B. Riley Financial Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Key Takeaways

  • Positive Sentiment: The company reported strong results with net income of $211.3 million and adjusted EBITDA of $262.2 million, while operating adjusted EBITDA increased ~40% sequentially to $34.6 million.
  • Positive Sentiment: Management meaningfully improved leverage, with net debt down to $372 million (≈$255 million reduction year-to-date) and total debt reduced by $129 million in the quarter, including redemption of the 5.5% senior notes due 2026.
  • Positive Sentiment: Capital markets momentum was emphasized—B. Riley Securities executed nearly $10 billion of client debt/equity raises, added $8.7 billion of new ATM capacity, and initiated coverage on 26 companies, supporting future deal flow and fee opportunity.
  • Neutral Sentiment: A large portion of the quarter’s upside was driven by mark‑to‑market investment gains—primarily a ~$229 million valuation increase in Babcock & Wilcox and higher SpaceX carried interest—which may be nonrecurring and volatile.
  • Negative Sentiment: Near‑term funding risk remains with about $167 million and $170 million of senior notes maturing in 2026; management says it will use capital actions, operating cash and asset sales to address these obligations.
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Earnings Conference Call
B. Riley Financial Q1 2026
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Operator

Good day, welcome to the BRC Group Holdings Inc. 1st quarter 2026 earnings call. My name is Isabelle, and I will be your EverCall moderator. The format of the call includes prepared remarks from the company, followed by a question-and-answer session. Please note that all attendees will be on a listen-only mode until the Q&A portion of the call. At this time, I will turn the call over to Bryant Riley, Co-CEO of B. Riley. You may now begin.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Good afternoon, and thanks for joining our call. I want to start off by saying how enthusiastic our entire team is by where our firm sits today. The deliberate steps we've taken to strengthen our balance sheet and align our core operating platform have positioned us well to capture this current market opportunity. That conviction is reflected in our momentum, which carried over from 2025 into our 1st quarter. For the 1st quarter, we generated net income available to common shareholders of $211.3 million and adjusted EBITDA of $262.2 million. Operating adjusted EBITDA was $34.6 million, up close to 40% sequentially. Net debt stands at $372 million, down approximately $255 million from year-end. Our CFO, Scott Yessner, will walk through the financials in detail.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

My remarks today focus on three points: our first quarter execution, our strategic path forward, and our ongoing commitment to our core franchise. During the quarter, our team executed against two key priorities: strengthening our balance sheet and delivering for our clients. On the balance sheet, we continue to optimize our capital structure. In March, we fully redeemed our 5.5% senior notes due 2026. We also retired $40.4 million of debt through bond for equity exchanges and open market repurchases through the end of March. Altogether, total debt is down $129 million in the quarter, and we expect that trend to continue. While we inherited a solid quarter across the entire platform, B. Riley Securities delivered our most active quarter for capital raising in five years.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

During the quarter, we executed on nearly $10 billion in total debt and equity raises for clients. We acted as joint lead book runner on WhiteFiber's $230 million convert, participated in a DSBC $1.3 million follow on, and we had key advisory mandates with the TrueCar take private. We are active across the entire capital structure. We saw $8.7 billion in new ATMs in the first quarter, including a $6 billion facility for Highland and a $1 billion facility for SMR. We also expanded our research footprint, initiating coverage on 26 companies in the first quarter alone. We see a deep expanding opportunity set for our team in the quarters ahead and expect momentum to continue. Ultimately, our broader strategy remains straightforward.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

We reinvest operating cash flows into our businesses and compelling market opportunities with our core franchise serving as the primary engine. Next year marks our thirtieth anniversary, and over the last three decades, we've intentionally built our business based on a commitment to be an active, dedicated advisory and liquidity partners for companies in the historically underserved small and midcap market. We have navigated every market cycle. During periods of macro stress, we have stayed committed to this strategy while others have cycled in and out. This consistency and a commitment to this market have proven to be our structural advantage. That same commitment is why we launched BRC Specialty Finance to enhance our commitment to small and midcap companies by providing capital and liquidity solutions. We will continue to leverage our platform and put capital to work to back our clients and our long-term partners.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Executing our strategy requires absolute operational discipline and a world-class team. We're incredibly grateful for our team's hard work and continued dedication to the firm and our clients. I will now turn the call over to Co-CEO Tom Kelleher to provide additional context on our operating performance. Tom?

