Visa stock dips to end 2025 as Class B conversion filing lands

Visa stock dips to end 2025 as Class B conversion filing lands

NEW YORK, January 1, 2026, 18:23 ET — Market closed

  • Visa shares last closed down 0.8% on Dec. 31, the final U.S. session of 2025.
  • A recent filing outlined updated Class B conversion rates tied to Visa’s U.S. litigation escrow funding mechanics.
  • Focus shifts to the Jan. 2 reopen and late-January earnings expectations for volume and capital-return signals.

Visa Inc shares ended the final trading day of 2025 down 0.8% at $350.71, as investors digested a new filing on the payments network’s restricted Class B share conversion rates. The stock traded between $350.71 and $355.13 in the session, market data showed.

The disclosure matters now because it affects Visa’s diluted share count — the “fully diluted” number investors use to calculate earnings per share. Changes to that denominator can subtly alter valuation models, even when the underlying payments business is steady.

Visa’s Class B stock converts into its publicly traded Class A shares at a specified ratio. When Visa funds a litigation escrow account, that conversion ratio is adjusted downward, meaning holders would receive fewer Class A shares on conversion.

Visa said the Class B-1 conversion rate into Class A stock fell to 1.5491 from 1.5549 and the Class B-2 conversion rate fell to 1.5108 from 1.5223, effective Dec. 23, after a $500 million deposit into its U.S. litigation escrow account. The company said the move reduced the as-converted share count by about 27,782 shares for Class B-1 and about 1.38 million shares for Class B-2; under the plan, Class B-2 adjustments occur at twice the rate of Class B-1 adjustments.

Visa said in the filing that the adjustments have the same effect on earnings per share as repurchasing Class A common stock. It also said it used a three-day volume-weighted average price — a measure that gives more weight to days with heavier trading — for the calculation.

Visa’s year-end dip came as Wall Street’s main indexes closed lower in thin holiday trading, with the S&P 500 down 0.74% in the Dec. 31 session. “It’s perfectly fine in any bull market to have moments of cost,” said Giuseppe Sette, co-founder and president of Reflexivity, pointing to profit-taking when liquidity is low; U.S. markets are closed Thursday for New Year’s Day.

Visa finished 2025 up about 11.8%, according to Yahoo Finance data. The stock’s gains reflect investor demand for large-cap payments names seen as resilient to swings in consumer credit because they earn fees on transactions rather than taking lending risk. Yahoo Finance

Because the Class B conversion change is largely mechanical, investors tend to focus on what it signals about litigation-related cash funding and any knock-on effects for capital returns. The more material question for equity holders is whether additional escrow deposits are required over time and how that intersects with buybacks.

With markets reopening Friday, traders will watch early-2026 positioning and interest-rate expectations that can move valuation-heavy stocks. For Visa, the key operating watchpoints remain cross-border spending trends and U.S. payments volume.

Before the next session, chart watchers are eyeing the $350 area after Visa tested that level on Wednesday. A move back above the mid-$350s would put the stock closer to the recent trading range that capped the late-December rebound.

Visa is expected to report earnings on Jan. 27 after the close, according to Yahoo Finance’s earnings calendar. Traders will listen for updates on payment volumes, cross-border trends and the pace of share repurchases. Yahoo Finance

The conversion-rate adjustment does not change Visa’s day-to-day transaction flows, but it underscores how litigation-related funding can still affect the share count. As 2026 trading begins, investors’ next catalysts are earnings and any fresh disclosures around the escrow plan.

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