Michael Tannenbaum
Analyst · Mizuho
Thanks, Mike. I'll kick it off by covering our strong performance this quarter. Q1 '26 continued our impressive financial performance with again over 110% consumer loan marketplace growth and roughly 50% adjusted EBITDA margins, putting us at a rule of 140 versus benchmark of 40. Revenue was up 92% and adjusted EBITDA margin at 50% as we continue to see the benefits of our capital light marketplace, Figure Connect in the financials. In fact, Figure Connect grew to 56% of volume, up from 54% last quarter. In terms of volume, we saw growth across all channels, most notably new partners, depository activity, business purpose and partner growth via Figure Connect. I'll walk through each now. We added 80 new partners the most ever, and launched partners, including the seventh largest lender in the country. Our business purpose product highlighted by the SMB channel continued its very rapid expansion with volume in almost $60 million this quarter. We've also seen a significant acceleration of depository activity within our pipeline, reflecting a clear and growing demand for Figure's own products from this important market segment. Highlighting this is the recent onboarding of Flagstar Bank, a large regional depository and now the largest bank originator on our marketplace to date. This validates our platform's institutional grade and our ability to support complex, large-scale banking operations. We're currently in the final stages of implementation. We believe this momentum will only be amplified by proposed regulatory shifts. Specifically, Fed guidance regarding reduced risk weightings for mortgage assets and home equity loans serves as a substantial tailwind further incentivizing depositories to leverage our platform and optimize their balance sheets. The business channel progress coincides with growth we are seeing in SCR and residential transition loans. These 2 products, often used by real estate investment businesses represent a roughly $100 billion addressable annual origination market. The SCR loans focus on rental housing and are one of the fastest-growing pockets of residential lending and residential transition loans are an attractive category for us on democratized Prime due to their short-term nature. In Q1, we saw 70% growth from both of these products, and we expect this to be a focus going forward. Last quarter, I jumped 2026 the year of the first lien. Today, I'm pleased to share first lien volume now accounts for 20% of our total, up from 19% last quarter. We compete there primarily in the small balance loans where our $1,000 average cost to originate versus industry average of $11,500 is most differentiated because the cost savings makes the largest difference on smaller loans. The standardization and liquidity that we are bringing to the mortgage industry is showing up in our strong results, our volume growth and our execution in the face of complex geopolitical and macroeconomic environments. In a recent meeting with a major potential partner and executive shared that their company sees 2 existential threats. The first I expected, AI disrupting the value chain such that their company's cost advantage erodes, but the second was that Figure becomes the default capital market and that they're late to partner with us. So that company is one we've called on for years and the posture ship was notable. Macrina will cover take rate in more detail, but we achieved 3.8 this quarter, in line with the guidance we provided. Reminder that in connection with the airline Mike just gave our economic level for Figure Connect and the consumer loan marketplace more broadly is take rate by volume. On this quarter's take rate, we see this result as impressive, especially in light of the volatility and interest rate expectations experienced throughout one, as we indicated last quarter, while our take rate is lower on firs-lien volume, the total revenue contribution margin and EBITDA we earn on each first lien loan is higher as balances are significantly larger. For example, we would rather earn a 2% take rate on a $300,000 first lien loan or $6,000, then a 4% take rate on a 60,000 second lien loan or $2,400, as the cost to originate are the same. Any decrease in take rate is not a reflection on our competitive differentiation or demand for our platform. Having just recently crossed the $1 billion monthly marketplace origination mark, we see a clear path to $2 billion. On the acquisition side, we benefit from what we refer to as Wales, which can do $50 million plus per month at scale. We've been adding at least one of these per quarter consistently. One of the wells we added in late Q3, for example, did over $150 million this quarter. While smaller partners contribute less, we have also been adding conservatively around 50 per quarter and with the wide open TAMs and SMB and depositories, we see lots of opportunity. Then we go from existing partners, which continues to exceed expectations. This is fueled by improvements we make to the product as well as the incentives that drive volume on Figure Connect. Think of Figure Connect as the Baylin for these walls, it's the specialized infrastructure that allows them to swim through the capital market and efficiently ingest vast amounts of volume. Just as been filters everything a well takes in, Connect standardizers and filters their originations into AAA quality assets for our capital markets. Three examples: one, product improvements we made in Q3, such as expanding the underwriting automation to business bank accounts now account for almost 10% of our monthly volume. Two, for Connect, on average, we see over 2x monthly volume on a same partner basis, 6 months after launching on Connect. And three, in Q1 saw offering 5x monthly volume growth for Mutual of Omaha, a Fortune 300 financial institution after upselling to Connect. Ultimately, we see a very clear path forward to continuing to double the business from here. Turning to the blockchain ecosystem. We continue to see rapid growth with