Tom Kelleher
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Thanks, Bryant. In April, we announced our intention to repurchase the outstanding minority stake of B. Riley Securities and combine B. Riley Securities with B. Riley Wealth. We are incredibly excited about this. The proposed transaction streamlines our corporate structure. More importantly, it intentionally aligns our investment banking, our broad retail and institutional distribution, and our equity research engine. Scott will spend some more time on the numbers. From an operational standpoint, the platform is continuing to normalize from all the activity that has transpired over the last two years. Targus continues to stabilize their business, operating at roughly breakeven. We are encouraged by recent improvements in distribution channel sales as tariff concerns begin to ease. Our communications group continues to deliver high-margin cash flow by leveraging our team in India. We remain relentlessly focused on efficiency across the entire enterprise.

Tom Kelleher
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

We are actively deploying AI not just as a corporate efficiency tool, but as a force multiplier across our entire revenue-generating platform. By equipping our bankers, sales force, and research teams with advanced tools to accelerate analysis and insights, we are empowering our teams to scale their output and capture more market opportunity without proportionally increasing our cost structure. While technology allows us to operate faster and smarter, our core business is fundamentally a relationship business. Our ultimate differentiator remains our people and the partnerships we build. In two weeks, we will host our 26th annual investor conference at The Ritz-Carlton, Marina del Rey. With approximately 200 companies and 1,000 attendees, this conference remains the clearest expression of who we work with and the partnerships we build.

Tom Kelleher
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

During the conference, we will once again host our annual Big Fighters, Big Cause charitable boxing gala benefiting the Sugar Ray Leonard Foundation and its mission to knock out pediatric diabetes. We are proud to have raised over $6 million for this cause since inception. Next week, on May 13th, B. Riley Securities is hosting our annual Commissions for Charity Day, where 100% of our equity trading commissions will be donated to Children's Hospital L.A. For nearly three decades, our firm has been defined not just by the deals we execute, but by the relationships we build.

Tom Kelleher
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

While we are incredibly proud of our operational execution this quarter, these events reflect the true character of our firm and our commitment to our clients, our partnerships, and our community. Our proprietary platform continues to serve as a major differentiator for recruiting, and we are actively leveraging it to add high impact talent. We are fielding numerous conversations for positions across the company, and just last month we welcomed back one senior sales trader as well as brought on an institutional salesman new to the firm. High performing producers want to be part of a company where deals are actively getting done, where the platform supports them, and where the culture is set by the fellow producers across our management team. With that, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Scott Yessner, to walk through the detailed financials. Scott?

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Thanks, Tom. I'm pleased to share an update on our first quarter 2026 financial performance, investment holdings and capital liquidity. To start, I would like to walk through our financial performance. Year-over-year first quarter total revenues were $352 million, compared to $186 million. The increase in total revenues was driven by $161 million of higher trading gains on investments primarily in Babcock & Wilcox common stock, $130 million of which is related to the value appreciation in the first quarter of 2026. Service and fee income was $152 million for the quarter, lower year-over-year by $6.7 million. Investment banking and brokerage revenues increased $12 million, offset by lower revenues from exited businesses in the prior year of $10.4 million, lower B.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Riley Wealth Management revenues of $4.6 million, and lower Communications Business Group revenues of $4.1 million from normal subscriber attrition. Year-over-year first quarter total operating expenses were $199 million compared to $247.5 million in 2025, a reduction of $48 million. The reduction was primarily due to a combined $20 million of eliminated costs from exited businesses and the Communications Business Group subscriber declines, with a remaining reduction of approximately $20 million from across a range of operating expenses, including lower legal fees of $3.7 million. Despite the lower operating expenses in total and in many expense lines, accounting fees related to the audit and accounting activities was $4 million higher than 2025, which was also at an elevated level.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

