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Date

Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • President — Balazs Fejes
  • Chief Financial Officer — Jason Peterson

Takeaways

  • Total revenue -- $1.4 billion, representing 7.6% year-over-year growth and at the high end of the stated outlook range.
  • Constant currency organic revenue growth -- 3.7%, as attributed directly to management's update.
  • AI native revenue -- $125 million in the quarter, up nearly 20% sequentially from Q4; management targets $600 million for the full year.
  • GAAP income from operations -- $117 million, growing 18% year over year and representing 8.3% of revenue.
  • Non-GAAP income from operations -- $201 million, increasing over 14% year over year and representing 14.3% of revenue.
  • GAAP gross margin -- 27.7%, up from 26.9% the previous year.
  • Non-GAAP gross margin -- 29.4%, rising from 28.7% the prior year.
  • GAAP diluted EPS -- $1.52, an 18.8% increase from the prior year.
  • Non-GAAP diluted EPS -- $2.86, an 18.7% year-over-year improvement.
  • Cash flow from operations -- Negative $36 million, with management noting impacts from higher variable compensation and specific vendor payments.
  • Free cash flow -- Negative $54 million, down from positive $15 million the prior year.
  • Cash and cash equivalents -- Over $1 billion at quarter’s end, as reported by management.
  • Share repurchases -- Approximately 1.8 million shares bought for $264 million at an average price of $143.84 per share this quarter.
  • Top 20 clients revenue growth -- 4.4% year over year, while clients outside that group grew 9.1%.
  • Vertical performance -- Financial services up 11.5%, software and hi-tech up 10.9%, consumer goods, retail, and travel up 7.2%, life sciences and health care up 5.9%, business information media down 0.7%, and emerging verticals up 6% and 8% (driven by energy and government).
  • Geographic revenue split -- Americas delivered 57% of revenues (up 2.5%), EMEA 41% (up 15.9%; 8.4% in constant currency), and APAC 2% (up 1.2%).
  • Total headcount -- Exceeded 62,750 with more than 56,500 delivery professionals; minor sequential decline due to reductions in Mexico and targeted geographies.
  • Utilization rate -- 77%, compared with 77.5% last year and 75.4% in Q4, influenced by onboarding of junior talent.
  • EMEA growth -- Described by management as delivering "strong double-digit" year-over-year growth, specifically cited as 15.9%.
  • Applied AI partnership -- Multi-year strategic agreement with Ontic and newly formalized Anthropic partnership, with over 1,300 Claude certifications completed; goal of 10,000 by year-end.
  • AI-native projects -- Over 100 new AI-native projects launched this quarter, with more than 80% of top 100 clients engaged in AI initiatives.
  • Full-year revenue growth outlook -- Lowered to 4%-6.5% (organic constant currency: 2.5%-5%) due to higher energy prices and macroeconomic uncertainty; foreign exchange expected to add 1.5%.
  • Full-year EPS guidance -- GAAP diluted EPS now expected at $8.29-$8.59, and non-GAAP diluted EPS at $12.98-$13.28.
  • Q2 2026 guidance -- Revenue projected at $1.4 billion-$1.415 billion (4% growth, midpoint); organic constant currency midpoint 2.7%.
  • Q2 margin and tax guidance -- GAAP income from operations expected at 9%-10%, non-GAAP at 15%-16%, GAAP effective tax rate 27%, and non-GAAP at 24%.
  • Q2 EPS guidance -- GAAP diluted EPS guided at $1.79-$1.87; non-GAAP diluted EPS at $3.10-$3.18.
  • M&A and capital allocation -- Management reiterates intent to prioritize M&A later in the year, while ongoing share repurchases continue amid current share price levels.
  • Pricing -- Management states, "not seeing...rate compression," and notes "successful" rate increases with some clients in Q1.

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Risks

  • Management announced, "we are lowering our full year revenue growth outlook," citing "higher energy prices and global economic uncertainty" as drivers of revised expectations.
  • Cash flow from operations and free cash flow both turned negative, with leadership attributing this to timing of variable compensation and vendor payments.
  • Management indicated "more macro uncertainty today compared to 90 days ago," highlighting delayed client decision-making and lower visibility in the second half, especially in North America.
  • President Fejes stated, "we are expecting some impact in Q2" from macro volatility, particularly in larger discretionary programs.

Summary

EPAM Systems (EPAM 2.55%) reported revenue at the upper end of guidance with sequential AI-native growth, expanded partnerships, and improvements in profitability metrics, while also lowering its full-year outlook due to macroeconomic uncertainty. A multi-year AI partnership with Ontic and operational expansion as an Anthropic services partner were highlighted as foundational to future growth, reinforced by intentions to reach 10,000 Claude certifications by year-end. Headcount optimization initiatives and double-digit year-over-year growth in EMEA contributed to margin expansion and discipline in operational expenditures.

  • Management clarified that outsized, non-T&M commercial model, AI-driven vendor consolidation, and transformation opportunities comprise the large-deal pipeline, but their ramp pace and conversion timing remain uncertain and are not fully reflected in the current guidance.
  • Client budget allocation continues to shift towards AI and automation, diverting investments away from digital platform, e-commerce platform build-outs towards new AI native products.
  • "100 new AI-native project" were launched in Q1, demonstrating active pipeline replenishment; more than 80% of top 100 clients are engaged in AI initiatives.
  • Cash flow reversals in Q1 reflected higher variable compensation and vendor payments; management expects additions to headcount supporting future growth.
  • Guidance does not assume improvement in the geopolitical or macroeconomic environment. Management stated, "we are guiding as we see it right now," and lowered the top and bottom end of full-year ranges to reflect ongoing client caution.
  • AI native service margins run "our current AI native business or portfolio, which is over $125 million per quarter is run higher profitability than EPAM average," according to Fejes, with pricing noted as favorable and no material rate compression detected to date.

