Noemie Heuland
Analyst · Wolfe Research
Thanks, Rob, and hello, everyone. Q1 represents a solid start to the year. And echoing Rob, our performance reflects disciplined execution across both of our businesses. Let me start with Moody's Analytics. Our Q1 results -- [ so we're ] delivering against the framework we've discussed over the last several quarters, durable recurring growth, strong retention and margin expansion, while we reshape the portfolio. MA revenue increased 8% in the first quarter as reported or 6% on an organic constant currency basis, reflecting healthy underlying demand across our core franchises. Recurring revenue grew 11% as reported or 7% on an organic constant currency basis and represented 98% of total MA revenue underscoring the shift towards renewable subscription-based solutions. As expected, transactional revenue declined materially, down 54% year-over-year, reflecting both the learning divestiture and our deliberate focus on scalable recurring revenue streams. This is fully consistent with the portfolio actions we've taken over the last several years to prioritize durable, high-quality revenue. ARR remains the clearest indicator of underlying demand and of the health of our future revenue base while reported revenue can move quarter-to-quarter due to timing effects and portfolio actions. ARR ended Q1 at $3.6 billion, up 8% year-over-year. Decision Solutions continues to be a key growth engine for MA, representing approximately 44% of total MA ARR and delivering 10% ARR growth. KYC grew 13%, driven by deeper penetration within existing banking customers and expansion beyond financial services. Our new Moody's for compliance offering officially launched in April, and we have already seen success in prelaunch activity, as Rob highlighted earlier. We are building pipeline, with April renewals as the first cohort of upgrades, and we expect this revenue to build progressively through the year. Banking ARR grew 10%, supported by strong adoption of our lending solutions, which grew in the high teens. We continue to see good customer uptake of our new package. Strength in lending was partially offset by more modest growth in the RAG product portfolio. Insurance ARR grew 7% reflecting sustained demand for higher definition models and cloud-based delivery via the intelligent risk platform, which is enabling the cross sell and upsell motion that is central to our strategy in this business. Research and Insights ARR grew 7% year-over-year, driven by our flagship CreditView suite, now Moody's View and EDF-X with broader adoption across banking customers and deeper integration into customer workflows. Data and Information ARR grew 6% year-over-year and we closed several high-value agreements that illustrate 2 distinct, but reinforcing demand patterns for Moody's decision grade intelligence. The first is mission-critical workflows where precision and auditability are nonnegotiable. 2 government tax authorities, one, supporting national scale fraud detection and tax compliance across thousands of users and the other powering AI-driven tax risk assessment and transfer pricing enforcement, selected Moody's as their long-term data partner. In these environments, the consequence of error is too high for good enough. Moody's curated, auditable data, we believe, is the best viable choice. The same dynamic plays out in financial services. A leading specialty insurer embedded our private company data and proprietary risk signals directly into its real-time surety underwriting workflows, replacing manual processes with automated point of decision analytics. The second pattern is front office and investment intelligence, where our data drives commercial advantage. First, as Rob shared, a major asset manager embedded our private and public credit risk data sets directly into its core portfolio platform to enhance credit modeling and surveillance across public and private markets. Second, a leading global professional services firm expanded access to our real-time information and research intelligence across thousands of consultants to sharpen customer advisory and business development workflows. Together, these wins reinforce that Moody's decision grade intelligence is becoming foundational infrastructure across both the risk and growth agenda of our customers. And across public institutions, financial services and global enterprises. Quarterly retention improved to 96%. That's up 200 basis points year-over-year as the outsized government and ESG-related churn we saw in Q1 2025 has no left. On a trailing 12-month basis, retention was 95%, improving 1 percentage point versus Q4 '25 and within our historical range, evidence that our solutions remain mission-critical as customers modernize their workflows, including with AI. Turning to profitability. MA adjusted operating margin was 32.5% and that's up 250 basis points year-over-year. We are well on track for full year margin of 34% to 35% and our mid- to high 30s target by the end of 2027. This expansion reflects the impact of prior restructuring actions, disciplined cost management as well as a thoughtful reallocation of resources, which enables us to fund priorities without increasing costs. As we look ahead, margins are expected to continue improving as efficiency initiatives scale, including usage of AI-enabled tools that lower unit costs in product development and tighter alignment of sales capacity to our highest growth opportunity with full benefit building into 2027. These structural changes underpin confidence in our medium-term margin trajectory. Turning to MIS. We delivered the strongest quarter on record. Rated issuance surpassed $2 trillion in Q1 for the first time, supported by strong primary market activity, relatively tight breads, increased M&A and solid investor demand. While investment grade and high yield spreads widened in March by roughly 15% and 30%, respectively, they remained well below the level seen around Liberation Day and the market stayed open and functional. Transactional revenue grew 8% year-over-year, outpacing the 6% increase in rated issuance. Recurring