Visa's profits rose at an impressive clip in its most recent quarter.
New stablecoin and agentic artificial intelligence (AI) tools should fuel the digital commerce titan's growth.
Shares of Visa (NYSE: V) surged on Wednesday after the credit and debit card giant delivered better-than-expected financial results.
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Visa's net revenue jumped 17% year over year to $11.2 billion in the quarter ended March 31.
Total payment cards rose 6% to 5.1 billion. Processed transactions climbed 9% to 66.1 billion. Total payment volume also increased by 9% to a staggering $3.7 trillion.
"Consumer spending remained resilient, and our strategy and innovations fueled strong performance in consumer payments, commercial and money movement solutions, and value-added services," CEO Ryan McInerney said in a press release.
That was a relief to investors who feared that higher energy prices would force consumers to pull back on spending.
In all, Visa's adjusted net income leaped 17% to $6.3 billion, while stock repurchases helped to drive its per-share earnings higher by 20% to $3.31. That topped Wall Street's expectations, which had called for adjusted earnings per share of $3.10.
These strong results prompted Visa to lift its full-year profit forecast. Management now sees the fintech provider's earnings rising by a low-teens percentage, up from a prior estimate of mid-to-high-single-digit growth.
Visa made additional announcements that should help to fuel its expansion. The digital payments leader added five blockchains to its global stablecoin settlement system. Visa also rolled out its AI agent-driven commerce program in the Asia Pacific and Latin America markets.
"We continued to enhance our Visa as a Service stack, including with agentic and stablecoin capabilities, to further strengthen our position as the leading hyperscaler of payments globally and drive growth for years to come," McInerney said.
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Joe Tenebruso has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Visa. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.