Benjamin Jackson
Analyst · KBW
Thank you, Warren, and thank you all for joining us this morning. Please turn to Slide 8. Across ICE's Derivatives platform, we've built technology that evolves with our customers' needs combining deep liquidity, global participation and transparent price discovery into a single connected marketplace. The first quarter was a clear validation of how we've built and scaled our markets. In environments that test liquidity, capital efficiency and operational resilience at the same time, the value of integrated global market technology becomes visible very quickly. This quarter, our platform was used exactly as intended to absorb complexity, facilitate price discovery and allow customers to manage risk at scale. That translated into significant activity across our markets. March marks the highest monthly volume in ICE's history, exceeding the prior record set just 2 months earlier by more than 70%. For the quarter, total average daily volume increased 45% year-over-year, with records across interest rates, global commodities and energy. In addition, looking forward into Q2, total open interest across futures and options hit new records over the past week alone, growing more than 20%. As we have consistently said, open interest is the leading health indicator of our markets, and rising open interest alongside record volumes signals that customers are building and maintaining positions, not speculating and exiting. As market shifts directly impacted inflation expectations, demand for interest rate risk transfer accelerated sharply. At the start of the year, SONIA futures were pricing 2 U.K. rate cuts. By mid-March, the outlook had reversed to rate hikes, driving a rapid reset in short-term pricing. Customers responded by turning to our markets in size with SONIA ADV increasing more than 120% year-over-year and open interest more than doubling as participation broaden. Similar dynamics played out across our European Rates Complex. Euribor futures and option delivered record volumes as expectations for ECB policy shifted. On March 3 alone, ICE traded over 9 million lots of Euribor futures, underscoring the depth of liquidity our platform provides when markets shift materially. Another contributor to our strong performance is the deliberate method that we have developed for our Global Energy franchise: our approach has been consistent, establish a trusted benchmark with deep liquidity then surrounded with differentials, spreads and regional contracts, creating network effects and giving customers increasingly precise tools to manage exposure. We applied that blueprint to Brent and crude oil, ICE gas oil and refined products and to TTF in global natural gas. As participation grows, those network effects compound not only through new products and customers, but also as existing participants deepen their activity across the platform. Historically, participants who come onto our platform during period of heightened volatility, stay once conditions normalize, and we expect this cycle to be no different. Importantly, performance was already strong in January and February. Before the Iran conflict escalated in late February, Energy ADV was up double digits and open interest was also up in both months. As disruptions on energy infrastructure and trade flows emerged, energy markets repriced rapidly and our platforms easily facilitated the global demand. In oil, record Brent ADV increased 60% year-over-year with record participation up 10%, positioning the benchmark as the primary venue customers turn to, during periods of stress. In our global natural gas markets, TTF delivered record ADV up 61% year-over-year with record participation up 12%. TTF set a new single day volume record of 2 million lots on March 3 and by the end of March, year-to-date volume was already at 46% of the full year 2025 total. In Asia, JKM hit both volume and open interest records as drone strikes on Qatar's facility, representing 17% of the country's LNG exports reinforce the critical role of Asian gas benchmarks in managing supply disruption risk. JKM also achieved record participation up 9% from last year. This strength extended to our environmental markets, where record first quarter average daily volume grew 30% year-over-year and participation here has grown double digits on average over the last 5 years. Supporting markets at this scale requires more than liquidity. It requires margin frameworks designed for volatility. ICE Risk Model 2 is now deployed across more than 1,000 energy contracts, improving portfolio margining efficiency so volumes can scale while appropriately increasing capital requirements. Even through recent periods of heightened volatility, margin calls were met without disruption, markets stayed orderly and risk managers have remained comfortable with the resilience of the system. Underpinning all of this market activity is the data and connectivity infrastructure that allows participants to operate with confidence. Please turn to Slide 9. We built the Fixed Income and Data Services business with the understanding that high-quality data, governance and secure distribution are foundational to how modern markets operate. That conviction matters even more today as workflows become increasingly automated and model driven. In the first quarter, FIDS delivered a record quarter, with both total revenues and recurring revenues at their highest levels to-date up 9% and 8% year-over-year, respectively. Pricing and reference data formed the foundation of the business. Each day, we evaluate approximately 3 million illiquid instruments across more than 150 countries. It is important to highlight that only a small percentage of municipal and corporate bonds trade on any given day. Stated simply, this is not data that can be scraped, inferred or generated synthetically. Our evaluated pricing methodologies have been built and refined over more than 3 decades and are deeply proprietary. They feed directly into regulatory, compliance, valuation and risk processes across the global financial system. These data sets are embedded in client workflows and switching providers typically requires a board-level decision for fund managers. That same pricing foundation supports our Index franchise. During the quarter, ETF assets under management tracking ICE Indices reached record levels, up more than 20% year-over-year. The Indices business also achieved a record quarter with revenues growing at a double-digit rate. Because our Indices are built on top of ICE's own evaluated pricing, the defensibility compounds over time. Shifting from data advantage into delivery and access, our Data and Network Technology business is an increasingly important growth driver within FIDS, led primarily by the ICE Global Network. Demand across this business continues to be driven by