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Date
Feb. 5, 2026 at 9 a.m. ET
Call participants
- Chief Executive Officer — Lachlan P. Given
- Chief Financial Officer — Timothy K. Jugmans
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Takeaways
- Total revenue -- $374.5 million, rising 17% and marking an all-time fiscal Q1 company record, reflecting broad-based gains in merchandise sales, pawn service charges (PSC), and scrap.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $70.3 million, up 36%, with margin expanding 260 basis points to 19% due to operating leverage.
- Diluted EPS -- $0.55, improving 34% compared to the prior year.
- Pawn loans outstanding (PLO) -- $307.3 million, increasing 12% to an all-time fiscal Q1 high, supported by sustained demand and higher average loan size.
- PSC revenue -- $129.6 million, up 11%, moving generally in line with PLO growth.
- Merchandise sales -- $205.2 million, increasing 10%, with same-store sales up 7% and merchandise margin expanding 230 basis points to 37%.
- Scrap margin -- 34%, up from 23% year over year, benefiting from elevated gold prices.
- Net earning assets -- $554 million, growing 17% and reinforcing expansion in earning power.
- U.S. segment revenue -- $269.8 million, up 16%; inventory increased 29% to $190.9 million, impacted by PLO growth and lower turnover (from 2.5x to 2.2x) due to a higher jewelry mix.
- Latin America segment revenue -- $104.7 million, up 19%, with PLO expanding 23% and merchandise margin rising 380 basis points to 34%.
- Store count -- 1,500 pawn stores now operated across 16 countries following two post-quarter acquisitions (Founders One/SMG and El Buffalo Pawn).
- SMG acquisition -- Acquired a 75% economic interest for approximately $64 million, consolidating financial results of an operator with 105 stores in 12 countries and providing expanded access to auto pawn and title lending in Puerto Rico.
- El Buffalo Pawn acquisition -- Added 12 Texas stores for $27.5 million, including an established local team.
- Cash position -- $465.9 million in unrestricted cash available for expansion and capital management.
- Expense outlook -- CFO Jugmans indicated, "we do expect a sequential increase through the year as we onboard our recent acquisitions and continue scaling operational best practices across all geographies."
- Same-store PLO growth -- U.S: up 8%; Latin America: up 12%.
- Jewelry mix -- Jewelry accounted for 68% of U.S. PLO, up 310 basis points; 47% in Latin America, up 650 basis points, signifying increased strategic focus on higher-margin collateral.
- Minimum wage increase in Mexico -- 13% increase announced Jan. 1, expected to impact labor costs in upcoming quarters.
Summary
EZCORP (EZPW +5.42%) achieved record quarterly revenue and robust margins driven by multi-pronged growth in loans, retail sales, and scrap, fueled in part by elevated gold prices and operational improvements. The company accelerated international expansion with the consolidation of SMG, adding 105 stores and entering 11 new countries, alongside strategic domestic additions in Texas. Management emphasized disciplined capital allocation, maintaining a conservative balance sheet while prioritizing scale and efficient integration of acquisitions.
- CEO Given stated, "a disciplined way that prioritizes growth and return on capital, maintaining a fiscally conservative balance sheet."
- The SMG transaction creates new revenue streams in higher ticket secured lending with auto pawn and title loans in Puerto Rico.
- Emerging best practices leveraging data and AI are intended to optimize lending decisions and drive continued margin and inventory efficiency improvements.
- Management stated that the main M&A pipeline now consists of smaller single- to low-double-digit store chains in the U.S, with greater opportunity remaining in Mexico and Latin America.
- Minimum wage increases in Latin America are acknowledged but management signals that revenue growth is outpacing expense inflation.
- Company retains flexibility for further M&A, organic growth investment, or shareholder returns, due to high liquidity and lack of near-term debt maturities.
- Operational focus is on integrating recent acquisitions and applying established EZCORP operating models across newly acquired businesses.
Industry glossary
- PLO: Pawn loans outstanding — the total principal balance of loans collateralized by personal property held at quarter-end.
- PSC: Pawn service charges — interest and fees collected on pawn loans.
- Scrap margin: The profit realized when jewelry or precious metals are melted down and sold for raw value, net of inventory carrying cost.
- De novo store: A new store opened by the company, rather than acquired.
- Turnover (inventory turn): The number of times inventory is sold or replaced over a specific period.
- GM inventory (general merchandise inventory): Inventory that excludes jewelry, consisting of consumer goods such as electronics, tools, and other retail products.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Lachlan P. Given: And good morning, everyone. EZCORP is off to an exceptional start to fiscal 2026, delivering one of the strongest quarters in our history. We achieved record first-quarter revenue in PLO, along with outstanding earnings growth for our shareholders. Our team's disciplined execution and the operating leverage inherent in our platform drove more than 35% growth in both net income and EBITDA. The pawn demand environment remains highly favorable. Consumer credit conditions continue to remain challenged, particularly for lower and middle-income households, as many traditional lenders continue to tighten underwriting standards. The consumers who need immediate, no-obligation access to cash find us a fast, transparent, and trusted solution.
