Visa‘s first-quarter profit beat Wall Street estimates on Thursday, as easing concerns about an economic slowdown and discounts encouraged customers to splurge during the holiday shopping season.
Retailers offered deep discounts on everything from apparel to toys and luxury products to lure cost-conscious consumers while online sales remained strong thanks to a boom in mobile shopping.
Payments volume – a gauge of overall consumer and business spending on Visa’s network – jumped 9 per cent, while revenue rose 10 per cent to USD 9.5 billion in the quarter.
Shares of the world’s largest payments processor were up nearly 1 per cent in after the bell trading.
Visa also benefited from strong domestic and international travel demand, driven by improved pricing and the absence of severe weather-related disruptions.
Cross-border volume excluding intra-Europe, a measure of international travel demand, jumped 16 per cent. Processed transactions rose 11 per cent in the quarter.
The San Francisco, California-based company posted an adjusted profit of USD 2.75 per share, in the three months ended Dec. 31. Analysts on average had expected USD 2.66 per share, according to data compiled by LSEG.
SPENDING OUTLOOK
“Visa’s strong first-quarter results reflected healthy spending during the holiday season and improving trends in payments volume, cross-border volume, and processed transactions growth,” said Visa CEO Ryan McInerney in a statement. Although higher-for-longer interest rates were expected to be a dampener, Consumer spending continues to be underpinned by a solid labor market and continued wage growth,.
The bodes well for Visa and rival Mastercard as they pocket a small fee off each transaction on their networks.
Mastercard earlier in the day reported a fourth-quarter profit that beat Wall Street estimates as consumers ramped up spending during the holiday season.
Shares of both companies had underperformed the broader markets in 2024 on worries that a slowdown in major global economies could hurt the sector.
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