2/12/2026

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Greetings and welcome to the Euronet Worldwide 4th Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you'll need to press star 1-1 on your telephone. If your question has been answered and you'd like to remove yourself from the queue, simply press star 1-1 again. As a reminder, today's program is being recorded, and now it's my pleasure to introduce your host for today's program, Adam Gutters, General Counsel for Euronet Worldwide. Thank you, Mr. Gutters. You may begin.

speaker
Adam Gutters
General Counsel, Euronet Worldwide

Thank you, and good morning, everyone, and welcome to Euronet's fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. On the call today, we have Mike Brown, our Chairman and CEO, as well as Rick Weller, our CFO. Before we begin, I need to call your attention to the forward-looking statements disclaimer on the second slide of the PowerPoint presentation we will be making today. Statements made on this call that concern Euronet or its management's intentions, expectations, or predictions of further performance are forward-looking statements. Euronet's actual results may vary materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result of a number of factors that are listed on the second slide of our presentation. The PowerPoint presentation includes a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures we'll be using during the call to their most comparable GAAP measures. Now, at this time, I'll turn it over to our chairman and CEO, Mike Brown.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Our fourth quarter 2025 results reflect one of the more challenging operating environments that we have faced in some time, immigration policy uncertainty, and economic stress, especially amongst lower income consumers, weighed on growth across all three segments with the most pronounced impact on money transfer and e-pay. That said, despite the external headwinds that pressured the quarter, we remain excited about growth initiatives underway across all our segments that will drive business momentum through 2026. We will discuss these items in detail throughout this call. Further, we remain confident in our competitive position, particularly in money transfer, where underlying trends continue to outperform broader market dynamics. I would be remiss not to highlight the resiliency of our EFT segment, which delivered solid growth and once again demonstrated its role as a stabilizing earnings engine. This business continues to evolve beyond its historical reliance on ATM ownership, with an increasing focus on payment infrastructure and merchant acquiring. Stepping back and looking at full year results, despite a difficult operating backdrop, I'm proud to say that we delivered another year of double-digit DPS growth consistent with our history as a publicly held company. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect to continue that performance With adjusted EPS growth in the 10 to 15% range, based on our track record and the investments we have made, we are now confident in our ability to deliver another year of double-digit earnings growth. Next slide, please. In periods of uncertainty, I believe that history does matter. And this chart on slide five shows our ability to consistently deliver top-line growth year over year. Urinet has more than three decades of experience in dealing with various economic cycles. We've navigated the economic downturn in 2008 and 2009, demonetization in India, the economic instability in Greece, one of our largest EFT markets, and of course, we navigated COVID, just to name a few. In each of these periods, the diversity and durability of our earnings, our conservative balance sheet management, share repurchases, and thoughtful investment in growth initiatives allowed us not only to withstand the pressure, but to emerge stronger, more agile, and with greater market share. You will see these themes emerge as Rick and I talk you through the details of the quarter. In short, we don't view near-term uncertainty as a reason to adjust our long-term strategy. Instead, we rely on the same principles that have grounded our success for decades. disciplined execution, evolution of our business model, thoughtful capital allocation, and a focus on building assets that compound value over time. Our 2025 execution shows how we put these principles into action. We generated $408 million in adjusted earnings, which allowed us to return approximately $388 million in capital to shareholders in the form of share repurchases, which excludes the shares repurchased to offset the shares issued for the court card acquisition. During the year, we also acquired Hyodi in our money transfer segment, and we announced the acquisition of CreditBank's merchant acquiring business. We expect both of these acquisitions to drive multi-year growth. Next slide, please. As I continue my comments on slide six, you can see a quick recap of some of our key accomplishments for 2025. We continued to invest in growth opportunities across all three segments, particularly in areas where we were accelerating our digital strategy. In addition to the acquisitions I previously mentioned, we signed a REN deal with one of the top three U.S. banks. We added Commonwealth Bank of Australia along with C to our data line portfolio. We continue to expand distribution into digital wallets and e-pay. Not only will these deals contribute to our growth, names like these demonstrate that our products are being recognized as market leaders and drive value. The flywheel is definitely turning and gaining momentum. So while we've experienced some pressure from immigration and the economy, we've continued to keep our eye on execution of all our growth initiatives as we enter 2026. Next slide, please. With that perspective in mind, I want to step back and remind everyone how we think about Uranet at a higher level, as illustrated on slide number seven. As we've discussed in prior calls, our business is built around two core revenue pillars, payment and transaction processing, and cross-border and foreign exchange. What is important is that these two pillars support a huge number of use cases across the globe. that we can serve through our technologies and global network, and they also work together to combine payments, cross-border movement, and FX, resulting in revenue generation, which is