A new financial analysis has highlighted how Visa and Mastercard are emerging as two of the most efficient companies in global finance, outperforming many of the world’s largest banks in profit generated per employee.
Key Highlights:
- Visa and Mastercard rank among the top five financial firms by profit per employee
- Blackstone leads with $1.14M profit per employee, followed by CME Group at $1.05M
- Payment networks outperform major global banks in workforce efficiency
- Some firms generate over $1M per employee, while others fall below $1,000
- AI-driven automation is accelerating efficiency gaps across financial services
- Traditional banks remain constrained by compliance and capital-heavy operations
The findings suggest that the rise of AI and digital infrastructure is reshaping productivity across the financial sector, particularly for payment networks like Visa and Mastercard, which operate with highly scalable, low-headcount business models.
Visa and Mastercard Lead Efficiency Shift in Financial Sector
According to research from BestBrokers, which examined the 200 largest publicly traded companies by market capitalisation, financial institutions remain dominant in high-efficiency rankings, but payment networks are now standing out as clear outperformers.
Visa and Mastercard ranked fourth and fifth globally in profit per employee, generating $588,211 and $376,884 respectively. Both firms achieved these results with relatively small workforces compared to traditional banking giants.
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Their performance places them ahead of several major global banks, including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, underscoring a structural shift in how value is created in modern finance.
Blackstone and CME Group Lead Overall Rankings
At the top of the list, Blackstone Group recorded $1.14 million profit per employee, followed closely by CME Group at $1.05 million. Investor AB of Sweden ranked third at $889,403 per employee.
These firms benefit from capital-light models, where revenue scales without proportional increases in staffing costs.
Visa and Mastercard Outperform Traditional Banking Models
The analysis shows a clear divide between capital-light firms and traditional banks.
While Visa and Mastercard rely on global transaction networks and digital infrastructure, banks such as Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Bank of America operate with heavier regulatory, compliance, and balance-sheet obligations.
This structural difference explains why payment networks consistently outperform banks in per-employee productivity.
AI and Automation Accelerate Efficiency Gap
Industry analysts say artificial intelligence is widening the gap between scalable financial platforms and labour-intensive banking models.
AI tools are increasingly automating administrative, compliance, and transaction-related processes, allowing firms like Visa and Mastercard to expand output without expanding headcount.
Experts describe this as a shift from labour-driven finance to infrastructure-driven finance.
Extreme Efficiency Gap Across Global Finance
The study also highlights a dramatic efficiency divide across the sector.
At the top, firms generate over $1 million per employee, while at the lower end, some institutions produce less than $1,000 per employee.
This reflects differences in business models, regional banking structures, and levels of digital integration.
Global Financial Landscape Shifting
The United States dominates the rankings, with firms spanning both traditional banks and high-efficiency platforms such as Visa and Mastercard.
China follows with strong representation from large commercial banks, while Europe shows a more fragmented but efficiency-focused structure across insurance, banking, and investment firms.
Analysts say the growing dominance of Visa and Mastercard signals a long-term shift in financial markets, where scalability, automation, and digital transaction infrastructure increasingly define corporate value.
As AI adoption deepens, the gap between infrastructure-led firms and traditional banks is expected to widen further.



