Apr 29, 2010
Executives
Jack Carsky – Head Global Investor Relations Joseph W. Saunders - Chairman of the Board & Chief Executive Officer Byron H.
Pollitt, Jr. - Chief Financial Officer
Analysts
Adam Frisch – Morgan Stanley David Hochstim – Buckingham Research Rod Bourgeois – Bernstein Capital Mosche Orenbauch – Credit Suisse David Long – William Blair Tien-Tsin Huang – JP Morgan Jason Kupferberg – UBS Securities Christopher Mammone – Deutsche Bank Julio Quinteros – Goldman Sachs & Co. Sanjay Sakhrani – Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Craig Maurer – CLSA Robert Dodd – Morgan Keegan James Kissane – Bank of America Merrill Lynch Timothy Willi – Wells Fargo Securities James Friedman – Susquehanna Financial Group Moshe Katri – Cowen & Co.
Bruce Harting – Barclays Capital Don Fandetti – Citigroup
Operator
Welcome to Visa Inc.’ s fiscal second quarter 2010 earnings conference call.
All participants are in a listen only mode until the question-and-answer session. Today’s conference is being recorded.
If you have any objections you may disconnect at this time. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr.
Jack Carsky, Head of Global Investor Relations.
Jack Carsky
Welcome to Visa Inc.’ s fiscal second quarter 2010 earnings conference call.
With us today are Joe Saunders, Visa’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Byron Pollitt, Visa’s Chief Financial Officer. This call is currently being webcast over the Internet.
It can be accessed on the Investor Relations section of our website at www.InvestorVisa.com. A replay of the webcast will also be archived on our site for 30 days.
A PowerPoint deck containing highlights of today’s commentary was posted to our website prior to this call. Let me also remind you that this presentation may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
By their nature forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and as a result of a variety of factors actual results could differ materially from such statements. Additional information concerning these factors is available in the company’s filings with the SEC which can be accessed through the SEC website and the Investor Relations section of the Visa website.
For historical non-GAAP or pro forma related financial information disclosed in this call the related GAAP measures and other information required by Regulation G of the SEC are available in the financial and statistical summary accompanying our fiscal second quarter earnings press release. This release can also be accessed through the IR section of our website.
With that, I’ll turn over the call to Joe.
Joseph W. Saunders
As we conclude the first half of our fiscal 2010, I’m increasing optimistic that the worst of the recession is behind is because we are finally beginning to see evidence of a pickup in spending domestically and internationally. This was apparent in the results of our fiscal second quarter as strong year-over-year payments volume and revenue gains were delivered in every area of our business.
However, while we are increasingly more comfortable the economic environment in which we are operating, we remain watchful of the longer term sustainability of growth in the world economy. Earnings for our second fiscal quarter on a GAAP basis were $0.96 per diluted share, a $0.25 or 35% increase over the second quarter of 2009.
Net income on a GAAP basis was $713 million, a 33% increase over the year ago period. Net operating revenues in the quarter were just under $2 billion, a 19% increase over the year ago period as a result of stronger than anticipated payments volume, cross border volume and process transaction growth coming from all areas of the globe.
Byron will get in to the details but overall we are very pleased with our results and we remain cautiously optimistic that we will continue to see solid trends going forward. Process transaction growth continued to accelerate over the quarter ending the period at 14% on a year-over-year basis with over 10.6 billion transactions processed over Visa net.
This is up from the 12% growth rate we experienced last quarter and well ahead of the same period a year ago when process transactions grew 6%. With these trends we are increasingly optimistic that our net revenue growth will now come in at the high end of our 11% to 15% range.
While we delivered 16% growth year-to-date keep in mind that we lap last year’s data processing price increase at the end of the June quarter. In addition, consistent with our annual plan and guidance, we are projecting modestly higher rebates and incentives in the back half of the year.
Byron will provide greater detail on this. As you know, last week we announced an agreement to acquire CyberSource.
It’s a strong fit with our long term strategic view of eCommerce and is complemented by its ability to deliver incremental benefits to our financial institution customers and their cardholders. While we’d be happy to entertain any outstanding questions you may have at the end of this call, please keep in mind that because CyberSource shareholder approval is still pending we will not be able to go in to any more detail on the transaction than we did last week.
I would refer you back to the presentation and transcript of our comments from the conference call. Additional information regarding the transaction will be available in the forth coming registration statement Form S4 which will be filed with the SEC in due course.
