Tradeweb (TW) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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DATE

Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026 at 9:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Billy Hult
  • Chief Financial Officer — Sara Furber
  • Head of Investor Relations — Ashley Serrao

TAKEAWAYS

  • Quarterly Revenue -- $521 million, up 12.5% year over year on a reported basis and 9.9% on a constant currency basis, driven by strong client activity and share gains.
  • Full-Year Revenue -- Exceeded $2 billion for the first time, reflecting 19% growth year over year and marking the twenty-sixth consecutive year of record annual revenues.
  • Adjusted EBITDA Margin -- Expanded by 39 basis points in the quarter and by 64 basis points for the year, indicating margin improvement from operating leverage.
  • Free Cash Flow -- Increased 32% year over year; free cash flow exceeded $1 billion for the full year.
  • Adjusted Diluted EPS -- Rose 19% for the year.
  • International Clients -- Accounted for approximately 42% of fourth-quarter revenue; Asian and European client revenues increased over 35% and 25%, respectively, for the year.
  • Rates Segment -- Delivered record revenue for the quarter, with particular strength in swaps, global government bonds, and mortgages.
  • Credit Revenue -- Lifted by double-digit growth in European credit, municipal bonds, CDS, and emerging market credit; EM credit revenues grew 25% year over year in the fourth quarter.
  • US Credit -- Revenues declined year over year due to a close to 30% drop in retail corporate credit revenue, offset by institutional strength and increasing RFQ and block share.
  • Swaps Revenue -- Quarterly global swaps revenue up over 25% year over year; total market share improved from 20.8% to 23.3% year over year.
  • Digital Initiatives -- Other revenues up 94% year over year, fueled by contributions from the Canton network with $6.6 million fourth-quarter revenue, and emerging digital asset projects.
  • AIX Automation -- ETF trades via AIX rose over 70% year over year globally and 28% sequentially in the US; contributed to record institutional equity derivative revenues up 18% year over year.
  • Fee per Million -- Fell 5% in cash rates products, 14% in cash credit, 10% in cash equities, and 6% in money markets, primarily due to segment and client mix shifts and pricing plan migrations.
  • Expense Growth -- Adjusted expenses increased 12% year over year, driven by an 11% increase in headcount, 24% rise in technology and communication spending, and a 59% jump in occupancy costs due to relocation.
  • Share Repurchases and Dividend -- Repurchased approximately 1.47 million shares (through January) for $157 million; Board approved new $500 million repurchase authorization and raised quarterly dividend by 17%.
  • Canton Coin -- Held approximately $1.6 billion in Canton coins valued at $243 million; $207 million in net gains recorded in the quarter from digital asset holdings.
  • January 2026 Revenue Growth -- Management reported 17% year-over-year revenue growth for January; after adjusting for one extra trading day and $8 million in market data, average daily revenue growth reached 26% year over year.
  • 2026 Expense Guidance -- Adjusted expenses expected between $1.1 billion and $1.16 billion (midpoint implies 11% growth); technology and communication expenses to increase mid- to high-teens percent above fourth-quarter run rate.
  • CapEx and Software Development -- Projected at $107 million to $117 million for 2026; approximately 60% allocated to software development initiatives.
  • Market Data Revenue Outlook -- 2026 revenue under master data agreement with LSAG expected at approximately $105 million, distributed evenly by quarter.

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RISKS

  • Foreign Exchange Losses — CFO Sara Furber noted, "Unfavorable movements in FX resulted in a $37 million loss in 2025, versus approximately a $1.1 million gain in 2024."
  • Fee Compression — CFO Sara Furber stated, "For cash credit, average fees per million decreased 14% due to the migration of certain dealers from fully variable plans to fixed plans across institutional and wholesale US credit. A mix shift away from retail within US credit also contributed."
  • Incremental Margin Expansion May Slow — CFO Sara Furber indicated, "We expect the incremental margin expansion to be more muted, as overall margins are higher. We continue to focus on balancing margin expansion with investing for the future."
  • Occupancy and G&A Costs — CFO Sara Furber disclosed, "Occupancy expenses increased 59% primarily from increased rent due to the move to our new New York City headquarters," and "Adjusted general and administrative costs increased 27%, primarily due to unfavorable movements in FX and a pickup in travel and entertainment and marketing expenses."

SUMMARY

Tradeweb Markets (NASDAQ:TW) achieved a record-breaking quarter, pushing annual revenues above $2 billion for the first time, supported by robust performances across rates, swaps, international markets, and digital initiatives. Management highlighted new product launches, client network expansion, and substantial market share gains in swaps and electronic credit trading. Accelerating digital asset and tokenization efforts contributed to other revenues and positioned the firm at the infrastructure forefront, while expense growth was driven by headcount, technology investments, and a significant increase in occupancy costs. Currency fluctuations negatively impacted results, contributing to a $37 million FX loss. Guidance for 2026 maintains disciplined investment in technology and growth platforms, but management noted incremental margin expansion may moderate given current profitability levels and operational scaling.

  • January 2026 saw revenue growth of 17%, translating to a 26% rise in average daily revenue after normalizing for a calendar shift and data timing, with swaps, global ETFs, and European businesses performing strongly.
  • Tradeweb Markets held approximately $1.6 billion Canton coins, with a fair value of approximately $243 million on the balance sheet, and flagged digital initiative revenue variability as dependent on coin earnings, price, and network structure.
  • Management emphasized strategic flexibility in expense management, with variable and discretionary cost levers available to preserve operating leverage if revenue moderates.
  • Tokenization was characterized by leadership in on-chain Treasury repo trades and active participation in key market pilots, with management asserting tokenization is "an infrastructure upgrade" rather than a threat of disintermediation.
  • Management positioned the company for further RFQ and block trading share growth in US credit, and underscored the importance of bank partnerships and cross-asset data in sustaining competitive advantage.
  • January saw a 15% increase in mortgage revenues after renewed primary issuance activity and signals of increased government support for lower mortgage rates.
  • For 2026, CapEx is projected to have 60% allocated to software development, and annual LSAG market data revenue is forecast at $105 million, providing recurring data revenue visibility.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Canton coin: A digital asset used within the Canton network, compensating participants such as Tradeweb Markets for their validator roles and services rendered in the network infrastructure.
  • RFQ (Request-for-Quote): An electronic protocol allowing buyers to solicit price quotes from multiple liquidity providers simultaneously for a particular security, used to facilitate large or complex trades.
  • Portfolio Trading (PT): The execution of multiple bonds or securities as a single transaction, enabling efficient risk management and pricing across diversified portfolios.
  • AllTrade: Tradeweb Markets’ all-to-all trading network platform where institutional clients can transact directly with each other, often increasing liquidity and price transparency.
  • AIX: Tradeweb Markets’ automation and predictive analytics platform supporting ETF and fixed income client workflows across global markets.
  • LSAG: Refers to a market data contract and agreement with London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) providing proprietary and third-party data products.
  • DVO1: Dollar value of one basis point; a measure of interest rate risk indicating the dollar change in the value of a financial instrument for a one basis point change in yield.
  • ICD: Tradeweb Markets’ platform for institutional cash and liquidity management, allowing clients to access a range of short-term investment products.
  • Sessions protocol: A trading protocol on Tradeweb Markets' platform supporting segmented, session-oriented trading windows to aggregate liquidity and enable price discovery.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Billy Hult: Thanks, Ashley. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our fourth quarter earnings call. I am extremely proud of the Tradeweb Markets Inc. team, which helped produce the best revenue year and quarter in our history, crossing $2 billion in annual revenue for the first time. Our 2025 performance continues our seventh consecutive year as a public company, producing double-digit revenue growth and the twenty-sixth consecutive year of record annual revenues. As I look back at 2025, a few thoughts that come to mind are our clients' focus on data-driven tools for larger and more complex trades, the acceleration of automation, and the growing interconnectedness of global markets.

