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EVO Payments, inc (EVOP)
Q3 2021 Earnings Call
Nov 5, 2021, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning. My name is Julie, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the EVO Payments' Third Quarter 2021 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Thank you. Mr. Ed O'Hare, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. You may begin your conference.

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Edward O'Hare -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations

Good morning, and welcome to EVO Payments' Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. Our press release and slides detailing the company's recent volume trends are available on the Investor Relations portion of our website.

Before we begin, I want to remind all listeners that EVO Payments desires to take advantage of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. Certain statements in this conference call, such as projections regarding future performance may be considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the act. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors, which could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. For additional information on these factors, please refer to our press release and filings with the SEC. Please refer to our press release for an explanation of the non-GAAP financial measures discussed in today's call along with the reconciliation of those measures to the nearest applicable GAAP measures.

Today, we will discuss our third quarter results and our overall business performance. Joining me on the call today is Jim Kelly, our Chief Executive Officer; Tom Panther, our Chief Financial Officer; Darren Wilson, President of the International segment; and Brendan Tansill, President of the Americas segment.

I will now turn the call over to Jim.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Ed. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. EVO delivered solid volumes and earnings this quarter as economic activity rebounded across our markets and accelerated card utilization continued.

As you can see from the slides, the company demonstrated volume growth of 15% compared to the third quarter of 2020. And on a currency-neutral basis, revenue grew 14%, adjusted EBITDA grew 25%, and margin expanded 341 basis points to 38%. We have expanded our margin by over 300 basis points for four consecutive quarters. The excellent execution of the executive team and our global employees has enabled us to grow revenue at an expanding rate while also reshape our cost structure as we actively manage through the pandemic over the last 18 months. We are committed to delivering positive operating leverage and increasing our margins while also investing in long-term growth opportunities. Tom will cover our third quarter financial results in more detail.

Our financial results reflect our ability to execute on our well-established bank referral and tech-enabled sales strategies across both Europe and the Americas. We continue to work closely with our international bank partners to facilitate digital payments acceptance and expand our geographic distribution as we enter new markets. Additionally, we are experiencing strong demand for integrated payment solutions throughout each of our markets, and we remain focused on growing our tech-enabled referral network to capture the global shift of software at the point of sale. Further, we continue to address unique in-market payment solutions through our global tech-enabled product suite, including new integrations and our proprietary gateway solutions, including ClearONE in Spain, Way2Pay in Ireland, SF Systems in Mexico, Pago Facil in Chile, and Anderson Zaks in the U.K. By enabling frictionless integrations to any software solution, we gain access to the entire integrated payments addressable market, enhancing our ability to drive outsized market growth for acquiring and payment processing.

In the U.K., we recently integrated our Anderson Zaks omnichannel gateway and now have access to more than 20 additional active ISV partners, whose legacy merchant portfolios we are working to convert to EVO's acquiring platform. Further, we are deploying our sales and product expertise to sign additional ISV partners and drive sales for our business as we capitalize on the accelerated adoption of integrated payments, which is particularly strong across Europe.

Turning to Chile. I'm very encouraged by our early success in the market since commencing operation last quarter. Our strong sales efforts have enabled us to expand our merchant portfolio to more than 5,000 customers. As we move through the fourth quarter and into 2022, we are continuing to grow our business together with our bank partner, VCI, leveraging EVO's direct sales force and tech-enabled capabilities. Our tech-enabled channel in Chile includes our recently acquired e-commerce gateway in addition to a growing ISV network. Brendan and Darren will provide more detail on our segment performance later on the call.

As the impact of the pandemic recedes, we will continue to grow our business through investments in our sales distribution, new product launches, and M&A. We are seeing increased M&A activity related to both bank partnerships and integrated solutions, and we'll continue to pursue opportunities that meet our strategic and financial objectives. We anticipate our strong momentum amid the global economic recovery will continue through the fourth quarter and into 2022, and we are confident that we would be able to execute our strategies and generate solid top line and bottom line growth.

Finally, as we announced yesterday, I'm very pleased to welcome Nikki Harland to our Board of Directors. Nikki currently serves as the Chief Operating Officer of Paradies Lagardere and was recently named to the 2021 list of Atlanta Top 100 Women of Influence. Her strong leadership skills and merchant experience will greatly benefit the Board and the company as we continue to grow.

I will now turn the call over to Darren to discuss our European business. Darren?

Darren Wilson -- President of International

Thanks, Jim. I would like to begin by providing some first-hand perspective on how Europe is successfully emerging from the pandemic. While government restrictions remained in place through much of the second quarter, in the third quarter, as vaccination rates increased, restrictions were greatly reduced and economic activity significantly rebounded. Our markets are experiencing broad growth across most industry verticals, including travel and hospitality, which is expected to accelerate in 2022 as the reopening continues and trans-continental travel and DCC activity increase. These trends are reflected in our recent financial results, which now exceed pre-pandemic levels.

For the quarter, European constant currency revenue increased 16% year-over-year. Volumes for the quarter was 16% higher compared to 2020 and grew 22% versus 2019. Excluding the impact to the Santander headwinds, which have now lapped, European volumes and revenue grew approximately 30% compared to 2019.

Our strong financial performance demonstrates the success of our international strategy, which focuses on underpenetrated markets, coupled with our ability to capitalize on the recent macroeconomic tailwinds and accelerated demand for digital payments. We continue to execute on our proven business strategies to grow and diversify our merchant portfolio throughout our European markets as we work closely with our bank partners and leverage our rapidly growing tech-enabled sales channel. Across the segment, we now have more than 200 tech-enabled referral partners and multiple gateway acquisitions, including IPG, ClearONE, Way2Pay, and Anderson Zaks integrated into our platform. These tech-enabled solutions, together with our continued investment in market-leading products and capabilities have enabled us to sign merchants spanning multiple verticals, driving accelerated growth for our European business.

Beginning with Ireland, we continue to work with Bank of Ireland to grow market share and bring innovative products and capabilities to the bank's customers. Over the last 18 months, we have established key in-market relationships to expand gift card solutions as well as contactless and mobile payment acceptance for merchants. This quarter, we also enabled Mastercard installments for our Irish e-commerce merchants as we continue to expand our payments offering, leveraging Mastercard's Buy Now Pay Later capability. Additionally, we are actively expanding our tech-enabled referral network, evidenced by our strong e-commerce sales and the more than 20 in-market ISVs we have signed this year, enabling us to attract new customers, such as the large soccer stadium in Belfast this quarter. We now have integrations to over 40 ISVs in Ireland, which will continue to drive growth for this business as merchants continue to adopt software at the point of sale.

