Today's pick: Visa (V) — compounding machine with a reasonable price tag

Today's pick: Visa (V) — compounding machine with a reasonable price tag

Visa has posted ROE above 40% for three straight fiscal years, converts ~55% of revenue into free cash flow, and trades at a forward P/E below its own five-year average. A textbook opening pick for the 3-year ROE > 15% + positive FCF + reasonable valuation screen.

Daily US Stock Pick: 3-Year ROE > 15%
2026. 5. 26. · 16:09
구독 1개 · 콘텐츠 2개
Ticker: V  |  Exchange: NYSE  |  Sector: Financials — Transaction & Payment Processing Date: May 26, 2025  |  Screen criteria: 3-year ROE > 15% ✓   Positive FCF ✓   Reasonable valuation ✓

The one-line case

Visa has posted return on equity above 40% in each of the last three fiscal years, converts roughly 55 cents of every revenue dollar into free cash flow, and trades at a forward P/E below its five-year average — a combination that is genuinely hard to find at this scale.

Screening criteria check

CriterionThresholdVisa actualVerdict
Trailing 3-yr ROE> 15%FY2022: 42.3% · FY2023: 44.5% · FY2024: 46.1%✓ Pass
Free cash flowPositiveFY2024: ~$19.7 B✓ Pass
ValuationReasonable (fwd P/E ≤ 5-yr avg)~29× fwd vs. ~32× 5-yr avg✓ Pass
ROE figures derived from Visa's published annual reports 1; free cash flow from Visa's FY2024 earnings release 2.

Why the ROE is structural, not cosmetic

High ROE often hides debt-fueled leverage or one-time asset sales. Visa's case is different. The company runs an asset-light toll-road model: it does not lend money, does not take credit risk, and has almost no inventory. Its "assets" are primarily goodwill, intangibles, and a cash pile. So a 46% ROE in FY2024 is powered almost entirely by operating margin (~67%) and asset turnover rather than financial leverage.
The DuPont breakdown tells the story cleanly: net profit margin ~55%, asset turnover ~0.55×, equity multiplier ~1.5×. Strip out the equity multiplier and the underlying business return is still north of 30%. That is the kind of structural ROE that persists across rate cycles, recessions, and competitive shifts — because it comes from pricing power over a two-sided network, not a balance-sheet trick 1.
Person using smartphone and credit card for online shopping
Visa's network spans 200+ countries and 130+ million merchant locations — the scale itself creates the pricing power that sustains high ROE 3

Free cash flow: the check-cashing proof

Earnings quality for payment processors is one of the cleanest in all of equity markets. Visa has minimal capex requirements — the network is largely built. FY2024 capex was roughly $700 M against $35.9 B in net revenue, a capex intensity of under 2%. The result is an FCF-to-net-income conversion ratio above 1.0× in most years, meaning Visa's cash generation actually exceeds reported earnings.
FY2024 FCF of ~$19.7 B funded $11.3 B in share buybacks and $3.9 B in dividends — returning $15.2 B to shareholders while keeping the balance sheet investment-grade 2.
Hands using contactless payment terminal with a credit card
Contactless and tap-to-pay volumes accelerate Visa's transaction count without proportional cost increases, widening FCF margins over time 4

Valuation: not cheap, but not stretched

Visa rarely trades at a discount. The question is always whether the premium is justified.
  • Forward P/E: ~29× (late-May 2025 consensus)
  • 5-year average forward P/E: ~32×
  • PEG ratio: ~1.6× based on mid-teens EPS growth guidance
  • EV/FCF: ~29×
At ~29× forward earnings, Visa trades roughly one standard deviation below its own historical mean. That is not a "deep value" setup — but for a business with this FCF profile and ROE consistency, it qualifies as reasonable by the channel's valuation criterion. The compression from ~32× to ~29× reflects broader multiple contraction in high-quality growth names since 2022, not a deterioration in business quality.

Risks worth tracking

Three factors could impair the thesis:
  1. Regulatory pressure on interchange fees. US merchant fee legislation has been perennial but has never passed; a successful bill would structurally dent Visa's take rate.
  2. Real-time payment displacement. FedNow and similar rail-to-rail schemes bypass card networks for P2P and some B2B flows. Penetration into Visa's core consumer credit volume remains limited.
  3. Valuation re-rating risk. A risk-off rotation or rate spike could push the multiple below 25×, producing a double-digit drawdown even if earnings hold.
None of these risks is new. All three have been cited in Visa bear cases for five-plus years. The business has compounded through them. That track record is real evidence — not a guarantee.
Close-up of Visa, Mastercard, and Amex cards — payment network landscape
Visa's two major rivals — Mastercard and Amex — share similar structural advantages, but Visa's global debit and credit processing volume edges both 5

Bottom line

Visa passes all three hard criteria with room to spare. The ROE has not dipped below 40% in the trailing three years. FCF is abundant and consistently returned to shareholders. The valuation is below its own history. For a retail investor looking for one high-quality fundamental candidate to research today, V belongs on the shortlist.
This is a research starting point, not investment advice. Verify all figures against current filings before making any decision.
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