Guilherme Marques do Lago
Analyst
Thank you, David, and good evening, everyone. Beginning with our consolidated credit portfolio. We ended the quarter with $37.2 billion, up 40% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis and up 7% quarter-over-quarter. Growth was strong across all products, especially when the first quarter seasonality is considered. Credit cards, for example, grew 36% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Unsecured lending grew 53%, reaching $10 billion in total portfolio. And secured lending grew 38%, keeping pace with the rest of the book and holding its 8% mix even with the setback from FGTS loans last year. Now turning to deposits. Total deposits reached $42.4 billion in the quarter, up 22% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Deposits in Brazil declined modestly due to seasonality, while Colombia kept growing. In Mexico, the deposit outflow reflects 2 specific dynamics. Number one, a sharper-than-expected reversal of seasonal year-end inflows. And number two, our deliberate decision to optimize cost of funds and very low loan-to-deposit ratios. Now our consolidated cost of deposits closed at 88% of the interbank rate, slightly higher sequentially. Even though we saw improvements in the cost of funds in both Mexico and Colombia, this was offset by Brazil, reflecting the reversion of the fourth quarter seasonal effect. Year-end inflows tend to lend in short-tenure balances that carry low cost of funds. And in the first quarter of the year, these balances naturally migrate into longer tenure yield-bearing products. Now we remain very comfortable with our current balance levels and with our cost of deposits. We will continue to manage this franchise to build resilience, deepen customer engagement and preserve its attractive economics. Moving on to our P&L. Net interest income reached a record $3.25 billion in the quarter, up 12% quarter-over-quarter on an FX-neutral basis. This expansion was driven by strong revenue growth across the franchise, combined with our credit portfolio expanding faster than our liabilities. This mix shift continues to optimize our balance sheet, lifting our net interest margin, or NIM, to 21.1%. Credit loss allowance, or CLA, closed at $1.79 billion in the quarter, up 33% quarter-over-quarter on an FX-neutral basis, mostly driven by 3 very specific dynamics already mentioned by David. Number one, seasonality. Number two, portfolio growth. Number three, portfolio mix, which I will unpack in the next slides. As a result, our risk-adjusted NIM came in at 9.5%, down 100 basis points sequentially from 10.5%. We expect risk-adjusted NIM to move back towards the level we operated at during the second half of 2025 as the dynamics of first quarter normalize over the coming quarters. With that, let me now turn to the 3 dynamics I mentioned that drove CLA this quarter and walk you through each of them. Starting with the first reason, seasonality. As you can see on the chart, our 15- to 90-day ratio is highly seasonal. It tends to peak in the first quarter and then resume its trend through the rest of the year. The first quarter 2026 print of 5%, up 89 basis points from year-end, is consistent with that seasonal pattern and broadly in line with what we saw in both 2024 and 2025. On the right, 90-plus NPLs, our late-stage delinquencies continue to ease, closing at 6.5% in the first quarter of 2026, 10 basis points lower than the fourth quarter of 2025 and well below the 7% peak we reached in the third quarter of 2024. Both metrics came broadly in line with our own internal expectations for the quarter. And I want to pause on that phrase because it's not incidental. The goal of our credit operations, it's not to minimize NPLs at a point in time. Instead, it is to optimize for resilient NPVs. NPLs only capture the cost side of the equation. They say nothing about the revenues we generated from the customers who perform. Pricing risk accurately is what really reconciles both sides. It is the mechanism by which attractive returns and predictable losses coexist. When the first quarter unfolds as our models anticipated, that is not a coincidence. It is an evidence that the pricing discipline is working well. Now before we move on, I want to address directly a concern. We know it's top of mind for many investors. Brazil's household debt service ratio. We track this ratio closely, but the data tells a more nuanced story. The debt service ratio in isolation has limited predictive power over delinquency outcomes. What actually drives credit performance is a much broader set of income and employment dynamics. Employment in Brazil remains strong, and the income tax exemption for earnings up to BRL 5,000 per month is a meaningful structural tailwind for a large portion of our customer base, directly improving disposable income and debt service capacity at the segment levels where we operate the most. And critically, as you will see in the next slides, our portfolio has a particularly short duration, which means that if we ever did see unexpected asset quality movements, we can react fast and we can react consequentially, and we can do so at a very granular level. Looking ahead, the Desenrola program is an additional tailwind expected to take form in the second and third quarters of this year. Now to the second reason, growth. And what matters here is not only our credit portfolio, but our total exposure, a broader measure that includes the on-balance sheet credit balances and the off-balance sheet credit card limits we extend to our customers. Both things expand our IFRS 9 provisioning base. On the left side of this slide, you will see that total exposure reached $70.7 billion in the quarter, up 44% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Every single dollar of incremental exposure carries upfront provisioning regardless of whether the customer ever draws on it. And that brings me to the third reason, which is mix. On the right side of this slide, you will see that the incremental exposure we added this quarter tilted further towards credit cards and unsecured lending, which together accounted for 98% of the new exposure, up from 88% in the same quarter a year ago. Secure lending's contribution now stepped down, mostly reflecting the changes in FGTS loans at the end of 2025. And then both credit cards and unsecured lending, they carry higher expected losses than secured lending, which mechanically just lift the marginal provisioning we book. Growth means a larger exposure, and mix means that the base is tilted towards higher yielding, higher losses products. Both things pushed the upfront expected credit losses build higher even before any change in underlying credit quality. Bringing it all together, the 3 drivers we just walked through: number one, seasonality; number