President Trump announced a plan to cap credit card interest rates at 10% for one year. The proposal came through a social media post on January 9, 2026.
Trump stated the cap would take effect on January 20. He did not provide details about how the policy would be implemented or enforced.
The announcement comes as current credit card APRs range widely across the market. Borrowers with excellent credit typically pay 17-18% while subprime borrowers face rates in the mid-30s.
Visa Inc., V
Trump floated a similar idea during his 2024 presidential campaign. Industry experts warned then that such a cap would completely reshape the credit card market.
Visa stock has performed well over the past year despite this policy uncertainty. Shares have climbed roughly 14% and analysts maintain a generally positive outlook.
The company reported Q3 results that slightly exceeded expectations. Earnings per share came in around $2.98 compared to analyst estimates of $2.97. Revenue grew approximately 11.5% year over year.
Visa raised its quarterly dividend to $0.67 per share following the earnings report. Analyst consensus ratings remain at Buy with average price targets in the low $400s range.
Visa’s revenue model differs from traditional credit card issuers. The company earns primarily from transaction and network fees rather than interest charges on balances.
This means the first wave of impact from a rate cap would hit issuing banks. Those institutions collect the interest income that would be capped under Trump’s proposal.
However, second-order effects could eventually reach Visa’s business. Banks facing squeezed interest margins might tighten lending standards or reduce credit availability.
Issuers could also cut back on rewards programs or add new annual fees. Some might push for higher merchant processing fees to offset lost interest income.
Any of these changes could slow transaction volumes over time. Lower volumes would eventually pressure Visa’s fee-based revenue streams.
Industry trade groups have voiced strong opposition to the proposal. The American Bankers Association warned that a statutory cap could reduce credit access for riskier borrowers.
Banking groups suggested that consumers denied traditional credit might turn to payday lenders. Some could resort to pawn shops or unregulated online lenders.
Financial markets are not treating the proposal as an imminent policy change. The lack of specifics and implementation pathway has kept investor reaction muted.
Trump did not outline whether the cap would require Congressional legislation or regulatory action. Either route faces substantial hurdles given industry opposition.
Research notes from early January 2026 continue focusing on Visa’s fundamental drivers. Cross-border payment volumes, value-added services growth, and digital payment expansion remain the primary themes.
Several institutional investors added to their Visa positions in early 2026. Analyst forecasts for 2026 project steady but incremental gains rather than transformative growth.
Senator Bernie Sanders criticized Trump hours before the announcement. He claimed Trump had previously promised to cap rates but instead deregulated banks.
Senator Josh Hawley responded positively to Trump’s Friday post. He called it a “fantastic idea” and said he looked forward to voting on it.
The Bank Policy Institute released a report in 2025 examining a potential 10% cap. The group concluded such a move would harm consumer access to card credit while forcing issuers to cut cardholder benefits.
Visa’s stock performance reflects the market’s view that full enactment remains unlikely in the near term. Any concrete legislative movement would likely serve as the real catalyst for price changes.
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