All-in-all we continue to execute well against our business plan. Our management team remains very focused on further expanding our payments network globally by growing issuance and acceptance locations, by expanding our processing capabilities, by adapting our products and services to fit the need of individual markets and by driving transactions with effective marketing programs.
As we navigate through the current economic environment, we are generating solid earnings results and will continue to focus on returning excess cash flow to our shareholders. While we temporarily curtailed our previous announced share buyback earlier in the second quarter, it is our intention to resume share repurchases this fiscal year as conditions warrant.
With that, let me turn the call over to Byron who will take you through the details of our financial results and then I will back.
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
As is customary, let me begin with the financial highlights for our fiscal second quarter and then comment on the global payment volume trends for the current quarter followed by transaction results for April. As Joe already mentioned, it was a very strong quarter with better than anticipated revenue growth.
Global payment volume growth for the December quarter in constant dollars rose from a positive 3% in the September quarter to 8%. In the US payment volume growth was a positive 7% in the December quarter up from a -1% in the September quarter.
Debit continued to prove both its resiliency as a product and its secular appeal by delivering a positive 15% growth compared to 7% growth in the September quarter. Credit improved to -1% in the December quarter from a -9% in the September period.
On a constant dollar basis, rest of world payment volume grew at 10% in the December quarter, a modest improvement over the 8% rate delivered in the September quarter. These results continue to reflect solid secular growth and a strong and healthy diversified country base outside the US.
Now, turning to the metrics that drive revenue on a current basis. Globally cross border volume growth continued to improve in the March quarter posting a positive 12% growth rate on a constant dollar basis from the positive 2% rate in the December period.
Transactions processed over Visa’s network totaled $10.6 billion in the fiscal second quarter, an increase of 14% over the similar period a year ago and up from 12% growth we saw in the December quarter. Turning to the income statement, in our fiscal second quarter gross revenues of $2.3 billion were up 20% from the similar period in 2009.
Volume and support incentive as a percentage of gross revenues came in at 16%, up from the prior year’s recession influenced level of 15% and in line with our expectations and guidance for fiscal 2010 as payment volume growth improved. Net operating revenues in the quarter were almost $2 billion, a 19% increase over the operating revenues recorded for the second fiscal quarter of 2009 driven by better than anticipated global payment volume and process transaction growth in debit, in credit and cross border payments.
Moving to the individual revenue line items; service revenues was $885 million up 10% over the prior year period and reflective of accelerating payment volume growth in the quarter ending December, a trend which continued through the March quarter. Data processing revenue was $728 million, up 34% over the prior year based on strong process transaction growth of 14% and the continuing effect of previously enacted pricing actions.
International transaction revenues were up a solid 22% to $545 million due to an improvement in cross border volumes during the period. The foreign exchange impact on revenue in the second fiscal quarter was a positive 2% as a result of the weakening dollar against several key currencies.
While the balance of this year’s revenue forecast is substantially hedged, some quarter-to-quarter volatility may be exhibited due to the timing of hedges and the underlying volatility of currencies. Overall, for the full fiscal year, we expect the foreign exchange impact of revenue growth to be neutral to slightly positive.
Our operating margin was 57% in line with our guidance of mid to high 50% range. Higher revenues in the period were offset by higher planned marketing and advertising spend in the quarter.
We expect a similar dynamic in our fiscal third quarter as we ramp up ahead of the FIFA World Cup. Total operating expenses for the second quarter were $837 million representing a year-over-year increase of $71 million or 9% driven by anticipated increases in marketing and advertising spend.
Our expectation continues to be that expenses on a full year basis will be relatively flat to the 2009 level on a GAAP basis excluding any affect from our pending CyberSource acquisition. On a sequential quarter basis, we saw moderately higher expenses in marketing and advertising as well given higher spending on the winter Olympics and upcoming World cup event.
We also saw consolidated personnel expenses as we invest for future growth. Capital expenditures were $42 million in the quarter and $79 million year-to-date representing ongoing investment in technology and our newer initiatives.
For fiscal 2010 we expect capital expenditures to be around $200 million. Moving on to the balance sheet, we ended the second quarter in strong shape with negligible debt and cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and available for sale investments of $6.3 billion.
Of this total $1.6 billion is restricted cash which represents amounts sufficient to fully pay out the American Express settlement with $1 billion that is currently uncommitted. The previously announced unlocking of 50% of the remaining locked up Class C shareholdings commenced on March 1st and as anticipated had little discernable effect on our trading activity.
