New York, Jan 9, 2026, 12:06 PM EST — Regular session
- Visa shares fell about 0.5% in midday trade, lagging Mastercard on a mixed day for payment stocks
- A shareholder group filed materials urging support for a proposal to permanently separate the CEO and board chair roles
- The vote is set for Visa’s Jan. 27 annual meeting, with investors also looking ahead to the next earnings update
Visa shares were down 0.5% at $350.57 on Friday, easing with other consumer-finance names as investors weighed a shareholder push to lock in a permanent separation between the company’s chief executive and board chair roles. Mastercard was little changed and American Express fell about 0.8%.
The National Legal and Policy Center, in an “exempt solicitation” filing with the U.S. SEC, urged shareholders to back Proposal 5 on Visa’s 2026 proxy ballot. The proposal asks Visa to adopt a policy requiring that the CEO and chair jobs be held by different people, with the chair “whenever possible” an independent director; the filing argued Visa’s governance “does not lock in that separation.”
The timing matters because the vote is close, and governance items tend to draw more attention when they land near a market wobble. Big institutional holders rarely trade on a single proxy proposal, but they do pay attention to signals about board oversight and how hard a company is willing to bind itself.
Visa’s current setup already splits the roles, with Ryan McInerney as CEO and John F. Lundgren as chair, the filing said. The shareholder group said Visa’s board wants “flexibility” to change leadership structures later, and argued that is exactly the problem.
Shareholders are scheduled to vote at Visa’s annual meeting on Jan. 27, which the company plans to hold online. (Visa Investor Relations)
The stock closed Thursday down 1.0% at $352.23, leaving it about 6% below its 52-week high of $375.51, according to market data. Traders have been watching the $350 area, near Friday’s session low, as a near-term line in the sand. (MarketWatch)
Beyond the proxy vote, investors are still anchored on the next set of volume and revenue signals. Visa last told investors it expected low double-digit fiscal 2026 net revenue growth on a constant-currency basis, and the next earnings update will test whether that pace holds as spending trends and cross-border travel settle after the holiday period. (Reuters)
But governance is not the only pressure point. Visa remains exposed to fee-related litigation and antitrust scrutiny, including a U.S. Justice Department lawsuit over alleged debit-card market monopolization, and any adverse legal turns can hit sentiment fast even when day-to-day card volumes look steady. (Reuters)
Next up is the Jan. 27 annual meeting vote on Proposal 5. Investors will also be watching for Visa to disclose the date of its next quarterly results and any fresh commentary on consumer spending and cross-border activity.