Financial Advisors Starting with V

The Macroaxis Financial Advisors Directory is an add-on service to help both investors and professional money managers find each other and collaborate. Macroaxis considers financial advisors to be anybody from financial planners that render services for other people to private individuals helping their family members to invest in various local capital markets.

Be your own money manager

Our tools can tell you how much better you can do entering a position in Visa without increasing your portfolio risk or giving up the expected return. As an individual investor, you need to find a reliable way to track all your investment portfolios. However, your requirements will often be based on how much of the process you decide to do yourself. In addition to allowing all investors analytical transparency into all their portfolios, our tools can evaluate risk-adjusted returns of your individual positions relative to your overall portfolio.

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Portfolio Holdings

Check your current holdings and cash postion to detemine if your portfolio needs rebalancing
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Visa Corporate Directors

Visa corporate directors refer to members of a Visa board of directors. The board of directors generally takes responsibility for the Visa's affairs and long-term direction of the entity. A corporate director does not make decisions for the corporation on his own. As a member of the board of directors, she or he must function as a part of a group that makes decisions on behalf of the business only by the board of directors' meetings. To pass a resolution, a majority of Visa's board members must vote for the resolution. The Visa board of directors' duties also include the election, removal, and supervision of officers, including the adoption, amendment, and repeal of bylaws.
John SwainsonIndependent DirectorProfile
Mary CranstonIndependent DirectorProfile
Joseph OngTreasurer, DirectorProfile
John LundgrenLead Independent DirectorProfile

Already Invested in Visa Class A?

The danger of trading Visa Class A is mainly related to its market volatility and Company specific events. As an investor, you must understand the concept of risk-adjusted return before you start trading. The most common way to measure the risk of Visa is by using the Sharpe ratio. The ratio expresses how much excess return you acquire for the extra volatility you endure for holding a more risker asset than Visa. The Sharpe ratio is calculated by using standard deviation and excess return to determine reward per unit of risk. To understand how volatile Visa Class A is, you must compare it to a benchmark. Traditionally, the risk-free rate of return is the rate of return on the shortest-dated U.S. Treasury, such as a 3-year bond.
Check out World Market Map to better understand how to build diversified portfolios, which includes a position in Visa Class A. Also, note that the market value of any company could be tightly coupled with the direction of predictive economic indicators such as signals in real.
You can also try the Global Correlations module to find global opportunities by holding instruments from different markets.