In the U.K., our growth strategy centers on tech-enabled solutions that capture the accelerating shift to integrated payments, given the relative maturity of the payments market. This quarter, we completed the integration of Anderson Zaks, our recently acquired omnichannel payment gateway, which will augment our integrated payments offering in the U.K. and Ireland and expand our tech-enabled referral network. We now have over 75 integrated payments partners and a merchant portfolio that exceeds 35,000 customers and are actively signing new ISVs and merchants as we continue to grow this business. Today, our combined Irish and U.K. business represents 22% of our European revenue compared to 8% in 2017. Year-to-date, this business has demonstrated strong revenue growth of greater than 30% with a significant portion driven by our tech-enabled channel.

Turning to our Central and Eastern European business, which is anchored by our joint venture with PKO in Poland in Poland, we are generating strong sales results by working with our bank partners and expanding our tech-enabled referral networks as we increase our market share across this under-penetrated region. Today, we have over 100,000 merchants in Central and Eastern Europe, which represents approximately 50% of our European revenue. This quarter, we continued to expand our relationships with many of our Polish merchants, signing additional locations in Poland and the Czech Republic as well as surrounding countries, including Hungary and Slovakia among others. We have demonstrated accelerated growth from our tech-enabled channel by signing more than 20 ISVs this year, which focus on serving merchants at both the physical point-of-sale and e-commerce.

Last month, we added three new e-commerce partners and launched our integration to a leading pharmacy software provider in Poland. Our tech-enabled revenue is growing more than 20% and now represents approximately 40% of our business in the region. Looking into next year, our business is well-positioned to deliver high teens revenue growth as we expand our merchant portfolio through our product capabilities and robust referral networks. In Germany, we have grown our tech-enabled network to approximately 20 referral partners. This quarter, we signed an agreement with Silkpay to provide gateway and acquiring services for their payments platform. Silkpay connects international customers to retailers across Europe by enabling merchants to accept international e-wallet payment methods, both at the physical point-of-sale and online.

Lastly, turning to Spain. We are seeing strong business momentum in this market, and third quarter volumes were up 18% compared to 2020 now that the headwinds from Santander and the pandemic are largely behind us. We remain focused on augmenting our tech-enabled channel, which now leverages more than 60 active ISVs and e-commerce partners connected via omnichannel Snap platform. We also continue to work with Liva Bank to expand our merchant portfolio, which has delivered steady sales growth even through the height of the pandemic. We believe our ability to execute our strategies will enable us to return to our historical growth rates.

I am very pleased with the economic activity across Europe and our strong business execution in the third quarter. As Europe continues to reopen and cross border activity, including DCC returns, we are well-positioned to deliver additional revenue growth and margin expansion for the segment.

I will now turn the call over to Brendan, who will provide an update on our Americas segment. Brendan?

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

Thanks, Darren. For the quarter, the Americas constant currency revenue increased 12% year-over-year, which was driven by 15% volume growth in the quarter. These results were largely attributable to growth from our international bank referral channels in our tech-enabled businesses across all markets.

Beginning in Chile. As previously discussed, EVO is now fully operational and delivering leading acquiring services and payment solutions to the market. We have worked with our bank partner, BCI, to generate strong sales results since we commenced operations in June. We continue to cross-sell acquiring services to the bank's initial targeted customer list of 15,000 merchants, which will strengthen the bank's existing customer relationships. In our tech-enabled channel, we are leveraging our Pago Facil acquisition, coupled with our sales expertise to accelerate e-commerce growth for our business as we also identify local ISVs with which to establish integrations and referral relationships, consistent with our international sales strategies. We anticipate our partnership with BCI and tech-enabled capabilities will result in a business that generates over $25 million of revenue within three years.

Turning to Mexico. Our volumes increased 23% this quarter compared to last year and 15% compared to 2019. I continue to be pleased with the solid growth from our bank and tech-enabled referral channels as we continue to deliver strong sales in the market, including the recent signing of several large merchants across multiple verticals, including healthcare and online retail. In our tech-enabled channel, which includes ISV and e-commerce, revenue is growing 40% this year and now represents approximately 20% of our Mexican business. Our total merchant portfolio grew 10% over the last year and now exceeds 200,000 merchants, further demonstrative of the health of the market and our ability to increase market share across all of our sales channels.

In the U.S., volumes for the quarter were approximately 7% above the prior year, which was driven by our B2B and ISV business units. B2B and ISV together grew in the mid-teens this quarter and today represent over 40% of our U.S. revenue. Specifically, in our B2B business, we signed a significant number of new referral partners to expand our B2B network and capitalize on the low card penetration of this fast-growing market. We also continue to cross-sell acquiring services to our proprietary PayFabric Gateway customers and expect the success of this conversion strategy to accelerate as the impact of the pandemic moderates. We remain focused on growing our B2B business through organic sales, expanding our referral networks, investing in proprietary products, and capitalizing on M&A opportunities, particularly additional ERP integrations.

In our ISV business, volumes have continued to improve as merchants migrate to the software at the point-of-sale, and consumer demand for hospitality services rebounds. We recently established integrations to international ISVs such as Infinite Peripherals, which will expand and diversify our merchant portfolio. As we work to meet the changing consumer demands that have remained in effect since the beginning of the pandemic, we will continue to invest in our capabilities and expand our referral network to support the growth of this business.

I am pleased with our third quarter performance, especially our growing tech-enabled business, which is not only a strong sales channel in the U.S. but in Latin America as well. We are continuing to invest in our Mexican platform and strengthen our infrastructure to support growth in this market in addition to Chile. As we expand our presence in Latin America, we will also look to grow our merchant portfolio by entering new markets with strong growth opportunities, leveraging our tech-enabled referral networks and international bank partners.

With that, I will turn the call over to Tom, who will cover the financials in more detail. Tom?

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Brendan, and good morning, everyone. For the quarter, on a currency-neutral basis, revenue increased 14% and adjusted EBITDA increased 25% and margin of 38% expanded 341 basis points compared to the prior year. Further, compared to 2019, our third quarter revenue grew 10% and adjusted EBITDA increased 22% as our margin expanded 351 basis points. These strong results are despite the significant strengthening of the U.S. dollar during the quarter, which adversely impacted revenue by approximately $2 million. We again generated record volumes this quarter, which increased 16% compared to both 2020 and 2019.