Industry glossary

  • T&M (Time-and-materials): A contract pricing model where clients pay for actual hours worked and materials used, contrasted with fixed-price or outcome-based models referenced in EPAM's large deal pipeline.
  • SDLC (Software development life cycle): Structured process for software creation, often referenced as an area impacted by automation and AI transformation in EPAM's project delivery.
  • Claude certification: Training and qualification specific to Anthropic’s Claude AI services, referenced in EPAM’s scaling of AI delivery teams.
  • Token costs: Refers to the computational units or charges incurred by clients or the provider for AI model usage, particularly in large language model deployments and commercial contracts in AI services.
  • Dark factory: An advanced, highly automated, and minimally human-involved IT operations capability, described as central to EPAM’s AI go-to-market model for autonomous maintenance and support.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Balazs Fejes: Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. It's a pleasure to be here with all of you. We delivered a solid first quarter with revenue growth at the high end of our outlook range, year-over-year improvement in adjusted profitability and gross margins and strong adjusted earnings per share pure AI revenues exceeded $125 million in Q1, up nearly 20% sequentially from Q4. This momentum gives us a strong line of sight to our $600 million target for the full year, even with the broader macro variability we have factored into our outlook. We also just announced a strategic multiyear applied AI partnership with Ontic to accelerate the delivery of safe, reliable enterprise-grade AI for our clients.

As an Anthropic services partner, EPAM is building a dedicated practice for more than 10,000 cloud-certified architects, including the specialized cadre of 250 forward deployed engineering Black Belts. To date, over 20,000 EPAMers have completed training via entropic economy and more than 1,300 are already Claude certified. We expect to reach 5,000 certifications by end of Q3 with 10,000 by year-end. This is a further proof of our engineering expertise for adaptability, advanced learning and education programs and readiness for Claude within the enterprise. As we outlined at our recent Investor Day, we have a clear multiyear strategy to drive our next phase of profitable growth and further capitalize on the global AI transformation opportunities.

Our aspiration is to become the go-to partner for enterprise a transformation with a focus on 3 strategic pillars, which are helping reshape the company. These pillars include establishing ourselves as a leading AI delivery software engineering services provider, transforming ourselves into an AI-native organization and capitalizing on our AIT structure to expand go-to-market offerings. For 30-plus years of engineering DNA and heritage expanding domain and vertical expertise, advanced IP and platforms and deepening strategic partnerships continue to differentiate us and provide a durable advantage. Our mission is to win the build opportunity of our lifetime.

The gap between the rapidly developing foundational AI capabilities and the ability of enterprises and societies to adopt AI safely, reliably and with sustainable growing volume will drive some of the largest technological investments humanity has ever made. This view was recently validated by our new partner Anthropic and also by NVIDIA's CEO, Jensen during his interview with Vorkesh Patel. Today, we are moving beyond traditional IT services with a sharp focus on AI native engineering and AI native business transformation, which both continue to gain traction. At the same time, EPAM is fundamentally retaining how the company operates, which goes beyond scaling AI adoption across 60,000 people.

With our Client Zero mentality, we are engineering an entirely new operating model one that dynamically blends human talent, AI capabilities and advanced agentic systems to run the business foster better and lower cost across all geographies. The early stage of this new blend reflected in the number and the shape of AI-native projects that we are starting with clients. AI/Run, then from being an SDLC transformation pay book to powering a series of AI/Run transform motions that bring significant structure and volume to our clients' own adoption apertures. ROI-driven Playbook uniquely brings together our engineering excellence with AI native delivery, coupled with strategic consulting and advisory teams, deep technical expertise and partner ecosystem technologies.

Online traditional consulting roads and deployments, EPAM's AI run transform integrates blueprints, talent and tools into a single proven, repeatable and scalable transformation platform for our clients. We continue to create global go-to-market playbook using proven methods across the globe. The larger number of our AI programs are scaled into deployments, tonic and implication for our engagement is becoming more significant. This is a generally new and consequential commercial construct and presents both challenges and opportunities for us and services companies in general. As the industry works through the models, we intend to be ahead of the curve as we continue to evolve our approach to AI investment pricing, client engagement and delivery models for some quarters to come.

One additional element of our strategy worth highlighting is the fact that we are now accelerating our deliberate go-to-market investments in our largest market in North America. These investments are modeled on what has proven to be successful in EMAR, evidenced by their industry-leading growth rate in Q1. Now let's turn to some quick Q1 highlights. In Q1, revenues grew 7.6% year-over-year with constant organic currency revenue growth of 3.7%. The 5 of our 6 verticals grew year-over-year, led by Financial Services and Software and Hi-Tech, followed by Consumer Goods, Retail and Travel, emerging verticals and Life Sciences and Health Care. Across geographies, growth was led by email, delivered strong double-digit year-over-year growth.

We are continual balancing our delivery locations and scale mix, adding new certification, domain specialization and additional roles across our global pet. We also continue to proactively manage our commercial engagement types, driving new fixed price and other service deals while proactively managing localized banks. Now turning to the demand environment. Overall, client sentiment remained stable through the end of Q1 and with continued shift in spend towards AI native and strategic deployments. Clients continue to turn to EPAM for help in addressing the widening adoption gap. The need to modernize and build out a foundation readiness remains critically important.

Technical debt continues to mount and the latest AI capabilities are making backlog of required work evident, further underscoring our confidence that the build opportunity is a long-term win. As we look ahead, there's a more macro uncertainty today compared to 90 days ago. And our outlook reflects the broader variability we are seeing in the client decision-making. We are particularly seeing underperformance in North America, and this is contributing to lower visibility in the second half. At the same time, our underlying momentum, particularly across our AI native business continues to build. However, macro volatility has introduced some additional caution in client decision-making, particularly on certain larger discretionary programs.

