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DATE

Tuesday, April 28, 2026 at 9:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Christopher Cartwright
  • Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Todd Cello
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Gregory Bardi

TAKEAWAYS

  • Total Revenue -- $1.287 billion, representing 14% reported growth and 11% organic constant currency growth, exceeding the high end of guidance by $41 million.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $453 million, a 10% increase, surpassing guidance by $18 million; margin reached 35.2%, down 100 basis points year over year, with a 120 basis point headwind from FICO mortgage royalties and a 25 basis point benefit from the Mexico acquisition.
  • Adjusted Diluted EPS -- $1.18, up 12%, exceeding guidance by $0.08, reflecting outperformance in core operations and recent M&A.
  • U.S. Markets Revenue -- Increased 14% organically, with Financial Services up 24% or 14% excluding FICO mortgage royalties; mortgage revenue grew 50% (24% excluding FICO royalties) versus a 7% increase in inquiries.
  • Emerging Verticals -- Revenue grew over 6%, led by insurance with double-digit growth, while public sector posted high-single-digit gains.
  • International Revenue -- Flat organically as expected; Canada grew 9%, the U.K. rose 7%, Africa increased 10%, and India declined 5%, moderately outperforming internal targets.
  • Consumer Interactive -- Segment revenue was flat as indirect channel growth and breach-related wins were offset by direct channel declines.
  • Mexico Acquisition -- Mexico revenue now fully consolidated, adding $22 million to revenue and $8 million to adjusted EBITDA, and is accretive to earnings though modestly dilutive to margin in 2026 due to accounting effects.
  • Share Repurchases -- $25 million repurchased year to date, with plans to increase repurchases under the existing $1 billion authorization in the remainder of the year.
  • Leverage and Capital Allocation -- Leverage ratio at 2.8x after funding the $660 million Mexico acquisition, with a stated goal to return to below 2.5x via debt prepayment and continued shareholder capital return.
  • Full Year 2026 Guidance -- Revenue expected between $5.1 billion and $5.135 billion (11% to 12% growth); adjusted EBITDA of $1.796 billion to $1.816 billion (9% to 10% growth, 35.2% to 35.4% margin, down 60 to 80 basis points); organic constant currency revenue growth of 8% to 9% (5% to 6% excluding FICO mortgage royalties); adjusted diluted EPS of $4.68 to $4.75 (9% to 11% growth).
  • AI Adoption Impact -- AI-enabled customers are increasing data consumption and product adoption, with one fintech’s revenue “approaching $15 million” (up 60% since 2022) and a top-five card issuer’s contract revenue rising over 20% to $20 million, despite declining new accounts.
  • Product Innovation -- Trusted call solutions, True IQ, and next-gen fraud models are noted as the fastest-growing products; 10 new fraud models launched in the past 12 months, generating “tens of millions of dollars of incremental pipeline.”
  • VantageScore Developments -- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have begun accepting VantageScore 4.0, with upcoming FHA acceptance; initial industry pricing set at $0.99, with TransUnion providing free vintage scores and multiyear pricing for credit reports and Vantage 4.0 through year end.
  • Second Quarter 2026 Guidance -- Revenue projected at $1.271 billion to $1.283 billion (12% to 13% growth; 8% to 9% organic constant currency, or 5% to 6% excluding FICO mortgage royalties); adjusted EBITDA targeted at $439 million to $445 million (8% to 9% growth); adjusted diluted EPS expected between $1.13 and $1.15 (4% to 6% growth).

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RISKS

  • Adjusted EBITDA margin contracted by 100 basis points year over year due to a 120 basis point headwind from FICO mortgage royalties, with further 2026 margin dilution expected from acquisition accounting.
  • Management is maintaining conservative volume assumptions for the remainder of 2026, citing, “heightened geopolitical risk” from the Iran conflict, which may increase inflation and potentially impact interest rates and lending volumes.
  • Asia Pacific revenue declined 18%, primarily due to the conclusion of onetime contracts and continued energy price pressures affecting operations in the Philippines.

SUMMARY

TransUnion (TRU 1.35%) management highlighted that customers sharply increased data usage through both direct integration and new AI-enabled partnerships, resulting in substantial performance gains in the Financial Services segment. New product launches on the OneTru AI platform are rapidly accelerating innovation, while expanded adoption of fraud analytics and marketing audiences is strengthening TransUnion’s recurring revenue base. Recently completed acquisitions—most notably the consolidation of Mexico operations—are expected to be accretive to overall earnings, though currently create modest margin pressures due to accounting mechanics. TransUnion leadership stated that, should current positive trends persist, financial results may continue at or above the high end of guidance.

  • Cartwright said, “We have ample capacity under our $1 billion repurchase authorization and expect to increase repurchases over the rest of the year.”
  • TransUnion continues to observe no negative trends in lending volumes, including subprime delinquencies, despite geopolitical uncertainties in international energy markets.
  • A new strategic partnership in India with a major telco will extend trusted call solutions to 500 million subscribers, increasing the reach of fraud-prevention products.
  • Leadership indicated that TransUnion’s AI-driven TruIQ analytics orchestrator is delivering 2-3x modeling productivity internally, with commercialization underway for external client use.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • FICO mortgage royalties: Payments received from FICO, associated with the use of FICO scores in mortgage originations, affecting reported loan segment revenues and margins.
  • Tri-Merge: The process of combining credit data from all three major bureaus into a single report, commonly used in U.S. mortgage underwriting.
  • VantageScore 4.0: The latest credit scoring model jointly developed by the three major credit bureaus, designed for enhanced predictive accuracy and broader consumer coverage.
  • Trusted call solutions: Products to authenticate and verify voice and text communications, primarily aimed at preventing fraud in consumer and commercial interactions.
  • OneTru platform: TransUnion’s next-generation AI-enabled technology environment, supporting advanced analytics and scalable solutions.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Christopher Cartwright: Thanks, Greg, and let me add my welcome and outline today's agenda. First, I will review our first quarter results and updated 2026 guidance. Second, I'll discuss how AI is accelerating innovation across to you and driving higher data usage among some clients. And then I'll pass to Todd, who will detail our first quarter results and provide second quarter and full year '26 guidance. So we started the year very strong, exceeding our first quarter guidance for revenue, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted diluted earnings per share. This is our ninth straight quarter of at least high single-digit organic constant currency revenue growth with 11% growth versus our 8% to 9% guidance.

