Pine Labs, a fintech firm based in Noida, offers merchants financing and transaction solutions via its POS machines. With a market capitalization of approximately ₹23,556.89 crore, the company has seen its stock rise nearly 32% since going public in November 2025.
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Rau emphasized that Pine Labs’ visible terminal business is merely one aspect of its operations. “That accounts for about 27% of our revenues; our growth drivers are primarily in transaction processing,” he noted, highlighting bill payments, online transactions, and wallets as significant contributors. “We’ve doubled our revenues over the last three years.”

The acquisition of Shopflo aligns with this evolution. As merchants transition to online platforms, their needs extend beyond simple payment processing. “More merchants are requesting consumer insights… they’re looking for a differentiated checkout experience,” Rau stated. With a network of about 1,000 merchants serving 65 million consumers, Shopflo enables Pine Labs to fill that requirement. “This will be a very strategic acquisition for us.”
Although Unified Payments Interface (UPI) continues to dominate, Rau highlighted the importance of reliability. “UPI volumes… are now approaching nearly 70%,” he observed, asserting the need for a 100% success rate, “which is our pledge.”
Also Read: Pine Labs acquires Shopflo to strengthen online checkout capabilities
Another key factor is distribution. “We already had distribution capabilities… what we needed was for this product stack to come together,” Rau explained. Pine Labs intends to expand Shopflo through its network of over 1,500 sales representatives.

Rau clarified that the acquisition should not be evaluated in isolation. “I don’t want to look at everything… on a standalone basis,” he noted, emphasizing the goal of maintaining growth momentum. “Can I sustain 100% year-on-year growth… this acquisition enables that.”
The deal size also reflects this strategic approach. “₹88 crore… is less than 20% of my adjusted EBITDA for the year,” he pointed out.
Addressing concerns about cash flow, Rau stressed that the business should be assessed annually rather than quarterly. “You need to evaluate our cash flow generation on an annual basis.”