speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Good day and welcome to Broadridge's Fiscal First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would like now to turn the conference over to Mr. Eddings Thiebaud, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

speaker
Eddings Thiebaud
Head of Investor Relations

Thank you, Alan. Good morning, everybody, and welcome to Broadridge's first Fiscal Fertilizer 2026 earnings call. Our earnings release and the slides that accompany this call may be found on the Investor Relations section of Broadridge.com. Joining me on the call this morning are Tim Gokey, our CEO, and our CFO, Ashma Ghaib. Before I turn the call over to Tim, a few standard reminders. One, we will be making forward-looking statements on today's call regarding Broderidge that involve risks. A summary of these risks will be found on the second page of the slides and a more complete description on our annual report on Form 10-K. Two, we'll also be referring to several non-GAAP measures which we believe provide investors with a more complete understanding of Broderidge's underlying operating results. An explanation of these non-GAAP measures and reconciliations to the comparable gap measures can be found in the earnings release and presentation. Let me now turn the call over to Tim Gose. Tim?

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Eddings, and good morning. I'm pleased to be here to discuss our strong first quarter results. With a positive economic backdrop, equity markets remain strong, and the fixed income market is steady. Capital markets are healthy, and our financial services clients are benefiting. And last, We're operating against a pro-innovation regulatory backdrop. As a result, it should come as no surprise that Broadridge is off to a very good start to fiscal year 2026. We delivered strong first quarter results, and we're raising our recurring revenue outlook to the higher end of our 5% to 7% growth range. Our pipeline is growing as our clients look at how they can accelerate change across their businesses. And we're also investing in new governance solutions in expanding our tokenization capabilities, and in making value-added acquisitions. With that backdrop, let's dig into the results, starting with the headlines. First, Broadridge delivered strong first quarter results, including 8% recurring revenue growth, constant currency, and 51% growth in adjusted EPS. Second, we continue to execute on our strategy to democratize and digitize investing, simplify and innovate trading, and modernize wealth management. That execution is driving our results in the form of strong growth, continued product innovation, and a growing pipeline. Third, we're using our investment-grade balance sheet and strong free cash flow to strengthen our business. Over the past year, we made a handful of small acquisitions to strengthen our ICS business. And of course, last year, we acquired SIS to accelerate our platform rollout in Canada. And in the last two quarters, we repurchased $250 million of our shares. Finally, we expect to deliver strong fiscal year 2026 results. With our positive start to the year, we now expect to be at the higher end of our 5 to 7% recurring revenue range, and we're reaffirming our guidance for 8 to 12% adjusted EPS growth and $290 to $330 million of closed sales. That outlook also keeps us on track to deliver again on our top and bottom line three-year growth objectives. Let's move to the drivers of our strong start on slide four. I'll start with our governance business, where we continue to drive democratization and digitization and to deliver innovation. Governance revenues rose 5% driven by revenue from sales and continued healthy position growth. Investor participation trends remain healthy across both equities and funds, At 2%, fund position growth was impacted by the timing and mix of communications in the quarter. Looking through that noise, we continue to see fund positions growing in the mid-single digits, consistent with fiscal 25. Total equity position growth was 12%, driven by continued growth in managed accounts. For the first half of the year, we expect mid-teens position growth overall, with high single-digit growth in revenue equity positions. Five years ago, we began to talk about direct indexing, and we're now seeing it as driving growth in managed account positions. Today, we're beginning to see interest in tokenized equities, which could create future sources of demand for new U.S. equity positions. While the speed of adoption is uncertain, the SEC has been clear that tokenized securities are still securities. That means they will need to incorporate all the complex features of corporate governance and corporate actions that regular equities do. And Broadridge is committed to making all that work. We will be there with disclosure and governance solutions for tokenized equities to ensure that there are no roadblocks to widespread adoption. It's too early to say how popular tokenized equities will become, but like direct indexing, we see them as another leg of democratization that will continue to drive position growth over time. Beyond position growth, we're also benefiting from a quiet but significant shift in how asset managers and public companies are approaching shareholder engagement and proxy voting. Last quarter, we talked about how the growth of Pathos Investing is forcing the largest asset managers to rethink how they vote, with a growing number of funds, nearly 400 at the end of fiscal 25, representing nearly $2 trillion in assets, using Broderidge's voting choice solution to enable their shareholders to engage by expressing their voting preferences. Now, we're working with large asset and wealth managers to create an objective, data-driven approach to voting. To be clear, we're a technology company, not a proxy advisor. Our solution, which will be live with a select group of clients this proxy season, will meet an important market need by enabling clients to define and implement independent policies to complement ISS and Glass-Lewis. In addition, we're also working with public companies to better engage retail shareholders by increasing the convenience of voting. This past quarter, we launched a pilot program with ExxonMobil to enable retail shareholders to provide standing voting instructions for annual meetings. Shareholders who opt in will continue to receive all the materials they do today, and they can change their vote at any time. This approach makes it more convenient to vote and has the potential to increase retail voting. It's a new and exciting front in shareholder engagement, and we're seeing significant interest from other public companies. Taken together, these innovations across passive funds, active institutional funds, and public companies are enabling