Visa Inc. (NYSE:V – Get Free Report) has been assigned a consensus recommendation of “Buy” from the twenty-seven ratings firms that are covering the firm, Marketbeat Ratings reports. Four research analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating, nineteen have assigned a buy rating and four have assigned a strong buy rating to the company. The average twelve-month price target among brokers that have covered the stock in the last year is $401.5217.
Several analysts have weighed in on the stock. UBS Group reissued a “buy” rating on shares of Visa in a research note on Tuesday, January 13th. Citigroup raised Visa to a “strong-buy” rating in a research note on Thursday, October 23rd. Wells Fargo & Company upgraded Visa to a “strong-buy” rating in a report on Wednesday, October 22nd. Truist Financial set a $374.00 price target on Visa in a research note on Tuesday. Finally, KeyCorp reiterated an “overweight” rating and issued a $405.00 price objective on shares of Visa in a research report on Wednesday, October 22nd.
Visa Stock Down 0.8%
Visa (NYSE:V – Get Free Report) last announced its quarterly earnings data on Tuesday, October 28th. The credit-card processor reported $2.98 earnings per share for the quarter, topping analysts’ consensus estimates of $2.97 by $0.01. Visa had a net margin of 50.15% and a return on equity of 60.31%. The firm had revenue of $10.72 billion during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $10.60 billion. During the same period in the previous year, the business posted $2.71 EPS. The business’s quarterly revenue was up 11.5% on a year-over-year basis. On average, analysts forecast that Visa will post 11.3 earnings per share for the current fiscal year.
Visa Increases Dividend
The company also recently declared a quarterly dividend, which was paid on Monday, December 1st. Shareholders of record on Wednesday, November 12th were given a dividend of $0.67 per share. This represents a $2.68 annualized dividend and a yield of 0.8%. The ex-dividend date of this dividend was Wednesday, November 12th. This is an increase from Visa’s previous quarterly dividend of $0.59. Visa’s dividend payout ratio is currently 26.25%.
Key Visa News
Here are the key news stories impacting Visa this week:
- Positive Sentiment: TreviPay announced a partnership with Visa to offer a “Pay by Invoice” tool to Visa-issuing banks, aiming to help issuers capture more of the $58 trillion North American B2B payments market — a product push that could expand Visa’s transaction volume in commercial flows. TreviPay Teams With Visa to Offer Banks Pay by Invoice Tool
- Positive Sentiment: Analysts note crypto-linked cards (example: Lemon’s Bitcoin-backed card on Visa’s network) point to another growth lane — enabling spending while holding crypto could broaden Visa’s fee-bearing volume if adoption scales. Does Lemon’s Bitcoin Credit Card Hint at V’s Next Crypto Growth Lane?
- Neutral Sentiment: Visa executive commentary on trust at authorization highlights the company’s ongoing focus on security and authorization UX — important for retention but incremental to near-term revenue. Visa on How Trust Is Built at the Moment of Authorization
- Neutral Sentiment: Comparative pieces (V vs MA) and market commentary are highlighting positioning ahead of earnings, useful for investors but not immediate catalysts. V or MA: Which Is the Better Stock Ahead of Earnings?
- Neutral Sentiment: Several broader-market personal-finance pieces (including a MarketBeat dividend roundup) reference dividend and income ideas but are unrelated to Visa’s fundamentals; they can affect investor attention but not Visa’s core outlook. This Cheap Dividend Just Jumped 13.6% (and We’re Buying)
- Neutral Sentiment: A local consumer report about fraud on a Visa-branded gift card underscores payment-fraud headlines that occasionally create reputational noise but are not material to Visa’s network economics. Ann Arbor woman warns others after money on Visa gift card goes to Draft Kings in Boston
- Negative Sentiment: Political pressure resurfaced: President Trump has publicly backed measures to curb swipe/merchant fees and advance credit-card competition legislation, triggering investor concern that regulatory caps or legislative changes could compress Visa’s fee revenue. Trump Is Taking Aim at Credit Card Swipe Fees. Should You Ditch Visa Stock ASAP?
