Corpay Inc.

FLT
NYSEFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 18, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
12%TTM 2026-Q1
Moat
Wide
Latest Q Revenue
$1.3B+25% YoYQ1 2026
Bull Case
Corpay's fast-growing Corporate Payments segment is mispriced at a fleet-card multiple, with compounding EPS and a highly aligned CEO driving long-term value creation.
Bear Case
Secular EV fleet transition threatens Corpay's core Vehicle Payments segment (55% of revenue), while business complexity and CEO succession risk justify a persistent valuation discount.

Business Model


ticker: FLT step: 01 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Corpay, Inc. (FLT / CPAY) — Business Overview

Note: FleetCor Technologies rebranded to Corpay, Inc. in 2024 and changed its NYSE ticker from FLT to CPAY to reflect its strategic pivot toward corporate payments. It remains indexed as FLT in the S&P 500 as of early 2026.

Business Description

Corpay is a global business payments company operating across three segments: Vehicle Payments (commercial fleet fuel cards, toll/parking, ~55% of revenue), Corporate Payments (virtual cards, cross-border FX, AP automation, ~31% of revenue, fastest-growing), and Lodging Payments (workforce/airline/insurance crew accommodation, ~14% of revenue). FY2024 revenue was $3.97B (+6% YoY); FY2026 guidance at $5.27B midpoint reflects accelerated growth from the $2.2B Alpha Group (FX/treasury services) acquisition (July 2025) and Mastercard's strategic minority investment in Corpay's cross-border platform.

Revenue Model

Primarily transaction-based: (1) Fleet/vehicle fee revenue — percentage of fuel transaction value + tolls + ancillary fees; (2) Virtual card interchange — Corpay issues virtual cards for AP automation and earns interchange/rebates; (3) Cross-border FX spread — Corpay earns bid-ask spreads on FX transactions for corporate clients (GPS Capital Markets + Alpha Group); (4) Lodging program management — negotiated rate arbitrage between hotel suppliers and corporate customers; (5) SaaS/subscription — analytics and fleet management software. FY2024 adj. net income margin ~35%. Long track record: 10%+ organic revenue growth and 13%+ EBITDA growth over many years.

Products & Services

  • Corpay ONE — integrated corporate card + AP automation for SMBs
  • Corpay Payables — enterprise AP automation and virtual card issuance
  • Paymerang — AP automation acquisition (2024); mid-market focus
  • GPS Capital Markets — cross-border corporate FX (acquisition Dec 2024)
  • Alpha Group — institutional FX and treasury services ($2.2B acquisition, July 2025); ~7,000 clients, $3B deposits
  • Mastercard minority investment — Mastercard took a minority stake in Corpay's cross-border payments platform, validating the strategy
  • Fleet Card Products — branded fleet cards (in U.S., Brazil, UK, Australia, Russia, New Zealand)
  • Comdata — truck stop network and fleet cards for long-haul transportation
  • Lodging Solutions — workforce housing, airline crew hotels, insurance displacement housing
  • EV Integration — expanding fleet card acceptance to EV charging networks

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Large, diverse customer base: SMB fleets + Fortune 500 treasury departments + airlines + insurance carriers + logistics companies. B2B only (no consumer). Distribution: direct sales + reseller/banking partnerships + embedded software integrations. Geography: U.S. largest; Brazil, UK, Netherlands, Australia significant international.

Competitive Position

In fleet: competes with WEX, Comdata (own), and fuel brand cards. In corporate payments/FX: competes with Convera, OFX, Western Union Business, and banks' own FX desks. Corpay's differentiation: scale (processes $1T+ in annual spend), proprietary network data, acquisition-driven geographic and product expansion, and the emerging cross-border payments platform. The Mastercard minority investment in the cross-border segment is a significant competitive validation and distribution amplifier.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 2000 (as FleetCor Technologies)
  • Headquarters: Atlanta, Georgia
  • Employees: ~10,000
  • Exchange: NYSE (ticker changed from FLT to CPAY in 2024)
  • Sector / Industry: Financials / B2B Payments & Corporate Payments
  • Market Cap: ~$20–25B (at ~$280–320/share)

Financial Snapshot


ticker: FLT step: 04 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Corpay, Inc. (FLT / CPAY) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary

