Today: 23 May 2026
Mastercard stock slides as Europe urges Visa, Mastercard alternatives; jobs and CPI loom
10 February 2026
1 min read

Mastercard stock slides as Europe urges Visa, Mastercard alternatives; jobs and CPI loom

NEW YORK, Feb 9, 2026, 18:13 EST — After-hours

  • Mastercard dropped 2.4% Monday, trailing behind a rising U.S. market.
  • European officials are reviving efforts to reduce dependence on U.S. card networks, bringing renewed attention to transaction fees and questions over market dominance.
  • Next up for consumer-linked stocks: U.S. jobs numbers and inflation data, both landing later this week.

Mastercard Incorporated dropped 2.4% Monday, finishing regular trading at $535.33. Post-market, shares held steady. Visa retreated 1.8%. American Express ticked up—just 0.1%. Mastercard’s session ranged from $534.47 to $548.60, volume hitting roughly 4.1 million shares.

The decision landed just as Europe’s payments debate flared up again. Martina Weimert, who heads the European Payments Initiative, told the Financial Times that Europe remains “highly dependent” on global payment solutions—and, she said, the region needs to move “urgently” to develop cross-border alternatives. Visa and Mastercard processed nearly two-thirds of card transactions in the euro zone during 2022, according to European Central Bank figures cited by the paper. Financial Times

Tech stocks bounced back Monday, lifting U.S. indexes after last week’s dip. Next up for investors: inflation reports and payroll data due later in the week, both critical for gauging rate bets and consumer demand.

Fees and routing are the main battlegrounds for card networks in Europe. “Interchange” or “swipe” fees—those payments that flow from merchants with every card sale—remain in focus, since any pivot to local payment schemes or fresh infrastructure chips away at the networks’ grip on pricing, even when consumers keep spending.

Mastercard has kept transaction volumes steady and seen its services segment expand, but shares have wobbled on regulatory worries globally. Last month, the company topped Wall Street’s profit forecasts and announced plans to trim roughly 4% of its worldwide full-time staff, a move expected to result in a $200 million restructuring charge in the first quarter.

Mastercard isn’t the only one under fire. Both Visa and Mastercard have dealt with years of pushback from merchants over card acceptance fees, culminating in a revised settlement unveiled with merchants last November.

Still, building up homegrown European options takes time, and consumer payment habits don’t shift overnight. For traders, the more immediate worry is a growth scare that hits travel and discretionary spending—or a fresh round of policy moves bringing card fees back under scrutiny.

Investors are bracing for fresh U.S. data—January’s Employment Situation lands Feb. 11, with January CPI following on Feb. 13. Payment stocks, sensitive to consumer spending and cross-border volumes, could see swift moves if those numbers upend the rates outlook.

Stock Market Today

  • Kevin Warsh Faces Challenges as Federal Reserve Chair at Economic Crossroads
    May 23, 2026, 2:28 PM EDT. Kevin Warsh is set to become Federal Reserve chair amid a crucial phase for the U.S. economy. Despite his initial ambitions to be a market disruptor, current economic conditions may limit his ability to cut interest rates. The Federal Reserve's monetary policy appears constrained, signaling tough choices ahead as it balances growth and inflation concerns.

Latest articles

AbbVie Shares Edge Up Ahead Of Holiday On Pipeline News

AbbVie Shares Edge Up Ahead Of Holiday On Pipeline News

23 May 2026
AbbVie shares closed Friday at $215.70, up 0.56%, gaining 2.5% for the week. The company reported a positive European panel recommendation for MAVIRET in acute hepatitis C and released new oncology data ahead of the ASCO meeting. U.S. markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day, with trading set to resume Tuesday.
Coherent Shares Trade Close to $378, With Next Test Set for Tuesday After Volatile AI-Optics Week

Coherent Shares Trade Close to $378, With Next Test Set for Tuesday After Volatile AI-Optics Week

23 May 2026
Coherent Corp. shares closed at $377.57 Friday, down 0.1% for the day and 1.3% below last week, underperforming the S&P 500 and Nasdaq ahead of the Memorial Day market closure. The company reported fiscal Q3 revenue of $1.81 billion, up 21% year-over-year, with strong demand in datacenter and communications. Nvidia invested $2 billion in March and signed a multi-year optics agreement. Coherent trades at 179 times trailing earnings.
Intuit Slashes 3,000 Jobs as TurboTax Faces New AI Threats

Intuit Slashes 3,000 Jobs as TurboTax Faces New AI Threats

23 May 2026
Intuit will cut about 3,000 jobs, or 17% of its workforce, and close offices in Reno and Woodland Hills as it restructures to focus on artificial intelligence. The company expects $300 million to $340 million in charges, mostly in the fiscal fourth quarter. Intuit raised full-year revenue guidance but lowered its TurboTax outlook, citing pressure from low-cost AI tools. Shares last traded at $319.94 after a volatile week.
Exxon Mobil stock hits a fresh 52-week high as oil firms — what to watch next
Previous Story

Exxon Mobil stock hits a fresh 52-week high as oil firms — what to watch next

India fintech MIDASX hits best quarter, turns cash-flow positive as it scales AI-led distribution
Next Story

India fintech MIDASX hits best quarter, turns cash-flow positive as it scales AI-led distribution

Go toTop