- Negative Sentiment: News outlets report Visa shares slipped after Trump’s backing of the Credit Card Competition Act — investors are re-pricing regulatory risk for networks and issuers. Visa Shares Slip As Trump Backs Credit Card Competition Act
- Negative Sentiment: Broader coverage (Reuters, Barchart) notes U.S. bank and card-related stocks fell as investors awaited clarity on a potential 10% cap on credit card interest rates and other rule-making tied to the administration’s deadline — a macro/regulatory risk that can weigh on Visa’s volume and issuer economics indirectly. US bank stocks fall as investors weigh credit card rate cap deadline
- Negative Sentiment: Multiple consumer media pieces revisited swipe-fee scrutiny, keeping regulatory headlines in the spotlight and sustaining short-term selling pressure on Visa and peers. Trump Is Taking Aim at Credit Card Swipe Fees. Should You Ditch Visa Stock ASAP?
Insiders Place Their Bets
In other Visa news, CEO Ryan Mcinerney sold 10,485 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction dated Friday, January 2nd. The shares were sold at an average price of $349.18, for a total value of $3,661,152.30. Following the transaction, the chief executive officer owned 9,401 shares in the company, valued at approximately $3,282,641.18. The trade was a 52.73% decrease in their ownership of the stock. The transaction was disclosed in a legal filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which can be accessed through the SEC website. Also, insider Paul D. Fabara sold 2,172 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction dated Friday, November 21st. The shares were sold at an average price of $325.93, for a total transaction of $707,919.96. Following the transaction, the insider directly owned 26,413 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $8,608,789.09. This trade represents a 7.60% decrease in their ownership of the stock. Additional details regarding this sale are available in the official SEC disclosure. Insiders have sold a total of 24,042 shares of company stock valued at $8,247,289 in the last quarter. Insiders own 0.12% of the company’s stock.
Hedge Funds Weigh In On Visa
Hedge funds and other institutional investors have recently made changes to their positions in the business. BXM Wealth LLC lifted its position in shares of Visa by 2,111.7% in the 4th quarter. BXM Wealth LLC now owns 32,999 shares of the credit-card processor’s stock worth $11,573,000 after purchasing an additional 31,507 shares during the period. Trust Investment Advisors raised its stake in Visa by 4.4% in the fourth quarter. Trust Investment Advisors now owns 5,342 shares of the credit-card processor’s stock worth $1,873,000 after buying an additional 227 shares in the last quarter. Ethos Financial Group LLC lifted its holdings in Visa by 8.3% in the fourth quarter. Ethos Financial Group LLC now owns 8,144 shares of the credit-card processor’s stock worth $2,856,000 after buying an additional 623 shares during the period. Nvwm LLC boosted its position in Visa by 0.4% during the 4th quarter. Nvwm LLC now owns 14,089 shares of the credit-card processor’s stock valued at $4,941,000 after acquiring an additional 54 shares in the last quarter. Finally, Invesco LLC grew its holdings in shares of Visa by 0.9% during the 4th quarter. Invesco LLC now owns 16,477 shares of the credit-card processor’s stock worth $5,779,000 after acquiring an additional 147 shares during the period. Institutional investors own 82.15% of the company’s stock.
About Visa
Visa Inc is a global payments technology company that facilitates electronic funds transfers and digital commerce by connecting consumers, merchants, financial institutions and governments. The firm operates one of the world’s largest payment networks, providing processing, authorization, clearing and settlement services for credit, debit and prepaid card transactions. Visa’s network-based model enables partner banks and other issuers to offer branded payment products while Visa focuses on the infrastructure, standards and technologies that move money securely and efficiently around the world.
Visa’s product and service portfolio includes card-based payment products for consumers and businesses, real-time push-payment capabilities, tokenization and authentication services, fraud and risk-management tools, data analytics and APIs for fintech and merchant integration.
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