As of the end of March there are a total of $100 million Class C shares outstanding of which $55 million shares remain locked up. Now, let me comment on March’s payment volume data and our early read on April.
Then, I’ll cover our updated financial expectations for the balance of the year. Global payment volume growth for the March quarter in constant dollars rose to 13% from a positive 8% in December.
We experienced meaningful growth in every one of our global regions. In the US payment volume growth was a positive 13% in the March quarter up from a positive 7% in the December quarter.
Debit continued its strong recent trend delivering a positive 21% growth compared to 15% growth in the December period. Debit, currently accounts for 57% of total US payment volume.
Credit accelerated to a positive 3% growth in the March quarter from a -1% in the December period. More recently through the 21st of April, US payment volumes grew at 15%, two percentage points ahead of the March quarter rate but one point lower than the month of March gross rate of 16%.
Further deconstructed debit grew at 22% while credit grew at 7%. On a constant dollar basis, rest of world payment volume grew at 14% in the March quarter, up from a 10% rate in the December quarter.
These results recognized continued secular growth and a strong and healthy diversified country base outside the US. Global cross border volume growth accelerated considerably in the March quarter hosting a 12% growth rate on a constant dollar basis from the positive 2% rate in the December period.
Growth in the month of March was an unexpectedly strong 16%. In contrast to our view a quarter ago this trend appears to be more representative of a broader cyclical trend rather than just pent up demand.
April cross border volume growth on a constant basis sustained the strong growth rate we saw in March posting a 17% rate of growth through the 21st of the month. Process transactions through the 21st grew at 15% over the prior year period up slightly from the 14% growth posted in the second fiscal quarter but down a point from the 16% growth rate delivered in the month of March.
Now, let me comment on our expectations for the remainder of the fiscal year for operating performance and the resulting impact on our full year guidance. As Joe mentioned, given our year-to-date results we are now comfortable with a net revenue growth target at the high end of the 11% to 15% range.
Despite our year-to-date growth of 16%, we anticipate a couple of dynamics over the back half of the year. First, the data processing pricing action we took in April of 2009 will lap in our June quarter making year-over-year growth comparisons in this line item less favorable in the fourth quarter.
Second, consistent with our guidance, we expect rebate and incentive costs to increase moderately in the second half due to higher earn out rates tied to the higher volumes we’re experiencing. Remember, as discussed at our investor day, the level of incentives tied to payment volume growth declined in fiscal year 2009 due to economic conditions.
Consistent with our internal operating plan and our guidance, the level of incentives earned will naturally rise with volume in 2010 with the financial impact weighted more to the second half of the fiscal year. In addition, we also anticipate signing several new deals, some as soon as the third quarter which may have upfront payments that are directly expensed rather than amortized resulting in some lumpiness to our quarter-to-quarter incentive levels.
That said, consistent with our Q1 guidance, we are still comfortable with full year rebates and incentives as a percentage of gross revenue in the range of 16% to 17% potentially at the higher end. Our expectation for our full year 2010 operating margin remains in the mid to high 50s.
As exhibited this quarter, increased marketing and advertising expenses as well as further investments in our numerous initiatives offset the higher margin we reported in our first fiscal quarter. We expect similar dynamics in our fiscal third and fourth quarters.
We expect our full fiscal year 2010 tax rate to be in the range of 36.5% to 38.5%. We continue to target better than 20% earnings per share growth in 2010 on a GAAP basis excluding the Visa Net Brazil gain and a 2011 earnings per share growth goal of better than 20%.
We expect capital expenditures to be around $200 million and lastly, our projection for free cash flow for the year remains north of $2 billion which is net of the $682 million pre-payment we made last quarter on the previous settled retailers litigation. That concludes my comments, so I’ll turn the call back to Joe.
Joseph W. Saunders
In closing let me say it’s certainly been a very busy and exciting time at Visa. We are fortunate to sit at the center of a dynamic and highly competitive industry.
Not only are more consumers turning their backs on cash and checks but more government and businesses are embracing the speed, security and reliability of Visa digital currency in every part of the world. Inevitably along with our success comes increased competition from companies large and small both within and outside the United States.
However, as we have done on the past, we will continue to challenge ourselves to innovative and adapt to the ever changing competitive landscape. Importantly, we are taking concrete steps to achieve our strategic objectives and secure our long term growth to the benefit of Visa shareholders and clients.
