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DATE

Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — John Caplan
  • Chief Financial Officer — Bea Ordonez

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue -- $262 million, up 6% year over year.
  • Revenue ex interest income -- $210 million, up 11% year over year with a sequential acceleration of 200 basis points.
  • Total volume -- Exceeded $22 billion, up 16% year over year.
  • B2B volume -- Up 44%, more than doubling sequentially from 21% growth in the prior quarter, outpacing internal targets.
  • SMB volume -- Increased 11% year over year; within this, SMBs selling on marketplaces rose 2%, and B2B SMBs surged 44%.
  • Checkout volume -- Up 53% year over year, reflecting benefits from the completed Stripe migration.
  • Enterprise payouts volume -- Increased 28% year over year, driven by new and expanding client participation.
  • ARPU ex interest income -- Up 22% year over year; total ARPU grew 17%.
  • SMB take rate -- Expanded to 120 basis points, up 1 basis point year over year and up 7 basis points sequentially, reflecting B2B and checkout franchise momentum.
  • Reported take rate -- Decreased to 115 basis points, a 10 basis point decline year over year mainly due to lower interest rates affecting interest income.
  • Customer funds on platform -- $7.6 billion, up 15% year over year, partially offsetting lower interest revenue.
  • Interest income -- $52 million for the quarter.
  • Hedged customer funds -- Hedging in place for $4 billion or 53% of held funds via treasury securities, term deposits, and derivatives.
  • Total operating expenses -- $232 million, a 7% increase attributed mainly to labor, incentives for card product adoption, and the EasyLink acquisition.
  • Transaction costs -- $35 million, down 11% despite 11% revenue ex interest growth; represented 13.5% of revenue, a year-over-year decrease of 250 basis points.
  • Sales and marketing expense -- Increased $3 million, up 6%, driven by card incentives and labor costs.
  • G&A expense -- Rose $6 million, or 20%, from higher labor, legal, and consulting costs.
  • R&D expense -- Up $6 million, or 16%, due to increased labor expenses.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $69 million, equaling a 27% margin; adjusted EBITDA excluding interest income was $18 million, an increase of over 140% year over year and a company record.
  • Net income -- $20 million, down slightly from $21 million in the prior period.
  • EPS -- Basic and diluted earnings per share were $0.06 and $0.06, respectively; last year, basic was $0.06 and diluted was $0.05.
  • Cash and cash equivalents -- $339 million at quarter end.
  • Share repurchases -- $74 million repurchased in the quarter at a weighted average price of $5.16; $117 million remains authorized.
  • 2026 revenue guidance -- $1.1 billion to $1.14 billion (midpoint raised by $10 million), with interest income of $200 million and $900 million to $940 million revenue ex interest income.
  • 2026 adjusted EBITDA guidance -- $285 million to $295 million; core adjusted EBITDA is expected to more than double to $90 million at the midpoint.
  • Operating expense guidance -- Adjusted OpEx expected to increase 6%-7% for the year.
  • B2B growth outlook -- Management expects more than 30% B2B volume growth for the rest of the year, supported by continued onboarding of upmarket customers and China momentum.
  • Checkout business outlook -- Management expects flat to modest mid-single-digit volume growth going forward, with Stripe migration completed and feature adoption increasing.
  • Agentic AI and stablecoin -- Management highlighted the launch of stablecoin wallet capabilities via Bridge and initial customer adoption; ongoing pilots for AI-powered agents in customer support and insight generation are noted as gaining speed and impact.

SUMMARY

Management increased full-year revenue and interest income guidance, attributing the revision to substantial B2B expansion and sustained growth in customer funds. Payoneer completed a complex migration of its checkout product portfolio to Stripe with higher-than-expected retention and feature adoption. The company reported rapid acceleration in B2B, enterprise payouts, and SMB take rates as a result of cross-selling, upmarket client additions, and new regional initiatives, especially in China and EMEA. Operating leverage was visible in a 140%-plus increase in adjusted EBITDA ex interest, with transaction cost reductions outpacing revenue growth, demonstrating improved margin structure. Use of cash was seasonally high with aggressive share repurchases; management is focused on unlocking further profitability through ongoing AI adoption and new regulatory licenses in strategic markets.

