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Why the Visa IPO is so hot

Posted Mar 19 2008, 12:32 PM by Anthony Mirhaydari
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The real reason Wall Street is downright giddy over the historic $18 billion Visa IPO this morning isn’t because the banks that own it are in for a big payday or that it represents a safe haven in a time of market turmoil. Instead, investors want to profit from the slow death of physical money. Cash is no longer king; Long live the charge card!

Already, a majority of retail transactions are done with a card instead of cash. This is up from less than 30% a decade ago. People love the convenience: Visa estimates that contactless card transactions are twice as fast as cash. For all their complaining about interchange fees, retailers love the fact people tend to spend 20% more when using plastic. Americans alone now possess some 1.5 billion credit cards.

The demise of paper notes and coins will only continue. The last refuge of cash has been small transactions like paying a bus fare. Now, even this is threatened. Interchange rates continue to fall. Card terminals are becoming less expensive and more ubiquitous. It’s only a matter of time before just about any purchase can be settled electronically.

Visa is by far the dominant player in this space: According to The Economist, not only are Visa’s interchange rates lower than its competitors, it holds a 60% share of the global payments market—twice that of Mastercard. As for Discover and American Express, since these two issue cards in addition to operating the clearance network, they are exposed to growing levels of consumer credit risk. Mastercard and Visa avoid this since member banks issue the cards.

But this doesn’t mean Visa is totally resistant to the recession. While it’s true that consumers are increasingly turning to plastic for non-discretionary items like groceries, gasoline, and even the electricity bill, card profitability is on the decline. No doubt, as rising credit card defaults squeeze margins, new card issuances will slow. Already carrying an average of 10 cards in their wallet, the American consumer is quickly reaching the point of plastic saturation.

With this in mind, global growth in card purchase volumes is expected to moderate from the 14% rate posted over the last few years. Global transaction growth will slow to 11% through 2012 according to Nilson Report. The United States will slow even more, down to 8%.

And there are some legal issues too: Since 2003, for every dollar of revenue Visa generated, 28 cents was paid out in settlements. Most of the litigation centers on the interchange rates Visa charges to merchants on each transaction and various other antitrust issues.

Given the great multitude yet to be armed with credit cards, especially in Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, I’d throw in with the herd on this one. After all, in Uganda you could still make tax payments with cowrie shells a hundred years ago. By all indications, the same fate awaits the C-note.   

(Disclosure: I don't own any shares of the companies mentioned in this post.)

Comments

 

I've been waiting for this a while, so when I heard about it this morning I jumped way out there and bot me 300 shares. hope it does as well as m/c.  Its an investment. A good one I hope.

          NO RISK, NO REWARD!!!!!  THE ONLY THING THAT CAN DRAGE THIS DOWN IS FURTHER LITIGATION. ALL THE WEALTHY PEOPLE WHO GOT IN AT 44.00 DOLLARS A SHARE ALREADY MADE A FORTUNE. IT ENDED AT 56.50 UP 12.50 PER SHARE TIMES 1,000,000. HUM NOT BAD. THE RICH GET RICHER. LETS HOPE THEY LEAVE SOME ROOM FOR THE MIDDLE CLASS. GET SOME BALLS AND GO FOR A RIDE. GOOD LUCK TO ALL!!!!!!!!!

Buy Visa. Hold for 10 years. Don't ever look at it.  In 10 years you will have 10x your money.  Same goes for Mastercard stocks holders if they bought right away.  They alread 5x their money in 2 years.

BUY IT AND DON"T TOUCH IT FOR 10 YEARS.

Thank you Issac for the vewry enlightening ( 03 10 08 1637 hr) explanation of the way Visa makes its money. gaterboat@plix.com

Here we go again on IPO hype and stock market bubble all over again? please.

An IPO, and money made in a day for a few wealthy investors at the expense

of all other 250,000,000 million Americans is a shame.  Truth: a volatile market,

weak economic times, a War in Iraq, and uncertain times in Wash. DC and USA.

why is it so hot?

hot in a good way?

do you always post the commercials for what you want to hear?

looks like it die like the rest then

They are putting us into debts and will unable to pay our charge card. Another

mortgage crises in our hand. Think before you put yourself in another debt.

Some of you are over-reacting, "The Sky is falling" which is analgous to a total collapse of the economy.  True, sectors are in big trouble but the economic cycle will play out and we may be nearing the bottom of this recession. Money is tight for folks who over-extended themselves and they are using more plastic to compensate for the lack of cash. Big ticket items like houses, cars, insurances and appliances will be eschewed for daily living expenses. This is the area which will rack up most of the Visa charges which should stimulate the stock similiarly to Mastercard. As for the payments themselves, the customers and the banks will eventually have to reach a break even point where each side satisfies their fiduciary responsibilities. As the business cycle recovers, more and better paying jobs will allow consumers to emerge from their financial purgatory.

Also, all of us have seen an old lady and sometimes middlle aged people writing checks at the grocery stores. These people are sticking to what they are comfortable with i.e. old ways. All new generation people prefer to carry cards vs. cash. Just demographics will keep this company growing. They are sort of a broker between the bank and the consumer. They make money regardless of defaults and actually they make more when people charge more on the cards since they are cash strapped.

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