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Visa (V) FY2025 — 68% Margin Toll Booth, DOJ Antitrust

V·FY2025·English

Grade: D — Significant Concerns

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2025-11-06, FY ended September 30, 2025) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: KPMG LLP — Unqualified opinion (no critical audit matters identified)

One-line verdict: Visa's core payment processing business remains an extraordinary cash machine — $23.1B operating cash flow on $40.0B net revenue, 80% gross margins, and an M-Score of -2.49 that clears the manipulation threshold comfortably. But two structural issues land it at D. First, goodwill and intangibles of $47.5B represent 125% of total equity, a legacy of the Visa Europe acquisition that leaves the balance sheet vulnerable to impairment. Second, accounts receivable have outpaced revenue growth for two consecutive years, a pattern that cannot be dismissed as timing alone. Add $2.6B in new interchange litigation accruals, a $39.4B overhang of unresolved interchange claims, and expanding global regulatory pressure on fees, and the risk profile is heavier than the pristine margins suggest.

MetricResult
Red Flags**2** (AR outpacing revenue 2 years, goodwill+intangibles > equity)
Watch Items**1** (cash-to-debt coverage 75%)
Checks Completed**17/18** (1 N/A: impairment data)
Beneish M-Score**-2.49** (clean; threshold is -2.22)
AuditorKPMG LLP — Unqualified opinion, serving since IPO

The Business Model: A Toll Booth on Global Commerce

Visa is not a lender and not a bank. Per the 10-K: "Visa is not a financial institution. We do not issue cards, extend credit or set rates and fees for account holders of Visa products." Instead, Visa earns revenue from four streams tied to the volume and velocity of money moving through its VisaNet network across more than 200 countries and territories:

Revenue StreamFY2025FY2024FY2023YoY Growth
Service revenue$17.5B$16.1B$14.8B+9%
Data processing revenue$20.0B$17.7B$16.0B+13%
International transaction revenue$14.2B$12.7B$11.6B+12%
Other revenue$4.1B$3.2B$2.5B+27%
Client incentives($15.8B)($13.8B)($12.3B)+14%
**Net revenue****$40.0B****$35.9B****$32.7B****+11%**

Service revenue is driven by nominal payments volume ($13.9 trillion for the twelve months ended June 30, 2025, up 7%). Data processing revenue is driven by processed transactions (257.5 billion, up 10%). International transaction revenue is driven by cross-border volume (up 13% excluding intra-Europe). Other revenue — which includes value-added services at $10.9B (up 24%) — is the fastest-growing line and now represents a meaningful diversification beyond pure transaction processing.

Client incentives — effectively volume rebates to financial institutions — grew 14%, faster than net revenue, consuming 28% of gross revenue. Per the filing: "The amount of client incentives we record in future periods will vary based on changes in performance expectations, actual client performance, amendments to existing contracts or the execution of new contracts."

Profitability: The Numbers

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025Trend
Net Revenue$32.7B$35.9B$40.0B+22% over 3 years
Net Income (GAAP)$17.3B$19.7B$20.1B+16% over 3 years
Net Income (Non-GAAP)$18.3B$20.4B$22.5B+23% over 3 years
Gross Margin79.9%80.4%80.4%Rock-stable
Operating Margin (GAAP)64.3%65.7%60.0%Declined — litigation
Diluted EPS (GAAP)$8.28$9.73$10.20+5% YoY
Diluted EPS (Non-GAAP)$8.77$10.05$11.47+14% YoY
Effective Tax Rate18%17%17%Stable

The gap between GAAP and non-GAAP earnings in FY2025 is $2.5B, driven almost entirely by $2.6B in litigation provision ($2.2B for interchange multidistrict litigation plus $331M for other uncovered legal matters). GAAP operating expenses surged 30% while non-GAAP operating expenses rose only 11%.

The 10-K states GAAP operating expenses included: personnel $6.96B (+11%), marketing $1.68B (+8%), network and processing $894M (+15%), professional fees $759M (+19%), depreciation and amortization $1.22B (+18%), general and administrative $1.93B (+21%), and litigation provision $2.56B (vs. $462M prior year).

Non-operating income fell to $200M from $321M, primarily due to lower interest income on cash and investments, partially offset by lower losses from derivatives.

Cash Flow: Still Converting at Premium Rates

MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025
Operating Cash Flow$20.8B$20.0B$23.1B
Net Income$17.3B$19.7B$20.1B
**CFFO / Net Income****1.20****1.01****1.15**
CapEx$1.1B$1.3B$1.5B
Free Cash Flow$19.7B$18.7B$21.6B
FCF / Net Income1.140.951.08

Per the filing: "Cash provided by operating activities increased in fiscal 2025 over the prior year primarily due to growth in our underlying business and the timing of payments related to income taxes, partially offset by higher incentive payments." CFFO/NI of 1.15 is excellent — earnings are fully backed by cash.

CapEx of $1.5B is trivial relative to the business — Visa's asset-light model requires minimal physical investment. The CapEx ratio (CapEx/Revenue) is under 4%, among the lowest of any large-cap company.

