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Date
May 14, 2026, at 6 p.m. ET
Call participants
- Founder, Chief Executive Officer, and Chairman — David Velez-Osomo
- Chief Financial Officer — Guilherme Marques do Lago
- Investor Relations Officer — Guilherme Souto
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Takeaways
- Customers -- 135 million total; over 115 million in Brazil, more than 15 million in Mexico, and close to 5 million in Colombia, marking continued geographic expansion.
- Monthly activity rate -- 83% consolidated, with sequential expansion, and approaching 100 million monthly active customers in Brazil.
- ARPAC -- Around $16 per active customer, sequentially higher every quarter since reporting began.
- Revenue -- $5 billion, setting an all-time high for the company in a single quarter.
- Efficiency ratio -- Below 18%, described as a record low for the company.
- Net income -- $871 million, defined as a historical high for the first quarter and compounding at over 80% annually on an FX-neutral basis since 2022.
- Credit portfolio -- $37.2 billion, up 40% year over year and 7% quarter over quarter, led by 36% credit card growth and 53% growth in unsecured lending (to $10 billion).
- Total deposits -- $42.4 billion, increasing 22% year over year, with deposit declines in Brazil attributed to seasonality and a deliberate optimization strategy in Mexico.
- Net interest income -- $3.25 billion, up 12% quarter over quarter, supported by credit portfolio growth outpacing liabilities.
- Net interest margin (NIM) -- 21.1% consolidated.
- Credit loss allowance (CLA) -- $1.79 billion for the quarter, up 33% quarter over quarter, attributed to seasonality, portfolio growth, and mix effects.
- Risk-adjusted NIM -- 9.5%, down 100 basis points sequentially from the previous quarter.
- 15-90 day NPL ratio -- 5%, up 89 basis points from year-end, said to reflect seasonality and mix rather than asset quality deterioration.
- 90+ day NPLs -- 6.5%, down 10 basis points sequentially and below the third quarter 2024 peak of 7%.
- Coverage ratio -- 16.2% of the credit portfolio, approximately 2.5 times the 90+ day delinquency balance.
- Gross CLA to new 90+ NPL formation -- 153.8%, indicating provisions are outpacing new NPL accumulation.
- Gross profit -- $1.88 billion, up 27% year over year, with float representing roughly 40% of segment mix due to the elevated CLA; diversification trend continues.
- Core efficiency ratio -- 16.6% when excluding strategic investments in return to office, international expansion, and AI.
- IFRS effective tax rate -- 8.7% this quarter, expected to converge to 15%-20% for the remainder of 2026; managerial ETR projected at 30%-35%.
- AI transformation -- AI assistance phase nearly complete, with nearly 100% employee adoption and 50% engineering throughput increase; proprietary models in production for credit decisioning in Brazil and Mexico.
- SME customers in Brazil -- 5 million, built reportedly at zero customer acquisition cost; more than 2 million SME credit cards issued, and new lines of secured and unsecured credit launched.
- High-income customer penetration -- Approximately 2 out of every 5 high-income Brazilians are customers; 24% year-over-year growth in this segment, with 42% growth in monthly credit card volumes.
- U.S. expansion OpEx impact -- Expected maximum operational expense headwind under 100 basis points on efficiency ratio in both 2026 and 2027; further investment conditioned on clear product market fit.
Summary
Nu Holdings (NU 6.77%) directly linked first-quarter record financial performance to a consistent model combining customer growth, rising monetization, and a scalable platform. Management clarified that increased credit provisioning was driven by seasonality, portfolio expansion, and product mix—not by deterioration in asset quality or a negative outlook. The company reported that Brazil now contributes a 7% share of its local profit pool, while Mexico, still below 1%, demonstrated an inflection with its first quarter of IFRS profitability, attributed to a doubling of ARPAC and efficiency ratio improvements. Nu's AI-led transformation entered a deployment stage, with proprietary foundation models actively driving real-time, individualized underwriting and productivity gains across the organization. Management described the U.S. entry as a deliberate, bounded-risk move, capping its OpEx impact and emphasizing contingent scaling upon demonstration of product-market fit.
- Nu's provision coverage increased, but the company explicitly stated that this is not because it has a directional view on the macro or on the micro, and that it continues to provision and underwrite with what it believes to be a fairly healthy, resilient buffer.
- The company highlighted "blue ocean" opportunities in Brazil's SME segment, indicating a low-cost base and recent expansion of credit offerings tailored for this customer group.
- In Mexico, management pointed to a sevenfold customer increase over four years and halving of efficiency ratio as primary drivers behind market share gains and earlier-than-expected profitability.
- Strategic investments in AI, return-to-office, and internationalization are expected to raise the efficiency ratio from 17.6% to approximately 20% in 2026, with one-third of current gains attributed to structural improvements and the remainder to temporary timing effects.
- Management described high-income customer growth as accelerating, with product enhancements and higher exposure limits leading to disproportionate expansion within this segment.
Industry glossary
- ARPAC: Average Revenue Per Active Customer; a metric tracking monetization on a per-user basis.
- FGTS loans: Credit products secured by Brazil's Fundo de Garantia do Tempo de Serviço, a government severance fund.
- CLA: Credit Loss Allowance; the provision for expected lifetime credit losses per IFRS 9 standards.
- NIM: Net Interest Margin; net interest income as a percentage of average earning assets.
- NPL: Non-Performing Loan, typically measured at 15-90 days and 90+ days overdue buckets.
- SME: Small and Medium-sized Enterprises; a key product and customer segment for Nu Holdings in Brazil.
- Desenrola: Brazilian federal program aimed at facilitating debt renegotiation for consumers.
- IFRS 9: International Financial Reporting Standard governing expected credit loss measurement and provisioning for financial instruments.
