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$V
At this stage, the 10% credit card interest rate cap is more of a political message, because it needs Congressional approval to become reality and there is no clear implementation plan on the table. But it still affects perception, and perception matters a lot in the stock market. A cap like this could tighten credit access, especially for weaker credit profiles, and pressure ancillary benefits.
The key distinction for Visa is this, Visa is not an issuer that collects interest income; its revenue is mainly driven by transaction volume through services, data processing, and cross-border transaction lines. So even if a 10% cap actually goes into effect, the hit to Visa would not come directly through an interest-income channel, but through a second order channel: banks issuing less credit, which reduces spending and transaction counts. Visa can absorb that shock. But for the stock, the most likely impact is short term valuation pressure and volatility as long as the headline flow continues. The 10% cap may not pass, it may be heavily watered down, and any competition/routing proposal could stretch into a long negotiation process. V will remain sensitive to headline risk in the short term, but the long term compounder story is not fully broken because the business model is resilient.
If this is not a crisis type situation, the support band should be enough for a bottom in this stock