Todd Cello
Analyst · Deutsche Bank
Thanks, Chris, and let me add my welcome to everyone. I'll build on that overview with first quarter results before providing guidance. Starting with the quarter, we exceeded the high end of our guidance across all key metrics by $41 million on revenue and $18 million on adjusted EBITDA or $22 million and $8 million, respectively, excluding the Mexico acquisition. Total revenue increased 14% on a reported and 11% on an organic constant currency basis led by U.S. Financial Services. Excluding FICO mortgage royalties, organic growth was 7%. Growth was broad-based and aligned with the innovation priorities outlined at Investor Day. Credit, excluding FICO mortgage royalties and fraud, both grew high single digit driven by continued traction in TruIQ, alternative data and trusted call solutions. Marketing Solutions delivered mid-single-digit growth with healthy identity performance. Consumer Solutions grew low single digit including another quarter of double-digit growth internationally. Adjusted EBITDA increased 10%. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 35.2%, down 100 basis points year-over-year. As anticipated, underlying margins contracted modestly in FICO mortgage royalties were a 120 basis point headwind. Our Mexico acquisition contributed 25 basis points in the quarter. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $1.18, up 12% year-over-year and $0.08 ahead at the high end of our guidance. In the first quarter, U.S. markets revenue grew 14% on an organic constant currency basis versus the prior year. Across all our B2B verticals, we delivered strong bookings and retention rates to start the year. Financial Services revenue grew 24% or 14% excluding FICO mortgage royalties. The environment remains constructive, and we outperformed underlying volumes driven by TruIQ, alternative data and noncredit solutions. Within financial services, credit card and banking rose 5% on stable lending volumes and strength from trusted call solutions. Consumer lending grew 13% and supported by sustained consumer demand and strong FinTech performance. FinTechs continue to perform well with increasingly diversified funding bases and delinquency trends within historical norms. Auto was up 11%, outpacing modest industry volume declines through pricing, share gains and new wins across our solution suites. Mortgage revenue grew 50% excluding FICO royalties, revenue grew 24% compared to inquiries up 7%. Inquiries were slightly better than anticipated, with additional outperformance through pricing and increased adoption of non tri-bureau solutions. Emerging verticals grew 6%, led by another quarter of double-digit growth in insurance -- within insurance, credit-based marketing continues to recover as insurers and pursue profitable growth. Consumer shopping also remains active. We drove new wins and growth across core credit driving history, trusted call solutions and marketing solutions. Across our other emerging verticals, public sector grew high single digits and is positioned for a strong year. tech, retail and e-commerce, and media grew mid-single digits. Communications grew modestly tenant and employment declined modestly but is expected to return to growth over the rest of the year. Consumer Interactive was flat, driven by indirect channel growth and breach-related wins, offset by declines in the direct channel. In international, all revenue growth comparisons are on an organic constant currency basis. International revenue was flat in the quarter, reflecting varied results across our diversified portfolio. Our 2 most developed markets drove outperformance against subdued market conditions. U.K. grew 7%, driven by healthy volumes from our largest banking and fintech customers as well as new wins across verticals. Canada grew 9%, reflecting another quarter of innovation-led growth as well as strong performance from fintechs and insurance. Africa performed well, too, growing 10% with strength across banking, FinTech and retail. Across our other emerging markets, India, Latin America and Asia Pacific, growth was softer, reflecting subdued conditions and timing dynamics. India declined 5%, slightly better than guided. We expect a gradual recovery in consumer lending, supporting mid-single-digit growth for India in 2026. We also continued to accelerate the pace of innovation in India. Most recently, we announced a strategic partnership with the leading Indian telco geo to enable branded calling across its 500 million subscribers as we continue to expand the reach of our leading trusted call solutions globally. Latin America was flat organically with growth in Brazil, offset by modest declines in Colombia and other markets. TransUnion to Mexico which was recorded as inorganic, grew well in the first quarter on the heels of double-digit growth in 2025. Asia Pacific declined 18%, primarily by lapping onetime contracts, as well as softer volumes. Performance across India, Latin America and Asia Pacific is expected to improve in the second quarter and as the year progresses. Turning to the balance sheet. We ended the first quarter with $5.6 billion of debt and $733 million of cash. During the quarter, we funded the approximately $660 million purchase for TransUnion New Mexico with $520 million drawn from our credit revolver as well as cash on hand. As a result, our leverage ratio at quarter end increased modestly to 2.8x. For the remainder of 2026 we plan to continue to execute our balanced capital allocation framework, prioritizing debt prepayment and capital return to shareholders. We have repurchased $25 million so far this year and expect to increase the pace of repurchases over the remainder of the