- OpEx: Operating Expenses, a category encompassing all day-to-day business costs outside of direct cost of goods sold.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Guilherme Souto: Thank you, operator, and thank you, everyone, for joining our earnings call today. With me on today's call are: David Velez, our Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman; and Guilherme Lago, our Chief Financial Officer. All financial metrics discussed and presented today reflect our managerial P&L framework, which we introduced in our fourth quarter 2025 results. These managerial measures are important to how we manage the business, but are not financial measures as defined under IFRS and may not be comparable to other companies. The full reconciliation to the most directly comparable IFRS figures is available in our managerial P&L reconciliation report and in the appendix to this presentation.
We are aware that consensus estimates across the sell side reflect the mix of IFRS and managerial frameworks, and we encourage everyone to use the reconciliation report as a reference point for aligning models going forward. Unless otherwise noted, all growth rates discussed today are presented on a year-over-year FX-neutral basis. Today's discussion may include forward-looking statements, which are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied. Please refer to the forward-looking statements disclosure included in this earnings presentation for additional information. With that, I will now turn the call over to David. Please go ahead, David.
David Velez-Osomo: Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. For several years now, our results have followed the same earnings-generating formula: a growing, more engaged customer base, monetized at higher ARPAC with a scalable, low-cost platform translating into outsized earnings. The first quarter of 2026 was another clean expression of that model. Our customer base now stands above 135 million customers. In Brazil, we surpassed 115 million customers and solidified our position as the largest private financial institution in the country. In Mexico, we crossed 15 million customers, becoming the third largest financial institution in the market. And in Colombia, we delivered another solid quarter of net additions and are getting close to 5 million customers.
Despite typical first quarter seasonality, consolidated monthly activity rate held at 83% and expanded sequentially. In Brazil, we're approaching 100 million monthly active customers. Customer growth, combined with ARPAC expansion, which has expanded sequentially every quarter since we began reporting and now sits at around $16 per active customer, compounded into record revenue, reaching $5 billion for the first time in our history. The higher revenue translated into strong operating leverage in the quarter, leading to a record low efficiency ratio below 18%, a result that reflects both structural progress and some timing benefits that Lago will unpack shortly.
This is happening despite our laying the foundations for our international expansion and accelerating an AI transformation that I will come back to in a few minutes. On the credit side, 3 things: seasonality, growth, and mix drove higher provisions. This reflects our ability to continue gaining market share with compelling and resilient unit economics and do not suggest any signs of asset quality degradation in our portfolio. Understanding this difference is key for those following high-growth, credit-led fintechs. We delivered a quarter 1 historical high net income of $871 million, compounding at more than 80% a year on an FX-neutral basis from 2022.
With that as a backdrop, let me start with our biggest market, where we still have a long road ahead of us. Brazil is, by any measure, one of the most attractive banking markets in the world. Across just the products and segments we serve today, the addressable profit pool already exceeds $100 billion in annual gross profit and is expected to keep showing healthy growth for years to come. As we expand our product shelf and deepen customer engagement, the profit pool becomes even larger. Even after a year of meaningful share gains, it's still day 1 for Nubank in Brazil.
Our share of that pool stands at roughly 7% even though we're already the largest private financial institution in Brazil by customer base with the strongest brand and the highest customer satisfaction scores. And in our second largest market, the runway is even bigger. The opportunity in Mexico is in many ways where Brazil was a decade ago. The profit pool of the products we want to serve consumers with already exceeds $40 billion in annual gross profit and is growing faster than most major banking markets in the world. The banking system in Mexico remains structurally underpenetrated. Cash still dominates everyday transactions.
Less than half of adults hold a formal credit product, and a meaningful portion of the population still lacks access to banking. Our share of that profit pool is still below 1% today, a fraction of where we are in Brazil and a fraction of where we believe we can go. What makes this opportunity particularly compelling is the dual dynamic at play. We're not only taking share of the existing pie, we're also helping grow it, bringing simple, digital, transparent financial products to broader segments of the population that have historically been left out of the formal banking system.
That combination is what gives us such a long horizon ahead, and the proof of that thesis is already starting to show up in the numbers. The same earnings-generating formula I described at the start of our remarks is now unfolding in Mexico, only earlier in its curve. In 4 years, our customer base there has grown from just over 2 million to 15 million today, roughly 7x larger. ARPAC has nearly doubled even as we have onboarded millions of newer, less mature customers. Our efficiency ratio has come down by 78 percentage points.
And on the bottom line, we have moved from a $30 million quarterly loss to our first quarter of IFRS profitability, a milestone that arrived ahead of our own internal plan. Underpinning our operations in Latin America, including Brazil, Mexico and Colombia, and where we believe will further accelerate our impact in the region for years to come is the AI technology shift I referenced at the start of our remarks. Our ongoing AI transformation is a core priority of Nu. Some companies see AI as a productivity enhancement tool. That is useful, but it is not the real opportunity in our view. AI transformation is something different.
It means we're designing from the ground up how financial products and services are manufactured and possibly distributed. There is a parallel here to the bet we made when we started Nubank a little over a decade ago. We did not digitize a branch. We built a bank without branches. We're applying the same logic to AI. We're not just adding AI to banking, we are rebuilding banking around AI. This transformation is already underway and unfolding in 3 phases at different stages of progress. The first phase, AI assistance, is largely complete. We're reaching close to 100% utilization of AI tools among our employees across all functions of the organization.
This enablement is driving productivity gains across the company, with engineering throughput up over 50% year-over-year, weekly token consumption nearly 10x higher than at the start of the year and testing cycles 90% faster. The second phase, workflow reinvention, is in motion. The principle is simple. AI executes, humans hold judgment. Customer journeys are being rebuilt end-to-end, and new AI-native customer experiences will reach our customers this year, deepening engagement and expanding monetization. A number of teams at Nubank are already working on products and features that we had originally planned to launch only in mid-2027. The third phase, the AI-native bank, is still early but the foundations are visible.