Excluding FICO mortgage royalties, revenue grew 7% and which is also above our expectations. Now U.S. markets grew 14%. Financial Services led the way up 24% or 14% excluding FICO mortgage royalties. We delivered broad-based strength across lending types driven by modest volume growth, pricing actions and sales momentum across both credit and noncredit solutions. Emerging verticals had another healthy quarter growing more than 6% led by insurance and public sector. International revenue was flat organically as expected. Canada and the U.K. grew high single digits and Africa grew 10%, and India declined mid-single digit, slightly better than we'd expected, and we expect a gradual improvement throughout the course of the year.

Now strong revenue growth translated into 12% growth in adjusted diluted earnings per share. In line with our disciplined M&A approach focused on highly strategic bolt-ons, we recently completed 2 acquisitions. TransUnion to Mexico extends our global playbook into an attractive market where we now hold the leading position. The smaller acquisition of RealNetworks Mobile division adds complementary messaging capabilities to our leading trusted call solutions. And in addition to completing these acquisitions, we repurchased $25 million of shares year-to-date through April. We have ample capacity under our $1 billion repurchase authorization and expect to increase repurchases over the rest of the year. Our outperformance reflects consistent execution in a relatively stable operating environment.

The strength of our diversified portfolio positions us to navigate potential changes in economic conditions. And as a reminder, our customers entered 2026 with cautious optimism. Lenders anticipated loan growth supported by their strong balance sheets, healthy consumer finances and expectations for rate cuts throughout the year. In February, the conflict in Iran added uncertainty about inflation, interest rates and the potential impact on consumers. The 10-year treasury rate in the 30-year mortgage rate are currently 4.3% and 6.3%, respectively, after briefly dipping below 4% and 6% in late February. We continue to monitor market dynamics and potential second order impacts on consumers and customers. To date, we have not observed any change in customer behavior tied to these developments.

Through mid-April, volume and revenue trends have remained at or ahead of our expectations. We saw a brief pickup in refi-driven mortgage activity during February's rate debt, followed by a March normalization previous levels. U.S. nonmortgage lending remains healthy. Against this backdrop, we delivered another strong sales quarter, underscoring sustained demand and commercial momentum for our credit marketing and fraud solutions. An uncertain market underscores the importance of our durable growth strategy. We have the broadest, deepest and most relevant solutions portfolio in our history. Our fastest-growing products include trusted call solutions, True IQ, identity-based marketing and next-gen fraud models, which address customer needs across economic cycles.

Looking ahead, we expect our strongest ever cohort of new product launches and major enhancements in 2026. While our investments in global AI-enabled platforms position us for cost efficiency and operating leverage. Against this backdrop, we are maintaining our full year organic constant currency guidance, including revenue growth of 8% to 9%. We are balancing first quarter outperformance driven by healthy underlying trends against macro uncertainty and the need to maintain prudently conservative guidance. The increase to the high end of our guidance, $154 million of revenue, $39 million of adjusted EBITDA and $0.04 of adjusted diluted earnings per share primarily reflects the addition of TU to Mexico. Our guidance approach remains unchanged.

If current trends continue, we expect to perform at or above the high end of our range. Alternatively, we expect that we could absorb a reasonable level of market softening within our guidance range. Todd will provide additional details on our guidance assumptions. At the high end of guidance, we expect to deliver our third consecutive year of high single-digit organic constant currency revenue growth and double-digit adjusted diluted EPS growth. Now this consistently strong financial performance underscores the strength and durability of our growth strategy. And as we highlighted throughout our Investor Day last month, AI can enhance that strength and fuel a new generation of growth.

Our proprietary and differentiated data assets anchor our competitive advantage as we move into an AI future. Our contributor or credit databases are sourced from thousands of institutions operating under demanding regulatory frameworks. Our industry-leading identity graph combines our proprietary data with billions of dynamic disparate signals in near real time, creating a network effect that powers our marketing and fraud solutions. We power our customers' complex mission-critical workflows with governable, explainable data and deep domain expertise, delivering effective and deterministic outcomes. And these solutions are priced economically relative to the significant value that they provide. Instead, we believe AI is a growth accelerant, enabling us to activate our data to serve our customers more effectively.

Already, AI drives tangible growth for TransUnion in 2 ways. First, by increasing demand for our data; and second, by accelerating our pace of innovation. Now let me provide additional context for what we highlighted at Investor Day to explain how these dynamics are converging. From a demand perspective, AI models are only as good as the data we can learn from, and customers are prioritizing the freshest, highest-quality signals. Our powerful and flexible [indiscernible] platform enables customers to integrate our best-in-class data directly into their AI environments. As AI-driven workflow scale, we see customers expand their use of TU's data, shifting from episodic transactions toward more embedded partnerships.

