V

Visa Price

V
$309,94
-$4,00(-%1,27)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-21 23:03 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-21 23:03, Visa (V) is priced at $309,94, with a total market cap of $605,28B, a P/E ratio of 33,05, and a dividend yield of %0,42. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $308,82 and $316,85. The current price is %0,36 above the day's low and %2,18 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 4,47M. Over the past 52 weeks, V has traded between $293,90 to $375,51, and the current price is -%17,46 away from the 52-week high.

V Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$317,02
Market Cap$605,28B
Volume4,47M
P/E Ratio33,05
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,42
Dividend Amount$0,67
Diluted EPS (TTM)10,86
Net Income (FY)$20,05B
Revenue (FY)$40,00B
Earnings Date2026-04-28
EPS Estimate3,09
Revenue Estimate$10,74B
Shares Outstanding1,90B
Beta (1Y)0.799
Ex-Dividend Date2026-02-10
Dividend Payment Date2026-03-02

About V

Visa Inc. operates as a payments technology company worldwide. The company facilitates digital payments among consumers, merchants, financial institutions, businesses, strategic partners, and government entities. It operates VisaNet, a transaction processing network that enables authorization, clearing, and settlement of payment transactions. In addition, the company offers card products, platforms, and value-added services. It provides its services under the Visa, Visa Electron, Interlink, VPAY, and PLUS brands. Visa Inc. has a strategic agreement with Ooredoo to provide an enhanced payment experience for Visa cardholders and Ooredoo customers in Qatar. Visa Inc. was founded in 1958 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.
SectorFinancial Services
IndustryFinancial - Credit Services
CEORyan McInerney
HeadquartersSan Francisco,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.visa.com
Employees (FY)34,10K
Average Revenue (1Y)$1,17M
Net Income per Employee$588,21K

Learn More about Visa (V)

Visa (V) FAQ

What's the stock price of Visa (V) today?

x
Visa (V) is currently trading at $309,94, with a 24h change of -%1,27. The 52-week trading range is $293,90–$375,51.

What are the 52-week high and low prices for Visa (V)?

x

What is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of Visa (V)? What does it indicate?

x

What is the market cap of Visa (V)?

x

What is the most recent quarterly earnings per share (EPS) for Visa (V)?

x

Should you buy or sell Visa (V) now?

x

What factors can affect the stock price of Visa (V)?

x

How to buy Visa (V) stock?

x

Risk Warning

The stock market involves a high level of risk and price volatility. The value of your investment may increase or decrease, and you may not recover the full amount invested. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Before making any investment decisions, you should carefully assess your investment experience, financial situation, investment objectives, and risk tolerance, and conduct your own research. Where appropriate, consult an independent financial adviser.

Disclaimer

The content on this page is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, or trading recommendations. Gate shall not be held liable for any loss or damage resulting from such financial decisions. Further, take note that Gate may not be able to provide full service in certain markets and jurisdictions, including but not limited to the United States of America, Canada, Iran, and Cuba. For more information on Restricted Locations, please refer to the User Agreement.

Other Trading Markets

Visa (V) Latest News

2026-04-01 03:55

Tom Lee: The market has already absorbed more than 90% of the selling pressure. The stock market typically bottoms out in the first 10% of the war process.

Gate News message. On April 1, Tom Lee, in an interview with CNBC, said the market has already absorbed 90% to 95% of the sell-pressure, and the selling process may already be over; now, it’s time to start rebuilding the base. He noted that in a war environment, the stock market often bottoms out early. Based on research into every war since 1900, the stock market bottoms out within the first 10% of the war’s progress; if this time follows the same pattern, it is currently in the early stage of that process. Tom Lee said that at this stage, any bad news could trigger de-risking, but once people become overly neutral, even if the situation is not as bad as it could be, the market may see another round of a V-shaped rebound. He added on social media that even though the “low point” has not yet been reached, he believes the U.S. economy can withstand oil prices of $100, and even $120.

2026-03-30 03:21

The Ethereum L2 project Linea announces a transition to the RISC-V architecture, aligning with the Ethereum Foundation's roadmap.

Gate News message: On March 30, Ethereum L2 project Linea announced it will shift to the RISC-V architecture. The project’s cryptography researcher Alexandre Belling said at the Ethproofs conference that the main reason for this architecture change is that each Ethereum hard fork requires a complete rewrite of the constraint module, causing the team to spend the long term dealing with complexity rather than pushing frontier performance. The RISC-V architecture provides only 32 registers and 40 instructions; for the proving system, it means a narrower trace scope, enables real-time construction, and allows the prover to begin processing proof fragments immediately. In addition, RISC-V has a narrower execution trace and Type-1 compatibility; Linea will also retain zkC (constraint native language), Vortex and Arcane (the proof/aggregation stack), as well as techniques such as formal verification. Linea said this move is highly aligned with the RISC-V roadmap being advanced by the Ethereum Foundation, and more technical details will be published in a few weeks.