Sequential revenue spreads increased this quarter due to merchant mix and the seasonal increase in cross-border activity. DCC revenue increased 24% compared to 2020 but remains approximately 40% below 2019 levels. We view both spread improvement and DCC revenue as opportunities for additional revenue growth of over $20 million in 2022. This quarter's solid results demonstrate the company's ability to generate strong top and bottom line growth as economic activity gradually normalizes across our markets. We remain optimistic that these trends will continue as we leverage our capabilities to capitalize on the continued cash to card tailwinds that have persisted coming out of the pandemic.

With respect to segment performance, in Europe, our year-over-year constant currency revenue increased 16% and adjusted segment profit increased 18%. In the Americas, year-over-year, constant currency revenue increased 12%, and adjusted segment profit increased 20%. Adjusted corporate expenses for the quarter were $10 million, which decreased 5% from the prior year, primarily due to the timing of various accruals last year. Adjusted net income for the quarter increased 44% to $26 million compared to last year, and adjusted net income per share for the quarter was $0.27, which increased $0.08 or 42% compared to a year ago.

At the end of the quarter, dilutive shares totaled $95 million, an increase of 1.7 million weighted average shares compared to the prior year. In the third quarter, capital expenditures were $6 million versus $4 million in Q3 2020. Of this amount, 78% was for terminals as our markets continue to reopen and board additional merchants. Free cash flow for the third quarter increased 33% to $40 million compared to the prior year, resulting in a free cash flow conversion ratio of 77%. This was driven by the company's record earnings and lower interest expense. We ended the quarter with leverage at 2.2x, which is down from 2.6x at the end of the second quarter. We also just completed the refinancing of our Term Loan B and revolving credit facility, which were set to mature in 2023 by entering into an all bank term loan and renewing our $200 million revolver, which now mature in 2026. These new credit facilities lower our interest cost a full percentage point and enable us to retain the same flexibility to access additional capital to support M&A opportunities for the next five years.

Turning to our outlook. We anticipate full year revenue growth of 13% to 14%, 20% to 22% EBITDA growth, and 200 to 250 basis points of margin expansion. These results reflect our strong third quarter business performance and assumes FX rates remain consistent with the prior quarter, and strong consumer trends continue in our markets.

With that, I will turn the call back over to Jim. Jim?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Tom. I'm pleased with the company's performance this year as we have successfully executed our business strategies. Revenue and EBITDA growth rates have increased. Our margins have improved over 300 basis points, and our balance sheet is extremely strong. As such, we remain focused on delivering consistent growth and expanding our geographic footprint and tech-enabled businesses. We have solid momentum heading into 2022 and are well-positioned to continue to deliver strong financial results through organic sales and capitalize on additional M&A opportunities.

I'll now turn the call over to the operator to begin the question-and-answer session. Operator?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from George Mihalos from Cowen.

Georgios Mihalos -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Congrats on the solid results. Nice to see the momentum.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thanks, George.

Georgios Mihalos -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

I guess my first question. Tom, you talked about the DCC opportunity that that's still sort of ahead of you potentially another $20 million if it gets back to '19 levels for '22. Can you give us a sense of the distribution kind of by country to that sensitivity? Meaning how much of that is really Poland versus a geography like Spain and the like? Just any sort of clarity around that would be helpful.

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Sure, George. So the majority of that, as you would expect, is Poland. Given that it's a significant portion of our European business, we do expect to see increased cross-border activity. Our domestic card activity in Poland was about still 90% domestic. So there's still an opportunity for more international and European cross-border activity that we see going forward. But as you'd heard in Darren's comments, we see a lot of opportunity in Spain. We have the Santander matter that we've lapped, and we think there's some really good growth opportunity within Spain that will also add to additional DCC momentum. Now one just -- thing to clarify, the $20 million that I referenced was a combination of both improvement in DCC as well as where we expect to see spreads continue to migrate up into 2022 based on transaction mix and merchant mix. I just wanted to clarify that you didn't attribute all of that to just DCC. There is a component of that that is spread improvement.

Georgios Mihalos -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Really appreciate that color, Tom. And then, Jim, I know on the last call, we were seeking out your expertise on a lot of things happening, real or perceived in the payment space. And I'm just curious, given your experience, given you guys have a big European business, I'm curious what you're seeing with alternative payments specific to things like account-to-account based payments, which I guess with open banking, might be a little bit more prevalent there relative to the U.S. Is that encroaching on the business at all, are there opportunities for you guys to participate in things like that? And then maybe as a quick follow-up, obviously, the balance sheet is in good shape. Anything you can say around M&A and maybe how valuations are trending for some of the assets that you're interested in. Thanks again and I apologize for the long-winded question.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

No, George, your questions are much appreciated. So Darren for the first time in what, 18 months is actually sitting in the room. We've been doing this by pointing to each other over the screen previously. So I'm going to let him take part of it. I think as you guys see these headlines, whether last time it was Buy Now Pay Later or here, bank-to-bank transfer, these are trends that are appearing in the marketplace, but the entrenched business of Nucor, Visa, Mastercard, and the other cards. Our job is to support the real estate in front of the point of sale. So it really -- it doesn't really matter to us at the end, what the merchant wants to transact as long as it's running across our rails in some way or fashion. So we've seen probably more in Eastern Europe than in Western Europe, an interest in bank-to-bank transfers, which to us, I mean, I guess, the equivalent to the U.S. would be kind of an ACH type of transaction. Although I think this is more real-time than an ACH, which is delayed. It's super early days, so I would not be overly concerned that it's going to have some material impact in the near term. And the other piece is we've seen Visa, Mastercard; I think Mastercard made an acquisition in the space in Europe. So my expectation is that you'll see those big brands find a way to be relevant in that space and those are the primary relationships that we support about. Darren, amplify something, I'll then come back to M&A. Darren?

Darren Wilson -- President of International

Thanks, George. Yes, I think Jim has covered it. Ultimately, yes. In Eastern Europe, we're seeing kind of great traction through the online channel. So e-commerce, where there's kind of a button to adopt an account-to-account type payment, it's not getting any traction in the card present space, as you'd probably imagine, because of kind of the friction to try and do that, and they kind of lost the memory of paying by card or an e-wallet type transaction. So we're seeing some intro into e-com; it's not material. That said, we see the trend, we've been working on ensuring we play in that captured space and ensure we participate in the economics of account-to-account where we see that growth opportunity. So it's not denting the volumes yet, but we'll have a footprint to capture those transactions in the future.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Just to draw somewhat of a parallel, it's not a bank-to-bank transfer, but there's a domestic scheme in Poland that was getting launched at the time we entered Poland in 2013, the end of 2013. It's called Blik. And Blik's been single digits since 2013. It's seen an uptick with e-commerce since the pandemic. So I don't know if it's out of the single digits yet but it has been a long runway, I mean, almost eight, nine years before it's become beginning to be relevant in the marketplace. So I think bank-to-bank has probably got some time too.

