David Ferguson
Analyst · Morgan Stanley
Great. All right. So thanks a lot, Mikheil. So let's run through the respective platforms. So first of all, payments in Kazakhstan, a TPV growth of 14% year-on-year in the fourth quarter, 19% for full year '25. So that is pretty much bang in line with the guidance of around 20% TPV growth for the year driven by solid trends and solid and consistent trends in transaction volumes of 12% for the fourth quarter and 14% for the full year. As we've talked about many times before, a slight take rate attrition, and that's just the result of Kaspi Pay and Kaspi B2B lower take rate products growing in share. So the combination of decent TPV growth with some take rate dilution is slightly lower revenue growth at 7% in the fourth quarter and 12% for the full year. It's just the natural flow through there. And overall, the more moderate rate of growth just reflects the scale now of this business. At the bottom line, a 4% growth in the fourth quarter and 13% for the full year. I'd just say to keep in mind on the fourth quarter, it was at least in part impacted by some of the costs related to the launch and scaling of Alaqan. So that will sort of normalize as we go into this year. Moving on to marketplace in Kazakhstan. So Underlying growth, strong, 12% in GMV growth in the fourth quarter, 19% for the full year. If you -- that's after the effect of smartphones, sort of pre-smartphones, 11%, and that's just slightly lower than the full year guidance of 12% to 14% the GMV growth. On that, I would say, and I guess this would be a question. There was no improvement at all in smartphone dynamics in fourth quarter. GMV from smartphones was down around 24%, which is pretty consistent with the year trend. So that's the explanation for Q4, although what I would say more encouragingly, having been down materially throughout or since March of 2025. smartphone category did return to growth in January of this year. And from March, we just have a favorable year-over-year comp. So we do expect that sort of growth in marketplace to normalize over the first half of this year and that smartphone issue to be a 2025 issue rather than a 2026 issue. So that's on GMV growth. If you look at purchases, purchase is very strong and consistent at 34% in the fourth quarter, 35% for the full year. So not really impacted to a material extent by issue and you see that demand is strong. And as Mikheil talked about, you also see the ongoing trend of take rate expansion. Take rates across the marketplace and specifically e-Commerce hitting gold time highs driven on the back, particularly of advertising and delivering those value-added services. If we look specifically at e-Commerce, the fastest-growing part of marketplace, 9% GMV growth in the fourth quarter, 16% for the full year. It's e-Commerce that's really impacted by smartphones and that sort of pretty obvious when you look at x smartphones 27% GMV growth for full year '25. Again, same point on purchases. If we want to look at sort of real demand on the e-Commerce platform, growth in purchases up 70% and 83% the fourth quarter and full year, it illustrates that demand is strong. And as we've said in sort of prepared remarks, the competitive position of the e-Commerce platform is unchanged. The smartphones was a very sort of specific anomaly, take rate hitting 13.1% for the fourth quarter and 12.7% for the full year. So again, that point an all-time high take rate, driven by advertising, driven by delivery. And here you see that advertising growing quickly, up 45% year-on-year in the fourth quarter and up 64% for the full year. We talked on our last call about some of the new advertising products that we launched at the end of last year, and they'll be very helpful for sustaining decent advertising growth both this year and into the medium term. The other driver of e-Commerce is also grocery, which, as Mikheil said, is the sort of the fastest-growing major product line that we have. Growth really not slowing down at all, up 53% for the GMV growth of 53% for the year and number of consumers now well north of [ 1 ] million approach B14 million. So continuing to scale very, very nicely. And again, would expect grocery to keep posting very, very decent growth into the medium term. Part of the reason for our success in e-Commerce is actually a result of the m-Commerce business. So this is sort of a bit more color on the dynamics within marketplace. What you can see here is that migration of both merchants and from merchants and consumers from commerce to e-Commerce is taking place now at a very rapid rate here. It's just two sort of vertical examples. M-Commerce, GMV down 5% and for shoes and clothing category, but e-Commerce GMV up 103% or for the health and beauty category. M-Commerce growth of 1%, this is for full year '25 versus for e-Commerce growth of 62%. So of course, this means lower growth in m-Commerce, but the value even when m-Commerce isn't growing is that you've got those relationships with off-line merchants through m-Commerce, through the other products and services that we offer and you're their first point of call as they migrate their businesses online. And that's something pure online only e-Commerce players do not have. So this is a material sort of competitive advantage. Having said that, I mean, you shouldn't assume that commerce is completely sort of tax growth if we ex out the smartphone issue for last year, it still delivered 11% GMV growth of 