TLDR
- Mastercard posted Q1 adjusted EPS of $4.60, beating the $4.41 estimate
- Revenue rose 16% year over year to $8.4 billion, topping forecasts
- Stock fell 2.1% in premarket despite the beat
- Gross dollar volume climbed 7%; cross-border volume up 13%
- Operating expenses rose 13%, including a $202 million restructuring charge
Mastercard reported stronger-than-expected first-quarter results on Thursday, but the stock still slipped in early trading.
$MA (Mastercard) #earnings are out: pic.twitter.com/JCQwigoO4R
— The Earnings Correspondent (@earnings_guy) April 30, 2026
Adjusted earnings came in at $4.60 per share, up from $3.73 a year ago and ahead of the Wall Street consensus of $4.41. Revenue hit $8.4 billion, a 16% year-over-year increase, beating analyst forecasts of $8.26 billion.
The stock dropped 2.1% in premarket trading. It was already down 3.9% for the year heading into Thursday’s session.
The muted reaction wasn’t a total surprise. Mastercard had already picked up a 3.5% gain on Wednesday after rival Visa reported its own earnings beat — suggesting much of the good news had already been priced in.
Visa was down 0.2% on Thursday.
Gross dollar volume — the total value of all transactions processed on Mastercard’s network — rose 7% year over year. That points to steady consumer activity on the platform.
Cross-border volume, which tracks card spending outside the country of issue, climbed 13%. That came despite airspace closures over the Middle East disrupting flight routes and causing thousands of cancellations.
Consumer Spending Holds Up
Consumer spending has broadly held up, even with economic uncertainty tied to U.S. tariffs and the Iran war weighing on sentiment. Consumer confidence has softened in a slow labor market, but transaction volumes have remained resilient.
A large chunk of that spending is coming from higher-income households, who are still making discretionary purchases. Lower-income consumers, by contrast, are pulling back on non-essentials.
This so-called “K-shaped” economy is a pattern that analysts have been flagging across the payments industry. It has helped cushion sectors like travel and entertainment.
American Express, whose customer base skews more affluent, also beat first-quarter profit expectations last week. Visa topped estimates too.
Costs Climb
On the expense side, operating costs rose 13% year over year. The increase was driven mainly by higher general and administrative costs.
That figure included a $202 million pretax restructuring charge, which added some pressure to the bottom line even as the top line came in strong.
Earlier this month, most major U.S. lenders reported an increase in consumer loan balances, pointing to continued borrowing despite broader economic pressures.
Mastercard’s stock has lagged the broader market over the past year.
Adjusted EPS of $4.60 came in above the analyst average of $4.40, per data from LSEG.
🚨 Our April Stock Picks Are Live!
A new month means new opportunities. Our analysts have just released their top stock picks for April, highlighting companies with strong momentum that rank highly on our KO Score algorithm. We’re also now sharing trade ideas for both long-term and short-term investors, giving you more ways to spot potential opportunities in the market.
Sign up to Knockout Stocks today and get 50% off to unlock the full list and see which stocks made the cut.
Use coupon code Special50 for your exclusive discount!







