NYSE:MA

Mastercard Inc. (MA)

491.08
+9.32 (1.93%)
as of Jun 5, 2026, 8:00:00 pm Market Open.
272 watching
0
Investor Insights
star iconJun 7, 2026, 12:00 am

This summary was created by AI, based on 19 opinions in the last 12 months.

Mastercard Inc. is viewed favorably by multiple experts who highlight its strong fundamentals, durability in the payments space, and the long-term growth potential of digital transactions. Despite short-term fluctuations and fears over the impact of digital currencies and stablecoins, experts largely agree that Mastercard, alongside its counterpart Visa, remains a solid investment opportunity. The company is benefiting from the global shift away from cash and maintaining strong revenue growth, with estimates of earnings increasing by 10-15%. Though some analysts recommend waiting for a better entry point due to current valuations and recent declines, the overall consensus emphasizes that any dips present a buying opportunity, reinforcing Mastercard's position as a high-quality asset in the credit services sector. With limited competition and a robust business model, Mastercard is well-positioned for future growth.

consensus icon
Consensus
Positive
valuation icon
Valuation
Fair Value
review icon
Similar
Visa, V
TOP PICK

It has $256 billion in revenue. It has an extensive global network in 210 countries. It started a $9 billion share buyback last year. Also it expects 18% EPS growth per year over the next few years. This is due to high post pandemic travel, revenge spending, and growing global and emerging market spending.    Buy 41, Hold 6, Sell 0

(Analysts’ price target is $457.51)
COMMENT
MA vs. Visa

Prefers Visa, because it trades at a slightly lower PE, growth rates are as good as MA's and it's the biggest credit card company by far. Also, Visa is concentrated in the debit market, which is where fintech is transitioning to.

BUY ON WEAKNESS

Markets like China are almost cashless. Visa or MA are the two places to be. Growth of digital payments has slowed, so you might get a better entry point.

BUY ON WEAKNESS

Owns shares for past 5 years.
Move to cashless society good for business.
Recovery in global travel helping with revenue.
Good business for long term shareholders.
Expecting double digit earnings growth.
Current share price not cheap.
Excellent management team.

HOLD

He owns Visa. Both trading at 52-week highs today. Wide moat, huge pricing power. Lots to like still. The type of business you can hold for multi-decades. Such a large network effect, they're in good shape for the long term.

BUY

Excellent business model.
Under regulatory watch, but not concerned.
Very robust network effects. 
Strong security to protect customers from cyber attack.
Excellent profits and free cash flow.
Investing in new lines of business.

PARTIAL BUY

The valuation of Visa and Mastercard has been elevated, but the growth has supported it. AmEx has the cheaper valuation; they benefit from international travel. He owns a little Visa. The future of payments processing? It's Apple Pay, which kids use through their phones. The sector has a lot of moving parts and competition, so it's hard to say where it's going.

PAST TOP PICK
(A Top Pick Sep 07/22, Up 21%)

It's a tech stock. Next to Visa, they're the king of transaction processing. They just bought Africa's largest cell network. Interesting that a credit card company is buying a cell company. MA is a money machine. They just beat top and bottom and extending guidance. It's his 4th-largest holding. You can buy it partially now and watch for fall volatility to add more.

HOLD
MA vs. V

Fundamentally, it's worthwhile to understand that Visa is the granddaddy of the card business. Visa does more transactions that all competitors combined, 60% of business is international, more of a footprint in debit cards. Prefers Visa at a few multiple points cheaper, with potential of high $8 or low $9 EPS for next year.

He doesn't dislike MA, very similar structures and business plans. It's done well.

BUY
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research.

 MA has shown its ability to compete, and also adapt, over decades. The cash-to-card trend is not likely to go away. Travel is coming back. Lower costs can still improve margins and AI could help its data mining. There are positives to offset the negatives noted. Certainly from an earnings standpoint, based on consensus estimates, no slowdown in growth is expected for three years at least. We think if investors were concerned it would lose it 'premium' multiple (31X). But it is not a company we would bet against, and we would be comfortable buying/owning it today.
Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free

WEAK BUY
MA vs. V

He prefers Visa, but both are good. MA gives more international exposure, so maybe a bit more growth. Defensive business models. Moving to the Financial sector of the S&P 500, so it will boost performance of that sector.

DON'T BUY
MA vs. V Visa has better domestic (that is, North American) exposure than MA. The NA economy is going to be stronger. Visa is a technology leader. If you use something yourself a lot, it's not a bad start for a stock choice. If you thought Europe was on the brink of a great recovery, you'd bet on MA as it's more prevalent there.
BUY
Same tailwind as Visa: spending is up. Likes it.
PAST TOP PICK
(A Top Pick Nov 23/21, Down 10%) Continues to grow the business (15-20% in the next 5 years). Likes the business and will continue to hold. Excellent long term business.
BUY ON WEAKNESS
She owns Visa, but both are attractive because of the trend to digital payments--lots of runway here. Near-term, there's some regulatory overhang in the U.S. given both stocks being so dominant. If we fall into a recession, transaction volumes may soften, but both offer attractive long-term growth. Start to build positions on pullbacks, though not all at once.
Showing 61 to 75 of 323 entries