As we look ahead, our ethos stays the same: continue to put forth rigor and discipline to help drive more innovation across our expanding markets. Our clients are now operating with an increased level of integration and sophistication across our markets. We saw real traction in the extension of electronic trading into areas that had previously been mostly manual, from uncleared swaps and swaptions to block trading in global credit. Liquidity has become more interconnected across assets, regions, and time zones, essentially breaking down those historical silos that used to dominate our clients' workflows.

At the same time, we have made significant strides alongside our key partners in moving digital assets from something built on a whiteboard to real advancement in market infrastructure and how our clients are thinking about trading and settlement. As we sit here at the intersection of TradFi and DeFi, we will continue to partner and invest across the digital asset landscape to deepen our network and drive more workflow efficiency solutions for our clients. Diving into the fourth quarter on slide four, despite tough comparisons, strong client activity, share gains, and a risk-on environment drove 12% year-over-year revenue growth on a reported basis.

We continue to balance investing for growth and profitability as fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA margins expanded by 39 basis points relative to 2024. Turning to slide five. Rates produced a record revenue quarter driven by continued organic growth across swaps, global government bonds, and mortgages. Credit growth was led by strength across European credit, munis, CDS, and emerging market credit. Money markets revenue growth was led by record quarterly revenues across global repos. ICD balances continued to recover post the tariff volatility, and ICD revenues were up 11% relative to the third quarter of 2025. Equity saw growth of almost 10% year-over-year led by growth in global ETFs and equity derivatives.

Other revenues grew over 90% year-over-year as our emerging digital initiatives continue to scale. Finally, market data revenues were driven by growth in our recently renewed LSAG market data contract and proprietary data products. Turning to slide six. Our record fourth quarter capped off a record revenue year in 2025. Record volumes across all asset classes translated into 19% annual revenue growth on a reported basis. The scale generated by our strong top-line results drove 64 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin expansion, 19% adjusted EPS growth, and 32% free cash flow growth. As our growth initiatives continue to scale, we maintained our tradition of constant and focused investment.

Broadly, we enhanced our existing product capabilities, added new clients, and forged new partnerships. On the capability front, we achieved many firsts. We completed the first-ever fully electronic bilateral swaptions and US multi-asset package trade across the swaps market. We launched the first electronic platform for Saudi Royal Bonds and Mexican repos, and we launched portfolio trading in the European government bond market. We expanded our ICD clients, allowing them to buy treasury bills directly through the platform. Additionally, we enhanced our RFQ offering across US credit and ETFs and rolled out our dealer algo solutions within US treasuries. Beyond our core markets, we've been very focused on the future, especially the digital asset space.

We have partnered with numerous start-ups and thought leaders and we completed the first-ever on-chain US treasury repo transaction done over a weekend and the first-ever on-chain auction for brokered CDs. We believe our investments in our core and frontier markets position us well for the future and also help to make 2025 another banner year for Tradeweb Markets Inc. Moving to slide seven. 2025 continued the streak of robust revenue growth that we have worked hard to deliver for multiple years now. Specifically, while the majority of our revenues still come from rates, 42% of our annual revenue growth came from our other businesses in 2025.

In fact, since the IPO, almost 50% of our revenue growth has come from non-rates businesses, with 45% of that growth from our rapidly expanding international business which grew at 20% CAGR over the same period. Our European business continues to anchor our international presence but our Asia Pacific product suite continues to scale. In 2025, our Asian client revenues grew over 35% and European client revenues grew over 25%. Strong momentum across Europe and Asia comes from connecting a global client base to local international markets. Relentless innovation has been critical to our success. Throughout our history, we have prioritized being first to market, which requires constant investment.

The last five years, we've invested over $600 million in technology, to help shape the future of electronic markets, growing these investments at an average of 16% since 2020. As our investments bear fruit, adjusted EBITDA margins have expanded consistently. Turning to slide eight, This quarter saw yet another meaningful decline in intraday volatility from the elevated levels seen in prior periods. Specifically, volatility was down 27% year-over-year and 15% quarter-over-quarter. Despite the lowest intraday volatility that we have seen in the last four years, our US treasury revenues increased modestly by 1% year-over-year as continued strength in our institutional channel was offset by weaker retail trends.

Our quarterly market share increased sequentially with December market share reaching the highest levels since February 2025. As we look forward, we are optimistic on a reacceleration in US treasury business as we penetrate additional parts of the voice market coupled with continued strong government debt issuance and normalization in rate volatility. Our competitive position remains strong on a relative basis. Exceeded 50% for the seventh consecutive quarter in electronic institutional US treasuries, versus our main electronic competitor. Turning to wholesale US treasuries, revenues were flat, mainly driven by lower volumes across our wholesale streaming protocol, partially offset by growth across our sessions protocol.

Wholesale remains a strategic priority as we focus on onboarding additional liquidity providers and strengthening our liquidity pools in support of our multi-protocol holistic platform strategy. In equities, ETFs posted strong double-digit revenue growth as we continue to deepen integration with our clients. During the quarter, we continue to leverage client workflow connectivity by delivering a more automated ETF trading solution in partnership with ION. Our AIX automation solution has been a key differentiator with our ETF clients with average daily trades increasing over 70% year-over-year. While AIX is deeply penetrated across European ETFs, we continue to see strong adoption across US ETFs. With AIX average daily trades up 28% quarter-over-quarter.