We have returned to a normal operating calendar which will allow us to drive infrastructure improvements that we believe will ultimately lower our accounting fees and other elevated costs. Continuing down the income statement, first quarter other income excluding interest expense was $106 million, primarily due to a $99 million increase in the Babcock & Wilcox fair value appreciation. The company's total increase in the Babcock & Wilcox investment across trading income and unrealized income for the first quarter in 2026 was $229 million. Booked in different revenue lines due to the investment being owned by multiple entities within the BRC Group Holdings structure. Year-over-year first quarter interest expense was $20 million, decline of $10 million from 2025, driven by lower average borrowing balances from senior note redemptions and other debt reductions.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

These details culminate with first quarter 2026 net income attributable to common shareholders of $211 million, diluted income per share of $6.57, compared to a net loss of $12 million, diluted loss per share of $0.39 in the first quarter of 2025. First quarter 2026 adjusted EBITDA was $262 million, compared to a loss of $45 million in 2025. Please refer to the reconciliation tables in our earnings press release for the adjusted EBITDA calculation. Next, I'll review our segment operating performance. Please note our former communications business segment has been separated into four reportable segments, which we aggregate and describe as a Communications Business Group. The capital markets segment, which is comprised solely of B. Riley Securities.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Riley Securities had first quarter 2026 total revenues of $172 million compared to $2 million in 2025, and segment income of $137 million compared to a segment loss of $36 million in 2025. The revenue and segment income increases were primarily driven by fair value increases in Babcock & Wilcox reported in trading gains. Additionally, core investment banking revenues also increased $9.7 million year-over-year. Next, the Wealth segment had first quarter 2026 revenues of $52 million compared to $47 million in 2025, a $5 million increase, and segment income of $16 million compared to $2 million in 2025, a $14 million increase.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

The revenue and profit increases were driven by an $8.9 million increase in market value of carried interest in a fund that owns SpaceX for the portion owned by the wealth segment. The wealth segment ended the first quarter with $11.9 billion in assets under management and 190 registered representatives. The Communications Business Group is the aggregate results of Lingo, magicJack, Marconi, and UOL reportable segments. The Communications Business Group had first quarter aggregate revenues of $60 million compared to $64.5 million in 2025, a $4.5 million decline, and aggregate income in the first quarter of $12.6 million compared to $10.6 million in 2025, a $2 million increase. The first quarter results are in line with our expectations.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

The operating leverage continues to be a core business strength as demonstrated by the results. Our targets business, which comprises the consumer products segment had first quarter revenues of $44 million compared to $42 million in 2025. An operating segment loss of $2.6 million compared to a loss of $5.1 million in 2025. After a period of declining sales, we are pleased with the revenue increase and the narrowing operating loss, which is due to improving the sales mix margins and lowering operating costs. Next, I'd like to provide an update on the company's investment holdings portfolio, which is reported on our balance sheet in securities and other investments, loans receivable at fair value, and equity investments. Investments are held across consolidated entities where valuation changes are primarily booked as revenue in either trading gains and losses or realized and unrealized gains and losses.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