a quiet revolution in shareholder engagement by leveraging Broadridge's technology to give Main Street investors a greater voice in the companies they own. That's great for our markets. We also completed two tuck-in acquisitions in the first quarter to strengthen our governance business. Signal is focused on digital client communications. It gives our customer communications business a foothold in Europe and strengthens our global relationships with key financial services firms. iJoin is a retirement plan technology provider that will strengthen our workplace and retirement solutions business. Both are great examples of how small strategic M&A can accelerate our product development and deepen our product set. Let's turn next to capital markets where we are simplifying and innovating trading. Capital markets revenues grew 6% driven by a combination of new sales and higher trading volumes with a boost from tokenization, on which I'll comment in a moment. The growth in new sales is being driven by a balanced mix across both front and back office solutions. In the front office, we're seeing strong demand for our connectivity solutions. And in the back office, we're seeing increased demand for solutions that help our clients simplify their global trading operations. We're also engaging clients in some of the market structure changes coming in calendar 26. namely the move to 23x5 trading of equities in the second half of 26 and a centralized clearing for treasuries at the end of 26. The good news is that the move to 23x5 trading will be seamless for Bobridge clients, highlighting the benefit of a mutualized platform. As we move toward treasury clearing, that is accelerating demand for our DLR, Distributed Ledger Repo solution. In September, we processed over $300 billion in tokenized equities equity tokenized trades per day, up from $100 billion per day six months ago. And we're clearly the leading at-scale platform. Next, we're going to real-time repo, which will make repos a trading and financing instrument and further scale volumes. While we started with repo, the platform is fully multi-asset, and we'll be going to other asset classes over the next 12 months. We'll also be incorporating stablecoin as the cash rails for real-time transactions. More broadly, we see tokenization as a megatrend over the next 10 years. It's ideal for less liquid, harder-to-settle asset classes, and there could be real benefits in other areas of fixed income, collateral, private credit, and alternative assets. One of the avenues for tokenized activity to grow is on the Canton network, a public permissioned digital asset network designed specifically for financial services. As a result of our investment in digital asset holdings and our work on DLR, we have been a super validator on the Canton network since the beginning of fiscal 25, for which we have earned Canton coins. In Q1, we recorded $4 million in recurring revenue from our super validator role. In addition, the coin holdings we earned previously also gained materially in value, as Ashma will share in a moment. We see the potential for the Canton network to serve as the operating system for tokenized institutional markets, including DLR. To support this vision, an investor group led by DRW announced yesterday the formation of a Canton-focused Digital Asset Treasury, or DIT, which intends to invest in Canton coin and create applications for the network. We are contributing a portion of our Canton coin holdings to take an 8% pro forma stake in that DAT, which will trade on the NASDAQ. This transaction is just one more indicator of the potential for our DLR and broader tokenization capability to create value as tokenized activity grows. Moving to wealth, where we're modernizing wealth investment management, revenues grew 22% in the quarter, paced by solid organic growth and the acquisition of SIS. Fiscal 25 was a strong sales year for our wealth business with three significant platform sales. So I'm pleased to note that we're making good progress in onboarding these new clients and are on track to begin recognizing revenue at the end of fiscal 26. November 1st marked the one-year anniversary of the SIS acquisition, and I'm pleased with how it's driving value for our business and our clients. Over the past year, we've extended our relationship with key Canadian clients and are making strong progress in integrating SIS onto our wealth platform. More broadly, we continue to see a strong pipeline across our wealth business. And finally, closed sales. After a strong finish to the fiscal 25 year in June, we closed $33 million in Q1 sales. More importantly, our pipeline continues to strengthen, and we are on track to deliver on our full year guidance of $290 to $330 million. All this means that Broadridge is better positioned than ever. Tokenization is just one of the many innovations we are driving that are transforming our industry and setting the stage for long-term growth. Let me close with some final thoughts. First, Broadridge delivered strong first quarter results. Second, our first quarter performance has Broadridge on track to deliver another strong year, including recurring revenue at the higher end of our 5% to 7% range and 8% to 12% adjusted EPS growth. We're also deploying capital to drive value. Third, our results are being driven by the execution of our long-term growth strategy. We're driving the democratization and digitization of governance by delivering new voting solutions that put Main Street investors front and center. We're simplifying and innovating in capital markets across both the front and back office, and we're modernizing wealth management by delivering platform capabilities for clients in both the U.S. and Canada. Fourth, we're positioned to benefit from the growth of digital assets and the trend toward tokenization. The combination of a pro-innovation regulatory backdrop and accelerating technology change is putting digital assets and tokenization front and center as a new megatrend in financial services that creates significant opportunity for Broadridge. Across our businesses, Broadridge is well-positioned. Tokenization is the next wave of democratization to drive equity position growth, and our early start makes us a leader in supporting the technology behind tokenized assets and trading. And finally, Broadridge is well-positioned to deliver on its three-year financial objectives and beyond. This will be the fifth consecutive three-year period in which we've met our goals, and the opportunity going forward is even larger. Before I turn it over to Ashima, I want to thank our associates around the world. Their focus on serving clients and driving change is how we add value to our clients and our industry every day, and it's making a real difference in the financial lives of millions. Asha?