revenue grew 9%, supported by growth in our portfolio of monitored credit, new mandates and pricing. First-time mandates increased 20% year-over-year, an important leading indicator of future recurring revenue. Here is how transactional revenue performed across the major categories. Investment grade was the largest contributor with revenue up 33% year-over-year. Investment grade revenue within Corporate Finance was driven by a record first quarter and the second highest quarter ever for issuance, including several jumbo transactions from hyperscalers and other technology issuers. Issuance from the top 5 hyperscalers year-to-date has already exceeded full year 2025 levels. Specialty grade revenue grew 31%, with investor appetite holding up well for most of the quarter despite geopolitical volatility. Now we're watching this closely as sub-investment-grade issuers tend to be more sensitive to issuance windows. Bank loan revenue declined as activity moderated in March following a strong start to the year. M&A-related issuance in Q1 was the highest in a number of years, which we view as an encouraging indicator for the balance of 2026. Public, Project and Infrastructure finance grew 8% driven by infrastructure finance, which delivered its second strongest quarter of the past decade. Funding needs tied to the energy transition, transportation and AI-related infrastructure remain key demand drivers. Financial institutions revenue was modestly higher year-over-year. Funds and asset management remained strong, supported by private credit activity, partially offset by lower opportunistic issuance from infrequent issuers in banking and insurance. Structured Finance revenue was slightly lower year-over-year as large AMBS and RMBS reductions in EMEA were offset by softer CMBS and CLO activity in the U.S., especially refinancing. On profitability, MIS delivered an adjusted operating margin of 66.7%, reflecting strong operating leverage, disciplined cost management and technology investments that are improving analytical productivity. We're streamlining credit workflows, so analysts can spend more time on credit analysis and less time gathering and formatting information, while maintaining the controls and human judgment regulators and the market expects. Those investments supported our ability to handle record issuance volumes while expanding margins. Looking ahead, our full year guidance remains unchanged across revenue, adjusted operating margin and adjusted diluted EPS. Our base case assumes the current market turbulence is largely contained to April with issuance recovering through Q2 and Q3 on the back of ongoing refinancing needs, a healthy M&A pipeline and sustained demand for high-quality investment-grade issuance, including AI-related financing. For the second quarter, we expect MIS revenue growth in the low to mid-teens with adjusted diluted EPS of approximately $4.15 to $4.30. If volatility persists beyond April, we'd have less confidence in a full recovery in Q2 and Q3 and would expect full year MIS revenue growth to moderate to the mid-single-digit range with adjusted diluted EPS trending towards the low end of our guidance range. For MA, we expect to close the sale of our Regulatory Solutions business on April 30. We have, therefore, excluded its contribution from our reported revenue outlook, which moves us towards the lower end of our mid-single-digit MA revenue guidance range. Importantly, this does not change our expectations for ARR or organic constant currency recurring revenue growth, which both remain anchored in the high single-digit percent growth range. On MA margins, we expect a modest step up in Q2 and a more meaningful ramp in the second half, consistent with our typical revenue seasonality. Pulling this together, in terms of MCO revenue guidance, as I shared, we expect to be within the high single-digit percent growth range we previously provided. For modeling purposes, taking into account the impact from the MA divestiture, we anticipate growth to be towards the lower end of high single-digit percent range for MCO for the full year. Finally, a few housekeeping items to help with your modeling assumptions. Excluding restructuring and other charges, we anticipate Q2 expenses to be broadly in line with Q1 with increases in the second half, reflecting typical seasonality. This includes ongoing investments and annual salary increases, partially offset with our continued cost containment initiatives. We expect MCO adjusted operating margins to be above the midpoint of our full year guidance range for Q2 and Q3 before taking down in Q4, consistent with MIS revenue seasonality and historical patterns. There is no change to our tax rate guidance for the full year, and we expect Q2 to be in the high end of the full year range of 23% to 25%. And please note that our revised nonoperating income and GAAP EPS guidance reflects the expected gain on the sale of our Regulatory Solutions business in April, but it doesn't impact adjusted diluted EPS guidance. We again delivered strong cash flow this quarter with free cash flow of $844 million, up 26% year-over-year. And given price levels and market dynamics, we were active in the market repurchasing shares in Q1. We returned approximately $1.7 billion to shareholders through a combination of share repurchases and dividends. Given the nearly $1.5 billion of buybacks executed in Q1, we have increased our full year repurchase guidance by $500 million and now expect approximately $2.5 billion of share buybacks in 2026. We remain on track to return approximately 110% of free cash flow to shareholders by year-end. Importantly, our balance sheet remains strong, providing us with the flexibility to continue investing growth while maintaining a disciplined and consistent capital return framework. In summary, we delivered another quarter of strong growth and profitability expansion and remain confident in the trajectory of the business. We believe we are well positioned to deliver sustainable growth, margin expansion and long-term shareholder value. And with that, operator, we'd like to take questions.