On 31st March 2026, securities and other investments increased $194 million-$640 million from 31st December 2025. The increase is primarily driven by a $229 million value increase in the Babcock & Wilcox investment and a $12.6 million increase in the partnership interest related to our marked value of carried interest in funds that own SpaceX for all BRC entities. Offset by a sale exit of $41 million of private stock holdings, rounding out the balance change. At 31st March 2026, the Babcock & Wilcox stock price used in the valuation was $14.69 a share, with the company owning approximately 27.4 million shares. The SpaceX security value was marked at $526 per share.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Securities and other investments are reported in detail in the 10-Q, with subtotals including public equities, private equities, corporate bonds, other fixed income securities and partnership interests and other. In the public equity subtotal, the Babcock & Wilcox valuation was the primary driver. The private equity subtotal amount, which has over 50 investments including the venture capital portfolio, was lower by $42 million, primarily from the private stock holding exit described earlier. Partnerships and other investments increased $13.4 million, primarily due to the SpaceX carried interest value increase described earlier. Continuing with investment holdings, loans receivable at fair value declined $1.4 million in the first quarter to an ending balance of $24.9 million at 31st March 2026. In the quarter, loan lending activity included approximately $20.1 million in fundings and $21.8 million in repayments.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

We received a $6.7 million loan recovery recognized through the income statement in fair value adjustments on loans. For the last balance sheet line item of our investment holdings, equity method investments were $90.7 million at 31st March 2026, virtually flat from 31st December 2025. The GA Group investment, formerly Great American, comprises $83.7 million of the 31st March 2026 balance, also virtually flat to 31st December 2025. GA Group had good quarterly performance, which is disclosed in summary in the file 10-Q. Next, I'll provide an update on our liquidity and capital. At 31st March 2026, cash equivalents and restricted cash had total balances of $178 million compared to $229 million at 31st December 2025.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

In the first quarter 2026, BRC reduced total debt by $129 million, which includes a $96 million RILYK bond redemption on March 30th, 2026, and $40 million of bond exchanges and buybacks. At March 31st, 2026, total debt was $1.3 billion, and debt declined $255 million-$372 million. For the remainder of 2026, the company has two senior note series maturing. $167 million in principal amount of RILYN senior notes due September 30th and $170 million in principal amount of RILYG senior notes due on December 31st. These amounts have been reduced through Section three(a)(9) bond exchanges since March 31st. We also have $7 million in scheduled pay downs on a subsidiary lending facility.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

As previously described, we will continue to use capital actions, cash generated from operations and investment liquidations to fund market opportunities and the operating companies while also redeeming the scheduled senior note pay downs. We look forward to answering your questions. I'll turn the call back to the operator for the Q&A session.

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we'll conduct a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. Once again, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star then one on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. We will pause here briefly. Our first question comes from Sean of Charles Lane Capital. Sean, your line is open. You may proceed.

Sean
Analyst at Charles Lane Capital

Hey, congrats on the quarter. Just had a few questions here. You guys touched on it a bit, but can you kind of elaborate on your philosophy for kind of harvesting some of these gains that you have, and maybe applying them to the debt if that's your preferred, use of capital?

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Sean, I think you touched on this last call. You know, we are

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

I think we've done a pretty good job of creating optionality. You know, that's really important. That means optionality might mean, you know, buying back bonds in the open market, swapping bonds for other bonds. You know, we sold some assets and repurchased bonds. For us, we, you know, we appreciate when we are asked often about our largest position. We don't. Our head's not on the sand. We are taking all of our portfolio as one, we will make the decisions I think that, you know, are in the best interest of the shareholders and the bondholders. There's not a I think I said last time there's no playbook in this business.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

You know, PDI, which is a big position for us, is finally going private. In fact, you know, we have $40 million of that. You know, SpaceX, we didn't really have nearly as high a year ago as it is today. You know, that's on our books for over $50 million. There's, you know, a fair amount of cash, and we've got investments. It is a daily discussion and analysis, but I just can't give you the answer that you want, which is A, B, C, D. We are, you know, being very active and I think thoughtful about do we invest in the business? You know, where do we invest to grow the business? When do we buy back bonds? What's the right place to buy back bonds?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

When do we swap bonds and all those things?