Investing activities generated a net $708M inflow (vs. $1.9B outflow in FY2024), primarily because Visa did not purchase investment securities in FY2025 while collecting maturities.

Financing consumed $19.0B: share repurchases $18.2B (54 million shares at an average price of ~$337), dividends $4.6B, and debt issuance proceeds of $3.9B (Euro-denominated notes). In April 2025, the board authorized a new $30.0B repurchase program; $24.9B remained available as of September 30, 2025.

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangePASSDSO 29 days, +3 days YoY
A2AR vs Revenue GrowthFAILAR outpaced revenue for 2 consecutive years
A3Revenue vs CFFOPASSRevenue +11.3%, CFFO +15.6%. Cash follows revenue

A2 is a red flag. While the balance sheet shows accounts receivable are not a large component of Visa's asset base, the pattern of AR growing faster than revenue for two consecutive years triggers the screening. The DSRI component of the Beneish M-Score registers 1.096, confirming the receivables trend. For a payment processor with settlement cycles of one to two business days for non-USD transactions, this pattern warrants monitoring.

Expense Quality

#CheckResultDetail
B1Inventory vs COGSPASSNo material inventory
B2CapEx vs RevenuePASSCapEx growth 17.9% vs revenue 11.3%. Normal
B3SG&A RatioPASSSG&A/Gross Profit = 13.6%, excellent
B4Gross MarginPASSGross margin 80.4%, unchanged YoY. Rock-stable

Visa carries no inventory — it is a pure technology and network business. Gross margin has been essentially flat at 80% for four consecutive years (80.4%, 80.4%, 79.9%, 80.4%). This stability reflects the toll-booth economics: processing more transactions costs marginally more, but not proportionally.

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs Net IncomePASSCFFO/NI = 1.15. Profits backed by cash
C2Free Cash FlowPASSFCF $21.6B, FCF/NI = 1.08
C3Accruals RatioPASS-3.0%. Low accruals
C4Cash vs DebtWATCHCash $19.0B covers 75% of debt $25.2B

C4 — Cash doesn't fully cover debt. Total debt is $25.2B ($5.6B current maturities + $19.6B long-term). Cash and cash equivalents of $17.2B plus $2.4B in investment securities totals $19.6B — covering 78% of total debt. In May 2025, Visa issued Euro-denominated notes totaling EUR 3.5B ($3.9B) with maturities ranging from 3 to 19 years. This is strategic leveraging of a balance sheet that generates $23B+ in annual operating cash flow, not a distress signal.

Balance Sheet

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + IntangiblesFAILGoodwill+Intangibles $47.5B = 125% of equity
D2LeveragePASSDebt/EBITDA = 1.0x. Healthy
D3Soft Asset GrowthPASSOther assets 9.9% vs revenue 11.3%. Normal
D4Asset ImpairmentN/ANo write-off data available

D1 is the second red flag. Goodwill of $19.9B and intangible assets of $27.6B total $47.5B — 125% of Visa's $37.9B in total equity. This is almost entirely a legacy of the 2016 Visa Europe acquisition. The goodwill grew modestly from $18.9B to $19.9B, reflecting the December 2024 acquisition of Featurespace for $946M (an AI payments-fraud technology company).

The intangible assets are primarily customer relationships and technology from acquisitions. Net intangibles of $27.6B on a base of $26.9B suggests modest additions offset by amortization. Per the filing, acquired intangible amortization was $218M in FY2025.

While goodwill-to-equity over 100% is a bright-line fail in our framework, context matters: Visa's business model generates $20B+ in annual net income and $21B+ in FCF. The goodwill would need to be impaired only if the acquired business (Visa Europe) ceased generating value proportionate to the purchase price — a remote scenario given European payment volumes continue to grow.

Debt/EBITDA of 1.0x is extremely conservative. Interest coverage is 45x (interest expense $589M vs. EBIT of ~$24B). The balance sheet is leveraged by goodwill, not by debt.

Acquisition Risk

#CheckResultDetail
E1Serial Acquirer FCFPASSFCF after acquisitions positive
E2Goodwill SurgePASSGoodwill+Intangibles change 4% YoY. Normal

The Featurespace acquisition ($946M) is modest relative to Visa's scale. No pattern of serial acquisition.

Manipulation Score

#CheckResultDetail
F1Beneish M-ScorePASS-2.49 (threshold: < -2.22)

M-Score of -2.49 is comfortably clean. Components: DSRI 1.096, GMI 1.0, AQI 0.965, SGI 1.113, DEPI 0.952, SGAI 1.035, TATA -0.030, LVGI 1.095. The LVGI (Leverage Index) at 1.095 reflects the new Euro-denominated debt issuance.

Key Risks from the 10-K

1. Interchange Litigation: $2.6B Accrual and $39.4B in Unresolved Claims

The single largest risk to Visa is the interchange multidistrict litigation (MDL). Per the 10-K: "During fiscal 2025, we recorded additional accruals of $2.2 billion to address claims associated with the interchange multidistrict litigation. We also made additional deposits of $875 million into the U.S. litigation escrow account."

