Visa slips 5.5% on report the DOJ is investigating the firm’s debit-card practices

visa cards

Shares of Visa slipped as much as 5.5% on Friday after a report said the Department of Justice is investigating the firm’s debit-card practices.

Visa is under investigation for “anticompetitive practices” in the debit-card market, reported the Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed sources.

The Foster City, California-based financial services corporation is specifically being investigated for possibly limiting merchants’ ability to route debit-card transactions over less expensive networks.

Visa and other credit card companies use what are called “network fees” as a main source of revenue. Although these fees are invisible to consumers, they can heavily weigh on merchants and be very lucrative for card companies.

The DOJ is probing whether Visa’s move to prevent merchants from avoiding their network fees could allow the firm to illegally maintain its leading market position, the WSJ reported.

Visa stock is down nearly 7.5% since hitting March 11 record highs of over $226 per share.

Before this latest news analysts were overwhelmingly bullish on shares of Visa. The company boasts 49 “buy” ratings, six “neutral” ratings, and zero “sell” ratings from analysts.

Most recently, Morgan Stanley maintained their buy rating and $253 price target on Visa in a note to clients on March 16.

Visa stock traded down 5.16% as of 1:23 p.m. ET on Friday.

Visa chart 2
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Wedbush says Tesla’s bitcoin investment will spark further corporate adoption – and highlights 4 stocks already poised to gain from the crypto boom

Elon Musk
  • Tesla has paved the way for more corporations to head down the path to owning and accepting bitcoin, according to Wedbush. 
  • The firm says current bitcoin mania is not a “fad,” but the start of a new era of digital currency. 
  • PayPal, Square, Mastercard, and Visa could benefit from the crypto boom, Wedbush said.
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Tesla’s bitcoin bet could be a “game changer” for the digital currency and the broader adoption of blockchain technology over the coming years, according to Wedbush.

Given the still nascent and volatile nature around bitcoin, less than 5% of public companies will likely invest in bitcoin over the next twelve to eighteen months, but that could move “markedly higher” as more regulation and acceptance of the cryptocurrency takes hold in the future, a team of analysts said in a Monday note. 

Bitcoin reached a new high above $50,000 Tuesday morning, bringing its year-to-date gains to 74% in a sign of the growing acceptance of the digital currency.

According to Wedbush, the bitcoin mania is not simply a “fad,” but a sign of the broader digital currency and blockchain space growing.

Read more: GOLDMAN SACHS: These 40 heavily shorted stocks could be the next GameStop if retail traders target them – and the group has already nearly doubled over the past 3 months

“…We believe the trend of transactions, bitcoin investments, and blockchain driven initiatives could surge over the coming years as this bitcoin mania is not a fad in our opinion, but rather the start of a new age on the digital currency front,” said Wedbush. 

Also, Tesla’s announcement to begin accepting bitcoin as a form of payment could be a “paradigm changing move for the use of bitcoin from a transaction perspective.” 

This will bode well for payments companies PayPal and Square, said Wedbush. Both of those companies allow consumers to buy, hold, and sell cryptocurrencies which is resulting in higher frequency usage of their consumer-facing ecosystems. 

The crypto-boom could also be a “neutral to slight positive” for Visa and Mastercard, said Wedbush. Those two networks are gradually planning to accept central bank digital currencies and asset-backed currencies in payments transactions. Mastercard will start supporting certain cryptocurrencies directly on the network in 2021, which could open merchants up to new customers, the analysts added.

Also, Visa plans to launch a pilot crypto software program to help banks roll out bitcoin and cryptocurrency buying and trading services. 

Read more: UBS says bitcoin is a bubble and too volatile to diversify a portfolio, unlike gold – here’s why the bank says it could end up ‘worthless’

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