At the same time, more consumers are seeking affordable, high-quality pre-owned goods driven by value-conscious shopping and a focus on sustainability. Both sides of our business benefit from these trends. Core financial metrics were very strong across the business for the first quarter. We saw continued momentum in PLO and PSC, merchandise sales and margin, and a material increase in scrap. We ended the quarter with net earning assets of $554 million, up 17%. And our PLO to inventory ratio remains healthy at 1.2 times, reflecting disciplined lending and inventory management. Subsequent to quarter end, we closed two exciting acquisitions that expand our scale and geographic reach.
As we've consistently said, we will deploy capital with discipline when the right opportunities emerge, and these transactions deliver on that commitment. Our focus in the immediate term is to successfully integrate these businesses to maximize profitability and returns. We remain excited about our active pipeline of additional M&A opportunities going forward. The first of these transactions was closed on January 2, with the acquisition of Founders One, which owns a majority interest in Simple Management Group, one of the largest pawn platforms in North America. SMG operates 105 stores across 12 countries, including Florida and Puerto Rico in the US, Costa Rica, Panama, and various markets across the Caribbean.
We first invested in Founders as a preferred equity holder back in October 2021. The transaction is immediately accretive and expands our pawn footprint into 11 new countries, creating a compelling platform for future domestic and international expansion. Importantly, SMG meaningfully broadens our total addressable market. In Puerto Rico, the stores also offer auto pawn and auto title loans, giving us exposure to a higher ticket secured lending category that complements our traditional pawn offering. SMG was one of the few remaining large independent pawn chains in the United States, and we're very pleased to welcome the team into our EZCORP family.
On January 12, we acquired El Buffalo Pawn, adding 12 stores in Texas, further strengthening our position in one of our largest domestic markets. The acquisition brings an experienced local team and a strong presence in a rapidly growing market. We are excited to apply our operating playbook and capital to unlock additional value in this business. Following these two transactions, EZCORP now operates 1,500 pawn stores across 16 countries, marking a significant milestone that highlights the scale of our growing global platform. Turning to slide three, for those new to the story, the pawn business resonates strongly with customers because the transaction is fundamentally customer-friendly. Our loans are nonrecourse, meaning customers have no obligation to repay.
We don't credit check, require bank accounts, or verify employment. We don't pursue collections, and we don't report to credit bureaus. These are small short-term transactions, typically $200 to $220 in the US, and $70 to $140 in Latin America, with terms ranging from thirty to ninety days. That core value proposition, together with offering great value for money secondhand goods in an environmentally responsible way, makes it fun to come and shop at a pawn store, which has been critical in driving consistent, outstanding operational and financial results for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn it over to Tim to walk through the financial details. Tim?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Thanks, Lachlan. Turning to Slide five for the consolidated financial results. We delivered another quarter of exceptional earnings performance. Adjusted EBITDA rose 36% to $70.3 million, with margin expanding 260 basis points to 19%. Diluted EPS improved 34% to $0.55. These results reflect the operating leverage embedded in our model as we scale. Total revenues reached a record $374.5 million, up 17%. Improvement was broad-based with meaningful contributions from PSC merchandise sales and a significant increase in scrap reflecting elevated gold prices. PLO also increased 12% to $307.3 million, marking an all-time Q1 high, fueled by sustained consumer demand and high average loan sizes across all geographies. PSC revenue rose 11% to $129.6 million, generally in line with PLO.
On the retail side, merchandise sales climbed 10% to $205.2 million, with same-store sales up 7%. Merchandise margin expanded 230 basis points to 37%, reflecting improved pricing, execution, and product mix. Scrap margins also expanded significantly from 23% to 34% as we benefited from higher gold prices. Gross profit of $218.9 million improved 18%, supported by contributions across all three revenue streams. G&A rose 9%, primarily due to higher incentive compensation and professional fees related to the acquisition activity. With top and bottom-line growth meaningfully outpacing operating expenses, we're demonstrating the scalability and operating leverage inherent in our platform. Before I turn it to the segments, I'd note our presentation change this quarter.
We've modified how we allocate certain administrative expenses. These are now reported within corporate G&A rather than allocated store expenses at the segment level. Prior periods have been recast to conform. There's no impact on operating expenses or net income. But please see Slide 22 in the earnings presentations for reference. Moving to the U.S. Segment on Slide six and seven. We ended the quarter with 547 stores across 19 states. Total revenues increased $37.6 million or 16% to $269.8 million. Roughly half of this improvement is attributed to higher scrap sales, which benefited from elevated gold prices and increased jewelry purchasing activity. PLO expanded 9% to $239.9 million, with same-store PLO up 8%.
Average loan size rose 12% to $231, largely due to higher prices on jewelry. Jewelry now represents 68% of U.S. PLO, up 310 basis points. PSC improved 8% to $95.2 million, supported by same-store PLO gains. On the retail side, merchandise sales climbed 8%, with same-store sales up 7%. Merchandise margin improved 170 basis points to 38%. Jewelry scrap gross profit rose $8.6 million, reflecting our ability to efficiently monetize inventory in this gold price environment. Inventory increased 29% to $190.9 million, fueled by PLO expansion, higher merchandise purchases, including continued growth of our lightweight product, as well as a decline in turnover from 2.5 times to 2.2 times.