For these reasons, our most AI-enabled customers are already consuming more data and adopting innovations faster. While most of our customers are early in their AI journey. Let me share 2 examples of how TransUnion facilitated AI adoption for 2 lenders and then how we scaled our relationship as a result. Now 1 of our most sophisticated fintech customers has embedded AI across underwriting, portfolio management, customer service, marketing and fraud prevention. As these enabled programs scale, the customer expanded their use of our credit, identity and fraud signals within their workflows. Their AI underwriting models also refresh data more frequently, driving higher credit volumes.

Their spending with TransUnion increased by more than 60% from 2022 and approaching $15 million in revenue in 2025 and outpacing 50% loan growth and volumetric unit pricing. Also a top 5 credit card issuer has embedded to use data across its AI-enabled governance, risk management, servicing and engagement workflows for its 50 million-plus accounts. These workflows support daily customer engagement and risk triggers rather than periodic checks. As a result, our relationship has evolved from a point-in-time transactional data vendor to a mission-critical, enterprise-wide partner under a multiyear subscription-based contract. TransUnion's revenue with this customer increased by over 20% from 2022 to $20 million in 2025. And despite a decline in new accounts during that period.

We see opportunity to deepen its relationship further by cross-selling additional credit in noncredit solutions. Now our next-generation AI power products reflect and drive increased demand for our data. During Investor Day, we highlighted 3 of these solutions, all built on the OneTru platform, these solutions enhance fast-growing products operating at scale, including True IQ, marketing audiences and fraud analytics to enable continued growth. they industrialize in-demand customized analytics into scalable solutions that drive higher data usage and monetization across our portfolio. So first, TruIQ Analytics orchestrator uses Google's Gemini models to streamline advanced credit modeling with natural language prompts. Analytics orchestrator scales the expertise typically delivered in highly effective but ad hoc innovation labs into a self-service solution.

This enables customers to build models faster and more frequently with less reliance on our data science teams. We expect analytics orchestrator to increase data usage drive new revenue streams, enable stickier customer relationships. In marketing, we are transforming our static audience segments into curated and outcome-driven audiences by TransUnion built off our identity backbone. We're also providing self-service search and discovery tools that accelerate activation and improve campaign performance. We expect improved efficiency and speed to drive increased consumption of our marketing audiences. And in front, our AI model factory unifies our identity data and advances analytic capabilities to respond to evolving fraud threat vectors.

We're launching new fraud models at 2 to 3x faster than previously possible with 10 new models launched in the last 12 months, including our credit washing and synthetic identity solutions. We generated tens of millions of dollars of incremental pipeline from these new fraud models. So in summary, AI will continue to accelerate our pace of innovation and expand the ways customers consume data, supporting durable growth across our solution suites. Now with that, I'll hand it over to Todd.

Todd Cello: Thanks, Chris, and let me add my welcome to everyone. I'll build on that overview with first quarter results before providing guidance. Starting with the quarter, we exceeded the high end of our guidance across all key metrics by $41 million on revenue and $18 million on adjusted EBITDA or $22 million and $8 million, respectively, excluding the Mexico acquisition. Total revenue increased 14% on a reported and 11% on an organic constant currency basis led by U.S. Financial Services. Excluding FICO mortgage royalties, organic growth was 7%. Growth was broad-based and aligned with the innovation priorities outlined at Investor Day.

Credit, excluding FICO mortgage royalties and fraud, both grew high single digit driven by continued traction in TruIQ, alternative data and trusted call solutions. Marketing Solutions delivered mid-single-digit growth with healthy identity performance. Consumer Solutions grew low single digit including another quarter of double-digit growth internationally. Adjusted EBITDA increased 10%. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 35.2%, down 100 basis points year-over-year. As anticipated, underlying margins contracted modestly in FICO mortgage royalties were a 120 basis point headwind. Our Mexico acquisition contributed 25 basis points in the quarter. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $1.18, up 12% year-over-year and $0.08 ahead at the high end of our guidance.

In the first quarter, U.S. markets revenue grew 14% on an organic constant currency basis versus the prior year. Across all our B2B verticals, we delivered strong bookings and retention rates to start the year. Financial Services revenue grew 24% or 14% excluding FICO mortgage royalties. The environment remains constructive, and we outperformed underlying volumes driven by TruIQ, alternative data and noncredit solutions. Within financial services, credit card and banking rose 5% on stable lending volumes and strength from trusted call solutions. Consumer lending grew 13% and supported by sustained consumer demand and strong FinTech performance. FinTechs continue to perform well with increasingly diversified funding bases and delinquency trends within historical norms.

Auto was up 11%, outpacing modest industry volume declines through pricing, share gains and new wins across our solution suites. Mortgage revenue grew 50% excluding FICO royalties, revenue grew 24% compared to inquiries up 7%. Inquiries were slightly better than anticipated, with additional outperformance through pricing and increased adoption of non tri-bureau solutions. Emerging verticals grew 6%, led by another quarter of double-digit growth in insurance -- within insurance, credit-based marketing continues to recover as insurers and pursue profitable growth. Consumer shopping also remains active. We drove new wins and growth across core credit driving history, trusted call solutions and marketing solutions.

Across our other emerging verticals, public sector grew high single digits and is positioned for a strong year. tech, retail and e-commerce, and media grew mid-single digits. Communications grew modestly tenant and employment declined modestly but is expected to return to growth over the rest of the year. Consumer Interactive was flat, driven by indirect channel growth and breach-related wins, offset by declines in the direct channel. In international, all revenue growth comparisons are on an organic constant currency basis. International revenue was flat in the quarter, reflecting varied results across our diversified portfolio. Our 2 most developed markets drove outperformance against subdued market conditions.

