Visa Inc. (NYSE: V) surged 6.12% in early trading on December 12, 2025, as the market digested a major upgrade from Bank of America (BofA) and positive operational developments across its global footprint. Shares hit the mid-$340s, lifting the company’s market capitalization to roughly $686 billion.
This jump underscores investor optimism around Visa’s strategic moves in stablecoins, cross-border payments, and worldwide expansion.
Visa Inc., V
Visa’s upward momentum traces directly to BofA’s move to upgrade the stock from “Neutral” to “Buy,” assigning a price target of $382. Analysts highlighted Visa’s strong fundamentals, including steady revenue growth, expanding cross-border transactions, and shareholder returns, as reasons for the upgrade. Trading volumes were elevated as investors reacted to the favorable analyst sentiment, making Visa one of the day’s top-performing large-cap stocks.
The upgrade also coincides with a more supportive macroeconomic environment. The Federal Reserve recently lowered its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 3.50%–3.75%, creating a “risk-on” market atmosphere that further buoyed payment network equities like Visa. Market observers noted that Visa’s performance contributed notably to the Dow’s overall gain due to its price-weighted impact.
Investor concerns earlier in 2025 about stablecoins disrupting card networks are now giving way to a more constructive narrative. Visa has adopted a “build, not battle” approach by integrating stablecoins into its Visa Direct platform through two pilot programs.
One pilot allows banks and remitters to pre-fund cross-border payouts using stablecoins, improving liquidity management. Another pilot enables U.S. businesses and platforms to send payouts directly to stablecoin wallets, starting with USD-backed stablecoins like USDC. Visa executives have tied this momentum to the GENIUS Act, a federal law passed in July 2025 that provides regulatory clarity for stablecoin payments.
Analysts suggest that Visa could benefit significantly from capturing stablecoin transaction volume, especially in B2B and cross-border settlements, reframing the debate from “stablecoins as a threat” to “stablecoins as a tool for growth.”
Visa’s strategic expansion continues to generate headlines. In Vietnam, the company partnered with VNPT Money to launch Visa Pay, a mobile-wallet solution compatible with both domestic and international transactions. In the Middle East, Visa consolidated operations across Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Oman, creating a new regional hub with appointed leadership to drive digital payments adoption. Plans are also underway for a launch in Syria in collaboration with the central bank, aiming to build a comprehensive digital payments ecosystem.
Visa’s European operations are also shifting, with a planned move of its European headquarters to Canary Wharf in London by 2028, signaling a long-term commitment to strengthening its global infrastructure.
Despite the bullish sentiment, investors are monitoring several key risks. Merchant pushback over interchange fees and lingering legal challenges, including the $38 billion revised swipe-fee settlement, could impact Visa’s profit margins and regulatory exposure.
On the fundamentals side, Visa reported net revenue of $40 billion for FY2025, up 11% year over year, with non-GAAP EPS rising 14% to $11.47. Cross-border transaction volumes grew 13%, and the company returned $22.8 billion to shareholders via buybacks and dividends. Looking ahead, Visa forecasts low double-digit revenue growth in FY2026, continuing its trajectory as a durable compounder in the payments sector.
The combination of strong fundamentals, stablecoin adoption, global expansion, and analyst upgrades has positioned Visa for further potential upside, though execution on expansion plans and regulatory developments will be key drivers for the next phase of growth.
The post Visa (V) Stock: Gains 6.12% on Bank of America Upgrade, Global Expansion Plans appeared first on CoinCentral.