We are also continuing to build our management team with key hires to lead and operationalize our activities in mobile and eCommerce. Even as we look to the future we continue to focus on the tremendous opportunities in our core business, the ongoing migration to digital currency from cash and checks.
By way of example, at the end of calendar year 2009, the number of Visa debit and prepaid cards issued globally surpassed one billion for the first time in our history. This represents not only further penetration of debt globally but the underlying growth and importance of prepaid cards which are a key contributor of all of our debit business overall.
In the coming weeks we will increase our marketing activation around our FIFA sponsorship in advance of this summer’s World Cup. The majority of these marketing investments will be focused on increasing awareness of the benefits of debit and premium credit products with the goal of driving every day and cross border transactions.
Particular emphasis will be given to markets with strong growth potential and a passion for soccer. With this, we are ready to take any questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Your first question comes from Adam Frisch – Morgan Stanley.
Adam Frisch – Morgan Stanley
I guess I’ll focus on emerging markets since CyberSource is sort of off the table for now. Turning to Brazil, two of the larger banks announced a JV this week.
It certainly can be seen as threat to you but our industry contacts suggests they’re going after the private label market and not your core offering. So any color you can provide there would be great and an update in other initiatives like India and Russia would also be appreciated and if you could focus on the support you’re getting from the big banks and government entities in these markets that would be really helpful.
Joseph W. Saunders
As it relates to Brazil there’s not much to report beyond what you just said. Every indication that we’ve had, any conversations we’ve had with the individuals at those institutions would suggest exactly what you said Adam.
So we don’t look at this as being threatening to us certainly in the near term. As it relates to Russia, we’re working well with the government and with Sharebank which is as you know the largest institution as well as other banks.
As a matter of fact I signed an agreement with Sharebank while we were at the Olympics and it covered an agreement on how we were going to operate cooperatively at the Winter Olympics in Russia. Sharebank who has actually traditionally been more of a MasterCard bank than a Visa bank is fully committed to issuing only Visa cards from now through the Winter Olympics.
I have nothing new to report on India other than what we’ve reported up to now.
Operator
Your next question comes from David Hochstim – Buckingham Research.
David Hochstim – Buckingham Research
To follow up on the answer to Adam’s question is Sharebank only issuing new Visa cards or are they going to convert from MasterCard to Visa? Then my real question was just could you give us some color on what you see in the way of cross border spending improvement?
And then, have you seen evidence in this last quarter of a pickup in discretionary spending in credit card? Is there faster growth in signature cards than in other credit cards?
Joseph W. Saunders
Well, I’ll answer the first part of the question which is the simple part. The answer is I don’t believe that they’re converting anything they have.
I was speaking primarily of new issuance, although that’s over a multiyear period of time. I don’t know that they’ll issue zero MasterCard cards but we are their principle partner by far.
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
What we see on cross border is that we are seeing just strong cross border gains throughout the globe. If we were to look at cross border for the second quarter for Visa transactions in constant dollars the category was up 12%, 11% in the US, 12% rest of world.
So it is a broad based recovery on cross border. Then, with regards to discretionary versus non-discretionary the mix for us for the quarter just ended in the US which is what we have real time visibility to, the mix is now a couple of percentage points higher for non-discretionary.
So in the spirit of your question, we would say that the pickup is still very much debit, very much non-discretionary but with credit starting to show some signs of life. But, even within our credit portfolio, we’re finding that the mix of non-discretionary is continuing to rise, modestly but continuing to rise.
Operator
Your next question comes from Rod Bourgeois – Bernstein Capital.
Rod Bourgeois – Bernstein Capital
It sounds like you’re poised to win some new accounts. Can you give us any profile information on the types of wins you’re expecting in terms of size or geography.
If you can comment on the basis for how you’re wining these deals. Then also related to that Byron, since you may have some unamortizable expenses attached to these wins should we expect this to be more of a new and common trend in terms of how you deal with the upfront expenses on new wins?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
Let me give you some perspective on that, when we guide at the beginning of the year and by the way let me first say that what is unfolding this year is very consistent with how we planned the year and how we guided to it. We have every year a natural deal pipeline and natural flow of deals.
What’s hard to predict is when those deals will actually renew or come to conclusion and it’s when you actually have a signed agreement that you can then trigger the accounting. So there is no particular call out on wins, losses, renewals here.