Darren Wilson -- President of International

And there's a scheme called Bizum in Spain as well that's got over 10 million registered users as in consumers, but similarly, volume is small at the moment, but exclusively online as well. And we also play in that space in terms of capturing Bizum transactions. So it's similar to Blik. Open banking, though, across the rest of Europe really is an account information service rather than payment information service at this stage. We're not seeing any real traction in the U.K., Ireland, or the western markets.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

And we have to remember the benefits of Visa, Mastercard chargeback rights, all the rest, 30 days of credit. That is still an incredibly solution for consumers. So at the end of the day, it's not our decision or somebody else's decision. It's the consumer's decision as to how they want to transact business. And I'm still extremely bullish on the major brands. And then on your second question, as Tom said, and we're very, very pleased at where we are on leverage. Actually, I think, George, it was one of your notes, pre-pandemic that highlighted that we were north of 4. So to see us down almost below 2, we're at 2, what -- 2.2, I think, is a testament to the management team and the efforts. We did bring in additional money before the pandemic not knowing how long and how deep it was going to be, but there's a lot of effort that was taken across the company to tighten the belt during COVID and coming out of COVID. And this was -- my expectation is that we'd be well-positioned to take advantage of M&A. I also mentioned -- I guess, it was some time last year at this time about it's difficult to do M&A when people aren't traveling. But as we see domestically and internationally, people are starting to travel again, and we are definitely having a lot more conversations on the M&A front. You saw we closed a deal in Chile for a gateway last quarter and my expectation going into the balance of this year and definitely into next year that we'll be coming to market with more M&A announcements.

Operator

And your next question comes from Jansen Wan from J.P. Morgan.

Jansen Wan -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

I'll echo what George said, good results here. It's good to see some clean numbers. Just on the volume side. I just wanted to make sure, given what we've heard from your peers, just from a surprise standpoint, month-to-month, intra-quarter, any change or anything concerning, anything to say around October, everything looks pretty consistent? Just wanted to make sure if there's been any surprises from a macro standpoint.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you. No. No surprises. Honestly, we're trying to wean the market off of us publishing volumes every single month. I really did that in the beginning because when we first hit COVID, we did the raise. I don't think the market appreciated how severe it was and because we are heavily international, 65-plus percent international, the European market was seeing, I think, it faster than clearly, Mexico and the U.S. So that was a catalyst to start producing the slides. We didn't put October on. October was sequentially stronger than September by a couple of percent. So actually, October was a very good month. It's one of the reasons we feel good about the quarter. I mean, FX is obviously out of our control. All the news that we're seeing about supply chain issues and holiday issues. So I mean there's still a potential headwind in the world relative to that. But where we're sitting today, we -- the fourth quarter and going into next year feels good.

Jansen Wan -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Great to hear. My quick follow-up is just on margins. I'll ask you've been -- just like you said on the leverage front, you've done an amazing job getting costs down and producing strong margin here. Any change in philosophy as you go into '22? Do you feel the need to invest more aggressively or can we assume that a lower cost baseline here is -- here to stay?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. I remember for the last 20 years, getting the question on margins. Margins -- I feel like we operate the company as we try to operate the company as efficiently as possible. We're obviously over the last 18 months, not just on the payroll side, which we've already announced, but on the non-payroll side. We found ways to be more efficient, reduce expenses, reduce reliance on third parties that were either part of legacy EVO or part of some of the companies that we acquired. And so, largely what you're seeing is permanent. We've reduced the expenses and as the company continues to get bigger, as we make more acquisitions, I don't say the margin goes up indefinitely, but I don't see pressure on the margin line. And I think the other important feature is, it's not like we're starving off. We, like everybody else, are somewhat challenged in filling open positions, and it's one of the things I get feedback from the EVPs and the GMs who run the business day-to-day. But we're as competitive, we can be on salaries and attracting talent in. So maybe we'll see some incremental cost increase as we add more positions, but the company is not starved for employees. And as you see on the capital side, we're continuing to spend money to buy terminals because the business is coming back pretty aggressively. I think the other benefit we and everyone is benefiting from is that there's more spend on card as a result of the pandemic. So we're just a bigger company, not necessarily more merchants in the aggregate, but just a bigger company because consumers are spending more, and spending more on a card just drives a greater margin for us. So relative to your first comment, I'm super impressed by how the company has performed on the margin line. I remember going public and during the early days of the IPO, that was the question we got. Why is our margin so low, why are margins so low relative to the bigger guys, and I would say they're bigger guys. But we're within spitting distance of companies that are multiples of our size. So, I think we're running a really efficient place right now.

Operator

And your next question comes from Andrew Jeffrey from Truist.

Andrew Jeffrey -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Jim, I think sort of following on to Jansen's question, we're clearly seeing a lot of noise in the market just around, I think, differentiation of some of the more legacy players. And one of the things that consistently jumps out as I listen to you talk about your business is the focus on tech-enabled and specifically the gateway strategy. And I wonder if you could just spend a couple of minutes talking about how you think EVO is positioned in the market, especially in the U.S. and in North America and how maybe some of your tech-enabled initiatives, absent owning vertical market software, for example, distinguishes the company and improves your competitive position perhaps relative to peers?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Okay. I may do this in tandem others, Brendan, since he has the Americas. I think relative to our peers in the U.S., our peers in the U.S. are massively bigger than we and very successful companies. I personally think the reaction in the market has been a massive overreaction. These are very well entrenched strong companies with lots of technology and lots of capabilities, so difficult to compete against. We have positioned the U.S. around tech-enabled, as you said, through an acquisition or a series of acquisitions. The piece of business that we are -- or the two pieces of business that we're most focused on is our ISV business, which was based out of Tampa, which was through the Sterling acquisition that has grown multiples of where it was when we first acquired it. And then the one that's even more impressive is our B2B business, which is based in Denver and Anaheim and focuses on the receivable side.

