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The Next "Magnificent Seven" Stock That No One Is Talking About

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"Magnificent Seven" stocks are soaring once again. This basket of well-known tech stocks like Nvidia and Meta Platforms has long been a reliable way to make huge profits fast. In the past 12 months alone, Nvidia shares have risen 240% in value, while Meta Platforms's stock price has surged 140%.

If you haven't taken advantage yet, there's still time. Every Magnificent Seven stock is a quality business with enormous long-term upside potential. But if you want the biggest returns, you should be focused on finding the next stock worthy of joining the Magnificent Seven. With that in mind, few stocks fit the mold as well as Visa (NYSE: V).

Big profits hidden in plain sight

Most people imagine Visa to be a boring payments company. And in many ways, it is. As of last quarter, Visa had 1.3 billion issued credit cards and 3 billion issued debit cards. It is from these cards that Visa makes most of its money, as the company earns a small fee with every transaction. In a nutshell, Visa sits between the businesses and consumers who make purchases with their cards and the financial institutions that lend the money for the purchase.

Why do consumers, businesses, and financial institutions put up with paying Visa for every transaction? It's because Visa has a network effect that few competitors can match. Purchasers aren't interested in using a debit or credit card that isn't accepted by most merchants. Merchants, meanwhile, aren't interested in accepting forms of payment that only a few purchasers use. Financial institutions, meanwhile, want to work with payment networks that reach the highest number of people. In combination, these market forces create natural industry consolidation.

It's no wonder, then, that roughly 46% of American adults have a Visa credit card. About 37% have a Mastercard credit card, while a little less than 20% have American Express or Discover cards. These four companies control nearly the entire credit card market in the U.S. The odds are overwhelmingly high that you or a family member have one of these cards in your wallet right now. Meanwhile, the odds are overwhelmingly low that you have a credit card not from these four companies, at least for those residing in the U.S.

What happens when you control nearly half of a gigantic market? Big profits -- even bigger than most Magnificent Seven companies. During the past decade, Visa has generated profit margins averaging nearly 50%. Magnificent Seven companies like Nvidia and Meta Platforms have rarely matched these levels and have had more volatility along the way, too.