ACI Worldwide fires CEO


Odilon Almeida had served as the payments company's president and CEO since March 2020 and will be succeeded temporarily by board chairman Thomas Warsop

ACI Director Mary Harman, who heads up the board’s nominating and corporate governance committee, described the CEO ouster in the press release as a needed leadership change.

Miami-based ACI provides payments software services to banks, merchants and billers worldwide, and it has worked with the Federal Reserve on the central bank’s FedNow instant payments pilot.

“As ACI advances its vision to lead the real-time payments revolution, the Board determined that now is the right time to transition to a new leader focused on accelerating our technology transformation and delivering operational excellence across our business,” Harman said in the release.

Warsop, 56, joined ACI’s board in 2015 and became non-executive chairman just five months ago in June, according to his profile on ACI’s website. While in the interim role, he will be paid $325,000 per month and is eligible for a $325,000 discretionary bonus based on performance criteria, the company said in the filing. 

Almeida had served as the company’s president and CEO since March 2020, his biography on ACI’s website notes. Before joining ACI, he served as an operating partner at private equity firm Advent International from 2019 to 2020. Prior to that, he held several positions at Western Union over 17 years, including president of that firm’s global money transfer unit.

Joe Vafi, managing director of equity research at Canaccord Genuity, called Almeida’s firing “a little bit of a head scratcher.”

Almeida had “done a good job here of accelerating growth and refocusing the company, becoming more competitive and fine-tuning the product portfolio,” Vafi said. “It did come as a surprise,” especially right after the company reported third-quarter earnings Nov. 2, he added. Almeida presided over an earnings call with analysts that day.

ACI’s board plans to tap an executive search firm in seeking a permanent CEO replacement, the release said. 


By Caitlin Mullen on Nov 9, 2022
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