Visa Quarterly Profit Jumps 73 Percent Amid Recession

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MARK JEWELL | 07/29/09 06:54 PM | AP

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A Visa sticker is shown at a business Wednesday, July 29, 2009, in Detroit. Visa Inc., reports second quarter earnings at the close of the market, Wednesday.(AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

BOSTON — Visa Inc. on Wednesday said its fiscal third-quarter profit jumped nearly 73 percent, as recent cost-cutting helped offset declining payment processing volume driven down by the recession.

Executives with the world's largest electronic payment network said they see recent stabilization in the economy. They offered a slightly more optimistic outlook for Visa's fiscal fourth quarter, citing recent moderation in the payment volume decline.

"The velocity of the downturn has slowed," Chief Financial Officer Byron Pollitt told analysts on a conference call, adding that it was too early to characterize the shift as a broad economic turnaround.

San Francisco-based Visa reported net income of $729 million, or 97 cents per share, for the three months ended June 30. That's up from a profit of $422 million, or 51 cents per share, in the year-ago period.

Excluding one-time items including a gain from Visa's sale of an interest in its Brazilian affiliate, Visa's adjusted quarterly profit was $507 million, or 67 cents per share.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expected a profit of 67 cents per share. Analysts' estimates typically exclude one-time items.

Visa's revenue rose 2 percent to nearly $1.65 billion, slightly above analysts' forecast of about $1.64 billion.

Visa said operating expenses fell nearly 15 percent to $824 million in the latest quarter after a cost-cutting campaign trimmed personnel and marketing costs. Adjusted for one-time items, the decline in operating expenses was more modest, at 9 percent.

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The reduced expenses boosted the company's profit margin. But that gain was partly offset by a 5 percent decline in payments volume, to $617 billion for the three months ended March 31, excluding the effects of currency fluctuations. Visa reports some operational results on a three-month lag.

U.S. payments volume fell 2.5 percent from the year-ago period.

But Chairman and CEO Joseph Saunders said Visa was encouraged that dropping volume has recently eased, remaining in "a relatively tight range," with declines of 2 percent to 4 percent throughout this calendar year.

Accounting for currency movements, payments volume continued to grow in all other regions outside the U.S. in the latest quarter. Other regions of the world are increasingly embracing credit and debit payments over cash and checks.

Total cards carrying the Visa brands rose 6 percent over a year ago, to more than 1.7 billion.

Visa earns revenue primarily from fees it charges to process payments made with credit and debit cards, which has enabled it to weather the recession better than banks that issue credit cards and make loans.

Visa continued to report increasing U.S. reliance on debit transactions rather than credit in the latest quarter, as consumers become more conservative.

Visa also has recently seen U.S. consumers spend less per transaction, although Pollitt told analysts Wednesday that trend leveled off in the fiscal third quarter.

Visa had previously forecast fiscal fourth-quarter revenue would grow in the low single digits in percentage terms. But Saunders said Wednesday that gain is "more likely to be in the mid-single digit range," based on recent results and the company's updated outlook.

For the full year, Visa reaffirmed expectations for revenue growth in the high single digits. For next year, that growth is forecast at the lower end of the 11 percent to 15 percent range, depending on the pace of economic recovery.

Visa slightly raised another aspect of its forecast, with expectations for an annual adjusted operating profit margin in the low 50 percent range through next year. That's up from the company's previous guidance of the high 40 percent to low 50 percent range.

Visa reported earnings after its shares rose 48 cents to close at $66.78. In after-hours trading, shares fell 73 cents, or 1 percent, to $66.05. The stock has traded in a 52-week range of $41.78 to $78.90.

The latest period was Visa's fifth full quarter as a public company. Visa went public in March 2008 in the biggest U.S. IPO ever. The launch came just as the U.S. economy fell deeper into a recession that is turning out to be longer-lasting and more far-reaching than most analysts had expected.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects lede and headlines to show earnings gain of nearly 73 percent, sted 72 percent. UPDATES with comment from earnings conference call, other details. ADDS photo numbers.)

BOSTON — Visa Inc. on Wednesday said its fiscal third-quarter profit jumped nearly 73 percent, as recent cost-cutting helped offset declining payment processing volume driven down by the recessi...
BOSTON — Visa Inc. on Wednesday said its fiscal third-quarter profit jumped nearly 73 percent, as recent cost-cutting helped offset declining payment processing volume driven down by the recessi...
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It's really very simple, but many of you would prefer to whine about corporate greed instead: If you don't like their fees, don't do business with them. Use cash.

Oh, consumer choice. What a novel concept.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 AM on 07/31/2009

American taxpayer monies at work to dig the hole of indebtedness deeper. Bush redux.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 PM on 07/30/2009
- robbep I'm a Fan of robbep 23 fans permalink

Ah life is good. The banks are making huge profits and giving huge bonuses, the healthcare companies are making money hand over fist, Visa has huge profits, and we are firing lower and middle class workers everyday. It is good to be king of Yokel nation. The rich keep getting richer and the yokels make sure it stays that way.