For fiscal year 2010, this is just how the deal pipeline fell and as a result we’re more second half weighted in the incentives than we would book in the first half. You will notice that we are still affirming that the level of incentives for the year are within the guidance we gave at the Q1 earnings call.
With regards to amortized expense, again I would say there is no call out here that we anticipated a certain amount of incentives being expensed and what we are reporting, although second half weighted is still very much consistent with how we thought the year would unfold.
Operator
Your next question comes from Mosche Orenbauch – Credit Suisse.
Mosche Orenbauch – Credit Suisse
Just in that same vein following up, could you talk about what perhaps percentage of the annual revenues in those contracts might be comprise? It would see that that should imply that fiscal 2011 should have some benefits relative to this year?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
We don’t guide or talk about the first part of your question, we don’t break that part out in any detail. But, the conclusion you’re drawing is fair and I think there are two phenomena here and frankly it has something to do with the deal flow but frankly it’s more about the earn outs.
Fiscal 2009 was a non-normalized depressed incentive year because portfolios did not grow substantively during that year, many of them didn’t grow at all. So what you have in 2010 is the beginning of a return to our more normalized incentive level.
You have growth in the portfolios, you’ll notice we’re now reporting year-over-year positive growth in the credit portfolios not just the debit portfolios and so what is happening is you’re starting to earn a level of incentives and get back to a more normalized level which then rests the base in fiscal year ’10 and hence you would expect, everything else being equal a more moderated level of incentives in the year that follows, a more moderated level of growth and incentives for 2011.
Joseph W. Saunders
I think I’d add that as it relates to the number of transactions that we’ve consummated over the last two years, it’s partially been a result of the economy and the consolidation of the banking industry and I think we’re pretty much at the tail end of that right now. So I’m not sure that you’ll see as many deals in 2010 as you have in the last two years.
Operator
Your next question comes from David Long – William Blair.
David Long – William Blair
MasterCard is increasing prices from what we hear on merchant assessments as of April 1st so my question is have you guys raised merchant assessment pricing as well? Then also as a follow up, are there any other pricing increases that we should be thinking about here for your fiscal third quarter?
Joseph W. Saunders
Well we’ve already announced an increase in our acquirers fees similar to the one that MasterCard did and ours is effective in July. But, because of the way we book our services fees won’t show up in our revenues until our first fiscal quarter which would be the October quarter.
Operator
Your next question comes from Tien-Tsin Huang – JP Morgan.
Tien-Tsin Huang – JP Morgan
I wanted to ask about the cross border revenue which was stronger than we expected. The difference between the 22% in cross border revenue versus the 19% reported volume, Byron is the delta there pricing or did mix continue to the spread widening out there?
Do you follow my question?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
We don’t hedge volumes but we hedge revenue so there’s no real call out here. With regards to the international it’s tracking pretty close but it will always have several – I mean it would not be unusual to have several points of difference plus or minus.
Operator
Your next question comes from Jason Kupferberg – UBS Securities.
Jason Kupferberg – UBS Securities
I just wanted to follow up on a comment you had made at the analyst meeting about seeing a narrowing of the traditional GAAP between PIN and sig debt interchange rates. Can you give us an update on what the impetuous is for this movement?
And, does it also apply to your network fees or is it really just on the interchange side? Is the goal here to more or less keep the average interchange rate about the same just by tweaking PIN up and sig debit down?
Joseph W. Saunders
Well there are parts of that question that I can answer and parts of it that I can’t and parts of it that I shouldn’t. What I would say to you is that I don’t think the trend from signature to PIN is any much different than it’s been for quite a while and while the PIN volume has grown, so has the signature volume and the signature volume is considerably more than the PIN volume.
It has always been a fact that a merchant can use PIN to any extent that they want. If the merchant wants to put PIN terminals in then they are more than welcome to do so.
So, what’s going on isn’t in my opinion or from what we can see much different than what’s been going on for quite some time. By the way which means that it isn’t narrowing anywhere near as rapidly as your questions would suggest.
Operator
Your next question comes from Christopher Mammone – Deutsche Bank.
Christopher Mammone – Deutsche Bank
I guess a similar question to Tien-Tsin’s. Just could you go in to more color on the service revenue fee growth?
It looks like service revenue fees lacked your payment volume growth which is a reversal of the trend at least from the past four quarters.
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
With regard to service fees again, I think what we report on service fees on volumes is unhedged so it is a gross number, nominal, unhedged. When we report it in our financial statements, it is hedged and so there is always going to be a delta with regards to that.
