Discontinued — last reported Q3 '24

Business Segments · Asset impairments

Corporate and Other — Asset impairments

Fidelity National Information Services Corporate and Other — Asset impairments decreased by 50.0% to $2.00M in Q3 2024 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric declined by 71.4%, from $7.00M to $2.00M. This is a positive signal — lower values indicate better performance for this metric.

Analysis

StatementSegment
CategoryRisk
SignalLower is better
VolatilityVolatile
First reportedQ3 2018
Last reportedQ3 2024

How to read this metric

Lower levels are preferred, as high impairment charges indicate potential overpayment for assets or declining business value.

Detailed definition

This represents non-cash charges recognized when the carrying value of an asset exceeds its fair market value. It often...

Peer comparison

Comparable to 'Asset Impairment Charges' or 'Goodwill Write-downs' across all sectors.

Metric ID: fis_segment_corporate_and_other_asset_impairments

Historical Data

12 periods
 Q3 '21Q1 '22Q2 '22Q3 '22Q4 '22Q1 '23Q2 '23Q3 '23Q4 '23Q1 '24Q2 '24Q3 '24
Value$202.00M$58.00M$29.00M$17.00M$17.00M$0.00$1.00M$7.00M$105.00M$14.00M$4.00M$2.00M
QoQ Change-71.3%-50.0%-41.4%+0.0%-100.0%+600.0%>999%-86.7%-71.4%-50.0%
YoY Change-91.6%-100.0%-96.6%-58.8%+517.6%+300.0%-71.4%
Range$0.00$202.00M
CAGR-81.3%
Avg YoY Growth+57.0%
Median YoY Growth-71.4%
Current Streak3 quarters decline

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Fidelity National Information Services's corporate and other — asset impairments?
Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) reported corporate and other — asset impairments of $2.00M in Q3 2024.
How has Fidelity National Information Services's corporate and other — asset impairments changed year-over-year?
Fidelity National Information Services's corporate and other — asset impairments decreased by 71.4% year-over-year, from $7.00M to $2.00M.
What does corporate and other — asset impairments mean?
Non-cash charges taken when an asset's value is written down due to a decline in its worth.