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Tim. Thanks, Tim. Good morning. It's great to be here today to share our Q1 results. Before I begin my review, I want to make five key call-outs. First, Broadridge is off to a strong start to fiscal 26, with strong recurring revenue and adjusted EPS growth. Second, event-driven revenue. We reported 114 million of event-driven revenues in Q1, well above the long-term average, driven in part by a proxy election at a major mutual fund complex. Third, We are deploying capital to drive shareholder returns. During the first quarter, we completed two tuck-in M&A deals for a total of $56 million and repurchased $150 million of our shares. Fourth, we continue to expect to deliver strong fiscal 26 results. We are now raising our recurring revenue growth outlook to the higher end of our 5% to 7% guidance range. We are also reaffirming our guidance for 8% to 12% adjusted EPS growth and closed sales of $290 to $330 million. And one final call-out, digital asset revenues and mark-to-market gains. As Tim referenced, Broadridge recognized $4 million of digital asset revenues related to our work as a supervalidator on the Canton network. While we have been earning coins for the service over the last year, they had de minimis value. Now, as these coins have increased in value, they are not only contributing to revenue, their value is also being recognized on our patent sheet. As a result, we recorded a $46 million unrealized gain on the value of the 1.7 billion coins we held at the end of the quarter. That gain was excluded from our calculation of adjusted EPS. With that, let's go to the numbers on slide six. Recurring revenues grew 8% on a constant currency basis, including 5% organic growth. Adjusted operating income margin expanded by 280 basis points to 15.8%. Adjusted EPS grew 51% to $1.51. driven by strong event revenue. And closed sales were $33 million. Let's move to slide 7 to discuss our segment recurring revenue, starting with our ICS or governance segment. ICS recurring revenues rose 5% to $518 million, including a one-point benefit from acquisitions and a one-point headwind from lower interest rates. As a reminder, the earnings impact of lower interest rates is functionally hedged by lower interest expense on available rate debt. Regulatory revenues rose 4% in Q1, driven by 7% growth in equity revenue positions and 2% growth in fund positions. Regulatory revenues were partially impacted by a shift in fund communications from September to October. which lowered Q1 regulatory growth by two points. Data-driven fund solutions revenue grew 2% as a three-point headwind from lower interest rates partially offset strong growth in our retirement and workplace solutions revenue. We also completed the acquisition of iJoin in mid-September, which had only a modest impact on growth in the quarter. We expect to see data-driven fund revenue growth accelerate in the second half of the year. Issuer revenues grew 6%, driven by strong growth in both our disclosure solutions and our shareholder engagement solutions. Customer communications revenues rose 8%, driven by organic growth in digital and print revenues, and the addition of Signal. For the year, we expect ICS recurring revenue at the high end of our 5% to 7% total recurring revenue guidance, including a modest benefit from the iJoin and Signal acquisitions and the continued drag from lower interest rates. Turning to GTO, revenues grew 12% in Q1, including 6% organic. Capital markets revenues grew 6%, driven by the growth in our global post-rate solutions, which benefited from high trading volumes and by the recognition of digital asset revenues, which together more than offset a point of losses related to the business exit that we discussed last quarter. Digital asset revenues contributed $4 million, or one point, to the growth of our capital markets business in the first quarter. With the recent increases in coin value, we expect these digital asset revenues to contribute approximately one point to capital markets growth in fiscal 26. Taken together with our growing revenues from distributed ledger repo platform, it's exciting to see our tokenization efforts starting to drive a small but real revenue contribution to our capital markets business. Wealth and investment management revenues grew 22%, driven by 5% organic growth and the impact of the SIS acquisition. As a reminder, we closed the SIS deal on November 1, 24, and that revenue will be reported as organic for the last two months of our second quarter and in the second half of the year. For the year, we continue to expect GTO recurring revenue growth within our 5 to 7 percent guidance range, with higher growth in wealth. Now let's move to slide eight to review our key volume indicators. We continue to see healthy growth in investor participation across both equities and funds. Equity position growth was 12%, including 7% growth in revenue positions. Looking ahead, our testing shows mid-teens total position growth in Q2. Full-year testing is showing low double-digit growth. which would imply revenue position growth in the mid to high single digit range. Q1 fund position growth of 2% was impacted by the timing of fund communications in the quarter. Our testing continues to indicate mid single digit position growth for both the first half and the full year. In GTO, trade volumes rose 17% for the quarter, driven by double-digit growth in both equity and fixed income volume. I'll wrap up my discussion of recurring revenue growth on slide nine. In Q1, recurring revenue growth constant currency was 8%, primarily driven by five points of