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Fiserv's CashEdge Acquisition Powers Up Its P-to-P

JUN 30, 2011 12:49pm ET
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Fiserv's deal to buy CashEdge eliminates a key contender in the growing person-to-person payments space and underscores how much the newest entrant, clearXchange, has rocked the industry.

As one of banking's most recent innovations, P-to-P has been finding its footing the past few years. The May arrival of the bank-owned clearXchange put immediate pressure on both Fiserv and CashEdge, which have been selling competing P-to-P systems to banks for more than a year.

Ostensibly, clearXchange's system will streamline the process of making electronic payments to the accounts of its outsize backers — Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. To Fiserv's and CashEdge's concern, analysts have cautioned that other banks might switch to clearXchange to provide their customers with the most seamless experience. Fiserv's purchase of CashEdge could give it the technological boost it needs to stay competitive.

"With this deal, we see a two-horse race in the bank-centric arena: Fiserv and clearXchange," Tien-tsin Huang, an analyst with J.P. Morgan Securities, wrote in a research report Thursday.

Fiserv said late Wednesday that it struck a deal to buy CashEdge for $465 million to bolster its digital payments capabilities, particularly for online P-to-P payments, which in general are dominated by eBay Inc.'s PayPal. Fiserv expects the deal to close by September.

"We think this market is going to move fast, and the ability to make sure we have the best technology and the best people to deliver that technology is most important," Jeffery Yabuki, the president and chief executive of the Brookfield, Wis., vendor, said in an interview.

CashEdge, of New York, has 500 clients for its various invoicing, account aggregation and payments software programs. Its Popmoney P-to-P payments software, first deployed in January 2010, is in use by 200 banks and competes directly with Fiserv's ZashPay, which debuted in the middle of last year. More than 730 banks and credit unions have agreed to offer the service as of March 31, according to a Fiserv spokeswoman.

Fiserv mostly sells core processing systems, online banking platforms, bill-payment tools, debit processing and mobile software, mostly to small and midsize financial institutions. The company widely expanded its technology portfolio with its $4.4 billion purchase of CheckFree Corp. in 2007, its last large acquisition.

While that deal was more transformational for Fiserv's business, the CashEdge acquisition is more of an "accelerant in … the P-to-P movement," Yabuki said.

Yabuki said he does not view clearXchange as a threat. "I believe that the more people who are exercising their opportunity to engage in electronic P-to-P [payments], the better," he said.

Andrew Jeffrey, an analyst with SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, said he is skeptical of the long-term viability of bank-owned technology consortiums like clearXchange because of the past records of similar ventures. He also sounded skeptical about the benefits of Fiserv's deal for CashEdge.

"It has me scratching my head a little bit," Jeffrey said. "Either, in my mind, Fiserv decided that ZashPay wasn't sufficiently robust or that Popmoney is that much better that it was worth acquiring. I realize CashEdge has other functionality in addition to just the P-to-P piece. My sense is that P-to-P is kind of the crown jewel of their technology portfolio, and it seems a little bit duplicative."

Yabuki said the acquisition is not because ZashPay lacks features, though he noted that CashEdge has been a leader in money transfer and P-to-P services.

"They're multiple generations ahead of anyone in the market, including us," Yabuki said. "That will allow us to bring a far more advanced set of capabilities to our clients." Yabuki added that CashEdge's management team has "been living and breathing this at a degree we think is really important for growing this solution."

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