AI Private Banker functionalities such as financial insights, payments, credit advice and debt resolution across the app are already serving more than 15 million monthly active users. nuFormer, our set of proprietary foundation models, are in production today for credit card decisioning in Brazil and Mexico and for unsecured lending in Brazil. We're now able to use real-time AI valuation for every personal loan request, priced and approved individually based on its predictive net present value in under 1 second. These capabilities have been a meaningful driver of the significant expansion in our credit portfolio over the last 12 months, enabling us to grow limits with resilience, not just speed.
And we believe Nu is uniquely positioned to win in AI-accelerated world, anchored by 3 structural advantages. First, our scale, first-party data, 135 million customers transacting on our platform every day, generating one of the largest, cleanest and most differentiated financial data sets in the world. Second, our proprietary technology stack, cloud native with core banking systems built internally, data unified across the company and the ability to move from experiment to production in days rather than quarters.
Third, our talent and culture, our world-class bench of employees for more than 50 nationalities with offices across 6 countries, all working under a single AI mandate, and one we keep reinforcing with the recent appointment of Carl Rivera as our new Chief Product Officer. AI is not an experiment at Nubank. It is reshaping how we build, how we decide and how we serve, and we're still very early in what this transformation will eventually deliver. Taken together, this is the model we're running in 2026, deepening Brazil from a position of leadership, scaling Mexico and Colombia through their inflection points and making AI compound through every layer of the company, including investing further in our internationalization plans.
With that, I hand it over to Lago, our CFO, to walk you through the financial highlights of the quarter. Over to you, Lago.
Guilherme Marques do Lago: Thank you, David, and good evening, everyone. Beginning with our consolidated credit portfolio. We ended the quarter with $37.2 billion, up 40% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis and up 7% quarter-over-quarter. Growth was strong across all products, especially when the first quarter seasonality is considered. Credit cards, for example, grew 36% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Unsecured lending grew 53%, reaching $10 billion in total portfolio. And secured lending grew 38%, keeping pace with the rest of the book and holding its 8% mix even with the setback from FGTS loans last year. Now turning to deposits. Total deposits reached $42.4 billion in the quarter, up 22% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis.
Deposits in Brazil declined modestly due to seasonality, while Colombia kept growing. In Mexico, the deposit outflow reflects 2 specific dynamics. Number one, a sharper-than-expected reversal of seasonal year-end inflows. And number two, our deliberate decision to optimize cost of funds and very low loan-to-deposit ratios. Now our consolidated cost of deposits closed at 88% of the interbank rate, slightly higher sequentially. Even though we saw improvements in the cost of funds in both Mexico and Colombia, this was offset by Brazil, reflecting the reversion of the fourth quarter seasonal effect. Year-end inflows tend to lend in short-tenure balances that carry low cost of funds.
And in the first quarter of the year, these balances naturally migrate into longer tenure yield-bearing products. Now we remain very comfortable with our current balance levels and with our cost of deposits. We will continue to manage this franchise to build resilience, deepen customer engagement and preserve its attractive economics. Moving on to our P&L. Net interest income reached a record $3.25 billion in the quarter, up 12% quarter-over-quarter on an FX-neutral basis. This expansion was driven by strong revenue growth across the franchise, combined with our credit portfolio expanding faster than our liabilities. This mix shift continues to optimize our balance sheet, lifting our net interest margin, or NIM, to 21.1%.
Credit loss allowance, or CLA, closed at $1.79 billion in the quarter, up 33% quarter-over-quarter on an FX-neutral basis, mostly driven by 3 very specific dynamics already mentioned by David. Number one, seasonality. Number two, portfolio growth. Number three, portfolio mix, which I will unpack in the next slides. As a result, our risk-adjusted NIM came in at 9.5%, down 100 basis points sequentially from 10.5%. We expect risk-adjusted NIM to move back towards the level we operated at during the second half of 2025 as the dynamics of first quarter normalize over the coming quarters. With that, let me now turn to the 3 dynamics I mentioned that drove CLA this quarter and walk you through each of them.
Starting with the first reason, seasonality. As you can see on the chart, our 15- to 90-day ratio is highly seasonal. It tends to peak in the first quarter and then resume its trend through the rest of the year. The first quarter 2026 print of 5%, up 89 basis points from year-end, is consistent with that seasonal pattern and broadly in line with what we saw in both 2024 and 2025. On the right, 90-plus NPLs, our late-stage delinquencies continue to ease, closing at 6.5% in the first quarter of 2026, 10 basis points lower than the fourth quarter of 2025 and well below the 7% peak we reached in the third quarter of 2024.
Both metrics came broadly in line with our own internal expectations for the quarter. And I want to pause on that phrase because it's not incidental. The goal of our credit operations, it's not to minimize NPLs at a point in time. Instead, it is to optimize for resilient NPVs. NPLs only capture the cost side of the equation. They say nothing about the revenues we generated from the customers who perform. Pricing risk accurately is what really reconciles both sides. It is the mechanism by which attractive returns and predictable losses coexist. When the first quarter unfolds as our models anticipated, that is not a coincidence. It is an evidence that the pricing discipline is working well.
Now before we move on, I want to address directly a concern. We know it's top of mind for many investors. Brazil's household debt service ratio. We track this ratio closely, but the data tells a more nuanced story. The debt service ratio in isolation has limited predictive power over delinquency outcomes. What actually drives credit performance is a much broader set of income and employment dynamics. Employment in Brazil remains strong, and the income tax exemption for earnings up to BRL 5,000 per month is a meaningful structural tailwind for a large portion of our customer base, directly improving disposable income and debt service capacity at the segment levels where we operate the most.
And critically, as you will see in the next slides, our portfolio has a particularly short duration, which means that if we ever did see unexpected asset quality movements, we can react fast and we can react consequentially, and we can do so at a very granular level. Looking ahead, the Desenrola program is an additional tailwind expected to take form in the second and third quarters of this year. Now to the second reason, growth. And what matters here is not only our credit portfolio, but our total exposure, a broader measure that includes the on-balance sheet credit balances and the off-balance sheet credit card limits we extend to our customers. Both things expand our IFRS 9 provisioning base.