meaningfully higher per dollar move than the broad global payments industry. Despite global challenges like the ones I mentioned earlier, the bottom line is that people and businesses will continue to make payments, They will send money, move funds across borders. Our focus is on ensuring that Euronet remains well-positioned to serve those needs, wherever, whenever, and however they may arise. Now let's go on to slide number eight, and we'll talk about how we furthered this strategy in each of the segments. And of course, I'll start with EFT. I'm on slide number eight now. Throughout 2025, EFT continued to deliver consistent growth, earning stability, and cash generation, which was largely the result of the diversity of our products, geographies, and payment channels in the segment. During the fourth quarter and on the heels of another year of exceptional growth in our merchant acquiring business, where adjusted EBITDA grew 32%, we acquired Credia Bank's merchant acquiring business. This partnership with Credia Bank, which is the fifth largest bank in Greece, adds to the diversity of products and services in the EFT segment. Additional mix shift to our digital strategy and is a perfect example of the breadth of services EFT can offer a partner largely due to our REN platform and its flexible modern digital payments processing capabilities. This agreement will add another 20,000 merchants to our acquiring portfolio or nearly a 10% increase as we provide the banking infrastructure for financial services to Credia, including credit, debit, and prepaid card issuing. We will also manage the outsourcing for the branch and off-branch ATMs and provide Credia customers with access to our leading ATM network. Before I wrap up, I'd like to briefly touch on our recent acquisition of CoreCard, which we completed at the end of October. This acquisition aligns well with our objective to expand into high-growth FinTech areas, such as credit card issuance and processing. We view CoreCard as a strong addition to our payments processing pillar, and we are encouraged by the early momentum into new markets, along with its ability to serve a more diversified client base. Since the acquisition, we've seen an expansion in processing relationships across several new programs, including the recently launched and well-publicized built 2.0 credit card focused on renters and homeowners, excuse me, that allow you to earn points on housing payments and the Coinbase OneCard, which offers rewards paid in Bitcoin. These are just a few of the potential new customers that we are targeting with this innovative platform. As previously stated, Our near-term focus is on integrating CoreCard into our product offering for international markets. Over time, this integration will enable a more comprehensive end-to-end client offering, combining seamless credit card processing with our existing payments capabilities. Needless to say, at this point, we are pleased with the early customer response. I'd like to pause here to specifically highlight one important point. our EFT business is evolving from a model historically centered on ATM ownership to one increasingly focused on payments infrastructure. While ATMs remain an important and cash generative component of EFT, partnerships like Credia and acquisitions like CoreCard accelerate our capabilities in modern issuing and processing, allowing us to scale software-driven services that support digital transactions and real-time payment flows across our global network. Now let's go on to slide number nine, and we'll talk about ePay. As I mentioned, ePay's results were impacted by global macroeconomic pressures. However, despite these challenges, the underlying core ePay business continued to perform well in a difficult environment. Throughout the year, we expanded and diversified ePay's distribution footprint across both physical and digital channels. This included growth in our merchant payments processing business, the expansion of our digital content and gaming partnership, and the launch of our own open-loop product in the new market. In the fourth quarter, we delivered strong performance in our gaming-related branded payments business which makes up 37% of our total branded payments margin. According to industry reports, the global video game market was approximately $290 billion in 2025 and is expected to grow at a 13% CAGR through 2031. We have strategically positioned our branded payment distribution to benefit from the strong growth trends in markets around the world. We also expanded our digital content distribution with Revolut to India and New Zealand as part of their loyalty program. We're now in 20 countries with Revolut and looking to expand further. Revolut is one of the fastest growing fintechs out there, which further demonstrates our global reach, good execution of our digital channel growth strategy, and customer demand for the ePay products. Additionally, We broadened our partnership with Lidl Supermarkets, adding digital branded payments in two markets, Italy and France. Finally, we continued to leverage our relationship with the merchants that distribute ePay content to offer payment processing. This has allowed ePay to grow its merchant payment processing revenue by 21% for the full year. As we move forward, we will continue to evaluate the business to ensure that ePay operates at optimal levels while staying focused on our core strategic initiatives to drive growth across the segment. Now let's move on to slide number 10, and we'll talk about money transfer. Slide 10. As I mentioned in my opening comments, the money transfer segment faced headwinds, particularly in the second half of the year, driven by macroeconomic uncertainty and the changes in U.S. immigration policies. While these external factors certainly impacted our business, they have impacted everyone in the industry. It's been tough for everyone, yet we continue to find ways to gain market share. Since we've acquired RIA, we have outpaced market growth. Despite the disruption and remittances, we have continued to expand our world-class network to add more digital touchpoints, to operate in new send and receive markets, and to add world-class partners to our dandelion network. To ensure the continuity and stability of our operations, our management team focused on what is within our control. And in 2025, anticipating a softer environment, we proactively initiated