Our efforts to broaden our equity presence beyond our flagship ETF franchise continue to pay off. With record institutional equity derivative revenues up 18% year-over-year. Looking ahead, the pipeline remains strong as the benefits of our electronic solutions continue to resonate with our clients. We believe we are well-positioned to capitalize on the long-term secular ETF growth story, not just in equities, but across our fixed income business. Turning to slide nine for a closer look at credit.

Low single-digit revenue growth for the quarter was driven by strong double-digit revenue growth across European credit, municipal bonds, credit derivatives, China bonds, and EM credit, which more than offset weakness in US credit, where revenues fell year-over-year mainly due to retail corporate credit revenues that were down nearly 30% year-over-year, primarily reflecting the better relative yields our clients were getting across money markets and munis. US credit remains a key growth initiative. We are focused on maintaining our leadership position and our pioneering portfolio and session trading protocols and increasing our block market share.

Perhaps most importantly, we continue to increase our RFQ share which we expect to be the number one driver of revenue growth in US credit going forward. Our deepening liquidity pool and continuously improving client experience is resonating. As we attract more clients and experience talent across the board. Our efforts to expand into RFQ are seeing early signs of success with our RFQ share of overall TRACE achieving a new quarterly record. Institutional RFQ average daily volume grew over 10% year-over-year. With growth across both IG and high yield. Also saw continued block share growth in fully electronic US investment grade and US high yield of over 130 basis points and 65 basis points, respectively.

This growth was broad-based, driven by continued adoption of our portfolio trading RFQ, and sessions protocols. More broadly, we saw active user growth of 18% year-over-year during the quarter, as we continue to strengthen our US credit client network. Portfolio trading average daily volume also increased 10% year-over-year with over 20% growth across international PT. Portfolio trading has become a widely used, reliable method for executing trades and managing risk. We particularly during periods of market volatility. As the market continues to evolve, we expect adoption to expand as it further embeds itself as an essential part of Credit Trader's toolkits. Altrade had a strong quarter with over $200 billion in volume. With average daily volume up over 14% year-over-year.

Our all-to-all average daily volume grew over 45% year-over-year while our sessions average daily volume rose by nearly 10% year-over-year. The team remains focused on expanding our network and increasing the number of responders on the AllTrade platform, In the fourth quarter, we saw the fourth highest level of ETF market maker participation ever across our institutional credit business. Beyond US credit, we're continuing to prioritize our emerging markets credit expansion efforts. We continue to broaden out our liquidity provider set across key markets, work with our OMS partners on key integrations, and expand the functionality around key differentiators such as asset swaps.

While still early in the journey, EM credit revenues grew 25% year-over-year in the fourth quarter signaling strong momentum. Moving to slide 10. 2025 represents the twentieth anniversary of our electronic interest rate swaps platform. Back in 2005, electronic swaps trading was still an emerging idea. Two decades later, it has become an ecosystem defined by transparency, efficiency, and ongoing innovation. Our leading position in the swaps market has been built upon two decades helping to shape global regulations, maintaining a regulated global footprint, cultivating a deep client ecosystem, and expanding a broad suite of adjacent global rates products.

Global swaps delivered record quarterly revenues up over 25% year-over-year, driven by a combination of strong client engagement, across our global suite of currencies that drove strong risk trading growth. And a 7% increase in weighted average duration. Our quarterly core risk market share which drives revenues and excludes compression trading, was a record rising over 70 basis points year-over-year. Total market share increased from 20.8% in 2024 to 23.3% in 2025. Due to a combination of strong risk and compression volume growth. During the quarter, we achieved the highest share in our history across Euro, other G11, and EM denominated currencies.

The fourth quarter performance was driven by record revenues across Europe, APAC, and emerging market swaps, while we produced double-digit revenue growth across dollar swaps. We continue to make progress across emerging market swaps and our rapidly growing RFM protocol. In EM IRS, structural challenges like geographic dispersion, pricing opacity, and operational inefficiencies have historically made voice trading the norm. We're helping to drive more discrete, transparent, and efficient execution, especially through innovations like RFM and AIX. Our fourth quarter EM swaps revenue produced another strong growth quarter and we believe is still significant room to grow given the low levels of electronification.

Our RFM protocol, which is seeing strong adoption across currencies also saw average daily volume grow more than 90% year-over-year, with further adoption picking up. Looking ahead, we continue to believe the long-term growth potential for swaps remains significant. On a DVO1 basis, electronification has continued to increase with 2025 DVO1-based electronification up more than 90 basis points year-over-year. And growing at an average rate of over 150 basis points annually since 2020 as dealers and clients move a greater share of their workflows electronically. That progress is evident in the performance of our swaps business, which has continued to deliver strong revenue growth in the fourth quarter.

On a notional basis, the cleared swaps market remains approximately 30% electronic and we see significant opportunity to continue digitizing workflows alongside our clients. In collaboration with them, we expect to drive further workflow innovation in 2026, across both cleared and bilateral swaps markets. And with that, let me turn it over to Sarah to discuss our financials in more detail.

Sara Furber: Thanks, Billy, and good morning. As I go through the numbers, all comparisons will be to the prior year period unless otherwise noted. Slide 11 provides a summary of our quarterly earnings performance. As Billy recapped earlier, this quarter, we saw record revenues of $521 million that were up 12.5% year-over-year on a reported basis and 9.9% on a constant currency basis, given the weakening dollar. We derived approximately 42% of our fourth quarter revenues from international clients. And recall that approximately 30% of our revenue base is denominated in currencies other than dollars, predominantly in euros. Total trading revenues increased 11%, comprised of 10% variable trading revenue growth, and 18% growth across fixed trading revenues.

Rate fixed revenue growth was primarily driven by an increase in minimum fee floors for certain dealers and by the addition of dealers to our mortgage and US government bond platforms. Credit fixed revenue growth was primarily driven by the previously disclosed introduction of minimum fee floors and the migration of certain dealers to subscription fees. Other revenues of $13 million for the fourth quarter increased by 94%, primarily driven by growth in our digital initiatives. Specifically, we earned $6.6 million from our commercial relationship with the Canton network. From our role as a super validator on the network. We are compensated in Canton coins.

Assuming similar Canton coin pricing as in January 2026, and based on our current estimate of earned coins, we would expect 2026 Canton-related revenue to be similar to 2025, which was approximately $11 million but this can vary. Overall, the other revenue line will remain variable quarter to quarter. Reflecting fluctuations in the number of Canton coins earned, Canton coin value, the number of super validators in the network, and periodic tech enhancements for retail clients. 2025 annual adjusted EBITDA margin of 54% increased by 64 basis points on a reported basis when compared to our 2024 full-year margins. Our net interest income of $18.8 million increased due to higher cash balances. Despite lower interest yields.

