Gregory Dean Feller
Analyst · H.C. Wainwright
Thanks, Dave. Before I turn to financials, I just want to touch on Carta. Turning to our payment business. We processed $2.8 billion volume in Q2, which was flat year-over-year on a reported basis. But as Dave mentioned, we previously announced the decision to exit Canada at the end of Q1 to exclusively focus on Europe where Carta has been a pioneer in payments market. When you exclude the Canadian volume market, core European business was up 15% year-over-year on a volume basis. In other words, we replaced a 13% revenue exit with 15% growth in the market we're scaling. With our full OCI migration now complete, Carta is operating in a modern infrastructure stack that improves both scalability and cost efficiency. And longer term, we see an opportunity for Carta to play a role in stablecoin-based payments aligned with broader shift to real-time blockchain-based settlements across fintech. Now I'll walk through our Q2 financial results, which reflect the progress we made across both operations and capital allocation. In Q2, we delivered strong year-over-year growth in both Wealth and Payments, up 48% and 23%, respectively. Gross margin expanded to 72%. Net income came in at $13.5 million, and we were operating cash flow positive. We also delivered an adjusted EBITDA margin of 11.4%, reflecting both operating leverage and capital discipline. Our growth is being driven by the right segments. Wealth and payments are both scaling organically. And importantly, within Wealth, we're seeing an ARPU shift towards higher-value users. We're not spending to acquire right now, as Dave mentioned, but new users are coming in at meaningfully higher ARPUs, while legacy lower-value users continue to churn. The mix shift is driving revenue growth without adding costs and positions us for strong unit economics when we plan to begin broader marketing of our intelligent investing Wealth platform in Q1 of '26. On the profitability side, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of $1.9 million, up from $1.1 million last quarter and $1.4 million a year ago. Margin also expanded, as I mentioned, to 11.4%. We're also operating cash flow positive again this quarter, a key indicator that we can self-fund core growth while also executing our capital strategy depending on our growth ambitions. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the quarter with $50.8 million in cash and marketable securities and private investments or about $2.10 per share. Our investment portfolio, which will increasingly reflect our Bitcoin strategy currently includes high- quality holdings in companies like WonderFi, Gemini and Hootsuite. While our Bitcoin reserve is still in early stages, crypto-related investments now represent close to 80% of our total investing holdings as of quarter end. Supporting this position, our book value at quarter end stood at $81.6 million, or $3.41 per share. When you compare those data points to our $54 million market cap, the disconnect is clear. And when you also consider that our operating business is approaching a $70 million annualized revenue run rate with high growth contributions from wealth and payments, that disconnect becomes even harder to justify. We believe we're operating one of the most attractive and strategically important segments of the market with an increasingly deep mode and long-term tailwinds firmly behind us. As long as we continue to execute and deliver, we believe the market gap will close. In the meantime, our balance sheet is strong. It's strategic. It gives us flexibility to invest with conviction, adapt when needed and compound value over the long term. Finally, let's revisit our Bitcoin treasury strategy, a key part of the structural foundation we're building at Mogo. We launched this strategy in 2024, a reminder we are one of the first public companies in the U.S. to actually put Bitcoin on our balance sheet when we added that back in 2020 after MicroStrategy and Block and before Tesla. And in Q2 of '24, we decided that we're going to expand on that. And this quarter, we expanded both at scale and strategic intent. We think of this in 3 layers. At the base layer, our Bitcoin reserve. This is a long-term sort of value and capital benchmark. In the middle, our regulatory infrastructure, where we're working to become 1 of only 2 regulated platforms in Canada offering both equities and crypto. And on top, our product integrations, including plans to launch a flagship 60-40 equity Bitcoin portfolio, BTC back lending and stablecoin-enabled payment infrastructure. This is more than an investment is a compounding system, platform integration, fuels user growth, which drives operating income, which funds treasury expansion and future capital gains and that in turn reinforces the reserve. We're still early in our Bitcoin deployment and that's intentional. Our near-term focus has been monetizing our stake in WonderFi, which is in the process of being acquired by Robinhood. After quarter end, we monetized just under 50% of our WonderFi position for approximately $14 million in net proceeds and immediately deployed over $1 million into additional Bitcoin. It's not a statement, it's execution and it's a real-time example of our dual compounding model at work. This is how we intend to build long-term value structurally, repeatably and with discipline. With that, I'll turn it back to Dave.