U.K. grew 7%, driven by healthy volumes from our largest banking and fintech customers as well as new wins across verticals. Canada grew 9%, reflecting another quarter of innovation-led growth as well as strong performance from fintechs and insurance. Africa performed well, too, growing 10% with strength across banking, FinTech and retail. Across our other emerging markets, India, Latin America and Asia Pacific, growth was softer, reflecting subdued conditions and timing dynamics. India declined 5%, slightly better than guided. We expect a gradual recovery in consumer lending, supporting mid-single-digit growth for India in 2026. We also continued to accelerate the pace of innovation in India.

Most recently, we announced a strategic partnership with the leading Indian telco geo to enable branded calling across its 500 million subscribers as we continue to expand the reach of our leading trusted call solutions globally. Latin America was flat organically with growth in Brazil, offset by modest declines in Colombia and other markets. TransUnion to Mexico which was recorded as inorganic, grew well in the first quarter on the heels of double-digit growth in 2025. Asia Pacific declined 18%, primarily by lapping onetime contracts, as well as softer volumes. Performance across India, Latin America and Asia Pacific is expected to improve in the second quarter and as the year progresses. Turning to the balance sheet.

We ended the first quarter with $5.6 billion of debt and $733 million of cash. During the quarter, we funded the approximately $660 million purchase for TransUnion New Mexico with $520 million drawn from our credit revolver as well as cash on hand. As a result, our leverage ratio at quarter end increased modestly to 2.8x. For the remainder of 2026 we plan to continue to execute our balanced capital allocation framework, prioritizing debt prepayment and capital return to shareholders. We have repurchased $25 million so far this year and expect to increase the pace of repurchases over the remainder of the year. We also remain committed to pushing our leverage ratio towards our long-term target of under 2.5x.

Before getting into guidance details, I want to reiterate our approach. Even with first quarter outperformance and healthy underlying momentum we are maintaining our full year organic growth assumptions. This reflects our disciplined guidance philosophy and provides flexibility in an uncertain environment. In the second quarter, we are guiding revenue to be between $1.271 billion to $1.283 billion, up 12% to 13%. Acquisitions add 4% and FX has an immaterial impact on our guidance. We expect organic constant currency revenue growth of 8% to 9% or 5% to 6% excluding FICO mortgage royalties. We anticipate mortgage revenue growing over 30% or 10% plus excluding FICO, compared to a mid-single-digit decline in inquiries.

We are guiding adjusted EBITDA to $439 million to $445 million, up 8% to 9%, implying a margin of 34.5% to 34.7%. Underlying margins expand by 20 to 40 basis points, offset by an 80 basis point drag from FICO royalties and a 60 basis point impact from acquisitions. We expect our adjusted diluted earnings per share to be between $1.13 and $1.15, up 4% to 6%. For full year guidance, we expect revenue to be between $5.1 billion and $5.135 billion, up 11% to 12%. Acquisitions add 3.5% and FX has an immaterial impact on our guidance. Our organic constant currency assumptions are unchanged at 8% to 9% or 5% to 6% excluding FICO mortgage royalties.

Our segment level assumptions are also unchanged. For mortgage, we continue to expect growth of 28% or 6%, excluding FICO, compared to mid-single-digit inquiry declines, unchanged since February. While the first quarter exceeded expectations, we modestly lowered volume assumptions for the remainder of the year to account for recent interest rate volatility. Full details on mortgage assumptions are provided in our appendix. We anticipate mid-single-digit international revenue growth for the year, driven by gradual recoveries in India, Latin America and Asia Pacific, following a softer first quarter. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be 1.796 billion to $1.816 billion in 2026, up 9% to 10%. That results in a margin of 35.2% to 35.4%, down 60 to 80 basis points.

Underlying margins are expected to expand by 50 to 70 basis points driven by revenue flow-through and remaining transformation savings. This strong underlying expansion is offset by a 90 basis point drag from FICO royalties and a 40 basis point impact from our acquisitions. We anticipate adjusted diluted earnings per share to be $4.68 to $4.75, up 9% to 11%. For other guidance items, depreciation and amortization is now expected to be approximately $640 million or $320 million, excluding step-up amortization from our 2012 change in control and subsequent acquisitions.

We anticipate net interest expense of $245 million, up $25 million from February reflecting $20 million related to debt financing for the Mexico acquisition and $5 million from higher sulfur on floating rate debt. Our adjusted tax rate is expected to be approximately 25.5%, modestly better than anticipated, driven by favorable geographic mix of earnings and changes in tax law that became effective in 2026. Capital expenditures are expected to be approximately 6% of revenue. We expect free cash flow conversion as a percentage of adjusted net income to be 90% or greater in 2026 and going forward. Slide 17 reconciles our updated full year guidance relative to February.

As shown, the increase is driven by our consolidation of TransUnion to Mexico, with nonoperating items having a net neutral impact on adjusted diluted EPS. While TransUnion to Mexico is accretive to 2026 earnings, it is modestly dilutive to our adjusted EBITDA margins this year. Importantly, the Mexico business operates at margins above our company average. The 2026 margin impact is driven by accounting mechanics rather than ongoing economics. Historically, our 26% ownership was accounted for under the equity method, contributing approximately $17 million of adjusted EBITDA in 2025 with no associated revenue.

Following the acquisition, Mexico's revenue is fully consolidated, while only the incremental adjusted EBITDA associated with increasing our ownership from 26% to 94% is additive versus prior reporting. As a result, consolidated margins appear modestly lower due to revenue consolidation despite the business's strong underlying profitability. In addition, during 2026, we will incur onetime integration expenses related to the Mexico and Mobile division of [ Mural ] Networks acquisitions, which we are not adding back to adjusted EBITDA. Our 2026 guidance fits within the context of our medium-term financial framework, which we reintroduced at our March Investor Day.