Lastly, this quarter's GAAP results were impacted by both unrealized and realized gains across our strategic investments. Specifically, we recorded $207 million in net gains this quarter. Including $180 million of unrealized gains reflecting the mark-to-market of our Canton coin holdings and $25 million in realized gains related to our exchange of Canton coins for warrants in the digital asset treasury company, TheraMune. As a reminder, these gains are only included in GAAP EPS. And are excluded from our non-GAAP adjusted diluted EPS. Moving on to fees per million on slide 12 and a highlight of the key trends for the quarter.

You can see slide 18 of the earnings presentation for additional regarding our fee per million performance this quarter. For cash rates products, average fees per million were down 5%. Primarily due to a mix shift away from US government bonds which carry a comparatively higher fee per million. For long tenor swaps, average fees per million were up 2%, primarily due to higher duration. For cash credit, average fees per million decreased 14% due to the migration of certain dealers from fully variable plans to fixed plans across institutional and wholesale US credit. And a mix shift away from retail within US credit. Which carries a higher fee per million.

For cash equities, average fees per million decreased 10% due to a mix shift away from European ETFs which carry relatively higher fee per million a reduction in US ETF fee per million, given an increase in notional per share traded. Recall in The US, we charge per share and not for the notional value traded. Finally, within money markets, average fees per million decreased 6% primarily due to a mix shift away from retail CDs, which carry a comparatively higher fee per million. Slide 13 details our adjusted expenses. At a high level, the scalability and variable nature of our expense base allows us to continue to invest for growth, and grow margins.

We have maintained a consistent philosophy here. Adjusted expenses for the fourth quarter increased 12% on a reported basis, and 9% on a constant currency basis. During the fourth quarter, we continued investments in tech and communications, digital assets, consulting, and client relationship development. Adjusted compensation costs grew 5%, driven primarily by an 11% year-over-year increase in headcount. Partially offset by lower accruals for performance-related variable compensation. Technology and communication costs increased 24%, primarily due to our continued investments in data strategy and infrastructure, and increased software costs. Adjusted professional fees grew 17% due to an increase in tech consultants as we augment our offshore technology operations, and due to episodic advisory fees, related to legal, tax, and consulting services.

Occupancy expenses increased 59% primarily from increased rent due to the move to our new York City headquarters. Adjusted general and administrative costs increased 27%, primarily due to unfavorable movements in FX and a pickup in travel and entertainment and marketing expenses. Unfavorable movements in FX resulted in a $37 million loss in 2025, versus approximately a $1.1 million gain in 2024. Excluding FX, adjusted general and administrative costs grew 3%. Slide 14 details capital management and our guidance. On our cash position and our capital return policy. We ended the fourth quarter in a strong position. With approximately $2.1 billion in cash and cash equivalents and free cash flow exceeding $1 billion for the year.

We delivered strong free cash flow growth of approximately 32% year-over-year, or 22% excluding a timing benefit related to the deferral of certain 2025 tax payments into 2026. We also held approximately $1.6 billion of Canton coins, with a fair value of approximately $243 million. Which is recorded on our balance sheet under digital assets and other investments at fair value. With this quarter's earnings, the Board declared a quarterly dividend of 14¢ per class A and class B shares. Up 17% year-over-year. During the quarter, as part of our 2022 share repurchase program, we repurchased approximately 990,000 shares at $106 million. Additionally, we have repurchased approximately 483,000 shares for approximately $51 million in January.

There is currently $23 million remaining to be purchased under the 2022 share repurchase program. Finally, this morning, the board of directors approved the 2026 share repurchase program, which authorizes the repurchase of up to $500 million of the company's class A common stock once the remaining authorization under the 2022 share repurchase program is exhausted. Turning to guidance for 2026. We will continue to invest in the business in 2026 and are expecting adjusted expenses to range between $1.1 billion and $1.16 billion. The midpoint of this range would represent an 11% increase year-over-year. Relatively in line with our average expense growth since 2016.

We believe we can drive adjusted EBITDA and operating margin expansion compared to 2025 at either end of this range. Although, we expect the incremental margin expansion to be more muted, as overall margins are higher, and we continue to focus on balancing margin expansion with investing for the future. Specifically, we continue to invest in credit, rates, international markets, ICD, and digital assets. As key focus areas with a long runway for growth. We also continue to invest in technology that allows us to sustain and build on our leading platform. Some of these investments will take time to scale, but we continue to prize innovation in creating durable long-term growth opportunities.

Within adjusted non-comp expenses, we expect our quarterly tech and communications expenses to grow in the mid to high teens over our fourth quarter run rate. As we continue to invest in our data strategy and infrastructure, to support the growth of our platform and new product initiatives. We expect annual G&A expenses to be impacted by continued FX losses, primarily impacting 2026 given current FX rates. We expect the 2026 professional fees to step down sequentially by approximately $2 million from 2025 related to the previously mentioned episodic expenses. We expect annual occupancy expenses to increase approximately 35% year-over-year primarily due to the full-year effect of our new York City headquarters and the overall expansion of our geographic footprint.

For 2026, we expect net interest income of approximately $15 million which reflects the current interest rate environment, and a seasonally lower cash balance driven by annual bonus payments and the expected purchase of approximately $70 million of transferable tax credits in Q1 2026. For modeling purposes, we view 2026 as a good starting point for the rest of the year. For forecasting purposes, our assumed non-GAAP tax rate ranges from 23.5% to 24.5% for the year. We expect CapEx and capitalized software development to range between $107 million and $117 million. The midpoint of our CapEx guidance implies a roughly 9% year-over-year increase.

We estimate that approximately 60% of the total spend will be on software development to support our growth initiatives, approximately 40% will be related to growth and maintenance CapEx. Acquisition and Refinitiv transaction-related DNA, which we adjust out due to the increase associated with push-down accounting, is expected to be $160 million in 2026. Lastly, we expect 2026 revenue generated under the master data agreement with LSAG to be approximately $105 million spread evenly throughout the four quarters. Now I'll turn it back to Billy for concluding remarks.

Billy Hult: Thanks, Sarah. Looking toward 2026, we see a constructive market environment taking shape. Even with lower volatility, issuance activity remains strong across governments, corporates, and increasingly AI-driven infrastructure investment. Supporting relative value trading and hedging flows across markets. Alongside the current regulatory backdrop, coupled with growing cross-border activity, these dynamics play directly to our strengths. With a global multi-asset platform and deep client connectivity, we're well-positioned to support the next phase of market structure evolution and to continue delivering scalable, resilient workflow solutions for our clients. On that note, we reported record volumes and revenues in January, which translated into total revenue growth of 17% year-over-year.

