Eric Aboaf
Analyst · RBC Capital Markets
Thank you, Martina, and good morning, everyone. Starting with Slide 16. We delivered strong first quarter financial results with 10% reported revenue growth, 9% organic constant currency revenue growth and 14% growth in adjusted diluted EPS. This performance underscores the durability and resilience of our business even amid a period of elevated geopolitical and economic disruption. Reported revenue growth of 10% includes the acquisition of With Intelligence, which closed in the fourth quarter, offset by the divestitures of EDM and thinkFolio in January as well as modest tailwind from FX. Adjusted expenses increased 8%. As Martina mentioned, we began to see volatility in macro risk increase in late February and continue through March. We reacted quickly to make sure we were measuring expenses effectively allowing for better first quarter margins in every division than we had anticipated when we gave initial guidance. Strong growth and disciplined expense management combined to deliver 100 basis points of year-on-year margin expansion to 51.8% and 12% growth in adjusted operating profit. Excluding OSTTRA from the prior year period, our first quarter 2026 margin expansion would have been 160 basis points. Turning to our divisions on Slide 17. Market Intelligence revenue grew 8% and organic constant currency revenue grew 6% in the first quarter. Subscription revenue increased a solid 6%, both on a reported and organic basis, driven by strong renewals and net sales across the franchise. Subscription growth included a 50 basis point headwind from the timing of revenue recognition that we expect to reverse in the back half of the year. Onetime revenue and volume-driven revenue grew 18% in aggregate in the quarter. This was partly driven by the acquisition of With Intelligence and partly by the rebound of volume-driven activity. Data Analytics & Insights reported revenue increased by 11%, driven by our first full quarter of revenue from the With Intelligence acquisition worth 6 percentage points as well as solid 5% organic growth driven by market data and valuations, Cap IQ Pro and Visible Alpha. Enterprise Solutions reported revenue grew 3%, reflecting the divestiture of EDM and thinkFolio in mid-January. The business has delivered very strong organic growth of 14%, with double-digit growth across all major product lines. We've also included an additional slide in our supplemental deck to provide a breakdown of the workflow tools in our Enterprise Solutions segment, most of which benefit heavily from S&P Global data and strong external networks. Credit and Risk Solutions revenue grew 6%, driven by strong subscription sales of RatingsXpress and RatingsDirect. Market Intelligence's adjusted expenses increased 7% year-over-year driven by a full quarter of expenses from the With Intelligence acquisition as well as an unfavorable FX impact, higher compensation expense and long-term strategic investments, partially offset by the impact from the recent divestitures, including the sale of EDM and thinkFolio. Market Intelligence delivered 80 basis points of operating margin expansion to 33.6% in the quarter. Now turning to Ratings on Slide 18. Ratings revenue increased 13% year-over-year, exceeding our internal expectations for the quarter. Growth was strong across both transactional and non-transactional revenue streams. Transactional revenue increased 15%, driven by strength in investment grade, supported by a number of large hyperscaler or M&A transactions in the first quarter. Transaction revenue from governance, high-yield and structured finance also grew in the quarter but was more than offset by the weakness in bank loans due to a high teens decline in billed issuance. Private markets revenues were up over 25%. Non-transactional revenue grew 11%, driven primarily by higher annual fee revenue. We were also pleased by our growth in issuer credit ratings or ICRs, and Rating Evaluation Services or RES in the quarter. adjusted expenses rose 8%, reflecting higher compensation costs and continued strategic investments in our people, technology and product development. This contributed to the division's 160 basis points of margin expansion to 67.8%. Now turning to S&P Global Energy on Slide 19. The conflict in Iran has brought considerable volatility and uncertainty to the Energy markets that has persisted into the second quarter. Some of the Energy customers in the Middle East have experienced a direct impact to their facilities and many are facing supply chain and/or distribution disruptions. Even in this environment, Energy revenue grew 7% this quarter as we benefited from very strong events revenue, and we saw a spike in value-driven transactional activity. At the same time, the conflict weighed on other parts of our Energy division, including our subscription revenue. Sanctions continue to be a headwind as well as we've called out in recent quarters, but the conflict in the Middle East is pressuring clients and could lead to slower growth in the coming quarters. As Martina noted earlier, amid this uncertainty, our customers are turning to S&P Global for Data & Insights only we can provide. CERAWeek in Houston hit new records and online, the number of user queries in our Energy platforms, ChatAI feature more than doubled quarter-over-quarter. Energy & Resources, Data & Insights and Price Assessments grew 7% and 