Metric FY2022 FY2023 FY2024 YoY
Revenue ~$3.4B ~$3.75B $3.97B +5.8%
Adj. EBITDA Margin ~45% ~46% ~47% improving
Adj. Net Income Margin ~33% ~34% ~35%
GAAP Net Income positive positive positive
Adj. EPS strong growth +13% mid-teens growth

FY2024: Revenue $3.97B (+5.8%); adj. net income margin ~35%; Corporate Payments +26% YoY to $1.23B (31% of total). FY2025: Revenue accelerated significantly with Alpha Group acquisition (closed July 2025) — Q4 2025 revenues $1.25B (+20.7% YoY). FY2026 guidance: revenue $5.27B midpoint. Corporate Payments expected to exceed $1.5B in FY2025 (40% of total). Mastercard minority investment in cross-border platform validates strategy. Q1 2026 EPS guidance ($5.38–5.52) was below Street consensus ($5.82) — near-term integration/transition headwind.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024)

Metric Value
Adj. Free Cash Flow ~$1.5–2.0B
Capital Expenditures ~$150–200M
Cash & Equivalents ~$1.5B
Total Debt ~$7–8B (senior notes + term loans + revolving)
Shares Repurchased significant (part of $2.5B capital deployment in 2024)

Corpay carries significant debt from its acquisition-driven growth strategy, but generates $1.5–2B in annual FCF to service and reduce it. Adj. free cash flow conversion is high (~90%+ of adj. net income). The $2.2B Alpha Group acquisition (2025) increased leverage temporarily. The Mastercard investment (undisclosed size) provided capital to partially offset.

Key Ratios (approximate)

  • P/E: ~16–18x (non-GAAP) | EV/EBITDA: ~14–16x | FCF Yield: ~5–7%
  • Revenue Growth: +5.8% organic (FY2024), accelerating with Alpha Group
  • Adj. EBITDA Margin: ~47% (industry-leading for B2B payments)

Growth Profile

Corpay grew from ~$3.4B (FY2022) to $3.97B (FY2024) organically — modest but high-quality growth — then accelerated via the Alpha Group acquisition toward FY2026 guidance of $5.27B. The Corporate Payments segment is the strategic future: cross-border FX (Alpha Group, GPS Capital Markets) + AP automation (Paymerang, Corpay ONE) + virtual cards are compounding at 20–26% organically, far above the 5–8% fleet segment. The transformation from "fleet card company" to "global corporate payments platform" is the re-rating thesis.

Forward Estimates

  • FY2026: Revenue $5.27B midpoint (+10–15% organic + Alpha Group full-year contribution)
  • Adj. EPS FY2026: ~$22–25 (mid-teens growth)
  • Analyst consensus PT: ~$350–390 (majority Buy) vs. current ~$280–320
  • Morgan Stanley: Overweight, PT $390; Mizuho: Buy, PT $340
  • Q1 2026 guidance soft ($5.38–5.52 adj. EPS vs. Street $5.82) — integration headwind acknowledged

Recent Catalysts


ticker: FLT step: 12 generated: 2026-05-13 source: quick-research

Corpay, Inc. (FLT / CPAY) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Corporate Payments Transformation + Alpha Group + Mastercard = $3B+ Revenue Platform by FY2027 — Corpay's Corporate Payments segment ($1.23B in FY2024, +26% YoY) is the company's most exciting growth asset: it includes virtual card issuance for AP automation, cross-border FX execution, and treasury services. The $2.2B Alpha Group acquisition (July 2025) added ~7,000 institutional clients, $3B in deposits, and deep FX/treasury capabilities — instantly making Corpay a credible competitor to bank FX desks for mid-market to large corporates. Mastercard's minority investment in Corpay's cross-border platform provides both capital and a massive distribution advantage: Mastercard can direct its corporate card clients to Corpay's cross-border FX rails, creating a referral flywheel. If Corporate Payments grows from $1.23B to $2–3B by FY2027 (at current growth rates + Alpha Group), it becomes Corpay's dominant segment, commanding a higher multiple than the mature fleet business.

  2. Proven M&A Machine + $1.5–2B Annual FCF = Compounding Acquisition Engine — Corpay has been the most consistent acquirer in B2B payments for two decades: Comdata, Paymerang, GPS Capital Markets, Alpha Group — each acquisition has expanded the addressable market and been integrated profitably. The company generates $1.5–2B in annual FCF, enough to fund one significant acquisition per year while maintaining leverage ratios. Unlike many acquirers, Corpay has a proven integration playbook: it centralizes back-office functions, layoffs overhead, and applies its yield management and data analytics across acquired businesses. The history of 10%+ organic revenue growth and 13%+ EBITDA growth over many years demonstrates that acquisitions are accretive rather than dilutive. At 16–18x non-GAAP earnings, Corpay is cheap for the quality of the franchise.