While Q1 was not impacted, we are expecting some impact in Q2. Importantly, our client pipeline of AI programs and fundings remain strong. What we see is a temporary shift in timing and direction as clients respond with caution and reprioritize the short-term actions against the bigger transformation opportunity. Now turning to AI. As we have all seen in the news, AI capabilities continue to advance extremely fast. The pace of technological change and digestion is unprecedented for enterprises as they face the challenge of balancing cost optimization and productivity with real business outcomes at scale. Further token usage and the associated economics are only becoming a more integral part of the investment thesis and business case.

All this just increases complexity, which, as we stated at our Investor Day on less new sets of requirements across all 8 dimensions of AI enterprise. EPAM remains in the sweet spot of helping enterprises close the AI adoption gap, solve their most complex challenges and deliver quality AI-native enterprise-grade solutions at scale. We are working hard to further build and create high velocity performance teams within our AI native delivery engine to take advantage of larger growth opportunities. By design, our teams will bridge strategy to execution with a more consultative approach, all with deep domain and verticalization expertise. Looking across our top 100 clients, traction remains strong as more than 80% of our engaged in AI initiatives.

Our AI frameworks and tools continue to support hundreds of active AI-native projects. Note, we had more than 100 new AI-native project launched in Q1, illustrating our active pipeline and healthy replenishment of new opportunities. In terms of new deals, or since we shared our updated at our AI Day. EPAM is seeing an oxalating large-deal pipeline focused on AI-enabled vendor consolidations, where EPAM has significant opportunity to gain market share. These multiyear deals are larger than our historical norm are expected to scale over time and include a range of commercial models. The trajectory of this pipeline marks a meaningful step in EPAM's evolution as a strategic partner to enterprise clients.

However, the full potential of these deals is not yet reflected in our outlook. Across our pure AI native revenues, our momentum continues and fundamentals remain intact with another quarter of double-digit sequential growth. Demand across our AI foundational services remains solid with faster growth in both our data and cloud practices as compared to the rest of the business. Importantly, we believe we can further accelerate capturing AI foundation demand with the deployment of more domain capabilities and forward deployed engineers to engagement. This motion will take some time to scale, but we see this as a critical unlock to being able to deliver true business transformation to clients.

Beyond transforming EPAM's business and go-to-market approach towards more outcome-based models, we are building not just an engineering moat, but a domain and context-based mode and court in playbook built on successful engagements over time. Capturing expertise at the source of these engagements further develops our playbooks into differentiated IP and ways of working. Here are some client example to illustrate the shift. one, PDLC transformation for Nelnet, a global company specializing in consumer finance, student loan servicing, telecommunications and education to explore the potential of GenAI tools to boost PDLC efficiency.

To do that, EPAM developed a program to identify baselines and performance productivity benchmarks based on EPAM's AI/Run transform, Nelnet achieved a 31% productivity increase, accelerated back-end development by nearly 2x and empowered its teams to scale AI-driven innovation across the organization. We continue working with Nelnet to expand the PDLC program across the organization and continued building an enterprise governance model that scales. Two, modernize and upgrade global streaming infrastructure for a leading streaming platform client within the media entertainment, serving 10-plus million concurrent users across 50-plus countries. With our partner, AWS, we successfully transformed a fragile single-region platform into a self-healing global system sustaining 99% uptime without manual interaction.

The solution deployed active, active ES across more than 6 regions with automated IAC governance and standardized site reliability engineering practices. Together, we helped our client achieve 70% less configuration drift and 0 downtime deployments. Three, bring the right AI and GenAI programs from use case concepts to full-scale production deployment for a large global insurance company. Here, our DI platforms serve us both domain playbook and a significant accelerator, integrating both upstream and downstream systems to ensure seamless end-to-end automation to assist the reinsurance clean department in first order of loss processing. EPAM automated billing reconciliation and streamlined reinsurance treaty analysis proving the real-world potential of AI in a highly regulated industry.

After implementation, time to process first order of loss events decreased by 75%. Our efforts continue to be recognized validating our strategy and the quality of our execution. So far, in 2026, we have been honored to receive several key leadership distinctions. We earned two 2026 Google Cloud Partner of the Year awards for helping clients achieve measurable business outcomes through advanced AI and cloud technologies. The sustainable award highlighted our use of AI and geospatial technology to address environmental challenges, while databases, ML awards celebrated or scalable methodologies for enterprise cloud migrations including our work with Deutsche Bank.

EPAM was included in the Forrester Customer Experience strategy consulting services landscape, featuring providers that supports end-to-end CX transformation from visions through execution. EPAM named a leader in the IDC Marketscape worldwide data modernization services provider for retail and restaurants. And finally, EPAM was ranked among the top 3 companies in Glassdoor's inaugural best companies in tech and AI 2026 list, recognized for its culture of belonging, innovation and leadership. These recognitions continue to reflect the hard work and dedication of global teams and riveting commitment to delivering tangible, high-volume outcomes for our clients.

In summary, we are pleased with our first quarter results, which delivered the high end of our revenue outlook despite more uncertain macro environment, a solid foundation we intend to build upon throughout the year. We remain confident in our long-term strategy and vision in transforming ourselves into a global leader in AI transformation services working to further capitalize on faster-growing parts of the total IT and AI services market. Our underlining AI native and AI foundational readiness momentum remains strong and continues to resonate with our existing client portfolio. while we transform our go-to-market motions over the coming quarters to further expand our new client portfolio, while the economic environment impacted visibility and added some vulnerability.

We feel good about our pipeline, including the larger strategic opportunities I described earlier, which represent a meaningful step in our evolution. Lastly, I want to thank you all for your continued commitment, trust and support. Jason, over to you.