2026-03-11 09:02

Polymarket Data: Market Bet on DeepSeek V with a 42% probability as of March 31

Gate News Report, March 11 — According to the latest data from Polymarket, the market odds that DeepSeek V will be released on March 31 are 42%. Currently, the trading volume on this prediction market has exceeded $1.04 million.

2026-03-02 00:06

Vitalik outlines the Ethereum execution layer roadmap, focusing on changes to the state tree and the virtual machine.

PANews March 2 News: Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin posted on social media outlining the Ethereum execution layer roadmap, focusing on two major changes: the state tree and the virtual machine. Regarding the state tree, Vitalik supports upgrading the current hexadecimal Merkle Patricia tree to a binary tree based on a more efficient hash function through EIP-7864. This change can reduce Merkle branch length by four times, lowering client verification bandwidth costs; at the same time, the hash function can be replaced with Blake3 or Poseidon series, significantly improving proof efficiency. The binary tree design will also group storage slots into "pages," reducing access costs for adjacent storage, saving over 10,000 Gas per transaction in many DeFi applications. Additionally, the binary tree structure is simpler and reserves metadata bits for future state expiration features. On the virtual machine side, Vitalik proposes a long-term direction to replace the EVM, potentially adopting a RISC-V architecture. The new VM must meet four goals: higher raw execution efficiency to eliminate most precompiles; better proof efficiency than EVM; support for client-side generation of ZK proofs; and maximum simplification of code implementation. He notes that if Ethereum remains at the "EVM + GPU" level, it is "good enough," but a better VM can make the protocol more powerful. The deployment roadmap consists of three steps: first, the new VM will replace precompiles; then, users will be allowed to deploy contracts based on the new VM; finally, the EVM will be retired, replaced by smart contracts written for the new VM, achieving full backward compatibility.

Hot Posts About Visa (V)

SelfRugger

SelfRugger

3 hours ago
Wall Street Pushes Deeper Into Prediction Markets With New ETF Filings ====================================================================== Vismaya V Wed, February 18, 2026 at 2:55 PM GMT+9 3 min read Wall Street’s latest push into political prediction markets is drawing both strong liquidity expectations and warnings of manipulation from industry experts, as major ETF issuers race to launch election-linked funds ahead of the U.S. midterms. Fund managers Bitwise Asset Management, Roundhill Investments, and GraniteShares are seeking to launch prediction-market ETFs, with Bitwise products falling under a new platform brand, PredictionShares, offering exposure to contracts tied to the 2028 U.S. presidential race and the 2026 House and Senate midterms. The listed funds cover the 2028 U.S. presidential election and the 2026 congressional midterms, including separate products for whether Democrats or Republicans win the presidency in 2028, and whether Democrats or Republicans control the Senate and the House in 2026.  “Given the level of interest in these event markets, providing liquidity would be very attractive for various hedge funds and quant trading firms,” Ganesh Mahidhar, Investment Professional at Further Ventures, told _Decrypt_, pointing to surging demand for contracts tied to U.S. election outcomes.  Meanwhile, Kadan Stadelmann, CTO at Komodo Platform, told _Decrypt_ that “political prediction markets create opportunities for insiders to trade on classified information and can also open the elections up to manipulation.” U.S. midterm elections are widely treated as referendums on the sitting administration, and historically, the president’s party rarely gains seats across both chambers, dynamics that tend to increase hedging and speculative activity around outcome probabilities. Federal Appeals Court Rejects Kalshi Bid to Pause Nevada Enforcement On prediction market Myriad, owned by _Decrypt’s_ parent company Dastan, President Trump’s approval rating is edging past the midpoint at 50.1%. Mahidhar said political polarization and policy uncertainty have supercharged activity on platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi, where traders already speculate on elections and macro events.  “Regulating these markets and making it accessible to the broader retail audience is the next step in the evolution of event contracts,” he said, adding that market makers are drawn to volatility and tight spreads. Stadelmann, however, said timing also reflects market conditions and product competition, with U.S. crypto funds seeing weeks of outflows and spot Bitcoin ETFs delivering muted momentum, issuers are searching for new themes.  Israelis Arrested Over Alleged Insider Polymarket Trades on IDF Military Secrets Bitwise is positioning early, he said, to capture opportunity “before regulators catch up with the technology.” He added that demand could still be strong: “In the U.S., gambling has become a part of life’s fabric… I suspect liquidity will be robust.” Story Continues Meanwhile, prediction market operators are facing enforcement actions across multiple states.  Regulators in Nevada, Massachusetts, and other states have moved against election and sports event contracts on platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket, saying they amount to unlicensed gambling, with court fights now underway over state versus federal authority. That jurisdiction fight is increasingly being taken up by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, with Chairman Michael Selig saying on Tuesday that the agency has filed an amicus brief in a federal appeals court asserting its authority over prediction markets and event contracts.  In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Selig wrote that the CFTC “will no longer sit idly by while overzealous state governments undermine the agency’s exclusive jurisdiction over these markets,” and said event contracts operate under CFTC rules as swaps rather than gambling. Terms and Privacy Policy Privacy Dashboard More Info
0
0
0
0
币圈掘金人