  • Payoneer noted that "Customer funds have grown at a substantially faster rate than SMB volumes for the past 5 quarters," reinforcing both customer engagement and future interest earnings potential.
  • The CFO stated that B2B volume growth is "take rate accretive," despite China B2B offering lower take rates versus other segments, due to the rising share of higher-margin products and services in the overall mix.
  • Management confirmed that pricing changes planned for the back half of the year target long-tail or non-core customer segments, with the majority of acceleration coming from other volume and client acquisition initiatives.
  • Initial demand for the stablecoin wallet offering is supported by a waitlist in which "80% of them are net new customers to Payoneer," highlighting total addressable market (TAM) expansion opportunities.
  • Revenue and volume acceleration in enterprise payouts is expected to continue, with recent client wins still ramping and further upside anticipated from expanded relationships with marquee clients.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • ARPU: Average Revenue Per User; for Payoneer, measures the average amount of revenue generated per active customer, adjusted when stated "ex interest income" to denote exclusion of interest-based earnings.
  • Take rate: Fee revenue recognized by Payoneer as a percentage of total platform transaction volume, a key profitability metric especially for B2B and SMB segments.
  • Checkout: Payoneer's online payment solution for e-commerce merchants, now operated via Stripe infrastructure, supporting direct-to-consumer transactions and advanced features like BNPL (Buy Now, Pay Later).
  • Stablecoin wallet/Bridge: Digital wallet enabling businesses to send, receive, and hold value using stablecoins through Payoneer’s Bridge integration; intended to serve client demand for next-generation cross-border money movement.
  • Core adjusted EBITDA ex interest: Non-GAAP profitability metric reflecting earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, excluding interest income, providing a view of “core” business performance and leverage.
  • EasyLink: Acquired China-based payments company enhancing Payoneer's Asia-Pacific B2B capabilities.
  • Enterprise payouts: Segment addressing high-volume, large-scale disbursements to vendors, sellers, or contractors by global marketplace and platform clients.
  • TAM: Total Addressable Market; the total revenue opportunity available for a product or service, specifically referenced here for B2B payments and stablecoin-based solutions.
  • BNPL: Buy Now, Pay Later; a payment option enabling consumers to defer payment or pay in installments, included in Payoneer’s Stripe-powered checkout solution.

Full Conference Call Transcript

John Caplan: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. In Q1, we delivered strong accelerating results across our major KPIs. Revenue ex interest accelerated and B2B volume growth more than doubled sequentially. We delivered another quarter of substantial core profitability expansion. Our results prove our team's dedication to our customers, our shareholders and our strategic transformation. I will walk you through what we are delivering and why we're confident our momentum will continue. Steve will then go through our financial results and our 2026 guidance. First, our powerful results to start 2026. Revenue ex interest accelerated with 11% growth year-over-year. We are confident in our ability to exit 2026 at a mid-teens growth rate.

Total volume grew 16%, exceeding $22 billion. B2B volume was up 44%. Growth significantly accelerated, more than doubling from 21% in Q4 and ahead of our expectations. We drove our SMB take rate to 120 basis points as we capture more complex B2B flows. ARPU growth accelerated and ex interest, we delivered our seventh consecutive quarter of 20%-plus growth. Our upmarket strategy is gaining traction, and our customer portfolio is becoming more and more valuable. We hold $7.6 billion of customer funds on our platform, up 15% or over $1 billion year-over-year. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $69 million, representing a 27% margin.

As a result of our disciplined execution, adjusted EBITDA ex interest grew over 140% to $18 million, our highest result as a public company and demonstrating substantial operating leverage. We are on track to more than double core adjusted EBITDA to $90 million at the midpoint of our 2026 guidance. This isn't one metric moving in the right direction. It's broad-based and well-executed acceleration across our business. Global B2B payments is a multitrillion-dollar opportunity. Payoneer's core strengths uniquely position us to capture meaningful share in this massive market. We've built powerful infrastructure based on years of investment and innovation.

We hold licenses in key jurisdictions, including the U.S., EU, U.K., China, Hong Kong, Australia, Japan and Singapore, with 3 more in progress in India, Israel and Canada. We maintain nearly 100 direct banking and payment relationships around the world. Our payment network spans 7,000 trade corridors. This didn't happen overnight. It took us more than a decade and significant investment to build. For context, getting a single payment services license in many major markets can take 18 to 24 months. Second, we now have the scale that creates real network effects. We processed over $22 billion in GMV in Q1 and over $90 billion over the last 12 months.