yields and democratized prime balances both growing roughly 80% quarter-over-quarter. With yields democratized prime participants are staking yield via the Hastra protocol as a way to earn yield. Growth also came via a measure milestone with an OCC chartered bank on yield on its balance sheet for treasury purposes. Lastly, we are working with a large region bank on a sweep arrangement that we expect to drive significant balances. The economic model of yields is a captured spread over SOFR, which is roughly 35 basis points multiplied by the yields balance outstanding. Democratized Prime saw the launch of Acura auto assets with $24 million borrowed as of the end of last month. Third-party borrowers are the immediate focus of Democratized Prime and the quarter we have already added 3 more, including a DSCR originator and Credibly, a fintech lender for salt and medium-sized businesses. Credibly highlight the traction we've made in the SMB space as well as the opportunity to build new tokenized Capital Markets rails. In 2026, we planned to add a total of 8 to 10 third-party originators, although we are on our way to exceeding that goal. Adding third-party borrower volume on Democratized Prime is important because, one, it's currently the bottleneck to growth; and two, because our revenue model earns economics from the borrower. 50 basis points has been the baseline but with the value of Forge, as Mike mentioned earlier, we see upside to that number. On the lend side of the marketplace, the state yields prime token is now the #1 by TBL on the Camino marketplace, and we recently announced an extension into Ethereum. Even though third-party borrow is the current limiter on growth in the marketplace, we maintain robust efforts to diversify our lender mix as well. I mentioned this because to echo Mike earlier, figure has ambitions for Democratized Prime to be much larger, and we are seeking to bring entire asset classes on chain. While the take rate Democratized Prime is lower than our consumer loan marketplace, the TAM is much larger and the inbound interest we have from borrowers joining the platform is significant. We see a medium-term world where Democratized Prime balances are measured in the tens to hundreds of billions. In terms of open, our on-chain public equity network we maintain a robust pipeline of issuers with OpenWorld being the second issuer to publicly file a registration statement with the SEC with the intent to use OPEN. Mike outlined a lot of the why with OPEN, but from an economic perspective, we see a number of fee opportunities here. Listing fees and trading fees are endemic to the equity capital markets, the broader prime brokerage activity with the same monetization model we see for debt and Democratized Prime is the largest opportunity by total addressable market. Before turning it over to Macrina, I want to quickly cover private credit before ending on AI. In terms of the capital markets, our platform was resilient despite the industry's concerns around retail investor-driven redemptions from private credit bonds. In March '26 alone, when private credit concerns were heightened, over $1.15 billion of whole loan sales were executed on Biggest Marketplace. In April 2026 a BWIC bid wanted in competition or a loan auction was completed on Figure's platform that resulted in a record low spread to the applicable risk-free rate, reflecting strong institutional investor demand for our assets. In fact, we're seeing increased interest in Figure assets as investors rotate out of leveraged loans where there are more concerns and into the high-quality, diversified consumer assets on our marketplace. As a reminder, the credit performance of loans in our marketplace reflects a borrower base with strong fundamentals. Turning to AI and building off our discussion from last quarter, we believe rapid AI adoption represent a massive tailwind for blockchain native coding like figure, and I'll continue to detail our efforts here regularly. Capital markets are undergoing a simultaneous shift from blockchain and AI and Figure is building the system that connects them. Here, we say AI is the brain, blockchain as the nervous system. Our custom AI platform operates on a structured, time-stamped on-chain financial data set that is directly tied to actual transactions, trained on real outcomes and helps with execution within our marketplace. This is a key point of differentiation and I can't emphasize enough. Many organizations today are building AI-enabled features or experimenting with agents, but moving capital markets requires an underlying system that is optimized for reliability, control compliance. As I repeatedly say, you can't AI your way into AAA. To lead this next phase of execution, we recently welcomed back Rod Albuyeh as our Head of AI. Under his leadership, we're developing agenetic workflow systems on top of our platform that handle tasks like data onboarding, document validation, underwriting checks and exception handling. Everything we do is in systematically reduced friction in areas where automation complemented by human oversight when necessary, delivers the most value. Three specific examples I'll cover are: one, our use of AI and building product; two, our use of AI and customer support; and three, our use of AI in adapting Agora's third-party auto assets to Democratized Prime. In the last year, we've seen a 25% increase year-over-year in what we call story completion, which is essentially engineering projects delivered on flat headcount. In chat containment, we've seen 70% and are now implementing voice AI and most significantly, with Agora and now other third-party Democratized Prime assets, we introduced an AI-enabled validation workflow that compares third-party assets against the underwriting criteria those assets were intended to satisfy at origin. The initial results have been encouraging and are helping us build a more scalable workflow and control framework for honoring third-party assets. And now I'll turn it over to Macrina for financials.