a comprehensive results-based review of the money transfer business with an external management consulting partner. The goal was to improve our digital sales focus together with the efficiency, scalability, and operating leverage of the segment. That work resulted in a set of structural actions designed to strengthen the business over time. Rick will walk you through the financial implications of those actions, but from my perspective, this was about fortifying and optimizing how the business focuses on digital customers and operates through AI and process automation. Because this work began well in advance, we are better positioned now and expect these proactive steps to support performance in the coming quarters and beyond. In parallel with the optimization effort, we continue to invest in key areas that will position money transfer for future growth. During the fourth quarter, we signed an agreement with World First, a UK-based fintech that is owned and operated by Ant Financial. World First will join Citi, Standard Charter, HSBC, and others in leveraging our dandelion network to offer best-in-class, real-time, cross-border payment flows to their customers. We also closed the year with strong performance in our RIA digital channel. In the fourth quarter, we expanded our digital reach with the launch of the RIA app in Greece, Romania, and the Czech Republic, which are exciting new markets that will support our ongoing digital growth. In the fourth quarter, our global digital channel delivered 31% transaction growth and 33% revenue growth, including 33% new customer acquisitions in December alone. We also continue to expand our global distribution network by launching business operations in Colombia and Panama under our own licenses. These new markets are part of our geo-expansion efforts that will allow us to continue to expand our global TAM. We look forward to building strong inbound and outbound businesses in both countries. Finally, we continue to work closely with Fireblocks and our internal teams to launch a stablecoin strategy. This initiative, which we announced last quarter, will support use cases around the globe. So while we worked through some market-driven challenges in 2025, we remain confident that our optimized operating model, combined with our leading global network, which now reaches 4.1 billion bank accounts, 3.7 billion wallets, and 4 billion cards across 200 countries, will continue to support our ability to outgrow the market in 2026 and beyond. I'll stop there, and I'll turn it over to Rick, who will walk you through the financial results for the quarter in more detail.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin my comments on slide 12, which shows our fourth quarter and year-over-year results on an as-reported basis. Most of the major currencies we operate in strengthen compared to the dollar. To normalize the impact of the currency fluctuations, we have presented our results adjusted for currency on the next slide, on slide 13. As Mike mentioned, adjusted EPS for the fourth quarter was $2.39, reflecting another quarter of double-digit year-over-year earnings growth, even as parts of the business face pressure. With that context, I'll start with the fourth quarter results and then move to the full-year performance. On a constant currency basis in the fourth quarter, consolidated revenue increased 1% year-over-year, adjusted EPS Operating income declined 6% in adjusted EBITDA was consistent with the prior year, reflecting macroeconomic and immigration-related pressures in money transfer and ePay, partially offset by strong performance in EFT, where we delivered double-digit growth in both adjusted operating income and EBITDA. EFT produced another strong quarter, with revenue growing 8%, adjusted operating income increasing 12%, and adjusted EBITDA growing 13%. Merchant services in the Greek business performed exceptionally well, delivering another strong quarter, with adjusted EBITDA up 32%. year-over-year on robust transaction volumes and continued merchant expansion. Results in the quarter also benefited from continued expansion in Morocco, Egypt, and the Philippines as we deployed additional ATMs, broadened service offerings, and deepened relationships with banks and fintech partners. In ePay, revenue declined approximately 2%, while adjusted operating income decreased 7% and adjusted EBITDA declined 8%, reflecting product mix shifts, continued investment in proprietary offerings, and macroeconomic pressures. Promotional activity in our B2B channel was lighter year over year, while our core digital content and payment processing businesses remained stable. Money transfer revenue declined 1% year over year with adjusted operating income down 6% and adjusted EBITDA down 5%. I want to put these headwinds in proper context. The declines we experienced in certain remittance corridors were driven primarily by macroeconomic conditions and immigration-related dynamics affecting senders with more pressure in the United States and more specifically, Mexico. Financial pressure remains concentrated among low-income households, which represents the majority of remittance customers. According to the Federal Reserve's most recent survey of household economics and decision-making, inflation and prices remain the top financial challenge facing U.S. customers, and a significant share of lower income households report difficulty covering monthly expenses and absorbing unexpected costs. What that typically means in practice is not a sharp reduction in support for families abroad, but rather fewer transactions. When budgets are strained by essentials such as rent, food, fuel, and utilities, senders continue to remit but with less flexibility between paychecks. That shows up first in frequency rather than ticket size. While we saw pressure in transactions, average amount sent increased by 7% to 8% year over year in the fourth quarter. According to the Central Bank of Mexico, remittances into Mexico declined approximately 2% in the fourth quarter of 2025, following eight months of decline ranging from about 2% to 16% compared to the prior year, and we're down roughly 5% for the full year. Our money transfer results tracked the industry in the fourth quarter, reflecting the same macroeconomic and immigration-related pressures facing U.S. senders. However, while the broader market contracted on a full year basis, our business