TLDR
- MA hit a 52-week low of $480.27, down ~17% over the past year and ~13% year-to-date
- Ling Hai will replace Sachin Mehra as CFO effective August 3
- Mehra moves to a newly created Chief Business Officer role
- Q1 revenue came in at $8.4B, beating estimates, with EPS of $4.60 vs $4.40 expected
- Mastercard, Visa, and PayPal are under investigation by the UK’s FCA for suspected anti-competitive conduct
Mastercard (MA) stock dropped to a 52-week low of $480.27 on Monday, extending a rough stretch that has seen the stock fall roughly 17% over the past year and around 13% since January.
The stock was trading near $486 as of Monday morning, still hovering close to that low mark.
The move lower came on the same day Mastercard announced a broad leadership restructuring, set to take effect August 3.
Ling Hai, currently President of Asia Pacific, Europe, Middle East and Africa, will step into the CFO role, replacing Sachin Mehra. Mehra isn’t going anywhere — he’ll move into a newly created position as Chief Business Officer, taking on responsibility for country operations, sales, global partnerships, and digital commercialization.
Linda Kirkpatrick, President of the Americas, will become Chief Services Officer, taking over from Craig Vosburg. Vosburg moves to Vice Chair, serving as a global ambassador. Tim Murphy, also a Vice Chair, will retire in October.
Dimi Dosis will take on the role of Chief Commercial Payments Officer, replacing Raj Seshadri, who moves to Senior Strategic Advisor to the CEO.
CEO Michael Miebach framed the changes as a strategic alignment: “These leadership updates build on our strategy by aligning our team to that opportunity — strengthening execution, advancing a more connected customer experience and positioning the company for our continued growth.”
Q1 Beat Wasn’t Enough to Lift the Stock
Despite the headline drama, Mastercard actually posted a strong first quarter. Revenue hit $8.4 billion, topping the $8.25 billion consensus, and representing 12% constant currency growth. Adjusted EPS came in at $4.60, an 18% jump year-over-year and ahead of the $4.40 estimate.
BMO Capital kept its Outperform rating but trimmed its price target from $605 to $580, pointing to pressure from cross-border travel trends tied to Middle East conditions. Macquarie also kept Outperform but nudged its target slightly lower to $665 from $675.
InvestingPro analysis flags the stock as potentially undervalued at current levels, and 24 analysts have revised earnings estimates lower for the upcoming period.
Regulatory Heat and Digital Moves
On the regulatory front, Mastercard — alongside Visa and PayPal — is under investigation by the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority for suspected anti-competitive practices related to PayPal’s digital wallet. No conclusions have been reached yet.
On the other side of that coin, Mastercard Transaction Services (U.S.) LLC recently received a BitLicense from the New York State Department of Financial Services, clearing it to operate with digital assets in New York.
Jorn Lambert remains Chief Product Officer, with responsibility for consumer payments including stablecoins, agentic payments, and core payment operations.
BMO’s current price target of $580 sits roughly 19% above where the stock is trading today.
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