organic growth. Revenue from closed sales remains the biggest driver of our organic growth at five points, as we onboarded revenues from our $430 million fiscal 25 year-end backlog. Our retention rate was 98% for the quarter. Internal growth contributed two points, primarily driven by higher trade volumes and digital asset revenues. Acquisitions, primarily SIS, contributed three points to growth. And finally, changes in FX contributed one point. Let's close our discussion of revenues on slide 10. Total revenue increased 12% to $1.6 billion, driven by five points of growth from recurring revenue. Higher event-driven revenue drove four points of growth. Q126 revenues of $114 million were our second highest quarter ever. The biggest driver of event-driven revenue in the quarter was board elections at a major mutual fund complex. This fund company had its last proxy event in the first quarter of fiscal 2019. In the seven years since that event, the number of positions grew approximately 30%, highlighting the long-term growth drivers propelling event-driven revenues. Looking ahead, we expect event-driven revenues to return to historic average levels of $50 to $60 million per quarter for the balance of fiscal 26. Low to no margin distribution revenues grew 8%, primarily driven by higher postage rates, and contributed three points to total revenue growth. Turning now to margins on slide 11, adjusted operating income margin was 15.8%, an increase of 280 basis points from Q1-25. This growth was driven by higher event-driven revenue and operating leverage from our scale business, partially offset by our ongoing reinvestments. The net impact of lower interest rates and higher distribution revenues reduced AOI margins by 30 basis points. Let's move on to earnings on slide 12. Q1 adjusted EPS grew 51% to $1.51, driven by higher event-driven revenue. Interest expense was $24 million in the quarter, a decrease of $8 million from Q125, driven by a combination of lower balances and lower rates. As I noted in my call-outs, Broadbridge recorded a $46 million unrealized gain, driven by the increase in the value of our digital asset holdings in the quarter. That non-cash gain was reported in other non-operating income and was excluded from our calculation of adjusted EPS. Given the volatile nature of digital asset values, we expect to continue to record gains and or losses as we mark these digital assets to market every quarter. Let's turn to sales now on slide 13. Broadridge reported close sales of 33 million, driven by sales of our governance solutions. Looking ahead, our pipeline remains strong, and we are reaffirming our guidance. for full-year closed sales of $290 to $330 million. Turning to our cash flows on slide 14, Broadridge generated free cash flow of $13 million in the first quarter. Our strong cash performance was driven by higher earnings and working capital management, and we remain on track to deliver free cash flow conversion of over 100% in fiscal 26th. Turning next to capital allocation on slide 15, we continue to take a balanced approach to capital allocation. In Q1, we invested $30 million in capital spending and software spend with an additional $7 million to onboard clients onto our solutions. We deployed $56 million during the quarter on two tuck-in acquisitions to strengthen our governance franchise. In addition, we continue to expect our previously announced acquisition of Akilin to close at calendar year-end, pending approval by German regulatory authorities. During the quarter, we also repurchased $150 million in Broadridge shares and returned an additional $103 million to shareholders via our quarterly dividend. And yesterday, We entered into an agreement to use approximately 340 million of our Canton coin holdings as part of a pipe offering in Thadamion Incorporated, a NASDAQ-listed company with the ticker THAR that intends to execute a digital asset treasury strategy for Canton coins. When the deal closes later this week, we anticipate holding warrants for 8% of the publicly traded vehicle. Let's start to wrap by reviewing our fiscal 26 guidance on slide 16. As I said in my call-outs, Broadridge is on track to deliver strong fiscal 26 results. Given our strong start to the year and the incremental revenue from our Signal and iJoin acquisitions, we now expect fiscal 26 recurring revenue growth, constant currency, to be at the higher end of our 5% to 7% guidance. We continue to expect adjusted operating income margin of between 20 to 21 percent, adjusted EBS growth of 8 to 12 percent, and 290 to 330 million in closed sales. Additionally, I will highlight that we are expecting a more normalized level of event-driven revenue in the second quarter of 26 compared to last year's record 125 million. As a result, we expect 2Q adjusted EPS to be approximately 13% to 15% of our full-year outlook. I'll wrap by summarizing my key points. Broadridge is off to a strong start to the year, and the combination of strong performance and recent acquisitions has us incrementally more confident in growth in recurring revenues. We are deploying capital to boost growth and shareholder returns. And last, we remain very much on track to deliver another strong year of recurring revenue and adjusted EPS growth in fiscal 26 and deliver, again, on our top and bottom line three-year objectives. With that, let's move to Q&A.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speaker phone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw it, please press star, then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from James Fawcett of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