delivered a modest increase in remittance volumes for 2025. In our view, that outperformance reflects continued share gains driven by our expanding digital footprint, corridor diversification, and strong partner network demonstrating the durability of our platform even in a softer demand environment. Consistent with our discussions over the past few quarters, we are very focused on extending our digital strategy in each segment. More specifically, in the money transfer segment, where we have consistently produced 30% growth rates in REIA Digital and signed dandelion agreements with leading financial and fintech institutions. to continue our focus on digital growth. About a year ago, we initiated a process to carefully look at what we could do to drive yet more focus on money transfer digital initiatives. This effort is expected to produce approximately $40 million in annual run rate benefit, a portion of which will drop to the bottom line. In that regard, as you saw in our earnings announcement, we recorded a charge of 20 million related to driving the extension of our wholesale, SME, and consumer digital products, enhancing the end-to-end customer experience, and deploying targeted marketing investments to accelerate digital customer acquisition and engagement. The net benefit of this investment will meaningfully contribute to an expansion in the money transfer segments operating margins by approximately 50 to 75 basis points in 2026. Moreover, we will continue to critically evaluate the opportunities to accelerate our money transfer digital revenue growth, which will likely require additional investment. We expect that the net benefit of these investments will drive additional growth as well as contribute to an expansion of our operating margins. This focused approach to accelerate our digital product opportunities to operate and scale the business to fully leverage the company's strong capabilities, extensive global infrastructure, deep banking relationships, and regulatory expertise is all designed to translate our advantages into scaled, sustainable growth in digital money transfer. We will share additional details regarding these initiatives in our upcoming quarters. Finally, despite the macro economic and immigrated related pressures impacting the fourth quarter, as Mike mentioned, we remain very confident in the underlying earnings power of this business. The momentum we see across EFT, early wins from CoreCard, and the structural cost actions we have taken across the business, including the ongoing optimization project in money transfer, giving us increasing confidence going into 2026. As Mike mentioned earlier, based on our current operating trajectory and pipeline of growth initiatives, we anticipate adjusted earnings per share growth to growth of 10 to 15% in 2026 with multiple levers to drive performance as volume, normalized and investments scale. I'm on slide 14 now. Turning to the full year, we delivered revenue of 4.2 billion, adjusted operating income of 550 million, and adjusted EBITDA of 743 million, and adjusted earnings per share of $9.61. Essentially, the difference between the fourth quarter and the full year was from the increasing pressure in the second half of the year due to macroeconomic conditions and immigration-related policy decisions across several markets. Despite these headwinds, the diversification of our portfolio, disciplined expense management, and share repurchases we executed during the year enabled us to deliver another year-over-year double-digit earnings growth. I would also highlight that consolidated operating margins expanded by approximately 30 basis points versus the prior year, and we expect that margin trajectory to continue into 2026. As Mike mentioned earlier, adjusted EPS of $9.61 represented another year of double-digit growth consistent with our long-term track record. Let's now turn to slide 17 for a few brief comments on the balance sheet. Slide 17 presents a summary of our balance sheet compared to the prior quarter. As you can see, we ended the quarter with $1 billion in unrestricted cash and debt of $2 billion. The decrease in cash is largely due to stock repurchases and debt repayments. partially offset by cash generated from operations. From a capital allocation standpoint, our priorities remain consistent, maintaining a leverage profile aligned with an investment grade rating, investing in growth opportunities tied to our digital initiatives, and returning excess capital to shareholders through disciplined share repurchases. In 2025, we repurchased $388 million of our shares, which represents essentially all of our adjusted earnings returned to shareholders through share buybacks. This $388 million does not include the 2.6 million shares repurchased and then reissued for the core card acquisition. We believe this balanced approach managing our balance sheet while actively deploying capital for growth and shareholder returns as central to our long-term value creation strategy. With this, I will turn it over to Mike to wrap up the quarter.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Rick. Growing this business has never been easy. Over 30 years, we have regularly been met with certain macroeconomics regulatory, and geopolitical challenges. Even though in the second half of the year we face stronger macro issues, we are not discouraged. We have entered the year with a lot of motivation and confidence. We will continue to focus on the areas that we can control, including executing on the growth of digital across all three segments, continuing to grow merchant processing in both EFT and ePay, enhancing our banking infrastructure products and services with RAN and CoreCard, adding more branded payment products across more markets with ePay, signing more partners and increasing transactions through our Dandelion network, expanding our digital money transfer presence, optimizing the business in all three segments, and generating free cash flow and deploying our capital where it makes most sense, whether to deliver growth through acquisitions or repurchasing shares. This strategy has served us well, highlighted by our ability to deliver our fifth consecutive year of double-digit adjusted EPS growth in a difficult environment. So I am confident we can continue to deliver 10% to 15% earnings growth in 2026. With that, we'd be happy to take questions. Operator, will you please assist?

