Visa (NYSE:V | V Price Prediction) and Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) both move money for a living, yet their latest quarters read like reports from different economies.
Visa printed a 15% year-over-year net revenue jump on resilient holiday spending. Coinbase absorbed a 30.54% revenue decline as crypto volumes cratered. Same industry label, very different quarters.
Card Swipes Keep Humming. Crypto Trading Stalled.
Visa’s fiscal Q1 (reported January 29, 2026) leaned on the everyday plumbing: 69.4 billion processed transactions, up 9%, and cross-border volume ex-intra-Europe up 11%. Data Processing revenue rose 17% to $5.54B, which tells you the network is scaling faster than card issuance alone.
CEO Ryan McInerney credited “resilient consumer spending and a strong holiday season” and framed the company as a “payments hyperscaler.” BEA data backs him up: total PCE climbed to $22,059.8B in May 2026, with gasoline alone jumping to $552.8B from $422.3B in February. More fill-ups mean more swipes.
Coinbase’s Q1 (reported May 7, 2026) was the other side of the coin. GAAP EPS came in at -$1.49 against a $0.04 estimate, dragged down by $482.40 million in mark-to-market losses on crypto held for investment. Transaction revenue slid to $755.80 million, down 23% quarter over quarter.
Bright spots existed: stablecoin revenue reached $305 million, USDC market cap hit an all-time high near $80B in March, and adjusted EBITDA stayed positive for a 13th consecutive quarter at $303.30 million. Brian Armstrong still had to announce a 14% headcount cut targeting roughly $500 million in annualized savings.
Hyperscaler Utility vs. Everything Exchange
| Lens | Visa | Coinbase |
| Core Bet | Value-added services, tokenization, stablecoin rails | Everything Exchange (crypto, derivatives, prediction markets, FX) |
| Q1 Revenue Trend | +14.6% YoY | -30.54% YoY |
| Beta | 0.754 | 3.351 |
| Forward P/E | 24x | 122x |
Both companies now talk about stablecoins as a strategic pillar. Visa treats them as another rail bolted onto its network. Coinbase co-owns USDC and captures roughly half its economics, with over 25% of circulating USDC held inside Coinbase products.
Armstrong’s x402 payments protocol has processed 100M+ payments, mostly powering agentic commerce on Base. Visa’s capital return machine keeps grinding: 11M shares repurchased at an average $342.13 for $3.8B, plus a raised dividend.
The Next Test Is Whether Crypto Volumes Come Back
For Visa, I want to see cross-border growth hold through summer travel and whether the litigation provision ($707M interchange charge) stays a one-off. Shares are already at their 52-week high of $362.13 after a 14.12% one-month move.
For Coinbase, prediction markets peg an 86.5% probability of reclaiming $175 by month-end, but the stock is still down 26.82% year-to-date. Q2 subscription and services guidance of $565 to $645 million will tell us if USDC and Base can carry the model when trading dries up.
Where The Risk/Reward Sits Now
Personally, I find Visa the more comfortable position after this earnings pair. A 67.3% operating margin and a beta under one is boring in the best way, and the analyst target sits at $398.70.
Coinbase interests me more as an options-like bet on stablecoin adoption and the $3T stablecoin market forecast by 2030. Coinbase offers turnaround leverage tied to a 53.31% one-year drawdown, while Visa profiles as the steadier toll-booth model. At Visa’s current price, the setup skews toward accumulation on pullbacks rather than breakout entries.
Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.