speaker
Michael Infante
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Hi, everyone. Hi, everyone. It's Michael Infante. I'm for James. Thanks for taking our question. I just wanted to ask on the recurring revenue outlook tracking towards the high end of the range versus the reiteration on the EPS front. I recognize that we're going to see a reversion of some of the event-driven revenue strength in the quarter, but can you just walk through some of the puts and takes as to why EPS wouldn't similarly track towards the high end of the range just given the you know, the high incremental margin nature of that event-driven revenue you saw in the quarter.

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks. Absolutely. Thanks, Michael. I'll take that. You're right. We're off to a strong start of the year. And as a result, we raised our guidance for recurring revenue to the higher end of the 5% to 7% range. The biggest driver of the revenue upside is the acquisitions that we're seeing from iJoin and Signal that we announced earlier this year. which are more than offsetting the additional rate cuts that we're seeing in the year. I will say beyond that, we're seeing strength in our underlying business. Revenue from sales, from converting our $430 million backlog, is continuing to deliver consistent results and fuel our growth. Position growth is another important factor for us, and we're growing increasingly confident about the mid-teens growth that we're expecting for equities in Q2, and mid to high single digit revenue growth for the full year. Fund position and revenue growth also continues at mid single digit. And we've seen a bit more upside from the digital asset revenues, driven by increase in market value relative to the starting point of the year. In specifically in Q1, as you noted, we also saw the impact of higher event, which we were expecting given the large mutual fund proxy that was planned in Q1. All in all, All of this gets us to a super strong start to the year, which enables us to invest in our business while we continue to drive towards our 8% to 12% adjusted EPS growth.

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

I'm just going to add on to that a little bit because it's pretty early in the year for us to think about the translation of any incremental margin, if I can talk, into earnings. I just note this is a time of great opportunity in the industry for us and for our clients. And we're really pleased that we're in a position to be both investing and delivering on our commitments. And I just want to focus you on four key areas that we're investing in now. Tokenization, digital assets, shareholder engagement, digital communications, AI and platform. And each of these are areas where we have a strong right to win. and can bring real value to our clients by helping them really drive innovation. It's early in the year to think about the balance of investment and earnings delivery, and so really staying with our guidance is the right call right now.

speaker
Michael Infante
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

That's helpful. Thank you both. And then maybe just a quick housekeeping one on Canton. I recognize you're using some of those funds or those holdings to participate in the pipe, but maybe after contemplating that transaction. Do you intend to convert some of those holdings to cash, if at all, to sort of mitigate some of the gap volatility? And if so, like, how should we think about maybe like a theoretical, you know, 10% change in Canton coin and the impact on gap EPS? Thanks.

