How Much Upside Can V Stock Deliver?

+5.15%
Upside
322
Market
339
Trefis
V: Visa logo
V
Visa

Visa (V) stock trades at $322.03 per share, a market cap of $582.2B, and 26.2x trailing earnings. Is that a fair price, or is there more going on here?

Where V Sits Today

  • Valuation: P/E of 26.2 versus a 3-year average of 29.2 and a 3-year high of 33.9.
  • Revenue: Revenue grew 14.4% over the last 12 months, with a 3-year CAGR of 11.6%.
  • Net Margin: Running at 51.7% LTM, against a 3-year average of 52.4% and a 3-year peak of 55.0%.

While the table below shows the same picture in one place, you can internalize V’s current state better with a more detailed financial picture.

V
Sector Financials
Industry Transaction & Payment Processing Services
P/E Ratio 26.2
P/E Ratio 3Y Avg 29.2
LTM* Revenue Growth 14.4%
3Y Avg Revenue Growth 11.6%
LTM* Net Margin 51.7%
3Y Peak Net Margin 55.0%
3Y Avg Net Margin 52.4%

*LTM: Last Twelve Months

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Trefis: V Stock Insights

Revenue Compounding Does The Work

V has accelerated recently, but at these levels, gravity eventually takes over. We will not extrapolate peak performance and instead apply a structural fade to project 12.2% annually.

Even with these conservative guardrails, compounding moves the earnings base enough to deliver the upside here. Margins and multiples are not asked to stretch.

The 3-Year Math

A straightforward scenario, not a forecast. Here is what the numbers look like.

  • Revenue grows at 12.2% annually (applying a structural fade to recent peak acceleration) and reaches $60.8B from $43.0B today.
  • Net Margin holds near the current 51.7% level.
  • Earnings combine the two. The base moves to roughly $31.5B from $22.2B today, about a 42% jump.
  • P/E holds near 26.2. No re-rating up, as that makes sense in cases of meaningfully accelerated revenue or EPS growth projections. The upside rests entirely on earnings execution.

Apply the projected multiple to the projected earnings base: the stock price lands near $456.92, a market cap of $826.1B against $582.2B today. That is roughly 42% above where the stock trades now.

Revenue compounding might be the key to V’s upside going forward. But did the same lever drive its recent move or was it something different?

What Has To Be True

The scenario assumes growth of 12.2% annually, intentionally faded below the LTM 14.4% pace. What has to be true is that growth settles at or above this modest rate. If it collapses entirely, the multiple in our scenario becomes hard to defend.

Worth flagging: V share count is down about 12% over the last 3 years. That buyback pace means even flat net income translates to rising EPS, compounding with whatever the main scenario delivers.

The 3-year horizon is a convenience. Whether this plays out over 3 years or 5, the stock price is likely to respond in a similar direction, as long as the trajectory holds.

When One Stock Isn’t The Whole Answer

A careful 3-year case on a single name is still a concentrated bet, as analysis of its volatility during past market crises shows. Investors who build analyses like this on individual positions often want the same framework running across a diversified book – partly for discipline, partly because even the cleanest single-stock thesis can break for reasons the math does not capture.

The Trefis High Quality (HQ) Portfolio combines analytical rigor with a forward-looking view across 30 stocks, with a consistent selection framework and a sizing and rebalancing discipline designed to deliver upside without the single-name risk you just read through here.

By selecting 30 high-conviction stocks, the HQ strategy has historically outpaced the S&P 500, S&P Mid-cap, and Russell 2000.