This reflects a higher mix of jewelry, which naturally carries a longer sales cycle. Layaway provides customers a flexible path to ownership and supports healthy sell-through and inventory velocity. In addition, jewelry that doesn't sell through retail can be monetized through scrap, providing a natural floor on inventory risk. Despite lower turns, aged general merchandise remains manageable at 3.1% of total GM inventory, or $1.7 million. We have prioritized efforts to optimize inventory velocity and reduce the HGM. Segment EBITDA improved 28% to $73.5 million as margins expanded 260 basis points to 27%, supported by robust gross profit performance and effective expense management. Same-store expenses were up 6%. Turning to Latin America on Slide eight and nine.
We ended the quarter with 836 stores across all countries. During the period, we opened seven de novo stores, including in Guatemala, one in Mexico, and one in Honduras, and acquired 14 stores in Mexico. Total revenues rose $16.7 million or 19% to $104.7 million. Roughly half of this improvement is attributable to merchandise sales, reflecting solid retail execution across the region. PLO expanded 23% to $67.4 million, with same-store gains of 12%. Average loan size improved 16% to $102, 9% on a constant currency basis, largely reflecting higher jewelry prices. Jewelry now represents 47% of Latin American PLO, up 650 basis points. PSC rose 18%, supported by the same-store PLO gains and contributions from new stores.
Merchandise sales climbed 15%, with same-store sales up 8%. Merchandise margin improved 380 basis points to 34%. Inventory increased 10% to $56.1 million, fueled by PLO expansion. Importantly, inventory turnover improved to 3.1x from 3x. Aged general merchandise increased to 3.6% of total GM inventory, representing $1.2 million. We are applying best practices to reduce aged GM. Segment EBITDA improved 23% to $21.4 million, and margins expanded 70 basis points to 20%, reflecting continued expansion despite a 16% rise in same-store expenses, mainly due to labor costs, including minimum wage increases.
From a balance sheet perspective, our robust position of $465.9 million in unrestricted cash will enable us to fund organic expansion, pursue compelling acquisition opportunities, and thoughtfully return capital to shareholders over time. As Lachlan noted, subsequent to quarter end, we completed two acquisitions that meaningfully expand our footprint. On January 2, we closed the SMG transaction. The transaction was funded through a conversion of existing preferred equity investments and notes receivable, plus approximately $9 million of cash for a total consideration of approximately $64 million. This results in approximately 75% economic interest in SMG. Following the transaction, we will consolidate 100% of SMG's financial results with net income allocated to noncontrolling interest reflected below the net income line.
We also provided SMG with an intercompany debt facility to replace its third-party financing. This intercompany debt and associated interest will be eliminated upon consolidation. Also in January, we acquired El Buffalo Pawn, adding 12 stores in Texas, for $27.5 million. Both transactions represent disciplined deployment of capital to drive longer-term shareholder value. Looking ahead on a consolidated basis, we remain focused on expanding PLO, improving inventory efficiency, and scaling operational best practices across all geographies. Based on the current trends, we expect Q2 momentum to remain favorable. Tax refund season typically drives increased loan redemption and retail activity, and the current gold price environment continues to support elevated scrap contributions.
With respect to scrap, we're not in the business of predicting gold prices. We can say gold has continued to rise through the quarter. As long as that continues, we expect elevated scrap gross profit contributions. As you will note in the last quarter, once gold stabilizes, we'd expect approximately two quarters of elevated scrap gross profit margin before margins begin to normalize towards historical levels. On expenses, we remain disciplined. That said, we do expect a sequential increase through the year as we onboard our recent acquisitions and continue scaling operational best practices across all geographies. Our M&A pipeline remains active in the U.S. and Latin America as we approach each opportunity with rigorous financial discipline.
With 1,500 stores across 16 countries, we've reached a significant scale milestone and are well-positioned to capitalize on further consolidation opportunities. Now I'd like to turn it back to Lachlan for closing remarks.
Lachlan P. Given: Thanks, Tim. From a capital allocation perspective, our strategy remains consistent. Our priority is to build scale, given the significant global opportunity in pawn. We are going to do that in a disciplined way that prioritizes growth and return on capital, maintaining a fiscally conservative balance sheet. We believe that this is the clearest path to generating meaningful long-term value for our shareholders. I want to extend my sincere appreciation to our team members in all of our markets. Your dedication to serving our customers with respect and professionalism is the foundation of these outstanding results.
Guided by our core values of people, pawn, and passion, we remain confident in our ability to scale with discipline, invest with purpose, and build on our momentum through fiscal 2026 and beyond to deliver sustained long-term value and superior returns for our shareholders. With that, operator, we'll open the line for questions.
Operator: And wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press 11 again. One moment for questions. And our first question comes from Brian McNamara with Canaccord Genuity. You may proceed.
Brian McNamara: Congrats on another strong quarter here.
