Is Visa Stock Still a Long-Term Buy After 30%+ Run?

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V Stock - Is Visa Stock Still a Long-Term Buy After 30%+ Run?

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Visa (NYSE:V), stock is up more than 30% over the past year, stoked, in part, by Federal Reserve rate hikes that have translated into higher profit margins for credit card companies. The overall fundamental strength of the company has also been the catalyst behind the V stock returns.

The world’s largest retail electronic payments network, Visa, is expected to report earnings on Apr. 24. There could be some volatility and profit-taking in V stock in April, especially as many other financial services firms also report in the coming weeks. However, I’d encourage long-term investors who would like exposure to the sector to regard any dip in the share price as an opportunity to add Visa stock to their portfolio.

Long-Term V Stock Strengths

Robust Fundamental Numbers: Visa is a quality blue-chip company with a $345 billion market cap. The group does not issue credit cards or lend money. Instead, the company operates as an “intermediary,” charging a fee on each of the 150 million transactions its network handles every day.

Visa has three sources of revenue:

  • Service revenues (for services provided to card issuers for the use of Visa products);
  • Data processing revenues (fees Visa collects for the authorization, settlement, or clearing); and,
  • International transaction revenues (for cross-border and currency conversion transactions).

Visa’s revenue for the quarter ending Dec. 31, 2018 was $5.51 billion, a 13.25% increase year-over-year. The company saw double-digit growth in payments volume, cross-border volume and processed transactions for Q4 and full-year.

As one of the major credit and debit card processors, Visa has strong pricing power and a good profit margin that stands at almost 55%. Visa’s leadership position in the industry requires financial flexibility so that the management can continue the growth-centric steps. Its current ratio, which measures Visa’s ability to pay off short-term liabilities with its current assets, is a healthy 1.65.

Wall Street expects Visa’s profitability and robust financial metrics to continue in the coming quarters, too — a fact that should bring higher prices for V stock.

Mobile Payments Space: Many of us have already paid for something with our smartphones at least once as mobile payments are fast becoming a convenient and swift method to pay bills or make transfers. Analysts expect the global market to reach $4.5 trillion by 2023.

The most widely used transaction methods include contactless payments without entering the credit card PIN number at the point-of-sale or using a smartphone to pay a merchant or even a person such as a friend or family member, i.e., peer-to-peer (P2P) payments.

If you are looking at ways to benefit from this trend, Visa may be a solid company to consider. It’s been boosting its mobile payment offerings. As early as 2011, the group took a stake in Square (NYSE:SQ), the San Francisco-based credit card processing fintech, which was founded in 2009. There are rumors that Visa may end up acquiring Square.

Its other strategic investments include Stripe and Marqeta. It’s currently bidding to buy Earthport, a British payments company.

Over the past decade, smartphones have become a part of our daily lives and it would not be wrong to expect mobile payments to enter our daily lives in a big way. In other words, as more consumers tap to pay or download an app to transfer money, Visa investors are likely to reap the rewards.

What Could Derail Visa Stock?

Short-term Technical Analysis and Price Charts: Year-to-date, Visa is up 19%. So, in the next few weeks, there might be some profit taking in V stock. As a result of the recent impressive run-up in the stock price, short-term technical indicators have become somewhat over-extended. Investors who pay attention to short-term oscillators should note that Visa’s technical message has also become “overbought.”

In April and May, Visa stock could trade sideways for several weeks, and even have a pullback toward the low-$140’s or even mid-$130’s level, where the stock is likely to find major support.

Visa stock’s beta is 0.99, which means its volatility on average mimics that of the broader market. Therefore if the industry or the broader market declines as the companies release earnings, V stock price may also be adversely affected.

If you already own Visa shares, you might want to hold your position. That said, if you are worried about short-term profit taking, then within the parameters of your portfolio allocation and risk/return profile, you may consider placing a stop loss at about 3-5% below the current price point, to protect your profits to date.

I would not advocate bottom-picking in case of near-term price weakness. Yet, I find Visa stock to be a compelling buy candidate and by the end of 2020, I’d expect the shares to reach $185.

Competition in the Mobile Payment Payments Space: The fintech revolution is evolving and the entire payments industry is growing fast. In addition to Visa, several other U.S. companies are leading the mobile-payment race that requires cutting-edge technology. In October 2014, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) introduced Apple Pay which has now become one of the dominant digital payment apps in the U.S.

In the P2P space, investors love PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) which owns the popular Venmo app. The app has over 25 million users and is ahead of its closest competitors — Apple’s Pay Cash, Square’s Cash App, and Zelle, which is owned by Early Warning Services, a private fintech company.

If there are other strong earnings reports or news from Visa’s competitors hit the wires, there may be short-term volatility or decline in V stock price. However, Visa is a solid company with continued growth prospects in mobile payments. Therefore small price dips on daily headlines should not keep long-term investors up at night.

Bottom Line on Visa Stock

Visa stock is a fundamentally sound stalwart investment with further growth prospects, leadership in the respective market, and proactive management — factors that are likely to translate into a strong balance sheet and robust bottom line in the rest of the decade.

Investors who are interested in financial services, but do not want to commit all their capital to a single stock such as Visa may also consider investing in various exchange-traded Funds (ETFs) that have Visa as a holding, including iShares U.S. Financial Services ETF (NYSEARCA:IYG), ISE Mobile Payments ETF (NYSEARCA:IPAY), or Vanguard Information Technology ETF (NYSEARCA:VGT).

As of this writing, Tezcan Gecgil did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.

Tezcan Gecgil, PhD, began contributing to InvestorPlace in 2018. She brings over 20 years of experience in the U.S. and U.K. and has also completed all 3 levels of the Chartered Market Technician (CMT) examination. Publicly, she has contributed to investing.com and the U.K. website of The Motley Fool.


Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, https://investorplace.com/2019/04/is-visa-stock-still-a-long-term-buy-after-30-run/.

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