Recall, January 2025 had one extra trading day and also benefited from an $8 million boost in market data tied to the delivery of datasets to LSEG. The revenue recognition of these datasets in 2026 will shift to $2 million being recognized in the first month of every quarter. Adjusting for these two factors, average daily revenue growth was 26% year-over-year. Showcasing how our sophisticated clients and dealers continue to be very active across our global markets. I would like to conclude my remarks by thanking our clients for their business and partnership in the quarter. I want to thank my colleagues for their efforts that contributed to the record quarterly and annual revenues and volumes at Tradeweb Markets Inc.

With that, I will turn it back to Ashley for your questions.

Ashley Serrao: Thanks, Billy. As a reminder, please limit yourself to one question only. Feel free to hop back in the queue and ask additional questions at the end. Q&A will end at 10:30 AM Eastern Time. Operator, you can now take our first question. Thank you. We also ask that you please wait for your name and company to be announced before proceeding with your question. The first question today comes from the line of Patrick Moley of Piper Sandler. Your line is open.

Patrick Moley: Yes. Good morning, and thanks for taking the question. So, Billy, I was hoping you could elaborate a little bit on your comments there you made at the end of your prepared remarks on the outlook for the market in 2026? What are some of the major themes that you're focused on this year? And then, also, I think the 17% year-over-year revenue growth in January was a lot better than people were expecting. So any color you could give on what drove the strength there would be much appreciated. Thanks.

Billy Hult: Yeah. Absolutely, Patrick. Thanks for the question. Know, we're working hard, so appreciate your voice on this. It's a really good setup. For our business. And maybe for a quick second, Patrick, like, let me give a moment of context. Like, even over the last, like, kinda, like, five, six years, we've gone from kinda zero rate, zero inflation market to this kind of post-pandemic world where there was the kind of roof on rates you know, on the back of that, like, big inflation burst. You know, to kinda where we are now which is around this kind of what feels like this kind of general rates you know, framework.

Like, we're you know, we're in the 4% on ten-year notes. Right? What we have is this you know, obviously, it's been a you know, a conducive Fed. I think the feeling that we have here is that there's more to do. But, you know, there still is, I think, something very important, which is it's like, you know, real debate know, on the timing of it all. And those are, you know, good outcomes for us. And then you take a little bit of a step back from there, debt markets are growing. Right? And, you know, we have this very active kind of, you know, primary activity issuance world now.

You know, public sector and the private sector need funding. Right? So even this past week, as you know well, Oracle you know, $25 billion in bonds this week. You know, that leads you know, to rates trading. As investors hedge out fixed exposure. I'll make the most obvious point of the day. AI is real. Right? The hyperscalers will be selling bonds. And so when you think about the big picture of it for a second, you know, the numbers that are you know, that we're talking about, $600 billion of AI infrastructure spent. Right? That's going to lead to more rates trading. And those things from our perspective, you know, are good.

You know, as the, you know, as the leading rates, you know, trading platform those are good outcomes for us, and those are things that we feel good about. So you know, as you know, for example, in January, our GlobalSwap platform was up over 40% on revenue. A really strong month for our treasury platform. Platform. Right? You can see how these things kinda work to our favor. The, you know, the geopolitical complexity kinda slash drama or not we wanna think about, like, the debasement trade or diversification away from, you know, US assets at a minimum what we're talking about, obviously, is, you know, central bank policy divergence.

You know, from our perspective, what's that going to do? It's going to spur you know, more cross-border trading, more global activity. And we have, as you know well, you know, a global enterprise. You know? And our international business is exceptionally strong. So in January, we saw exceptionally good results. From our European swaps business, European government bonds, very strong numbers. Coming out of European credit. The revenues there were up 40%. Big news, obviously, happening this month in Japan. Our JGP revenues were up 30% in January. So the international business that we bring to the table that we work very hard on building, I think, is an advantage for us kinda going forward.

You know, getting very just quickly into a version of kinda what's happening with equities doesn't take a big leap to understand that, you know, perhaps, like, the index is full. We could be looking at a world where there's more kind of drawdowns there. It's gonna be about kinda allocating resource into kind of more sector exposure. More country exposure. Those kinds of thoughts and that kind of theme, I think, plays extremely well to the ETF business that we've worked very hard here on building. And so our globally ETF revenues were up 40%, in January. So these are, like, good outcomes for us you know, and a good setup.

And then I think as we think about maybe one of the more important components to kinda how we're thinking about '26, you know, sometimes things are kind of in our control and things can be a little bit out of our control. As you know well, there's this concept, obviously, I think is really important just around you know, the deregulation of the banks and the way that ultimately that's going to and has led to, you know, these extremely strong kinda trading operations coming out of you know, how we think about you know, the legacy banks, but really from our perspective, kind of like the partner banks. You know, for us. You know?

And so I kinda say this with a little bit of humor. Like, the you know, the swag is back. You know, for these firms, and the numbers kind of prove it. And, you know, for from my perspective, and from Tradeweb Markets Inc.'s perspective, these are great outcomes for us. These are you know, in a lot of ways, you know, twenty-five-year relationships that we've had you know, with firms like Goldman and firms like Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, and Citi. And so as risk-taking kind of is back in vogue, and the profitability of the business for these partners of ours is, you know, high level.

I think the you know, the quote that I the quote that I looked at was, you know, between Goldman, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, and Citi. In FICC in 2025. They made over $55 billion. Right? As a trusted partner in the markets with those kind of firms, it's an incredibly good outcome for us to see the profitability of those businesses. And so that's an important thing as we think about the outcome and setup for know, for twenty-six. Then the other thing I would just say is, like, you know, this concept of risk events is always gonna be a part of our world. And it's pretty interesting.

If you think about just the way the market kinda tended to shrug off some real risk events and kinda December and January. As you know, the tenure kinda stayed between, like, 04/01/1942. You know, around some pretty big headline news whether or not that was, like, you know, the justice department with actions against Powell, or military action in Iran, these are pretty big headlines. I think there's a there's a thought process sometimes that the has the ability to only price in what's right in front of it. There are moments from our perspective where that kinda ends.

And so the concept of living with exogenous risk is a part of the cadence of how markets develop And so the last piece of kind of secret sauce around how we think things will develop is ultimately gonna be the return of good you know, risk orientation into our world. And so I step back and I say, a very good rates framework for activity going forward, kinda green light there. Continued cross-border global activity green light there. Diversified equities exposure, green light there. And then a business environment that's keyed positively in the marketplaces off of deregulation. You know?