On the left side of this slide, you will see that total exposure reached $70.7 billion in the quarter, up 44% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Every single dollar of incremental exposure carries upfront provisioning regardless of whether the customer ever draws on it. And that brings me to the third reason, which is mix. On the right side of this slide, you will see that the incremental exposure we added this quarter tilted further towards credit cards and unsecured lending, which together accounted for 98% of the new exposure, up from 88% in the same quarter a year ago. Secure lending's contribution now stepped down, mostly reflecting the changes in FGTS loans at the end of 2025.
And then both credit cards and unsecured lending, they carry higher expected losses than secured lending, which mechanically just lift the marginal provisioning we book. Growth means a larger exposure, and mix means that the base is tilted towards higher yielding, higher losses products. Both things pushed the upfront expected credit losses build higher even before any change in underlying credit quality. Bringing it all together, the 3 drivers we just walked through: number one, seasonality; number two, growth; and number three, mix, are exactly what shape the moves in NPL 15-90 and in ECL allowance this quarter. There was no sign of credit portfolio degradation. Let me walk you through each of those bridges.
On the left side of this slide, the NPL 15-90 moved from 4.11% at year-end to 5% in the first quarter, an 89 basis points increase; 65 basis points came from seasonality, 17 from intentional risk expansions, 4 from product mix shifts and the small remainder from other effects. Now none of these drivers reflect the systemic deterioration in underlying credit quality. Now on the right side of the slides, you will see that ECL allowance moved from $5.3 billion at year-end to $6.1 billion in the first quarter, an $800 million increase. The numbers here are worth pausing on. Why?
Because portfolio growth alone contributed $423 million, more than half of the total build, which simply reflects the upfront lifetime loss provisioning we book under IFRS 9 as we expand the credit book. Seasonality alone contributed another $267 million, consistent with prior years. Together, growth and seasonality account for 86% of the entire allowance increase. Intentional risk expansion contributed $69 million; product mix, $16 million; and other minor effects, the small remainder. Now not one of those components reflects deterioration in underlying credit quality. These moves reflect the deliberate scaling of our credit portfolio.
As we said before, we manage this business not to minimize NPLs or cost of risk in any given quarter, but to maximize the long-term resilient risk-adjusted returns. We see that discipline at work in the cohort unit economics of our 3 most relevant unsecured credit products. Across all of them, revenues consistently outweighed funding costs and expected losses, leading to return levels that are best-in-class for retail banking. With a significant buffer, these portfolios remain NPV positive even at substantially higher levels of expected losses. And the short duration of these portfolios is worth pausing on. Why?
Because it means that if we ever did observe an expected asset quality movement, we can react fast and we can react decisively. And we can do so at very granular levels well before they become a systemic issue. We are not a loan book lender waiting quarters and quarters to see the impact of a credit policy change. We see it in days, and we act on it immediately. That is what grounds our strategy. Beyond the unit economics, we also hold considerable buffers in the balance sheet. Our total coverage stands at 16.2% of the portfolio, roughly 2.5x our entire 90-plus delinquency balance. And we are adding to that buffer each quarter.
Our gross CLA against the new 90-plus NPL formation closed at 153.8%, which means the provisions we book are running ahead of the new NPL forming. That is balance sheet engineered for resilience, and one that lets us grow the franchise from a position of strength. That balance sheet resilience that I've just mentioned flows through the gross profit line, which closed at $1.88 billion in the quarter, up 27% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. This quarter's mix reflects the elevated CLA we just walked through, which directly reduced credit's contribution and brought float to roughly 40% of the total. Beneath that quarterly seasonal effect, a multi-quarter trend of genuine diversification continues.
Our credit business, our float business and our fee business have been scaling and balancing each other. And our model allows us to build a more diversified gross profit base and ultimately, a higher quality earnings profile overall. Now turning to efficiency. With net revenues outpacing operating expenses, we continue to deliver operating leverage in the quarter. Our efficiency ratio improved this quarter to 17.6% on a reported basis and 16.6% at the core, which excludes our return to office investments, our international expansion and our investments in AI infrastructure. The first quarter came in better than expected for 2 reasons working together. Number one, revenues accelerated faster than we anticipated, driven by both ARPAC outperformance and continued portfolio growth.
Second, OpEx came in below plan. And here, it's worth pausing to discuss why. Roughly 1/3 reflects structural efficiency gains that are durable and compounding, mainly AI-driven improvements in operations and collections, software platform consolidation and hiring discipline. Now the remaining 2/3 reflect timing items that will normalize in the next quarters, including real estate and marketing phasing. So the 17.6% efficiency ratio should not be extrapolated as our run rate. But even accounting for those normalizations, we expect our consolidated efficiency ratio for the full year of 2026 to land at approximately 20%, broadly in line with where we ended 2025.
And while our core efficiency ratio continues its natural downward trend, we remain confident in the attractiveness of our investments in return to office, U.S. expansion and AI infrastructure. The positive effects of operating leverage and financial leverage continue to flow through the bottom line. Net income reached $871 million in the quarter, the highest ever for our first quarter and up 41% year-over-year on an FX-neutral basis. Now I want to be direct about our effective tax rate, or ETR, because we know it may be a focus. The 8.7% IFRS rate this quarter reflects structural changes we have been making to our global operating and corporate structure. It is not a one-off, and it's not an accounting adjustment.
It is a recurring structural feature of how we operate. The first quarter rate is naturally lower than our full year rate because it reflects some of the seasonal patterns we discussed earlier in this call. For modeling purposes, we expect our IFRS ETR for the remainder of 2026 to converge towards the 15% to 20% range. Our managerial ETR, which we believe is the more economically meaningful comparison, should converge towards the 30% to 35% range, which is broadly in line with peers in the region. Now the broader point is this. We are absorbing intentional investment headwinds in the OpEx line, and those are being more than offset by structural improvements in our ETR.