Lachlan P. Given: Thanks, Todd.
Brian McNamara: Good morning. Congrats on the SMG deal. You guys had a preferred equity interest there since, like, October '21. I'm curious why was now the right time to kind of take a controlling stake here. It's to me, it's sounded like you wanted to get that a little larger in terms of store count. Was it just a was it just a factor of just, you know, the bid ask spread kinda narrowing to a point you were comfortable?
Lachlan P. Given: Yeah. I think it's I think there are a bunch of things, and you've named a couple of them. I think the first one was we wanted we wanted to give John and his team the ability to really scale the business quickly, using leverage And I think after being an investor for four or five years, we were comfortable that he'd done a the team had done a really good job there. And I think that from an operational perspective, we, you know, we got very, very keen on the opportunity. Think secondly, you've gotta have a willing seller and a willing buyer as well.
So I you know, on the timing side of it, the deal terms came together. In a way that we thought would be really beneficial long term for our shareholders. So I think operationally, the time was right. Deal terms were right. And, you know, now we are deep into integration and partnering with John and his team on making sure that this is good an acquisition as we think it can be. That had control environment at the center of what we're doing, but growth and de novo stores and in a whole bunch countries that EZCORP's never been in.
So you know, we shared with you, Brian, and the whole market over the last couple of years that we thought this is best opportunity out there for EZCORP. So we're really excited that we've been able to solidify that for our shareholders and now get the get the earnings momentum throughout income statement that we've never had before.
Brian McNamara: Great. And then just talking to you guys about capital allocation the last few quarters, it sounded like the M and A pipeline is pretty robust. I'm curious after the acquisition of, you know, SMG and El Buffalo, how does that pipeline look today? And any changes in your capital allocation priorities here?
Lachlan P. Given: No. I think we've been really consistent on that in the last couple of years. I think we are as I said in my remarks, scale is our number one priority. And so to your question, the m and a pipeline definitely remains strong. Clearly, we've taken the biggest one in North America or one of the biggest ones in North America out of that equation now by buying SMG, but it remains strong, particularly in Mexico and other Latin American countries. So look, you know, while this opportunity I keep saying, is a global one, we still think there is great opportunity in the markets that we're already in.
And we're gonna take know, we're gonna continue with this disciplined approach to all we're doing, which you know, it prioritizes growth but return on capital at the same time. So to maintain this balance of capital allocation strategy, which is scale, putting money into our existing business. You can see just how quickly we're growing organically. And so we need to fund that. And we're gonna balance that with some thoughtful return to our shareholders when we deem it appropriate. So I think it's the same the same message. It's one of balance that I think you can see from these results.
Prioritizing scale and growth is really working, and that's what I think is delivering such fantastic returns to our shareholders. I think, you know, I think the stock's up 80% in the last twelve months. And we're really excited about where we can go from here. We think we're phenomenally positioned. The remainder of this year, and you know, I'm I'm just really looking forward to our team continuing to deliver on this business.
Brian McNamara: So there's an expectation that this tax season's gonna a pretty big one in terms of refunds. I think it's a thousand dollars more per household. Typically, you have a you know, a loan pay down in the March that we really haven't seen that seasonal as in a few years now. How are you guys planning for that? And, like, what's your expect what's your baseline expectation? For q five Q2? Your notes, but thank you for that.
Lachlan P. Given: I think Tim will Tim will make some remarks, but it's you know, my perspective is you read a lot about it. A lot of people have very different views, then you've got to segment the market. Right? You've got to look at the lower demographic market and what you think that protect that tax return season's gonna look like. But from, you know, from a corporate perspective, we are preparing for, you know, daily, you know, what we've seen in the last few years. Might be a little different. Tim will walk you through that. But, you know, our focus is we can't control that. All we can control is serving our customers the best we can.
And if tax refunds are bigger than normal, then clearly, we'll probably see some higher loan high loan pay down and give us the opportunity to sell some more. But my personal view is that I'm not expecting some monumental change here for our customer demographic, but I can't predict that. But Tim, any anything you wanna add?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Yeah. That's exactly how we've it's you know, this is a day business. Dealing with customer demands that do change. And so the if these extra if there is extra cash, the team knows how to deal with it, and if there's less, the team knows how to deal with it. So they prepared for any direction. But as Lachlan said, you know, we've generally seen in The US pawn business going from December to March, a, you know, eight, 9% decrease in PLO in the last couple of years. You know, it does look like it's gonna be slightly higher than that.
I'm reading various papers, which you know, I think a few of them are really targeting to say that this low lower demographic is probably not going to get as a bigger percentage, but they will be it will be slightly higher than prior years.