6%, respectively, driven by strength in petroleum gas, power and renewables. The sanctions we discussed last year drove a 100 basis point headwind to Energy & Resources and 140 basis points headwind to Price Assessments. Advisory & Transactional Services revenue increased 15%, driven by strong growth in conference and training revenue as CERAweek delivered record-setting attendance and revenue. We also posted close to 30% growth in Global Trading Services or GTS amid elevated energy market volatility. Upstream Data and Insights revenue declined 5% in the quarter. driven by the absence of a prior year onetime fee. We continue to streamline this business line and refocus on the areas of proprietary Data & Insights, as Martina mentioned. Our transformation is on track, including the realignment of the sales teams and the debut of our upgraded client platform at CERAWeek, which already has sparked strong customer interest. We're pleased with the team's progress, but given heightened Energy market volatility and uncertainty, we still think it could take several quarters before these management actions drive growth in Upstream. Adjusted expenses grew 4%. Our teams in Energy did a particularly good job moving quickly to keep expense growth low to preserve margins during a volatile period. The expense growth we did see was driven by higher compensation costs and unfavorable FX impact as well as ongoing investments in growth initiatives. First quarter margin expanded by 120 basis points to 49.3%. Now turning to S&P Dow Jones Indices on Slide 20. Revenue grew by 17% with double-digit growth across all business lines. Revenue associated with asset-linked fees grew 18% in the first quarter. This was driven by year-over-year equity market appreciation and net inflows into products based on S&P Dow Jones Indices. As we've noted before, in periods of heightened volatility, we often see slower flows and higher priced indices like sector, factor and thematics and higher flows in lower price indices like the S&P 500. That was the case in the first quarter as well, and that mix shift drove a modest decline in average realized price year-over-year in our asset-linked fees business. Exchange-Traded Derivatives revenue was up 18%, driven by strong volumes, particularly in SPX, which continues to demonstrate the natural hedge we have in this business during times of geopolitical and macroeconomic disruptions. Data and custom subscriptions continued to benefit from our focused commercial efforts over the last several quarters posting its third consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. Revenue increased 12%, largely driven by new business growth and end-of-day contracts. Adjusted expenses were up 13% year-over-year, driven by higher compensation costs and investments in growth initiatives. Indices operating profit grew 18% and and operating margin expanded 90 basis points to 73.8%. Now turning to Mobility on Slide 21. Revenue grew 8% in the first quarter, underscoring the mission-critical nature of the division's products with high single-digit growth in both dealer and financials and other and a modest tailwind from FX. Customers continue to rely on CARFAX's unique data and solutions, driving strong subscription growth despite a complicated environment for automotive OEMs. Dealer revenue increased 9%, benefiting from momentum in new customer growth at CARFAX and automotiveMastermind. Manufacturing revenue grew 5%, driven by subscription growth and increased discretionary spending. Growth was partially offset by softness in recalls and OEM marketing related products. Financials & Other grew 8% as the business line continues to benefit from underwriting volumes and commercial momentum. Adjusted expenses grew 5%, driven by advertising and promotional investments. Mobility's operating margin expanded 150 basis points year-over-year to 40%. Looking forward, we remain on track for our planned separation of the Mobility business, including completion of the spin mid-2026. We will file our Form 10 publicly this quarter, and the Mobility Global team is excited to be hosting their Investor Day in New York City on May 12, ahead of the launch of its equity roadshow. We also plan to launch a public debt offering for Mobility at some point this quarter, targeting an investment-grade rating. As a reminder, from a financial reporting and guidance perspective, S&P Global will continue to fully consolidate Mobility Global in our financial statements and 2026 guidance until the separation is complete. Upon completion of the spin, we intend to provide recast financials for the 4 quarters of 2025 and any 2026 periods reported adjusted to exclude Mobility's contributions along with other relevant adjustments as outlined at our Investor Day. We also expect to issue updated 2026 guidance at that time, excluding Mobility. Now shifting to our outlook, starting with Slide 22. I'd like to review the key macroeconomic assumptions that underpin our guidance, which takes into account the current geopolitical environment. The conflict in Iran has led to the largest energy shock since the 1970s and counterbalance what was previously a broadly favorable economic environment for business. Our current outlook assumes the situation stabilizes by the end of the second quarter, but we acknowledge the risk of a protracted conflict. We assume 3.2% global GDP growth, including 2.2% growth in the