Credit Cards Are Feeling the Crunch [View article]
The Beijing Olympics start in a week. Visa is getting HUGE exposure in Chinese media because of it, and they are on an intense drive to sign up new cardholders there right now. In a country of 1.3 billion people, 50% of whom live in cities.
Now THERE is a growth opportunity if there ever is one!
That's why I'm long on Visa ever since I got in at $56 / share.
They need to hold an Olympic games in India! (another billion people there!)
Visa and Mastercard: The Mortgage Brokers of the Credit Card Industry [View article]
I bought into V and MA precisely because of the recession in the U.S.-- V and MA both do business in plenty of countries where the economy isn't anywhere as bad as the U.S. Half of V's revenue comes from overseas, by the way.
Mastercard, Visa: Q1 Earnings May Be Fine, But Guidance Will Be Weak [View article]
Latest retail reports say that in-store sales are down, but internet sales are UP. That's good news for V and MA, because credit cards are THE preferred method of payment for internet purchases.
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
The $44 IPO price are if you were allocated the shares by one of the underwriters. If you are not a client (or if your broker isn't a client) of one of the underwriters, it would be very difficult to get in on the IPO price.
As far as floats go, Mastercard has 160 million shares floated while Visa has 440 million Class A shares.
Options for Visa are trading right now, but the short interest as percentage of float is very small (I don't think it's even 1%), so no, the shorts are not keeping this stock down. Visa's share price isn't going to change very much until after the first couple quarterly reports come out so investors can better evaluate thie company's performance.
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
to Jon Galt: Actually, Visa does not charge the customer per transaction. The price a consumer pays for a purchase is the same, cash or credit.
And when is the last time you ever saw anyone buy anything with cash on the internet? Plastic will never totally replace cash, but Credit cards are necessary in this day and age.
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
According to Dow Jones Newswire yesterday, the Bank of Brazil sold 56% of their Visa stock yesterday for $250 million USD to window-dress their end-of-quarter results. (Their remaining 43% is locked up for 3 more years.) That was what triggered the drop yesterday afternoon.
Visa, Mastercard Risk Ramped Up Competition [View article]
Just how big a risk is litigation, really?
Microsoft has been sued continuously for the past 15 years for anticompetitive practices everywhere in the world. They are still here and still profitable.
Mastercard faces many of the same litigation Visa is undergoing, and that has not prevented its equity from rising 400%.
It seems to me all you need is a team of lawyers who know how to obfuscate and drag things out, which every multinational corporation has legions of on retainer.
Vast majority of people in China and India are subsistance farmers?
Sorry dude, you must be living in the 1980s. Ever wonder why almost everything you see on Walmart's shelves is labeled "Made in China"?
The chief economic engine driving China today is manufacturing, not subsistence farming, which is why the latest UN population report says 40% of China's population live in urban areas.
Visa stands to get a huge market share boost during the Beijing Olympics this year-- They are the exclusive payment system for the Olympics (sorry, they don't take Mastercard or American Express), and Visa's commercials and branding will be flooding Chinese TVs this summer.
Maybe that's why Visa chose to go public during these troubled times.
Credit Cards Are Feeling the Crunch [View article]
Now THERE is a growth opportunity if there ever is one!
That's why I'm long on Visa ever since I got in at $56 / share.
They need to hold an Olympic games in India! (another billion people there!)
Visa and Mastercard: The Mortgage Brokers of the Credit Card Industry [View article]
Mastercard, Visa: Q1 Earnings May Be Fine, But Guidance Will Be Weak [View article]
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
Personally, I would be inclined to hold until after 4th Quarter to see what effects the Beijing Olympics will have on Visa.
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
As far as floats go, Mastercard has 160 million shares floated while Visa has 440 million Class A shares.
Options for Visa are trading right now, but the short interest as percentage of float is very small (I don't think it's even 1%), so no, the shorts are not keeping this stock down. Visa's share price isn't going to change very much until after the first couple quarterly reports come out so investors can better evaluate thie company's performance.
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
Actually, Visa does not charge the customer per transaction. The price a consumer pays for a purchase is the same, cash or credit.
And when is the last time you ever saw anyone buy anything with cash on the internet? Plastic will never totally replace cash, but Credit cards are necessary in this day and age.
Visa: The Most Successful New Stock in Years? [View article]
Visa IPO Aftermath: Europe’s in Trouble, China’s Buying in Bulk [View article]
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Virtually all of the cards issued in that network in China are Visas or Mastercards.
Visa, Mastercard Risk Ramped Up Competition [View article]
Microsoft has been sued continuously for the past 15 years for anticompetitive practices everywhere in the world. They are still here and still profitable.
Mastercard faces many of the same litigation Visa is undergoing, and that has not prevented its equity from rising 400%.
It seems to me all you need is a team of lawyers who know how to obfuscate and drag things out, which every multinational corporation has legions of on retainer.
Credit Cards by Country [View article]
Vast majority of people in China and India are subsistance farmers?
Sorry dude, you must be living in the 1980s. Ever wonder why almost everything you see on Walmart's shelves is labeled "Made in China"?
The chief economic engine driving China today is manufacturing, not subsistence farming, which is why the latest UN population report says 40% of China's population live in urban areas.
Visa stands to get a huge market share boost during the Beijing Olympics this year-- They are the exclusive payment system for the Olympics (sorry, they don't take Mastercard or American Express), and Visa's commercials and branding will be flooding Chinese TVs this summer.
Maybe that's why Visa chose to go public during these troubled times.