And we've said this many times before, I think that has been and is going to continue to be our primary area of focus for our U.S. business because that's what consumers are looking for. In particular, on the B2B space, we've made a series of acquisitions and I think we're going to continue to. We have a differentiating product on the Microsoft plugins, on SAP, on Oracle. These are stickier and larger customers, customers the size of Levi's. SAP is a customer, FUJIFILM is a customer. And I think that's how we -- at our size, without bank relationships in the U.S. what as we have outside the U.S., I think that's how you're going to see us continue to grow in a meaningful way domestically. The other gateways we mentioned in the script, what we have learned over time where we originally started with a U.S. Snap gateway for ISVs. We've supplemented that by buying into smaller ones, Anderson Zaks' a really good example as Darren mentioned in his speech. This is something we chased for a number of years. It's got over 1,000 customers already connected to it, over 20 ISVs connected to it. I think in total, we're like 40 or 50 ISVs in the U.K. market. That has been an incredible bright spot for us in terms of its growth rate. Actually, the U.K. market is almost as big or not or bigger than our Irish market, and it does not have a bank partner. The -- our U.K. business, think of the old mercury business in the U.S. on the ISV side. We're essentially just taking that playbook in each of these international markets and taking the learnings from the U.S. from our ISV business out of Tampa and using that as a way to teach our GMs internationally, where new opportunities are besides just relying on financial institutions. I don't know if I covered all of it but, Brendan, if you wanted to add something to that. Maybe, Chile.

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

No. I mean, I think Jim hit the question head-on. I mean, what we're trying to do, not just limited to the U.S. but globally is build distribution and our entree to the market, to distill the strategy, and make it very simple. We go into a market with a partnership through a bank, the bank provides us a brand, we don't call ourselves EVO, we brand ourselves under the bank, the bank -- its corporate bankers and retail footprint constitute our initial distribution, and then we immediately follow that up by introducing our other sales capabilities and product set. And we try and buy a gateway in the market because that gateway accelerates our integrations to ISVs that have a significant presence domestically in whatever market we're talking about. And those ISVs and VARs and resellers become an extension of our distribution. And we think that in many of these international markets, we're not competing against the great companies domestically here that Jim referenced earlier, we're competing against financial institutions that aren't otherwise super focused on innovative point-of-sale solutions. So that -- the list that Jim referenced earlier, Anderson Zaks, ClearONE in Spain, SFS in Mexico, Delego and Nodus here domestically, Pago Facil in Chile, they are all a replication of the exact same strategy. And we talk about it all day, every day here, how do we build distribution in a scalable way that doesn't just constitute hiring more heads because this allows us to attract a lot of merchants, grow the top line, grow volume, and not grow our headcount, which creates the EBITDA margins that we all enjoy.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

I would just want to add one other component to this. As he -- as Brendan just described, going into a market, again, we'll use Anderson Zaks or we could use SFS in Mexico. Going into those markets, we have two options, go in with our own software/buy somebody in the market. And now we're competing in a channel that's not core to our company. We're going to a market and try to partner with everyone. And maybe we have to give up 10% or 15% of our revenue, but we're not giving up 99% of our revenue, which you would see in a PayFac model with somebody like a Toast or some of these other companies that have been enabled over the years to basically harvest the value of processing the payments. Piece of it as opposed to making money on software. So we're partnered with software companies where we keep the majority of our revenue and just like a sales commission, we pay them a sales commission for referring business to us. And that model has been replicated country after country after country. And I -- again, I think it would be naive to think that I can develop a software in the United States that's going to be ubiquitous across the world; there's software everywhere. Everywhere we've gone, there's the point-of-sale infrastructure that is already in place. So that's the model internationally. Domestically, we do the same model on the ISV side and a very heavy focus on B2B, where we do differentiate by buying software, developing software as plugins to ERP systems. And that -- we're seeing dividends from that strategy. As we said in the script, the growth rates of those businesses far exceed the total growth rate of the company, which over time will pull the growth rate of the company up beyond where we are currently. Long-winded answer, but hopefully, that answers your question.

Andrew Jeffrey -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Yes, it does. Super thorough. Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from Bob Napoli from William Blair.

Robert Napoli -- William Blair -- Analyst

Jim, maybe along the same lines. But how do you feel about the growth outlook for EVO today? You went public four years ago, you had a model that you would put out there. The market is kind of saying that there's been a lot of new technology and that some companies, the size, that you're not going to be able to compete against that new technology, it's going to take market share. But how do you feel about EVO's market position versus the new companies that are out there and your growth opportunities and the growth model versus when, say, you went public four years ago?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. I like my model. I mean, I can't lose the amount of money that they do and have valuations that have a lot of 0s behind them. But our strategy is, I think, well documented, as we've just described here. Banks, I think we have a lot of investors who are U.S.-domiciled where maybe banks have become less relevant to the payment market, but 65% and growing of our business is outside the United States, where banks are still very relevant or branches are still relevant. Business is done away differently than, say, it's done here in the United States and the tech-enabled piece that we just described outside the United States. So inside the United States, we're not competing against some of the businesses. I think that you're referring to relative to recent valuations. We're focused $24 trillion, as they say, of opportunity which will float a lot of boats. And an ISV business that, again, is not based on owning software because I -- my experience has been software in it of itself is not making any money. They're making money on the payment side. And I think the big mistake that some people have made is enabled these software companies to make all their money on the economics and the infrastructure and the cost that companies like us have to bear to run our businesses. But we're not competing against a lot of the companies that you're referencing or you're not referencing, but you're, I think, referring to because we're domiciled in Chile and Mexico and countries across Europe where we're not seeing the phenomenon that maybe is more prevalent here in the United States. But I also think there's a test of time. Let's see how these businesses do over the long haul, do they morph into something else, or because at some point, they do have to make money. They can't just grow for the sake of growth. They have to be able to provide a return to shareholders. And one of the feedback -- some of the feedback that I got when we went public was about not just growth but margins and leverage and all the rest. And those other ingredients of the company have been more than addressed and you're seeing our growth continue to accelerate. And that's going to continue because what EVO started with was a small sales organization based in New York. That was a traditional ISO model that all U.S. companies that are in our payment space have some remnants of. And it's still not an immaterial piece of our company, it's still a resident in the U.S. But outside the U.S. as you saw in the number, some of this is a bounce back from COVID, but all our numbers are pointing in the right direction, and I feel very good about competing against any of the companies domestically or internationally. I don't see any concerns.

Robert Napoli -- William Blair -- Analyst

And then just a follow-up. Just, Tom, I was -- would you want to give any color on growth rate into 2022? I mean, you seem pretty confident, assuming kind of a stable recovery from COVID, the -- would you expect growth rates to accelerate from here where you could give. So I mean, it seems like you're very confident on margins. And so maybe a steady growth, gradual margin increase. But just any thoughts around the revenue growth in 2022 would be helpful.