The net result is a net income trajectory that remains durable and compounding, which is the right lens through which to assess the earnings power of our business. Now to wrap it all up, this was another quarter that demonstrated the durability of our business model. Number one, a growing and engaged customer base. Number two, an expanding credit portfolio, growing profitably and resilient. Number three, a more diversified gross profit base. And number four, one of the strongest balance sheets in financial services. With that, I will pass it over to David for his closing remarks.
David Velez-Osomo: Thanks, Lago. Nubank is incredibly well positioned to continue strengthening its place as Latin America's leading digital bank. While our consumer base is large, our total market share is still small. And that gap represents a long and visible growth runway in our core markets. This remains our #1 priority. But we continue to have conviction that the digital banking thesis we started to execute in 2013 is a global thesis, not a local or regional one. First principles reasoning shows our advantages [ travel well ]. Our cost structure is 20x to 30x more efficient than the incumbents that still own 90% of the world's banking market. Our technology gives us the agility to move fast in any environment.
Our differentiated approach to credit gives us the tools to compete and grow within a segment that represents over 70% of the world's consumer banking profit pool. And our consumer obsession allows us to build relationships with fans, not just customers, creating one of the strongest and most authentic consumer brands wherever we operate. That is why we are excited to be expanding our model to the U.S. deliberately and at a measured pace, treating it the way we treat every new market, as a call option. We invest a relatively small amount of capital and resources while we protect our core. Once we see product market fit, we're ready to scale.
To be precise, the maximum OpEx headwind we expect from U.S. investment in each of 2026 and 2027 is less than 100 basis points on our consolidated efficiency ratio. And this is inside the 20% efficiency ratio level Lago mentioned before. For a company at our scale, that is quite affordable. Beyond that, any additional investment is explicitly contingent on clear evidence of product market fit and a credible path to profitable scalability. Even in a scenario where we do not find product market fit, the cost to you as a shareholder is less than 100 basis points on our efficiency ratio, temporary and fully absorbable without touching the trajectory of our core businesses.
The upside, if we do find product market fit, is a second Nu. We have seen this movie before in both Mexico and Colombia. The asymmetry between a bounded downside and an uncapped upside is at the center of our investment thesis in the U.S. and potentially, the world. And it does not change our long-term trajectory on efficiency. With that, let's open it up for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Guilherme Souto, Investor Relations Officer.
Guilherme Souto: Thank you, operator. Could you please open the line for Mr. Jorge Kuri from Morgan Stanley?
Jorge Kuri: Congrats on the results. And really much appreciated the incredible detail around delinquency and credit losses and provisions and expenses and sizing the U.S., I think that's going to go a long way in helping people understand the story better. So thank you. My question is on an announcement, and I really don't have any questions on the quarter, sorry about that, but I did see an interesting announcement in the press that you're launching an SME-specific product in Brazil. And so I wonder if you can maybe talk about it, what type of products, how they're different from what your competitors offer? What is the edge, the moat that you guys are using in SMEs?
And dream the dream, what size can this business be to you overall?
David Velez-Osomo: Thanks, Jorge, for that question. I actually think this is probably one of the most underappreciated opportunities we have at Nu. We should be speaking more about it, but we're not. So thank you for asking the question. The reality is we've kind of silently have built the largest SME base in Brazil with our 5 million SME customers effectively built with 0 customer acquisition cost. Since Brazil has a very large number of SME, a significant percentage of employment in Brazil, something like upwards of 70% is -- operates in small businesses. A very large percentage of our 110 million customers have their own businesses.
And so we were able to cross-sell our SME product to them, and that took us at a 0 CAC to build this base of upwards of 5 million customers. We've invested increasingly in building better the product savings account. Initially, we now crossed over 2 million credit cards for the small business. We recently announced what you probably saw is now a number of new lines of credit, both secured and unsecured. Some of them are using some of the government-available programs where entrepreneurs are able to use certain government guarantees to get loans.
And we see a blue ocean in that space, really, the kind of comparative advantages that we have on the [ FS side ] on the individual side applies to the SME. This is a very underserved segment. And I think we're also -- while we began at the base of the pyramid with a very small micro entrepreneurs, we've been slowly going up the base and starting to serve companies that are -- have more than 10 to 15 employees. So I'll leave at that for now, but we have an ambitious plan on that space. We -- it's -- there's a lot of scarcity in the entire environment.
It builds a lot of loyalty with our consumers since they get to back both their businesses and their individual in the same place. And it brings pretty significant advantages on our flywheels.
Guilherme Souto: Operator, could you please open the line for Mr. Yuri Fernandes from JPMorgan?
Yuri Fernandes: Everybody, congrats also here on the presentation, very clear. I have one regarding asset quality. And maybe 1 week ago, there was a podcast with Lago, [ Jeremy and Tyler ] to discuss asset quality. And I think one of the highlights in the podcast was how to read a good or a bad quarter for asset quality, right, especially regarding coverage formation and all those metrics. And here in this quarter, it looks like, kind of an introduction for the quarter, in my view. Because we had a quarter that the company did a lot of provisions, right? The coverage went up. The new NPL formation when you look at the amount of coverage was over 150%.
So my question here is, is Nubank being a little bit more conservative and building more reserves, maybe just to show the market that you have a very strong balance sheet? Or no? Or are you seeing a worsening outlook? Are you seeing something that we are not seeing? I guess, Lago already mentioned that he is not seeing a worsening, and the presentation was clear on that, but just reinforcing this message and trying to link with the past week's podcast.
Guilherme Marques do Lago: Thanks so much for the question. Look, we feel that our balance sheet is fairly robust, and we try to be extremely conservative in how we build our provisions over time. But I have also to say that the provision that we have been doing over the past quarters, they do not reflect any directional outlook that we have on the credit cycle of each of the markets in which we operate. The way that we have tried to do credit underwriting and consequently, to do credit provisioning is one where we always assume that the future will be worse than the past, irrespective of where any of us think we may be in the credit cycle.