Brian McNamara: Great. Then last one for me before I get back in the queue here. I'm assuming you guys are talking to investors just given what the stock's done over the last year, and I feel like I'm talking a lot more new investors as it relates to the industry as well. So how should investors new to the industry think about the price of gold here and any inherent risk to your business should it move lower? Like, what kind of buffer is typically embedded in your loan book relative to the price of the underlying commodity?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Thank you, Brian. Look. On your first on your first comment, we're absolutely seeing a lot more interest activity in firstly, in the industry and then secondly, in our stock. Know, we are seeing the big active, fundamental, long only funds showing much more interest than becoming shareholders if they hadn't been previously. They're new to the story. So I've been incredibly excited by that. I think it's been a real change over the last twelve months, and so I'm very happy to see us creating some value for them. And I as you know, I think the stock is fundamentally underpriced because we are you know, we are growing so rapidly We are fiscally conservative.
We have a lot of liquidity. We have no short or medium term debt maturities. So I think the business is set up fundamentally for a really phenomenal future. And as I said, I'm very, very happy to see these new long only household name funds getting interested or buying stock. On your second question on gold, look. Tim, why you do you wanna do you wanna give that one a crack?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Yep. So from a PLO perspective, the jewelry part of the business is it was 68% in the quarter. And in Latin America, it was 47%. Both of those are up from last year. So we do see that customers are bringing in more gold as can be expected. So we do see the gold price increasing, there is some it does create activity from a customer perspective where they do bring in more gold. They're getting greater value for the gold they bring in. They also bring in gold to sell. So the amount that we're purchasing is also increased. From a from a risk perspective, you know, we looking when we lend on gold, we're not adjusting daily.
We're looking at longer term trends. So, you know, the recent up and down of the gold price in the last week no effect whatsoever. So we're really looking at long term trends. So we build in and, we're not lending at the rate that we're gonna scrap at. So there is a margin already built in to what we can do, and you can see that in our long term sales margins. Where you do have where we do have some ups at the moment is on the scrap margins. Where we lent some of the gold that we're scrapping we lent a year ago is obviously a very different price now.
And so those margins you know, the 25 to 35% on those scrap margins. Which is which is a temporary nature until gold stabilizes.
Brian McNamara: Very helpful. Thank you, guys. Best of luck.
Lachlan P. Given: Thanks, Brian.
Timothy K. Jugmans: Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from David Scharf with Citizens Capital Markets. You may proceed.
David Scharf: This is Zach on for David. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the strong quarter. Wanted to dig in a little bit on the growth side of things. You know, with the 11 new countries that are of the SMG acquisition, Wanted to see if we can get some additional color on the growth potential in those specific new geographies, both in the near term and the longer term.
Lachlan P. Given: Yeah. Look. Thanks, Zach. So it there is obviously 11 new countries, but there is Florida and Puerto Rico is really where SMGs you know, most of the SMG business or the largest part of the SMG business is in those two regions. So I think know, we're looking at we do, as you say, have 11 new countries, but some of them are relatively small in The Caribbean So what I what I would say to you is that Puerto Rico represents probably at this point the most significant opportunity for SMG. They are already probably 25, 26 stores, something like that. What? 29 stores?
Know, 29 stores with the with the potential to have I think significantly more there. I think that's a really strong market. And, you know, now that I mean, we only owned it a couple of weeks, so we are assessing the opportunities across Panama, Costa Rica, and those other Caribbean countries. But you know, this SMG team have built their careers on de novos. They built value porn in Florida, which is now our largest business. We bought that from them in 2009. That was that was almost entirely a de novo chain that we paid a 120,000,000 for. Those years ago. So this is a team that is very good at de novo store build out.
So that's what we're looking for from them. I think we're gonna do that in a disciplined and focused way, though, because it does drag earnings. But over the medium to long term, it's exactly what we need to be doing to demonstrate growth to our shareholders. So look, I think it's while SMG still represents a relatively small part of the Uzi Corp business, I think those new markets represent some really strong opportunities. I think it'll be done mainly through De Novo. There'll be some acquisition opportunities as well, but look, we're a few weeks in. We're working really well with the with the management team there.
And I think you know, as I said, while still relatively small, it's it's it's certainly capable of being a very large very large business that we're excited about. Understood. I wanted to follow-up with one more growth related question. Just in The U. S. Specifically, you wanted to drill down just see what the m and a outlook is for, you know, kind of these yep, five plus, 10 plus store chains. Yeah. Look. That's it's there aren't many of those left. I've gotta say there's there's some, but it's you know, I would say that The US, following the SMG deal, I would say that The US is you know, it's more in the single digit stores now.
It's it's kind of we need to get good at consistently buying one, two, and three. And if as you say, if any of the kind of the five to 15 come up, know, we'll we'll take a good look at them, but as we've demonstrated to everyone, we're gonna do that in a really disciplined way that prioritizes return on capital. So you know, I think I think the more m and a opportunities are sort of Latin America and beyond, but we will absolutely stay active in The US.
I just think with the SMG deal done and oh, Buffalo as well, the 12 stores in Texas, You know, we're we're know, those opportunities are starting to be, you know, less and less Great. Thank you very much.
David Scharf: Thanks, Zach. Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from Andrew Scutt with Roth Capital Partners. You may proceed.
Andrew Scutt: Hey. Good morning, guys. Congrats on the strong results, and thanks for taking my questions. Guys, we've been talking a lot about jewelry, scrapping margins. But you guys did post some really nice numbers in LatAm, and I know that's been a focus recently. So can you just kind of talk about the progress you've seen LatAm kind of getting the jewelry business up to speed with what you're seeing in The US?