Over the medium term, we expect to deliver high single-digit organic revenue growth, 50 basis points of underlying margin expansion and low to mid-teens adjusted diluted earnings per share growth. This guidance is anchored in our repeatable earnings model and the momentum we are delivering today and not dependent on a recovery in U.S. mortgage or other markets. Our medium-term financial framework reflects our value creation flywheel. Our multiyear transformation is now enabling faster innovation and improved commercial outcomes. We are scaling the business on a common technology and operating platform and deploying AI across the enterprise to drive further productivity.

Our scalable growth drives compounding cash flow that we will deploy to fund our growth, optimize our balance sheet and increasingly return capital to shareholders. With that context, I will turn the call back to Chris for closing remarks.

Christopher Cartwright: All right. Thanks, Todd. So before closing, I want to provide our perspective on last week's announcement from the FHFA Director and the HUD Secretary. These developments are an important milestone and a 20-year journey to enable competition and modernization in mortgage credit scoring. So as noted by Director Pulte, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have begun accepting VantageScore 4.0. Freddie Mac took delivery of VantageScore loans during an operational test and will soon securitize them. The FHFA is expanding this pilot with a group of lenders and the GSEs will communicate pricing guidelines. Additionally, HUD Secretary, Scott Turner announced that the VantageScore will also be accepted for FHA mortgages starting later this year.

With the combination of Vantage 4.0 and TransUnion's comprehensive trended and alternative data will expand access to creditworthy consumers and promote affordability while maintaining safety and soundness within the mortgage ecosystem. And we have taken several steps to foster industry adoption, most recently announcing the industry's first 99 [indiscernible] VantageScore 4.0 mortgage pricing. Adoption of VantageScore can drive hundreds of millions of dollars of savings for lenders and consumers. Managed Score also represents an incremental revenue opportunity over time. We plan to support continued score valuation from our customers with free vintage score offered to those customers who purchased the FICO score through the end of 2026.

We are also offering customers multiyear pricing for credit reports and Vantage 4.0, providing better pricing certainty to lenders. And more broadly, our actions reflect our belief that effective mortgage underwriting and responsible financial inclusion are ultimately driven by the quality and the depth of the data used. As stewards of data on over 295 million U.S. consumers, we continue to invest in data sets and analytics that support the fairest and the most accurate credit decisions across economic cycles. So in summary, we started 2026 with a good first quarter, growing both our revenue and our earnings by double digits. We've raised our guidance based on our recent acquisitions and anticipate a strong year.

We're guiding 8% to 9% organic constant currency revenue growth and 9% to 11% adjusted diluted earnings per share growth. And AI continues to accelerate to use growth reinforced by the dynamics that we highlighted, expanding data demand and accelerating innovation, and we look forward to continuing this conversation in future quarters. Now with that, let me turn it back to Greg.

Gregory Bardi: Thanks, Chris. That concludes our prepared remarks. For the Q&A, we ask that you each ask only 1 question so we can include more participants. Operator, we can begin the Q&A.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] And the first question will come from Toni Kaplan from Morgan Stanley.

Toni Kaplan: And thanks for the comments at the end on the press conference from last week. I wanted to ask a question about that conference. There was a comment made about scrutinizing pricing in the credit bureau industry. And I was hoping you could just maybe talk about you've already sort of provided the $0.99 down from a higher like the $4 level you were originally talking about. And so I guess what are the areas, maybe in particular, on pricing that investors should be thinking of are maybe under scrutiny?

Christopher Cartwright: Well, Tony, and thank you for the question. It's an important question. And going back to that press conference from last week, I mean, well, first of all, we're just really excited to see the momentum at the FHFA. And in the GSEs for accepting Vantage 4.0 and the progress in completing the LLPAs and the pricing guides generally. We see strong demand in the market. And so I think you'll begin to see some rapid adoption of that. Yes, we're not entirely clear on what Director Pulte was referring to in his comments.

We are following up to try to get clarity on those I think there's a lot of speculation that it could be a reference to the Tri-Merge. And look, I think we've been pretty clear in recent years about the importance of the tri-merge in underpinning the safety and soundness of the mortgage market in the U.S. and ensuring that the potential pool of mortgage applicants that are scored accurately and qualify for mortgages is as substantial as it can be while also accurately assessing the risk that lenders are undertaking that will eventually be passed on to the GSEs and to investors.

I mean, in short, the rationale for the tri-merge is that it drives the efficacy of underwriting and financial inclusion because you're getting full access to all of the data that's available for diligence. And I think sometimes, discussions about changing from the tri-merge don't appreciate that credit bureau data is not a constant across the 3 bureaus. We have different furnitures. There have been new lending types that have emerged in recent periods like fintech, financial innovation like NPL and now the bureaus are actively developing alternative data like rental and utility and others, our files have diverged even more.

And so using data inconsistently or excluding a report means you'll either be mispricing risk or lowering access for creditworthy borrowers or lowering the hurdles for potential mortgage fraudsters. So we firmly believe Tri-Merge is the gold standard. It's deeply embedded in mortgage underwriting processes. The industry is already digesting a good degree of change, whether it's the early assessment program, and most recently, score competition, which is terrific. And I think this would be an even more substantial change at a time when stability is particularly important as this administration contemplates the IPO of the GSEs. And I think we got to remember that we charge $10 to $12 per report. That is a fraction of closing costs.