Jason Peterson: Thank you, FB, and good morning, everyone. In the first quarter, EPAM generated revenue of $1.4 billion at the high end of Q1 revenue outlook, delivering year-over-year growth of 7.6%. On an organic constant currency basis, revenue grew 3.7% compared to the first quarter of 2025. With improved year-over-year profitability in the quarter. GAAP income from operations grew by approximately 18% and non-GAAP income from operations grew by over 14%. AI native and AI foundational revenues continued to contribute to year-over-year growth with more than $125 million AI native revenues in the quarter. This is the fifth consecutive quarter of sequential double-digit growth. Moving to our Q1 industry performance. We delivered broad-based year-over-year growth across the majority of our verticals.

Financial Services delivered strong growth, up 11.5% year-over-year, driven by asset management and insurance clients. Software and Hi-Tech grew 10.9% year-over-year, driven by strong execution across existing clients and contributions from new logos. Consumer Goods, Retail and Travel delivered 7.2% year-over-year growth, notably driven by retail and consumer goods. Life Sciences and Health Care increased 5.9% on a year-over-year basis. Revenue growth in the vertical continues to be driven primarily by clients in life science and med tech. Business Information Media decreased by 0.7% year-over-year, and our emerging verticals delivered year-over-year growth of 6% and 8%, primarily driven by ongoing strength in energy and government.

From a geographic perspective, Americas, our largest region, represented 57% of our Q1 revenues, grew 2.5% year-over-year. EMEA comprised 41% of our Q1 revenues, grew 15.9% year-over-year and 8.4% in constant currency. And finally, APAC making up 2% of our revenues grew 1.2% year-over-year. Lastly, in Q1, revenues from our top 20 clients grew 4.4% year-over-year, while revenues from clients outside our top 20 increased [ 9.1% ] Moving down the income statement. Our GAAP gross margin for the quarter was 27.7% compared to 26.9% in Q1 of last year.

Non-GAAP gross margin for the quarter was 29.4%, compared to 28.7% for the same period a year ago, demonstrating our commitment to improving profitability and gross margin during the fiscal year. GAAP SG&A was 17.1% of revenue compared to $0.168 in Q1 of last year. Non-GAAP SG&A in Q1 2016 came in at 14.1% of revenue, compared to 14.2% in the same period last year. GAAP income from operations was $117 million or 8.3% of revenue compared to $99 million or 7.6% of revenue in Q1 of last year, and grew by 18% year-over-year.

Non-GAAP income from operations was $201 million or 14.3% of revenue compared to $176 million or 13.5% revenue in Q1 of the previous year, and grew over 14% year-over-year. Our GAAP effective tax rate, which includes a higher level of tax shortfalls related to stock-based compensation, came in at 31.6%. And our non-GAAP effective tax rate was 23.6%. Diluted earnings per share on a GAAP basis was $1.52 compared to $1.28 in Q1 of last year, a $0.24 increase year-over-year, reflecting growth of 18.8%. Our non-GAAP diluted EPS was $2.86 compared to $2.41 in Q1 of last year, a $0.45 increase year-over-year, reflecting growth of 18.7%. In Q1, there were approximately 54.2 million diluted shares outstanding.

Turning to our cash flow and balance sheet. Cash flow from operations for Q1 was negative $36 million compared to $24 million in the same quarter of 2025. Q1 cash flow was negatively impacted in the quarter by higher variable compensation payments related to 2025 performance as well as timing of certain vendor payments. Free cash flow was negative $54 million, compared to free cash flow of $15 million in the same quarter last year. Cash and cash equivalents were just over $1 billion as of the end of the quarter. At the end of Q1, DSO was 76 days and compares to 72 days for Q4 2025 and 75 days for the same quarter last year.

Share repurchases in the first quarter were approximately 1.8 million shares for [ $264 million ] at an average price of $143.84 per share. To date, since the initiation of our share repurchase program, we've returned approximately $1.5 billion in cash to shareholders. Moving on to operational metrics. We ended Q1 with more than 56,500 delivery professionals, reflecting total growth of 1.6% compared to Q1 2025. Our total head count at quarter end was more than 62,750 employees. During the quarter, the company reduced head count in Mexico. Additionally, there were targeted reductions in certain geographies as part of our cost optimization program. These actions produced a modest sequential decline in production head count during the quarter.

Utilization was 77% compared to 77.5% in Q1 of last year, and 75.4% in Q4 2025. Q1 2026 utilization was impacted by the ongoing introduction of juniors, who initially operate at lower levels of utilization. The addition of juniors is intended to improve our seniority index over time. Now let's turn to guidance. Before moving to the specifics of our 2026 and Q2 outlook, I'd like to [indiscernible] and are beginning to modestly delay decisions. This behavior became more apparent early in [indiscernible] opportunities and are looking to close these in Q3 and Q4, driving higher levels of growth in the second half of the year.

At the same time, we are now expecting that higher energy prices and global economic uncertainty will have an impact on our revenue growth rate for the year. As a result, we are lowering our full year revenue growth outlook. We remain committed to improving overall profitability and gross margins. As usual, our guidance assumes that we'll be able to continue to deliver from our Ukraine delivery centers at productivity levels similar to those achieved in 2025. Moving to our full year outlook. Revenue growth will now be in the range of 4% to 6.5%. Foreign exchange is expected to have a positive impact of approximately 1.5%.

Therefore, the organic constant currency growth is now expected to be in the range of 2.5% to 5%. We expect GAAP income from operations to continue to be in the range of 10% to 11% and non-GAAP income from operations will continue to be in the range of 15% to 16%. We expect our GAAP effective tax rate to be 27%. Our non-GAAP effective tax rate, which excludes the impact of benefits in shortfalls related to stock-based compensation will continue to be 24%.

