NASDAQ:JKHY Jack Henry & Associates Q3 2025 Earnings Report $171.57 -0.45 (-0.26%) Closing price 05/7/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$173.33 +1.76 (+1.02%) As of 04:04 AM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Jack Henry & Associates EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.52Consensus EPS $1.29Beat/MissBeat by +$0.23One Year Ago EPS$1.19Jack Henry & Associates Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$585.09 millionExpected Revenue$585.84 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$748.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+8.60%Jack Henry & Associates Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date5/6/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, May 7, 2025Conference Call Time8:45AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Jack Henry & Associates Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 7, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Jack Henry and Associates Inc. Third quarter fiscal year twenty twenty five results conference call. All participants will be in the listen only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, may press and 1 on your touch tone phone. Operator00:00:24To withdraw your question, you may press and 2. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Vanshirad, the Vice President. Thank you, and over to you. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates00:00:37Thank you, Myron. Good morning, and thank you for joining the Jack Henry third quarter fiscal twenty twenty five earnings call. Joining me today are Greg Adelson, President and CEO and Mimi Carsley, CFO and Treasurer. Following my opening remarks, Greg will share his insights and observations on our quarter and year to date financial results, operational metrics and outlook. Mimi will then discuss the financial results provided in yesterday's press release, which is available in the Investor Relations section of the Jack Henry website. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates00:01:11Afterward, we will open the lines for a Q and A session. Please note that this call includes forward looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. The company is not obligated to update or revise these statements. For a summary of risk factors and additional information that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward looking statements, refer to yesterday's press release and the Risk Factors and Forward Looking Statements sections in our 10 ks. During this call, we will discuss non GAAP financial measures such as non GAAP revenue and non GAAP operating income. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates00:01:51Reconciliations for these measures are included in yesterday's press release. Now I will turn the call over to Greg. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:01:58Thank you, Vance. Good morning, I appreciate each of you joining the call. I'd like to begin by thanking our associates for their hard work and dedication to our success, consistently going above and beyond in taking care of our clients. Our commitment to people first culture, service excellence, technology innovation, and a clear strategy backed by consistent execution continues to differentiate us in the market. I will share three main takeaways from the quarter, and then we'll provide additional detail about our overall business. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:02:29First, our financial performance. Our third quarter fiscal year twenty twenty five results reflect solid overall performance. Our non GAAP revenue increased 7% and our non GAAP operating margin was 23%, representing an impressive two zero seven basis points of margin expansion over last year. In terms of GAAP revenue, we are starting to see an increase in M and A activity and our Q3 deconversion revenue was $9,600,000 We expect a continuation of increased deconversion revenue in Q4, thus we are forecasting a full year deconversion revenue range of 22,000,000 to $28,000,000 Second, our fiscal twenty five guidance. As you saw in the press release and with three quarters now closed, we adjusted our full year guidance for GAAP and non GAAP revenue, margin expansion and EPS. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:03:25Despite revenue revisions, our primary or key revenue consistent mostly of processing and cloud was 76% of total revenue for the quarter and grew at 9.8% versus a growth rate of 8.8% for Q3 fiscal year twenty four. The adjusted non GAAP revenue guidance is primarily due to macroeconomic concerns and the softening of non strategic revenue such as hardware purchases and consulting engagements. As most of you know, hardware is sold to our in house processing clients at a time they desire to add or replace equipment. Similar to hardware purchases, we are seeing some customers delay the start of signed non recurring projects. Examples include one off work orders and the implementation of post core conversion products in our complementary and payment segments. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:04:21We are also seeing some softening in debit card transactions, which is similar to what the card associations experienced in their U. S. Debit businesses. Based on these factors and what we have seen through April, we felt it was necessary to lower our revenue guidance. However, due to our key revenue growth and higher incremental margins, as well as our disciplined approach to expense management, project prioritization and capital expenditures, we have increased our GAAP and non GAAP guidance on margin expansion and EPS growth. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:04:55Mimi will provide more details in her comments. Third, we are continuing to win larger competitive core deals. Over the past two years, the aggregate assets of competitive new core takeaways have more than doubled. This is important to note since our core revenue models include asset based and per account pricing options, both benefiting from larger institution wins. To date this fiscal year, we have secured 28 new core wins, including 11 in Q3, with financial institutions totaling 30,000,000,000 in assets. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:05:32This compares to 35 core transactions totaling $21,000,000,000 in assets at this time last year, and 31 core deals totaling $14,000,000,000 in assets two years ago. Our core and total pipeline remain very strong, and we will see a significant increase in competitive core wins in Q4 over the previous three quarters. We can expect a win total similar to what we did in Q4 last year, and again, with larger asset financial institutions. In addition to core wins, we are seeing a similar trend in migrations of existing customers for in house processing to our private cloud. This fiscal year to date, we have contracted to migrate 26 clients, including seven in Q3 that total $42,000,000,000 in assets. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:06:22That compares to 29 clients with $27,000,000,000 in assets at this time last year, representing a 55% increase in assets. We currently have 76% of our clients processing in the Jack Henry private cloud environment. Our success with new core wins and migration aligns well with the core platform survey results published by the American Bankers Association in February. For the first time, the ABA named the core providers. Previously, they used generic labels like company A, B and C. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:06:54The title of the report is all core platform providers are not the same, and we wholeheartedly agree. Jack Henry scored near the top across multiple categories, and when the respondents were asked what matters most in a core provider, innovation and customer service topped the list. Definitely two key differentiators for Jack Henry. Turning to specific product and strategy updates, I will comment on the payments and complementary segments followed by providing updates on technology modernization, our new SMB solutions, and our annual benchmark survey results. In our payment segment, we continue to experience strong growth with our faster payment solutions. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:07:36Over the past year, we've grown the number of FIs using Zelle by 10%, the clearinghouse's RTP network by 37%, and FedNow by 96%. We now have three fifty four clients on the Zelle platform representing 14% of FIs using Zelle, three eighty four clients on RTP representing 43% of FIs using RTP, and three seventy clients on FedNow representing 26% of FIs using FedNow. In our complementary segment, 32 contracts were signed in the quarter for Financial Crimes Defender or FCD Faster Payment Fraud Module, a real time solution designed to mitigate fraud in Zelle RTP and FedNow transactions. As of the March, we have installed 115 Financial Crimes Defender customers and have another 83 in various stages of implementation. We also have 69 faster payment modules installed and 160 in various stages of implementation. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:08:39Our Banno digital platform continues to experience healthy growth with 29 new Banno platform contracts in the quarter. At the March, we had more than 1,000 Banno platform clients, including two seventy live with Banno business. We finished the quarter with more than 13,700,000 registered users on the Banno platform. At the end of Q3 last year, we had 11,600,000 registered users, an 18% increase over the past twelve months. Regarding our technology modernization, we continue to execute very well and ahead of schedule on our core strategy for the new public cloud native Jack Henry platform. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:09:20We are now live in various stages with 15 components. Some of these are only used internally to eliminate duplication of development costs across the company, but most are utilized by our clients and are getting favorable reviews. As a result of the efforts of our development teams, we remain on track to deliver our public cloud native consumer and commercial deposit only core in the first half of calendar year 2026, which will be about six months ahead of what we communicated in February of twenty twenty two. Another example of our technology modernization progress is our new enterprise deposit and loan account opening solution. This technology enables banks and credit unions to grow loans and deposits by streamlining processes, automating workflows, and better serving retail and business clients through a single digital deposit and loan account opening experience. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:10:15We have initiated our closed beta process with two clients, and we'll continue to add more early adopter clients over the coming months. Another area of focus that the industry is excited about is our small and medium sized business strategy. A key aspect of our strategy is to only provide the service directly to financial institutions, allowing them to recapture high value deposits and service the needs of their account holders. Our initial offering called Jack Henry Rapid Transfers is in closed beta with three clients. We are currently extending availability to all Banno customers and actively enrolling clients through our digital operations team. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:10:56Jack Henry Rapid Transfers enables both SMBs and consumers to instantly move funds between external accounts, eligible cards and digital wallets. We are collaborating with both Visa and MasterCard to facilitate these transactions through their respective debit rails. The second offering is our unique merchant acquiring solution in partnership with Move. This solution delivers many distinguishing features for merchants, including instant decisioning, tap to pay for both iOS and Android devices, the option to receive settlement funds up to eight times per day, and continuous account reconciliation to the accounting platform of their choice. We are on track for a closed beta in June with two BANO clients. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:11:43We are also currently working on several additional phases to our SMB strategy as we expect to continue to deliver new functionality and solutions over the next eighteen to twenty four months to both Jack Henry and non Jack Henry core institutions. We recently released our seventh annual 2025 strategy benchmark survey. While we track many industry surveys, this one stands out because it reflects insights directly from the CEOs of our own bank and credit union clients. The survey indicated that 76% of our bank and credit union clients plan to increase technology spending over the next two years. Of those, the largest segment, 33% plans to increase investments between 610%. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:12:32We also asked where they expect to invest over the next two years. The top three areas identified were digital banking, fraud prevention, and enhancing efficiency through automation. All areas where Jack Henry has been investing and executing with innovative solutions such as the Banno platform, Financial Crimes Defender and the digital deposit and loan account opening solution that I mentioned earlier. It's worth noting that the survey was conducted in January and February prior to April's market volatility. However, we did spend a significant amount of time speaking with our clients about the current environment at our strategic insights event last week in Minneapolis. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:13:13Much of what we learned in the survey still holds true for them today. Banks and credit unions are generally concerned about the impact of tariffs on their commercial clients, especially SMBs. They remain optimistic overall and see expected regulatory relief as a positive as well. Our clients continue to suggest that M and A activity is picking up, and we are also seeing an increase in our clients making acquisitions, which presents additional revenue opportunities in the future. In closing, we remain excited and confident that our unwavering approach to culture, service, innovation, strategy and execution will continue to enable Jack Henry to drive industry revenue growth and margin expansion through this evolving macro environment. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:14:01We have a robust sales pipeline and a proven ability to attract and win deals, especially with larger financial institutions. We will continue to evaluate acquisitions that will accelerate or complement our strategy, remain disciplined in our expense management, and continue to rationalize products that fall in our non key revenue segment. In short, we remain well positioned for the future. With that, I'll turn it over to Mimi for more detail on the financials. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:14:30Thank you, Greg, and good morning, everyone. I want to open by thanking the dedicated Jack Henry team for their steadfast focus on execution and support of our clients. While the quarter results differed modestly from our fiscal year expectations, it was another quarter of solid revenue and earnings growth. I will discuss the details behind our third quarter and year to date results, then conclude with commentary on our updated fiscal 'twenty five guidance. Q3 GAAP and non GAAP revenue increased 97%, respectively, with GAAP revenue outperformance driven by notable uptick in deconversion revenue. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:15:11Despite strong performance in previously identified key areas, overall non GAAP revenue growth was tempered by lower non key revenue growth, especially from a slowdown in hardware sales and non reoccurring revenue from customer projects. Excluding hardware impact, Q3 non GAAP revenue growth would have been 8%. Quarterly deconversion revenue of approximately $9,600,000 which we released prior to full earnings, increased $8,800,000 compared to the same period last year, reflecting an accelerating pace of consolidation in the industry. In light of year to date results and fourth quarter pending agreements, we have raised our full year deconversion guidance to a range of $22,000,000 to 28,000,000 Financial institution M and A activity will have minimal non GAAP impact in fiscal 'twenty five, but potential for a meaningful impact in fiscal 'twenty six. Now, looking closer to the quarterly results. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:16:18In the quarter, GAAP and non GAAP services and support revenue increased 86%, respectively. Data processing and hosting continue to dominate services and support revenue growth for the quarter and year to date. Hardware revenue was down $4,000,000 in the quarter and $11,000,000 year to date, creating headwinds for services and support revenue. As a reminder, hardware revenue is both nonrecurring and low visibility, making it a part of non key revenue. Our private and public cloud offerings increased 11 in the quarter, reflecting strong persistent new install and existing FI growth trends. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:17:04This reoccurring revenue growth contributor is 33% of our total revenue and continues to be a double digit growth engine. Moving to processing revenue, which is 43% quarterly revenue and a significant contributor to our long term growth model, we saw strong performance with 9% growth on both a GAAP and non GAAP basis for the quarter. Continuing long term trends, quarterly drivers include increased card, digital and payment processing revenues. Completing commentary on revenue, I would highlight quarterly total reoccurring revenue, excluding deconversion revenue, was 92%. We focus on key revenue, which is comprised of our strategic reoccurring revenue. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:17:56Non key revenue includes lower growth and margin solutions that are typically non reoccurring or not aligned to our future strategic direction, yet often support existing operations. Quarterly key revenue was 78% of total non GAAP revenue, and grew a robust 10%. The year to date key revenue was 75% of total non GAAP revenues, with continued momentum producing healthy growth of 9%. Quarterly non key revenue makes up the remaining non GAAP revenue, and during the quarter and year to date has contracted 2%, creating a headwind to total growth. While Jack Henry is not immune to the broader macroeconomic challenges, the high reoccurring revenue, long term contracts, and critical functionality of our products ensure the resiliency of our business model. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:18:52We are well positioned regardless of economic conditions. Next, moving to expenses. Starting with cost of revenue, which increased 4% on a GAAP basis and 3% on a non GAAP basis during the quarter. The quarterly increase was due to higher direct costs, internal licenses and fees, which partly offset by an increase in labor cost deferrals. For clarification and to assist with models, the amortization of acquisition related intangibles was $6,000,000 in the quarter. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:19:27Next, R and D expense increased 9% on both a GAAP and non GAAP basis for the quarter. The quarterly increase was primarily related to net personnel costs. Ending with SG and A expense, it increased 7% for the quarter on a GAAP basis, and 5% on a non GAAP basis is also related to an increase in net personnel costs. We remain focused on prioritization, cost efficiencies, and effective utilization of our workforce that will result in annually compounding margin expansion. We are pleased to report that the quarter delivered two zero seven basis point increase in non GAAP margin to 23%. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:20:14We remain confident in our ability to deliver margin expansion and have increased the full year guide. These solid quarterly operating results produced a fully diluted GAAP earnings per share of $1.52 up 28%. Reviewing the three operating segments, we are pleased with core segment key revenue performance, monitoring payments for consumer sentiment impacts, and continue to benefit from strong complementary performance. Core segment increased 6% for the quarter on a non GAAP basis due to the headwinds from license and credit union hardware that rolls up into this segment. On a key basis, the segment revenue grew 11%, a 10 basis point increase over the prior period. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:21:05Core segment performance primarily came from organic growth in data processing and hosting, partly offset by lower maintenance fee revenue and credit union related hardware, the result of our core clients continuing to shift from on premise to private cloud. Non GAAP segment income margin for core increased 141 basis points from improved operating leverage. Payment segment non GAAP quarterly revenue increased 7% and saw non GAAP segment income margin growth of 59 basis points. Performance was due to continued higher card revenue for volume, increased payment processing revenue, including FedNow, RTP, Zelle, and elevated EPS payments. Margins in the payment segment also benefited from ongoing improvement to operating leverage. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:22:02Finally, complementary segment quarterly non GAAP revenue increased 10% from strong product mix with digital and hosting revenue driving growth momentum. Segment margins strongly expanded 64 basis points from the high incremental margin of reoccurring revenue and SaaS like nature of our business model. Now let's turn to a review of cash flow and capital allocation. Third quarter operating cash flow was $108,000,000 a $10,000,000 increase over the prior year's period. Strong cash flow reflects higher profitability from operations and increased deconversion revenue, partly offset by higher tax payments. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:22:49Trailing twelve month free cash flow was a hearty $3.00 $3,000,000 resulting in a 71% conversion, in line with the full year guidance range. Our dedication to value creation resulted in a trailing twelve month return on invested capital of 20%. This is a nice improvement, and we expect to see this increase returning to historic levels in the near future. For the quarter, we repurchased $18,000,000 of Jack Henry shares, aligned with our constructive outlook for future Jack Henry growth. As we move towards the close of fiscal 'twenty five, I will conclude with comments on full year guidance and other operating metrics. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:23:36Yesterday's press release included adjusted fiscal twenty twenty five full year GAAP guidance, along with a reconciliation to our adjusted non GAAP guidance metric. While the press release also included a fiscal 'twenty five non GAAP EPS metric, this is not intended to be a new guidance metric. The purpose is to provide additional clarity on our numbers, and it should be noted that a 24% tax rate is used. Given the current dynamic macroeconomic environment, including early signs of softness of consumer related payments, we are adopting a more cautious stance for the remainder of the fiscal year. Updated full year guidance metric and outlook include full year deconversion revenue of $22,000,000 to $28,000,000 up from $16,000,000 non GAAP revenue growth of 6% to 6.5%, lowered from 7% to 8%. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:24:34Non GAAP margin expansion of 60 to 70 basis points increased from 25 to 40. A tax rate of 23% decreased from 24%. GAAP EPS of $6 to $6.09 up from $5.78 to $5.87 representing annual growth of 15% to 17%. Outlook for full year free cash flow conversion is unchanged at 65 to 75%. And outlook for full year return on invested capital is 21% to 22%, based on expected lower debt at the end of the fiscal year. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:25:19The appropriate performance indicator for our business continues to be the full fiscal year financial results. In conclusion, we are seeing modest headwinds to non key revenue items that impact our consolidated results and near term outlook. Still, we remain confident as the key parts of our business continue to perform strongly and position us for continued growth. Our focus remains on delivering long term profitable growth at scale through compounding revenue growth and margin expansion. In pursuing these goals, we appreciate the achievement of our approximately 7,200 dedicated associates and our investors for their ongoing confidence. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:26:07Byron, please open the line for questions. Operator00:26:11Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw a question, please press star and then 2. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Operator00:26:42We have the first question from the line of Dan Perlin from RBC. Please go ahead. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:26:48Thanks. Good morning. So I wanted to get back to the question obviously around like large capital purchases for hardware being down. Completely understand that. The question is, are you seeing similar restraints when it comes to your more modernized projects and cloud migration? Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:27:04So, are you starting to hear elongated implementation cycles in that kind of area? Or is it really just this non recurring stuff that we're seeing right now? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:27:13Hey, Dan. Yeah, so it's almost all in the non recurring stuff. We are seeing a little bit in some of the complementary and payment products that I mentioned. So mostly in what we would call day two or post conversion, where folks have a product set that they're either waiting contract to terminate with a competitor, or they have an existing Jack Henry product, which is the case in most of these, where they're just delaying putting the new one on. So let's say Yellowhammer to our Financial Crimes Defender product, which by the way also affects some consulting revenue because the consulting revenue goes hand in hand with the Financial Crimes Defender stuff. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:27:57So there's some examples of that. We're not really seeing any real delays in, like as you described, from somebody going from in house to outsource. They usually fill those gaps and want to take advantage of them. But I also do want to remind you that we see delays regularly throughout the year, but because there's only one quarter left, and where we are with kind of the environment, especially with pure hardware sales, where folks that are in house that are wanting to buy hardware, and looking to either delay that decision for one of two reasons. One, that they want to wait to kind of see timing wise and see if they have an opportunity to wait as long as they can to make those purchases. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:28:40But the other side is actually a really good reason, which is several of those folks are evaluating moving to our private cloud. And it's through that evaluation they've also made decisions to delay those purchases as well. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:28:54Interesting. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:28:55Yes, that's great color. Just a quick follow-up for Mimi. Mimi, talked about M and A impacts being really kind of de minimis to this year, but you took the opportunity to kind of throw out that there could be impacts to non GAAP revenue growth for '26. So I'm just wondering if you want to put any kind of context or a finer point around that point. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:29:14Thank you. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:29:17Thank you, Dan, for the question. So yes, as we talked about, we have line of sight through known when people sign the deconversion agreement. That's when we start from a revenue recognition perspective when folks are leaving. I would say we have seen an acceleration in that merger activity, roughly around 30 clients. The majority of these have been Jack Henry to Jack Henry mergers. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:29:46And typically, they're cloud customers. So fantastic that we're retaining that revenue. There can be a little bit of a modest pricing impact from a tiered pricing perspective. What usually comes later in the merger cycle, so when it's a Jack Henry client doing the acquisition, we get notified pretty early on in the cycle they want to secure their slot. What happens when it's a Jack Henry customer getting acquired away to another platform? Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:30:16We tend to hear about that a little later in the cycle, as well as the convert merge services that we help them with during that consolidation, when it's our clients doing this acquisition, are usually a little later post approval cycle. That's why we're not really expecting to see much of that impact in FY twenty five, but you would see more of that probably longer in the improvement cycle. We're only a couple months into the administration, we haven't seen a radical shift in the timing being shrunken from an approval cycle. So as more deals happen, and you get a little longer in that implementation and close of those deals, is where we would expect to see the impact to our revenue from a positive perspective, as well as any services that we would perform for them. Just a final note on the point, on that convert merge related Jack Henry to Jack Henry cloud, any of that, you won't see any lumpiness, because that is spread out over the remaining life of the contract. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:31:31So, it's doubtful that you would see anything noticeable in any one quarter. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:36Great color. Thank you so much. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:31:39Of course. Operator00:31:42Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Rayna Kumar from Evercore. Please go ahead. Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:31:50Hi, Greg and Mimi. And, yeah, it's actually Oppenheimer now. Just in terms of the project delays that you experienced in the third quarter, what are you hearing on a timeline? Like, are these projects that could come in later this year? Is this Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:32:03maybe a next year event? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:32:06Yeah. Hey, Rayna. So yeah, just you're right on. So where we are at the end of the year, like I said, this happens throughout the year on a regular basis. We're seeing a little bit more than normal, but also ones that are getting pushed into the following year. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:32:22So as I said, these are delays in products that they've already contracted for. And so it's not like they're walking away from a contract or things along that line. But they're just things that are getting pushed into out of the next quarter and into the next fiscal year. Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:32:41Understood, that's helpful. And then it was nice to see the strong margin expansion in the quarter. I know Mimi, you've spoken about 20 to 40 basis points of margin expansion as a medium term target. Just given the strength we saw in the high margin revenue and cost management, is that target too low? Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:33:01So cost management is something that is just bread and butter for Jack Henry. It's something we've always done from zero baselining of every headcount decision to a rigorous prioritization of our capital spend. I'll note that our R and D spend is 14.5 this year, down a little from last year. Now, last year was elevated a touch related to the Payrails acquisition and the integration needed between those two businesses. But we are always very mindful as a leadership team. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:33:32Certainly, as we've started to see a little bit of the softness related to that non key revenue, we've even turned up the dial a little bit more from discretionary spending controls. I feel very comfortable in the 25% to 40% representing the floor of what's achievable from the model from a year in year out basis. That's always just a floor and we aim for more. Too early to see from fiscal twenty six perspective, given where we stand in the budget timing cycle. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:08Raina, one thing I want to add on that. So, you know, Mimi said it, but historically, we've always done a really good job of managing our headcount and the timing of that headcount. So, you know, we've taken that to another level. We have new leaders and, you know, really they've been grained and trained to make sure that that's part of the process. So that'll continue. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:30And, you know, Some of the things we have to spend additional money on as far as infrastructure and other spends do vary each year. Some of that is as we're still going through the budget process, as some of that is yet to be determined on where we will end up for next year. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:47And this year, we're up 1% on headcount. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:50Yeah. Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:34:51Thank you. Appreciate all the color. Operator00:34:57Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Vasu Goldwil from KBW. Please go ahead. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:35:05Hi. Thank you for taking my question. I guess the first one, maybe just for you to follow-up on the change in the revenue guide for the fourth quarter. It sounds like it's mostly hardware and lease contract delays, but I think you also mentioned conservatism in the guide. So if you could just break apart the big drivers for the change. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:35:23And then also if there's a way to size the overall hardware revenue for us, so we sort of have a sense for how much that can drive volatility in growth. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:35:33Sure, Vasu. So the guide for the remaining of the year is really just given the prudence and having conservative macro assumptions as it relates to what's going on in the economy, as well as the trends we've seen in the third quarter. Particularly, the outlook for hardware is down. As Greg mentioned, we're seeing some customers delay big capital purchases, possibly due to economic uncertainty also, as they contemplate moving to the cloud, which is a good thing for Jack Henry. In fact, FI maybe not wanting to make those pretty expensive hardware decisions may actually help push their decisions to the cloud. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:36:20So I think in the long run, that could be a great thing for Jack Henry, as we're already at 76% of our clients in our private cloud environment. The headwind on hardware is about $11,000,000 for the year. I'll call out that 80% of that falls within the corporate segment, with the remainder of that being in the core segment. I think the other is what Greg already touched upon, which is we're just seeing customers take a bit more of a cautious stance, delaying some of these non reoccurring projects, mostly consulting work orders, some of the implementation of some of their post core. As Greg mentioned, and I just want to reiterate it, these are contractual commitments they've already signed for. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:37:06So it's just more of a timing than a fundamental shift or a change in decision making pattern. So historically, we've seen anywhere between after eighteen months of implementation, but it can be as long as thirty six months. And so that really comes down to their readiness versus our resources and capability to help them. We have not seen any meaningful changes to our implementation schedule. So I think it's more just out of an abundance of caution to be thoughtful. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:37:41In terms of the payments impact, we just started to really see that more in April. As we sit here today, we all know that the transaction volume is based on consumer spending and how they feel. It also depends on what's top of their wallet, whether it's debit or credit. So, again, just prudent in the current environment to narrow that horizon aperture of our outlook. And it really more came down to what our original expectation was, was more for a really robust fourth quarter. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:38:14So in absolute, it's not that we're calling for it to drop off precipitously from the current trends. It's more just relative to our original expectation of being pretty robust. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:38:27Yeah, one last point, Vasu, is that when you think about historically in tough economic times, folks tend to move to their credit versus their debit. And so based on what we saw in April and ironically, we've actually seen pretty good volumes in May thus far, even though a short number of days so far. But the reality is, based on historical around here, we've seen the use of credit accelerate over the use of debit during these times. So we're just as Mimi said, we're just being cautious with our approach and making sure that we provide that level of guidance. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:39:08Great. That's very helpful color. And then, Greg, one high level one for you. Sort of any change in how you're thinking about your competitive positioning following the announcement from FIS to acquire the issuer business from Global Payments? Thank you. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:39:23Yeah, it's a great question. Thank you. No, I think look, here's what I would say. When you look at the fact that they added much better credit processing capabilities with that acquisition, That's good for them. We already had credit capabilities. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:39:40I think one thing that we have that is still a differentiator is that we process on a single platform for both debit and credit. That's not the case for what they have today. And so it's too early to see from a competitive standpoint. Specifically that particular competitor, we didn't have a lot of challenges when it came to looking at their debit processing capabilities versus ours. So we'll have to wait and see. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:40:09But they're still working in the same environments as they always have as far as the type of customers they're going after and the size of asset customers. So we'll continue to compete as we always have at that market. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we're very bullish on our Q4 related to core opportunities. And as you know, most of those come with a lot of add on products. So I'll leave it at that. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:40:39Thank you for the color. Operator00:40:44Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Jason Kuhferberg from Bank of America. Please go ahead. Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:40:52Good morning, guys. So it sounds like as we start thinking ahead to fiscal 'twenty six, there might be a couple of moving parts we need to consider on the revenue line. You've got the effect of the deconversion revenues that you highlighted as a potential headwind, but now we've got some delays in post core add ons being pushed into fiscal twenty twenty six, which sounds like could be a tailwind. So I'm just wondering how you think those two dynamics might net out and what the implications could be for revenue growth next year, just in the context of the medium term outlook of 7% to 8%. Is there any risk there? Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:41:29Thank you. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:41:32So Jason, I'd love to share with you the full FY 'twenty six picture. We're just too early in the process. Budget and season is deeply underway here at Jack Henry, but it's not finalized yet for another several months. And so in this dynamic environment, we just can't commit on next year, this far in advance. I will say to some of your comments in terms of the tailwinds and headwinds, our sales pipeline continues to be robust. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:42:01We're seeing no elongation of the sales cycle. Greg mentioned the numerous account wins, including large FIs that are still making plenty of decisions and commitments. So seeing no change in trends from that perspective. In terms of any of the deals that are being pushed from an implementation perspective, as Greg mentioned, there's always some moving of the calendar within the year. I'm not sure that that will really create a tailwind. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:42:33We always manage the implementation pretty tightly, so we'll see if there's enough demand for another implementation team. We'll certainly add that if there's there. But I wouldn't say that that's a layering effect to the normal flow. It's a continuously evolving calendar. In terms of just the guide, again, too early to say for sure, but I would say as a preview, the width of the revenue guide will likely expand on that, and we'll talk more about that in August. Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:43:09Okay. No, that's definitely helpful for now. So I wanted to come back to the key revenue, the cloud plus processing, like you said, it's now 76% of total, and you did actually see acceleration in the growth, almost 10% versus 9% each of the past two quarters. Are we going to are we expecting to sustain, call it, that 10% level in Q4? And is there any reason to believe that something in that kind of general neighborhood couldn't sustain into next year? Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:43:41I think you're on the right course in terms of the ballpark you're talking about. I feel pretty comfortable. Those are the long term strategic growth of the business. You have things like digital, you have things like the new product, the cloud, the continued cloud migration, so all of those have been long sustainable trends for the business, and we fully expect that to continue. What has hurt us is the headwinds from the non key business that has compressed at about 2%. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:44:15So that's been more of the challenge, but as we have more and more as a percentage of the portfolio in that key revenue, and we will continue to thrive. Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:44:28Thanks, Mimi. Operator00:44:33Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Darrin Peller from Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:44:41Guys, thank you. You mentioned obviously the step up in consolidation you're seeing in your end markets. So again, I mean, I know I think you just it was brought up a little bit in the prior question around what it could mean for the future. But Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:44:55at the end of the Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:44:55day, there's positives and negatives. Obviously, you have integration revenue if your customers are the acquirer or part of the merger. And then there's obviously the risk. So just number one, is this an environment that you'd say is big enough of a change in consolidation levels that you would anticipate it actually impacting growth in the next twelve to eighteen months? Or are we just a little higher than normal and still watching to see? Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:45:17And just remind us the positives versus the negatives, obviously, besides just losing a customer. What could be the positive offsets in a higher M and A environment for you guys? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:45:28Yeah. Hey, Darren. I'll take that. It's Greg. So a couple of things. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:45:31So as I mentioned, it starts with the size of the institution. So as you know, we've continued to grow. Last year, we sold 15 multibillion. We sold eight so far this year. Much larger ones, referenced, from an asset size on the 30,000,000,000 on the 28 sold so far this year, meaning on average, we're selling over a billion in assets per deal sold. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:45:55Again, that historically hasn't been the case. As we continue to be able to go up market and have larger sized institutions, they tend to be the acquirers, as you can imagine. Over the forty years of the market shrinking, most of that has happened at the $500,000,000 and below asset size. So the larger we have, the more opportunity. So to answer the second part of your question, yes. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:46:23So it happens to be kind of both. So if it's a Jack Henry client buying a Jack Henry client, there's some things that we can work through related to the deconversion fees and or convert merge fees that end up being positive for us. When you look at a competitor buying one of our clients, obviously we tend to get the full conversion fee, deconversion fee, and push. And it really depends on how much time is left on that contract at the time that that purchase happens. But what we typically see when it's Jack Henry to Jack Henry is not only do we retain the client, but they tend to buy additional products depending on what one of the which institution had which products. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:47:11And we actually saw that this year with a large merger of $4,000,000,000 plus institutions, where one of them had our digital platform and one of them didn't. And we were able to them to move to Banno for both. So it is a hit and miss, depending on which institutions, what products they have, the timing of how much time is left on the term of the agreement, and things along that line. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:47:37And I'll just add that while in general over the multi year period, it tends to be a positive for Jack Henry. As Greg mentioned, more of our clients are the acquirer than the acquired. It can produce some lumpiness, particularly as we moved upmarket. While deconversion revenue is a great thing for free cash flow and EPS, it does represent the loss of future revenue. And so, if for some reason in this environment we were to lose any bulk of larger clients, we would call that out from a headwind grow over problem. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:48:15Yeah. So I mean, where we are now, are you what you're seeing, is it gonna do you see it more as a headwind or a tailwind for the next one to two years? But and then really the follow-up for me is more around you guys called out the things you're seeing around the project related non key revenue items, and then maybe some cyclical impacts on spend on debit, for example. But what's the demand environment like for the core business, the key areas? If you just rank ordered what you're seeing the most demand for right now, and how that's looking from the prior couple? Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:48:44It sounds pretty good from a sales standpoint, but I'd love more color. Thanks, guys. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:48:48Yeah, thanks. So I think from a sales pipeline, as we tried to articulate, was very, very robust, continues to be very robust. So not just for CORE itself, but for the products that we have created. That level of innovation related to financial crimes into pay center components, to what I just described as enterprise account origination, a lot of those key revenue products that continue to grow at a nice pace at that 9.8 that we referenced are hugely continue to be in demand. I think when you look at where the challenge was related to what we were trying to describe in the non key revenue, again, it's really that one off stuff, the things that we don't control for timing, and things that are typically done on a more as needed basis than a must have basis. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:49:42And that's really where a lot of that delay happened. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:49:44So I would point to the strategic benchmark survey that Greg mentioned in his opening remarks. That's up on the Jack Henry investor website and available, that talks about the three top priorities for both banks and credit union CEOs continuing to be around gathering deposits, accounts, efficiency. But the longer term trends that we've talked about over several quarters now around digital, around fraud, and around payments tend to be dramatically the largest demand that we're seeing. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:50:20Okay. Okay. All right. Thanks, guys. Operator00:50:27Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Kartik Mehta from Northcoast Research. Please go ahead. Kartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast Research00:50:34Hey, good morning. Greg, I know you talked a little bit about, the delays a lot actually. I'm just wondering, has that, been reflected at all in your conversations with financial institutions on their core decisions? Is it are they kind of waiting at all to make those decisions? Or is that still business as usual and it's only really impacting these smaller projects? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:51:03So Kartik, so it's 100% on the smaller nonrecurring, non must have type products or hardware purchases, which can be delayed another quarter for them or delayed because of their evaluation of moving to the private cloud. That's really what it is. When you look at the core component, when you think about a core deal that takes typically anywhere from twelve to eighteen months to even go through the sales cycle on normal time, because most people are looking multiple years out from when their contract actually expires. So those decisions have not slowed down at all. And again, I'm very bullish about our success rates for next quarter based on what I've already seen and what I know is coming. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:51:53So I don't see that as any part of the challenge. It's really just these if it wasn't the end of the third quarter, we may not be talking about some of these, but some of them are going to move into the next fiscal year, and that's where the challenge comes. Kartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast Research00:52:10And Greg, I know earlier in the call you talked about the SMB product, and obviously you have this partnership with Move. And I'm wondering how that's going. I think you anticipated hopefully it would generate some revenue going into next fiscal year. And I'm wondering if you've seen any uptake on the product or any update there? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:52:31Yeah, so our Jack Henry rapid transfers, we've rolled out. We have three clients in what we call a closed beta, but we are now taking active enrollments from all of our clients. So there's a process they have to go through for Jack Henry rapid transfers that goes through our operational. It's not a contractual thing they have to go, but there is an operational component. So that's starting to move. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:52:55We're very excited. Got a lot of fanfare and comments at our strategic insights meeting last week in Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:53:02particular. Excuse me. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:53:04And then on the merchant acquiring side, as I mentioned, partnership with Move, we will have two clients and maybe more in a closed beta in June and moving. Then our expectation is to try to roll that out to everybody by the end of the first quarter of fiscal year twenty twenty six. So we're working through that process as well. But again, the interest level from not only our clients, but some of our distribution partners that we compete with, there's a lot of interest there. And actually, we've been talking to some non Jack Henry clients, some very large non Jack Henry clients that are very interested in the product as well. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:53:46So like I said, the interest level is there, and we are on track, as we stated, to roll that out in our first phase in June of this year. Kartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast Research00:53:56Perfect. I really appreciate it. Thank you. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:53:59Thanks, Kartik. Operator00:54:02Thank you. We have the next question from line of Andrew Schmidt from Citi. Please go ahead. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:54:09Hey, Greg, Mimi, Vance. Thank you for taking the questions. And I appreciate the comments on the total level of assets that you've wanted, this important distinction versus number of FIs. So appreciate that. I know a lot of questions have been asked in the demand environment and I'll ask in a slightly different way. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:54:26I understand that these are long term decisions and obviously a lot of confidence in terms of near term conversions. Have there been any changes in terms of up the mid to upper funnel when we think about just how FIs are working through the decision making process? Just curious when we get I know it's a little bit early, but just curious in terms of the earlier part of the funnel, if you're seeing anything there. Thanks so much. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:54:53Yeah, it's a great question. And thank you for calling out the addition of the asset size. We thought it was important to share that what we're talking about is actually happening. But related to your question, I have not I talk to the sales folks and our sales leaders literally every week, and there hasn't been anything that has come to my attention from them that has said that anything in the lower half, the middle half, or the ending half of making decisions has slowed down. Because again, a lot of those decisions do not necessarily take place for an installation for six, nine, twelve, or twenty four months, depending on core or what it is. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:55:36So we have not seen any real elongation of the sales cycle at all. It's just been these short term projects, as I mentioned before. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:55:45Got it. Super helpful. And then when we think about just the headwinds that you're seeing, obviously a lot of this, you mentioned is timing, but we have seen in previous cycles that discretionary projects get pulled back and sometimes they don't materialize for some time. So is there an element how large is that discretionary component versus non discretionary component when we think about just the headwinds that we're seeing here? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:56:14Yeah. The interesting thing is and Mimi and I have commented on this before so these are contractual arrangements that they have. And we do have some clocks that tick to a certain point in time where we can literally start billing the customer at a certain point in time if the delay goes longer than it's expected. And so they haven't reached those thresholds and won't in the quarter. But the reality is because they're contracted and because there's an approach that we've taken with these, we literally could start billing our customers even if they didn't implement. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:56:52And that's something that we can do. So I don't foresee any of these being things that get delayed or they try to cancel or things like that, because it's things that they need. As I mentioned, the one that seems to happen a little bit more is that a customer that has our Yellowhammer product that wants to move to financial crimes, that needs some consulting and other things that go with part of the implementation, we've seen some delays in those. And so we've worked with our clients. They're already clients of ours using some of our products. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:57:24But that's where some of that delay has happened. A little bit in some of our pay center products and payment initiatives as well, and trying to get folks to use, say, the come on with our send capabilities or, you know, most of them have received but moving to send capabilities, things like that. But again, that's wholesale of a challenge. It's not core implementations and things along that line. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:57:51Morning, Andrew. The only thing other that I would add from just a macro sense, as we always talk about, regardless of interest rate environment, regardless of economic conditions, the challenges facing financial institutions today are going to be solved through technology. It's not going to be solved through adding more bodies. Whether technology is the only part of the solution or the bulk of the solution, we feel pretty confident in the continuation of the demand. And the reality is, if you have an ROI, it's compelling. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:58:33And we just thought in our strategic benchmark survey that efficiency is one of the top priorities. So if you show the ROI, they will spend. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:58:45Absolutely. Now, that's great comments. Appreciate the help, Greg and Mimi. Thanks so much. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:58:51Of course. Operator00:58:54Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Andrew Botch from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo00:59:02Hey, thank you for squeezing me in here. Just wanted to revisit how this business operates through recycle. I know I appreciate the defensiveness and the recurring nature of all of it. But if we were to go into a more pronounced recession, how do we will we impact how would we kind of handicap the impact there? Is it just the trends that you would see today would be more pronounced? Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo00:59:26Would there be changes to kind of the core pricing strategy? Just trying to understand the recessionary scenario. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:59:35Andrew, appreciate in this certainly a dynamic environment, it's a really meaningful question. First of all, would say, and no one asked the question specifically, but I would say relative to tariff exposure, we're certainly lucky to have very limited exposure to shifts in policy. As a company, we're monitoring our vendor pricing and resource availability, as well as costs. For example, prescription costs for our associates. We do have very limited exposure on the direct. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:00:10I think where more of the exposure is in general to our industry is on the commercial side of the business. We're all watching the health of businesses in The US. So through things like our remit business and our enterprise payments businesses that serve those commercial customers, as well as indirect through lending, things like BANO business and treasury. But the reality is, this is not a global financial crisis. The banks are well capitalized, have really learned their lesson in terms of mortgage origination and credit extension. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:00:49They're working their way through various interest rate cycles, but we're not anticipating any mass closures of financial institutions. And as we said earlier, they need to continue to serve their account holders and members. They need to continue to drive efficiency. Fraud is top of mind for these institutions. Digital experience as well. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:01:16So a lot of them, because of the nature of the competitive market with the largest financial institutions in the country, they need to continue to innovate regardless of the economic cycle to retain their account holders and make sure that they get on the other side of the economic situation healthier and stronger. Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo01:01:39Understood. And then if I could, just my follow-up question. Just wanted to put a finer point on the consolidation activity you've been seeing. Could you give us a sense on the a little bit more around what you're seeing? Is it from a bank size, be it AUM? Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo01:01:56Is it across banks versus credit unions? Just additional, like a little bit more targeted on where you're seeing that activity pick up. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:02:05Yeah, so the activity really is spread. So you probably have seen, and it continues to happen. There are credit unions continuing to buy banks. In fact, we had a credit union of a competitor buy one of our banks recently, And that has continued to happen. We'll see if that continues to happen long term based on some of the things that they're trying to do in the market related to credit unions. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:02:31But what I would say, I think we have been really well positioned, as I mentioned earlier, just because we've continued to grow the asset size. So we're seeing we've won things that we call winter mergers, where we've actually had an institution acquired by a competitor's institution. But because of the technology and innovation and products that we've delivered, they've made the decision to actually switch to Jack Henry versus maintaining their existing core or complementary products. And again, we don't win them all, but we've won more than our fair share. And that continues to be the trend. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:03:07And I expect that because when you look at what's going on in the industry today, and I recognize that our competition is working their way back into focusing on this space where they weren't for many years, we've never lost our focus. And so our focus on this space over the last six or seven years has been unmatched. And when you look at what folks, including what was in the ABA core survey, which I highly recommend all of you to go look at, it was significant differences between us competition and how our customers view us versus how their customers view them. And so as those kind of mentions continue to get out, it continues to help our sales pipeline, our execution, and things along that. That's why all of these things that we've tried to articulate that are happening today, we truly believe are short term things. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:04:05We've got to work through the macroeconomic stuff that we can't control. But the other things that we have, we believe are short term. Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo01:04:13Great. Greg, Mimi, thank you. Operator01:04:18Thank you. We have the next question from the line of James Faucette from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. James FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan Stanley01:04:26Great. Thank you very much and apologies for the background noise. Just wanted to follow-up on that comment there, Greg, around competition and competitive intensity. Just wondering how that's if you've seen that manifest at all in terms of like your engagements or win rates or even pricing intensity thus far, and how you're expecting that to evolve, especially as there does seem to be some increased focus from historical competitors. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:04:54Yes. Hey, James. Good to hear from you. I think a couple of things. We continue to see the pricing sensitivity, as we've mentioned in other calls and really even other years. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:05:09That hasn't significantly changed. Again, our win rates continue to be by far the best in the industry. As I mentioned, we're winning larger deals, which means we're winning those from them. So that continues to be a good benchmark for your question. But I will say that they get aggressive in many times trying to keep their customers. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:05:35And so there's times where we may walk away from a particular deal if that gets to be too rich for our blood. But I will tell you that I haven't seen anything strategically change in the market from what they're doing. Obviously, one of them has a brand new CEO that was just formally announced. The other one has made some strategic decisions to rid themselves of one of their businesses and have talked that they're going to get more focused on our space. So time will tell, but I can tell you as of right now and where we are in our pipeline and where we've been with customer feedback and prospect feedback, because I do go to a lot of our large prospect opportunities, I haven't seen any level of concern on our part as of today. James FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan Stanley01:06:29That's great color. And then I guess associated with that, just want to ask back on Banno, how has traction trended with Banno business? I know it's early, but can you update us on the go to market, particularly given some of implications on the competitive front and how you're thinking about that as a product enhancement to the portfolio? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:06:51Yes, again, another good question and one that we're highly focused on. So we do have over two seventy clients now live on Banno Business, and a little over 1,000 on the platform itself. So that continues to roll out. We're really pushing to that feature parity that I've been talking about since the last Investor Day in September. We expect to see that this summer, as I mentioned, as well. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:07:19And I think that will be a real turning point for us to not only be able continue to win more in our own core base, but to take it outside the Jack Henry core base. We've been, as I mentioned, very strategic in our approach, but also on the timing. We don't want to go out and try to sell something to a competitive core base until we're ready. And that'll happen later this fall. So long story short is very much a big part of what we're doing. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:07:52And candidly, it will play a big part in what we're doing in our SMB strategy as well. James FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan Stanley01:07:59Thanks for that, Greg. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:08:01Sure. Operator01:08:05Thank you. We have the next question from the line of John Davis from Raymond James. Please go ahead. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:08:12Hey, good morning guys. Greg, just wanted to circle back on core wins and I'll echo Andrew's comments that the asset size is helpful. You've historically given us kind of number of wins, now you're giving us assets. But I guess the real question and maybe you can help us directionally think about ACV, right? So if assets year to date are up almost 50%, I'm sure ACV is not up 50%. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:08:34But how do we think about number versus assets? And like what really matters is kind of dollars of revenue contracted? And so maybe just help us directionally kind of correlate the asset size to kind of an ACV. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:08:49Yeah, I mean, JD, it's a good question. I think it's very difficult to every core deal is its own core deal. So some of it is timing what other products they have. Some of it is folks have best of breed approaches. Some have best of suite approaches. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:09:10But every single deal literally has its own nuances to that. And so I think it's really hard for us to button that up and just say, hey, if we want a 100,000,000,000 deal and we want a billion dollar deal, doesn't necessarily mean that the $100,000,000,000 deal long term is going to bring 100 times the revenue. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:09:34Right. But I guess it's safe to say that asset is more important than number. Is that a fair assessment? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:09:43Well, Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:09:45also ranges based on retail and commercial based customers. So sometimes a larger asset institution is more commercially focused and has less accounts. So depending on the type of bank or credit union it is, and whether it's more retail focused or commercial focused. So that's why I'm saying there's such an ebb and flow related to asset pricing, per account pricing, number of attach rates on the products that it brings, and all those. So it just isn't that easy to just give you a complete single answer to that. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:10:26Okay. No, understood. Mimi, one quick one for you on margins. How should we think about the margin implication of kind of the non strategic revenue runoff? Is this lower margin business and therefore, it could be a margin tailwind as that kind of revenue rolls off? John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:10:44Or is it higher margin? Just help us think about that and any impact that may have had not only this quarter but for the full year guide as well. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:10:54So I would say generally, JZ, the non core rather non key non strategic revenue tends to be lower margin mix. It has things like hardware. It has things like some of the consulting that is less software oriented and tends to be lower margin on the whole. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:11:20Okay. Thanks. And I want to John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:11:21squeeze one last quick one in, I can. Mimi, free cash flow. I think the midpoint of your guide would imply free cash flow below 100 in the fiscal fourth quarter. At least in my model going back, it's never been below, I think, like 120,000,000 So just curious if there's anything specific around free cash flow that you see coming in the fourth quarter that we should be aware of or any other comments there would be helpful. Thanks. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:11:44Well, it wouldn't have been an earnings call if we didn't have a free cash flow. So I'm glad we were able to squeeze that one in, JD. I would say we're on a healthy pace. As you know, the trailing twelve month or an annual view is the best view to look at from a free cash flow perspective, rather than any quarterly. Year to date, free cash flow of $139,000,000 definitely on track. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:12:11We're at 71% from a conversion, so on track to that guide of the 65 to 75. And as we've talked about, that's a multi year journey back to that eighty, ninety, one hundred plus type of territory, as we're now starting to rebuild solidly the cost basis for the R and D related expenditures, and we have greater clarity from a tax policy perspective. On the trailing 12, the prior year had some reflected of overtax payment benefits on the prior year, plus there's a touch more on CapEx in the current TTM. But we feel pretty good about staying on track here and hitting the guide for the full year. That's why we kept it unchanged. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:13:02Okay. Thanks, guys. Operator01:13:06Thank you. This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back to Van Sherrod, the Vice President, for closing remarks. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates01:13:17Thank you, Myron. We appreciate all the interest in today's call. And in the upcoming weeks, management is planning to attend investor events across The U. S, providing additional availability for in person meetings. We would like to again thank all Jack Henry associates for their outstanding efforts and dedication, which have contributed to our solid results. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates01:13:36Thank you for joining us today. Myron, please provide the replay number. Operator01:13:42Sure. Thank you very much. The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesVance SherardVP - IRGregory AdelsonCEO & PresidentMimi CarsleyCFO & TreasurerAnalystsDan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsRayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill LynchDarrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLCKartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast ResearchAndrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at CitiAndrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells FargoJames FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan StanleyJohn DavisManaging Director at Raymond James FinancialPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallJack Henry & Associates Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K) Jack Henry & Associates Earnings HeadlinesZacks Research Issues Pessimistic Forecast for JKHY EarningsMay 8 at 2:30 AM | americanbankingnews.comJack Henry & Associates Inc (JKHY) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Highlights: Strong Revenue Growth ...May 8 at 2:26 AM | gurufocus.comTrump to redistribute trillions of dollars Seeing how the media and other analysts are covering Trump’s actions – it’s laughable. At least it would be laughable if it wasn’t putting so many Americans’ financial futures at severe risk… That’s why, with the 100-day mark of Trump’s second term just days away, it’s time to shine a light on what’s really going on, because if you move your money out of the wrong places and into the right ones before it’s too late… …you could be one of the few who profits from this imminent trillion-dollar reset.May 8, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Jack Henry’s Earnings Call: Mixed Sentiments Amid GrowthMay 7 at 8:36 PM | tipranks.comJack Henry & Associates, Inc. (JKHY) Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 7 at 12:13 PM | seekingalpha.comJack Henry & Associates, Inc. Reports Third Quarter Fiscal 2025 ResultsMay 6 at 5:47 PM | gurufocus.comSee More Jack Henry & Associates Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Jack Henry & Associates? