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Fiserv CEO flees after presiding over 71% stock drop in his short tenure
The financial-services company ‘continues to look strategically adrift,’ an analyst says, as the stock falls further
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Last Updated: June 15, 2026 at 12:25 p.m. ET
First Published: June 15, 2026 at 9:36 a.m. ET
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Fiserv’s stock was sinking Monday after a surprise CEO change.Photo: Getty Images
In just over 13 months as CEO of Fiserv, Mike Lyons presided over a 71% drop in the company’s stock. Now shares of the financial-technology company are falling further toward a 10-year low after news of Lyons’s unexpected departure for a new role.
The company, which sells payment-processing, mobile-banking and other services to both merchants and financial clients, announced Monday morning that Lyons is departing to become CEO of Truist Financial. Succeeding him, effective immediately, is Takis Georgakopoulos, who has been with the company since late 2024 and most recently served as a co-president focused on technology and merchant solutions.
“I have great confidence in the company’s strong platform, talented leadership team, and dedicated associates and look forward to partnering with Fiserv as a client in the years ahead,” Lyons said in a release.
Fiserv shares
sank 8.5% in midday trading Monday, putting them on track for their lowest close since October 2016.
“Our own view is that [Fiserv] continues to look strategically adrift, having first made a head-scratching hire in Mr. Lyons and now making another change just one month after holding an investor day,” Seaport Research analyst Jeff Cantwell said in a note to clients.
Bernstein Research analyst Harshita Rawat agreed that it was a “bad look” for the company to swap CEOs only a month after revealing longer-term targets at its investor day.
“While this is a perfectly logical CEO appointment, we worry that the abruptness of the change and subsequent unclear direction will continue to weigh on the stock,” she wrote.
The company maintained its 2026 forecasts after Lyons’s exit, although Baird analyst David Koning wrote that he expected ”some investors to view the CEO transition as his admission that growth targets could remain difficult to achieve.”
He personally views the transition differently: “We see it more as Mike wanting to get back into the banking world, and expect Fiserv to return to a highly recurring mid-single-digit growth business in coming quarters.”
Lyons’s short stint as Fiserv CEO was tumultuous. He dramatically cut the company’s 2025 growth expectations last fall, admitting that prior forecasts were overly optimistic and that Fiserv’s cost-cutting moves had gone too far, hurting product rollouts. That drove a historic stock sell-off as investors worried about heightened competition and management’s credibility.
But some analysts said Lyons was getting the company back on track. “Mike’s tenure was marked by a return to a focus on recurring revenue, reinvestment in client relationships/tech, and a stock that has fallen significantly on slow revenue growth on very tough comps (non-recurring revenue was elevated before he stepped in),” Koning wrote.
Wolfe Research’s Darrin Peller said that Lyons had become central “to the reset story and the credibility many investors had begun to ascribe to him.” Investors may now worry if there were “more underlying issues than expected.”
That said, Georgakopoulos seems like a solid fit for the CEO post, analysts argued. Koning noted that he was viewed as a leading candidate to replace former CEO Frank Bisignano after he departed for a role in the Trump administration last year. Cantwell called the choice “logical at first glance,” adding that the previous appointment of Lyons “had always struck us as coming from out of left field,” given his banking roots.
Opinion (October 2025): Fiserv’s former CEO left the fintech company in crisis. Trump put him in charge of Social Security.
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About the Author
Emily Bary is MarketWatch's assistant managing editor, tech. She is based in New York.
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