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Yes. Well, first comment on the macroeconomic environment. I think we expect there to be a strong macroeconomic environment in 2022. Pandemic appears to be abating, vaccination rates are increasing, governments and consumers are getting a strong footing underneath them. So I think the macroeconomic environment, I think, is encouraging. We said a couple of times that the cash to card tailwind seems to continue to be at our back. We would expect that to be sticky. I mentioned earlier in terms of the level of cross-border activity that we expect to see an improvement on. As I said, domestic volume was around 90% in our European market. Historically, it would have been -- we would have seen a higher level of international and cross-border activity. I think DCC will be a benefit to us. So, we think there's a lot of macroeconomic as well as industry-specific opportunities in front of us. And I think that bodes well for the growth potential of the organization. I think, obviously, this year, we're at that 13%, 14%, 15% growth rate. We'll be coming off of a tougher comparable, obviously, in 2021. But if historically, we were 8% to 9%, I think, going forward with those tailwinds, you could see us above those historical levels on a go-forward basis. Hard to predict where we sit here today but that would certainly be our expectation that you'd see a rotation up from those historical top line growth rates that we've iterated before.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. Just to add to that. One of the things, as I just mentioned, that has kind of held back our overall growth rate has been the legacy EVO business we refer to as traditional. But our ISV and B2B, in particular, B2B has grown 5x the size, 6x the size, probably more than when we first acquired it from Sterling and added some acquisitions. So those businesses are now over 40% of our U.S. business. And as they continue to get bigger, and I think B2B is probably the one where we have bigger opportunities or better opportunities for M&A. As that becomes a bigger part, and there it plays a bigger role in payment commerce in the U.S., then you're going to continue -- you'll see -- we'll see the U.S. business accelerate. European and Latin America is already where we'd like it to be. It's really the U.S. that we've been working on trying to move it up the chain.

Operator

Your next question comes from Ramsey El-Assal from Barclays.

Ramsey El-Assal -- Barclays -- Analyst

I wanted to ask about the AMI from BCI and the Pago Facil gateway. I'm just trying to get a sense of the underlying U.S.-Mexico performance versus sort of what was incremental or new this year.

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

BCI and Pago Facil was relatively immaterial. I mean, I think we really only started boarding merchants in earnest in the second half of September through the JV. And then October, I will say, we are the beneficiary of a very, very engaged bank partner there and so we've prescreened, I think in the script, we said 3,800 accounts. We have very lofty ambitions in terms of the number of merchants we think we can board between now and year-end. And they have a very significant foothold in the Corporate Banking segment. So some of these merchants could be considerably chunky in terms of volume and profitability. But in terms of contribution within the quarter from the JV relatively immaterial and then the Pago Facil gateway while profitable and attractive, is also relatively small at this stage as well.

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I think, Ramsey, it's Tom. I think the story around BCI in Chile is really a '22 story. As Brendan said, I mean, you're talking single digits, low single digits on the revenue contribution measured in millions from the business, obviously just getting started down there. But we do have expectations that from a revenue perspective, you'll see that accelerate significantly in 2022 and beyond. And Brendan's script even commented on how that business, we think, can grow significantly over the next three to five years and generate outsized revenue growth for us.

Ramsey El-Assal -- Barclays -- Analyst

Great. So strong organic drivers this quarter rather than anything sort of newer, incremental, and organic driving to be. I appreciate that. One follow-up question for Jim is -- or maybe not necessarily for Jim, for whoever choose to answer it. You mentioned enabling Mastercard installments in Ireland and I was just wondering if you could talk a little more about that implementation and maybe the opportunity to roll that product out more broadly across your footprint. And if you wouldn't mind also just commenting on your updated view on Buy Now Pay Later in general, how it's evolving, how you see it as an opportunity or a potential challenge for the business, specifically.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Well, Darren is here. He's not Irish, he's English, but he goes there a lot, so I'll let him answer the Mastercard, and then I can -- I guess we can both talk about Buy Now Pay Later.

Darren Wilson -- President of International

Sure. Thanks, Jim. So Mastercard installment is purely the -- Mastercard ensuring that they can support their share of banks with installment solutions or Buy Now Pay Later, however you want to label it, but really more an installment product of ensuring that they play in the market, and we wanted to be front and center with them in terms of ensuring that integration that we've got that functionality and capability. Clearly, it's -- at the minute, it's a fashionable time in terms of consumers seeking installments for a myriad of products, which some of it is questionable, I think in terms of taking your groceries on three month installments, etcetera. So I think there's a lot of froth in the market. But I think in terms of having a stable secure legacy future product in terms of enabling merchants is important to partner with the Mastercard on a robust installment solution.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes. So Buy Now Pay Later is not limited to the U.S. I mean we -- I was talking to Poland recently and they're starting to see the shoots of people talking about Buy Now Pay Later. Again, for our industry, my experience has been, and Discover would be a good example of this, Amex another, is that merchants like a single statement, a single deposit. It makes life easier to manage their business. So to have a Buy Now Pay Later company coming in with a separate deposit as opposed to running everything through the acquirer who again has the real estate, I think in the long term, that's not a good outcome. So I see if -- as Buy Now Pay Later, assuming it does continue to be a part of the options for consumers, then I think it's going to be -- at the point of sale, it's going to run through the same acquiring structure, infrastructure that's common across all the markets. And as some of our larger competitors have said, and I think we have a small Buy Now Pay Later company that we process some transactions for, they need someone to get to Visa, Mastercard, at least for debit transactions. So they're going to ride the rails of the companies they have made the investments, otherwise, they have to spend a fair amount of money to stand that up for themselves. So I think on both ends, whether it's processing for them, or it's at the point of sale, I don't -- I just see as another tender type. I don't see it as a threat to the industry.

Darren Wilson -- President of International

And just one more clarification, while we've enabled that in Ireland, for e-commerce transactions, we can take it across all European markets, be it Germany, U.K., Spain, etcetera. So it's an important engagement with Mastercard that I think continues, as Jim says, embedding us with the schemes to support this transaction type.

Operator

And your next question comes from Ashwin Shirvaikar from Citigroup.

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Good quarter and results.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thanks, Ashwin.