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I'll take that just at a very high level. I do think we're going to see some gap volatility. That's why we're certainly going to adjust this We do think this is going to be a pretty volatile asset and it's probably something we'd prefer to have off on the side. I think the core thing here is we're an operating company, not an investment company. And so I think you should expect to see us liquidate these holdings over time. There are reasons because a lot of the momentum in the network is and the potential for the network to become really the rails for institutional financial transactions, that the coins could become a lot more valuable over time. So I think this will be something that you'll see us evolve over probably a few years.

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

The only thing I'll add is, remember in terms of the revenue at least, I called out that we expect this to be about one point of impact to our capital markets business. So in the larger scale, I wouldn't expect the value to have a significant impact to Broadridge revenues.

speaker
Michael Infante
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

That makes sense. Thank you, guys.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Our next question comes from Kyle Peterson of Needham. Please go ahead.

speaker
Kyle Peterson
Analyst, Needham

Great. Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. I wanted to talk a little bit on sales cycles and kind of what you guys are seeing, particularly if there's been any impact from the government shutdown. Obviously, at least some things in capital markets and things have been hit snags a little bit. But I guess, have you guys seen any impact to getting deals across the finish line or client conversations that might have kind of slowed down in the last month plus?

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Kyle, thanks. It's Tim. First of all, I think we are really pleased with the strong close we had to fiscal 25, and we're still on our guidance for this year. Specifically to your question, I think the selling environment that we're seeing is pretty stable. We haven't seen any slowdown in conversations because of the government shutdown. Now, I think many of our conversations are They have a sales cycle that's really outside the window of whether a few weeks makes a difference unless we're coming right up on the end of the year like we talked about last spring. So I think it's really, you know, we're not seeing any change. It's pretty early in the year in terms of doing anything other than confirming our guidance. And, you know, all that said, I think the market remains strong, the conversations we're having. with our clients are pretty exciting around strategic topics in digital communications and shareholder engagement in platform, among others. And the conversations that I'm having with clients are really very much more on the transformational side, which I think is a testament to the investments that we've made. So we have a lot of confidence going forward. It's grounded in those conversations. It's grounded in our pipeline, which remains healthy and has actually grown since the beginning of the year.

speaker
Kyle Peterson
Analyst, Needham

Great. That's really helpful. And then maybe just a follow-up broadly, kind of your thoughts on how digital assets and tokenization fits within Broadridge. Obviously, several moving pieces. You guys are starting to get some revenue from that. You made the investment. But I guess how should we think about how digital assets should continue to evolve and what role do you see that playing in your business both in the near and long term here?

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thank you for that. You know, I think we see digital assets and tokenization as a mega trend for the next 10 years and as a real opportunity for Broadridge and the industry. And our strategy is to drive tokenization across the asset classes where we have deep expertise and and where we think the asset class will benefit the most. And that certainly includes fixed income, repos, collateral. Longer-term tokenized equities we think can be part of the next wave of democratization that drives demand for U.S. equities and contributes to long-term position growth. And then sort of as a double-click within that, we think the Canton network has the potential you know, early days, but potential to become an operating system that makes a lot of that more possible. So, you know, I think as you look across our businesses, you're seeing the continued progress on distributed ledger repo in capital markets, and there we're certainly going to be expanding to additional use cases, including real-time, new asset classes, stablecoin. There's a Canton network side of things, which is also sort of within capital markets. Tokenized equities we'd see as a longer-term opportunity that would be really affecting more our – somewhat on the capital market side, but more our ICS business in terms of extending position growth and really being the next wave of the evolution of democratization to drive that mid-single, high-single-digit position growth into the foreseeable future and beyond. And then last on the wealth management side, this demand for digital assets is – putting pressure on wealth managers to integrate those assets into their traditional client service operations. And they've sort of stayed away from them in the past, and I think that is changing quickly now. But when you think about a wealth manager for now offering digital assets to clients, there's all the other things that you need to do, tax, margin, statements, all those things. And so we think that's an area where we can really help. Our core engines will be enabled to represent digital assets by early next calendar year. And that is going to allow our clients to flow transactions through for everything from cost basis, tax, margin, seg, statements, asset servicing, and all that complexity that comes with being a large scale, either capital markets or wealth manager.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Great. Thanks for taking the questions.

