Visa stock (V) is seeing a glimmer of hope after a difficult start to the year. On January 13, 2026, the stock closed at $327.88, marking a sharp 4.46% drop in a single day and extending a losing streak that has seen shares fall over 8% in just one week. However, a major new partnership announced on Wednesday has investors looking at the company’s future in digital payments instead of just its recent price chart.
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The major news keeping investors interested today is that Visa has chosen BVNK, a leading stablecoin infrastructure provider, to run new pilot programs for Visa Direct. This partnership allows business customers to pre-fund their payouts using stablecoins like digital U.S. dollars. Instead of waiting for banks to open on Monday morning, businesses can now send money directly to recipient wallets instantly, even on weekends and holidays.
Why the Stock Needed a Lifeline
The recent drop in Visa’s stock price wasn’t just random. Markets have been nervous about a proposed 10% cap on credit card interest rates in the U.S., which analysts fear could hurt profits for major payment processors. On top of that, political news regarding the revocation of over 100,000 visas for students and workers has created extra volatility for the company. Before the BVNK news, Visa was the worst-performing stock in the Dow Jones Industrial Average for the week.
Visa’s Move Is Clever
From an educated perspective, this move is a smart defensive play. Stablecoins have grown into a $280 billion market, with transaction volumes reaching up to $4 trillion annually. By embedding these tokenized dollars into its own system, Visa is ensuring it doesn’t lose market share to newer fintech startups or decentralized networks.
In addition, Visa and BVNK are launching these pilots while keeping a close eye on the CLARITY Act in the United States. This upcoming law will decide how regulated companies can handle stablecoins and if they can offer rewards or interest on them. For now, Visa’s pilots are restricted to compliant wallets to make sure they follow all the rules in the U.K., U.S., and Europe.
Is Visa Stock a Good Buy?
Turning to TipRanks, Visa shares remain a Strong Buy based on analysts’ consensus. This breaks down to 23 Buys and three Holds assigned by 26 Wall Street analysts over the past three months. Moreover, the average 12-month V price target of $405 suggests a 23.5% upside potential from the current price level.