That volume creates liquidity in currency corridors and lets us offer better pricing to customers while maintaining healthy unit economics. And as our volumes grow, particularly those in B2B, these efficiencies compound. Third, we're essential operating infrastructure for our customers' growth. Our customers use us as a multicurrency wallet for treasury management, accounts receivable management, working capital, accounts payable and workforce management. The majority of our usage now comes from customers using us from three or more products, and that number keeps growing. As we move upmarket and deepen our ability to serve our customers' needs, we see revenue per customer, multiproduct adoption, customer loyalty and funds on platform increase.

This is what makes our business so powerful, a global financial operating account that is essential to the daily needs of our customers. The more they use, the more embedded in their business we become. Now I'd like to share what's driving our B2B growth because this is the engine for the next phase of our business. We drove 44% volume growth in our B2B business in Q1, more than doubling from 21% in Q4 and ahead of our ambitious expectations. Growth accelerated in every region, driven by strong acquisition and onboarding of high-quality upmarket SMB and SME customers over the past year.

We also drove strong growth from customers choosing to load funds from their bank accounts on to Payoneer so they can use our AP capabilities. In particular, we delivered very strong growth in our China B2B business. China's SME B2B export sector represents a multitrillion-dollar opportunity and is a key strategic pillar of China's economy. We are intently focused on building a scaled compliant platform to serve these customers and capture this opportunity. We have real momentum. Beyond B2B, we are also driving momentum across regions and use cases. Our revenue from SMB selling on marketplaces continues to grow, driven by accelerating double-digit growth in APAC and EMEA. We have put in place initiatives to accelerate this growth.

In Q1, our new marketplace volume acquired in China doubled year-over-year, and we are winning wallet share through product bundling and packages. We expect our initiatives to provide a strong foundation for us and support our mid-teens exit growth rate. We're taking a disciplined use case-driven approach to implementing agentic AI. I'm encouraged by the initial data and innovation we're seeing. For example, we're piloting agents and customer support to reduce the overall volume of ticket and accelerate customer resolution time. We are leveraging AI-driven insights and lead generation to drive customer growth. And driving widespread adoption of AI tools in our platform organization to accelerate product velocity. These programs are gaining speed and impact.

We are also investing in stablecoin capabilities. These capabilities, we believe, will be important for the future of commerce and money movement for 3 to 5 years from now, not just for next quarter. We launched stablecoin wallet capabilities via Bridge and are live in the market with our initial cohort of customers, understanding demand, and we intend to scale up quickly. Payoneer has the regulatory maturity that many stablecoin native firms don't, which positions us well as the preferred partner for real-world adoption, particularly by larger businesses and leading global marketplaces. We believe our application to establish an uninsured national trust bank in the United States announced this February will further strengthen our position.

Thousands of businesses have signed up for our waitlist since launch. 80% of them are net new customers to Payoneer, highlighting the TAM expansion potential of this new product. Additionally, a meaningful portion of our business is doing $600,000 or more in annualized commercial stablecoin activity, signaling significant workflows and real-world use cases. We serve businesses, and we will make it easier for them to do business in whatever currency or payment method that's appropriate for them. For example, an IT services customer in Europe that uses our platform to receive 6 figures of monthly volume is an early adopter of our stablecoin wallet.

Their contractors are requesting payment in stablecoin, and this customer wanted to simplify fragmented operations with one trusted partner. Payoneer is doing just that for them. We had a strong Q1 and a strong start to 2026. Payoneer is profitable, scaled. We have broad-based momentum in a massive market. We have real defensible strategic assets, regulatory and payments infrastructure, scale, brand and distribution that are based on years of innovation and development and that compound over time. Our Q1 results demonstrate that our strategy is working. We're executing with focus and discipline as we continue to drive durable, profitable growth. With that, I'll turn it over to Bea to take you through the numbers and our outlook for the year.

Bea Ordonez: Thank you, John, and thank you, everyone, for joining us. Payoneer delivered a strong quarter with accelerating growth in revenue, excluding interest income, powered by our B2B franchise and robust adjusted EBITDA performance, including a quarterly record for adjusted EBITDA, excluding interest income. Our upmarket strategy is delivering strong growth. We are unlocking operating leverage and improving the health and quality of our customer portfolio. Our increased full year 2026 guidance reflects our focused execution and our business momentum. Now turning to our first quarter results. We delivered revenue of $262 million, up 6% year-over-year.