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

I'll just – maybe I'll just add on because you were also asking about the near-term and the mid-term implications from a revenue perspective, right? So I'll just tack on, as you know, we – specifically for Canton Coins, we earn these Canton Coins for being a supervalidator on the Canton network. In Q1, we recognized $4 million of revenue, like we said, associated with this service. the actual revenue that we earn over the course of the remainder of the year would vary based on the actual minting activity, the number of coins specifically, and the price of these coins, right? We've got a whole minting schedule, but bottom line, it translates into about a point of impact to capital markets higher in Q2 and lower in Q3 and Q4. So that's from a revenue perspective. And on the balance sheet perspective, the only thing I'll call out is we do have, at the end of last quarter, we have 1.7 billion coins that were valued at 74 million, right? And like you said, we've contributed some of these to the DAT, but there could be volatility associated with the 74 million, which we'll continue to adjust out of our adjusted EPS.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Great. Thanks for the clarification there. Our next question comes from Scott Wurzel from Wolf Research.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Please go ahead.

speaker
Scott Wurzel
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Ashma, just on the 2Q EPS guide at about 13% to 15% of full-year EPS, I understand that we should see a normalization of event-driven revenue, but just wondering if there's anything else going on there that we should keep in mind for 2Q EPS.

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

No, that's really the major driver, Scott. It's just a tough compare because of the event activity that we saw last year in Q2. Just wanted to make sure you guys saw the Grover impact coming in from that. Nothing else significant to call out.

speaker
Scott Wurzel
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Got it. That makes sense. And then, forgive me, I was hopping from another call, so I may have missed the commentary here. But just wondering if you can talk a little bit more about the position growth trends that you saw in the quarter and how that sort of trended relative to expectations. Thanks.

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thanks, Scott. You know, look, position growth is remaining strong, and we're seeing really nice strength in the underlying drivers. For equity positions, which go 12%, really driven by healthy growth in managed accounts, but also pretty good growth in self-directed. As we talk to our clients, they continue to tell us that direct indexing is, you know, a significant driver of the managed account growth. And then the equity revenue positions, you know, taking out the smaller accounts and the fractional shares of 7%, which is really in line with what we've seen over the long run. And then I noted that on the fund growth side, it was 2%, but that was really an anomaly driven by timing, and we're continuing to see underlying position growth in the mid-single digits. It is still early in the year, but our testing is now beginning to You have a little bit of visibility into the second half, and that's showing, again, continued strength across funds and equities, low double-digit equity position growth, continued mid-single-digit fund growth for the balance of the year. I know you asked about drivers right now, but since I have the floor, I think that the key takeaway here is that innovation remains the key driver for long-term position growth. You know, 15 years ago, we were talking about the rising popularity of ETS. And 10 years ago, we started to talk about managed accounts. Five years ago, it was zero commission trading. And we started talking five years ago about direct indexing. But now we're seeing how that's beginning to become an important component of growth now. And as I said in my remarks, now we're beginning to hear, you know, beginnings of interest in tokenized equities. And I think that just highlights the ongoing – innovation that has given physician growth for the past 40 years, that there's always the next thing. And, you know, that's exciting. And so I think really we feel good about the long-term health here.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Great. Thanks, guys. Our next question comes from Puneet Jain of J.P.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Morgan. Please go ahead.

speaker
Puneet Jain
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

Yes. Hey, thanks for taking my question. So I want to make sure, like I understand, like so the super validator status that stems from the digital asset repo platform, it seems like. So is it common for you to be paid for that repo platform in form of coins? And then the second question on that is like the investments that you made in Canton Network, like how do you expect to make returns on that investment?