Lachlan P. Given: Yeah. It's a it's a really good question. I think it's it's one of the real highlights of these results. You know, as I said in my remarks, this is probably the best quarter I've I've seen it easy and potentially one of the best in it, you know, thirty five year history. It's it's a phenomenal set of results. And one of the real highlights, as you point out, is Latin America. And it's not just the sheer growth.
You know, we're seeing phenomenal organic growth, but what's what's really pleasing is just the balance of that growth you know, the balance in PLO, the balance in inventory, net revenue, and then profit, I think it's it's just a real testament to Blair and his leadership team down there to have delivered these results. As you also said, we are seeing jewelry become a bigger proportion of our PLO and inventory, and that's clearly by design. We are spending a lot of time training our teams down there that this is such a huge opportunity down in that market.
And I think, you know, irrespective of gold price, it has it has just been too small a part of our business. And so I think we're showing some really great not only numbers, but just behaviors in our stores that it's becoming it's becoming much more a significant strength of our business in Mexico and of our team that we can lend on jewelry. So you know, that's been super pleasing as well.
Timothy K. Jugmans: I'd add to that it's not just jewelry. Right? You know, we talk about jewelry and improving that because that's easier to see in the in the numbers. But the general merchandise part of that LatAm business continues to go strength to strength as well. So that is the combination of those two is really driving that amazing bottom line performance.
Andrew Scutt: Thanks for the color there, and good segue to my second question, Tim. On just the general merchandise I know there's some seasonality in the quarter with the holidays. But we saw a nice bump in the margins there. So can you just kind of talk to the margins in the quarter? GM margins, that is?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Yes. The GM margins are still well, overall margins are still on merchandise sales margins are still on a low end of what we think we can achieve. But it was up from last year. The you know, I think it's just a testament to our teams in all geographies. Really doing a great job at the sales counter and continue to sell Fresh Velocity. Which is creating that And I think what I'd add, Tim, is that we're doing a much better job of using data and AI to lend better at the counter. And that, you know, that has the down the flow impact all sorts of impact on inventory, on margin, and on turns.
And so we're at the corporate office, we're employing, I think, much more sophisticated thinking around pricing using AI and deep data machine learning to make sure that we're giving our store managers the best thinking on how to lend. So I think that's that's also starting to really have an impact on what you're seeing on sales margin.
Andrew Scutt: Great. Well, thanks for taking my and congrats again on the strong results.
Timothy K. Jugmans: Thanks, man.
Lachlan P. Given: Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from John Douglas Hecht with Jefferies. You may proceed.
John Douglas Hecht: Hey, guys. Congrats on the results. I'm on for John today, but thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to I just wanted to go back to the margins and of the question that was just asked. With the strong performance this quarter, we were just curious, like, how much of that should we think about will maintain, with gold prices, you know, changing? And what are the other factors aside from what you just mentioned that are contributing to that strong performance?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Yeah. I think that's going to yeah, our clients have, you know, last couple of quarters have always been that we're gonna continue to operate in the lower end of the range, and it will move around a bit. The you know, this is obviously the strongest quarter of the year. With a lot of a lot of demand through the holiday season for buying items. Which does create momentum in the in the margins. But, you know, we continue to work on what happens on the sales floor is what is happens on pricing in our backrooms in and trying to figure out the best way forward.
Our focus is really on making sure that turns continue to be strong, that our stores continue to have fresh inventory in them for our customers and it continues to grow the business.
Lachlan P. Given: I think I think you know, we don't manage the business as we've said to the market. We don't manage the business per sales margin. You know, we are, as Tim said, focused on turns, minimizing aged, it's really all about turns. So, you know, it's a really strong result on the margin side, but know, we wanna make sure, as Tim said, that we keep turning this inventory because as the market knows, if you're not doing that, that's that's that's what's starting to negatively impact your business. But, you know, strong very strong quarter on March.
John Douglas Hecht: Definitely. Really strong quarter. And then just one follow-up kind of going back to the of the first questions asked. Around the M and A pipeline, you'll you'll still have a lot of cash on hand. I was just curious, in terms of capital allocation, how you all were thinking about the balance of growth investment, the debt repayment, and also the shareholder return. Through the rest of the year?
Lachlan P. Given: Yeah. I think I think that the keywords balance, and we've been consistent on that. You know, in m and a, we've done two really strong acquisitions this quarter, and we've done a few that the previous quarter as well. So I've got the team focused on making sure that integration is nailed. You know, I think often, often you think the deal part's the big part, and it's just not that at all. You've gotta really integrate these businesses to make sure that the growth potential and the return on capital is there for our shareholders.
So I'd I'd say know, we in the short term, nailing the integration is super important, but yeah, the I said earlier, the pipeline is still very strong. There are very large chains across Latin America that you know, capable of being bored if you can come to a reasonable price. So we will prioritize that. We will prioritize scale, which means m and a as well as scaling our existing organic business. Right? It's hungry for capital because we're growing really nicely. So we'll prioritize that. The moment at the moment, we have got no short or near term debt repayments. Which is which is obviously pleasing, and we have plenty of liquidity.