Now, having said that, I wouldn’t get overly concerned about an individually quarter, you ought to be looking at it over several quarters because there will be ins and outs for the quarter. Having said all of that, there is always a degree of variance that will occur simply because there is a difference in mix.
We have one level of service fee yield in the United States which is the single largest source of service fees. As you move outside the United States we have very different mix profiles so it actually does matter from which geographies the stronger growth rates are coming because if the yield is higher in the faster growing than everything else being equal we’ll have service fee revenues growing faster than payment volume.
But, if it’s coming from areas that have lower yields on service fees, then we’ll have the opposite. Then of course, there is a difference between the mix of credit and debit.
Credit carries on balance higher service fee yields than debit. Then within debit, signature carries a different service field yield signature debit than PIN debit.
So in short there are quite a few factors that go in to the actual translations of payment volume in to revenue and what you see is the outcome of all of those in a given quarter. All-in-all we feel it is a pretty healthy growth rate and is growing at a rate that is frankly, somewhat above our expectations at the beginning of the year.
Operator
Your next question comes from Julio Quinteros – Goldman Sachs & Co.
Julio Quinteros – Goldman Sachs & Co.
Byron can I just stay on that same point and just add another quick question on that delta card services fees. How much of that, if any, is attributable to tiering?
In other words people moving so the volume is coming back faster and some of the tier pricing that you would see maybe even a merchant mix situation? I’m just trying to get a sense if there’s some of that that could also be another factor to kind of contemplate in the delta there?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
I think the answer that I gave earlier, Julio there are a multitude of factors. I would say that the factor that you just described has very little to do with the calculation.
The added concentration of payment volume would be much more a driver than tearing.
Joseph W. Saunders
I think the short answer to everything that Byron has said is that nothing has essentially changed in the way that we do business or the way we generate revenue or what our yields are. I think that there will be some anomalies on a quarter-to-quarter basis but as he said earlier, look at the year, look at several quarters and you’re not going to see any significant change.
So there’s nothing going on that we’re aware of and we’ve looked at it pretty carefully that is significantly changing or that you have to think of as being different than it has in the past.
Operator
Your next question comes from Sanjay Sakhrani – Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.
Sanjay Sakhrani – Keefe, Bruyette & Woods
Byron I was just wondering if you can talk about that personnel line? You mentioned some reinvestment there and I was just wondering how we should think about it on an ongoing basis?
Maybe if you could split out the investment spend portion versus the core number there. The second question was just to your comments that the rebound in volume seems to be related to a broader cyclical trend versus pent up demand.
I was wondering if you could just maybe talk about the specific items that kind of lead you to believe that that is the case?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
On the personnel line, I think just keep in mind that we are coming off a year, namely 2009 where we had a combination of a very uncertain economic environment where it made sense to put a very close watch on expenses. At the same time we were completing the rationalization of expenses associated with the merging of the various Visa companies at the time of the IPO.
So at the same time we were then, as we completed the rationalization we were then waiting for the right time to really start gearing up and recognizing that we have a lot of secular growth to capture. That means we need people and more people on the ground, in countries, calling and servicing clients and that it’s time for us to start ramping that up.
We don’t have a specific call out or breakout on the personnel but the notion here is it is time to start investing in our cross structure to support the growth in revenue and capturing the secular. It’s not a heavy investment because we are leveraging our platforms but it is time to start growing that line which is what you’re beginning to see.
With regards to the rebound, we’re just remaining cautious on this front. There are very mixed views from an economic standpoint as to whether or not what we’re seeing in today’s economy even globally is supported by strong fundamentals.
But, there is no denying as I referenced on the cross border transactions, that we are in an environment where the world is traveling again. I say the world, we don’t have Europe but it seems everyone else is traveling and we’re starting to see a return to growth in the credit portfolios not just the debit.
When we say positive growth in the credit portfolio, that’s a global comment. We’re seeing positive growth in our portfolios, both debit and credit in the United States and across the globe.
Whether that will be sustained or at what level remains to be seen but back in December and January it was just hard to know whether, particularly on the cross border front whether we were seeing pent up demand. Well, here we are now in March and we’re continuing to see very strong increases year-over-year on cross border.
Operator
Your next question comes from Craig Maurer – CLSA.