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Sure. Welcome. So on the bank perspective, I just wanted to look at sort of the propensity to continue doing bank partnerships and the pipeline. From the bank perspective, what has changed over the last year? Are they appreciative of the fact that you're bringing in more tech-enabled product, how does that play into negotiations, what does the pipeline look like?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Okay. I think I've mentioned this prior, but I think banks do this for two reasons. Do this meaning formal relationship with a third party. It's not uncommon internationally for banks to have partnerships with a variety of different companies that have specialization in anything from payments to insurance. And I think they do it for two reasons. One, in the case of a bank that needs to raise capital, there is a process to look across the bank as to ways to raise capital versus just selling stock. And in the early days of EVO's international expansion, we capitalized on that coming out of the 2010 crisis and, in particular, in Europe and I think even in Latin America to some extent. In the last several years, pre-pandemic, and I think we're seeing it again now. It has more to do, if they don't need to raise capital, is capabilities. So it cost a lot of money to build companies like EVO or Global or FIS, etcetera. And the ability to replicate it not impossible but for a financial institution, it would be a very big undertaking. I think they would have to buy somebody for that to be able to get to market in any reasonable period of time. And the model works. I mean it's been working since first day I coined it back in the late 90s and into the 2000s my old company Global Payments and has been extremely successful, continues to be successful with it. Vantiv, when it was doing it and now you're starting to see it with some European players. So because it works and has worked in Canada and the U.S., Asia-Pacific, in Europe, Latin America, then I think the stigma of, oh, I'm going to have a partner who's going to touch my accounts just like I touched the same customer's, I think that's gone and the reputation that our company has, we've got, I don't know, 15, 16 of these relationships spanning several different continents. That gives somebody a level of comfort that they're dealing with an organization that knows to how to appropriately build a business together because it's not all about us. As Brendan said, our model is to leverage a variety of things, one of which is the bank's name, and that's an important distinction and our approach is going into a new market where nobody knows who EVO is. We go into Ireland, and we're the Bank of Ireland payment acceptance. Or we go into Europe, Czech Republic, where we're aligned with Raiffeisen Bank and we're called REVO, R for Raiffeisen and EVO for our name. And I see that, as I said earlier, I see that's starting to accelerate. There's still lots of banks in the world that need to be relevant in the digital world. And that's something that we and people like us have the ability to do, where someone who is like a square or others who are competing for banking services, they're not going to be interested in partnering with somebody who otherwise wants to offer a service that the bank is otherwise used to doing. So we're very clear with financial institutions that we stay within our lane, we do what we do, and they continue to do the other 30 or so banking products.

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Great. The second question; just could you remind the credit versus debit by geo in your footprint? We're getting a few questions on that.

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Ashwin, it's Tom. So as you would expect, in Europe, it's heavy debit market. It's probably over 80% debit market within Europe. Within the U.S., it's kind of the reverse, but not quite at the same level, 70% credit. We've actually seen the credit market card type actually move up recently. That's something I think that does influence our view around spreads. And then within Mexico, it's -- credit market is 40%, 50% of the business. So it's a bit more balanced in Mexico between credit and debit. And then, as I mentioned earlier, Europe is heavily debit card-related -- based.

Operator

Your next question comes from Kartik Mehta from Northcoast Research.

Kartik Mehta -- Northcoast Research Partners -- Analyst

Jim, I know you've answered a lot on acquisitions. Now I'm wondering if you're seeing any change in who you're competing for those acquisitions with, especially since some of the valuations, at least on the public side are coming down, and I'm wondering if that's changing, maybe people who might want to compete for some of the acquisitions we want?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

So I don't think -- well, thanks, Kartik. I don't think I answered that question, somebody else asked something similar. So it's a fair proxy, but -- where we trade in the marketplace tends to some extent drive what banks think their business might be worth. There's other dynamics in play and yes, as the industry has trended up over the last many years, I think it has driven up the prices for either acquiring a business in an alliance structure or in a joint venture structure. But the going-in price relative to the things that both Brendan and Darren have described, with making other acquisitions in the marketplace, integrating to our fixed infrastructure of back-end systems or back-end and front-end systems, it still provides a tremendous amount of leverage. But I think, for now, I don't know that the price is because the impact as to our stock prices in our sector of the industry, that has moved down pretty significantly recently. I don't know that that's translated into what the price for the next bank relationship is going to look like. I think it will have a bearing on it. But these relationships take -- varies like a marriage, as I've said many times. It takes a long time to together. You date for a while before you're in a room talking about contracts and the like. But, yes, they take a variety of things into consideration and clearly public multiples are part of that analysis.

Kartik Mehta -- Northcoast Research Partners -- Analyst

And then, just a follow-up. I don't know, Tom or Brendan, you talked about the Chile business. And I know -- I think, Tom, you said late-2022 is you should start seeing some acceleration. I'm wondering from margin standpoint, is that business similar to kind of the margins you see in the Americas or is it different?

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

Yes. Thanks for the question, Karthik. So we run the company in a hub-and-spoke model. We have kind of two big hubs internationally. We have Warsaw for the European business and then Mexico City for the Latin American business. Then what that allows us to do is populate our in-market businesses with sales initially. So basically exclusively sales. And then over time, we'll move customer support in market as the business scales. We are going to be processing the market or we are processing the market off our Mexican platform, which essentially has no variable cost per transaction or very, very little variable cost per transaction. So listen, we may lose a tiny bit of money for the first couple of months. We would expect to get to breakeven super quickly. We would expect there to be positive EBITDA for the first year. We would expect the margin to scale and normalize to what you would see in our other spoke model -- spoke markets around the world. So, we would look very similar to what our Irish business or Spanish business or German business might look like. So -- and that would be way north of 50% contribution margins.

Operator

Your next question comes from Bryan Keane from Deutsche Bank.

Bryan Keane -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

I know we're going long here so I'll just keep it to a quick one question. When I just look high level, you see the massive improvement in volume on the two year in Europe. But on the two year, the Americas dropped, I think, from 12% to 9%. So just thinking, particularly in the Americas, the cause for the drop on the two year and the possible rebound on the two year going forward.

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Bryan, it's Tom. As we've said, the U.S. business doesn't grow as fast as our international business. So it's somewhat dilutive to that overall blended Americas growth number. When you look at -- when you break it apart, Mexico is growing north of 20% and the U.S. is, as we've said before, it's going to be in that mid- single digit kind of grower until the tech-enabled piece continues to grow. We do see double-digit mid-teens growth in the ISV, B2B business, not just on the top line but also on the volume. So it's just a function of those other businesses continue to kind of dilute. We look forward to when those businesses get smaller and aren't influencing some of the blended numbers, but you're just seeing a blend of those other businesses continue to affect the overall. But internationally, whether it's Europe or Mexico, the volume numbers are very strong.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

And I'll just add to that. While the B2B business has done incredibly well through the pandemic, relative to other business channels that we have. Our ISV business in the U.S., while we're growing outside of hospitality, the business we acquired years ago was predominantly hospitality. So that segment saw some closures and that segment has rebounded and then retrenched and rebounded and retrenched, and this had service issues in getting servers, etcetera. So I think that's been not really a headwind, but relative to volumes and maybe what the bounce-back would have otherwise looked at -- looked like. I think that has played into it a little bit too.