And I don't love to kinda root for, obviously, exogenous events, but we know that you know, risk comes back into the system, and that's part of you know, the cadence of our world. So I take these things, and I add them up. You know? And I think the reality is that we form you know, a strong a strong picture you know, for our business. And so I'm pumped. You know, I'm excited for what's in store, you know, for the markets. I'm gonna excited about Tradeweb Markets Inc.'s leadership role around all of the things I just described.

And we're looking forward to a, you know, to a really good '26 on the heels of a very strong January and, obviously, very early stage, but a really strong start to February. So it's a it's a good outcome for us in a good marketplace. And thanks for the question.

Patrick Moley: Very helpful, Billy. Thank you.

Ashley Serrao: One moment for the next question. And our next question is coming from the line of Craig Siegenthaler of Bank of America.

Craig Siegenthaler: Good morning, Billy, Sarah. Hope everyone's doing well. We had a question on AI. And, you know, we know automation is a key component of your AIX solution. As you take a step back and look across the entire Tradeweb Markets Inc. platform, can you talk about your utilization of AI and also differentiate between both generative AI and predictive AI models?

Billy Hult: Absolutely. And great question. You know, I'll make you kind of laugh for a quick second. As a kinda ex-English major, it's always like a pinch me moment on an earnings call to kinda have a conversation about AI. You know? So it's kinda really fun for me. But, you know, my view and the company's view is always gonna be shaped, I think, ultimately by pragmatism. You expect us to be, and we will be always kind of commercially focused. We think about AI and how it's tightly linked, you know, truthfully to how we make money.

And it's always, you know, from my perspective, very specifically a bit about this kind of transition from how we think about efficiency gains to ultimately the most important thing, which I think is, like, effectiveness gains and, ultimately, what is that kind of client impact engine kind of thing. And those are really kind of important thoughts. And so as you know very well, we have this, like, very deep high-quality real-time market data. From my perspective, that's the real strength of Tradeweb Markets Inc. Our proprietary data comes from running and operating kind of markets first and foremost.

And so we see extensive executable pricing RFQ response behavior, execution outcomes, and client decision-making across protocols and asset classes as key to all of this. We've always been built around providing ultimately more efficient workflow tools for our clients. And I think we would say clearly that AI is a natural extension of that. And so we, you know, as an English major, again, with pride, I'll say, you know, we really employ a very deep bench now of the strongest kinda data scientists, the strongest minds you know, inside of Tradeweb Markets Inc.

And one of the things that we, I think, have done well, and Sarah and I talk about this a lot, is the collaboration between those minds and our business. And they sit directly with our product team and working on helping ultimately deliver better analytics and smarter tools. And these are really important kind of behavior patterns, I think, for companies to do those kinds of integrations. And so on the, you know, on the predictive AI side, I would say we are kind of looking at our proprietary datasets to help unlock what we describe as, like, the next frontier of electronification. Something we find particularly valuable across how we would describe less liquid markets.

And larger notional trades. So that's a focus for us where pricing signals tend to be the weakest. And that's a that's a kinda big area of focus. And so I'll go back a little bit as we're talking about kind of you know, AI or how we think about, like, superintelligence. Know, I make a point all the time which is you know, all intelligence is really ultimately about learning. And as a company, you have to be kinda continuously on this kinda learning journey, this journey about learning and getting better. And so one of the things I know that Sarah and I talk about and our XCOM talks about a lot is the ability to keep learning.

I think you have to be willing to make mistakes. You have to be willing to push things into new outcomes. And that's the mindset ultimately that a company needs to continue to move forward on this amazing new path around learning. We can all get smarter. I'm very excited for Tradeweb Markets Inc. to play a very strong leadership role around how AI continues to be applied into the financial markets. And thanks a lot.

Ashley Serrao: One moment for the next question. And the next question is coming from the line of Alexander Blostein of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Alexander Blostein: Hey, Billy. Hey, Sarah. Good morning, everybody. Sarah, one for you. I was hoping you can talk us through how you're thinking about the interplay between Tradeweb Markets Inc.'s sort of annual expense growth, trajectory and margins. So just taking the guidance you provided this morning. Obviously, the revenue backdrop started off really well this year. But as you sort of think about the goal for operating leverage for 2026, Is that still the case if revenue moderates? And if it does moderate, maybe talk a little bit about the flex you have in the expenses in order to still drive positive operating leverage.

Sara Furber: Thanks, Alex. Great question. You know, I think when we talk about operating leverage and margins expenses, I think it's actually a really important reminder in terms of what's our top priority. And our top priority is investing for revenue growth through various cycles. And so when you think about that, the way we've designed our expense base is to support that and to deliver and be able to deliver positive operating leverage across all these different revenue environments and through the cycles. And so, like, what does that really mean? Means when you think about our expense base, roughly 55%, so a little bit more than half, is fixed.

And the remainder, so about 45%, a meaningful portion, are variable or discretionary. So variable being things that automatically right-size with revenues, commissions, performance-driven compensation, exchange fees, Discretionary being things more like marketing T&E, the pace of hiring, philanthropy, things that are within our control. And that balance allows us to maintain operating leverage through different environments. And we can do things in both directions. We can accelerate the pace of spend, and we can decelerate the pace of spend. We can do that with the flexibility while still protecting, which I think is really that first priority, investment strategies that are often multiyear that drive long-term revenue growth. Through the cycle.

And so obviously, as the size of the company has scaled and as our revenues have scaled, there's also natural operating leverage that falls to the bottom line. Billy talked about being pragmatic earlier. I would say all of this is great. Flexibility is great a theoretical point, but the reality is I think we've already demonstrated our willingness and ability to execute on that flexibility. So if you think back and you've got to think back a little bit, but if you think back to the first 2023, the environment was such that the top-line revenue for Tradeweb Markets Inc. grew about 5%.

And even in that environment, we paced expenses and were able to deliver positive margins, so 43 basis points of margin expansion for EBITDA. Contrast that with just a year later in 2024, you'll remember the top line grew 29%. We were able to accelerate our investments and expenses significantly and therefore margin expansion was around 90 basis points. Last year, same thing. You had a really different environment in the first half of the year, the second half of the year. So I think we've proven our ability and flexibility.

But most importantly, like our strategic lens is on continuing to invest, continuing to innovate, and having that flexibility to do it when our clients need it which means doing it through the cycle. Thanks for the question. Hopefully that helps.

Alexander Blostein: It does. Thank you.

Ashley Serrao: One moment for the next question. And our next question is coming from the line of Ken Worthington of JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Ken Worthington: Hi. Good morning, and thanks for taking the question. My question's on mortgage. So Tradeweb Markets Inc.'s mortgage business was one of its slower-growing businesses in 04/2025. As one of Tradeweb Markets Inc.'s most dominant legacy and most electronic markets how do you think about the outlook for mortgage trading in 2026? Particularly if primary and refi activity rebounds? And then maybe as a second part to this, are the innovations that we're seeing at firms like ICE and others in mortgage tech are these innovations, possibly gonna have, an impact positive impact on your business over time? What are you sort of thinking there?