币圈掘金人

8 hours ago
Cryptocurrency Market Deep Analysis for April: Finding Structural Opportunities Amid Fear and Institutional Accumulation The crypto market in April 2026 is at a highly tense crossroads. Bitcoin rebounded from an intra-year low of around $60,000 in early February to above $75,000, but still retraced over 40% from its October 2025 all-time high of $126,000. The market fear and greed index dropped to an extreme fear zone of 8 to 9 at the start of the month, hitting the lowest level since the 2022 bear market. However, in stark contrast to retail panic, institutional capital is pouring in at record speeds—Bitcoin spot ETFs saw nearly $1 billion in net inflows in the week ending April 20, and Morgan Stanley launched its own Bitcoin trust product. The core contradiction in the current market lies in: geopolitical risks (US-Iran conflicts, tariff policies) and regulatory uncertainty suppressing short-term sentiment, while supply contraction after the halving, improved institutional infrastructure, and long-term holders’ steadfast positions provide deep support. This article will analyze in depth from four dimensions: Bitcoin and Ethereum’s technical structure, the structural divergence in the altcoin market, macro liquidity environment, and operational strategies. 1. Bitcoin: Repair from Extreme Fear, but Still Entrenched in Volatility 1.1 Price Trends and Key Levels As of April 21, Bitcoin is quoted at about $75,850, up approximately 2.6% to 2.8% in 24 hours, with a market cap around $1.52 trillion. Looking at the full month, Bitcoin shows a clear "V-shaped" recovery: climbing gradually from $66,000 at the start of the month, briefly breaking the $70,000 psychological barrier on April 7, then oscillating sharply within a broad range of $73,000 to $78,000. On April 17, it hit a high of $78,320 intraday but failed to break through decisively, indicating persistent selling pressure above. The current technical structure reveals several key features. Support levels around $74,000 to $75,000 have become the short-term core support zone, where multiple technical supports converge—such as the 100-day simple moving average, the 2025 low, and the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement. If this zone is broken, the market risks falling toward $70,000 or even $65,000–$68,000. Resistance levels at $76,000 to $78,000 have been the most stubborn over the past two months, with four failed attempts to break through. Above that, the CME futures gap at $81,000 will be a key target if Bitcoin can sustain a move above $78,000. Notably, the fear and greed index for Bitcoin plunged to 8–9 in early April, the most pessimistic since the Terra-LUNA collapse and FTX bankruptcy in 2022. Historical experience suggests that extreme fear often signals a window for medium- to long-term positioning, but short-term emotional recovery takes time and can be hurt by external shocks. 1.2 Institutional Behavior and ETF Fund Flows In Q1 2026, Bitcoin spot ETFs accumulated nearly $18.7 billion in net inflows, confirming ongoing institutional demand. Despite increased volatility in April, ETF inflows did not reverse. In the week ending April 20, Bitcoin ETF saw nearly $1 billion in net inflows, with Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin Trust ETF (MSBT) marking Wall Street’s top investment bank officially entering the spot Bitcoin ETF competition. From a cost basis perspective, the average holding cost for ETF investors is about $84,000, meaning current prices are generally below breakeven for many institutions. This "stuck" structure has dual implications: on one hand, if prices rebound above $84,000, it could trigger selling pressure from those seeking to cut losses; on the other hand, continuous buying below cost indicates long-term recognition of Bitcoin’s value. MicroStrategy, the largest corporate holder, increased its holdings by 4,871 BTC (about $330 million) in the first week of April, bringing its total to 766,970 BTC. Its "buy-the-dip" behavior has a significant anchoring effect on market confidence. 1.3 On-Chain Data and Supply-Demand Structure From the supply side, after the 2024 halving, network inflation turned negative, meaning the total circulating supply of Bitcoin is slowly decreasing. Meanwhile, Bitcoin reserves on exchanges are at multi-year lows, and long-term holders (LTH) now hold a record-high proportion of total supply, indicating a solid underlying chip structure with many Bitcoins "frozen" from short-term trading. However, demand-side uncertainty remains. The Federal Reserve is highly likely to maintain high interest rates in 2026, with the CME's "Federal Reserve Watch" tool showing market expectations for the first rate cut delayed from March to the second half of the year. Persistent high rates favor flows into US Treasuries and other traditional safe assets, suppressing valuations of non-yielding risk assets like Bitcoin. Additionally, the expiration of the US-Iran ceasefire agreement on April 22 is a key variable—if conflicts escalate, soaring oil prices could heighten inflation expectations, prompting the Fed to prolong tightening; if a ceasefire holds, risk assets may see a relief rally. 