Quote from THE-BEAKER:
i think in viewing the credit card companies as a buy in ' a recession ' due to the fact that they do quite well in these periods traditionally and historically could be a major mistake.
in the past this worked as people would fall back on credit cards and small loans to help them through difficult periods.
the credit card companies and small loan co's would obviously do quite well with a surge in fees and interest etc etc.
however that was on the old model and this is now the new economy.
as amex just found out recently default rates this time round are a lot higher.
i think the big difference is previously households never had existing credit card debts and certainly equity extraction was not common place where as now everybody has 4/5/6 credit cards with an exsiting loan, a car on the finance and also taken out $50k equity withdrawal to finance the last few years.
sadly the credit card companies are starting to realise this where as the market has wised up to this already.
hence their lower share prices.
Quote from NoDoji:
I think a lot of the concern is over pending legislation about credit card merchant fees. In our very weak economy, merchants are complaining at length about the effects of these fees. This is the bread and butter of V and MA, so anything that would limit these fees would have a negative effect on their growth. However, as a merchant, you have have many processors to choose from at varying fee levels, so I'm not sure how in a free market economy legislation could be enacted that would in some way affect this.
Quote from trendlover:
VISA plan for its IPO was to put first $3 billion aside for pending lawsuit. They are the big player in emerging markets, but waiting for new litigation on how they market.
China has its own credit card system.
VISA has no exposure to default of payments, that is on banks that issue the card. VISA makes money on the transactions and processing. I like this for a longer term hold.
Quote from sophiekay:
I own V as part of my Long Term Portfolio.
Here is what happened. VISA and MA settled a lawsuit with AMEX over being shut out of the debit card business. When you are a monopoly, like VISA and MA you have to appease the Gods every now and then.
Now, VISA took the charge last year before it went public. MA just took the charge this quarter. Everyone knew it was coming. It has nothing to do with the strength of MA and VISA's businesses.
Visa took a hit due to MA.
Quote from eveningtrader:
In my understand, VISA is owns by the banks.