Sean
Analyst at Charles Lane Capital

Okay. Fair enough. On the merger with the wealth division, I might have missed it, but have you put out any sort of quantitative synergies that you think you're going to realize out of that?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

We haven't. I think from my perspective, Scott can touch on this a little bit. You know, there's a lot of one-time costs that we have had to deal with as we've gotten our financials current. Our team has done an amazing job of getting our financials current. It was, you know, it was just a massive group of people. We've been, you know, we are now at a point where on a normal cadence where we can really focus on that. Not that we haven't been focusing on it, but, you know, not everything is a mad rush.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

As we look through our overall corporation and then we look through the subsidiaries and the mergers, we'll be more clear now that we can really, I don't want to say focus is the wrong word, but maybe to focus on some of those things and not just the mad scramble to get our financials current. Scott, anything you want to add on that?

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Yeah, Bryant Riley, I think you touched on the important points there. You know, the merger is going to have synergies across revenues and cost lines, and those are in the early parts. Early on, we're focusing in on the client side and the connectivity between the wealth and the retail, the wealth retail side and the institutional part of the business. That client focus and that connectivity serves the top part as we in the back office sort of determine that the right steps are in there. I'd echo Bryant Riley's comments with respect to, you know, we're really just in the early innings of evaluating our operating cost structure at the company and coming out of a very intensive period.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

Now we're gonna have a very normal operating environment that's gonna give us a lot of bandwidth to evaluate our cost structure. There's some easy wins in this. Our audit fees were high just due to the demands we had put on our auditor and with the normal timeline that we're gonna be able to use this year. You know, that's a pretty easy win for us. We have several of those across the entity in different parts of our business and operating expenses. Now we're still staying at the directional, "Hey, there's a lot of opportunity off the outsets." Understand that that's not as easily calculable into a model.

Scott Yessner
CFO at BRC Group Holdings

In the future quarters, when we start realizing those and have more dimension, Bryant Riley, we can share you more specifics.

Sean
Analyst at Charles Lane Capital

Got it. Just lastly, just because you called it out in the release. For the 26 initiations in the quarter, how much of that is attributable to new hires versus kind of increasing coverage for existing hires?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

I don't have that number handy, but I'm just gonna a general thesis. I think that the world is much more efficient given all the capabilities of everything. Everything from AI and so, you know, just the ability to gather information, the ability to, I think a research analyst 10, 12 years ago, it would have been 12-15 companies per analyst. If you can't get to 25, I think that would be, you know, you're just able to distill information quicker. You don't have to download every 10-K and 10-Q and make your, you know, do your analysis faster. I think that the vast majority of that is just from analysts that are already on board.

Sean
Analyst at Charles Lane Capital

Got it. All right. Well, appreciate it, and again, congrats.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Yeah. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, Sean. Our next question comes from Griffin of Owl Creek Asset Management. Your line is open. You may proceed.

Griffin
Analyst at Owl Creek Asset Management

Hey, guys. Congrats on the, on the good trajectory here. Looks like the clouds are starting to part. I was hoping you could provide some much further clarification on a couple of things. I guess the first thing is, can you kind of walk through the rationale of buying back the minority stake of BRS? Initially, we thought that this was another lever that you had created to potentially partially monetize to help with the cap structure, and now it seems like you're walking back that. Can you kind of help us understand the rationale behind that?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Yeah, I think we, you know, we laid that out when we made the announcement. When we carved that out, it was a different time, and we have to acknowledge it was in the middle of a very unique situation for us. Carving it out and separating it at that time felt like the best thing to do for keeping people and for managing the business and from circling it and refactoring it. I think as we've gotten through and as you said, are seeing some bluer skies, you know, we have balance sheets that have been separated and utilized in different ways and now can be utilized in one way.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

You might have a, you know, a BRS which had a lot of money at the money market at 4% of the broker-dealer while we're on corporate utilizing money at, you know, much higher rates. There's also operating synergies. We still think that, you know, that business could be very easily separated if we needed to do that or if somebody came along and determined that that was worth the value that we thought it was worth. You know, in the, in the near term, it's just from a, from a cost of capital perspective, from an operating efficiencies perspective, we felt like that was the right thing to do. Jay or Scott, anything you wanna add to that?