It's less than 1%. And by pulling all 3 reports, you optimize across all the dimensions of the mortgage process. you can score the largest number of consumers and qualify the largest proportion for homeownership, you mitigate risk, you ensure accurate pricing and you minimize the risk to taxpayers via the GSEs. And ultimately, you ensure that investors who are buying these assets once securitized fully understand the risk management process from which they were generated. So look, we -- look, I know from my own discussion some last week, there's a lot of support in the industry for the tri-merge whether it's legislators or regulators or investors, I think they understand the value of maximizing the diligence on this.

So we'll just have to wait and see. And obviously, -- we look forward to further discussions with the director with the FHFA. I think goodness always comes from that, and we would certainly welcome it.

Operator: The next question will come from Andrew Steinerman from JPMorgan.

Andrew Steinerman: My question is on India. Looking back to the Analyst Day recently, transient outlined to double-digit revenue growth, organic revenue growth profile longer term for TransUnion India. How long would it take to get to that cadence? And what needs to change to get there?

Christopher Cartwright: Well, thanks for the question, Andrew. India is a great part of the TransUnion story, and we're super pleased that we own that asset, and it's a wonderful market and a growing economy. But it's an economy that's had a variety of macroeconomics and also regulatory shock in recent years, some of which were exacerbated by the conflict with our and in Middle East and rising energy prices and the like. I think despite that, we have seen some stabilization for consumer lending volume and commercial lending volume, which is helpful. And we're also growing through some kind of onetime exceptional and anomalous stuff. And so we did okay against our guidance in the first quarter.

And we believe we now, with this foundation of stability are going to pivot back toward growth and overall, we think India will deliver mid-single-digit growth over 2026. And hopefully, that gets us back to sustained low double-digit growth and beyond as the economics and the political environment inside should stabilize there. I mean the regulatory environment, not the political environment.

Operator: And the next question is from Andrew Nicholas from William Blair.

Andrew Nicholas: Chris, in your prepared remarks, I think you made the comment that most of your customers are still pretty early in their AI journey. And so I was hoping you could flesh that out a little bit more. What are you kind of seeing in terms of pace of adoption what's a reasonable time line for some of your customers to get a little bit more ready on that front? And any comments on what would be kind of slowing that or expectations for adoption there?

Christopher Cartwright: Yes. Thanks, Andrew. Well, look, I would just -- stepping back, I would say, societally and economically, we're still in the very early innings of AI adoption. I think you've got certain sectors of the economy where the adoption is fairly deep like software development, if you will. Those are the guys that created it. So it's not surprising that they are deeply applying it to their work first. And then I think you've got kind of mass experimentation going on just about everywhere else. I think you're going to see that accelerate as people understand the technology more deeply and its potential across all types of business processes and functions.

And if you even here at TransUnion, I mean our developers have been using it for a while. They are dramatically more productive. It's not order of magnitude, productivity increases yet, but it's solid. 30% plus productivity kind of ranging depending on the nature of the development activity. And frankly, it really helped us accelerate the delivery of the OneTru platform and the migration of our products and our legacy technology onto that platform. At the -- at a recent Investor Day, which you attended, you would have seen the true analytics orchestrator. That is 1 of the most potent applications of AI that we have here at TransUnion, we're using it across our data and analytics organization.

We're seeing 2 to 3x productivity improvement that's allowing us to build more models more frequently with greater accuracy than we could previously. And all of the internal use is designed to ready the application, the agent for licensing and usage independently by our clients, which is what I was referring to in my prepared remarks. So look, we're very much in the early innings. But I don't think there's really anything that's going to slow this down. I think the productivity potential and the potential to lower the cost of things that today are very difficult but can become substantially more cost-effective and thus can be consumed in greater quantities, that's what I see happening going forward.

Operator: And the next question will come from Jeff Mueler from Baird.

Jeffrey Meuler: On the updated pricing guidelines and dedicated Vantage LLPA grid. I guess just have they been communicated to the 21 initially approved lenders? Have you seen them -- if so, any perspective you can provide on what they look like? If not, just when do you expect them, given that it sounds like they're finalized and how important do you think they are to the share shift that you expect?

Christopher Cartwright: Yes. Now I'll remind you that for our guidance purposes this year, we didn't assume any share shift. We viewed this year as 1 of learning experimentation and transition. And we're not clear on exactly which lenders are in the initial cohort of 21 and we're not clear on whether the FHFA has communicated the LLPAs to all of them.

We know from discussions with the FHFA staff and also from the CEO of Vantage score that the guides are complete and that they're in dialogue with the firms that are in this initial cohort, but I'm not sure about the time frame for public release. mean some of these questions, they just simply have to be answered by the FHFA. But I think the director was very clear and forceful and enthusiastic that they're ready to go they're ready to scale, and he's really excited to push that forward and get competition going.

Operator: And the next question will come from Faiza Alwy from Deutsche Bank.

Faiza Alwy: I wanted to ask about the contribution of noncredit products to your growth in financial services, particularly outside of mortgage and sort of what the traction has been there? And relatedly, if you could touch on the -- you alluded to some macro uncertainty likely related to the conflict and that you could absorb a reasonable level of market softening within the guidance range. So I was hoping you could double-click on that because I'm assuming to the extent there is softening, it would impact more of your credit growth.

Christopher Cartwright: Let me pull back to lens a little bit and just kind of characterize this first quarter. I mean, obviously, we're off to a good start. We're nicely ahead of expectations, and we're well positioned to deliver a third straight year of high single-digit revenue growth, low double-digit profit flow-through and low to mid double-digit EPS. The strength is really coming out of the U.S. right now. A lot of strength in mortgage, which I know Todd will double click on in the call. Consumer lending also very strong in auto and card off to very solid starts as well. So we're very pleased with that. On the emerging market side, we're right on our plan.

