 6, 2025. Himanshu Sharma | Afp | Getty Images India’s total goods exports for November rose 19% on year to $38.13 billion, with sharp improvement in the country’s trade with U.S. India’s merchandise goods trade deficit, which had touched a […]

Read More