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Certainly. And our first question for today comes from the line of Mike Grundell from Northland. Your question, please.

speaker
Mike Grundell
Analyst, Northland Securities

Hey, guys. Wanted to ask a little bit, you know, you've called out some macro issues at the lower end and immigration. Are you seeing the light at the end of the tunnel on any of those? You know, 3Q and 4Q had 1% constant currency growth and Did things pick up by the end of the year? Are they picking up in January at all? Just kind of curious what you're seeing there kind of real time.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, I would say it's, first of all, whatever happens in January doesn't necessarily reflect the rest of the year. We do see some positive trends in January, but I wouldn't hang my hat on. We have to kind of see what happens. It's still a very difficult environment out there. We've got a very anti-immigrant administration here, which slows down my money transfer business. And so I would say we're cautiously optimistic, but I'd be careful jumping to conclusions.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I'd add to that, Mike, you know, just a little bit of data. And again, as Mike says, you know, I don't think you want to jump to, you know, any kind of quick conclusion here. But if we take a look at the transfers to Mexico, as reported by the Bank of Mexico, we saw declines as sharp as 16%. Now, this was back more in the summertime period, okay? And those have consistently decreased. Those drops have kind of they've had a bit of a sawtooth pattern to them, but let's say they've consistently decreased where actually in December there was an increase year over year. So you kind of see the momentum moving a bit more north here. And, you know, that you kind of take a look at that, you know, that families are you know, families in Mexico are dependent on the monies being sent back home for their daily needs. And so, you know, maybe there's something in that kind of underlying improving trend. But as Mike says, you know, let's not overthink it at this point. It's positive, I think. And, you know, we think that we're well positioned to take advantage of that because we've continued to grow and expand our network. We continue to put more emphasis in our digital business. And so from that standpoint, our operational execution is doing good. And if we really do see that this, you know, kind of northerly movement out of what you're seeing in Mexico is reflective of a broader environment, you know, maybe that, you know, is more positive than you think. But I At least those indicators, and I'll look more specifically to this Mexico stuff, they look like they're moving in the right direction.

speaker
Mike Grundell
Analyst, Northland Securities

Got it. And then secondly, it sounds like the money transfer review started a while ago. One, maybe what triggered that? And then two, any thoughts on doing something similar in EFT or ePay?

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So, yeah, we started this about this time last year, maybe a little before. So, yeah, we've been thinking about it and kind of what triggered it. You've got to remember, RIA is an exceptional case of success. When we bought RIA, you know, 18 years ago, it was, you know, it was doing $200 million in revenue and now doing $2 billion, you know. So we've grown a whole lot over the last decade. We've moved up to be from a very tiny player to the second largest money transfer house in the world. And with that, we realized we need to take a hard look at how we're organized, what we're doing to make sure that our organization matches the size of the opportunity and our customer base. So that's why we did it. It wasn't, I mean, you know, we weren't doing it out of desperation. It was more like, boy, we have really grown. Let's make sure we're not leaving any money on the table. And as Rick said and I said, we're really focusing on the digital aspects of money transfer. And you can see with the with a 30-plus percent growth rate that we've had for several years now, we want to continue to grow that digital business.

speaker
Mike Grundell
Analyst, Northland Securities

Got it. And then I guess just any thoughts on a similar review at EFT?

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Oh, yeah, yeah. We're always doing that. We may do something like that in the others, or we may self-review, but – I would say that the growth in EFT has not been quite as quick over the last couple of decades as maybe money transfers, so that's why we wanted to make sure. And the focus there, of course, is moving our bricks and mortar to more digital.

speaker
Mike Grundell
Analyst, Northland Securities

Got it. Okay. Hey, thanks, guys.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Christopher Kennedy from William Blair. Your question, please. Yeah, good morning.

speaker
Christopher Kennedy
Analyst, William Blair

Thanks for taking the questions. Can you give us a little bit more details on the merchant processing business? We understand it's split between ePay and the ATH segment, but any more color on the growth of that and the opportunities going forward?