For earnings per share, we expect that GAAP diluted EPS will now be in the range of $8.29 to $8.59 for the full year, and non-GAAP diluted EPS will now be in the range of $12.98 to $13.28 for the full year. We now expect weighted average share count of 52.7 million fully diluted shares outstanding. Moving on to our Q2 2026 outlook. We expect revenue to be in the range of $1.4 billion to $1.415 billion, producing year-over-year growth of 4% at the midpoint of the range. Our guidance reflects a 1.3% positive foreign exchange impact during the quarter, producing organic constant currency growth of 2.7% at the midpoint of the range.

For the second quarter, we expect GAAP income from operations to be in the range of 9% to 10% and non-GAAP income from operations to be in the range of 15% to 16%. We expect our GAAP effective tax rate to be approximately 27% and our non-GAAP effective tax rate to be approximately 24%. Earnings per share, we expect GAAP diluted EPS to be in the range of $1.79 to $1.87 for the quarter, and non-GAAP diluted EPS to be in the range of $3.10 to $3.18 for the quarter. We expect a weighted average share count of 52.4 million diluted shares outstanding.

Finally, a few key assumptions that support our GAAP to non-GAAP measurements for Q2 and the remainder of the year. Stock-based compensation expense is expected to be approximately $50 million for Q2 and $44 million for each of the remaining quarters. Amortization of intangibles is expected to be approximately $70 million for each of the remaining quarters. The impact of foreign exchange is expected to be an approximate $3 million loss each quarter. Tax effect of non-GAAP adjustments is expected to be around $19 million for Q2 and $14 million for each of the remaining quarters. We expect $2 million excess tax shortfall and negligible in Q3 and $1 million in Q4.

Expenses associated with the 2025 cost optimization program are expected to be $13 million in Q2. And 1 more assumption outside of our GAAP to non-GAAP items. We now expect interest and other income to be $1 million in Q2, $2 million in Q3 and $4 million in Q4. Lastly, my continued thanks to all our EPAMers for their dedication and focus on serving our clients and driving results throughout 2026. Operator, let's open the call for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Bryan Bergin from TD Cohen.

Bryan Bergin: On the 2026 guide on the organic growth guide revision. So is this a handful of large engagements that are just moving slower or a broader portfolio dynamic, and what gives you the confidence on the second half implied sequential growth, just given where the 2Q number is. Are you assuming geopolitical volatility moderates to hit that revised target? Do you have things in hand? Maybe a little detail on that.

Balazs Fejes: Yes. I guess I'll talk a little bit about the impact that we're seeing as we look at Q2. And I would say it's probably more of a handful of customers where decision-making does seem to be somewhat delayed. And again, we began to see that probably more so in April and May. And then I think Jeff probably could update us on some of the larger deal opportunities in the second half. .

Jason Peterson: Number one, in our estimate, we are not kind of considering that the geopolitical environment changes significantly. So we are guiding as we see it right now. So we're not assuming anything significantly changing in the current geopolitical setup. At the same time, we have quite a bit of -- as I in the prepared remarks, I highlighted large, unusually large opportunities, which we are targeting. We are currently not really sure yet how fast they're going to ramp, how fast they're going to close.

But we are actually went after a piece of market, which was previously was not open to us, but I already became available due to our AI native and AI/Run capabilities, which opened us for large vendor consolidation, large transformation deals, which is for us was outside of our normal norm. So that's what's included in our current guide.

Bryan Bergin: And then my follow-up on the Anthropic relationship. So good to see that come through. Can you talk about how different that model is relative to your heritage delivery approach? I'm trying to understand how difficult of a pivot that may be for you. And do you see that relationship potentially driving an inflection in your AI native revenue growth mix? .

Balazs Fejes: I think Anthropic is going to be a very important relationship for -- we are -- I think we are following a playbook, which we've done before. We are -- we prepared preprepared engineers with our internal development. Once commercial products became available and certification quickly. We pivoted towards uncertified or engineering team. I just checked this morning, we are over 1,400 certified cloud architects as of this moment. So it's ramping up pretty nicely. And we will be going to the market together with Anthropic and bring to the market applied AI solutions. . I think it will be similar to the go-to-market movements like what we've done previously. But clearly, this is in the AI era.

We will be focusing on AI native AI transformation to bring safe AI capabilities to the enterprise. I don't think it's a pivot, it's an expansion, and we are hoping to see acceleration from this partnership.

Operator: Our next question comes from Maggie Nolan from William Blair.

Margaret Nolan: Maybe to follow up on that subset of clients that are seeing a little bit of fitness there. Does the full year guidance range consider any broadening of this weakness beyond that subset of clients that are currently affected, and maybe can you help us understand if that's a specific vertical or why or why not you wouldn't see that broadening?

Jason Peterson: Yes. So I think the reflection in the -- lowering the bottom end of the range, obviously, would sort of -- if we were to end up closer to that portion of the growth range that clearly maybe would reflect that we saw a somewhat broadening of the delayed decision-making. So again, we took the top down because we are sort of have a less rapid entry into the second half. We still feel good, as FB said, about some of the larger opportunities that we're looking to close here in the second half, but the bottom end of the range clearly reflect that there's some broadening of the delayed decision-making.

Balazs Fejes: And talking about impacts. I think clearly, already, we see some of these impacts coming in from travel and consumer sector. It's well understood for the reason. And right now, clearly, our Financial Services or in our Hi-Tech environment, we continue to see strong demand.

Margaret Nolan: Okay. And then, Jason, can you sort of bridge the gap for us between the non-GAAP operating margin that you saw in the quarter, a 14.3% to kind of the full year target range in the kind of 15% to 16% range?

Jason Peterson: Yes. So I think probably the best way to look at profitability is really to compare kind of year-over-year. And so we always have seasonal factors where Q1 is lower from a profitability standpoint. You've got the reset of the social security clocks. You also generally have that slow January that we talked about. And those things usually sort of result in sort of lower profitability in Q1. I think if I -- where I feel actually very positive, if I compare Q1 to Q1, we've got improvement in gross margin, which is the first time that we've seen that in quite a long period of time.

