The world's largest payments network operator has beaten
analysts' earnings estimates over the past two years as consumer
spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S.
economic activity, remains at a healthy clip.
Visa's payment volumes rose 9.8 percent to $1.93 trillion, on a
constant dollar basis, with the United States accounting for
about 43 percent of that total.
The card network was also helped by higher stock markets, which
have been consistently hitting records.
Net income rose 11 percent to $2.14 billion in the quarter ended
Sept. 30. Earnings per Class A share rose to 90 cents and beat
analysts' estimates of 85 cents per share, according to Thomson
Reuters I/B/E/S. Visa has topped estimates for eight straight
quarters.
"Visa ended our fiscal year as we began, with strong growth
across payments volume, cross-border volume and processed
transactions, which was bolstered by the addition of Visa
Europe," Chief Executive Alfred Kelly Jr said.
Shares of Visa, a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average,
were up 1.5 percent at $109.98 before the bell.
The stock has climbed 37.6 percent this year as of Tuesday's
close. The shares have outperformed the Dow Jones Industrial
Average Index <.DJI>, which rose 18 percent over the same
period.
Total operating revenue rose 14 percent to $4.86 billion,
beating estimates for the fifth straight quarter, reflecting
growth in payment volumes and processed transactions. http://bit.ly/2z5EEeA
Cross-border volumes – the value of transactions made outside of
the United States – increased 10 percent, on constant dollar
basis. Operating expenses rose marginally to $1.64 billion.
Visa said it expects revenue growth of high-single digits in
2018, on a nominal dollar basis.
Visa's rival, MasterCard <MA.N> reports financial results next
week.
(Reporting By Aparajita Saxena in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio
D'Souza and Bernard Orr)
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