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We are getting pretty much blown away by that growth is kind of the bottom line. We probably do about 20% of that volume coming out of ePay and the other 80% out of EFT. As you can see by those numbers in both of them, in the ePay merchant acquiring business grew over 20%. Our merchant acquiring business in Greece and elsewhere that was run out of EFT has grown over 30%. So, you know, this is a big one for us. And it's now gotten to the point where the combined EBITDA of both of those endeavors is in the kind of $90-ish million. So it's not only growing fast, but it has size. So we're really excited about that.

speaker
Christopher Kennedy
Analyst, William Blair

Great. Thanks for that. And then just a quick modeling question. Can you talk about free cash flow in 2025 and the prospects for 2026? Thank you. I'll let Rick do that one.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Well, as Mike said, we essentially generated about $400 million of free cash earnings there. And so now that obviously was offset with things like share repurchases, did a couple little acquisition pieces there. We would expect 26 to be statistically no different than our earnings improvement, right? We expect our earnings to be going up 10 to 15%. That should be, we should see a similar kind of rhythm in our free cash flow. Now, you know, then, as Mike said, we will be thoughtful on how we then deploy that free cash flow. Our first objective would be to support and develop our internally developed products, and Mike mentioned a couple of those in his comments there. We're going to continue to have very strong focus on our digital initiatives across all three segments. You know, we've talked a lot about money transfer, but we've got initiatives going in all three segments, whether it's acquiring or it's gaming or it's money transfer. I mean, they're in every one segment. every part of the business. And so to that end, you know, we'll continue to look for opportunities on the acquisition side that would be helpful to promoting and extending those digital growth strategies. So yeah, net-net, I would expect that that number will improve consistent with our EPS outlook for 26th. Great.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thanks for taking the questions. Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Pete Heckman from DA Davidson.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Your question, please. Hey, good morning. Thanks for the time.

speaker
Pete Heckman
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

I had a few follow-ups. In terms of core card, can you give us the approximate revenue contribution for the partial quarter in the fourth quarter?

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, it was, you know, in the ballpark of $10 to $12 million. Okay.

speaker
Pete Heckman
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

And that's helpful. And then just in terms of the pending Credia merchant acquiring acquisition, can you give us maybe some brackets around potential purchase price and total revenue? Okay.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

I wouldn't put anything out there on the – I mean, we haven't disclosed those kind of numbers. The purchase price was relatively small, and it really will be, and it'll only happen once we migrate the parts of the business into our platforms. But – More like towards the last half of the year. Yeah, it's in the few of millions of dollars rather than hundreds of millions of dollars. So, yeah, it's quite low on the few of millions of dollars scale.

speaker
Pete Heckman
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Okay, that's helpful. And certainly that acquisition would lead us to believe that you just mentioned that the merchant acquiring business is generating strong growth organically off the base of the PBMA deal. Now you're adding in this tuck-in. Are there opportunities for other tuck-ins to continue?

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, we're looking for them, Pete. And so, you know, we've been looking for them since we purchased them three years ago, since we purchased the Merchant Acquired business from Piraeus. So we're looking. When we find a good one, we'll slip it in. But there's no guarantee to what you can find and what it'll be priced at, you know. So, but... I mean, all our growth up to this point, which probably has a compounded return of 30% over the last three or so years, has all been organic. So it's nice to be able to have a little inorganic tuck-in that we can also use some of our additional products on that they didn't have themselves to help them grow faster.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

And, you know, Pete, I would add to it, we do see some across each of our businesses as opportunities. It's good to see that it appears that sellers are coming to their senses on valuation. I mean, the whole payments industry is being hit extremely hard in terms of valuation, and that's starting to kind of sink in with sellers out there. And I'd also tell you kind of in terms of some of the things that we've seen, and I would even say on this credit thing, is the economics we will get out of the deal will be as good or better than share repurchases. So that'll give you, you know, some perspective in terms of the efficiency of the acquisition versus even using it for share repurchases. We'll have as good or better economics than share repurchases. All right. Great to hear. I'll get back in the queue. I appreciate it.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Raina Kumar from Oppenheimer. Your question, please.

speaker
Raina Kumar
Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Good morning, Mike and Rick. I just want to go back to CoreCard for a second. Can you talk about what your expectations are for CoreCard in 2026? And now that JP Morgan is going to be the issuer for Apple cards, Is there a prospect for you to retain that Apple card relationship?

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, we'll just say that we don't know that answer for sure, Raina, but based upon JP Morgan's history of wanting to do things in their own shop, I would say long-term that would be doubtful. I'm not saying it's impossible. They may decide that because the core card platform has a plethora of of services and features that they don't have in their current platform, they might find that it's better to use our platform for a while until they make those transitions, or maybe they won't. But when we did the business model, we said this is a good buy if we can keep them through the end of their contract, which is 2027, and it may go further.

speaker
Raina Kumar
Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

That makes sense. And anything you can say on just like the contribution of core card in 26, what you're estimating?