Revenue, excluding interest income reached $210 million, up 11% year-over-year and accelerating 200 basis points sequentially, driven primarily by increasing momentum in our B2B franchise, strong performance in checkout and our ongoing pricing and monetization initiatives. ARPU increased 17% in the quarter and excluding interest income, was up 22%. ARPU, excluding interest income, has now grown at or above 20% for 7 consecutive quarters, demonstrating the success of our upmarket strategy, our cross-sell efforts and our pricing and monetization initiatives as well as the increasing value of our financial stack. Total volume was up 16% year-over-year.

SMB volume grew 11% year-over-year with volume from B2B SMBs up 44%, volume from SMBs that sell on marketplaces up 2% and checkout volume up 53%. B2B volume accelerated across all reported regions, but was especially strong in the China goods sector, both with existing and newly acquired customers. We also delivered strong B2B volume growth in EMEA, driven by robust growth among larger customers in Tier 1 markets as well as in APAC. We continue to drive strong momentum in our enterprise payouts business with volume up 28% year-over-year as we both increase penetration with existing clients and ramp newly acquired clients.

Our Q1 take rate of 115 basis points decreased 10 basis points year-over-year from the impact of lower interest rates on our interest income. However, we continue to drive expansion in our SMB take rate, which increased 1 basis point year-over-year and 7 points sequentially due primarily to strong growth in our B2B and checkout franchises. Customer funds held by Payoneer increased 15% year-over-year to $7.6 billion, partially offsetting the impact of lower rates on our interest income revenue. We generated interest income of $52 million in the quarter. Customer funds have grown at a substantially faster rate than SMB volumes for the past 5 quarters.

This demonstrates the trust and value customers place in our platform and the utility we provide via our multicurrency account, AR and AP capabilities and in the ability we provide for customers to choose when, how and in which countries and currencies to use their funds. As of March 31, we had hedges in place related to approximately $4 billion or 53% of customer funds through our portfolio of treasury securities and term deposits and through derivative instruments. Total operating expenses of $232 million increased 7%, primarily driven by increases in labor-related expenses, incentives and other spend designed to drive card adoption and usage and the effect of our EasyLink acquisition in China.

Transaction costs of $35 million decreased 11% despite 11% growth in revenue, excluding interest income and represented 13.5% of revenue, down approximately 250 basis points year-over-year. Excluding interest income, transaction costs declined over 400 basis points to 16.8% of revenue due to the impact of our strategic relationships with Mastercard and Stripe as well as improved operational efficiency. Sales and marketing expense increased $3 million or 6% from increased spend on marketing initiatives, including incentives related to our card offering and higher labor-related costs. G&A expense increased $6 million or 20%, primarily due to higher labor-related costs and higher legal and consulting costs.

R&D expense increased $6 million or 16%, primarily due to higher labor-related costs, while other operating expense decreased by $2 million or 4%, primarily due to lower labor-related costs and lower IT and communication costs. Adjusted EBITDA was $69 million, representing a 27% adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter. We generated $18 million of adjusted EBITDA, excluding interest income, our highest ever quarterly performance. We are unlocking leverage in our business by optimizing our transaction cost economics and through disciplined expense management, even as we invest for the long term in our regulatory infrastructure, in stablecoin capabilities, in AI and in our product road map. We have a substantial long-term opportunity to unlock further core business profitability.

Net income was $20 million compared to $21 million in the prior year period. Basic and diluted earnings per share were both $0.06 versus basic earnings of $0.06 and diluted earnings of $0.05 per share in the prior year period. We ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $339 million. Use of cash is seasonally higher in the first quarter of each year, while we also saw higher CapEx related to our move to new office space in Israel and significantly accelerated the pace of our buybacks.

During the quarter, we repurchased approximately $74 million worth of shares at a weighted average price of $5.16 and as of March 31, had approximately $117 million remaining on our current share repurchase authorization. Turning now to our 2026 guidance. We expect total revenue between $1.1 billion and $1.14 billion, an increase of $10 million at the midpoint relative to the guidance we issued in February. This includes interest income of $200 million and $900 million to $940 million of revenue, excluding interest income. We are increasing our expectations for interest income by $10 million to reflect robust growth in customer funds and updated expectations related to prevailing interest rates in the U.S. and Europe.

