Is Visa Stock Too Expensive at $160 Or Is There Even More Upside Here?

Is Visa Stock Too Expensive at $160 Or Is There Even More Upside Here?

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Payments processor Visa (NYSE:V) has been a gift that keeps on giving for investors who’ve held on to their shares. V stock is up roughly 21% so far this year and many believe the firm can keep going. The S&P 500 index is up 13.4% in the same period.

Is Visa Stock Too Expensive at $160 Or Is There Even More Upside Here?
Is Visa Stock Too Expensive at $160 Or Is There Even More Upside Here?

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However, with a price-earnings ratio of 33.1 and a dividend yield that’s below 1%, Visa stock is also an expensive buy. While the V stock price is up there, the company has a lot of room to keep on growing and that make the shares a solid addition to long-term investors’ portfolios.

Payments Processing Goldmine

One of the biggest reasons investors consider Visa stock at all is the fact that the firm is the largest payments processor in the world, as measured by the number of branded cards issued. That’s a big deal because the industry itself has a huge growth runway, so owning the largest beneficiary of that trend has its perks.

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People are abandoning cash and opting instead for credit/debit cards and digital payments. Back in 2016 we saw the number of non-cash purchases overtake cash for the first time, and since then the gap has only gotten wider. Visa has been on the receiving end of a great deal of that growth. In 2018, Visa processed 124 billion transactions on its network — a step up from the 111 billion it facilitated in 2017.

Those rising transaction figures are the reason Visa has been able to consistently produce double-digit growth over the past few years, a trend that most expect to continue throughout the medium term.

Growth Ahead

With the largest number of outstanding cards, Visa has a lot of power over the fees it can charge merchants and it’s used that power to grow its margins. As one of the most widely accepted credit cards, Visa appeals to customers and that in turn makes merchants more willing to pay a premium to accept Visa payments.

It’s also important to recognize that Visa stock isn’t just a credit card play anymore, either. V has also started branching out into the digital payments space with Visa Checkout, and the firm has also took a position in Square (NYSE:SQ), a smaller payments processor with a firm foothold in next-generation payment methods.

Times They Are a’ Changing

Some argue that Visa’s dominance in the payments processing space is actually a negative. The firm’s near duopoly with Mastercard (NYSE:MA) in the credit card space could make it a target for regulatory action, especially as cash payments continue to dwindle and it becomes more and more necessary to have a credit card on-hand.