Fiserv (FISV) rose 3.71% to $53.70 after reports linked major U.S. banks to its debit network. The stock also gained 4.4% after hours on Monday, though it remains down 23% this year. The move followed talks over a possible sale of its STAR Network payments business.
Fiserv has held discussions with JPMorgan and Bank of America about selling its payments infrastructure business. The unit handles debit card transactions across banks, merchants, consumers, and digital commerce channels. The talks form part of a wider review as Fiserv works to improve performance.

Wells Fargo and PNC Financial Services Group also joined discussions in recent months, according to Reuters. However, no agreement has emerged, and the talks could still end without a deal. The source requested anonymity because the information remains private.
The potential sale comes after a difficult stretch for the payments company. Fiserv has faced pressure from weak market performance and leadership changes. Therefore, the firm appears focused on reshaping operations and strengthening its business mix.
The STAR Network provides routing infrastructure for debit, ATM, e-commerce, and other payment transactions. It connects banks, merchants, cardholders, and payment platforms across the U.S. market. The business plays a central role in Fiserv’s payments network portfolio.
Fiserv says STAR serves more than 115 million debit cardholders across the country. It also supports cards issued by more than 2,800 financial institutions. As a result, the unit holds strategic value for large banks seeking broader payments control.
The network could attract banks because it sits between key transaction parties. It also supports payment flows across physical and online channels. However, its scale could draw regulatory and political attention if major lenders pursue ownership.
Any transaction would arrive during a more supportive regulatory period for large U.S. banks. The environment has encouraged lenders to explore growth across payments and financial infrastructure. Therefore, a network deal could fit broader expansion plans.
The Wall Street Journal first reported the talks and linked them to debit-card fee rules. The report said bank ownership could help lenders avoid certain federal fee limits. That possibility may increase scrutiny from lawmakers, regulators, and merchant groups.
Some companies reviewed the Fiserv network but later stepped back from the process. They raised concerns that a deal could trigger backlash from regulators and merchants. Still, the talks show strong interest in payments infrastructure despite legal and political risks.
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