2. Ethereum and Altcoin Market: Structural Divergence Intensifies, Narratives Replace Broad Rally 2.1 Ethereum’s Dilemma and Resilience Ethereum, as the second-largest cryptocurrency, with a market cap of about $233 billion, continues to underperform Bitcoin. In early February 2026, ETH briefly fell to $2,206, retracing far more than Bitcoin from its all-time high. This "beta coefficient" characteristic becomes especially evident during broad risk asset declines—when Nasdaq drops, ETH tends to fall even more. However, Ethereum’s fundamentals have not deteriorated substantively. From a technical upgrade perspective, the "Alpenglow" network upgrade expected in Q1 2026 for Solana may pose some competitive pressure, but Ethereum’s Layer 2 ecosystems (like Arbitrum, Optimism) still lead in transaction volume and user activity. Institutional adoption remains cautious; although ETH spot ETFs face outflows, its underlying value as a smart contract platform remains recognized by long-term capital. Ethereum’s core trading range currently lies between $2,900 and $3,300 (based on January data), but April prices have fallen well below this zone, indicating a weak trend. Investors should watch whether ETH can establish support around $2,200–$2,500; a breakdown below this could trigger deeper deleveraging. 2.2 The "K-Shaped" Divergence in Altcoin Markets The altcoin market in 2026 differs fundamentally from previous cycles. The traditional "Altcoin Season"—where altcoins rally broadly and outperform Bitcoin significantly—has not yet arrived. According to the Altcoin Season Index, current readings remain in the 30–40 range, far below the 75 threshold needed to confirm a season. This divergence stems from structural changes. First, institutional capital mainly enters via Bitcoin ETFs, creating a "heavy head, light tail" liquidity distribution—Bitcoin receives ample liquidity before funds spill over into altcoins. Second, the number of tradable tokens has exponentially increased since the last bull run, diluting liquidity and shifting from broad rally logic to selective investment. Third, evolving regulation narrows the space for speculative projects, favoring assets with real use cases, compliance, and strong narratives. In April 2026, standout altcoins show clear narrative concentration. XRP, after the SEC lawsuit resolution, rebounded strongly, with weekly gains near 10%, breaking above $1.50 and becoming a major beneficiary of regulatory clarity. DeXe (DEXE) surged 63.8% in a week, Ethena (ENA) up 27.1%, MemeCore (M) up 24.2%, but these gains are narrative-driven rather than broad-based. 2.3 Stablecoins and DeFi Infrastructure as "Safe Havens" During market turbulence, stablecoins reached a record high of $310.4 billion in market cap in early 2026, reflecting a clear flight-to-safety. DeFi infrastructure tokens like Hyperliquid hit new highs amid panic, indicating investor preference for projects with real revenue and protocol income. This "quality premium" suggests a paradigm shift from speculation to fundamentals in the altcoin space. 3. Macro Environment and Policy Variables: Liquidity Tightening and Regulatory Dawn 3.1 Monetary Policy and Geopolitical Pressures The biggest macro constraint currently comes from Fed monetary policy. Expectations for the first rate cut in 2026 have been pushed from March to the second half, with high interest rates continuing to suppress risk asset valuations. Meanwhile, the US-Iran conflict has driven oil prices up by about 50% since late February, intensifying inflation expectations and making the Fed more cautious about easing. This "stagflation" risk is especially unfavorable for crypto: high rates suppress valuations, while high inflation should theoretically benefit Bitcoin’s inflation hedge narrative. Yet geopolitical uncertainty fuels risk aversion, pushing funds toward gold and USD cash. Interestingly, gold even declined over 10% during the conflict, indicating traditional safe-haven logic is being re-evaluated. 3.2 Potential Turning Points in Regulation Despite short-term headwinds, positive signals emerge from regulation. The US "CLARITY Act" is scheduled for a vote in late April; if passed, it would clarify crypto regulation and be seen as a significant step toward regulatory clarity. Additionally, the SEC’s resolution of the Ripple lawsuit and Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin trust launch suggest a shift from suppression to regulation. Globally, crypto-friendly jurisdictions like Singapore, Switzerland, and Dubai continue to attract projects and capital, creating a regulatory arbitrage landscape that may pressure the US to accelerate legislation to avoid losing strategic advantage in digital assets. 