Nuvei’s planned $2.75 billion acquisition of Payoneer signals a broader shift in B2B cross-border payments. The market is moving from fragmented point solutions toward integrated finance operating platforms that combine collections, payouts, multi-currency accounts, FX, settlement, compliance, and embedded financial services.
The deal combines Nuvei’s strengths in merchant payment acceptance, local acquiring, card issuing, alternative payment methods, and embedded payment infrastructure with Payoneer’s cross-border payouts, collections, multi-currency accounts, banking relationships, marketplace connectivity, and same-day or real-time settlement across more than 150 markets. Payoneer’s regulatory footprint includes licenses in mainland China and in-principle authorization as a cross-border payment aggregator in India. These also give Nuvei difficult-to-replicate scale for serving export-oriented SMBs, marketplaces, and digital platforms that need faster, more transparent, and lower-cost cross-border settlement.
This Deal Is Part Of A Broader M&A Pattern In B2B Cross-Border Payments
Nuvei’s acquisition of Payoneer is part of a broader consolidation cycle in B2B cross-border payments. The recent wave of M&A can be grouped into several deal types: payment networks and card schemes buying new rails, such as Mastercard’s planned acquisition of BVNK to strengthen stablecoin and fiat-rail connectivity; merchant payment providers expanding into B2B cross-border money movement, such as Nuvei’s acquisition of Payoneer and Stripe’s acquisition of Bridge; banks acquiring fintech capabilities, such as BNP Paribas’ acquisition of Kantox to add FX automation and treasury workflow capabilities; cross-border payment specialists adding finance automation and CFO-office software, such as Airwallex’s acquisition of Leapfin and Ripple’s acquisition of GTreasury; and established remittance players separating or repositioning B2B assets, such as Western Union’s spin-off of its B2B payments arm into Convera. B2B cross-border payments are moving beyond simple money movement into broader platforms that combine payments, FX, treasury, compliance, reconciliation, and embedded finance.
What The Consolidation Means For The B2B Cross-border Payments Industry
Consolidation will favor payments and finance platforms that combine B2B cross-border payments with adjacent merchant payment and finance automation capabilities. Standalone specialists will face rising pressure to expand, partner, or be acquired. Businesses will gain more integrated options, but must manage vendor lock-in and evaluate providers by corridor, use case, and workflow integration. For banks, card networks, and payment giants, the race is shifting from owning individual payment rails to owning the broader finance and payments operating layer. We believe the M&A activity is likely to accelerate over the next few years.
The Nuvei–Payoneer deal is a powerful reminder that B2B cross-border payments are becoming core infrastructure for how global businesses manage their finances. The next wave of competition will be led by providers that help businesses move money globally while reducing operational complexity, compliance risk, and friction across finance workflows.
What To Read Next
Forrester has dedicated reports and blog posts on B2B cross-border payments, including:
Predictions 2026: Payments
Mastercard Makes Its Stablecoin Move: The BVNK Acquisition
How Stripe And Bridge Are Pushing Stablecoin Real-World Adoption: A Conversation With Mai Leduc
Ant International’s Playbook On AI, Blockchain, And Wallet Network
Predictions 2026: Asia Pacific
The Cross-Border Payment Solutions For B2B Landscape, Q1 2024
Forrester will publish a vendor landscape on B2B cross-border payments in November 2026, followed by a Forrester Wave evaluation in May 2027. Stay tuned.
Forrester clients can set up an inquiry or guidance session to discuss these topics with me.















-1024x683.jpg)