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Well, you can see what they had in their publicly reported information. you know, we'll do that good or better. And, you know, so we're not putting a specific number out there for CoreCard. But as Mike said, we're already seeing the wins show up on the ledger. And the one, I mean, the value that CoreCard brings to the table is they've got a great platform. They've got a great group of people that know this industry inside and out. They've got a great reference customer that's better than anybody else you could probably have out there. in Apple. Now you put that together with us that has global distribution, just like we did with money transfer. When we bought money transfer, it was highly focused on the United States. We're now around the world with that business. Same thing with ePay. When we got ePay, it was focused on the UK. We've got ePay now around the world. That's the same kind of customer reaction that we're seeing on the core card product. It is the leading quality product in the market. And now we're exposing it to the rest of the world. So we're excited on seeing what the customer reaction is. But I would say you can see what their publicly reported numbers are. We'll do that good or better. And you can bet that we're driving it to be a heck of a lot better. But let's not, I don't want to overhype the expectation.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

But I will say, even though Rick's telling me not to overhype, the number of interested parties that have come out of the woodwork since this announcement has been phenomenal. So what we've got to do is move those interested parties to closure, and then we'll be cooking.

speaker
Raina Kumar
Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Okay, that's exciting, and I appreciate that. And then just one more, if I can. sneak it in. Um, just like any thoughts on like segment EBITDA contribution for 26, like how we should think of the different growth rates by segment. And I, like, I know, um, a competitor, um, recently announced, uh, an exclusive relationship with Kroger's. Um, is there any impact there to your business? Thank you.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Well, first of all, the Kroger impact to us will be marginal at best. Um, and, um, Yeah, so it unfortunately wasn't a great success in that regard. So nothing there to speak of. As it relates to, you know, the growth rates in that by segment, I think we'll kind of hold off on that. We've given you guidance for the EPS. You can kind of look at the, you know, what we've had historically as growth rates across those businesses and you know, what I would probably say without putting numbers out there, you know, we would expect the growth rates out of EFT and money transfer to lead the way with ePay, you know, in a lesser growth kind of a profile as we see it right now. Although I know that, you know, Kevin is looking at a number of exciting products that, you know, hold out some some opportunity, but yeah, we'll hold off on putting specific numbers out there by segments. If you remember a couple of years ago, we went through an approach of using an earnings guidance for the bottom line, because essentially what we're seeing, we were seeing is a dozen different numbers out there that if you meet, if you exceed one and you miss any one of the others, you know, you really get penalized for it. And so we're trying to get the investors to focus on the strength of our total business and really reward us for, again, this is the fifth year in a row with double digit earnings growth. I looked at the Fortune 500 stuff the other day, and the expectations for the full year are something like about 12% growth. When you say, all right, well, if that's what's out of the S&P 500, I meant, if that's out of the S&P 500, we did 12%, why aren't we getting the same kind of trading multiple? Then if you took the four or five leading valuation guys out of those numbers, their numbers were 9% in growth year over year. Yet we've produced, again, Mike said, the fifth year in a row of double-digit earnings growth, and we expect the same thing next year. So we've got a business that has great consistency, great continuity. We have great diversification because we're not dependent upon any one market. You know, just look at Mexico, for example. If all of our business was going to Mexico, our results wouldn't be anywhere to what they are now. They would be down significantly. But we're diversified in that we're not dependent upon Mexico. We'd love to see better numbers come out of that market, but we have a great diversified business. And so we really try to, you know, want to try to get people to focus on the consistency and the reliability of double digit earnings growth.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

And our earnings are durable. I mean, they've been here for a long time and they continue to be so.

speaker
Raina Kumar
Analyst, Oppenheimer & Co.

Thank you for the call.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Darren Pellett from Wolf Research. Your question, please.

speaker
Daniel Krebs
Analyst, Wolf Research (on for Darren Pellett)

Hi, thank you. This is Daniel Krebs on for Darren. I would love if you could discuss the recent CXC-Hogan partnership, you know, how you may think that can improve distribution of the issuer processing products and maybe where those efforts are being targeted by client or region. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Did you say Hogan Partnership?

speaker
Daniel Krebs
Analyst, Wolf Research (on for Darren Pellett)

DXC, the DXC partnership.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I'm sorry. I'm unfamiliar with what that is.

speaker
Daniel Krebs
Analyst, Wolf Research (on for Darren Pellett)

Okay, no worries. We can take that one offline. Maybe switching back to Credit App Bank then. I know we're not getting a lot of specifics on the revenue. It sounds kind of smaller than Pirates, but if you could just compare and contrast the business relative to Piraeus when you got it? Are we talking about a similar margin profile and growth profile as we look at combining those two?

