Report
Colin Plunkett
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Morningstar | Bank Tech M&A: Slowing Growth at Fiserv and FIS Leads to Value-Destructive Acquisitions

After a comprehensive review of the Fiserv-First Data and Fidelity National Information Services-Worldpay mergers, we believe these deals are value-destructive. We have downgraded Fiserv’s moat rating to narrow from wide and assigned it a negative moat trend rating. Though we view First Data’s competitive positioning favorably and believe it has a moat, we believe the economics of merchant acquiring are dilutive to Fiserv’s wide moat in core processing. Had Fiserv not acquired First Data, we would probably still assess it as having a wide moat. We also decreased our fair value estimate for Fiserv to $74 per share from $77.

Though we regard FIS as the most overvalued name in the space, we are increasing our fair value estimate to $79 per share from $68. After reviewing our cost of capital assumptions for the industry, we decided to lower Fidelity’s cost of equity to 7.5% from 9%. Nevertheless, we still view Fidelity’s purchase of Worldpay as value destructive.

Finally, throughout our research into these deals we became increasingly impressed by rival Jack Henry, which has largely refrained from big acquisitions. Our dive into the industry’s cost structure suggests that the company’s margins will continue to rise. We regard these gains as sustainable and have increased our fair value estimate to $127 per share from $107.

We detail all of our key findings in our new Select piece, "Bank Tech M&A: Growth at the Cost of Value Destruction." Though we raised our Fidelity fair value estimate, this is entirely related to a lower cost of capital assumption in line with the rest of the industry. We still believe the Worldpay acquisition is value-destructive and regard FIS as the most overvalued name in the space. Our fair value estimate implies that shares in Fidelity are approximately 40% overvalued; in our minds, that makes a potential short candidate. We expect the company’s true cash earnings will differ significantly from its adjusted earnings metrics.

We think Fiserv’s competitive positioning doesn’t benefit from the addition of First Data. While we regard the merchant acquiring industry favorably and do believe it is moaty, Fiserv’s shareholders will own a company with a weaker moat once the deal is completed. In addition, our review of Fiserv’s cost structure leaves us increasingly concerned that the company will need to address its aging infrastructure, which should pressure margins. This has led us to lower our moat trend rating to negative. Overall, we believe the company's $900 million cost synergy target is aggressive, and we struggle to find new products and cross-selling opportunities that will lead to $500 million in revenue synergies.
Underlying
Jack Henry & Associates Inc.

Jack Henry & Associates is a provider of information processing solutions for community banks. The company's range of products and services includes processing transactions, automating business processes, and managing information for financial institutions and corporate entities. The company's proprietary solutions are marketed through three primary business brands: Jack Henry Banking, which is a provider of integrated data processing systems; Symitar, which is a provider of data processing solutions for credit unions of various sizes; and ProfitStars, which is a provider of agnostic products and services to financial institutions that are primarily not main customers of the company

Provider
Morningstar
Morningstar

Morningstar, Inc. is a leading provider of independent investment research in North America, Europe, Australia, and Asia. The company offer an extensive line of products and services for individual investors, financial advisors, asset managers, and retirement plan providers and sponsors.

Morningstar provides data on approximately 530,000 investment offerings, including stocks, mutual funds, and similar vehicles, along with real-time global market data on more than 18 million equities, indexes, futures, options, commodities, and precious metals, in addition to foreign exchange and Treasury markets. Morningstar also offers investment management services through its investment advisory subsidiaries and had approximately $185 billion in assets under advisement and management as of June 30, 2016.

We have operations in 27 countries.

Analysts
Colin Plunkett

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