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NEW YORK - TransUnion (NYSE:TRU) on Thursday issued weaker-than-expected guidance, overshadowing better-than-anticipated first quarter results.
The company’s shares slipped -6.80% in premarket trading following the release.
The company reported first quarter adjusted earnings of $1.05 per share, beating analyst estimates of $0.98. Revenue rose 7.3% YoY to $1.1 billion, also topping expectations of $1.07 billion.
However, TransUnion’s outlook disappointed investors. For the second quarter, the company forecast adjusted EPS of $0.95-$0.99, below the $1.02 consensus. Full-year 2025 EPS guidance of $3.93-$4.08 also fell short of analysts’ $4.07 projection.
"We are maintaining our 2025 organic constant currency revenue guidance of 4.5 to 6 percent, balancing strong outperformance in the first quarter against increasing market risks," said Chris Cartwright, President and CEO.
The weak guidance overshadowed TransUnion’s solid Q1 performance. U.S. Markets revenue grew 8.6% YoY to $856.6 million, led by 14.7% growth in Financial Services. International revenue increased 2.5% to $242.2 million.
The company said it is "actively monitoring conditions" but has not yet seen softening volumes in its business.
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