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, we hope so. So they've got about 10% of our base of, you know, our number of merchants. So that gives you an idea of kind of its size. The one thing that has helped us grow that business where we've gone from about 18% market share in agrees to about 24% market share over the last three and a half years. And that's in a highly competitive market. We've grown that market share because we have a really good product set and we do more than just merchant acquiring. We do DCC at these things, we do tax refund, we have various credit kinds of deals going on with our merchants. So we continue to grow that business really quickly. And I would expect that if we could add 20,000 more merchants, they should fall right there in lockstep with it. So we're pretty excited. Plus, we're not stopping. We mentioned, too, that we did, what, 7,000-plus merchants organically in the fourth quarter. So we're going to keep working organically, not just inorganically.

speaker
Daniel Krebs
Analyst, Wolf Research (on for Darren Pellett)

Great. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you, and our next question comes from the line of Vasul Govil from KBW. Your question, please.

speaker
Vasul Govil
Analyst, KBW

Hi. Thank you for taking my question. I guess this first one on the EPS guide of 10 to 15 percent, maybe you could give us some color on sort of what the underlying macro assumptions are at the low end versus the high end, just given we're seeing some pressure there.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I don't think we have high end and low end assumptions. We have our forecast that falls in that range. There's a lot of things that can happen positive and negative in a year or so, and we've been able to deliver that for the last five years, so we feel pretty comfortable with that range. I'd like to beat it like we did the year before last, like we did in 24, but we're just going to put that out there to give people a little bit of a yardstick of where we think we're going to land.

speaker
Vasul Govil
Analyst, KBW

Great, thank you. And then, Mike, I know you talked about sort of diversifying the EFT revenue mix away from the ATM business. You've obviously made a bunch of acquisitions to make that happen. Can you remind us what that mix looks like today? And sort of if you look out two to three years, what do you envision that mix could be? And then similarly on the margin profile, I'm guessing it will be accretive to the margin profile, but any color on how we can see that evolve over time?

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, can you repeat that for me?

speaker
Vasul Govil
Analyst, KBW

Yes, the revenue mix. You guys have been making acquisitions and you're talking about that mix sort of diversifying away from the ATM business. So just looking for some color on what that mix would look like two to three years from now, just given that you're buying non-ATM businesses and some of them are going at a faster pace. And then also like what that means for margins over time.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, Vasu, there's also another nuance here because you say diversifying away from the ATM business. What that assumes is that all we do is you're kind of probably referring to our owned ATM business. What we've found is because of our scale and the size and our reach, we do a lot of banking infrastructure deals where we're actually being contracted by the bank to do their ATMs or provide them ATM services. So unlike our traditional tourist-focused ATMs, where if a tourist does not walk up to the ATM, you don't make money. If he uses less cash this year than last year, you make less money. These are infrastructure deals. These are long-term contracts with banks. And so what we're finding now is you've kind of got to break out. When you look at ATMs, you can't, like, throw them all in one bucket because some of them It really doesn't matter how much people are going to spend with cash. We're going to get paid the same or more. And as far as what percentage, I'll let Rick try to take a shot at that. But I just want to kind of educate people. Everybody wants to say this is all ATMs. It's not all ATMs.

speaker
Rick Weller
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, you know, we've shown you some charts and graphs before that, you know, that show that the ATM business is slightly less than 20% of our consolidation there. And so, and we've even put out a slide that said, you know, by, when you look out, you is anticipated maybe to be something like, you know, 13, 14, you know, kind of in that, you know, ballpark, right? So we continue to see the mixed shift to where we won't get rid of the ATM business, but we're not, as Mike said, we're not focused on it being a growth engine. We're seeing more of the growth come out of our digital strategy being either infrastructure support for banks or acquiring, or like core card, where, again, which falls into that infrastructure piece. So that will continue to become a bigger and bigger part of it. And then as it relates to the margins, I would expect that we would see an improving margin structure. Today in our In our EFT business, we have an operating margin that's just north of 20-ish kind of percent. And if you kind of take a look at the acquiring business, it generally is going to be in a... in a 25-ish kind of zip code, the better, okay? You look at the infrastructure or like the issuing business, it's going to be more in the 40 to 50% kind of range. And so we would anticipate seeing that that mix will shift down for the ATM portion of it, and that we'll have better margins out of the EFT segment over time.

speaker
Mike Brown
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

And I think, yeah, yeah, it's nice to talk to you. And with everybody else, I notice we're at the top of the hour, so we're going to close ourselves off. We appreciate your interest and look forward to talking to you in the future. Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day.

Disclaimer

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