And then for each and every single cohort, we have the stress test whereby that cohort has to withstand a fairly material credit deterioration and still be kind of an NPV positive. And then the additional disclosure that we are providing that may be helpful to address your question, Yuri, if you go to Slide 18, you can see the unit economics of our 3 core unsecured credit products, namely credit cards in Brazil, unsecured lending in Brazil and credit cards in Mexico, right? They account for the majority of our unsecured exposure. And I would underscore 2 things. First, if you go through the unit economics, it's kind of a healthy unit economics in our view.
But more importantly, if you take a look at the ratio between losses and the net margin, you can see that they can withstand a lot of risk worsening and still being NPV positive. The second thing I would underscore is the duration, right? If you take a look at the duration of each of those portfolios, we operate intentionally with much lower duration than the average of the market. This is a feature, this is not a bug. Why? Because it allows us to navigate with lots of agility at a very granular level. All this to say that we are provisioning conservatively as we have provisioned in the past. Nothing has changed.
We are not provisioning more or less because we have a directional view on the macro or on the micro, but we continue to provision and underwrite with what we believe to be a fairly healthy resilient buffer across every single segment that we do. There are two things that I believe, Yuri, you have written extensively in your reports that we have not yet taken into account in credit underwriting and provisioning. The first one is the income tax exemption or reduction that has been announced in Brazil at the beginning of this year. That basically benefits consumers with up to BRL 7,400 per month of income. It may very well be a tailwind for us.
It's hard to calibrate the magnitude, but that has not been taken into account in the provisions and credit results for. The second one is the Desenrola 2.0 that we briefly mentioned and you also wrote about it. That, I think can be a fairly important kind of a renegotiation tool sponsored by the federal government for our customers, which we believe can be, for Nubank, either neutral or positive.
Yuri Fernandes: No. So basically, I guess, if I can summarize, first quarter is usually seasonal, higher provisions. Following the pattern, I guess, you mentioned this on your remarks, maybe cost of risk moves a little bit lower. Margins are higher. So risk adjusted, maybe the trajectory should be more positive going forward. Do you agree with the summary here?
Guilherme Marques do Lago: I do. And I think we even mentioned a bit in the opening remarks, if you go through kind of Slide 14, Yuri, you can see that the risk-adjusted margin contracted from 10.5 to about 9.5 mostly because of the additional CLA in the first quarter, which does not indicate any sign of credit deterioration. And therefore, once seasonality goes out, you should see risk-adjusted NIMs converging back to the levels where it was towards the end of 2025.
Guilherme Souto: Operator, could you please open the line for Mr. Eduardo Rosman from BTG?
Eduardo Rosman: Hi, everyone. Look, I do see local Brazilian investors today being much more constructive than the foreigners regarding the investment story, right? They are less concerned about asset quality, more positive on the expansion into the U.S. So I just wanted to hear your thoughts based on your conversations that you have, right? Do you think that this is because maybe local investors were the ones skeptical at the time of the IPO? Or -- and naturally, you delivered a lot, right? Or maybe -- I don't know, maybe foreign investors, they are more concerned about AI, disruption risk and maybe because they never saw a digital bank really succeeding at scale in the U.S.
So trying to understand here, based on the conversations that you've been having with investors, if you can share your thoughts with us?
Guilherme Marques do Lago: I wouldn't go as far as segregating kind of local versus foreign investors or Brazilian versus non-Brazilian there. But there are, I think, a few topics that are top of mind for many of them. The ones that I would highlight first is kind of asset quality. So I think when Nubank was founded 13 years ago, the bank had a fairly strong thesis and hypothesis on its ability to do credit underwriting at scale throughout multiple credit cycles in Latin America, which is one of the most volatile regions of the world. It was a hypothesis we couldn't prove at that point in time.
You fast forward the move 13, 14 years, and I think we can both in Brazil, in Mexico and in Colombia, already now clearly highlight that we have developed the ability in terms of process, systems and talent to be able to do credit underwriting in a resilient manner at scale. And I think the velocity to which Nubank has been able to gain market share has now encouraged or impressed some of them.
So I think the credit underwriting capabilities of the bank and concerns with asset quality will always remain and they should remain because for any kind of digital bank that has been able to attack credit, we will always have credit risk first in our priority list. But I think at this point in time, let's say, across most of the investor spectrum with when we speak, that has been more of a common theme. The second question that I would say that is more polarizing is on our international expansion, specifically to the U.S.
On one hand, Rosman, you do have investors that are extremely bullish on our ability to basically break into what is simply the largest retail financial services market globally, right? And there are key and relevant pockets of pain points on consumers there that a digital bank franchise can attract. On the other hand, you have investors, they are more skeptical about this. At this point in time, we have deliberately chosen not to fully disclose the go-to-market strategy that we want to have in the U.S., mostly for competitive reasons.
But I think what we can know -- and David tried to address this in his closing remarks, provide the comfort to investors is that we will be very deliberate and we will stage the deployment of capital and the deployment of talent and never putting at risk, our ability to execute in Latin America. So it's more of an attempt to balance the downside that hopefully will allow investors to more clearly identify the asymmetry of this bet. And finally, the third one that I would say that it kind of has an even more heterogeneous assessment is the role that AI has been playing and will continue to play in digital banking or in banking in general, right?
So a lot of companies have been talking about their efforts to kind of use AI. We have the first time, in the opening remarks of David, prove that we have been able to use AI to deliver impacts and results, not efforts. So a material growth of our customer base and credit underwriting hinges on our success to kind of embed AI across how we manage the company. A material improvement in our efficiency ratio hinges on our ability to fully embrace AI. And there's a ton of additional things for us to do, and we are very confident that we have the capabilities to continue on that front. So 3 points, Rosman: asset quality, internationalization and AI.