This is how we modeled revenue growth for the course of the year. This is a solid start at 6%, and it does position us to achieve our plan of high single digit for the full year. Now obviously, with the conflict in Iran, there are new uncertainties and new pressures on the cost of energy and thus inflation and thus potentially interest rates as well. In February, the 10-year got down to about 4%. The 30-year mortgage was around $6 million -- we got a little disproportionate volume bump because refi was reactivated.

That was fairly short-lived, and then we kind of reverted back to the previous levels of volume, which I'll remind you are almost represent a floor now for ongoing mortgage natural purchase activity in the U.S. But -- we like to have a conservative guide, particularly in the early part of the year. We point investors to the high end of the guide. Our goal is to hit the high end and exceed the high end we have a reasonable level of contingency to achieve that, which we will hopefully release throughout performance over the course of the year.

And given this heightened geopolitical risk, we just thought it prudent not to flow through the revenue and the profit at this point. Another thing to be very clear on, though, is that through really the beginning of this week, our volumes across all of our credit categories are steady. So we're not seeing really any negative impact on any type of loan volumes at this point. And if we maintain this level of stability and kind of volumes, we would fully expect to deliver at or above the high end of the guidance over the course of the year.

This kind of stability and performance, it's also there on the subprime side, drilling into consumer lending, which had a very strong 13% growth rate in the quarter. We've been looking at the level of delinquencies there amongst subprime borrowers. They're holding up exactly as you would expect, solid underwriting practices, small loan amounts, good controls, FinTech players, accelerating their use of alternative data to fully understand risk and so while all of the players in this space expanded their credit box a bit last year and again in the first quarter, the delinquencies are solid. And so we're not really seeing anything problematic at this point.

Todd Cello: Faiza, I'm going to go back. This is Todd, to the beginning of your question as it pertains to contribution of noncredit to financial services. So Chris just gave you all the details about what we saw in Financial Services and excluding mortgage, we continue to see stable volumes. But the diversification of our products, we had a couple of three, what I would consider to be outperformers. First, the TruIQ analytics platform continues to perform well within financial services as well as alternative data and then our trusted call solutions has been a winner with our financial services customers as well.

Operator: And our next question will be from Manav Patnaik from Barclays.

Manav Patnaik: Yes, I guess I just wanted to follow up on the second part of that. Chris, you talked about absorbed a reasonable level of market softening within the guidance range. I was just hoping you could put some parameters on that? Like what is the low end of the range, I guess, imply from some of the volume trends you're seeing today?

Todd Cello: So Manav, I'll take that one. Thanks for the question. So I think what -- if you listen back to the prepared remarks, we just continue to see stability within our volumes. And we're happy to print a very solid Q1, where organic constant currency, excluding the FICO mortgage royalty was 7%. But for all the reasons that Chris just went through geopolitically, we just felt it was the right move to not raise the guidance for the beat that we had in Q1. So in essence, what happens, then it's just math.

When we look at the growth rates for the rest of the year by us printing a 7 and then maintaining the organic constant currency growth rates, we end up for the full year at a 6% rate. And then when you look at it for the second quarter in the guide, it's also 6% at the high end, which is implying the second half is 5%. So if you believe, which we do, that volumes continue to be stable, we orient you towards the high end of our guidance, that should mean if things stay stable, we should beat in the subsequent quarters.

In the event that we don't, I think you'd see that we've built some cushion here and based on keeping the organic constant currency rates. So there is some push in there. But then the range itself at the low end would provide some cover for us. So we're very comfortable with the guidance that we're providing this morning.

Christopher Cartwright: Yes. And Manav, as you know, these past 3 years, we've really prioritized stable and consistent delivery at the high end or above in our guidance. That was certainly our posture going into 2026. And just given the uncertainty and given the outperformance, we thought it would be prudent to add a bit more contingency on the revenue and the profit side. And we did it again out of an abundance of caution, not because we're seeing any negativity in our volumes at this point.

Operator: And the next question will be from Ashish Sabadra from RBC.

Ashish Sabadra: I just wanted to better understand if the Iran conflict is having any impact on the international markets. I was just wondering if you could provide some any color on your conversations with customers or if you've seen any trends softening in those international markets?

Christopher Cartwright: Yes. So I think we've definitely covered our views on the U.S. market, and we'll leave that on the international side, yes, there has -- there is more exposure to rising energy prices in the international market. There's been some exposure into India. But early on, the Trump administration is allowing India to purchase Russian oil, which is helping offset some of those inflationary pressures. In the Philippines, which is a great part of our business, but a small part of our business, I think things are particularly difficult. They're highly dependent on imported energy. And there's been a considerable run-up in the prices.

And the government there is almost you're running a coved like playbook with energy subsidies going out to consumers and the like. And that was part of the reason why we had a difficult quarter in Asia Pacific although, frankly, the primary driver is just the end of the onetime analytics work that we were doing in Hong Kong to prepare for this transition to the MCRA. We think that's kind of finished and out of the system now. And so the comps improve and the performance is already stabilizing there. But I think that's some flavor for where we're seeing some energy impact elsewhere in our portfolio.

Obviously, the U.K. and Europe has more exposure, and we've got a great business in the U.K. We think we're performing really well there competitively. And again, it was another quarter of high single-digit growth.

Operator: And our next question will come from Kelsey Zhu from Autonomous.

Kelsey Zhu: Could you maybe talk a little bit more about your expectation around VantageScore market share gains and future pricing policy in the mortgage vertical over the medium term? More specifically, Cycle 100's latest pricing model is $0.99 upfront and then $65 at closing. I was wondering if VantageScore pricing could adopt a similar framework of lower cost upfront and then the success via closing? Or is that not something that you're considering?

