Paul Brody
Analyst · BMO Capital Markets
Thank you, Nancy, and good afternoon. Thanks, everyone, for joining the call. We will start with our revenue items on Page 3 of the release. We are pleased with our financial results this quarter as we again produced record net revenues and strong results in our key operating metrics. Commissions rose 19% versus last year's first quarter, reaching over $600 million for the first time. We saw robust trading volumes from our growing base of active customers across stocks, options and futures. Net interest income rose 17% year-on-year to $904 million, driven by higher balances and partially offset by lower benchmark interest rates. We saw strength from margin borrowing and from our segregated cash portfolio, partially offset by interest we paid on our customers' cash balances. Other fees and services generated $86 million, up 10%, primarily driven by higher market data and FDIC sweep fees, as well as higher payments for order flow from options exchange-mandated programs. Other income includes gains and losses on our investments, our currency diversification strategy and principal transactions. Note that many of these noncore items are excluded in our adjusted earnings. Without these excluded items, other income was $77 million for the quarter. Turning to expenses. Execution, clearing and distribution costs were $106 million in the quarter, down 12% over the year ago quarter, driven by lower SEC regulatory fees, which were set at 0 in last year's second quarter. Versus the fourth quarter, execution and clearing was higher due to exchange fees on greater futures trading volumes. Because they were largely passed through, these fees increased both our commission revenue and execution costs. Execution and clearing costs were 13% of commission revenues in the first quarter for a gross transactional profit margin of 87%. We calculate this by excluding from execution, clearing and distribution $24 million of nontransaction-based costs, predominantly market data fees which do not have a direct commission revenue component. As a reminder, for the upcoming quarters, the SEC raised its fee rate for securities from 0 to $20.60 per million effective April 4. For comparison, based on our volume in the first quarter of 2025, SEC fees then totaled $24 million and the fee rate was $27.80. And again, these fees are a pass-through for us, increasing both commission revenue and execution and clearing expense equally with no impact on the income we earn. Compensation and benefits expense was $167 million for the quarter for a ratio of compensation expense to adjusted net revenues of 10%, down slightly from 11% last year. Note, there are several calendar-based components that tend to increase comp and benefits expense modestly, such as additional U.S. FICA tax on salaries in the first quarter and on the vesting of stock incentive plan shares in the second quarter. Our headcount at March 31 was 3,232. G&A expenses were $68 million, up from the year ago quarter, mainly on expansion of advertising. Our pretax margin was 77% for the quarter as reported and as adjusted. Income taxes of $117 million reflects the sum of the public company's $56 million and the operating company's $61 million. This quarter, the public company's adjusted effective tax rate was 17.2%, within its usual range. Moving to our balance sheet on Page 5 of the release. The consistent strength of our business and our healthy balance sheet support our raising the dividend from $0.32 to $0.35 per year, returning capital to shareholders while still maintaining an ample capital base for the current business and future opportunities. Our total assets were 39% higher than in the prior year at $219 billion, with growth driven by higher-margin lending and segregated cash and securities balances. New account growth also helped drive our record customer credit balances. We continue to have no long-term debt and profit growth drove our firm equity up 23% to $21.3 billion. We maintain a balance sheet geared towards supporting growth in our existing business and helping us win new business by demonstrating our strength to prospective clients and partners while also considering overall capital allocation. Turning to the operating data. We had near record customer activity in options with our contract volumes up 16% over the prior year. Futures contract volumes rose 20% for the quarter to a new quarterly record and stock share volumes were up 25%, all were in line with the industry volumes. Stock share volumes generally increased versus last year as clients gravitated to larger, higher-quality names and traded relatively less in Pink Sheet and some other very low-priced stocks. Growth in the notional dollar value of shares traded in the quarter was significantly higher than the growth in share volumes. On Page 7, you can see that total customer DARTs were 4.4 million trades per day in the quarter, up 24% from the prior year. Commission per cleared commissionable order of $2.69 was up slightly from last year when the full SEC fee rate was being charged. Page 8 shows our net interest margin numbers. Total GAAP net interest income was $904 million for the quarter, up 17% on the year ago quarter. And our NIM table net interest income was $953 million, up 20%. We include, for NIM purposes, certain income that is more appropriately considered interest, but that for GAAP purposes is classified as other fees and services or as other income. Our net interest income reflects strong annual increases in balances as well as reductions in benchmark rates in most major currencies, including the full quarter impact of December's cuts in the U.S. The growth in balances resulted in a rise in interest income on margin loans and customer cash balances, partially offset by higher interest expense on customer cash balances. This quarter, central banks in most major markets held their benchmarks constant. Year-on-year, the average U.S. Fed funds rate fell 69 basis points or by 16%. Despite this decline, our margin loan interest was up 17%, and our segregated cash interest was up 3%, both bolstered by higher balances. The average duration of our investment portfolio remained at less than 30 days. During the quarter, U.S. dollar yield curve inversion from the short to medium term substantially flattened. So we continue to maximize what we earn by focusing on short-term yields rather than accept the uncertainty and higher duration risk of longer maturities. This strategy also allows us to maintain a relatively tight maturity mismatch between our assets and liabilities. Securities lending net interest was higher than last year, though we did not see as much activity in hard-to-borrow names as in the fourth quarter. Contributors to annual growth include several factors: our growing account base, which increases our inventory of attractive stocks to lend including international securities; the interest we pay on short cash balances, which makes us attractive to investors who utilize short selling; our fully paid lending program shares proceeds with clients generally on a 50-50 basis, which appeals to investors looking to maximize the return on their portfolios; and finally, more activity in some of the typical drivers of securities lending, including IPOs and M&A activity. A portion of what we earn from securities lending is classified as interest on segregated cash. We estimate that if the additional interest earned and paid on cash collateral were included under securities borrowed loans, then total net revenue related to securities lending would have been $270 million this quarter, up 45% over the prior year quarter. Fully rate-sensitive customer balances ended the current quarter at $27.8 billion versus $20.3 billion in the year ago quarter. Now for our estimates of the impact of changes in rates, we estimate the effect of a 25 basis point decrease in the benchmark Fed funds rate to be an $80 million reduction in annual net interest income. Note that our starting point for this estimate is March 31, with the Fed funds effective rate at 3.64% and balances as of that date. Any growth in our balance sheet and interest-earning assets would reduce this impact. About 1/3 of our customer interest sensitive balances is not in U.S. dollars, so estimates of the U.S. rate change exclude those currencies. We estimate the effect of a 25 basis point decrease in all the relevant non-USD benchmark rates would reduce annual net interest income by $35 million. In conclusion, we started the year with another financially strong quarter, reflecting our continued ability to grow our customer base and deliver on our core value proposition to customers while simultaneously scaling the business. Our business strategy continues to be effective, automating as much of the brokerage business as possible, continuously improving and expanding on what we offer while minimizing what we charge. And with that, we will turn back to the moderator and open up the line for questions.