7% including smartphones and minus 4% growth in the fourth quarter, including smartphones plus 3%, excluding. But the m-Commerce will be one of the things that drives the growth in e-Commerce. And longer term, e-Commerce will just naturally evolve around the more services part of the economy, which doesn't migrate to e-Commerce, restaurants, beauty salons, gyms, those kind of areas, but that's over the sort of the medium term. m-Commerce take rate strong and consistent, 9.4% in the fourth quarter, 9.2%, up slightly for the full year. Clearly, the growth driver of marketplace is e-Commerce, though, I think that's pretty clear. And then on Kaspi Travel, this is also now a more relatively at least more mature business within marketplace, 6% GMV growth in the fourth quarter, 14% GMV growth for the full year with some take rate expansion. But again, I mean, I think the point is pretty clear. The main driver of the marketplace business is the core e-Commerce franchise and the value-added services around advertising delivery and financing for both the merchant and the consumer. So the combination of decent GMV growth, but strong take rate improvement results in materially faster revenue growth. 13% and 23% ex smartphones, up 21% for the fourth quarter and 30% revenue growth in the marketplace for full year 2025. Net income growth was down 7% in the fourth quarter but up 6% for the full year. Now part of the reason here for the decline in the fourth quarter is again the smartphone issue growth, net income growth would have been positive otherwise. But also a lot of the growth in marketplace that growth in purchases is being driven by lower ticket size, frequently purchased, but lower ticket size items where the cost of delivery is a higher part of the GMV from the first of January beginning of this year, we've raised the price of delivery to protect against that. So again, that will sort of be an issue that is less obvious as we move into 2026 increase in the price of delivery offsets. The sort of the dilution from growth in small ticket items. So then finally, moving on to fintech in Kazakhstan. 4% growth TPV growth in the fourth quarter. Again, lower growth in the marketplace means a lot of growth in fintech, 13% growth for the full year. Growth driven by -- across all products, but again, been the case now for several years, the merchant and micro business financing has really been the growth driver of the lending part of the business. [ Order ] fintech trends broadly stable over the year. So those trends being both sort of pricing. Yield flat at 24% over the year and cost of risk probably unchanged at 2.2%. We've talked about it on previous calls, the increase in the NPL ratio. That's just a function of as collections become more efficient as we get better collecting, the probability of collection improves. Those nonperforming loans stay on the balance sheet. So that's the reason for the increase. Number one, number two, we'd expect it to stay broadly around that sort of 6% level for the remainder of this year. And the lower coverage, that just reflects, again, I've said this before, growing share of car loans. That's a collateralized product. Requires less coverage and the growing share of the merchant financing, the fastest-growing lending product, which is a lower risk product. Again, we'd expect the coverage to stay around that level. Although it just varies, it [ all ] depending on the exact pace of growth between those -- the mix of different products. Loan portfolio growth was good, both in the fourth quarter and for the year, up 27% and 31% and growth in savings growth in deposits, up 16% and 18%. So actually pretty consistent throughout the year. So decent TF fee growth with stable pricing translates into a decent revenue growth up 19% in the fourth quarter, up 20% for the full year. The net income growth was 4% and 9%. So again, fintech is the marketplace was affected by the smartphone issue. Fintech has been impacted by material increase in interest rates over the course of the year, higher taxes and higher national bank reserve requirements. If you ex all those factors, which is -- with the position we were in 12 months ago, when we started the year, our fintech growth was around 18% for the fourth quarter and also 18% for the full year 2025. So that just gives you a sense of the impact these external factors have had on the performance of the business and particularly fintech over the course of the year. On Hepsiburada, when Mikheil already talked about it, I think we said on the last call, a simple metric for investors to track the improvement in the performance of the business is just look at purchases. And you can see that purchase momentum at the end of the year, up 19% was dramatically better than at any other point during the year and actually for some time. So here too, similar strategy to the marketplace in Kazakhstan, driving a number of orders, which is frequency of purchase, the things that we will buy on a day-to-day basis to increase the relevancy and engagement on the platform. And that is clearly coming through and can improve further. That is partly at the expense of ticket size, frequently purchased items, cost less. So you have slightly lower GMV growth. So just to be clear, the 13% and the 7% growth in the fourth quarter and full year, respectively. That's the real growth, the 49% and the 45% is the nominal growth in the business. From our perspective, what's important, again, is that the momentum -- where this business finished the year from a top line perspective? Is in a dramatically better position from where it started for the year. And of course, we're still in the early days of the plan for Hepsiburada for [indiscernible] With take rate improvement and with also grass growth in delivery revenue that led to faster growth in revenue. 