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Apr 23, 2024

Visa profit climbs 17% as consumer credit-card spending grows

Reasons to invest in household names like Visa and Coca-Cola over big tech

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Visa Inc. reported a quarterly profit that beat Wall Street predictions as U.S. credit-card spending climbed.

Adjusted net income for the fiscal second quarter rose 17 per cent to US$5.1 billion, or $2.51 a share, Visa said Tuesday in a statement. That was 7 cents more than the average estimate of analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

In the U.S., where Visa gets more than 40 per cent of its revenue, credit-card spending grew 6.2 per cent from a year earlier. Worldwide payments volume climbed 8 per cent and total processed transactions rose 11 per cent.

“We remain focused on the trillions of dollars of opportunity in consumer payments and new flows and on continuing to deepen our partnerships with clients around the world,” Chief Executive Officer Ryan McInerney said in the statement. 

Visa forecast net revenue growth for the current quarter in the low double-digit range. Its full-year forecast remains unchanged.

Shares of San Francisco-based Visa rose 3.2 per cent to $282.80 in extended trading at 4:44 p.m. in New York. The stock had climbed 5.3 per cent this year through the close of regular trading.

In March, Visa and smaller rival Mastercard Inc. agreed to cap swipe fees and allow U.S. merchants to charge consumers extra for using credit cards — a deal that retailers said would save them at least $30 billion over five years. The pact, one of the most significant antitrust settlements ever, followed a legal fight spanning almost two decades and remains subject to court approval. 

The bulk of those fees, also known as interchange, are passed on to card-issuing banks that use the revenue in part to fund customer rewards programs.

Other second-quarter highlights:

  • Revenue climbed 10 per cent from a year prior to $8.8 billion, exceeding Wall Street estimates
  • Operating expense increased 29 per cent to $3.4 billion, more than the $2.89 billion average estimate of analysts in the Bloomberg survey