We are also increasing our guidance for total adjusted EBITDA to between $285 million and $295 million. There are no changes to our guidance for revenue, excluding interest income, transaction costs, adjusted OpEx, which represent revenue less transaction costs and adjusted EBITDA or core adjusted EBITDA. We are confident in our ability to accelerate growth to exit the year at a mid-teens rate, unlock leverage and more than double core adjusted EBITDA to $90 million at the midpoint. We are evolving our business to capture a significant growth opportunity. Behind our strong results is a healthier, higher quality and more durable customer portfolio.

We are capturing and growing our business with larger customers, improving our risk profile, unlocking robust operating leverage, making strategic investments, generating substantial cash flow and positioning the company to create long-term shareholder value. We are now happy to answer any questions you may have. Operator, please open the line.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Nate Svensson of Deutsche Bank. Your next question comes from the line of Aditya Buddhavarapu, Bank of America.

Aditya Buddhavarapu: This is Aditya from Bank of America. Just on the full year guidance, could you just maybe just talk about how we should think about some of the underlying assumptions in terms of what you're seeing on macro, any sort of sentiment from customers? So if you could just walk us through that. And second, more specifically on the phasing of growth during the year, if you could provide any color across different segments and how you're thinking about that as well, that would be great.

Bea Ordonez: Sure. Happy to do that. Thank you for the question. So look, overall, in terms of sort of the macro context, what we're seeing in Q1 is very consistent, I think, with what we're seeing more broadly with industry trends. We're seeing improving -- stable to improving marketplace trends, really outsized robust performance in our B2B business, where we grew volumes by more than 40%, improving performance in checkout, where the migration to our new Stripe solution is now complete and has gone much better than we anticipated. So really robust performance across all of the major drivers of volume into our ecosystem.

So as we think of the assumptions that underpin our guidance for 2026, in our marketplace business, we're expecting broadly mid-single-digit volume growth. with revenue broadly in line with those volumes to maybe a little bit higher than that and acceleration to your question around the quarterly cadence, accelerating into that back half of the year as we lap the impact of tariffs. We're seeing really strong growth from our China cohort with some of the initiatives that we launched there last year, strong growth in APAC. So all supportive of that mid-single digits and accelerating in the back half of the year.

In our B2B business, we now expect more than 30% year-over-year volume growth through the rest of the year. So really strong performance there. Revenue probably to come in the mid-20s, lower take rate from really the business mix there in China and EMEA. And in our Checkout business, there, again, as I noted, really strong performance in migrating that portfolio. We're seeing great customer adoption, including some of the underlying features there. So we're expecting flat to modest mid-single-digit growth in volume and continuing to scale from there on out.

So all of that really against a macro environment that we view as stable through the rest of the year, broadly speaking, robust in terms of customer spending behavior, B2B behavior. So overall, low double-digit volume performance in the aggregate and revenue growing, let's call it, a shade faster than that and accelerating into the back half of the year with Q2, we'll say, broadly stable from a top line revenue growth versus Q1.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Cristopher Kennedy of William Blair.

Cristopher Kennedy: It's great to see the $18 million of ex float EBITDA. And B, you mentioned the opportunity to unlock core adjusted EBITDA even more than that. Can you just help frame kind of where you think the margins can go on the core business as the business mix changes?

Bea Ordonez: Yes. Thanks for the question, Chris. Look, we're really, really pleased with our performance in Q1 because we're achieving it by really driving every sort of critical KPI, right? We're accelerating growth from a top line perspective, gives us conviction going into the back half of the year that we can exit that core revenue in the mid-teens as we called out in February. We're driving really nice margin expansion even as we mix shift into more complex business. So we're seeing really nice transaction profit margin dynamics within the business. We called that out coming into this year and really sort of improved performance versus last year. So that's dropping to the bottom line.

And we're investing in our platform, investing in our stack, but still able to operate with discipline within the business and expect our OpEx overall, our adjusted OpEx to be up sort of mid-single digits. So 6% to 7% overall is what our guidance calls for. All of that is going to continue to unlock leverage in the business, unlock leverage in the core business. And as John said in his prepared remarks, as we continue to deploy AI in a very use case-specific manner within our platform team, within our operations teams and our risk functions, we expect to be able to unlock meaningful leverage going forward. So we're going to keep executing against that plan.

We can expect the results to show up in the bottom line, and we're very happy with the trajectory that we're on.

Cristopher Kennedy: Okay. And then John highlighted the opportunity in China. Can you just talk about the potential take rate in that market as the business kind of evolves into higher take rate products?