What is a yokel? A person of lower or middle class income that fights tirelessly against his interest to protect the rights of the rich. Example of this wld be Joe the Plumber, he PRETENDED he was a business owner in order to attack Obama's tax plan with his right wing ideology. Even though in reality Obama's tax plan BENEFITED Joe more than McCain's did he still cldnt resist the urge to fight against his own interest. And for his loyalty he was paraded around the country by the republicans so other yokels cld see the rewards of fighting against their interest. You can usually find a yokel watching Foxx or listening to Rush and Glen or here on this blog repeating what they just learned from Rush or Glen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 07/30/2009
- jason10006 I'm a Fan of jason10006 2 fans permalink

Wow you guys just don't know a thing about Visa. Visa and MasterCard have NOTHING whatsoever to do with your credit card rates. That is the bank. Visa charges stores, restaurants, hotels, and other merchants a percentage of the transaction cost every time you buy. They make 0.00% of their money from your credit card interest payments and fees. 100% of that money goes to your bank, or the bank managing your card for your card issuer (airline, hotel, whatever.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 PM on 07/30/2009

Visa increased the rate that they charge merchandisers for their service. It's not that it doesn't affect the people -- it affects them through higher prices when the merchants pass the charges onto the consumer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 07/30/2009

ah but shouldnt your businesses just eat some of the costs and pass the savings to the consumer. who said the businesses should profit too much?

ah but if Visa makes profits its bad, if businesses make profits, its all in days work ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 07/30/2009

Vote with your money....don't do business with companies you don't like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 07/30/2009

21 st century usury...

hat tip to http://www.iamned.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 07/30/2009
- fcsakes I'm a Fan of fcsakes 92 fans permalink
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I guess raising rates and adding fees really helps. Good for you Visa!. You understand of course, that the people most impacted by your greed are older Americans living on a fixed income. Prices have increased so much on virtually everything that many are forced to use their credit cards in order to make it through the month. Adding that extra burden on the backs of people who have lost their jobs and/or their homes too, hey, clever thinking Visa. Good, sound business practices, right?

But, hey, the only thing that matters are those shareholders, right Visa?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 07/30/2009

Amid ridiculous fees in all forms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 07/30/2009
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Too many of you are confusing the Visa and Mastercard networks with the banks that issue the cards and set the lending terms. They aren't the same thing. Your 30+% usury interest rate hike comes from the issuing loansha-- I mean bank, not Visa or Mastercard themselves. Visa/MC don't receive any income from your interest rate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 07/30/2009

But they did raise their fees to merchants, who in turn raised their prices. It means we are paying for their profits!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 07/30/2009

the merchants should just eat some of those costs. who says they should make "too much" profits too :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 07/30/2009

Folks, the DUTCH system is NOT govt funded ...its all private.

What part of that don't you understand??

The govt DOES set the laws on the PRIVATE insurers though.

All they have to do is pass ONE stinking LAW.............Just one to get the free market ball rolling.

Make it a felony for any insurance company to deny coverage and limit premiums to maximum 150 dollars a month with a deductible of 150 dollars a year.

That is what we have in Holland for the best health care on earth ( no waiting in crappy offices).

You can do it America............................if you portend to be the ''greatest nation on earth''.

The moment a law like that were passed the economy would start to boom BECUASE it would free up both employers and employees. MORE FREEDOM and more MONEY.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 AM on 07/30/2009
- CTG I'm a Fan of CTG permalink

VISA does charge fees directly to cardholders!

I pay my bill in full every month. I got my VISA bill yesterday, and there were 'finance charges' on it. Turns out these are 3.5% fees VISA charges card-holders for international transactions. We didn't go out of the country - these were on line purchases, priced in US dollars. Companies doing e-business in the USA, with dot-com web sites (not dot-CA or dot-GB) and on the right site page you can see where the company is based, but not that these companies have NO US operations to process your transaction. One company is a wholely-owned subsidiary of Amazon (a US company) based in Canada, the other company is based in Great Brittain. I'm uncertain there was any currancy exchange provided by VISA, since the transaction was in US dollars.

I called Target (it's their branded card) and was told VISA charges the fees for all international transactions. It's in the disclosure form you get with the terms and conditions - that fine print unreadable without a magnifying glass. And they get lots of calls from people who are buying things on EBAY or by pay-pal and are surprised to get charged the fees. (As if they doesn't indicate there is an information gap!) Of course it's the consumer's obligation to find out if this is an international payment, not theirs.

SO VISA CHARGES TRANSACTION FEES DIRECTLY TO CARDHOLDERS.

Be careful with online purchases .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 AM on 07/30/2009

there is no DOT GB, its dot co.uk.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:49 AM on 07/30/2009
- DustinTime I'm a Fan of DustinTime 64 fans permalink

They just precipitously raise rates on existing debt while refusing to lend more, thusly gouging non-defaulting customers still struggling to remain above water. They got the sheep into the pen. Now the gate is closed.

Simple formula.

And what are the victims to do about it? Complain to their government?

Yeah, good luck with that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 07/30/2009
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right argument, wrong topic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 07/30/2009
- YewNeekId I'm a Fan of YewNeekId 26 fans permalink

Great work Obama. Wall Street loves you. Have another beer

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 AM on 07/30/2009
- Bude I'm a Fan of Bude 166 fans permalink
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I thought you guys were against regulations?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 07/30/2009
- Bude I'm a Fan of Bude 166 fans permalink
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Doesn't look like change, more like same.

It's not the yets that will get you, it's the agains.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 07/30/2009
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As Arianna says, we are socializing losses while privatizing gains. We let these feudalistic fiefdoms, we call banks, rob us both with ripoff interest rates and federal bailouts.

You don't need a bank !! Find a credit union

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 AM on 07/30/2009
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