And as I said, we'll now that we're through these acquisitions, we will you know, we'll be relooking at our share buyback think program. So to answer your question again, it's it's really balanced between those three, but we are prioritizing growth and scale.
John Douglas Hecht: Great. Yep. That makes sense, and it's good to hear. Just had one last quick one. Going back to what you're saying about integration, Yeah. For the integration of the Founders One, how should we think about expenses related to that? What the plan is and how you'll plan to kind of leverage y'all's operational expertise that you've done for so many years. Over the next twelve months.
Lachlan P. Given: Yeah. Look. I think on the expense side, we'll we'll announce next quarter will be our first quarter with SMG ownership. So that's when you'll see much more detail on the numbers. We've we've we've given numbers in the announcement of the deal. You know, that's what we're prepared to give the market at the moment while we really get stuck into it in the first quarter of ownership. But you'll have much more visibility at the end of this current quarter on how SNG looks. And know, just from a from a high level expenses, you know, it's it's sort of ups and downs. Right?
We expect to put some more expense into the control environment to make sure that the finance function, the legal function, the IT function all have the resource needed truthfully, you know, my hope is that we can really leverage the existing easy teams to make sure that there's not too much expense there. But we've got we're sort of taking a you know, very responsible approach to what we're doing there. It's a private it was a private company that now has to operate in a public company world.
But the great news for shareholders is that we think the revenue upside in working with John and his team we think that easy sharing operating initiatives and practices and playbook should more than compensate for that expense base. So look, we'll we'll be back at the end of the quarter with more detail on FMG numbers. They'll be in our reporting. But for now, it let us sort of get deep into the into operating the business and be back at the end of the quarter.
John Douglas Hecht: Right. That makes sense. Thanks for the detail and another great quarter. So I'll hop back in the queue. Thanks for the question.
Operator: Thank you. And as a reminder, to ask a question, please press 11 on your telephone. Our next question comes from Kyle Joseph with Stephens. You may proceed.
Kyle Joseph: Hey, good morning, guys. And, yeah, echo, congrats on a on a strong quarter and the acquisition as well. Most of my questions have been asked. I just wanna focus on appreciate the color you gave on tax refunds in The US, but just kinda wanna get a macro update on LATAM, recognizing, you know, there's a number of countries there. But in terms of you know, anything you'd highlight on wage growth or inflation in those geographies?
Lachlan P. Given: Yeah. Thanks, Carl. I mean, definitely, we saw the obviously, the impact of the minimum wage increase in Mexico, but we'd we'd flag that to the market. We often speak to you guys, the analysts, shareholders and protect prospective investors. That was coming. It wasn't far off what we thought it was going to be. So but, of course, you can see it in the numbers that, you know, we are we have got inflated labor numbers down in Mexico, but with that, you can see this very, very strong growth across all that we're doing in Latin America. You know? Ten years ago in pawnbroking, it was sort of a tale of two stories. Right?
You'd you'd see poor lending up, and you'd see sales down What we've been seeing now over a number of years is that we're running a business that's got really strong growth in lending and really strong growth in sales while maintaining some pretty impressive sales margin. So look, Yes. The expense base is up down there, but think the revenue and you can see the you can see the numbers. It's we're we're able to get that operating leverage out of this business, and even with the even with the minimum wage growth, it's the numbers are so particularly down in Latin America have been phenomenal.
Timothy K. Jugmans: Yeah. The most of the effect is obviously Mexico. Mexico's minimum wage increased by 13% on January 1. So, you know, that was that will that will start coming through in the in the next quarter. Onto on top of last year's increases.
Kyle Joseph: Got it. Helpful. And then Tim, I think you talked about earlier, you know, you manage this business almost on a day to day basis, you know, on that note. Think tax refunds started hitting last week. Know, have you seen any and you guys talked about your expectations for loan demand, but you know, shifting over to the retail side of things, have you seen any kind of pickup in terms of retail sales domestically? Recognizing it's very early in the season.
Timothy K. Jugmans: Yeah. It's very early on. I think Momentum out of the of the fourth quarter has been strong. So we're very happy with where we are today.
Kyle Joseph: Great. Thanks very much for taking my questions.
Timothy K. Jugmans: Thanks, Kyle.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Raj Sharma with Texas Capital Bank. You may proceed.
Raj Sharma: Hi. Thank you for taking my questions. Fantastic quarter. What a great beat. I just wanted to understand, you've had the increase in revenues quarter up 16%, just higher year over year you know, higher than, you know, mid teens, higher than expected, Is that can you give some color on you think that's purely the consumer feeling tight? Or is it elevated gold prices? And do you expect this sort of organic growth to continue at this pace?
Lachlan P. Given: I think look, when you separate macro from what we're doing internally, let's start there. I think gold is clearly helpful. You can see that in the scrap numbers, and you can see that in the average line size. So that has clearly been a tailwind. But I think the real story here is what we're doing internally around everything that's going on inside the store around serving customers I think that's the main story. It's truly our operational execution that's we've been doing we've been at this as a team four years now.
