Bloomberg
Visa Inc had to shell out more money to entice banks to issue their cards on the company’s network.
The firm set aside $1.69 billion in incentives for banks during its fiscal fourth quarter, a 13% increase from a year ago, that topped the $1.51 billion average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
The world’s largest payments network — which earlier this year inked a 10-year deal with JPMorgan Chase & Co for the lender’s cards — had warned that it will spend more pursuing such agreements.
The company offered fresh guidance for its fiscal year. Investors can expect client incentives to be 22.5% to 23.5% of gross revenues while net revenue may grow by a percentage in the low double digits.
Visa has seen a slowdown in cross-border spending this year as trade tensions and a stronger US dollar hindered foreign consumers’ spending in the US.
That showed signs of continuing: Overseas spending on the firm’s network climbed by 7%, missing the 7.5% average of analyst estimates.
The stock had climbed 34% this year through the close of trading last week, compared with the 32% advance of the 68-company S&P 500 Information Technology Index. Visa said spending on the firm’s cards climbed 9% to $2.27 trillion, missing the $2.28 trillion average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.