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Jack Henry & Associates and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Jack Henry & AssociatesJack Henry & Associates (NASDAQ:JKHY) is a financial technology company, which engages in the provision of technology solutions and payment processing services. It operates through the following segments: Core, Payments, Complementary, and Corporate and Other. The Core segment provides core information processing platforms to banks and credit unions which consist of integrated applications required to process deposit, loan, and general ledger transactions, and maintain centralized customer and member information. The Payments segment includes secure payment processing tools and services including ATM, debit, and credit card processing services, online and mobile bill pay solutions, ACH origination and remote deposit capture processing, and risk management products and services. The Complementary segment focuses on additional software, hosted processing platforms, and services including call center support, network security management, consulting, and monitoring. The Corporate and Other segment offers hardware and other products. The company was founded by Jerry D. Hall and John W. Henry in 1976 and is headquartered in Monett, MO.View Jack Henry & Associates ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Disney Stock Jumps on Earnings—Is the Magic Sustainable?Archer Stock Eyes Q1 Earnings After UAE UpdatesFord Motor Stock Rises After Earnings, But Momentum May Not Last Broadcom Stock Gets a Lift on Hyperscaler Earnings & CapEx BoostPalantir Stock Drops Despite Stellar Earnings: What's Next?Is Eli Lilly a Buy After Weak Earnings and CVS-Novo Partnership?Is Reddit Stock a Buy, Sell, or Hold After Earnings Release? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the Jack Henry and Associates Inc. Third quarter fiscal year twenty twenty five results conference call. All participants will be in the listen only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, may press and 1 on your touch tone phone. Operator00:00:24To withdraw your question, you may press and 2. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Vanshirad, the Vice President. Thank you, and over to you. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates00:00:37Thank you, Myron. Good morning, and thank you for joining the Jack Henry third quarter fiscal twenty twenty five earnings call. Joining me today are Greg Adelson, President and CEO and Mimi Carsley, CFO and Treasurer. Following my opening remarks, Greg will share his insights and observations on our quarter and year to date financial results, operational metrics and outlook. Mimi will then discuss the financial results provided in yesterday's press release, which is available in the Investor Relations section of the Jack Henry website. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates00:01:11Afterward, we will open the lines for a Q and A session. Please note that this call includes forward looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. The company is not obligated to update or revise these statements. For a summary of risk factors and additional information that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward looking statements, refer to yesterday's press release and the Risk Factors and Forward Looking Statements sections in our 10 ks. During this call, we will discuss non GAAP financial measures such as non GAAP revenue and non GAAP operating income. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates00:01:51Reconciliations for these measures are included in yesterday's press release. Now I will turn the call over to Greg. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:01:58Thank you, Vance. Good morning, I appreciate each of you joining the call. I'd like to begin by thanking our associates for their hard work and dedication to our success, consistently going above and beyond in taking care of our clients. Our commitment to people first culture, service excellence, technology innovation, and a clear strategy backed by consistent execution continues to differentiate us in the market. I will share three main takeaways from the quarter, and then we'll provide additional detail about our overall business. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:02:29First, our financial performance. Our third quarter fiscal year twenty twenty five results reflect solid overall performance. Our non GAAP revenue increased 7% and our non GAAP operating margin was 23%, representing an impressive two zero seven basis points of margin expansion over last year. In terms of GAAP revenue, we are starting to see an increase in M and A activity and our Q3 deconversion revenue was $9,600,000 We expect a continuation of increased deconversion revenue in Q4, thus we are forecasting a full year deconversion revenue range of 22,000,000 to $28,000,000 Second, our fiscal twenty five guidance. As you saw in the press release and with three quarters now closed, we adjusted our full year guidance for GAAP and non GAAP revenue, margin expansion and EPS. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:03:25Despite revenue revisions, our primary or key revenue consistent mostly of processing and cloud was 76% of total revenue for the quarter and grew at 9.8% versus a growth rate of 8.8% for Q3 fiscal year twenty four. The adjusted non GAAP revenue guidance is primarily due to macroeconomic concerns and the softening of non strategic revenue such as hardware purchases and consulting engagements. As most of you know, hardware is sold to our in house processing clients at a time they desire to add or replace equipment. Similar to hardware purchases, we are seeing some customers delay the start of signed non recurring projects. Examples include one off work orders and the implementation of post core conversion products in our complementary and payment segments. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:04:21We are also seeing some softening in debit card transactions, which is similar to what the card associations experienced in their U. S. Debit businesses. Based on these factors and what we have seen through April, we felt it was necessary to lower our revenue guidance. However, due to our key revenue growth and higher incremental margins, as well as our disciplined approach to expense management, project prioritization and capital expenditures, we have increased our GAAP and non GAAP guidance on margin expansion and EPS growth. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:04:55Mimi will provide more details in her comments. Third, we are continuing to win larger competitive core deals. Over the past two years, the aggregate assets of competitive new core takeaways have more than doubled. This is important to note since our core revenue models include asset based and per account pricing options, both benefiting from larger institution wins. To date this fiscal year, we have secured 28 new core wins, including 11 in Q3, with financial institutions totaling 30,000,000,000 in assets. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:05:32This compares to 35 core transactions totaling $21,000,000,000 in assets at this time last year, and 31 core deals totaling $14,000,000,000 in assets two years ago. Our core and total pipeline remain very strong, and we will see a significant increase in competitive core wins in Q4 over the previous three quarters. We can expect a win total similar to what we did in Q4 last year, and again, with larger asset financial institutions. In addition to core wins, we are seeing a similar trend in migrations of existing customers for in house processing to our private cloud. This fiscal year to date, we have contracted to migrate 26 clients, including seven in Q3 that total $42,000,000,000 in assets. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:06:22That compares to 29 clients with $27,000,000,000 in assets at this time last year, representing a 55% increase in assets. We currently have 76% of our clients processing in the Jack Henry private cloud environment. Our success with new core wins and migration aligns well with the core platform survey results published by the American Bankers Association in February. For the first time, the ABA named the core providers. Previously, they used generic labels like company A, B and C. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:06:54The title of the report is all core platform providers are not the same, and we wholeheartedly agree. Jack Henry scored near the top across multiple categories, and when the respondents were asked what matters most in a core provider, innovation and customer service topped the list. Definitely two key differentiators for Jack Henry. Turning to specific product and strategy updates, I will comment on the payments and complementary segments followed by providing updates on technology modernization, our new SMB solutions, and our annual benchmark survey results. In our payment segment, we continue to experience strong growth with our faster payment solutions. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:07:36Over the past year, we've grown the number of FIs using Zelle by 10%, the clearinghouse's RTP network by 37%, and FedNow by 96%. We now have three fifty four clients on the Zelle platform representing 14% of FIs using Zelle, three eighty four clients on RTP representing 43% of FIs using RTP, and three seventy clients on FedNow representing 26% of FIs using FedNow. In our complementary segment, 32 contracts were signed in the quarter for Financial Crimes Defender or FCD Faster Payment Fraud Module, a real time solution designed to mitigate fraud in Zelle RTP and FedNow transactions. As of the March, we have installed 115 Financial Crimes Defender customers and have another 83 in various stages of implementation. We also have 69 faster payment modules installed and 160 in various stages of implementation. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:08:39Our Banno digital platform continues to experience healthy growth with 29 new Banno platform contracts in the quarter. At the March, we had more than 1,000 Banno platform clients, including two seventy live with Banno business. We finished the quarter with more than 13,700,000 registered users on the Banno platform. At the end of Q3 last year, we had 11,600,000 registered users, an 18% increase over the past twelve months. Regarding our technology modernization, we continue to execute very well and ahead of schedule on our core strategy for the new public cloud native Jack Henry platform. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:09:20We are now live in various stages with 15 components. Some of these are only used internally to eliminate duplication of development costs across the company, but most are utilized by our clients and are getting favorable reviews. As a result of the efforts of our development teams, we remain on track to deliver our public cloud native consumer and commercial deposit only core in the first half of calendar year 2026, which will be about six months ahead of what we communicated in February of twenty twenty two. Another example of our technology modernization progress is our new enterprise deposit and loan account opening solution. This technology enables banks and credit unions to grow loans and deposits by streamlining processes, automating workflows, and better serving retail and business clients through a single digital deposit and loan account opening experience. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:10:15We have initiated our closed beta process with two clients, and we'll continue to add more early adopter clients over the coming months. Another area of focus that the industry is excited about is our small and medium sized business strategy. A key aspect of our strategy is to only provide the service directly to financial institutions, allowing them to recapture high value deposits and service the needs of their account holders. Our initial offering called Jack Henry Rapid Transfers is in closed beta with three clients. We are currently extending availability to all Banno customers and actively enrolling clients through our digital operations team. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:10:56Jack Henry Rapid Transfers enables both SMBs and consumers to instantly move funds between external accounts, eligible cards and digital wallets. We are collaborating with both Visa and MasterCard to facilitate these transactions through their respective debit rails. The second offering is our unique merchant acquiring solution in partnership with Move. This solution delivers many distinguishing features for merchants, including instant decisioning, tap to pay for both iOS and Android devices, the option to receive settlement funds up to eight times per day, and continuous account reconciliation to the accounting platform of their choice. We are on track for a closed beta in June with two BANO clients. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:11:43We are also currently working on several additional phases to our SMB strategy as we expect to continue to deliver new functionality and solutions over the next eighteen to twenty four months to both Jack Henry and non Jack Henry core institutions. We recently released our seventh annual 2025 strategy benchmark survey. While we track many industry surveys, this one stands out because it reflects insights directly from the CEOs of our own bank and credit union clients. The survey indicated that 76% of our bank and credit union clients plan to increase technology spending over the next two years. Of those, the largest segment, 33% plans to increase investments between 610%. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:12:32We also asked where they expect to invest over the next two years. The top three areas identified were digital banking, fraud prevention, and enhancing efficiency through automation. All areas where Jack Henry has been investing and executing with innovative solutions such as the Banno platform, Financial Crimes Defender and the digital deposit and loan account opening solution that I mentioned earlier. It's worth noting that the survey was conducted in January and February prior to April's market volatility. However, we did spend a significant amount of time speaking with our clients about the current environment at our strategic insights event last week in Minneapolis. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:13:13Much of what we learned in the survey still holds true for them today. Banks and credit unions are generally concerned about the impact of tariffs on their commercial clients, especially SMBs. They remain optimistic overall and see expected regulatory relief as a positive as well. Our clients continue to suggest that M and A activity is picking up, and we are also seeing an increase in our clients making acquisitions, which presents additional revenue opportunities in the future. In closing, we remain excited and confident that our unwavering approach to culture, service, innovation, strategy and execution will continue to enable Jack Henry to drive industry revenue growth and margin expansion through this evolving macro environment. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:14:01We have a robust sales pipeline and a proven ability to attract and win deals, especially with larger financial institutions. We will continue to evaluate acquisitions that will accelerate or complement our strategy, remain disciplined in our expense management, and continue to rationalize products that fall in our non key revenue segment. In short, we remain well positioned for the future. With that, I'll turn it over to Mimi for more detail on the financials. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:14:30Thank you, Greg, and good morning, everyone. I want to open by thanking the dedicated Jack Henry team for their steadfast focus on execution and support of our clients. While the quarter results differed modestly from our fiscal year expectations, it was another quarter of solid revenue and earnings growth. I will discuss the details behind our third quarter and year to date results, then conclude with commentary on our updated fiscal 'twenty five guidance. Q3 GAAP and non GAAP revenue increased 97%, respectively, with GAAP revenue outperformance driven by notable uptick in deconversion revenue. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:15:11Despite strong performance in previously identified key areas, overall non GAAP revenue growth was tempered by lower non key revenue growth, especially from a slowdown in hardware sales and non reoccurring revenue from customer projects. Excluding hardware impact, Q3 non GAAP revenue growth would have been 8%. Quarterly deconversion revenue of approximately $9,600,000 which we released prior to full earnings, increased $8,800,000 compared to the same period last year, reflecting an accelerating pace of consolidation in the industry. In light of year to date results and fourth quarter pending agreements, we have raised our full year deconversion guidance to a range of $22,000,000 to 28,000,000 Financial institution M and A activity will have minimal non GAAP impact in fiscal 'twenty five, but potential for a meaningful impact in fiscal 'twenty six. Now, looking closer to the quarterly results. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:16:18In the quarter, GAAP and non GAAP services and support revenue increased 86%, respectively. Data processing and hosting continue to dominate services and support revenue growth for the quarter and year to date. Hardware revenue was down $4,000,000 in the quarter and $11,000,000 year to date, creating headwinds for services and support revenue. As a reminder, hardware revenue is both nonrecurring and low visibility, making it a part of non key revenue. Our private and public cloud offerings increased 11 in the quarter, reflecting strong persistent new install and existing FI growth trends. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:17:04This reoccurring revenue growth contributor is 33% of our total revenue and continues to be a double digit growth engine. Moving to processing revenue, which is 43% quarterly revenue and a significant contributor to our long term growth model, we saw strong performance with 9% growth on both a GAAP and non GAAP basis for the quarter. Continuing long term trends, quarterly drivers include increased card, digital and payment processing revenues. Completing commentary on revenue, I would highlight quarterly total reoccurring revenue, excluding deconversion revenue, was 92%. We focus on key revenue, which is comprised of our strategic reoccurring revenue. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:17:56Non key revenue includes lower growth and margin solutions that are typically non reoccurring or not aligned to our future strategic direction, yet often support existing operations. Quarterly key revenue was 78% of total non GAAP revenue, and grew a robust 10%. The year to date key revenue was 75% of total non GAAP revenues, with continued momentum producing healthy growth of 9%. Quarterly non key revenue makes up the remaining non GAAP revenue, and during the quarter and year to date has contracted 2%, creating a headwind to total growth. While Jack Henry is not immune to the broader macroeconomic challenges, the high reoccurring revenue, long term contracts, and critical functionality of our products ensure the resiliency of our business model. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:18:52We are well positioned regardless of economic conditions. Next, moving to expenses. Starting with cost of revenue, which increased 4% on a GAAP basis and 3% on a non GAAP basis during the quarter. The quarterly increase was due to higher direct costs, internal licenses and fees, which partly offset by an increase in labor cost deferrals. For clarification and to assist with models, the amortization of acquisition related intangibles was $6,000,000 in the quarter. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:19:27Next, R and D expense increased 9% on both a GAAP and non GAAP basis for the quarter. The quarterly increase was primarily related to net personnel costs. Ending with SG and A expense, it increased 7% for the quarter on a GAAP basis, and 5% on a non GAAP basis is also related to an increase in net personnel costs. We remain focused on prioritization, cost efficiencies, and effective utilization of our workforce that will result in annually compounding margin expansion. We are pleased to report that the quarter delivered two zero seven basis point increase in non GAAP margin to 23%. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:20:14We remain confident in our ability to deliver margin expansion and have increased the full year guide. These solid quarterly operating results produced a fully diluted GAAP earnings per share of $1.52 up 28%. Reviewing the three operating segments, we are pleased with core segment key revenue performance, monitoring payments for consumer sentiment impacts, and continue to benefit from strong complementary performance. Core segment increased 6% for the quarter on a non GAAP basis due to the headwinds from license and credit union hardware that rolls up into this segment. On a key basis, the segment revenue grew 11%, a 10 basis point increase over the prior period. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:21:05Core segment performance primarily came from organic growth in data processing and hosting, partly offset by lower maintenance fee revenue and credit union related hardware, the result of our core clients continuing to shift from on premise to private cloud. Non GAAP segment income margin for core increased 141 basis points from improved operating leverage. Payment segment non GAAP quarterly revenue increased 7% and saw non GAAP segment income margin growth of 59 basis points. Performance was due to continued higher card revenue for volume, increased payment processing revenue, including FedNow, RTP, Zelle, and elevated EPS payments. Margins in the payment segment also benefited from ongoing improvement to operating leverage. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:22:02Finally, complementary segment quarterly non GAAP revenue increased 10% from strong product mix with digital and hosting revenue driving growth momentum. Segment margins strongly expanded 64 basis points from the high incremental margin of reoccurring revenue and SaaS like nature of our business model. Now let's turn to a review of cash flow and capital allocation. Third quarter operating cash flow was $108,000,000 a $10,000,000 increase over the prior year's period. Strong cash flow reflects higher profitability from operations and increased deconversion revenue, partly offset by higher tax payments. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:22:49Trailing twelve month free cash flow was a hearty $3.00 $3,000,000 resulting in a 71% conversion, in line with the full year guidance range. Our dedication to value creation resulted in a trailing twelve month return on invested capital of 20%. This is a nice improvement, and we expect to see this increase returning to historic levels in the near future. For the quarter, we repurchased $18,000,000 of Jack Henry shares, aligned with our constructive outlook for future Jack Henry growth. As we move towards the close of fiscal 'twenty five, I will conclude with comments on full year guidance and other operating metrics. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:23:36Yesterday's press release included adjusted fiscal twenty twenty five full year GAAP guidance, along with a reconciliation to our adjusted non GAAP guidance metric. While the press release also included a fiscal 'twenty five non GAAP EPS metric, this is not intended to be a new guidance metric. The purpose is to provide additional clarity on our numbers, and it should be noted that a 24% tax rate is used. Given the current dynamic macroeconomic environment, including early signs of softness of consumer related payments, we are adopting a more cautious stance for the remainder of the fiscal year. Updated full year guidance metric and outlook include full year deconversion revenue of $22,000,000 to $28,000,000 up from $16,000,000 non GAAP revenue growth of 6% to 6.5%, lowered from 7% to 8%. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:24:34Non GAAP margin expansion of 60 to 70 basis points increased from 25 to 40. A tax rate of 23% decreased from 24%. GAAP EPS of $6 to $6.09 up from $5.78 to $5.87 representing annual growth of 15% to 17%. Outlook for full year free cash flow conversion is unchanged at 65 to 75%. And outlook for full year return on invested capital is 21% to 22%, based on expected lower debt at the end of the fiscal year. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:25:19The appropriate performance indicator for our business continues to be the full fiscal year financial results. In conclusion, we are seeing modest headwinds to non key revenue items that impact our consolidated results and near term outlook. Still, we remain confident as the key parts of our business continue to perform strongly and position us for continued growth. Our focus remains on delivering long term profitable growth at scale through compounding revenue growth and margin expansion. In pursuing these goals, we appreciate the achievement of our approximately 7,200 dedicated associates and our investors for their ongoing confidence. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:26:07Byron, please open the line for questions. Operator00:26:11Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw a question, please press star and then 2. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Operator00:26:42We have the first question from the line of Dan Perlin from RBC. Please go ahead. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:26:48Thanks. Good morning. So I wanted to get back to the question obviously around like large capital purchases for hardware being down. Completely understand that. The question is, are you seeing similar restraints when it comes to your more modernized projects and cloud migration? Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:27:04So, are you starting to hear elongated implementation cycles in that kind of area? Or is it really just this non recurring stuff that we're seeing right now? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:27:13Hey, Dan. Yeah, so it's almost all in the non recurring stuff. We are seeing a little bit in some of the complementary and payment products that I mentioned. So mostly in what we would call day two or post conversion, where folks have a product set that they're either waiting contract to terminate with a competitor, or they have an existing Jack Henry product, which is the case in most of these, where they're just delaying putting the new one on. So let's say Yellowhammer to our Financial Crimes Defender product, which by the way also affects some consulting revenue because the consulting revenue goes hand in hand with the Financial Crimes Defender stuff. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:27:57So there's some examples of that. We're not really seeing any real delays in, like as you described, from somebody going from in house to outsource. They usually fill those gaps and want to take advantage of them. But I also do want to remind you that we see delays regularly throughout the year, but because there's only one quarter left, and where we are with kind of the environment, especially with pure hardware sales, where folks that are in house that are wanting to buy hardware, and looking to either delay that decision for one of two reasons. One, that they want to wait to kind of see timing wise and see if they have an opportunity to wait as long as they can to make those purchases. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:28:40But the other side is actually a really good reason, which is several of those folks are evaluating moving to our private cloud. And it's through that evaluation they've also made decisions to delay those purchases as well. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:28:54Interesting. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:28:55Yes, that's great color. Just a quick follow-up for Mimi. Mimi, talked about M and A impacts being really kind of de minimis to this year, but you took the opportunity to kind of throw out that there could be impacts to non GAAP revenue growth for '26. So I'm just wondering if you want to put any kind of context or a finer point around that point. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:29:14Thank you. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:29:17Thank you, Dan, for the question. So yes, as we talked about, we have line of sight through known when people sign the deconversion agreement. That's when we start from a revenue recognition perspective when folks are leaving. I would say we have seen an acceleration in that merger activity, roughly around 30 clients. The majority of these have been Jack Henry to Jack Henry mergers. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:29:46And typically, they're cloud customers. So fantastic that we're retaining that revenue. There can be a little bit of a modest pricing impact from a tiered pricing perspective. What usually comes later in the merger cycle, so when it's a Jack Henry client doing the acquisition, we get notified pretty early on in the cycle they want to secure their slot. What happens when it's a Jack Henry customer getting acquired away to another platform? Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:30:16We tend to hear about that a little later in the cycle, as well as the convert merge services that we help them with during that consolidation, when it's our clients doing this acquisition, are usually a little later post approval cycle. That's why we're not really expecting to see much of that impact in FY twenty five, but you would see more of that probably longer in the improvement cycle. We're only a couple months into the administration, we haven't seen a radical shift in the timing being shrunken from an approval cycle. So as more deals happen, and you get a little longer in that implementation and close of those deals, is where we would expect to see the impact to our revenue from a positive perspective, as well as any services that we would perform for them. Just a final note on the point, on that convert merge related Jack Henry to Jack Henry cloud, any of that, you won't see any lumpiness, because that is spread out over the remaining life of the contract. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:31:31So, it's doubtful that you would see anything noticeable in any one quarter. Dan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:36Great color. Thank you so much. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:31:39Of course. Operator00:31:42Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Rayna Kumar from Evercore. Please go ahead. Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:31:50Hi, Greg and Mimi. And, yeah, it's actually Oppenheimer now. Just in terms of the project delays that you experienced in the third quarter, what are you hearing on a timeline? Like, are these projects that could come in later this year? Is this Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:32:03maybe a next year event? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:32:06Yeah. Hey, Rayna. So yeah, just you're right on. So where we are at the end of the year, like I said, this happens throughout the year on a regular basis. We're seeing a little bit more than normal, but also ones that are getting pushed into the following year. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:32:22So as I said, these are delays in products that they've already contracted for. And so it's not like they're walking away from a contract or things along that line. But they're just things that are getting pushed into out of the next quarter and into the next fiscal year. Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:32:41Understood, that's helpful. And then it was nice to see the strong margin expansion in the quarter. I know Mimi, you've spoken about 20 to 40 basis points of margin expansion as a medium term target. Just given the strength we saw in the high margin revenue and cost management, is that target too low? Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:33:01So cost management is something that is just bread and butter for Jack Henry. It's something we've always done from zero baselining of every headcount decision to a rigorous prioritization of our capital spend. I'll note that our R and D spend is 14.5 this year, down a little from last year. Now, last year was elevated a touch related to the Payrails acquisition and the integration needed between those two businesses. But we are always very mindful as a leadership team. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:33:32Certainly, as we've started to see a little bit of the softness related to that non key revenue, we've even turned up the dial a little bit more from discretionary spending controls. I feel very comfortable in the 25% to 40% representing the floor of what's achievable from the model from a year in year out basis. That's always just a floor and we aim for more. Too early to see from fiscal twenty six perspective, given where we stand in the budget timing cycle. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:08Raina, one thing I want to add on that. So, you know, Mimi said it, but historically, we've always done a really good job of managing our headcount and the timing of that headcount. So, you know, we've taken that to another level. We have new leaders and, you know, really they've been grained and trained to make sure that that's part of the process. So that'll continue. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:30And, you know, Some of the things we have to spend additional money on as far as infrastructure and other spends do vary each year. Some of that is as we're still going through the budget process, as some of that is yet to be determined on where we will end up for next year. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:47And this year, we're up 1% on headcount. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:34:50Yeah. Rayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:34:51Thank you. Appreciate all the color. Operator00:34:57Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Vasu Goldwil from KBW. Please go ahead. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:35:05Hi. Thank you for taking my question. I guess the first one, maybe just for you to follow-up on the change in the revenue guide for the fourth quarter. It sounds like it's mostly hardware and lease contract delays, but I think you also mentioned conservatism in the guide. So if you could just break apart the big drivers for the change. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:35:23And then also if there's a way to size the overall hardware revenue for us, so we sort of have a sense for how much that can drive volatility in growth. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:35:33Sure, Vasu. So the guide for the remaining of the year is really just given the prudence and having conservative macro assumptions as it relates to what's going on in the economy, as well as the trends we've seen in the third quarter. Particularly, the outlook for hardware is down. As Greg mentioned, we're seeing some customers delay big capital purchases, possibly due to economic uncertainty also, as they contemplate moving to the cloud, which is a good thing for Jack Henry. In fact, FI maybe not wanting to make those pretty expensive hardware decisions may actually help push their decisions to the cloud. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:36:20So I think in the long run, that could be a great thing for Jack Henry, as we're already at 76% of our clients in our private cloud environment. The headwind on hardware is about $11,000,000 for the year. I'll call out that 80% of that falls within the corporate segment, with the remainder of that being in the core segment. I think the other is what Greg already touched upon, which is we're just seeing customers take a bit more of a cautious stance, delaying some of these non reoccurring projects, mostly consulting work orders, some of the implementation of some of their post core. As Greg mentioned, and I just want to reiterate it, these are contractual commitments they've already signed for. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:37:06So it's just more of a timing than a fundamental shift or a change in decision making pattern. So historically, we've seen anywhere between after eighteen months of implementation, but it can be as long as thirty six months. And so that really comes down to their readiness versus our resources and capability to help them. We have not seen any meaningful changes to our implementation schedule. So I think it's more just out of an abundance of caution to be thoughtful. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:37:41In terms of the payments impact, we just started to really see that more in April. As we sit here today, we all know that the transaction volume is based on consumer spending and how they feel. It also depends on what's top of their wallet, whether it's debit or credit. So, again, just prudent in the current environment to narrow that horizon aperture of our outlook. And it really more came down to what our original expectation was, was more for a really robust fourth quarter. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:38:14So in absolute, it's not that we're calling for it to drop off precipitously from the current trends. It's more just relative to our original expectation of being pretty robust. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:38:27Yeah, one last point, Vasu, is that when you think about historically in tough economic times, folks tend to move to their credit versus their debit. And so based on what we saw in April and ironically, we've actually seen pretty good volumes in May thus far, even though a short number of days so far. But the reality is, based on historical around here, we've seen the use of credit accelerate over the use of debit during these times. So we're just as Mimi said, we're just being cautious with our approach and making sure that we provide that level of guidance. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:39:08Great. That's very helpful color. And then, Greg, one high level one for you. Sort of any change in how you're thinking about your competitive positioning following the announcement from FIS to acquire the issuer business from Global Payments? Thank you. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:39:23Yeah, it's a great question. Thank you. No, I think look, here's what I would say. When you look at the fact that they added much better credit processing capabilities with that acquisition, That's good for them. We already had credit capabilities. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:39:40I think one thing that we have that is still a differentiator is that we process on a single platform for both debit and credit. That's not the case for what they have today. And so it's too early to see from a competitive standpoint. Specifically that particular competitor, we didn't have a lot of challenges when it came to looking at their debit processing capabilities versus ours. So we'll have to wait and see. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:40:09But they're still working in the same environments as they always have as far as the type of customers they're going after and the size of asset customers. So we'll continue to compete as we always have at that market. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we're very bullish on our Q4 related to core opportunities. And as you know, most of those come with a lot of add on products. So I'll leave it at that. Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:40:39Thank you for the color. Operator00:40:44Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Jason Kuhferberg from Bank of America. Please go ahead. Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:40:52Good morning, guys. So it sounds like as we start thinking ahead to fiscal 'twenty six, there might be a couple of moving parts we need to consider on the revenue line. You've got the effect of the deconversion revenues that you highlighted as a potential headwind, but now we've got some delays in post core add ons being pushed into fiscal twenty twenty six, which sounds like could be a tailwind. So I'm just wondering how you think those two dynamics might net out and what the implications could be for revenue growth next year, just in the context of the medium term outlook of 7% to 8%. Is there any risk there? Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:41:29Thank you. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:41:32So Jason, I'd love to share with you the full FY 'twenty six picture. We're just too early in the process. Budget and season is deeply underway here at Jack Henry, but it's not finalized yet for another several months. And so in this dynamic environment, we just can't commit on next year, this far in advance. I will say to some of your comments in terms of the tailwinds and headwinds, our sales pipeline continues to be robust. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:42:01We're seeing no elongation of the sales cycle. Greg mentioned the numerous account wins, including large FIs that are still making plenty of decisions and commitments. So seeing no change in trends from that perspective. In terms of any of the deals that are being pushed from an implementation perspective, as Greg mentioned, there's always some moving of the calendar within the year. I'm not sure that that will really create a tailwind. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:42:33We always manage the implementation pretty tightly, so we'll see if there's enough demand for another implementation team. We'll certainly add that if there's there. But I wouldn't say that that's a layering effect to the normal flow. It's a continuously evolving calendar. In terms of just the guide, again, too early to say for sure, but I would say as a preview, the width of the revenue guide will likely expand on that, and we'll talk more about that in August. Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:43:09Okay. No, that's definitely helpful for now. So I wanted to come back to the key revenue, the cloud plus processing, like you said, it's now 76% of total, and you did actually see acceleration in the growth, almost 10% versus 9% each of the past two quarters. Are we going to are we expecting to sustain, call it, that 10% level in Q4? And is there any reason to believe that something in that kind of general neighborhood couldn't sustain into next year? Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:43:41I think you're on the right course in terms of the ballpark you're talking about. I feel pretty comfortable. Those are the long term strategic growth of the business. You have things like digital, you have things like the new product, the cloud, the continued cloud migration, so all of those have been long sustainable trends for the business, and we fully expect that to continue. What has hurt us is the headwinds from the non key business that has compressed at about 2%. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:44:15So that's been more of the challenge, but as we have more and more as a percentage of the portfolio in that key revenue, and we will continue to thrive. Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch00:44:28Thanks, Mimi. Operator00:44:33Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Darrin Peller from Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:44:41Guys, thank you. You mentioned obviously the step up in consolidation you're seeing in your end markets. So again, I mean, I know I think you just it was brought up a little bit in the prior question around what it could mean for the future. But Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:44:55at the end of the Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:44:55day, there's positives and negatives. Obviously, you have integration revenue if your customers are the acquirer or part of the merger. And then there's obviously the risk. So just number one, is this an environment that you'd say is big enough of a change in consolidation levels that you would anticipate it actually impacting growth in the next twelve to eighteen months? Or are we just a little higher than normal and still watching to see? Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:45:17And just remind us the positives versus the negatives, obviously, besides just losing a customer. What could be the positive offsets in a higher M and A environment for you guys? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:45:28Yeah. Hey, Darren. I'll take that. It's Greg. So a couple of things. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:45:31So as I mentioned, it starts with the size of the institution. So as you know, we've continued to grow. Last year, we sold 15 multibillion. We sold eight so far this year. Much larger ones, referenced, from an asset size on the 30,000,000,000 on the 28 sold so far this year, meaning on average, we're selling over a billion in assets per deal sold. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:45:55Again, that historically hasn't been the case. As we continue to be able to go up market and have larger sized institutions, they tend to be the acquirers, as you can imagine. Over the forty years of the market shrinking, most of that has happened at the $500,000,000 and below asset size. So the larger we have, the more opportunity. So to answer the second part of your question, yes. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:46:23So it happens to be kind of both. So if it's a Jack Henry client buying a Jack Henry client, there's some things that we can work through related to the deconversion fees and or convert merge fees that end up being positive for us. When you look at a competitor buying one of our clients, obviously we tend to get the full conversion fee, deconversion fee, and push. And it really depends on how much time is left on that contract at the time that that purchase happens. But what we typically see when it's Jack Henry to Jack Henry is not only do we retain the client, but they tend to buy additional products depending on what one of the which institution had which products. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:47:11And we actually saw that this year with a large merger of $4,000,000,000 plus institutions, where one of them had our digital platform and one of them didn't. And we were able to them to move to Banno for both. So it is a hit and miss, depending on which institutions, what products they have, the timing of how much time is left on the term of the agreement, and things along that line. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:47:37And I'll just add that while in general over the multi year period, it tends to be a positive for Jack Henry. As Greg mentioned, more of our clients are the acquirer than the acquired. It can produce some lumpiness, particularly as we moved upmarket. While deconversion revenue is a great thing for free cash flow and EPS, it does represent the loss of future revenue. And so, if for some reason in this environment we were to lose any bulk of larger clients, we would call that out from a headwind grow over problem. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:48:15Yeah. So I mean, where we are now, are you what you're seeing, is it gonna do you see it more as a headwind or a tailwind for the next one to two years? But and then really the follow-up for me is more around you guys called out the things you're seeing around the project related non key revenue items, and then maybe some cyclical impacts on spend on debit, for example. But what's the demand environment like for the core business, the key areas? If you just rank ordered what you're seeing the most demand for right now, and how that's looking from the prior couple? Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:48:44It sounds pretty good from a sales standpoint, but I'd love more color. Thanks, guys. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:48:48Yeah, thanks. So I think from a sales pipeline, as we tried to articulate, was very, very robust, continues to be very robust. So not just for CORE itself, but for the products that we have created. That level of innovation related to financial crimes into pay center components, to what I just described as enterprise account origination, a lot of those key revenue products that continue to grow at a nice pace at that 9.8 that we referenced are hugely continue to be in demand. I think when you look at where the challenge was related to what we were trying to describe in the non key revenue, again, it's really that one off stuff, the things that we don't control for timing, and things that are typically done on a more as needed basis than a must have basis. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:49:42And that's really where a lot of that delay happened. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:49:44So I would point to the strategic benchmark survey that Greg mentioned in his opening remarks. That's up on the Jack Henry investor website and available, that talks about the three top priorities for both banks and credit union CEOs continuing to be around gathering deposits, accounts, efficiency. But the longer term trends that we've talked about over several quarters now around digital, around fraud, and around payments tend to be dramatically the largest demand that we're seeing. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:50:20Okay. Okay. All right. Thanks, guys. Operator00:50:27Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Kartik Mehta from Northcoast Research. Please go ahead. Kartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast Research00:50:34Hey, good morning. Greg, I know you talked a little bit about, the delays a lot actually. I'm just wondering, has that, been reflected at all in your conversations with financial institutions on their core decisions? Is it are they kind of waiting at all to make those decisions? Or is that still business as usual and it's only really impacting these smaller projects? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:51:03So Kartik, so it's 100% on the smaller nonrecurring, non must have type products or hardware purchases, which can be delayed another quarter for them or delayed because of their evaluation of moving to the private cloud. That's really what it is. When you look at the core component, when you think about a core deal that takes typically anywhere from twelve to eighteen months to even go through the sales cycle on normal time, because most people are looking multiple years out from when their contract actually expires. So those decisions have not slowed down at all. And again, I'm very bullish about our success rates for next quarter based on what I've already seen and what I know is coming. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:51:53So I don't see that as any part of the challenge. It's really just these if it wasn't the end of the third quarter, we may not be talking about some of these, but some of them are going to move into the next fiscal year, and that's where the challenge comes. Kartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast Research00:52:10And Greg, I know earlier in the call you talked about the SMB product, and obviously you have this partnership with Move. And I'm wondering how that's going. I think you anticipated hopefully it would generate some revenue going into next fiscal year. And I'm wondering if you've seen any uptake on the product or any update there? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:52:31Yeah, so our Jack Henry rapid transfers, we've rolled out. We have three clients in what we call a closed beta, but we are now taking active enrollments from all of our clients. So there's a process they have to go through for Jack Henry rapid transfers that goes through our operational. It's not a contractual thing they have to go, but there is an operational component. So that's starting to move. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:52:55We're very excited. Got a lot of fanfare and comments at our strategic insights meeting last week in Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:53:02particular. Excuse me. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:53:04And then on the merchant acquiring side, as I mentioned, partnership with Move, we will have two clients and maybe more in a closed beta in June and moving. Then our expectation is to try to roll that out to everybody by the end of the first quarter of fiscal year twenty twenty six. So we're working through that process as well. But again, the interest level from not only our clients, but some of our distribution partners that we compete with, there's a lot of interest there. And actually, we've been talking to some non Jack Henry clients, some very large non Jack Henry clients that are very interested in the product as well. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:53:46So like I said, the interest level is there, and we are on track, as we stated, to roll that out in our first phase in June of this year. Kartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast Research00:53:56Perfect. I really appreciate it. Thank you. Darrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLC00:53:59Thanks, Kartik. Operator00:54:02Thank you. We have the next question from line of Andrew Schmidt from Citi. Please go ahead. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:54:09Hey, Greg, Mimi, Vance. Thank you for taking the questions. And I appreciate the comments on the total level of assets that you've wanted, this important distinction versus number of FIs. So appreciate that. I know a lot of questions have been asked in the demand environment and I'll ask in a slightly different way. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:54:26I understand that these are long term decisions and obviously a lot of confidence in terms of near term conversions. Have there been any changes in terms of up the mid to upper funnel when we think about just how FIs are working through the decision making process? Just curious when we get I know it's a little bit early, but just curious in terms of the earlier part of the funnel, if you're seeing anything there. Thanks so much. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:54:53Yeah, it's a great question. And thank you for calling out the addition of the asset size. We thought it was important to share that what we're talking about is actually happening. But related to your question, I have not I talk to the sales folks and our sales leaders literally every week, and there hasn't been anything that has come to my attention from them that has said that anything in the lower half, the middle half, or the ending half of making decisions has slowed down. Because again, a lot of those decisions do not necessarily take place for an installation for six, nine, twelve, or twenty four months, depending on core or what it is. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:55:36So we have not seen any real elongation of the sales cycle at all. It's just been these short term projects, as I mentioned before. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:55:45Got it. Super helpful. And then when we think about just the headwinds that you're seeing, obviously a lot of this, you mentioned is timing, but we have seen in previous cycles that discretionary projects get pulled back and sometimes they don't materialize for some time. So is there an element how large is that discretionary component versus non discretionary component when we think about just the headwinds that we're seeing here? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:56:14Yeah. The interesting thing is and Mimi and I have commented on this before so these are contractual arrangements that they have. And we do have some clocks that tick to a certain point in time where we can literally start billing the customer at a certain point in time if the delay goes longer than it's expected. And so they haven't reached those thresholds and won't in the quarter. But the reality is because they're contracted and because there's an approach that we've taken with these, we literally could start billing our customers even if they didn't implement. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:56:52And that's something that we can do. So I don't foresee any of these being things that get delayed or they try to cancel or things like that, because it's things that they need. As I mentioned, the one that seems to happen a little bit more is that a customer that has our Yellowhammer product that wants to move to financial crimes, that needs some consulting and other things that go with part of the implementation, we've seen some delays in those. And so we've worked with our clients. They're already clients of ours using some of our products. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates00:57:24But that's where some of that delay has happened. A little bit in some of our pay center products and payment initiatives as well, and trying to get folks to use, say, the come on with our send capabilities or, you know, most of them have received but moving to send capabilities, things like that. But again, that's wholesale of a challenge. It's not core implementations and things along that line. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:57:51Morning, Andrew. The only thing other that I would add from just a macro sense, as we always talk about, regardless of interest rate environment, regardless of economic conditions, the challenges facing financial institutions today are going to be solved through technology. It's not going to be solved through adding more bodies. Whether technology is the only part of the solution or the bulk of the solution, we feel pretty confident in the continuation of the demand. And the reality is, if you have an ROI, it's compelling. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:58:33And we just thought in our strategic benchmark survey that efficiency is one of the top priorities. So if you show the ROI, they will spend. Andrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at Citi00:58:45Absolutely. Now, that's great comments. Appreciate the help, Greg and Mimi. Thanks so much. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:58:51Of course. Operator00:58:54Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Andrew Botch from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo00:59:02Hey, thank you for squeezing me in here. Just wanted to revisit how this business operates through recycle. I know I appreciate the defensiveness and the recurring nature of all of it. But if we were to go into a more pronounced recession, how do we will we impact how would we kind of handicap the impact there? Is it just the trends that you would see today would be more pronounced? Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo00:59:26Would there be changes to kind of the core pricing strategy? Just trying to understand the recessionary scenario. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates00:59:35Andrew, appreciate in this certainly a dynamic environment, it's a really meaningful question. First of all, would say, and no one asked the question specifically, but I would say relative to tariff exposure, we're certainly lucky to have very limited exposure to shifts in policy. As a company, we're monitoring our vendor pricing and resource availability, as well as costs. For example, prescription costs for our associates. We do have very limited exposure on the direct. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:00:10I think where more of the exposure is in general to our industry is on the commercial side of the business. We're all watching the health of businesses in The US. So through things like our remit business and our enterprise payments businesses that serve those commercial customers, as well as indirect through lending, things like BANO business and treasury. But the reality is, this is not a global financial crisis. The banks are well capitalized, have really learned their lesson in terms of mortgage origination and credit extension. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:00:49They're working their way through various interest rate cycles, but we're not anticipating any mass closures of financial institutions. And as we said earlier, they need to continue to serve their account holders and members. They need to continue to drive efficiency. Fraud is top of mind for these institutions. Digital experience as well. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:01:16So a lot of them, because of the nature of the competitive market with the largest financial institutions in the country, they need to continue to innovate regardless of the economic cycle to retain their account holders and make sure that they get on the other side of the economic situation healthier and stronger. Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo01:01:39Understood. And then if I could, just my follow-up question. Just wanted to put a finer point on the consolidation activity you've been seeing. Could you give us a sense on the a little bit more around what you're seeing? Is it from a bank size, be it AUM? Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo01:01:56Is it across banks versus credit unions? Just additional, like a little bit more targeted on where you're seeing that activity pick up. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:02:05Yeah, so the activity really is spread. So you probably have seen, and it continues to happen. There are credit unions continuing to buy banks. In fact, we had a credit union of a competitor buy one of our banks recently, And that has continued to happen. We'll see if that continues to happen long term based on some of the things that they're trying to do in the market related to credit unions. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:02:31But what I would say, I think we have been really well positioned, as I mentioned earlier, just because we've continued to grow the asset size. So we're seeing we've won things that we call winter mergers, where we've actually had an institution acquired by a competitor's institution. But because of the technology and innovation and products that we've delivered, they've made the decision to actually switch to Jack Henry versus maintaining their existing core or complementary products. And again, we don't win them all, but we've won more than our fair share. And that continues to be the trend. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:03:07And I expect that because when you look at what's going on in the industry today, and I recognize that our competition is working their way back into focusing on this space where they weren't for many years, we've never lost our focus. And so our focus on this space over the last six or seven years has been unmatched. And when you look at what folks, including what was in the ABA core survey, which I highly recommend all of you to go look at, it was significant differences between us competition and how our customers view us versus how their customers view them. And so as those kind of mentions continue to get out, it continues to help our sales pipeline, our execution, and things along that. That's why all of these things that we've tried to articulate that are happening today, we truly believe are short term things. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:04:05We've got to work through the macroeconomic stuff that we can't control. But the other things that we have, we believe are short term. Andrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells Fargo01:04:13Great. Greg, Mimi, thank you. Operator01:04:18Thank you. We have the next question from the line of James Faucette from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. James FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan Stanley01:04:26Great. Thank you very much and apologies for the background noise. Just wanted to follow-up on that comment there, Greg, around competition and competitive intensity. Just wondering how that's if you've seen that manifest at all in terms of like your engagements or win rates or even pricing intensity thus far, and how you're expecting that to evolve, especially as there does seem to be some increased focus from historical competitors. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:04:54Yes. Hey, James. Good to hear from you. I think a couple of things. We continue to see the pricing sensitivity, as we've mentioned in other calls and really even other years. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:05:09That hasn't significantly changed. Again, our win rates continue to be by far the best in the industry. As I mentioned, we're winning larger deals, which means we're winning those from them. So that continues to be a good benchmark for your question. But I will say that they get aggressive in many times trying to keep their customers. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:05:35And so there's times where we may walk away from a particular deal if that gets to be too rich for our blood. But I will tell you that I haven't seen anything strategically change in the market from what they're doing. Obviously, one of them has a brand new CEO that was just formally announced. The other one has made some strategic decisions to rid themselves of one of their businesses and have talked that they're going to get more focused on our space. So time will tell, but I can tell you as of right now and where we are in our pipeline and where we've been with customer feedback and prospect feedback, because I do go to a lot of our large prospect opportunities, I haven't seen any level of concern on our part as of today. James FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan Stanley01:06:29That's great color. And then I guess associated with that, just want to ask back on Banno, how has traction trended with Banno business? I know it's early, but can you update us on the go to market, particularly given some of implications on the competitive front and how you're thinking about that as a product enhancement to the portfolio? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:06:51Yes, again, another good question and one that we're highly focused on. So we do have over two seventy clients now live on Banno Business, and a little over 1,000 on the platform itself. So that continues to roll out. We're really pushing to that feature parity that I've been talking about since the last Investor Day in September. We expect to see that this summer, as I mentioned, as well. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:07:19And I think that will be a real turning point for us to not only be able continue to win more in our own core base, but to take it outside the Jack Henry core base. We've been, as I mentioned, very strategic in our approach, but also on the timing. We don't want to go out and try to sell something to a competitive core base until we're ready. And that'll happen later this fall. So long story short is very much a big part of what we're doing. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:07:52And candidly, it will play a big part in what we're doing in our SMB strategy as well. James FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan Stanley01:07:59Thanks for that, Greg. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:08:01Sure. Operator01:08:05Thank you. We have the next question from the line of John Davis from Raymond James. Please go ahead. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:08:12Hey, good morning guys. Greg, just wanted to circle back on core wins and I'll echo Andrew's comments that the asset size is helpful. You've historically given us kind of number of wins, now you're giving us assets. But I guess the real question and maybe you can help us directionally think about ACV, right? So if assets year to date are up almost 50%, I'm sure ACV is not up 50%. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:08:34But how do we think about number versus assets? And like what really matters is kind of dollars of revenue contracted? And so maybe just help us directionally kind of correlate the asset size to kind of an ACV. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:08:49Yeah, I mean, JD, it's a good question. I think it's very difficult to every core deal is its own core deal. So some of it is timing what other products they have. Some of it is folks have best of breed approaches. Some have best of suite approaches. Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:09:10But every single deal literally has its own nuances to that. And so I think it's really hard for us to button that up and just say, hey, if we want a 100,000,000,000 deal and we want a billion dollar deal, doesn't necessarily mean that the $100,000,000,000 deal long term is going to bring 100 times the revenue. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:09:34Right. But I guess it's safe to say that asset is more important than number. Is that a fair assessment? Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:09:43Well, Gregory AdelsonCEO & President at Jack Henry & Associates01:09:45also ranges based on retail and commercial based customers. So sometimes a larger asset institution is more commercially focused and has less accounts. So depending on the type of bank or credit union it is, and whether it's more retail focused or commercial focused. So that's why I'm saying there's such an ebb and flow related to asset pricing, per account pricing, number of attach rates on the products that it brings, and all those. So it just isn't that easy to just give you a complete single answer to that. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:10:26Okay. No, understood. Mimi, one quick one for you on margins. How should we think about the margin implication of kind of the non strategic revenue runoff? Is this lower margin business and therefore, it could be a margin tailwind as that kind of revenue rolls off? John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:10:44Or is it higher margin? Just help us think about that and any impact that may have had not only this quarter but for the full year guide as well. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:10:54So I would say generally, JZ, the non core rather non key non strategic revenue tends to be lower margin mix. It has things like hardware. It has things like some of the consulting that is less software oriented and tends to be lower margin on the whole. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:11:20Okay. Thanks. And I want to John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:11:21squeeze one last quick one in, I can. Mimi, free cash flow. I think the midpoint of your guide would imply free cash flow below 100 in the fiscal fourth quarter. At least in my model going back, it's never been below, I think, like 120,000,000 So just curious if there's anything specific around free cash flow that you see coming in the fourth quarter that we should be aware of or any other comments there would be helpful. Thanks. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:11:44Well, it wouldn't have been an earnings call if we didn't have a free cash flow. So I'm glad we were able to squeeze that one in, JD. I would say we're on a healthy pace. As you know, the trailing twelve month or an annual view is the best view to look at from a free cash flow perspective, rather than any quarterly. Year to date, free cash flow of $139,000,000 definitely on track. Mimi CarsleyCFO & Treasurer at Jack Henry & Associates01:12:11We're at 71% from a conversion, so on track to that guide of the 65 to 75. And as we've talked about, that's a multi year journey back to that eighty, ninety, one hundred plus type of territory, as we're now starting to rebuild solidly the cost basis for the R and D related expenditures, and we have greater clarity from a tax policy perspective. On the trailing 12, the prior year had some reflected of overtax payment benefits on the prior year, plus there's a touch more on CapEx in the current TTM. But we feel pretty good about staying on track here and hitting the guide for the full year. That's why we kept it unchanged. John DavisManaging Director at Raymond James Financial01:13:02Okay. Thanks, guys. Operator01:13:06Thank you. This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back to Van Sherrod, the Vice President, for closing remarks. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates01:13:17Thank you, Myron. We appreciate all the interest in today's call. And in the upcoming weeks, management is planning to attend investor events across The U. S, providing additional availability for in person meetings. We would like to again thank all Jack Henry associates for their outstanding efforts and dedication, which have contributed to our solid results. Vance SherardVP - IR at Jack Henry & Associates01:13:36Thank you for joining us today. Myron, please provide the replay number. Operator01:13:42Sure. Thank you very much. The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesVance SherardVP - IRGregory AdelsonCEO & PresidentMimi CarsleyCFO & TreasurerAnalystsDan PerlinManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsRayna KumarManaging Director - Fintech Equity Research at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.Vasundhara GovilManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Jason KupferbergSenior Equity Research Analyst at Bank of America Merrill LynchDarrin PellerManaging Director at Wolfe Research, LLCKartik MehtaExecutive MD & Director of Research at Northcoast ResearchAndrew SchmidtEquity Research Analyst - FinTech, Software & Payments at CitiAndrew BauchDirector - Equity Research at Wells FargoJames FaucetteManaging Director at Morgan StanleyJohn DavisManaging Director at Raymond James FinancialPowered by