Billy Hult: Hey, Ken. I feel I feel like you almost complimented and insulted us at the at the same time with that very And it's always great to hear your voice. I mean, you've known us for a while, and, obviously, you know me as a as a CEO. But to make you laugh for a quick second, I'm also a father too. And so you also, I think, understand very well, like, that expression that all of us parents have. Which is kind of like, you know, all of our children are smart. All of our children are the most beautiful. We love all our children the same. All of our children are our favorite children.

I think there's a possibility that, like, the mortgage business might be my actual favorite child. Which I haven't told anyone that yet until right this second. Because in a lot of ways, it kinda represents some of the best things about the company for a long time. It's the, you know, it's the most electronic market that we have. It's the market that we have the highest you know, market share in. It's the first market that we were in to have what I would describe to you something, like, very important, which is, like, real risk flow. We talk about risk, like, all of the time, the elusive risk in credit.

The mortgage market, I think, for a bunch of reasons, one of which was kinda like the ethos of kinda how mortgage bankers kinda dealt in the market, was always very comfortable trading real risk electronically in comp. And those are the kinds of characteristics that play very well to electronified marketplaces. And then it was the first market that we were in that actually we wound up kind of expanding into wholesale. It was the was the starting point for us to ultimately move into the wholesale side of the market. And build out, you know, these really important near kinda liquidity pools. So it's got the kind of favorite the favorite childness around all those things.

But the reality is, which you which you framed properly, is that market can go you know, sleepy. At times. You know? It could be a sleepy market depending on where rates are. And then when it wakes up, it can wind up being one of the you know, sort of two or three most important kinda coupons ultimately in global markets. So there's very big different levels of activity depending on where we are in the in the in the rate cycle. I think the reality is we are kinda out of sleepy zone. We have primary issuance increasing. Have actively managing kind of pipeline risk adjustments around duration, and convexity exposure kinda happening.

And so the market is you know, without question, kinda coming to life. We also, as you know, I think had, you know, pretty big headlines in January. You know, with the GSE commentary, you know, coming out of the administration. You know, the administration wants lower mortgage rates, and they you know, tend to get sometimes what they want. So there was a material pickup in activity in January, Our revenues were up know, 15%. I think the outlook for that business is quite strong. Particularly if we break lower on rates. And I think the future of it is gonna have ultimately I think, and very importantly, a larger group of players as participants.

If you really think about it, it's kinda interesting. You know, the systematic players that are very strong companies as you know, Ken, very well in adjacent marketplaces like government bonds. Have largely think because of the of the cycles that the business goes through, have largely stayed out of the of the mortgage market. But we see those types of companies ultimately coming into that market. And from our perspective, I think that kind of pushes things know, towards a more, you know, velocity-driven marketplace, which is good for business. I follow pretty closely things that Jeff does on the mortgage servicing side. I think he's been kinda right on his thesis all along.

Tough to time it, I would say. But, ultimately, as he makes you know, origination and he makes the servicing aspect of the marketplace more efficient. Those become good aspects of know, secondary trading, and we feel like we'll ultimately also be ironically you know, the beneficiary of that as well. So in an interesting way, kinda rooting for him, you know, on the efficiency play that he's been working on, we think directionally, he's been right in terms of you know, that area of the business needing a step up in technology. But I appreciate the question, and thanks very much, Ken.

Ken Worthington: K. Thank you.

Ashley Serrao: Moment for the next question. And our next question will be coming from the line of Alex Kramm of UBS. Your line is open.

Alex Kramm: Hey. Good morning, everyone. Billy, I saw you on a panel on tokenization a few weeks back. Sounds like you're doing a lot on that topic, a lot of initiatives. So maybe today, can you talk a little bit more specifically what you're doing and maybe some of the timing of those initiatives that you have going, going right now? Also, you know, since I'm sure there's a lot going on, where do you actually see the biggest revenue opportunities coming out of this?

And then on the other side of the coin, because I need to ask, since you're kinda pretty critical connecting buy and sell side today, as those, you know, underlying markets potentially change here and get digitized or tokenized. How do you ensure that you're not gonna get this intermediated as, you know, people may be looking for new rails, etcetera?

Billy Hult: Yeah. All good questions, Alex. Appreciate it very much. I'm sure you heard me kind of on the panel, confusing everyone, let me, just for a quick second, I'm gonna I'm gonna actually kick this to this to Sarah who's been spending a ton of time on this. And I'm really looking forward to kinda hearing you, Sarah, kinda describe this, like, perfectly. So you take it.

Sara Furber: You know, as a I'll start just kind of where you left off, which is a little bit of a big picture and, you know, how do we think about disintermediation. On tokenization, we don't really view it as disintermediating what we do. We think of it as an infrastructure upgrade. It's not replacing market structure. And in particular, it doesn't really impact price discovery. So as we see things evolve, we think people still need platforms to connect buyers sellers. They need to be supported in terms of price discovery. They need to manage that risk transfer.

And importantly, deeply integrate into institutional workflows which are things that we think we are still well-positioned to do given how long we've been investing in this space. And can do it, whether it be traditional rails or on these digitized, more modern rails. What we do see tokenization impacting are things like settlement and collateral mobility. And I know, Bill, you talked about this on the panel. Which we think frees up capital, increases velocity of trading over time. We've talked about potential for 24/7 trading before. All positives from RC. In terms of the big picture.

More specific to us, and Billy and I and Chris Brunner here have been spending a lot of time on this, We've been at this for a while. So for the last three years, and I would add know, with my CFO hat on, in a remarkably capital-efficient way we've built out a leadership position. Whether it be digital assets, blockchain networks, or tokenization. And today, I'll give you one specific example. We feel like we are positioned to be the premier venue for tokenized trading for US Treasuries. We've talked about this, I think, on other earnings calls.

We've completed multiple rounds of fully on-chain repo trades utilizing tokenized treasuries as collateral and, you know, versus stablecoins with the notion of expanding for other forms of collateral like digital cash. So that's already been in the works since the third quarter of last year. More recently, which I think is interesting and a little bit to your timing point, we think we're sitting in a unique position during what you would argue might be a milestone year. The SEC delivered a no-action letter to DTCC this December.

And Tradeweb Markets Inc. is positioned as the non-venue really leading the charge for their pilot program where trillions of assets that sit at DTCC will now be tokenized on an opt-in basis from their clients. And so if you think about what that means, that program can launch at the second half of this year. That opens up a real opportunity. And we think tokenized treasuries, given what we've already put into the market, will be a place start. And from there, we'll grow. I don't think anything changes overnight. You know, Billy and I talk about that. We think clients, as we know better than anyone, take time to change. We do see interest.