Operator

Your next question comes from Jason Kupferberg from Bank of America.

Cathy Chen -- Bank of America -- Analyst

This is Cathy on for Jason. I just wanted to follow up on the October trends that you mentioned. We saw some improvement relative to September. Is that for both the Americas and the European segment and are you assuming these trends are holding steady from these October levels in order to sort of hit your 2021 guidance?

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

So, yes. I think it's -- I mean, Tom can amplify, but I think we're pretty consistent in relative to where we were coming out of the quarter. And we would expect that they will continue. We have a holiday season that we're approaching and two markets in particular have probably more exposure to big-box type of activity that would be Mexico and our Polish market as opposed to kind of most of our others would be more stable type of activity. So there may be some improvement in December just as relative to other months just because of the holiday.

Cathy Chen -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Okay, that's helpful.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you.

Cathy Chen -- Bank of America -- Analyst

And I just wanted a quick follow-up on margins. I know you guys are expecting 200 to 250 basis points of margin expansion this year. In terms of like next year, should we kind of be thinking about it as back to the sort of 50 to 75 basis points of annual expansion? And are there certain expenses that are coming back which is kind of why posting margins would see a little bit of a deceleration relative to the third quarter?

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Cathy, similar to my comments, I think when I was answering Bob's question in terms of how do we think about '22? I was focused on revenue growth and talking about how we think it will be a bit outsized relative to the long-term historical run rate. Think we'd feel the same way on margins as well. So before -- pre-pandemic, we were kind of 50 to 75 annually. I think that rotates up to 75 to 100. We'll continue to invest in the company long term, adding resources, predominantly people, customer-facing people, whether that's customer support or sales so that we can continue to feed the distribution engine. But we will be very focused on operating leverage. We've demonstrated strong execution through and coming out of the pandemic, and I think operating leverage will continue to be something that you will us generate, which will cause those margins to continue to expand. Obviously, the 300 basis point is a complete pandemic reset but from here, we see margins growing at a higher rate than historically.

Operator

Your next question comes from Ken Suchoski from Autonomous Research.

Kenneth Suchoski -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

I just wanted to follow up on the Chile opportunity. I think you mentioned it was a $25 million revenue opportunity within three years. I mean, can you talk about how you expect that revenue to ramp over the coming years? Is it linear, call it, $8 million, $16 million, $25 million over three years? And I guess any other detail on how came up with that estimate and if there's upside to that number.

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Ken, it's Tom, and, Brendan, I can kind of tag team this. So, no, we would see it obviously accelerate. As Brendan said, 2021 is our start-up year. I mean Pago Facil came with an established business, 5,000 merchants and growing. But the BCI, we're starting from scratch and partnering with the BCI very well to get that moving. We would see -- part of the reason why I feel good about 2022. I left this out in one of my earlier remarks when I was answering Bob's question. But I think Chile is also a significant tailwind financially for us in '22. We see that in kind of, call it, the -- just to use round numbers, $10 million-ish kind of revenue number for '22, and then we can see it doubling from there as that business continues to accelerate. Strong margins, the margins will increase over time as we gain scale and cover more of those fixed costs that we put in the market. But given the hub-and-spoke structure that we have, those fixed costs are customer-facing, sales generation type resources that will more than pay for themselves. So it will accelerate to that $25 million number, but we see significant contribution in '22 coming from Chile. Brendan, do you want to...

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

Yes. I mean, as you think about the opportunity set, the bank's addressable audience in terms of their customer base, they have mid-70,000 corporate customers, 75,000 to 80,000 corporate customers. And the goal is to service those as many as we possibly can. I think the CEO of the bank has set a target for 10,000 merchants this year. I think that's likely ambitious. I hope he's not listening, but we're going to give it our best shot. But I do think this gateway has been a huge addition to us in terms of capabilities, and we are seeing a lot of demand. I mean, that business boarded 1,500 customers in the third quarter alone, which is a remarkable growth. And I think, validates the strategy that we had in buying it. So we feel really well positioned. Again, the competition there is relatively skinny. We are competing against an incumbent that has been operating as a monopoly for since the origin of the payments market there. And the only other company that's sort of doing something along similar lines is Santander, but they are running it themselves, not in partnership with an acquirer like in EVO. So I think the positioning is good. I think our partner is good. As I said in an earlier question, they are super, super engaged. And I think the answer that Tom provided in terms of what the outlook looks like is spot on.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

I'd add to this that beyond how we think that's going to perform. And again, as Brendan said, the proxy to Ireland is a good one because that was likewise a start-up and this Chilean bank is incredibly supportive and has been a great partner just as BOI has been. But this also gives us footings within South America, which we're the first international into the Chilean market. And there's real estate all around Chile. The bank is going to be supportive of us finding our way into other markets as well. So I think it's more than just an organic story which is great and high-growth great but it's also I think going to be an M&A story in '22 and 23'.

Kenneth Suchoski -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Got it. That's really helpful. And then just a quick follow-up to the previous [Phonetic] question. I think in the opening remarks, I think the mention of a high-teens revenue growth rate in 2022 and I just wanted to know was that for all of Europe or was that for just Poland?

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

Yes. That was specific to Poland. And but we think there's a lot of opportunity across Europe so I think as we look into 2022, we see the rest of Europe being, if not to that level, very near it. I mean, we also had in the prepared remarks that we've seen U.K. and Ireland growing at 30%. So really the only unknown is Spain and that economy coming back and travel returning and DCC, those are things that are out of our control. But based on the things that we can control, we see it as mid- to high teens.

Operator

And there are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to the presenters for closing remarks.

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

All right. Well, thank you, operator, and thanks to everyone who -- we ran a little long today, but we continue to appreciate your interest in EVO. And have a good week.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 79 minutes

Call participants:

Edward O'Hare -- Senior Vice President of Investor Relations

James G. Kelly -- Chief Executive Officer & Director

Darren Wilson -- President of International

Brendan Tansill -- President of The Americas

Thomas E. Panther -- Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Georgios Mihalos -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Jansen Wan -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Andrew Jeffrey -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Robert Napoli -- William Blair -- Analyst

Ramsey El-Assal -- Barclays -- Analyst

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Kartik Mehta -- Northcoast Research Partners -- Analyst

Bryan Keane -- Deutsche Bank -- Analyst

Cathy Chen -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Kenneth Suchoski -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

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