year. We also remain committed to pushing our leverage ratio towards our long-term target of under 2.5x. Before getting into guidance details, I want to reiterate our approach. Even with first quarter outperformance and healthy underlying momentum we are maintaining our full year organic growth assumptions. This reflects our disciplined guidance philosophy and provides flexibility in an uncertain environment. In the second quarter, we are guiding revenue to be between $1.271 billion to $1.283 billion, up 12% to 13%. Acquisitions add 4% and and FX has an immaterial impact on our guidance. We expect organic constant currency revenue growth of 8% to 9% or 5% to 6% excluding FICO mortgage royalties. We anticipate mortgage revenue growing over 30% or 10% plus excluding FICO, compared to a mid-single-digit decline in inquiries. We are guiding adjusted EBITDA to $439 million to $445 million, up 8% to 9%, implying a margin of 34.5% to 34.7%. Underlying margins expand by 20 to 40 basis points, offset by an 80 basis point drag from FICO royalties and a 60 basis point impact from acquisitions. We expect our adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between $1.13 and $1.15, up 4% to 6%. For full year guidance, we expect revenue to be between $5.1 billion and $5.135 billion, up 11% to 12%. Acquisitions add 3.5% and and FX has an immaterial impact on our guidance. Our organic constant currency assumptions are unchanged at 8% to 9% or 5% to 6% excluding FICO mortgage royalties. Our segment level assumptions are also unchanged. For mortgage, we continue to expect growth of 28% or 6%, excluding FICO, compared to mid-single-digit inquiry declines, unchanged since February. While the first quarter exceeded expectations, we modestly lowered volume assumptions for the remainder of the year to account for recent interest rate volatility. Full details on mortgage assumptions are provided in our appendix. We anticipate mid-single-digit international revenue growth for the year, driven by gradual recoveries in India, Latin America and Asia Pacific, following a softer first quarter. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be 1.796 billion to $1.816 billion in 2026, up 9% to 10%. That results in a margin of 35.2% to 35.4%, down 60 to 80 basis points. Underlying margins are expected to expand by 50 to 70 basis points driven by revenue flow-through and remaining transformation savings. This strong underlying expansion is offset by a 90 basis point drag from FICO royalties and a 40 basis point impact from our acquisitions. We anticipate adjusted diluted earnings per share to be $4.68 to $4.75, up 9% to 11%. For other guidance items, depreciation and amortization is now expected to be approximately $640 million or $320 million, excluding step-up amortization from our 2012 change in control and subsequent acquisitions. We anticipate net interest expense of $245 million, up $25 million from February reflecting $20 million related to debt financing for the Mexico acquisition and $5 million from higher sulfur on floating rate debt. Our adjusted tax rate is expected to be approximately 25.5%, modestly better than anticipated, driven by favorable geographic mix of earnings and changes in tax law that became effective in 2026. Capital expenditures are expected to be approximately 6% of revenue. We expect free cash flow conversion as a percentage of adjusted net income to be 90% or greater in 2026 and going forward. Slide 17 reconciles our updated full year guidance relative to February. As shown, the increase is driven by our consolidation of TransUnion to Mexico, with nonoperating items having a net neutral impact on adjusted diluted EPS. While TransUnion to Mexico is accretive to 2026 earnings, it is modestly dilutive to our adjusted EBITDA margins this year. Importantly, the Mexico business operates at margins above our company average. The 2026 margin impact is driven by accounting mechanics rather than ongoing economics. Historically, our 26% ownership was accounted for under the equity method, contributing approximately $17 million of adjusted EBITDA in 2025 with no associated revenue. Following the acquisition, Mexico's revenue is fully consolidated, while only the incremental adjusted EBITDA associated with increasing our ownership from 26% to 94% is additive versus prior reporting. As a result, consolidated margins appear modestly lower due to revenue consolidation despite the business's strong underlying profitability. In addition, during 2026, we will incur onetime integration expenses related to the Mexico and Mobile division of [ Mural ] Networks acquisitions, which we are not adding back to adjusted EBITDA. Our 2026 guidance fits within the context of our medium-term financial framework, which we reintroduced at our March Investor Day. Over the medium term, we expect to deliver high single-digit organic revenue growth, 50 basis points of underlying margin expansion and low to mid-teens adjusted diluted earnings per share growth. This guidance is anchored in our repeatable earnings model and the momentum we are delivering today and not dependent on a recovery in U.S. mortgage or other markets. Our medium-term financial framework reflects our value creation flywheel. Our multiyear transformation is now enabling faster innovation and improved commercial outcomes. We are scaling the business on a common technology and operating platform and deploying AI across the enterprise to drive further productivity. Our scalable growth drives compounding cash flow that we will deploy to fund our growth, optimize our balance sheet and increasingly return capital to shareholders. With that context, I will turn the call back to Chris for closing remarks.