  3. Fleet Segment Stabilization + Stablecoin/New Rails = Emerging Payment Infrastructure Play — The bull case mentions "stablecoin adoption" as a catalyst — suggesting Corpay is exploring blockchain-based payment rails for its cross-border FX business, where stablecoins could dramatically reduce the cost and settlement time of international corporate payments. This is speculative but directionally credible: a company processing $1T+ in annual business payments has enormous incentive to find cheaper settlement rails. The fleet segment, while slower-growing, is extremely high-margin and generates the FCF that funds everything else. EV charging integration (expanding acceptance network) reduces the fleet card's long-term obsolescence risk. Q4 2025's +20.7% revenue growth signals the Alpha Group integration is driving the acceleration promised.

Bear Case Risks

  1. Q1 2026 EPS Guidance Miss + Integration Complexity = Near-Term Credibility Risk — Q1 2026 adj. EPS guidance ($5.38–5.52) came in significantly below Street consensus (~$5.82), suggesting Alpha Group integration costs, transition period revenue disruption, or both are weighing on near-term results. Corpay has historically guided conservatively and beaten, but the 6–10% guidance miss was large enough to raise questions. Large, complex acquisitions (especially $2.2B cross-border FX businesses with different cultures and client relationships) frequently have 12–18 month integration periods where margins compress before recovering. If the Q1 guidance softness persists into Q2–Q3, the $5.27B FY2026 revenue target could be at risk — and so could the re-rating story.

  2. Leverage + Rising Interest Rates + Acquisition Dependency = FCF Vulnerability — Corpay's $7–8B in net debt (post-Alpha Group) combined with its ongoing acquisitive strategy creates meaningful financial risk in a higher-for-longer rate environment. A significant portion of Corpay's debt is floating-rate, meaning rate increases directly reduce FCF available for repurchases and future acquisitions. If the next targeted acquisition (Corpay has historically needed M&A to supplement 5–8% organic growth) requires equity issuance at the current valuation, it could be dilutive. Additionally, the corporate payments / cross-border FX business has thinner and more competitive margins than the fleet card business — as this segment grows to 40%+ of revenue, blended EBITDA margins may face slight compression despite volume growth.

  3. Fleet Card Secular Decline + Competitive Pressure from WEX and Branded Cards — Corpay's fleet segment (~55% of revenue) faces the same EV transition risk as WEX: as commercial fleets electrify, the closed-loop fuel card network faces obsolescence. Corpay's international fleet operations (Brazil, UK, Australia) are more exposed because EV transition is faster in Europe and EV-native competitors (ChargePoint, etc.) have less reason to work with legacy fleet card providers. Domestically, WEX's unified fuel+EV card (launched Jan 2026) puts competitive pressure on Corpay to match the capability or lose fleet customers who want a single payment solution. The fleet segment's 5–8% organic growth could decelerate to 0–3% as EV transition accelerates after 2026.

Upcoming Events

  • Q1 2026 earnings: EPS vs. $5.38–5.52 guidance; Alpha Group integration status; organic growth rate
  • Corporate Payments ARR: Does the segment sustain 20%+ growth as Alpha Group fully integrates?
  • Mastercard partnership metrics: Cross-border volume referred through Mastercard distribution
  • Stablecoin pilot: Any announcement on blockchain/stablecoin payment rails for cross-border
  • Fleet EV expansion: Charging acceptance network growth vs. WEX competition
  • FY2026 revenue target progress: Q1+Q2 trajectory toward $5.27B midpoint

Analyst Sentiment

Strong Buy: 12 analysts, 8% Strong Buy / 58% Buy / 33% Hold; avg PT ~$360–390 vs. current ~$280–320. Morgan Stanley Overweight at $390; Mizuho at $340. "Corpay rallied 12% on robust earnings" (TIKR, Q4 2025 earnings) but Q1 2026 guidance was soft. Bull thesis: Corporate Payments transformation + Alpha Group = meaningful multiple re-rating from fleet card discount to corporate payments premium.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-13

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