Sunday, December 15, 2024

Wall Street fixer Bisignano eyes worst mess yet: Social Security

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(Bloomberg) — Frank Bisignano, the chief executive officer of financial-technology company Fiserv Inc., has long had the reputation as a fixer on Wall Street. Now, he’s being tasked with fixing one of the biggest issues the US faces: Social Security.

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President-elect Donald Trump nominated Bisignano to lead the Social Security Administration, an almost 60,000-person government agency that provides benefits to roughly 71.6 million Americans. For years, management of the program has been a political football and subject of hot debate due to its cloudy future. Estimates have emerged that benefit cuts will be necessary as early as 2033, the result of a projected shortfall between the taxes that fund the program and the amount needed to pay full benefits.

“I have no objective to cut the benefit of any American, I’m going to fix it by doing other things,” Bisignano said on a call with Wall Street analysts following Trump’s nomination, without giving details on his plans. “I hope you guys root for me to do that in the way that I did other turnarounds.”

While he’s spent a long career in finance, Bisignano has some government in his background. His father worked a government job in Brooklyn, New York, and Bisignano recalled growing up in a patriotic household, informed by his grandfather’s immigration to the US from Italy.

Bisignano learned the ropes of navigating complex businesses over decades in banking. At Citigroup Inc., he overhauled the transaction-services division. That turnaround caught the eye of JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon, who recruited Bisignano to his bank, where he worked on the integration of Bear Stearns following the firm’s emergency acquisition during the financial crisis of 2008. He performed well enough that at one point there was talk that he might be among candidates to succeed Jamie Dimon as CEO.

He faced a tall task when he was named CEO of First Data Corp., a New York-based payments company where he was charged with unwinding $22 billion in debt saddling the company following a leveraged buyout by KKR & Co. In 2019, he oversaw First Data’s acquisition by Fiserv. A year after the merger, Bisignano was named CEO of the combined firm.

The same year as the Fiserv and First Data deal, competitors Fidelity National Information Services Inc. and Global Payments Inc. made similar acquisitions with middling success. FIS acquired WorldPay Inc. for $35 billion, only to sell a majority stake in the business five years later to private equity firm GTCR at an $18.5 billion valuation.

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