But I think the reality is the tokenized rails digitization blockchain will operate side by side with a lot traditional rails in the marketplace, and we think we can bridge that quite well for clients. As a result, I think from a revenue opportunity, it's early to say how it plays out, but we see opportunities to drive revenue in our traditional trading business. As a result, as well as new opportunities given our leadership position on some of these networks developing apps, and bringing other market participants, given our institutional and dealer network, onto some of these digitized rails. But And I think that's spot on, Sarah.

And then for a quick second, Alex, kinda like almost like tying, you know, your question a little bit in an interesting way back to kinda what Ken was asking about. Like, if you just think about for one second just about the concept of, obviously, you know, the guardrails of collateral management and ultimately problem solving around kind of settlement. I was talking about my favorite child before, the mortgage market, which has in a lot of ways within the fixed income complex you know, the most onerous you know, settlement cycle.

And I think that settlement cycle in a lot of ways is one of the reasons why know, there are you know, the types of entities that have been performing well in other markets have tended to either stay away from or have a lower impact in that market. And for sure, as we see you know, the continued advancement of, know, of blockchain, and we've talked a lot about our partnership with Canton, As we see that continued advancement there, we've identified the you know, the mortgage market as one of those businesses where, from our perspective, a great commercial outcome would be onboarding more participants, and we see a streamlined settlement process as a very important outcome there.

So that's an area of focus and attention for us. That has a good commercial outcome. And good to hear your voice, Alex. Thanks.

Alex Kramm: You.

Ashley Serrao: Thank you. One moment for the next question. The next question will be coming from the line of Tyler Moore of William Blair. Your line is open.

Tyler Moore: Hi. I'm on for Jeff Schmitt. We have one question on share buybacks. Given the strength in the quarter in January and new authorization. So their stock down a fair amount over the last six months. I think it's now trading here near the lowest PE since going public. Is there potential for you to increase your buybacks at all?

Sara Furber: Thanks, Jeff. We're definitely giving more thoughts to buybacks. I think you've heard us talk about our positioning and view of the forward market and the macro environment and our business performance. Not only in January, but that momentum continuing in February. So we remain confident in what we can drive and deliver. And we do think that you've seen the stock dislocate from some of those fundamentals. You've already seen us, and I think you're aware of this. You've already seen us be more aggressive. So in the fourth quarter and through January, we've repurchased about $150 million of stock and the board authorized an additional $500 million plan.

So we think we have the flexibility to continue to do it. I think from our seat, it's one piece of our capital allocation framework. So it's one that we definitely have in our arsenal, but we also feel quite strongly that we have a lot of opportunity to grow the business organically. Have the opportunity to pursue inorganic investments and M&A and obviously share repurchases, particularly when the stock dislocates from what we think is our fundamental growth opportunity, we'll use that tool as well. Thank you.

Tyler Moore: Thank you. One moment for the next question.

Ashley Serrao: And the next question will be coming from the line of Simon Alistair Clinch of Rothschild. Your line is open.

Simon Alistair Clinch: I was wondering if you could characterize the competitive environment in credit today? This is, you know, clearly a focus of investment community. Particularly given they have the market share data out there all the time. So what's see is the biggest catalyst for improvement in share for Tradeweb Markets Inc. going forward from this point and how that sort of competitive dynamic shapes up over the next one year to five years?

Billy Hult: Yeah. Good question. I would agree completely. Know, it's competitive. And I would agree completely with you that it's a focus you know, of the of the analyst world and the investor world. I wouldn't go so far to say it's an obsession, but it's it's it's a focus for sure. And, you know, I would start by saying just a as a reiteration, like, we feel very, very comfortable competing. It's part of who we are. We've been competing day one, as we built this company over twenty-five twenty-seven years with Bloomberg. The competitive framework is something that's comfortable to us. I think the path forward on continuing to grow revenue and grow share is gonna be pretty straightforward.

You have to be on side with the banks I described that, you know, before when I was talking about the you know, the framework going forward to '26. You know, if you're on the wrong side with the banks as this next leg of evolution occurs in credit, you're on the wrong side. And we think our relationships with the banks is a is a game changer for us there. You have to continue to be able to link markets. And so, again, we feel like our footprint in treasuries is kind of important there. Obviously, you know, the cross-asset piece of how we approach the market, I think, is important.

Data, pre-trade data, you know, the ability to present clients with the best data, I think, is again, very important principles for us to keep in mind. And then, ultimately, I'm gonna get into kind of the two things that we feel very strongly about, which is solving for risk and solving for what we would describe to you as you know, banks' inventories and banks' trading access. And to make an obvious point, if you don't do the first three things I described at the highest level, which is partnership, the ability to bring in other marketplaces, and ultimately have the best data, then you cannot solve for ultimately what is risk trading and what is what is complexity.

And so, you know, month to month quarter to quarter, we are focused on the credit business. We grew revenues, as you know, quite well. In the month of in the month of January, so we're feeling good direct directionally about how we're positioned there. It is an enormous focus for me and for the company to continue in a competitive environment to be best in class there. And that's that's the mandate for us as a company. And appreciate it. Good question. Thank you.

Ashley Serrao: Thank you. One moment for the next question. Our next question is coming from the line of Bill Katz of TD Cowen. Your line is open.

Bradley Hayes: Hi. It's Bradley Hayes on for Bill Katz. Following up on tokenization as assets increasingly become tokenized, how are you thinking about the impact for the swaps market? In particular, is there risk to volume from smart contract functionality?

Sara Furber: Sure. Why don't I jump in with that? I think similar to how we talked about tokenization, smart contracts really takes away the friction in the swaps market potentially that sits downstream past execution in terms of the value chain that we're in. So it really streamlines affirmations, confirmations, clearing that post-trade life cycle management, which we think is really helpful and only furthers electronification and the trading velocities in the space. But from our seat, it doesn't, you know, disintermediate or really impact the value that we are offering in terms of our markets.

Bradley Hayes: Okay. That's perfect. Thanks.

Ashley Serrao: Thank you. And at this time, I would like to go ahead and turn the call back over to Billy Hult, CEO, for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

Billy Hult: Great. I know Sarah and I both appreciate a very busy day for everyone on the call. Appreciate your time. Thank you all very much for joining us. Any follow-up questions, obviously, please feel free to reach out to Ashley, Sameer, and our great team. Everyone, have a great day. Thanks very much.

Ashley Serrao: Thank you all for attending today's program. You may now disconnect.

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