Payment Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Payment stocks.

Payment Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 MA Gen Z Is Charging Too Much, And Not Paying Bills: What The Latest Credit Card Delinquency Data Says About American Consumers
May 17 MA Mastercard (MA), Salesforce Unite to Aid Transaction Disputes
May 17 WEX Mastercard (MA), Salesforce Unite to Aid Transaction Disputes
May 17 MA How Mastercard's using gen AI to combat payment disputes
May 17 MA How Data Will Help Cities Fight the Climate Crisis
May 17 MA Warren Buffett's Best Tips from the 2024 Berkshire Annual Meeting
May 16 MA Piper Sandler Pounds the Table on These 2 ‘Strong Buy’ Credit Card Stocks
May 16 MA Mastercard (MA) Ties Up to Ease Global Digital Payments
May 16 MA Healthy consumer evidence in earnings calls from PG, MA, DAL, NKE and others - Goldman Sachs
May 16 MA Mastercard and Salesforce partner to transform transaction disputes
May 16 MA Sector Update: Financial Stocks Edge Higher Pre-Bell Thursday
May 16 APCX AppTech Payments Announces Commercial Launch of its Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS) Platform Following Successful Pilot Program
May 16 MA Home to half of the world's top 10 trending tourism destinations, Asia Pacific is making a comeback: Mastercard Economics Institute on travel in 2024
May 16 MA Mastercard: Global Travel Sector Breaking Boundaries
May 16 USIO Usio, Inc. (USIO) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 15 XELA Exela Technologies EPS of -$4.27, revenue of $258.8M
May 15 XELA Exela Technologies Holdings, Inc. Reports First Quarter 2024 Results
May 15 WEX If You Invested $100 In This Stock 15 Years Ago, You Would Have $31,000 Today
May 15 USIO Usio GAAP EPS of -$0.01 misses by $0.02, revenue of $20.32M misses by $1.55M
May 15 MA 2 Warren Buffett Stocks to Hold Forever
Payment

A payment is the trade of value from one party (such as a person or company) to another for goods, or services, or to fulfill a legal obligation.
Payment can take a variety of forms. Barter, the exchange of one good or service for another, is a form of payment. The most common means of payment involve use of money, cheque, or debit, credit or bank transfers. Payments may also take complicated forms, such as stock issues or the transfer of anything of value or benefit to the parties. In US law, the payer is the party making a payment while the payee is the party receiving the payment. In trade, payments are frequently preceded by an invoice or bill.
In general, the payee is at liberty to determine what method of payment he or she will accept; though normally laws require the payer to accept the country's legal tender up to a prescribed limit. Payment is most commonly effected in the local currency of the payee, unless if the parties agree otherwise. Payment in another currency involves an additional foreign exchange transaction. The payee may compromise on a debt, i.e., accept a part payment in full settlement of a debtor's obligation, or may offer a discount, for example, for payment in cash, or for prompt payment, etc. On the other hand, the payee may impose a surcharge, for example, as a late payment fee, or for use of a certain credit card, etc.
The acceptance of a payment by the payee extinguishes a debt or other obligation. A creditor cannot unreasonably refuse to accept a payment, but payment can be refused in some circumstances, for example, on a Sunday or outside banking hours. A payee is usually obligated to acknowledge payment by producing a receipt to the payer. A receipt may be an endorsement on an account as "paid in full". The giving of a guarantee or other security for a debt does not constitute a payment.

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