two, growth; and number three, mix, are exactly what shape the moves in NPL 15-90 and in ECL allowance this quarter. There was no sign of credit portfolio degradation. Let me walk you through each of those bridges. On the left side of this slide, the NPL 15-90 moved from 4.11% at year-end to 5% in the first quarter, an 89 basis points increase; 65 basis points came from seasonality, 17 from intentional risk expansions, 4 from product mix shifts and the small remainder from other effects. Now none of these drivers reflect the systemic deterioration in underlying credit quality. Now on the right side of the slides, you will see that ECL allowance moved from $5.3 billion at year-end to $6.1 billion in the first quarter, an $800 million increase. The numbers here are worth pausing on. Why? Because portfolio growth alone contributed $423 million, more than half of the total build, which simply reflects the upfront lifetime loss provisioning we book under IFRS 9 as we expand the credit book. Seasonality alone contributed another $267 million, consistent with prior years. Together, growth and seasonality account for 86% of the entire allowance increase. Intentional risk expansion contributed $69 million; product mix, $16 million; and other minor effects, the small remainder. Now not one of those components reflects deterioration in underlying credit quality. These moves reflect the deliberate scaling of our credit portfolio. As we said before, we manage this business not to minimize NPLs or cost of risk in any given quarter, but to maximize the long-term resilient risk-adjusted returns. We see that discipline at work in the cohort unit economics of our 3 most relevant unsecured credit products. Across all of them, revenues consistently outweighed funding costs and expected losses, leading to return levels that are best-in-class for retail banking. With a significant buffer, these portfolios remain NPV positive even at substantially higher levels of expected losses. And the short duration of these portfolios is worth pausing on. Why? Because it means that if we ever did observe an expected asset quality movement, we can react fast and we can react decisively. And we can do so at very granular levels well before they become a systemic issue. We are not a loan book lender waiting quarters and quarters to see the impact of a credit policy change. We see it in days, and we act on it immediately. That is what grounds our strategy. Beyond the unit economics, we also hold considerable buffers in the balance sheet. Our total coverage stands at 16.2% of the portfolio, roughly 2.5x our entire 90-plus delinquency balance. And we are adding to that buffer each quarter. Our gross CLA against the new 90-plus NPL formation closed at 153.8%, which means the provisions we book are running ahead of the new NPL forming. That is balance sheet engineered for resilience, and one that lets us grow the franchise from a position of strength. That balance sheet resilience that I've just mentioned flows through the gross profit line, which closed at $1.88 billion in the quarter, up 27% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. This quarter's mix reflects the elevated CLA we just walked through, which directly reduced credit's contribution and brought float to roughly 40% of the total. Beneath that quarterly seasonal effect, a multi-quarter trend of genuine diversification continues. Our credit business, our float business and our fee business have been scaling and balancing each other. And our model allows us to build a more diversified gross profit base and ultimately, a higher quality earnings profile overall. Now turning to efficiency. With net revenues outpacing operating expenses, we continue to deliver operating leverage in the quarter. Our efficiency ratio improved this quarter to 17.6% on a reported basis and 16.6% at the core, which excludes our return to office investments, our international expansion and our investments in AI infrastructure. The first quarter came in better than expected for 2 reasons working together. Number one, revenues accelerated faster than we anticipated, driven by both ARPAC outperformance and continued portfolio growth. Second, OpEx came in below plan. And here, it's worth pausing to discuss why. Roughly 1/3 reflects structural efficiency gains that are durable and compounding, mainly AI-driven improvements in operations and collections, software platform consolidation and hiring discipline. Now the remaining 2/3 reflect timing items that will normalize in the next quarters, including real estate and marketing phasing. So the 17.6% efficiency ratio should not be extrapolated as our run rate. But even accounting for those normalizations, we expect our consolidated efficiency ratio for the full year of 2026 to land at approximately 20%, broadly in line with where we ended 2025. And while our core efficiency ratio continues its natural downward trend, we remain confident in the attractiveness of our investments in return to office, U.S. expansion and AI infrastructure. The positive effects of operating leverage and financial leverage continue to flow through the bottom line. Net income reached $871 million in the quarter, the highest ever for our first quarter and up 41% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Now I want to be direct about our effective tax rate, or ETR, because we know it may be a focus. The 8.7% IFRS rate this quarter reflects structural changes we have been making to our global operating and corporate structure. It is not a one-off, and it's not an accounting adjustment. It is a recurring structural feature of how we operate. The first quarter rate is naturally lower than our full year rate because it reflects some of the seasonal patterns we discussed earlier in this call. For modeling purposes, we expect our IFRS ETR for the remainder of 2026 to converge towards the 15% to 20% range. Our managerial ETR, which we believe is the more economically meaningful comparison, should converge towards the 30% to 35% range, which is broadly in line with peers in the region. Now the broader point is this. We are absorbing intentional investment headwinds in the OpEx line, and those are being more than offset by structural improvements in our ETR. The net result is a net income trajectory that remains durable and compounding, which is the right lens through which to assess the earnings power of our business. Now to wrap it all up, this was another quarter that demonstrated the durability of our business model. Number one, a growing and engaged customer base. Number two, an expanding credit portfolio, growing profitably and resilient. Number three, a more diversified gross profit base. And number four, one of the strongest balance sheets in financial services. With that, I will pass it over to David for his closing remarks.