1. Fiserv, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 72
Percentage Decline in Stake in Q2: 92%
Fiserv, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV) is ranked first on our list of 15 stocks Mario Gabelli is dumping. The firm provides financial technology services and is based in Wisconsin. Regulatory filings reveal that GAMCO Investors owned 2,139 shares in the firm at the end of June 2021 worth $229,000.
On August 17, investment advisory JPMorgan maintained an Overweight rating on Fiserv, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV) stock and raised the price target to $145 from $142, noting that modern players in the payments sector were outperforming.
At the end of the second quarter of 2021, 72 hedge funds in the database of Insider Monkey held stakes worth $2.6 billion in Fiserv, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV), down from 75 the preceding quarter worth $2.7 billion.
In its Q1 2021 investor letter, Madison Funds, an asset management firm, highlighted a few stocks and Fiserv, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV) was one of them. Here is what the fund said:
“This quarter we researched several new stock ideas, but because of high prices, acted on only one. Thus, a new portfolio name is Fiserv, with corporate headquarters in Brookfield, WI, just down I-94 from us. Fiserv is a technology company serving financial institutions (“FIs”) and retail merchants. It has two main business lines. In the first, it’s a market leader in outsourced IT solutions for banks and credit unions, online and mobile banking technology, digital money movement solutions, and card issuing services. Fiserv’s second core business is merchant acquiring and processing, where it’s a leader in providing a variety of solutions to help all types of merchants accept digital payments. They entered this business through the acquisition of First Data in 2019.
Within the first business, Fiserv’s software is critical to the daily operations of FI clients. Their solutions not only provide the vital central processing systems, but also enable services such as electronic bill pay and digital money transfers at both large institutions and local banks and credit unions alike. As such, it is an incredibly sticky business that is resilient through economic cycles. On the merchant acquiring side of Fiserv, they process trillions of dollars annually for millions of merchant clients. Their solutions cater to all types of merchants and optimize for seamless acceptance and high authorization rates while also limiting fraud. Similar to the IT outsourcing business, Fiserv’s merchant solutions are critical to their customers’ daily operations. Furthermore, we are especially encouraged by their investments in new solutions, particularly Clover and Carat. Clover is a small and midsize business merchant acquiring platform and Carat is an e-commerce acquiring platform. Both these products hit the bullseye in terms of the way people are interacting with the retail industry, and both are growing at above market rates, which we believe will sustain into the future.
In addition to Fiserv’s favorable business characteristics and competitive positioning, the management team, led by CEO Frank Bisignano, has a track record of successfully investing for growth, improving profitability, and intelligently allocating excess capital. We believe these value-creating activities will continue going forward.
Financial institutions are increasingly making investments to digitize their customer facing products and digital payments are increasingly taking share from cash as a form of payment. As a result, demand for Fiserv’s solutions, should continue to grow nicely in the coming years. In our view, Fiserv offers a nice combination of above average growth, high profitability, business resiliency, and shareholder-friendly management. We do not believe these characteristics were fully reflected in Fiserv’s share price when we made our investment during the quarter at a discount to the market’s 2021 price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple, a valuation level well below Fiserv’s historical premium.
An offsetting trade was the sale of Cognizant Technology Solutions, which was sold around the time Fiserv was added to the portfolio. Cognizant had been held since 2018, and we had expected it to perform similarly to another portfolio holding in the same industry, Accenture. Alas, multiple years of below industry growth challenged the investment, and despite our belief that CEO Brian Humphries could materially improve operations, recent metrics regarding elevated employee turnover and still below-average revenue growth led us to conclude that there was more heavy lifting required at the company. We decided that our investors would be better served by being invested in Fiserv rather than Cognizant.”
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