And it's consistent with the expectations that we said that we would be working on improving profitability throughout the year. What you should see, Maggie is improved gross margin as we go from Q1 to Q2. Some of that is seasonal, but again, we continue to sort of focus on profit improvement while trying to drive top line revenue growth and certainly being successful with the transformation opportunities.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jason Kupferberg from Wells Fargo.

Jason Kupferberg: Just wanted to see if we can put a finer point on quarter-over-quarter revenue growth expectations for Q3 and Q4. I mean we know what typical seasonal patterns look like, but would be curious what your base case looks like there, just given the moving parts in the macro.

Jason Peterson: Yes. I'll talk to, I guess, maybe just about what my model looks like, and I'll let FB sort of provide more color as to the client opportunities. I mean, usually, what we would see is stronger sequential growth between Q2 and Q3 driven seasonal factors, the additional available bill days. And then we're also factoring in some subset of the deals that we're working on that those would then begin to ramp. We clearly have a higher grade in the second half than we have in the first half and again, that's driven by the opportunities that are within our line of sight at this time.

Balazs Fejes: And what brings us this confidence and what we're counting on. We have quite a few deals which we already know is going to start in the Q3. We also had a pipeline of large opportunities, which we're working to close and start to ramp in Q3 and Q4.

Jason Kupferberg: So yes, sorry, that's why I wanted to follow up on the. So those large opportunities. There's vendor consolidation deals. It sounds like there is -- I don't know if there's 2 or 3 of them, maybe you can clarify that, but it sounds like that you do have something in your back half guide for those, I guess, maybe on a risk-adjusted basis. If you can just clarify that? And then just say a little bit more about the nature of the work that is comprising those large pipeline opportunities for the second half.

Balazs Fejes: So it's no longer just 3 or 4. We're actually talking about close to 10 opportunities at this point of time. These opportunities are outsized in terms of range, all of them are non-T&M, so different commercial models, combining AI, token in the picture themselves. They are -- it's a variation of business transformation, vendor consolidation and the size is really outside of EPAM's norm, what we typically do.

Jason Peterson: And then, Jason, clearly, there's a number of opportunities. And from a risk-adjusted standpoint, obviously, we're not assuming that we control all of those. We're just capturing a small subset and then that helps contribute to the growth in the second half of the year.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jamie Friedman from Susquehanna.

James Friedman: I'll just ask my 2 together in the interest of time. Jason, I want to get your perspective on the outlook that you had provided longer term at the Analyst Day for -- for the period 2027, 2028. There were assumptions about the improvement in gross margins, which you delivered in the first quarter and then SG&A efficiency, I think, 20 to 30 basis points. So wondering if you could share that -- I think it was 16% objective in the margin? And then FB, I'd be interested, so in your prepared remarks, you were mentioning that you're seeing opportunities in AI-enabled vendor consolidation. So I was hoping you could elaborate on that. What's that about?

Jason Peterson: Yes. It's quickly on profitability. So there's a -- we did get price in Q1. We're focused on improving some utilization. I think we've done a nice job with our cost optimization program and kind of getting us into good shape. The cost of our bench is somewhat lower. So all the things that we talked about doing, including improving the seniority index, all of that's in process. And as a result, you see better gross margin, Q1 of 2026 to Q1 of 2025. I also expect you will see better gross margin Q2 2026 to Q2 2025. So I think that whole journey of improved profitability, we're certainly, I would say, on our way.

We're not expecting so much SG&A optimization this year that would come more in those out years. In this year, I think you'll see us do more with sort of go-to-market investments as we talked about during the IA Day. Then, I guess, I will turn it over to FB.

Balazs Fejes: Absolutely. Thanks, Jason. So during IA Day, we kind of talked about and demonstrated our AI capabilities, we talked to you about Level 1, Level 2, Level 3 level of AI capabilities and SDLC maturity. In these larger deals, in vendor consolidations and also in enterprise AI transformation, we're deploying the best of EPAM or AI/Run Transform playbook. And this is a combination of our global capabilities augmented with AI, where we are able to bring a very differentiated and I would call, and a challenging proposition to our clients, which very much challenges the status quo in the vendor landscape. And that's what we are doing right now with our larger clients. .

Operator: Our next question comes from David Grossman from Stifel.

David Grossman: So I know this has come up in a couple of the previous questions, just about the visibility on the back half of the year and the guide. But historically, you've done a really good job of framing the low versus the high end and what needs to happen. So perhaps you can take some of the data points that you shared already and maybe put that in the context of the range, what happens at the end, what happens at the midpoint versus the high end?

Jason Peterson: Yes. So I think probably the first thing is that we're not assuming an improvement in the economic environment. So on the lower end of the range, you probably have maybe some further worsening you also have maybe more of what we referred to earlier, where you do have some clients sort of delaying sort of spending decisions. And so again, that would probably just be incremental kind of uncertainty and incremental kind of delays in decision-making. On the higher end of the range, it's both sort of solid execution in the traditional book of business, and then probably a somewhat higher share of wins in these larger deals that FB have been talking about.

Again, we have throughout the year and even when we guided during our Q4 call, we always expected a stronger growth rate in our second half, in part driven by these deals that we've kind of been focused on in developing over the last sort of quarter or two. Is that sufficient David or anything else? .

David Grossman: Well, I was just curious, can you still hit the midpoint of the range if we see a continuation of the environment where these larger deals continue to get pushed out?

Balazs Fejes: I think the question, David, is where the environment is the current for the mid range, I don't think we need to win too many of those deals. So actually, we're not that much counting on them on the midrange. I think -- but if the environment continues to get worse, that's clearly challenging for the mid range. So the midrange is steady execution, the usual conversion, typical EPAM style deal structures in order to achieve the midrange.