The filing discloses that "the estimated interchange reimbursement fees at issue in unresolved claims for damages in the U.S. covered litigation was approximately $49.6 billion as of October 1, 2023 and was approximately $39.4 billion as of October 1, 2025." The $10.2B reduction over two years reflects settlements, but $39.4B in remaining disputed interchange fees represents an enormous overhang.

Under Visa's retrospective responsibility plan, monetary liabilities from U.S. covered litigation are ultimately absorbed through a downward adjustment to the class B common stock conversion rate — insulating class A shareholders. But the process is slow and uncertain, and additional accruals "could be higher or lower than deposits made into the U.S. litigation escrow account."

2. Global Interchange Fee Regulation — Closing In from Every Direction

The Risk Factors section devotes extraordinary space to regulatory threats on interchange fees. Key highlights:

·U.S. Debit: In August 2025, the District Court for North Dakota "ruled that the Federal Reserve exceeded its authority in implementing Regulation II" and "vacated Regulation II's debit interchange fee standard." If affirmed on appeal, this could result in "a significantly lower interchange cap for relevant debit transactions in the U.S."
·U.S. Credit: The Credit Card Competition Act "may be reintroduced in Congress" requiring large issuers to offer at least two unaffiliated networks for credit transactions — directly threatening Visa's network exclusivity.
·EU IFR: Consumer credit and debit interchange are already capped at 30bps and 20bps respectively. "The European Commission has announced its intention to conduct another impact assessment of the IFR, which could result in even lower caps."
·Latin America: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Costa Rica have adopted or are exploring interchange caps.
·Asia Pacific: Australia's RBA "recently proposed reducing existing interchange caps on domestic credit and debit transactions."
·UK: The PSR is conducting a market review focused on post-Brexit cross-border interchange increases and has expanded review into "scheme and processing fees."
·Network fees: Regulators in Australia, the EU, Chile, and New Zealand "have expressed an interest in network fees, including issues related to transparency."

Per the filing: "Restrictions on doing business. Even though we generally do not receive any revenue related to IRFs in a payment transaction... IRFs are a factor on which we compete with other payments providers and are therefore an important determinant of the volume of transactions we process."

3. Preferred Stock Conversion Overhang

In August 2025, Visa "released $1.4 billion of the as-converted value from our series B and C preferred stock and issued 40,080 shares of series A preferred stock in connection with the ninth anniversary of the Visa Europe acquisition." The balance sheet shows $745M in preferred stock (down from $1.0B). The class B-1 and B-2 common stock (125 million shares) will eventually convert to class A shares, but the conversion rate is adjusted downward as litigation liabilities are resolved. This creates ongoing dilution uncertainty.

4. Severance and Restructuring

The filing discloses that during FY2025, Visa "recorded severance costs within personnel expense to realign our organizational structure and focus on areas that will drive higher long-term growth." These were excluded from non-GAAP results as a $213M add-back (pre-tax). Combined with $39M in lease consolidation costs, Visa is actively restructuring — a signal that the growth trajectory requires reinvestment in different capabilities.

Settlement Risk: The Hidden Liquidity Requirement

A detail specific to Visa's business model: "As of September 30, 2025, we held $9.2 billion of our total available liquidity to fund daily settlement in the event one or more of our financial institution clients are unable to settle." This is not idle cash — it is a settlement guarantee reserve. Of the $17.2B in cash, more than half is effectively restricted for settlement purposes. Available-for-working-capital cash is substantially less than the headline number.

Summary

Grade: D. Two structural red flags — goodwill exceeding equity and persistent AR divergence — plus massive litigation overhang.

Visa's core business is extraordinarily profitable: 80% gross margins, $21.6B in free cash flow, CFFO/NI of 1.15, and near-zero accruals. KPMG issued an unqualified opinion with no critical audit matters. The M-Score of -2.49 clears the manipulation threshold. No inventory, no impairment risk beyond goodwill, and Debt/EBITDA of just 1.0x.

The D grade is driven mechanically by two screening failures: D1 (goodwill + intangibles at 125% of equity) and A2 (AR outpacing revenue for two consecutive years). The D1 flag reflects the Visa Europe acquisition structure — real but unlikely to impair given European payment volume trends. The A2 flag requires monitoring.

The qualitative risks are where the genuine concern lies. The interchange MDL represents $39.4B in unresolved fee claims. Interchange regulation is tightening simultaneously across the U.S., EU, UK, Latin America, and Asia Pacific. The Credit Card Competition Act threatens Visa's network exclusivity in credit. If multiple regulatory actions converge — lower interchange caps, mandated multi-network routing, and capped network fees — Visa's pricing power faces a structural reset, even as transaction volumes continue to grow.

The cash machine is working perfectly. The question is how much of each dollar flowing through it Visa gets to keep.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Visa's FY2025 10-K filed with SEC EDGAR on November 6, 2025. This is NOT investment advice.

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: KPMG LLP (Unqualified opinion, no critical audit matters)

Fiscal year ended: September 30, 2025

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Visa (V) FY2025 — 68% Margin Toll Booth, DOJ Antitrust — EarningsGrade