Eduardo Rosman: Thanks a lot, Lago.
David Velez-Osomo: Only thing I'll just add to everything that Lago said on the internationalization is that it's interesting that every time we've launched a new country, the locals have been skeptical. When we launched in Brazil, the locals were very skeptical. When we launched in Mexico, the locals were very skeptical. And the capital came from the foreigners. And so sort of the same thing kind of repeats, sometimes being a local is a little bit of a blessing. Sometimes, it's a little bit of a curse because if you're a local by definition, it's very hard for you to reimagine how things can happen differently. You are too consumed by the status quo.
So I definitely do not want to minimize the challenge that a country like the U.S. is going to be -- is extremely -- will be clearly challenging. There's a lot of very competent competitors. But we think we have an insight, and we'll see how that goes. The good news is that if we're wrong, it's a little loss. If we're right, it's going to be a huge opportunity for us.
Guilherme Souto: Operator, could you please open the line for Mr. Daniel Vaz from Safra?
Daniel Vaz: Congrats on the results, and thanks for the insightful presentation. David, in the present [indiscernible] agenda for the next years with AI transformation, Mexico and U.S. expansion, and so on and so forth. But let me ask you about Brazil. How specifically the team is looking at Brazil, right? So your incremental exposure is again on unsecured products. And all your competitors are trying to focus in on exactly the opposite, like they're trying to grow in secured loans, private payroll. So I guess my question is, how should we read that, right?
So is it -- we realize that we can extract much more value and returns from these unsecured products compared to our peers, and we'll try to focus the most on it and dominate the market, especially the mass market. And as a follow-up, how should we think about the secured products like the private payroll loans? So if you can answer that, it's very helpful.
David Velez-Osomo: Of course. And it's a great question. And that's why I think we wanted to -- if you go back to Slide 7, we wanted to -- this is a slide I would like to use maybe at least once a year to kind of anchor people on the opportunity. And to remind everybody how early it is, this story, even for us in Brazil, even though we're already -- in terms of number of customers, we have over 110 million Brazilians, and we're the largest private financial institution in the country. But in terms of profit pool, we only have 7%. And I think the answer to your question is really the growth opportunities everywhere.
In unsecured loans, there is a lot of growth ahead. We only have about 8% market share, but we have something like 25%, 30% market share of new originations every month. So we have a disproportionate amount of market share gains every month. In secured loans, we are tiny. We started later, as you know, we've been kind of around for about 1.5 years, 2 years. Operationally, it's much more complex, especially on the public, what is called public payroll, [ consignado ]. There's been a fair amount of contracts that we needed to sign with the municipalities, and there is a fair amount of integrations that need to happen.
But if you look at the growth rate we're seeing in secured loans, it's growing pretty significantly as well. And we think that the growth in secured will be -- will continue to be even in something like FGTS, which we launched about 2 years ago, we became the largest FGTS provider, which is fully secured in about 18 months. Obviously, the product was restructured by the government. But anyway, long way to say that the opportunity, the growth opportunity is in both, and we continue to see both. On private payrolls specifically, we've discussed that we've been slower at growing that, and that has been by design.
Here, I think we have just a little bit of a different point of view than a lot of other players in the market. We think that this product began with more risk than people anticipated because there was -- there were a number of different points in the chain. And especially with integration with DataPrev and some of the providers that were untested. There were a lot of flows like what happens when employee goes from company to company that was completely untested. And so we just took a more careful approach. And I think yes, we'll see how that goes, but we're seeing 10% to 15% for payment default. That's a very high FPD.
That's a very high risk for supposedly, a secure product. We also decided not to put interest rate too high. We don't want to be charging too high of an interest rate for these products because they are supposed to be secured. And we thought that there was a lot of regulatory risk. And in fact, there is now a conversation about capping pricing, which is going to hurt more, the players that were too fast, pricing very high. So we think in the long run, this is a winning product. We think in the long run, this is going to be great for customers to be able to have that security.
And in the long run, we will also -- will stand ready to win this market with the same advantages that we have of data, of consumer trust, of cost to serve also apply for secured loans. But here, we decided to just be a little bit more careful and go a little bit slower as we measure them. So long answer to say, there is no preference necessarily here. This is a wide open market. We're very well positioned to gain -- continue gaining share across the board, even in credit cards, which has been our first product.
And so that's why we just say that this is sort of still the first minute of the first half in Brazil.
Guilherme Souto: Operator, could you please open the line for Mr. Marcelo Mizrahi from Bradesco BBI.
Marcelo Mizrahi: I have two questions. First one is regarding the efficiency ratio. So you guys were saying that to target at range to achieve 20% efficiency ratio. So now we are below this level, just to understand, just how we can predict that. So how to forecast that looking forward? First one. And the second one is about the private payroll. If you guys have any update in terms of the view of Nubank looking to this product and the possibility to this product to bring more clients or even some impact that could bring on the NIMs on the margins?
Guilherme Marques do Lago: Thanks so much for the question. I'll take the first one, and we can maybe refine David's last response on the private payroll loan. But the first one was about efficiency ratio. So I will draw your attention to Slide 21. And you can see that we have had kind of a positive trajectory on efficiency ratio overall. Now last quarter, or last call, we did mention that we were making deliberate investments in 3 fields: return to office, internationalization, and AI infrastructure. And those investments would be kind of a headwind to our overall efficiency ratio.
And therefore, we wouldn't be able to get the same level of efficiency ratio gains over time that we saw over the past 2 years. We still believe this is going to be the case, but I wanted to kind of unpack the performance in the first quarter a little bit more. So in the first quarter, you can see that we got kind of a 17.6% efficiency ratio. It was slightly better than even us expected there, but I would underscore a few things. First, about 2/3 of this kind of overperformance in efficiency ratio in the first quarter was mostly due to timing. What do I mean?