And I think you know, The US has led the turnaround, but you can still see we have so much to do You can see it in the organic growth. You can see it in our sales numbers and our margin improvement. So I think you know, yes, gold and the macro is supportive, but you know, we don't sit around on our hands just hoping that the macro is gonna improve. This is this is really an internally led story an operational execution story. And in terms of in terms of do I think that's gonna continue? Look.
We don't guide the market, as you know, Raj, but I think that there is in every store, Blair and the rest of us walk into, we can see that even when they are best stores that make 2 or 3,000,000 a store, we can see stuff that can be improved. So, you know, my objective here is that we're gonna grow these key metrics And you know, we're we're just seeing some, as Tim mentioned, momentum, and momentum builds on momentum.
So you know, the key job here is to concentrate on our people, make sure that they are incentivized the right way in stores, that we retain them and that we give them career paths so that they wanna stay because retention in our stores really is the key driver. And I think our training and development programs and then our use in the corporate store of much more AI, much more much more digital initiatives that, you know, we're whole industry is essentially backward on this on this area. So I think selling online, interacting with customers digitally, there is just so much more here to do.
And so while I'm not gonna guide you know, where I think organic growth can go, It is certainly our objective to not only grow through acquisition and de novo, but to grow these stores organically as well.
Raj Sharma: Fantastic. And obviously, you guys are doing a great job It's showing in the results. Just sort of, how do you think of scrapping Is that is that purely related to gold prices? You know, how do we sort of think about it modeling wise? Is it allocated percentage you wanna scrap regardless of price?
Timothy K. Jugmans: Tim, you wanna try that? Yeah. So the I'm gonna answer. The way we look at scrapping, is we scrap things that have been sitting in our stores close to a year. And then we scrap things that you know, definitely quite a bit on purchases where people are buy where people are selling stuff to us that we don't think is sellable. So broke like a broken necklace, heavily personalized items. We'll start scrapping those pretty quickly. So those are the combination of what we scrapped So it really comes down to know, on the purchase side, it really comes down to what are people bringing in. So that is that is quite different.
This is not we're not just gonna go scrap to make property. We are trying to sell as much jewelry in our stores as possible, and we really just scrapping because of age liquidation. So it's it's the way we manage our inventory rather than the way to manipulate profit or we're gonna scrap to make fun of it. You know, the you know, once we scrap, we're gonna make money. But, you it's the way Blair talked about it is it's how we actively manage our inventory. Rather than gonna scrap x percent of some measure.
Raj Sharma: Got it. So whether gold is down a lot or up a lot, that shouldn't really impact scrapping. It's what's going on internally.
Timothy K. Jugmans: Right.
Raj Sharma: Okay. And then just lastly, is it reasonable to think that you know, some something like cash converters would be kinda next. Do you have a planned amount of m and a that you want to do?
Lachlan P. Given: No. We think about it that way. We don't we don't think about it sort of in a you know, dollars plan per year or number of stores per year. We look at every opportunity on its own merits. And as I said, we think there's a lot to do in our existing markets. On cash converter specifically, Sam and his and his team are doing a just a fantastic job They are you know, they just did a rights issue that we participated in. I think we put about 7 or $8,000,000 into it to maintain our ownership percentage.
But they are you know, they've done probably I think their largest acquisition ever If you if you look into their financials, But they're their business is you know, their sorry. Their m and a strategy is very, very simple. They are buying back franchisees. Are already on their pods, already used their brand know them well, know the teams well, So it's, you know, it's a really simple m and a strategy across a whole bunch of countries. They're they're doing really well in The UK. That's a porn only business. So we're, you know, we're really excited about that. But, you know, cash converter still remains a pretty small part of our business.
If you look at the balance sheet, we carry it at a pretty small amount. And if you market to market, it's it's still a relatively small part of the EZ Corp business. But that said, it's it's very strategic. We love that they're in 15 or 16 countries. But just remember, they are pawnbrokers and secondhand goods resellers, but they also have a significant unsecured lending business. So it is different. Know, we're 43 something percent We recognize the earnings through our p and l, which I know our shareholders love, and we get a we get a nice dividend yield as well. So we're happy with where it sits now. It's it's strategic. They're doing a great job.
And, you know, we'll just continue to assess our ownership position going forward.
Raj Sharma: Great. Great. Thank you for taking my questions. I'll take it offline. Again, congratulations.
Lachlan P. Given: Thanks, Matt. To you a bit later.
Operator: Thank you. And now I'd like to turn the call back over to Lachlan P. Given for any closing remarks.
Lachlan P. Given: Thank you, operator. Thank you, everyone, for joining. I just wanna echo my remarks to thank the teams for delivering such a phenomenal set of results for our for our shareholders, and I'm really looking forward to talking to everyone over the next couple of days. Investors, prospective investors and analysts, even more looking forward to delivering a really great year for our shareholders. So thanks for joining. Talk to you later.
Operator: Thank you. This concludes the conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