4. Operational Strategies: Building Resilient Positions Amid Volatility 4.1 Bitcoin Trading Strategies Long-term investors: The market is in early recovery from "extreme fear," with $65,000–$70,000 offering good entry points for dollar-cost averaging. Divide positions into 3–4 tranches at $65,000, $68,000, and $72,000, betting on the long-term trend of supply contraction post-halving and ongoing institutional accumulation. Stop-loss at below $60,000, the confluence of February lows and bear flag lower bounds. Mid-term traders: Focus on the $74,000–$78,000 range for high-low trading. Lightly buy near support at $74,000–$75,000, targeting resistance at $76,000–$78,000. If a breakout above $78,000 occurs and holds, add positions toward $81,000 and higher. If prices fall below $74,000 without quick recovery, reduce exposure and wait for $70,000 or lower. Short-term speculators: With high volatility—daily swings of 3–5%—intraday trading can be profitable but requires strict stop-loss discipline. Limit risk per trade to 2% of capital. Focus on event-driven moves such as US-Iran tensions, Fed speeches, and ETF flows. 4.2 Ethereum and Altcoin Strategies Ethereum: Consider establishing a core position in the $2,200–$2,500 range, controlling size at 30–50% of Bitcoin holdings. ETH is more volatile; rebounds can be larger, but downside risk is also higher. If Bitcoin breaks $81,000 convincingly, ETH could rally above $3,000. Altcoins: Avoid broad "scattergun" approaches; focus on sectors with clear catalysts. XRP has upside after regulatory clarity, with key support at $1.30 and resistance at $1.60–$1.75. Infrastructure projects like Hyperliquid and RWA tokens benefit from institutional trends, suitable for satellite positions. Meme coins and small-cap tokens should be treated as high-risk lottery tickets, not core holdings. 4.3 Core Principles of Risk Management Position sizing: Regardless of bullish or bearish outlook, individual trade risk should not exceed 5% of total capital; leverage should be kept below 2x. The current high-volatility, low-direction environment makes over-leverage dangerous, risking liquidation in whipsaws. Asset allocation: Allocate 30–40% of total crypto portfolio to Bitcoin as a "risk anchor," 20–30% to Ethereum, and the rest to selected altcoins and stablecoins. During extreme fear, increase stablecoin holdings to 30% to enable bottom-fishing. Event monitoring: Maintain a calendar of key events—Fed meetings, US-Iran negotiations, legislative votes, large token unlocks—and reduce exposure ahead of these to avoid "buying the rumor, selling the news" or adverse volatility. 5. Conclusion: Dawn in the Dark, Patience is Key The April 2026 crypto market is a fierce battleground of fear and greed, selling and accumulation, short-term noise and long-term trends. Bitcoin has rebounded 25% from $60,000 lows, but a 40% retracement from the all-time high reminds us this is not a smooth bull run but a thorny recovery. Extreme fear often signals the best opportunities, but realization requires time, patience, and strict risk controls. Institutional inflows continue amid fear, and long-term holders remain steadfast during dips—these underlying signals reveal the true market direction more than short-term price swings. For investors, the key task now is not to precisely predict bottoms or tops but to build resilient portfolios through position management and selective asset choices, acknowledging uncertainty. Historical data shows Bitcoin’s average April return is 33.4%, but the 2026 environment deviates significantly from historical norms. Instead of relying on seasonal stats, focus on structural supply-demand shifts: post-halving supply contraction, ETF-driven institutional demand, and gradually clearer regulation. These factors underpin Bitcoin’s cycle traversal. In the altcoin space, the era of broad rallies has ended; narrative-driven and quality-focused strategies are now essential. XRP’s regulatory victory, robust DeFi infrastructure, and emerging narratives like AI and RWA create opportunities for selective positioning. Yet, investors must be cautious: most tokens will be eliminated in the wave of institutionalization and regulation, with only a few emerging as winners. Ultimately, 2026 marks a shift from "cyclical speculation" to "strategic allocation." This transition will involve pain, volatility, and setbacks, but for those who remain rational amid fear and can identify structural signals amid chaos, the current environment may be a valuable window for medium- to long-term deployment.
1
0
0
0