Craig Maurer – CLSA
I hate to go back to Chris’ question but I just want to be sure that none of the weakness we saw on the yield was driven by the JP Morgan and Washington Mutual resigning and possible concessions there? As a follow up, if you can comment on the composition of the rebound in US credit spending, with American Express we saw pretty extraordinary growth rates out of the co-brand portfolio and I was wondering if you were seeing a similar trend between that and our normal non co-branded cards?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
As Joe said, in terms of however you look at it yield, growth rate, we are not seeing any material change in our yield environment for the yields that have been done over the past year. It’s unfolding very consistently in terms of a yield standpoint with how we planned the year.
What is proceeding faster is the rate of recovery. Again, I use the word recovery advisedly but I assure you we did not expect to be generating 19% revenue growth at this time almost a year ago when we were assembling budgets.
With regards to credit portfolio, I’m afraid our credit growth is being generated by categories that are a little less sexier. It is we’re starting to see, as I mentioned earlier, a pick up on the credit side with regards to non-discretionary spend so it’s fuel, it’s discount stores, it’s bill pay, it’s grocery stores but what is encouraging is these are categories that are recurring and have a high degree of stability associated with them.
I might also add that on the travel front, we are starting to see increases in airline and hotel year-over-year. But, what’s really driving the gate is the earlier [inaudible] I mentioned.
Operator
Your next question comes from Robert Dodd – Morgan Keegan.
Robert Dodd – Morgan Keegan
A bit of a broader question if I can, on advertising, I know we’ve got the Winter Olympics and the World Cup this year, we’ve got the Rugby World Cup next year, do you have a number obviously to be able to be premium partners in the sponsorship department? Is it the plan to try and grow that number of sponsors at the high end or are you happy with where you stand with the particular portfolio of relationships you have right now?
Joseph W. Saunders
We actually have reduced the number of sponsorships we have over the last couple of years and our primary focus is on the Olympics, FIFA and the NFL. Beyond that we don’t have any significant or major sponsorships that we leverage our advertising against in any substantial way, nor do we intend to.
I would like to go back and just clarify one thing that Byron talked about a little bit earlier just to make sure that nobody misunderstands. I think that we did see potentially a low watermark in some of our personnel line maybe in the first quarter of this year.
But, let me reiterate that we are an efficient organization, we intend to be a efficient organization, we’re simply refocusing resources where we think that they should be refocused and our intention would be to end the year spending less on that line than we did last year, modestly less but less nonetheless.
Operator
Your next question comes from James Kissane – Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
James Kissane – Bank of America Merrill Lynch
A quick question, Joe are the signings in the back half, are these renewals or are they mostly new business? I guess going on to Byron, are the signing bonuses becoming more prevalent, especially the ones that don’t have the claw backs?
Joseph W. Saunders
I don’t think so. There’s a combination of things that could come together under – I mean the funny thing about this is would happily come together particularly in the third quarter.
But, they’re not one thing, they’re a number of things and they are in a number of parts of the world. The real answer to the question is what’s going on, is we continue to attract new business, better business and we continue to excel from a competitive point of view and it’s very, very consistent with our plan and where we want to go and where fortunately we seem to be ending up.
So it would be wrong to say that everything is something new but it would be just as wrong to say that a lot of it isn’t very new. That’s where we are.
But you’re not talking about 10%, it’s crippling our revenue growth by 10% or something, you’re talking about amounts of money that may amount to somewhere between 1.5% , 2% to 2.5% of our revenue growth in a particular quarter. That would be a great quarter.
Operator
Your next question comes from Timothy Willi – Wells Fargo Securities.
Timothy Willi – Wells Fargo Securities
A question on yield and just sort of tying it in to maybe your thoughts around pricing. I know you’ve commented every quarter about what you expect there but could you talk about how you think about on a multiyear basis impacting revenue yield by value added products whether that be around pools that give consumers more security around using the card or accessibility or prompting.
Is there anything there to think about around revenue yield outside of just price increases that you would highlight?
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
I would say at this point nothing to highlight. It is very clearly an objective over time to introduce more services that not only will yield more but that will differentiate Visa more relative to more alternative payment forms and of course, that is one of the strategic underpinnings of why we were interested in CyberSource which is a discussion as you know for another day.
Operator
Your next question comes from James Friedman – Susquehanna Financial Group.
James Friedman – Susquehanna Financial Group
I wanted to ask about the prepaid and Joe, thanks for sharing the $1 billion debit prepaid number, that was helpful. I’m wondering if the growth in prepaid is noticeably different from some of your other products?
And, if as we had dialoged at the analyst day, you might contemplate breaking that out over time, how significant is that for the company?
