By Miho Uranaka and Echo Wang
TOKYO/NEW YORK, March 11 (Reuters) – The initial public offering of SoftBank’s PayPay is likely to price around the low end of โits marketing range as war in the Middle East roils markets, two people โfamiliar with the matter said.
PayPay’s order book was more than five times oversubscribed and has now closed with โpricing to be finalised after U.S. market hours on Wednesday, one of the people said.
The Japanese payment app operator was offering 55 million American depositary shares, priced $17 to $20 apiece, a filing this month showed, targeting a valuation of up to $13.4 billion.
The people declined to be identified as โthe information is not public. โ PayPay declined to comment.
Tencent, Ant Group’s Alipay, and Alphabet’s Google have committed to invest in the IPO, one of the people said.
The companies did โ not respond to requests for comment.
PayPay has played a central role in encouraging Japanese consumers to move away from a preference for cash by offering rebates on its payments app.
It has over โ70 โmillion registered users.
However, the company has had a โbumpy path to an IPO. Its โIPO roadshow was initially postponed after markets were jolted by conflict in the Middle East, Reuters reported last week.
PayPay had already postponed the IPO last year during the U.S. government shutdown, which disrupted regulatory processes and delayed regulatory filing.
Despite recent volatility, the U.S. IPO market is expected to rebound sharply this year. Goldman Sachs has forecast proceeds could quadruple to โa record $160 billion in 2026, with potential debuts including โElon Musk’s SpaceX, and artificial intelligence firms OpenAI and โAnthropic.
PayPay would mark the first U.S. โlisting of a SoftBank majority investment since the blockbuster IPO of Arm.
SoftBank โtook the chip designer public in 2023 โat a valuation of $54.5 โbillion, and its market capitalisation has since risen to almost $130 billion.
Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, Mizuho and Morgan Stanley are joint book-running managers for the PayPay offering.
PayPay plans โto list on the Nasdaq โunder the symbol “PAYP”. Reuters first reported its plans for a U.S. listing in โ2023.
(Reporting by Miho Uranaka and Echo Wang; Writing by Sam Nussey; Editing โby Sumeet Chatterjee, Christopher Cushing and Jacqueline Wong)