It would mean kind of operating expenses that would be incurred in the first quarter, but will likely be incurred in the subsequent quarters of the years. Examples, some marketing investments, some real estate, then it will be tied to the return to office. Now about 1/3 of the overperformance is truly structural. They are mainly coming from some of the operation gains driven by some of the AI investments that we are making across the board, from BPOs to software consolidation to enterprise functions. And those will continue. The second thing that I would highlight, as we mentioned in the last quarter that we would start breaking down the efficiency ratio in two.
One is the consolidated efficiency ratio, which we can see is 17.6%. But also is the efficiency ratio that we would have had, had we not decided to make the investments in RTO, internationalization and AI infrastructure, which in this quarter will be 16.6%. Now going forward, I think one should expect that our 2026 efficiency ratio will converge towards approximately 20%, which is largely in line with where we landed last year. And this 20% envelope includes those kind of strategic investments that I alluded, both the RTO and U.S. expansions that David touched as well. Your second point was on private payroll.
I think I will -- David has covered kind of a little bit of the strategic reason on our choice to speed it up more or less. The one point that I would just underscore, if I got your question correctly is we continue to believe that as the lowest cost manufacturer of this industry. We will be able to provide kind of this product at very competitive levels. And we are very bullish about this product specifically because it will allow us to have access to customers and data that we have been unable to do as we don't have a corporate business.
So if you are today an employee of a large corporate in Brazil, most likely, that corporate has a payroll agreement with 1 of the top 5 incumbent banks of the country. And we historically have had some limitations on the amount of data that we could get from those customers by virtue of not being able to offer that payroll services. Now with private payroll, we can have access exactly to the data, by which I mean how much money you make, for how long you've been working at the company, what's your expected severance cost. So we basically closed entirely, the gap that we could have had on that specific segment against incumbent banks.
So we will likely drive more customer acquisition, better credit underwriting, better cross-sell.
Guilherme Souto: Operator, could you please open the line for Mr. Tito Labarta from Goldman Sachs?
Daer Labarta: Great job addressing a lot of the key concerns with the credit quality and expenses. I guess my question, a follow-up a little bit, I guess, on credit quality. I think part of the concern also is your relative exposure to the lower income segment. So the question is more, how is the high income segment going? I think that's still a big opportunity for you as well. Anything you can comment on that? And also one follow-up on the secured lending side because I know you're not growing the private payroll now. And you still had the headwind from FGTS in the quarter, the full quarter impact.
So I was a little surprised with the strong growth in the secured lending quarter-over-quarter. I imagine that's public payroll, but just to talk a little bit about that opportunity on the secured lending side? Not just private payroll, but I think public payrolls and other segment where you have a lot of opportunity to grow.
Guilherme Marques do Lago: Let me try to address some of your questions in order. So I'll start with what you call the high income, which I would mention kind of in the 3 segments that we have in the bank, so mass market, super core and the high income. Look, we have been kind of quite encouraged by the progress that we have made across the more affluent segments. Both the super core and the high income, which I think all our banks would probably core more of a mass affluent than the high income, which, just to be clear, those are customers who earn anywhere between BRL 5,000 to BRL 12,000 super core and more than BRL 12,000, the high income.
If you take a look at not only the number of products that we have been launching with the new UV credit cards, the [indiscernible], the 3 kind of international seen, the cashback, [indiscernible], so there's a lot of new products and features that we have been launching. And all of those things have been translating in not only more customers, but also more engagement, right? So out of the high income, we now have about 2 out of every 5 high-income Brazilians are customers of Nubank.
The customer base has grown by about 24% year-over-year based at the end of the first quarter of 2026, with now monthly credit card kind of volumes up 42% year-over-year, assets under custody by like 36%. So we are seeing lots of traction there. In super core, 3 out of every 5 Brazilians are already customers of the bank, again, kind of TPV and AUC all growing between 35% and 40%. So happy with the traction that we have had over the past now 2.5 years. Now back to your question on credit exposure, you're absolutely right that still the bulk of our credit exposure is in what we call mass market.
That's a bigger exposure than what we have in kind of the more affluent customers. And then when you look at Slide 12, you will see the evolution of unsecured and secured. And in spite of the headwinds from the new regulations of FGTS, you can see that we continue to grow secured, as you pointed out. But I would underscore one thing, Tito. As the duration of the FGTS portfolio is relatively long, so more than 36 months, it means that even if we decrease the origination, it takes some time for that to play out entirely in the balance, and that's the fact that you may be seeing.
Now to counter the slowdown in originations of FGTS, we are seeing an increase in the originations of public payroll loans, and we do expect that we will also see a pickup in the originations of private payroll loans. So I would not expect that the volume of secured cards will suffer too much throughout the year, irrespective of the FGTS regulations.
David Velez-Osomo: To your question, Tito, on high income specifically. We don't disclose the numbers particularly, but the growth of -- the PV growth for high income for us is one of the fastest segments that we have, growing upwards of 40%. So way faster, way higher than what we're seeing in mass market. And a lot of the benefits of these new models that allow us to give higher exposure. If you see the big growth in higher exposure is coming also disproportionately for being able to give better limits to high income population, which historically has been something that we hadn't really gotten, right, since our models were very much focused on mass market.
So from this exposure growth, there is a disproportionate amount of high income. And obviously, that's good news because this is a segment where we have a very large -- 2 out of 5 Brazilians with high income are already customers of Nubank, and we have a significant opportunity to continue growing that share and diversify the customer base that we have.
Guilherme Souto: So thank you, everyone. We now have approached 60 minutes of the call. So we are now concluding today's call. On behalf of Nu Holdings, our Investor Relations team, I want to thank you very much for your time and participation on Nu earnings call today. Over the coming days, we will be following up with questions received tonight, but we were not able to answer. And please do not hesitate to reach out to our team if you have any further questions. Thank you, and have a good night.
Operator: The Nu Holdings conference call has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.