U.S. We also assumed 3.2% CPI growth in the U.S. We expect near-term energy client demand to remain suppressed given our expectation for ongoing market uncertainty. Should the conflict persist longer or escalate, we could see more significant direct headwinds, particularly in our Energy business and significant indirect headwinds in our market-sensitive businesses depending on equity market reaction and credit market conditions. We continue to see favorable market conditions for issuance in 2026 even though we now only expect 1 rate cut in the U.S. We also entered the year with encouraging maturity walls as we discussed on our fourth quarter call, and we are encouraged by the growth of announced M&A. As Martina mentioned, some of the strength in issuance in the first quarter was driven by front-end loading of hyperscaler issuance relative to our initial expectations. Given both the outperformance in the first quarter and the more modest expectations for Q2, we do not expect to see acceleration in Ratings revenue growth in the second quarter. We continue to expect Ratings growth to moderate in the third quarter before turning negative in the fourth quarter as we lap prior year highs. This leads us to our updated guidance for the Enterprise on Slide 23. At the consolidated level, we are reiterating our guidance for organic constant currency revenue growth in the range of 6% to 8%. We're also reiterating our guidance for 50 to 75 basis points of margin expansion in 2026 excluding the impact of OSTTRA. Our adjusted EPS guidance is also unchanged at slightly higher expected interest expenses offset by lower share count due to the additional repurchases we now expect. As you can see on Slide 24, our division guidance is also unchanged with the exception of our Energy division. Given the external environment, particularly the impact of the Iran conflict and the energy disruption on both the demand and supply side, we currently expect to deliver organic constant currency revenue growth in the range of 4.5% to 6%, 1 percentage point lower than the previous guidance. Importantly, our guidance assumes that the current elevated level of disruption in the energy market persists through the second quarter. The supply chain disruptions would not fully be resolved until later this year. For our Indices business, our full year guidance is unchanged. However, the underlying assumptions have been adjusted to reflect the current market dynamic. Our guidance now assumes equity markets roughly flat from current levels and low double-digit growth year-over-year in ETD volumes. We also wanted to provide some directional color for the second quarter. In Market Intelligence, we expect some acceleration in subscription revenue, given what we're seeing in customer traction and sales pipeline. We expect that to be offset somewhat as growth in nonsubscription revenue normalizes. In Ratings, we will be lapping the disruption caused after Liberation Day last year, which creates a favorable compare. We expect growth to remain strong, but we do not expect acceleration in 2Q. We do expect investment grade to continue to represent a higher mix of issuance compared to historical averages, particularly if we continue to see elevated hyperscale CapEx driving large volumes in the second quarter. For Energy, the macro disruption has a concentrated impact in the second quarter, and we have already seen that impacting our near-term sales pipeline. We expect revenue growth in the second quarter to fall slightly below the guidance range for the full year before reaccelerating in the second half. We will be monitoring the sales motion, customer health and macro environment closely and managing expenses throughout the year to ensure we are preserving margin. For Indices, we expect continued robust growth in the second quarter before growth decelerates in the second half given the tougher compares in 3Q and 4Q. For Mobility, we expect growth to accelerate slightly from the first quarter levels with stronger growth expected in the second half. On second quarter margins, we expect margin expansion to be above the enterprise full year range for Ratings and Indices, slightly below the range for Mobility and Energy and within the range for Market Intelligence. This is largely due to the timing and quarterly phasing of expense recognition as we were very disciplined in our approach in the first quarter. Our full year expectations in each of these divisions are unchanged. Lastly, we want to provide an update on our capital plans for the rest of the year. As you know, we have a target gross leverage range of 2 to 2.5x trailing 12-month EBITDA. Given the expected loss of Mobility EBITDA, our current leverage of 2.3x will naturally increase to 2.4x at the end of the year. However, we expect to issue approximately $2 billion in debt at Mobility in conjunction with the spin. Proceeds are expected to fund a cash payment to S&P Global, which we would expect to use for a combination of incremental share repurchases and some debt reduction. Given the strength and resilience of our business and our confidence in its long-term profitable growth, we believe the current share price reflects an attractive opportunity to increase our repurchases from the expected 85% of adjusted free cash flow to at least 100% or to roughly $4.5 billion for the year. With that, let me turn the call back over to Mark for your questions.