Bea Ordonez: So from a B2B perspective, I think, is what you're getting at, Chris. So look, we saw really robust growth, as we called out in China or in B2B more broadly, 44% from a volume perspective, in excess of 20% from a revenue perspective. And we saw really strong growth in both China and EMEA with larger customers, right? We've talked before about our China B2B business. It's predominantly a goods business versus the rest of our B2B business being mostly service-oriented, a lower take rate overall versus the rest of our B2B business. But overall, as we grow that B2B business more quickly than the rest of the business, it is still take rate accretive, right?

So even with China showing that robust growth, our take rate in the B2B business is, give or take, 1.5x what it is in the rest of the business. And is overall take rate accretive to the overall portfolio. So we're seeing really nice dynamics there. We've been looking to grow in that market in a measured way, as we've talked about before. We're adding capabilities. We have a strong brand in China, adding features to that product set, and we have every right to win in what is a massive market.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Mike Grondahl of Northland Capital Markets.

Unknown Analyst: This is Logan on for Mike. First, can you just provide some additional color on what exactly drove the 44% year-over-year growth in B2B volume and also remind us of the opportunity there?

John Caplan: Thanks for the question. We are really excited about the momentum we have in B2B, and it is the engine of our growth going out into years ahead. And we're building on that strong momentum we saw in the fourth quarter, and we doubled the volume sequentially quarter-over-quarter. I think we highlighted in her previous answer, larger customers in China turning to Payoneer as the preferred partner for their global exports. And then around the globe, services businesses, larger services customers as we move the firm up market, choosing Payoneer as the multicurrency wallet for their cross-border operations as we focus on the key geographies and markets and incorporation hubs around the globe. We are really pleased with the progress.

And I think the key here for us is that we've really migrated to the full financial stack of offerings for multinational cross-border SMB firms, and they're adopting three or more of our products. They're loading more funds onto our platform as demonstrated in our overall balance growth at 15%. We're seeing very strong usage of our AP products. Our workforce management business continues to exceed our expectations and be very strong as we help global firms hire contractors and employees around the globe. Given the trends we see, and as Be mentioned, we expect B2B volume growth for the rest of the year of at least 30% which is a meaningful increase from our expectations heading into the year.

And we are -- I think of our SMB business overall, B2B is now 1/3 of the total volume, and this is a very exciting dynamic for us. It's a $10 trillion opportunity, as you know. And I think we have slightly less than 1% share, and we are health end on getting our fair portion of it.

Unknown Analyst: Appreciate that color. And then one more from us. Can you just walk us through what markets over performed and underperformed in 1Q and if those trends continue so far in the second quarter?

John Caplan: Yes. For B2B, every market sort of blistering results. China is strong, APAC is strong, EMEA is strong. Really pleased at the progress we're seeing there in Latin America, really solid growth of moving upmarket overall. LatAm is 10% of our revenue, small portion of the overall business, but a very important franchise for us. And we're doing better than we had anticipated in China, and we intend to continue to do so.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your next question comes from the line of Nate Svensson of Deutsche Bank.

Christopher Svensson: Apologies about the technical difficulties earlier. I appreciate you let me hop back in here. I wanted to ask a couple of questions just around the back half acceleration. Your answer to one of the earlier questions was very helpful, but just trying to double-click in a couple of areas. So the first one is the dynamics in checkout. Numbers were very good. I think you called out that the migration to Stripe went a lot better than expected. So I was just hoping you could provide a little more color and commentary on what exactly went better than expected.

If I recall correctly, I think maybe there had been some intention maybe to not migrate a portion of the customers. So I'm wondering how things played out versus your expectation. And now that the migration sounds like it is complete, any color on sort of underlying performance within that business and kind of how you expect that to play out going forward?

Bea Ordonez: Yes. Thanks for the question, Nate. So look, in terms of the acceleration more broadly, we feel really good about the -- again, the KPIs and how they're performing in our business. So what supports our view on that, the significant acceleration we're seeing in our B2B business, as John said, more than double in Q1 versus what we saw in Q4, continued momentum into April. We feel really good about that 30% plus volume number going into the back half of the year. The marketplace business, as we said, we're seeing stable to improving trends. We launched a bunch of initiatives to really sort of push and accelerate and inflect that business.

