Fiserv exploring sale of debit card network to big US banks, source says

Industry:    2 days ago

Payments firm Fiserv has held talks with U.S. banks, including JPMorgan and Bank of America to sell ​its payments infrastructure business that handles debit card transactions, a ‌source familiar with the matter said on Monday.

Here are some details:

  • The potential divestment comes as the payments-focused financial technology firm pursues a turnaround plan to improve performance ​after a difficult year marked by a significant decline in ​market value and substantial fallout from leadership changes.
  • Other banks that ⁠have held discussions in recent months include Wells Fargo and PNC ​Financial Services Group, the source said, adding that no deal is certain ​and the discussions could still fall apart. The source declined to be named as the information is not public.

  • The STAR Network business of Fiserv provides the infrastructure that ​routes debit, ATM, e-commerce, and other transactions between banks, merchants, and consumers. ​It serves more than 115 million debit cardholders, using cards issued by over 2,800 ‌financial institutions, according to Fiserv’s website.
  • Any deal would also come as America’s largest banks seek to take advantage of a more favorable regulatory regime to expand their businesses.
  • The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the talks ​earlier on Monday, ​said that an ⁠acquisition by large U.S. banks would enable the lenders to bypass federal debit-card fee caps.
  • Some companies that looked ​at the Fiserv network have already decided it ​would be ⁠unlikely for them to move forward, as they expressed concern that such a deal could prompt backlash from lawmakers, regulators and merchants, the source ⁠added.
  • Fiserv’s shares, ​which are down 23% so far this ​year, rose 4.4% in after-hours trading on Monday.
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