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Visa (V) trades at $325.05 per share on a $587B market cap and 26.4x trailing earnings. Under a conservative 3-year scenario, the math points to roughly 42% of upside. Revenue compounding does most of the work in our scenario. Here is the picture the math sits on top of:

Where V Stands Today

Valuation: P/E of 26.4 versus a 3-year average of 29.2 and a 3-year high of 33.9.

Revenue: Revenue grew 14.4% over the last twelve months, with a 3-year CAGR of 11.6%.

Net Margin: Running at 51.7% LTM, against a 3-year average of 52.4% and a 3-year peak of 55.0%.

The Three Levers Of Upside

Today's price is paying for some combination of these three. Under our conservative calibration:

Revenue compounding at 12.2% annually. Top line moves from $43.0B to $60.8B. Standalone contribution to the price move: 41%.

Net margin holds near 51.7%. Standalone contribution: 0.4%.

P/E multiple holds near today's 26.4x. Standalone contribution: 0.0%.

Multiplied through, the three combine to roughly 42% of upside over three years. Before we stress each one, here is the picture they are operating on top of:

V

Sector

Financials

Industry

Transaction & Payment Processing Services

P/E Ratio

26.4

P/E Ratio 3Y Avg

29.2

LTM* Revenue Growth

14.4%

3Y Avg Revenue Growth

11.6%

LTM* Net Margin

51.7%

3Y Peak Net Margin

55.0%

3Y Avg Net Margin

52.4%

*LTM: Last Twelve Months

What Happens To Upside If The Levers Change?

The base case lands at 42%. Soften revenue compounding by 200 basis points, so the top line grows at 10.2% instead of 12.2%, and the upside slides toward 34%. Holding net margin at its 3-year average of 52.4%, essentially where the base case puts it, leaves the upside near 43%. The multiple barely changes the answer in either direction, holding it flat at today's 26.4x leaves the upside near 42%, close to the base case. And stretching the horizon from 3 years to 5 lifts the upside to 79%, with the math compounding in the patient investor's favor.

Which Lever Carries The Weight

Of the three levers, revenue compounding is doing the most. Margins and the multiple are supporting actors that can chip in or chip away, but the case lives or dies on the top line moving at roughly the projected pace.

Worth flagging: V has retired roughly 12% of share count over three years, which means per-share earnings rise faster than absolute earnings. A small fourth lever quietly working in the background.

The revenue lever is the test. If it holds, the math works; if it doesn't, none of the other levers fills the gap.

Should You Invest In Visa?

A careful 3-year case on a single name is still a concentrated bet, as historical volatility across past market crises shows. Investors who build analyses like this on individual positions often want the same framework running across a diversified book, partly for discipline, partly because even the cleanest single-stock thesis can break for reasons the math does not capture.

The Trefis High Quality (HQ) Portfolio combines analytical rigor with a forward-looking view across 30 stocks, with a consistent selection framework and a sizing and re-balancing discipline designed to deliver upside without the single-name risk you just read through here.

By selecting 30 high-conviction stocks, the HQ strategy has historically outpaced the S&P 500, S&P Mid-cap, and Russell 2000.