18% in the fourth quarter, 13% for the full year. So again, you see that the revenue momentum is starting to get up in real terms to much better levels at Hepsiburada, of course, the improvements that we're making, there is an investment behind that. The aim here now is to sort of to keep the business at around EBITDA breakeven, reinvest into improving the products and services, driving engagement and driving the growth to create a much more bigger business and with scale with a highly engaged user base. It's what will drive the profitability of the business. So we'll keep that strategy of investing to build a much bigger, much more valuable asset in the medium term. But you can see that the results are starting to come through, and we've got a lot to continue working on. That wraps up the review of the respective segments. So, I mean, here is just a summary for Kazakhstan, 15% revenue growth in the fourth quarter and 19% for the full year, 18% and 21%, underlying, net income growth 1% and 10%, in the fourth quarter and full year underlying 13% and actually 18% for the full year. So again, just a really clear indication of the impact that higher rates higher taxes and regulatory requirements and smartphones have had on the business in 2025 including Turkiye, you see that revenue increase to just a $4 trillion, which is just over $8 billion of revenue for the full year. And again, sort of similar, you see on the top line to -- sorry, on the bottom line, the net income growth for the full year was flat year-on-year. $1.1 trillion tenge, just around $2.1 billion, and we're reinvesting we've reinvested the profit growth into Hepsiburada. And just that -- sorry, I should say just on this slide, that net income growth there of 10% for full year '25, that compares with the revised guidance for last year of 10% to 12% at the lower end, reflecting, again, the absence of recovery in smartphones in the fourth quarter. So looking forward to 2026, a couple of points to make here. So firstly, guidance as usual for GMV, TPV and TFV. However, guidance now includes Hepsiburada and Turkiye. So previously, last year's guidance was Kazakhstan only. This year's guidance is Kaspi.kz. It includes Kazakhstan and Turkiye. To give you the base to work off, these are the GMV TPV and the TFV numbers. including Hepsiburada in 2025. Clearly, the bulk of heps businesses is a marketplace that goes into although there are components of payments and fintech as well. And if you want to work out those components, you can just compare these numbers with the respective segments for Kazakhstan that have just run through and you can split out what's from Kazakhstan and what's from Turkiye. The growth, again, we've been pretty clear the growth now going forward for '26 and medium term will be driven by marketplace GMV. So this around 20% is both Kazakhstan Marketplace and Turkiye, our marketplace, TPV and TFV the same. And then the bottom line or the profitability level will guide on adjusted EBITDA. Here is the base to work off $1.6 trillion tenge for 2025. And this just reflects now with Kazakhstan and Turkiye as a multi-country business, different interest rate environments and cycles, different tax levels, different regulatory changes this sort of axes out those things is a better reflection of the sort of underlying business and just aids comparability between the different countries. So we're looking for around 5% EBITDA guidance. I mean here, just one point beyond the point about sort of reinvestment in Hepsi. From talking with investors, a lot of investors talk to me about the benefit from interest rates go it potentially moving down this year. And it's logical, but you just need to keep in mind, it hasn't happened yet. And we don't assume in this guidance any sort of reduction in rates. And I think that may be some of the sort of differences between where some sort of buy side our expectations and versus our own. So just let's keep that in mind. It is reasonable to assume that rates can come down over the medium term and that we'd be -- that would be a material benefit for us, but we're not there today. Just on the marketplace guidance. So also what we will now do again, combining Kazakhstan and Turkiye. So we guide from marketplace as a whole. This gives you the 2025 reconciliation. We'll split it is e-Commerce. These are the two comparable businesses between Kazakhstan and Turkiye. I mean, these relate to the metrics that Mikheil showed you, this is what we're focused on trying to drive. These two components in 2025, were 54% of marketplace GMV. We expect them to be around 60% of marketplace GMV this year. And then m-Commerce, travel and e-Commerce with the Kazakh specific parts of marketplace, we'll have them sort of separately. So this will just give you a sense of how we'll report from Q1 and going forward of Q1 '26. Here is the reconciliation from net income to adjusted EBITDA. I won't go through it line by line. If people have questions, we can just take this offline. So that's on that side of things. But I think that generally wraps up our comments. So Harry, let's open the call up to Q&A, please.