Visa and stablecoin infrastructure provider startup Bridge are partnering to offer stablecoin-linked Visa cards to customers across multiple countries in Latin America, which the companies say will allow users to make everyday purchases in cryptocurrency tokens.
V continues to witness growth in payment and cross-border volumes. It returns $5.6 billion to shareholders in the fiscal second quarter via share buybacks & dividends.
Here's our initial take on Visa's (V -0.46%) fiscal 2025 second-quarter financial report.
Visa Inc. (NYSE:V ) Q2 2025 Earnings Conference Call April 29, 2025 5:00 PM ET Company Participants Jennifer Como - Senior Vice President & Global Head, Investor Relations Ryan McInerney - Chief Executive Officer Chris Suh - Chief Financial Officer Conference Call Participants Tien-Tsin Huang - JPMorgan James Faucette - Morgan Stanley Sanjay Sakhrani - KBW Andrew Schmidt - Citi Will Nance - Goldman Sachs Timothy Chiodo - UBS Darrin Peller - Wolfe Research Jason Kupferberg - Bank of America Bryan Keane - Deutsche Bank Adam Frisch - Evercore ISI Ramsey El-Assal - Barclays Harshita Rawat - Bernstein Operator Welcome to Visa's Fiscal Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. All participants are in a listen-only mode until the question-and-answer session.
Spending growth has been strongest among the affluent, but Visa has seen resilient trends overall.
While the top- and bottom-line numbers for Visa (V) give a sense of how the business performed in the quarter ended March 2025, it could be worth looking at how some of its key metrics compare to Wall Street estimates and year-ago values.
Major indexes gains from 0.5-0.75% in today's trading, on a plethora of data across many realms of the market.
Visa (V) came out with quarterly earnings of $2.76 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $2.68 per share. This compares to earnings of $2.51 per share a year ago.
Visa (V) reported fiscal second-quarter results that beat analysts' expectations and announced a $30 billion stock buyback program.
Ccross-border volume and processed transactions rose 13% and 9%, respectively. Those healthy trends drove the company's overall revenue growth, Chief Executive Ryan McInerney said.
Visa (V) is on deck to report earnings after the close. Caroline Woods talks about how the credit card company will highlight consumer spending trends.
Visa is a high-quality, long-term buy despite a forward P/E of nearly 30x, with potential for solid upside over the next 12–24 months. Economic uncertainty and potential tariffs may limit near-term upside, but Visa's strong consumer spending and robust financials support long-term growth. Recent acquisitions of Featurespace and Pismo expected to minimally impact upcoming earnings; Q2 EPS forecasted between $2.70-$2.78 and revenue above $9.6 billion.