Buyback yield (TTM)
3.95%
Shareholder yield (TTM)
7.51%
5Y share count change
-17.2%
Buyback spend (TTM)
$955.00M
Cumulative buybacks
$17.52B
Key takeaways
- Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) repurchased about $955.00M of stock over the trailing twelve months.
- Diluted share count is down 17.2% over the last ~5 fiscal years — buybacks are net-shrinking the share base.
- TTM buyback ÷ stock-based-comp ratio of 21.22× — repurchases more than cover SBC dilution.
- Cash buyback spend has compounded at +66.3% per year over the latest 5-year window.
- TTM repurchases used about 50% of free cash flow remaining after dividends.
Dividend & buyback yield over time for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)
Stacked annual yields — buyback yield (TTM cash repurchases ÷ market cap) plus dividend yield from the same fiscal-year-end key-metrics period — show how total cash return per dollar of equity has evolved.
Diluted vs basic shares (annual) for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)
Diluted weighted-average shares are the EPS denominator — a falling count means buybacks are outpacing SBC dilution.
Year-over-year change in diluted shares for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)
Green is fewer shares vs the prior fiscal year (net repurchase); red is growth (dilution). The earliest year shown has no prior year to compare.
Cash buyback spend over time for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)
Latest: $1.43B
Overview
2025's annual buyback spend for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) came in at $1.43B – plunged 64.8% year-over-year.
Looking at the 2020–2025 (5 years) stretch, Fidelity National Information Services buyback spend compounded at +66.3% per year, with mixed annual results across the window.
Fidelity National Information Services buyback spend peaked at $4.04B in 2024; the latest annual figure is $1.43B in 2025 (64.8% below peak).
2024 marks the peak buyback spend at $4.04B, with the historical low of $0.00 recorded in 1999.
Fidelity National Information Services Buyback Spend 2025: $1.43B
In 2025, Fidelity National Information Services reported buyback spend of $1.43B, plunged 64.8% below 2024.
Fidelity National Information Services Buyback Spend 2024: $4.04B
Fidelity National Information Services buyback spend in 2024 was $4.04B, surged 674.9% from 2023. This figure represents the highest annual value in the available history.
Fidelity National Information Services Buyback Spend 2023: $522.00M
2023's buyback spend for Fidelity National Information Services came in at $522.00M, plunged 73.1% below 2022.
Fidelity National Information Services Buyback Spend 2022: $1.94B
Fidelity National Information Services posted buyback spend of $1.94B in 2022, declined 8.3% below 2021.
Fidelity National Information Services Buyback Spend 2021: $2.11B
Fidelity National Information Services buyback spend in 2021 was $2.11B.
See more financial history for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS).
Buyback, SBC & dilution history
Buyback spend, SBC, net dilution effect, and share count.
| 2025 | $1.43B | $181.00M | $1.24B | 4.15% | 0.52B | -6.5% | |
| 2024 | $4.04B | $186.00M | $3.86B | 9.34% | 0.56B | -6.1% | |
| 2023 | $522.00M | $120.00M | $402.00M | 1.48% | 0.59B | -2.2% | |
| 2022 | $1.94B | $189.00M | $1.75B | 4.82% | 0.60B | -2.7% | |
| 2021 | $2.11B | $383.00M | $1.73B | 3.18% | 0.62B | -1.0% | |
| 2020 | $112.00M | $283.00M | −$171.00M | 0.13% | 0.63B | +39.0% | |
| 2019 | $453.00M | $402.00M | $51.00M | 0.53% | 0.45B | +35.8% | |
| 2018 | $1.25B | $84.00M | $1.17B | 3.75% | 0.33B | -1.2% | |
| 2017 | $153.00M | $107.00M | $46.00M | 0.49% | 0.34B | +1.8% | |
| 2016 | $40.00M | $137.00M | −$97.00M | 0.16% | 0.33B | +14.2% | |
| 2015 | $320.00M | $98.00M | $222.00M | 1.79% | 0.29B | +0.1% | |
| 2014 | $522.00M | $56.00M | $466.00M | 2.97% | 0.29B | -1.9% | |
| 2013 | $475.90M | $53.40M | $422.50M | 3.07% | 0.29B | -1.1% | |
| 2012 | $511.30M | $83.80M | $427.50M | 5.03% | 0.30B | -3.1% | |
| 2011 | $364.20M | $64.70M | $299.50M | 4.73% | 0.31B | -12.8% | |
| 2010 | $2.54B | $58.70M | $2.48B | 30.98% | 0.35B | +47.0% | |
| 2009 | $0.00 | $71.00M | −$71.00M | — | 0.24B | +23.7% | |
| 2008 | $236.10M | $60.70M | $175.40M | 7.65% | 0.19B | -1.5% | |
| 2007 | $80.34M | $0.00 | $80.34M | 1.82% | 0.20B | +3.9% | |
| 2006 | $160.45M | $0.00 | $160.45M | 3.94% | 0.19B | +198.5% | |
| 2005 | $0.00 | $0.00 | $0.00 | — | 0.06B | -0.9% | |
| 2004 | $96.50M | $0.00 | $96.50M | 8.04% | 0.06B | -2.9% | |
| 2003 | $73.55M | $0.00 | $73.55M | 6.44% | 0.07B | -4.6% | |
| 2002 | $79.55M | $0.00 | $79.55M | 9.00% | 0.07B | -0.1% | |
| 2001 | $2.35M | $0.00 | $2.35M | 0.18% | 0.07B | +1.6% | |
| 2000 | $0.00 | $0.00 | $0.00 | — | 0.07B | -2.4% | |
| 1999 | $0.00 | $0.00 | $0.00 | — | 0.07B | — |
- 2025$1.43B
- 2024$4.04B
- 2023$522.00M
- 2022$1.94B
- 2021$2.11B
- 2020$112.00M
- 2019$453.00M
- 2018$1.25B
- 2017$153.00M
- 2016$40.00M
- 2015$320.00M
- 2014$522.00M
- 2013$475.90M
- 2012$511.30M
- 2011$364.20M
- 2010$2.54B
- 2009$0.00
- 2008$236.10M
- 2007$80.34M
- 2006$160.45M
- 2005$0.00
- 2004$96.50M
- 2003$73.55M
- 2002$79.55M
- 2001$2.35M
- 2000$0.00
- 1999$0.00
Buybacks vs stock-based compensation for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)
Annual cash repurchases set against stock-based compensation. Coverage above 1× means buybacks fully offset the equity dilution from SBC. TTM coverage: 21.22×.
Buybacks vs dividends (share of cash returned) for Fidelity National Information Services (FIS)
How Fidelity National Information Services splits cash returned to shareholders between dividends and buybacks.
Sector peers by buyback spend
Companies in the same sector as Fidelity National Information Services, ranked by their latest buyback spend.
| $90.71B | |
| $40.09B | |
| $18.42B | |
| $6.65B | |
| $6.31B | |
| $1.32B | |
| $0.00 | |
| $0.00 |
- $90.71B
- $40.09B
- $18.42B
- $6.65B
- $6.31B
- $1.32B
- $0.00
Buyback capacity (TTM)
Free cash flow minus dividends paid versus actual TTM repurchases — the headroom bar shows how much of post-dividend FCF is still being deployed elsewhere.
Headroom $1.92B (TTM FCF − TTM dividends, clamped at zero).
Frequently asked questions
Data & methodology
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