And as you called out, and I'll mention this maybe very quickly before I get to checkout, the enterprise business has also outperformed expectations, and we're seeing really nice acceleration in that business as well. We won some nice new partners last year. Those are continuing to ramp. We won more business from some of our larger marquee partners. Those are continuing to ramp. So we feel really good about that. In terms of checkout, as you know, we talked sort of late last year around the shift of the product to the Stripe solution, and we anticipated doing a migration in the early part of this year.

And as part of that, look, we haven't done that kind of migration before. complex from an operational perspective. We expected some amount of churn in the book, right, some amount of attrition. Some we were intentional about, and we've seen that, that we weren't going to plan to fully migrate. But some we just anticipated some amount of churn. In the end, we performed much better than that. We were able to transition more than 90% of the portfolio. We were able to do it more quickly than I think we anticipated. So we have a really solid foundation going into the rest of the year on a solution that really works for our customers, right?

So it's a massive market. It's a great sort of cross-sell into e-com and other sellers who are really looking to expand their distribution. And we're on a platform now that has best-in-class features, right? So we're seeing or better uptake, if you like, of some of those features within Stripe. I saw just today from the team, the adoption of BNPL features within the checkout solution, significantly higher than we used to see. So we feel great about the trajectory there. We always did. We've just expected a little bit of a bump in the road in '26. We've actually performed better and feel really good about the overall opportunity.

John Caplan: I'd just add one thing about -- to the context of B's remarks. It proves the thesis of Payoneer, a multicurrency account where you receive all of your global accounts receivable, selling on a marketplace like Amazon or Walmart, selling B2B globally or selling direct to consumers and acquiring customers directly the volumes into your Payoneer account and leveraging our broad accounts payable capabilities to manage with cards, your travel spend or your ad spend, with our sourcing capabilities, managing your raw material sourcing, it really proves the value prop for our customers and that they want a single trusted partner for all of their international accounts receivable and accounts payable.

That is what the financial stack is all about, and it's coming true. And the checkout team, I think, did a great job delivering the transition, and we're seeing the uptick, as Steve mentioned.

Christopher Svensson: Yes. Super helpful and detailed answer. Just I guess for the follow-up on, again, the back half acceleration. So B, I think earlier, you talked about easier comps with the tariff dynamics last year. Just asked about the checkout migration to Stripe. I think the two other factors that I recall are the timing of some pricing initiatives and then those enterprise wins that you were talking about. So maybe on those last two things. Jeff, on pricing, generally speaking, right, can you just talk through some of like the timing dynamics? So for example, if you had implemented pricing increases in 1Q, how long does it take for that to kind of flow through to the business?

And is that part of why we're seeing or expecting some of the acceleration in the back half? And then the question on enterprise specifically, again, it was great to hear some of the ramp from the recent wins. Are those recent wins in general kind of fully ramped? Or I guess the question is there still more room to continue growing with logos you've already won like leaving aside any potential future wins? So yes, those are the 2 questions, pricing, enterprise.

Bea Ordonez: Yes, happy to take that. Look, pricing has been a good lever for us, right? And we've talked about it as part of our ongoing strategy to really better align our products, our pricing from a sort of bundling and share of wallet sort of gain perspective into how we think about acquiring and serving our customers. In terms of the ramp, look, it's a factor, but I wouldn't over-index on it, right? Like the other things we've talked about are much more important to that, that there is some pricing uplift that comes in the back half of the year. We're very confident we can deliver it.

It's mostly long tail or nonstrategic routes, and that's sort of the kind of pricing moves that we're likely to be making now. Sort of in terms of pure-play pricing moves, we're really impacting sort of the non-true ICPs like the long tail of our portfolio, if you like, and nonstrategic routes. So we feel very confident that we can roll them out as scheduled and we can model the impact relatively easily. But I wouldn't over-index on that. Much more important is really the performance and the momentum we're seeing across the rest of the business in driving that uplift. Specifically to the enterprise business, not all fully ramped as of yet. We expect to see continued momentum.

We -- as I say, we won additional sort of share of business from some of our marquee clients in that space, and we're ramping up those routes and can continue to see, I think, strong momentum there. And we added a number of nice wins overall that we think can continue to drive volume.

Operator: That ends our Q&A session, and we appreciate your participation. I will turn the call back over to John Caplan, CEO, for the closing remarks. Please go ahead.

John Caplan: Thank you, everybody, for your questions and your participation this morning. Our Q1 results demonstrate that our strategy and execution are working, and we're capturing the many opportunities in front of us. We look forward to speaking with you again in August. Thanks, everyone.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.