Tom Kelleher
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

I would just say again, you know, a year ago, two years ago, different landscape. Again, a big part of the reason was just the optionality. You heard earlier, you know, that's one of our focuses here, to make sure that we're in the right position to take advantage of whatever situation we find ourselves in. You know, we went down that road. A year later, a year and a half later, the landscape has changed. It has proven to be, you know, operationally really challenging, among other reasons. Rather than persist with what we're doing, we're going to simplify our lives and, you know, put it back to the way it was.

Griffin
Analyst at Owl Creek Asset Management

Can I infer that X, a sale of BRS, you think you have all the solutions necessary in-house to solve the 26s?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Yes.

Griffin
Analyst at Owl Creek Asset Management

Okay. Understood. I guess one of the statements you had made, which I thought was obviously great, is, you know, you didn't see the most deal activity in five years in BRS with the capital raising. Maybe I missed the nuance of that. It doesn't look like that's massive increases is showing up in the numbers. Is that because of you're trying to regain market share with lower pricing, or is that, you know, can you kinda help me out there?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

We are Yeah. If we are 30% of a deal, that's obviously a lot more valuable than being 5% of the deal. I think what I've been super impressed with is that, you know, companies value our research and value our distribution. You know, the noise that has surrounded us and is dissipating, and I'm hopeful it turns the other way, you know, as it surrounded us, those percentages of those deals, we lost economics. You know, ideally, we would rather be a smaller number and be 100% of the economics. I think it speaks to our position. I think it speaks to the value that we provide to companies and to the markets.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

As, you know, we've been playing, I think, with, you know, one hand behind our back. We haven't had our financials current. We've had to spend a lot of time on that. As we are now in a completely different position, I would expect that our percentages of those deals would go up meaningfully. I would hope. That is the goal.

Griffin
Analyst at Owl Creek Asset Management

Got it. Then the last one for me is, you had mentioned that because the company was a delinquent filer, there was certain business that was pulled from you guys. How are you thinking about, or how are you seeing the cadence of that recovery of former clients coming?

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Yeah, it's been strong. We measure it weekly. You know, we have seen a lot of onboarding in accounts again. It was a big deal for, I think, some of the bigger institutions that it is check a box, and that box was, we're delinquent, so let's cut them off for now. It's been dramatic over the course of the last quarter.

Griffin
Analyst at Owl Creek Asset Management

Okay. Good to hear. Congratulations on the quarter, and that's it for me.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

All right. Thank you. Thanks for your questions.

Operator

Thank you, Griffin. This concludes the Q&A session. Turning it back to Bryant Riley for any final remarks.

Bryant Riley
Bryant Riley
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Thank you, operator. It really feels good to report on the 7th and have a normal cadence. Now we get to go after, as I mentioned, some of these operating costs that were one-time in nature. None of this would have happened if we didn't have an amazing group that worked 24/7 to get us not only our revenues in line, but also get the financials done. Super thankful, thanks everyone for calling in. We look forward to talking. Our conference is coming up, hopefully we'll see some of you at our conference on the 20th. Appreciate the interest. We'll see you next quarter. Thank you.

Tom Kelleher
Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings

Before we conclude, we'd like to inform listeners that today's call may include forward-looking statements. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. For a discussion of these risks, please refer to our most recent SEC filings, including our annual report on form 10-K and subsequent 10-Qs. We do not undertake any obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

Operator

This concludes today's Evercall. A replay will be made available shortly after today's call. Thank you, and have a great day.

Executives
Analysts
    • Griffin
      Analyst at Owl Creek Asset Management
    • Scott Yessner
      CFO at BRC Group Holdings
    • Sean
      Analyst at Charles Lane Capital
    • Tom Kelleher
      Co-CEO at BRC Group Holdings