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, it's Tim Phinney. So first of all, just to be clear, the role as super validator is separate from what we're doing on distributed ledger repo. So we built a distributed ledger repo platform, which is at this point actually on the, it's on a private version of the Canton network. It'll go public later on. But That's an investment we've made. And I was just saying that because of our closeness to digital asset holdings, they invited us to be a super validator. That was a separate investment we made for that activity. And it's just a separate activity. So related but separate. And in terms of getting paid and how people get paid for that role, yes, it is very common to be paid in coin. There's a whole governing document for that. uh, the Canton network, much like there are for Ethereum or Bitcoin, uh, that explains the different roles that people play and how the economics of that works. And so, uh, you know, the payments we're getting, which again, until, until this quarter really didn't have any value, we are, we are, uh, uh, picking this up, but, um, uh, but now they do. So it's, um, it's sort of interesting. Does that help? And then the investment in Canton, um, it's, it's really, uh, You know, the investment that we made was just the investment to become a super validator and to operate that, which was, frankly, rather low.

speaker
Puneet Jain
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

Got it. Got it. And then the guidance increase for recurring revenue growth, can you talk about puts and takes, like the accruation contribution? I think, Ashima, you mentioned the lower interest rates, that being a headwind there. So can you talk about various puts and takes that drove one point increase in the guidance?

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, sure. I'll just reiterate what I said before, Puneet. Yes, the biggest driver of our revenue upside the guidance was the contribution that we saw from iJoin and Signal, both of which were announced within the quarter. It's really less than 50 basis points of contribution coming in from those. We are, so that's one put. The other side I'll call out is we are seeing additional rate cuts. What we're baking in right now is our expectation based on the latest Fed dot plot, right, which calls for two more interest rate cuts. in the balance of our fiscal year. That's baked into our guidance as well. But beyond that, the guidance really reflects our growing confidence in our underlying growth, right? Tim spoke a little bit about position growth that continues to be strong. Our revenue from sales is tracking well, and the digital asset revenue, while it's super small, is helping our growth overall. So all of that gives us confidence in our guide towards the higher end of 5% to 7% regarding revenue growth.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Okay. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

The next question is by Patrick O'Shaughnessy of Raymond James. Please go ahead.

speaker
Patrick O'Shaughnessy
Analyst, Raymond James

Hey, good morning. In a world where tokenized equities trades are recorded on the blockchain, Do you see that impacting the need for intermediated communications between corporate issuers and their shareholders?

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Patrick, thank you very much for the question. And look, we see this as an opportunity. And really, we see it as the next wave of democratization that's going to create new sources of demand and position growth. And as I said in my remarks, the SEC has been really clear that tokenized securities are are still securities. Week four last at a major industry event, Paul Atkins was asked specifically about tokenized equities on the main stage, and he was clear that they're going to be subject to all the same regulation, including reg NMS and all the governance provisions that traditional equities are. We believe the vast majority of tokenized equities are going to be purchased through a broker-dealer or exchange, and that those intermediaries are going to have the same financial same asset servicing obligations they have today, including FOXI, but also corporate actions, class actions, protecting the personal information of their clients, all of which creates a real opportunity for Broadridge. So as I said in my remarks, we're going to be there to manage the complexity of disclosure, governance, and all of that. And we're already talking to clients and industry participants about how we enable them to make this possible. So And then, as I said earlier, this work on tokenized equity is just part of our broader strategy to drive tokenization across multiple asset classes where there's real value and where we have deep expertise.

speaker
Patrick O'Shaughnessy
Analyst, Raymond James

All right. Got it. Thank you. And then trade volume growth continues to be a healthy tailwind for GTO segment revenue. Can you remind us the percentage of segment revenue that's tied to trading volumes, and how durable do you view this growth to be?

speaker
Ashma Ghaib
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so overall, Patrick, if you think about the GTO revenues, I'd say about a third of GTO revenues are tied to trade volumes. Not all of it is exactly paper trade, like one-on-one, though. I would say about half of that is direct paper trade, half of that is step-band kind of structures that we have. And we're definitely seeing the impact of higher volumes on that direct paper trade portion. It is – you typically see higher trade and periods of higher volatility. It's proven to be double digits for the last many quarters. We're not counting on very elevated levels of trade volumes going forward, but we're expecting continued strong growth.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

Great. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

This concludes the question and answer session. I'd like to – I would like to hand things over back to management for any closing remarks.

speaker
Tim Gokey
Chief Executive Officer

Well, thank you, Operator, and I want to thank everyone for joining our call today. Again, just to reiterate, we're really pleased with the strong start to the year. We're excited about what we see coming forward. We're excited about the innovation in the industry, and we hope that you're as excited as we are about everything that's happening in our industry and about the year ahead as we continue to really work with our clients to transform the financial services industry. So thank you for your interest in Broadridge. We look forward to speaking to you on the next call.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

Q1BR 2026

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