clients' needs for reliable, low latency connectivity to reference data, consolidated feeds and execution venues. As clients scale their data consumption and deploy real-time valuation engines, proximity to reference data sources becomes critical. This favors ICE's owned and operated infrastructure where data, compute and connectivity sit together rather than in public cloud environments. ICE owns and operates its data centers, and we're building additional capacity as client demand accelerates, delivering operational security, data protection, cost predictability, and the low latency performance our clients' workflows require. Turning next to our CDS Clearing business. It delivered a record revenue quarter with growth approaching 20% versus last year, driven by elevated activity across index, option and sovereign CDS products, which delivered a record of $2.7 trillion in notional clear on March 20. We invested in this business coming out of the great financial crisis and continue to innovate as the market evolves. Treasury Clearing is now operationally live following SEC approval in February, and we are actively building the repo rule book well ahead of the regulatory mandate. A meaningful development during the quarter was the launch of ICE Private Credit Intelligence with Apollo as our anchor partner. This initiative builds directly on ICE's strength in fixed income data, analytics, and market infrastructure extending those capabilities into the private credit market, one of the fastest-growing asset classes. Private credit participants are increasingly operating alongside public fixed income markets in portfolios and risk systems, and ICE Private Credit Intelligence is designed to support that convergence. By leveraging our existing data science, analytics, and secure distribution capabilities, we are positioning ICE to play a central role as private credit continues to institutionalize and scale. Across FIDS, we continue to expand the breadth and relevance of our data sets to complement our traditional market data. During the quarter, we launched our Polymarket signals and sentiment product, which normalizes prediction market data for institutional workflows and is available exclusively through ICE Feeds. We are also incorporating additional correlated data sets, including Reddit and Dow Jones content to provide broader context around market sentiment and information flow. As these data sets scale, the ways in which clients use our data continue to expand, whether powering automated workflows, AI models or real-time decision-making, every use case requires high-quality proprietary inputs and we believe ICE controls the most comprehensive and institutionally trusted data sets across these markets. Importantly, customers are embedding our proprietary and secure real-time data for inference in their workflows and not simply consuming it to train models and then move on. As these use cases deepen demand for ICE's proprietary data increases rather than decreases. The dynamic of growing client engagement is also evident in our Mortgage Technology business where we continue to advance the platform to support clients across origination, servicing and capital markets. Please turn to Slide 10. The opportunity in mortgage remains significant, and our platform is positioned to capture it across market cycles. The business continues to execute against its core thesis, helping clients automate connect and scale in a highly cyclical environment. In the quarter, revenues grew 6% year-over-year, driven by double-digit growth in both Origination Technology and Closing Solutions. Manual intervention still exists across parts of the mortgage workflow, and we see a long runway to continue automating and delivering real savings for our clients. Because this is a highly regulated market that requires a deep understanding of risk, audit and governance before deployment, we embed AI directly into the systems of record, reinforcing ICE's role as a neutral trusted platform that does not compete with its customers. That approach is especially relevant as the GSEs publish updated guidelines around AI usage. Our clients should take comfort in the fact that ICE Mortgage Technology operates under one of the most comprehensive risk and compliance frameworks in the industry. This includes enterprise technology risk assessments built for multiple regulators, annual GLBA reviews, independently audited SOC reports shared with clients, application level compliance and data privacy assessments and former quarterly risk reports to an independent risk committee. Our AI capabilities are deployed within that same framework, not outside of it, which means the governance auditability and controls our customers rely on extend fully to every automation we deliver. Our client's interaction with our platforms continues to evolve and what we're seeing is not displacement, but deeper integration. In March alone, our Servicing business processed approximately 4 billion API and web services calls up nearly 20% year-over-year driven by increased use of our AI and Business Intelligence tools, a signal that our infrastructure is becoming more embedded in client operations, not less. On the product side, platform modernization remains a core priority. In February, we launched our enhanced MSP user experience and the efficiency gains are already measurable. Take escrow as an example. What was previously a 46 touch-point process spanning 10 days, now requires just 6 touch points over 2 days. At our ICE Experience Conference in March, we unveiled AI-powered Voice and Chat Agents for Mortgage Servicing to handle routine borrower inquiries, execute common loan management actions and help servicers manage fluctuating call volumes. We also launched 16 exception-based automation agents for complex servicing workflows, including escrow management, investor reporting and disaster-related processes. Our MERS eRegistry surpassed 3 million registered eNotes in the quarter, which are the work product of a fully digital closing. Leading lenders are now registering between 30% and 80% of their originations digitally. I'm also excited to announce that this month, we signed an Encompass deal with a large superregional bank that is also an existing MSP customer. A great example of the cross-sell flywheel between origination, servicing and data that continues to drive growth across the business. Stepping back, what ties together ICE's best quarter in our history is the breadth of our model and the discipline behind it. Each of our businesses contributed, whether through record exchange and clearing activity or continued momentum in data and workflows that compounds over time. The integration across our segments remains a competitive advantage, one that we will continue to execute on. With that, I'll hand it over to Jeff.