Fiserv (FISV) stock took a sharp hit on June 15 when the company announced CEO Mike Lyons was leaving to become head of Truist Securities. The stock fell 11% on the news. Lyons had been in the role since January 2025.
Fiserv, Inc., FISV
The drop brought FISV to around $49 per unit — not far from its 52-week low of $47.04.
What happened next was interesting. Rather than head for the exits, key insiders started buying.
On June 16, CFO Paul Todd purchased 10,060 units at an average price of $49.70, totaling $499,982. It was his first open-market buy since late 2025 and increased his position by 5.78%.
Chief Legal Officer Adam Rosman also moved on June 16, picking up 10,150 units at $49.33 each — a total of $500,699. His last purchase was in December 2025.
Three board members followed suit the same day. Chairman Gordon Nixon, former CEO of Royal Bank of Canada, led the group with a purchase of 7,500 units at $49.57, spending $371,775. The three directors combined spent $572,973 on 11,611 units.
This mirrors a pattern from December 2025, when a wave of insider buying came just weeks after FISV suffered a historic single-day drop.
On the institutional side, Assenagon Asset Management opened a brand-new position in Q1, buying 1,418,377 units valued at approximately $79.1 million — representing a 0.27% stake in the company.
Several smaller funds also initiated positions in recent quarters, though institutional ownership overall stands at 90.98%.
FISV opened at $47.53 on Friday, well below its 50-day moving average of $55.76 and its 200-day moving average of $60.14. The stock carries a P/E ratio of 8.06 and a market cap of $25.35 billion.
Wall Street is not rushing to upgrade. The current consensus is Hold, with an average price target of $82.23 across 37 analysts — nine buys, twenty-five holds, and three sells.
Royal Bank of Canada has an Outperform rating with a $75 target. TD Cowen reiterated a Buy in May. On the other end, Rothschild & Co Redburn cut its target from $50 to $40 and rates the stock Sell.
Fiserv’s Q1 results showed EPS of $1.79, beating the $1.57 consensus by $0.22. Revenue came in at $4.67 billion, slightly below the $4.73 billion estimate. The company reiterated full-year 2026 EPS guidance of $8.00 to $8.30.
FISV has now fallen 28% in 2026. It dropped 67% in 2025, making it the second-worst S&P 500 performer that year behind The Trade Desk.
FISV opened Friday near its 52-week low of $47.04.
The post Fiserv (FISV) Stock: Insiders Buy the Dip After CEO Departure – Here’s Why appeared first on CoinCentral.


