Visa had one major message for merchant attendees at MRC Vegas 2023 this year: the U.S. may go into recession, but so what?
The credit card network, which was the overall sponsor of what is perhaps the most important annual conference for risk and payments professionals, delivered the message in the form of a keynote presentation by its Principal U.S. Economist Michael Brown that was chock full of data and graphs. However, the bottom-line was simple. According to Brown, the strength of the U.S. labor market should keep consumer spending healthy and ensure that if there is a technical recession, it would be a short and shallow one.
Visa’s team of U.S. economists predict that GDP will still grow this year relative to last year, albeit a small 1 percent improvement. But Brown prefaced his presentation by openly stating, “we have no idea what is going on.” Instead, he provided what can be called an educated guess backed by a lot of analysis. While some economic indicators are showing an economic recession in the U.S., such as a decline in industrial production, most are not or at least not yet.
Along with the other credit card networks, Visa has reason to be upbeat about the economy. Last quarter, Visa, Mastercard and American Express all reported significant year over year growth in earnings. Visa in particular grew 12 percent in the fourth quarter, and outpacing the rate of inflation.
In the beginning of March, Visa also shared with the market its transaction data from January and February, with both months showing double digit year over year growth in U.S. payment volumes (i.e. including both credit and debit card payments). With U.S. inflation ranging between six and seven percent, that means Visa is experiencing real economic growth in payments volumes beyond just cost-based prices increases. Cross-border volumes were even stronger, with growth exceeding one-third year over year in both months.