Christopher Cartwright: Yes. So thanks for the question. Obviously, in terms of the pricing model and the pricing levels, there's a lot of options in the medium term. I think TransUnion's position, and I see this reflected in the behavior of our competitors as well, is we just need to get this started, right? We've been talking about price competition since 2006 when the bureaus came together to form the VantageScore. Finally, we've got a regulator that was willing to push this and make it happen. And we have very attractive pricing at roughly $1 per score with no tail, no success fee attached to it, which is which is important to note.

And I think in terms of pricing and model, it depends on your perspective and what you're trying to accomplish. The goal of the administration, the goal of FHFA is to reduce borrowing costs and therefore, help home affordability and charging $65 for the score as opposed to just buying at 1 time for $1, that's a material price difference, right? And so we're just focused on the introduction. We're focused on the transition, and we're focused on share gain. But we acknowledge that downstream, we have a lot of optionality. But in the meantime, let's just continue to plow forward here. It's a more modern score, Vantage 4.0.

It rests upon a broader foundation of trended credit information as well as alternative data. It's been 2 decades in the making. And we're just excited that competition is here and the playing field is leveled and we're excited to get after it.

Operator: The next question will come from Jason Haas from Wells Fargo.

Jason Haas: Just wanted to follow up on the strength in mortgage. Can you just talk about what drove the strength there outside of mortgage -- or outside of the FICO score?

Todd Cello: Sure. Jason, it's Todd. I'll take that one. So as you probably recall, in the first quarter, we guided for a modest increase in inquiries and 35% growth for mortgage revenues. And we ended up posting 7% increase in inquiries and 50% growth. So the outperformance that we saw primarily pertained to volumes. And Chris spoke to that earlier. In particular, in late February, when the 30-year mortgage rate dipped below 6%, we saw a pretty significant increase in volumes. But as I'm sure you're aware, with the conflict in Iran. We saw an increase pretty immediately in early March of the 10-year treasury and thus, the 30-year mortgage went back up and those volumes dropped back to previous levels.

So the outperformance is primarily just related to that dynamic that I articulated. I would say that the pricing assumptions that we had assumed are pretty much held. So there are not much noise there. Other thing I'd highlight as well is that when you think about these moves in interest rates, you see how a drop in interest rate had such a significant increase in a short period of time. If rates were to go up, let's argue the opposite way, it would be a modest negative because we're already near the floor of activity when we're talking about volumes that we haven't seen since the mid-'90s.

But when you go the other way and you see a 25 basis point drop it's pretty significant, what the opportunities would be from a volume perspective, in particular, the ReFi population. And we included some slides in the appendix of today's materials. And you can get a sense on one of those slides as to just the population of consumers that would be eligible to ReFi. So the opportunity there is pretty significant. However, we're not there yet, right? So when you look at the guidance for the rest of the year, for the second quarter and for 2026 for the full year, we're calling for inquiries to be down mid-single digits.

And again, upside would come if we just see that a little bit of move on the interest rates.

Christopher Cartwright: Yes. And I think another element of the mortgage outperformance is that on the prequalification side and on the early assessment side, the volumes that we're experiencing have been favorable to our guidance assumptions. And look, we are solidly into the third year of the early assessment program from the GSEs and just changes in mortgage prequalification practices. And I think it's worth noting that, I mean, look, when you think about tri-merge and potential changes to the system, our data gets consumed primarily because the market participants want to fully understand risk and they want to optimize price.

And that particularly matters if you're a lender and you're going to sell on certain mortgages to the GSEs because variances in credit scores per the LPAs can have a material variation in what you can realize for those loans. And so even though in theory, you only have to pull 1 credit report during the prequalification process. We see the industry settling into somewhere between 2 and 3.

There are still a lot of players that are pulling 3, and there's a number of players that are increasing the number of poles they do for mortgage because really understanding the risk and optimizing around price matters a lot to their economics and the relative cost of a credit report is small.

Operator: Our final question today will come from Scott Wurtzel from Wolfe Research.

Scott Wurtzel: Just wanted to ask on TCS I'm wondering if you can unpack some of the drivers of the growth that you saw during the quarter. And just as a kind of related follow-up, I know there's sort of the trusted messaging opportunity as well down the line, if you can talk about sort of your expectations for a time line in terms of productizing that and when we can see that start to contribute to growth.

Christopher Cartwright: Great, Scott. So another really strong quarter for trusted call solutions, kind of a [indiscernible] component of our fraud mitigation services. And we think we're positioned for another really strong year there. It is a unique and differentiated offering. It's a very durable offering. And I mean I think you just it underscores that even though we have been in this era of digital commerce analog commerce over the phone is still really important to ensuring the authentication and the safety of various transactions. And we want to extend that to the tech side of things. Increasingly, there's fraud in the SMS channel in the text channels generally and that's why we bought the mobile division of real networks.

They've got some great underlying technology. We think it will take us about a year to complete the integration and the productization of that technology. But then it is the perfect complement to all of the business that we've generated and all the market penetration that we've got there. And I think going forward, just the combination of authentication over the phone and over the text combined with all of our digital device behavioral and reputational assets is kind of an unbeatable combination in the fraud space.

Todd Cello: And I just want to add some numbers and remind you what we presented at Investor Day pertaining to trusted call solutions. So this was a $27 million product for us in 2021. At the time of the Neustar acquisition, this year, we are expecting it to be a $200 million product at the end of 2026. And in 2028, we expect that to be a $300 million product.

Gregory Bardi: All right. Chris, Todd, I think that's a good place to end. Everyone, thanks for the time today, and have a great rest of your day. Thank you.

Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.