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Visa beats quarterly profit estimates on resilient consumer spending

Visa (V-N) beat estimates ​for Wall Street profit on Tuesday ‌as the world’s largest payment processor benefited from a steady rise in payment volumes despite ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty, sending its shares up about 4% in extended trading.

U.S. consumer ⁠spending rose ​more than expected in March as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran boosted gasoline prices and receipts at service stations, while tax refunds supported spending elsewhere.

Payments volume, a gauge of overall consumer and business spending on Visa’s ​network, jumped 9% in the second quarter.

“Consumer spending ‌remained resilient, and our strategy and innovations fueled strong performance in consumer payments, commercial and money movement solutions and value-added services,” said CEO Ryan McInerney in a statement.

Visa, which operates a digital payments network across more than 200 countries and territories and is ‌used by ​billions for everyday transactions, ‌is well positioned to weather any potential economic downturn.

The company’s business model is ​insulated as it depends on transaction volumes ⁠rather than credit risk, allowing strength at the top end of ⁠the income spectrum to offset softness at the bottom.

Data processing revenue came in at US$5.54 billion, ​up 18% from the year-ago period.

American Express, which generally caters to affluent customers, also beat Wall Street estimates for first-quarter profit last week as its wealthy customer base splurged on travel and entertainment, lifting its card spending growth to the highest in three years.

Mastercard, ⁠the company’s direct peer, is expected to report its quarterly earnings later in the week.

Visa’s cross-border volume in the second quarter rose 12% on a constant-dollar basis, down slightly from the 13% it reported in the year-earlier quarter.

The company’s cross-border indicators, viewed as a real-time gauge of global ⁠trade and travel, are closely monitored by analysts and ​economists. Investors were closely awaiting this metric in the run-up to the second ⁠quarter earnings.

Tensions in the Middle East have disrupted global trade and travel, as airspace closures and rerouted ‌shipping lanes hit supply chains.

Visa’s board of directors authorized a new $20 billion multi-year share ​repurchase program on Tuesday.

The company’s adjusted net income rose to $6.3 billion, or $3.31 per share, in the three months ended March 31, compared with $5.44 billion, or $2.76 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts were expecting a profit ​of $3.10 per share, according to estimates compiled by LSEG.

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