David Grossman: And then if I heard you right, I think you said that North America was where you were seeing the most incremental weakness and you also said that's where you're focusing your go-to-market investments. So Dakota market investments were similar to some of the prior cycles we've been through. So I don't know, did I get that right? And if I did, could you maybe at least provide some clarity around that dynamic and where those investments are going? .

Balazs Fejes: David, absolutely. I mean already in IA Day, we called out the go-to-market investments, although we were not that specific, but actually highlighted that we are -- we brought in a new Chief Marketing Officer, who started and focusing on performance marketing. We talked to you about how the market changed moving away from a seller to a much more of a buyers market. We didn't highlight it, but we already at that point of time was thinking about the North American market itself. So what we're going to start doing is applying all the learnings and the investments, what we've done and understanding what we've done in the EMEA market and bring it to the North American market.

Clearly, it's going to be investment in personnel, investment in process, investment in changes and transformation of our go-to-market motions in North America.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jonathan Lee from Guggenheim.

Yu Lee: You highlighted large multiyear deals in the pipeline that are larger in scale than what EPAM has historically pursued. What gives you confidence in your ability to close and execute on those agents do you have the sales muscle, governance frameworks and delivery infrastructure to manage those programs and that magnitude? And how should we think about the profile of these deals as it relates to competitive dynamics in deal size and margin profiles relative to what you currently see?

Balazs Fejes: Jonathan, great question. I think Clearly, I think it was also kind of a surprise, how successful our offering has been with our clients. We didn't expect this amount of pipeline be built with these differentiated offerings. I think do we have the sales muscle to close them, to convert them to run them up. That's why we are risk-adjusting the pipeline itself. And we are not fully including them the same way as we include other deals because we actually -- we are not sure that how fast they're going to convert and how fast they're going to ramp. So that's been all honesty, right? So yes, we have the sales muscle to actually get into these opportunities.

I think the offering is differentiated enough and resonates really, really well with our clients because we bring AI native capabilities to these deals, and we are disrupting the status quo. In terms of scaling these opportunities and to governance in place, we, EPAM has an experience running large programs, but in the past, those programs were built bid by bed, not as one big opportunity. So yes, we were running these opportunities before as an aggregate, but we never really wanted us won't go. So that's the difference. At the same time, I think what you asked about profitability.

Clearly, what we can tell you is that our current AI native business or portfolio, which is over $125 million per quarter is run higher profitability than EPAM average. So that's what we see.

Yu Lee: Got it. And just as a follow-up, where do we stand on the large network client? Did revenue stabilize in Q1 as expected? Or are you seeing incremental deterioration there? And what does this imply for the remainder of the year? .

Jason Peterson: Yes. So the client did stabilize revenue as expected. I think we would see probably some very modest sequential decline over the next quarter or two. But again, something I would still put very much in a stable camp. And then in terms of the rest of the book of business there we are seeing solid growth in their book of business in the Iberian Peninsula. We're also seeing growth throughout South America. And so we feel generally good about the book of business there with the exception of some slowness in Mexico and with that large customer. .

Operator: Question comes from Jim Schneider from Goldman Sachs.

James Schneider: I was wondering if you could maybe comment on the extent that the large deals convert into revenue beginning in the back half and heading into 2027, what would be the impact, do you think, on margins? Or would they be coming in at or below sort of your corporate average?

Jason Peterson: Yes, we're still looking at improved gross margin on a year-over-year basis. There's always seasonal impacts. And so again, Q3 would have generally higher profitability just because it's got higher billl days. And so I think what we'll all have to be looking at is just Q1 to Q2, Q2 to Q3. Sometimes, as you bring in deals, there is a modest kind of impact as you sort of do the transition or what's called KT our knowledge transfer. But I think what you'll find is that with our focus on improving profitability. In India, reducing the cost of the bench, improving utilization and focus on sort of improving fixed fee profitability.

I feel comfortable that we can continue to improve profitability. .

James Schneider: Yes. And then maybe as a follow-up. On capital allocation, given what the stock has done, can you give us a kind of a refresher on your latest thoughts on the relative uses of cash between buybacks at this point and incremental M&A new capabilities?

Balazs Fejes: Yes. So we did the accelerated share repurchase. There's kind of a true-up piece of that, that will show up in Q2, and we will also be probably doing incremental repurchases when the market opens again next week. At the same time, I think we are looking ahead to sort of the second half of the year. You might see us begin to again prioritize sort of M&A-related investments. But certainly, with the share price at this level, you continue to see some amount of generally open market purchases of the stock. .

Operator: Our next question comes from Bryan Keane from Citi.

Bryan Keane: FB, can you talk a little bit about contract pricing and how those dynamics have changed over the last year or so, in particular, something like the Anthropic deal the partnership there. How does that -- how are you going to recognize revenues in that contract in that partnership? Is it any different than the model has been over the last few years? .

Balazs Fejes: Bryan, it's a good question. I think it's a moving target. As we highlighted, the economics is -- continues to be a subject which we are exploring. At this point of time, we are in most client relationships or clients are bearing the cost of the tokens. I don't know how it's going to change. We are in discussion with quite a few clients, how would that transition. So Anthropic in this sense, it's not different. We -- our relationship, we will be expecting to develop software using the Anthropic stack, the models, the tools themselves. . And right now, we are in various cases.

We're exploring different commercial models, how we can actually charge the tokens or the client pays for the tokens or what is the commercial model going forward. It's complicated in a sense because it's impacting certain security considerations. And it's -- I think it's an open subject, which we continue to work with our partners, with our clients, and with Anthropic themselves. In terms of, I think, pricing, I think Jason is actually -- was very pleased to see even rate increases in the first quarter. So we are actually not seeing what we call rate compression at this point of time. We're quite successful for minority -- small minority of our clients to negotiate rate increases.