Joseph W. Saunders
We’ve never broken out the absolute significance of it but I think we suggested of the new products that we’re involved in or the new initiatives that we’re involved in this is the most mature. I think that we would certainly consider breaking it out as we go in to 2011.
Operator
Your next question comes from Moshe Katri – Cowen & Co.
Moshe Katri – Cowen & Co.
Can we get an update on the merchant lawsuit in terms of some of the pending deadlines? Then, maybe looking at the recent volcano eruption and in terms of can you give us a feel on whether there was an impact on cross border transaction volumes during the June quarter because of that.
Joseph W. Saunders
I’m going to let Byron start out by telling you about the volcano and then I’ll comment.
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
What we can say is that for about three days we saw a blip in the forest but it was not a blip of any substantive size in that if I can call it the bounce back, things seemed to have bounced back very, very quickly and so we do not expect to have any call out in the quarter associated with the volcano eruption at this time. It was an event but for revenue purposes I think for us it was a non event.
Joseph W. Saunders
As it relates to the litigation there are motions that are pending. There is no trial date that’s been set.
There’s a mediation that’s ongoing but obviously under those circumstances I don’t have anything else that I can report to you about the litigation at this time.
Operator
Your next question comes from Bruce Harting – Barclays Capital.
Bruce Harting – Barclays Capital
Is there anything to read in to the 1% slide in the April volume from March? Then, is it just my imagination or are you a little skimpy on the guidance for 2011 relative to this time last year?
I don’t see any revenue growth guidance or volume?
Joseph W. Saunders
Let’s just level set everything, I talked earlier about the fact that we thought we’d see a little bit of pullback in the second half of the year as it related to our revenue growth due to lapping the pricing increase in the fourth quarter and due to, as Byron said, the lumpiness in the incentive line. Having said that, our projections for our guidance for the rest of this year are not predicated on a continued rapid ramp up of volume.
I also mentioned earlier in my speaking points that while we’re optimistic I’m not betting on a continued recovery that just goes through the roof. So, that kind of sets where we are in 2010.
Obviously, under those circumstances as it relates to 2011 we’ve talked about the better than 20% growth in our earnings per share but I’m really reluctant to try and specifically pinpoint revenue or some of the other categories until we get a little bit further in the year and I’m a little bit more comfortable where the economy is and where it’s going and where our volume is going. We’re poised to do well if the economy does well.
Our success to some extent will follow an economic recovery. We have enjoyed volume increases up to now by expanding categories and moving in to new geographies, we will continue to do that but that would obviously be enhanced by any worldwide economic recovery or economic recovery in certain pockets of the world.
We’re optimistic but we’re not going to go overboard and I’m going to continue to be reluctant to predict what’s going to happen until I have some more certainty around whether it’s going to happen.
Byron H. Pollitt, Jr.
I would just add to that, that by the time we give 2011 guidance we’d like to be able to include CyberSource in to that guidance assuming the transaction closes in the fourth fiscal quarter.
Operator
Your last question comes from Don Fandetti – Citigroup.
Don Fandetti – Citigroup
Joe, in terms of the alternative payments and eCommerce are you sort of where you think you need to be with our pending acquisition in Right Click? And, how do you think you stand versus some of the other networks?
Joseph W. Saunders
I think that our recent acquisition is a spoke in the wheel. I think it’s one of the things we had wanted to do and had thought about doing as we were putting our eCommerce strategies and our strategies for growth in the future together.
I think we talked about that at investor day and so what we’ve just done is consistent with what we talked about but it’s one part of it, it’s not by any stretch of the imagination the entire answer. But, as it relates to whether I’m comfortable that we’re where we need to be given what we need to do, yes I am comfortable or as comfortable as one can be in a rapidly changing environment.
I think Visa has done a good job over the years in doing the research and the heavy lifting and moving that is enabling us to bring products to market today. We at Visa as a public company are very fortunate as it relates to some of the things that went on in Visa the association prior to our IPO.
We’re the very fortunate recipients of a lot of infrastructure and a lot of effort and testing and tests in the market that are the type of experience that you can’t buy, you have to experience. So I think we’re prepared and I’m as confident as ever that we’re ready to move forward.
Jack Carsky
That concludes our call everybody. Thank you as always for joining us today.
If you have any follow up questions feel free to call either Victoria or myself.
Operator
Thank you for your participation in today’s conference call. The call has concluded.