So overall, we are not seeing that type of market pressure.

Bryan Keane: And then just as a follow-up, Jason, I saw that sequentially, head count was down, and then obviously, revenue per head was up in the first quarter. How do we think about the rest of the year to hit the guidance maybe sequentially? How should we think about the head count cadence and the revenue per head?

Jason Peterson: Yes. So I think with Q1, clearly, we've talked about the lead customer in ours, and so we did see some reduction in the head count in Mexico. And we continue to make some adjustments in different locations that kind of improve utilization and decrease the cost of our bench. I do think you'll see head count additions throughout the remainder of the year.

The revenue per head count is usually not a calculation that I do, and you always have to remember the foreign exchange also plays a role in that, but as FB that be indicated, we did get rate in Q1, and so that was positive and did help with profitability and throughout the remainder of the year, I think you'll see ongoing head count to support business growth. But I think you'll also see some adjustment in sort of contract structures. And so I think the whole calculation of revenue per head is probably a conversation we'll be having kind of later in the year.

But again, we feel good about the growth associated with some of these larger revenue opportunities.

Operator: Our next question comes from Arvind Ramnani from Truist.

Arvind Ramnani: I just wanted to ask, right, like I mean it looks like you kind of lowered the guidance on sort of existing customer weakness, and I think what you have described as sort of in order to hit your guidance for the full year, there's some, I guess, prospective clients or pipeline, or some of the pipeline needs to convert. It seems like it's kind of like visibility at existing clients wasn't like kind of properly accounted for how are you getting confidence that the prospect of clients will actually convert to revenue on time in order for you to hit your guidance numbers?

Jason Peterson: Yes. I think maybe the first thing just remember is I don't think any of us thought that what happened in the Middle East was going to happen and it was going to go on for as long as it's gone on for. So we are seeing some impacts from that. And then from a deal standpoint, there are a significant number of opportunities, Arvind, and we're just running on a modest share of those to convert. And so again, that's why we think that it's an appropriate guidance and why we also think that there's also opportunity to get to the higher end of the range.

Arvind Ramnani: And then just on the topic of AI, right? I mean, certainly kind of -- you are seeing kind of good traction out there. I mean, is there any sort of like revenue cannibalization or workflow cannibalization or displacement of some of the legacy work as some of the AI work ramps up?

Balazs Fejes: Arvind, mean clearly, there is some impact. clients shifting some of the IT budgets towards AI spending and also the increasingly automating parts of the SDLC, for example, testing itself. And probably, they are diverting investments away from digital platform, e-commerce platform build-outs towards new AI native products or a native platforms construction. So that's the shift what we are seeing right now.

Arvind Ramnani: And just last question. Just with these advancements and model capabilities we have seen both across Anthropic and open AI just in the most recent model releases. Are you all proactively going to some of your clients and saying, like, hey, we can use some of these of improvements in sort of AI to kind of lower head count on certain projects? Are you offering that a few clients or not really seeing the dynamic?

Balazs Fejes: So we are going to the clients with very advanced engagement model. This is what I highlighted when you were in the IA Day, we demonstrated dark factory capabilities. And yes, we are proactively talking to our clients, how we can introduce them how we can actually provide them a dark factory based for the autonomous applicable maintenance and support capabilities, how we can automate a large part of the testing flows. So this is all part of the go-to-market movement, which we launched earlier this year.

Operator: Our final question today comes from James Faucette from Morgan Stanley.

James Faucette: Thank you very much. Just a couple of quick follow-up questions. On margins, I think you -- Jason, you've talked about like what you're planning to do, but especially on these longer duration projects and if we're starting to factor in tokenization or token costs, excuse me, how do you think about like the levers that you need to control or what kinds of relationships and that kind of thing do you need to develop? And then I'll just throw in my second question simultaneously. I heard loud and clear, your potential interest in revisiting M&A, especially in the latter part of this year.

Can you give us a little bit of view on in terms of what you might be looking at what makes sense and what valuations are doing in the types of acquisitions you could be looking at.

Balazs Fejes: James, I think it's -- this is a great question, and it's so funny that so few people actually ask about economics. What you need to do is you need to control multiple aspects. You need to, first of all, control the model usage, what task, which model you are using what is the frequency of that model. You need to have the right blend of model. So what we are building out is this blending capability, which is which where for each particle task, you need to select the right model, which is able to execute, but cheap enough to deliver the ROI.

At the same time, you also have to recognize that you can buy the same token from the same model from multiple sources. So you need to have the multi-sourcing capability, someone came to a trading desk, which allows you to purchase the same model, same capability from various sources. And this is -- we need to develop this capability to manage these contracts, how to manage our consumption and how to buy the same tokens related to price, availability, cash hit limits. All of these are influencing the pricing at the end. You can achieve differentiation or different in terms of pricing and profit levels, if you correctly control the sourcing and the usage of models themselves.

In terms of M&A, I turn over to Jason.

Jason Peterson: Yes. So I think that we continue to focus on domain capabilities, probably data assets and then some of the geographic opportunities that we talked about in the past, allowing us to expand our position, most likely in Asia Pac. And so kind of similar to what we've talked about in the past, again, I think you're not likely to see anything in the very near future, but maybe later in the year.

And then just quickly from a valuation standpoint, I think we continue to see what in our eye is still a little bit of a disconnect between private market expectations and kind of public market valuations, but we continue to be engaged with the potential targets and I guess, kind of stay tuned. .

Operator: This concludes the question-and-answer session. I'd now like to turn the call over to Balazs Fejes for closing remarks. .

Balazs Fejes: Thank you for joining us this morning, and we're going to see you guys in 3 months. Thank you. .