Earnings call transcript: London Stock Exchange Q4 2024 shows 8.7% growth

Published 01/05/2025, 09:16
Earnings call transcript: London Stock Exchange Q4 2024 shows 8.7% growth

The London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) reported an 8.7% growth in total income on a constant currency basis for the fourth quarter of 2024. The company’s organic growth stood at 7.8%, driven by strong performance in its subscription businesses. With a market capitalization of $81.7 billion, LSEG maintains its position as a leading global financial markets infrastructure provider. Despite a slight dip in stock price by 0.51% to 6,948, LSEG reaffirmed its full-year financial guidance and announced continued strategic investments and product innovations. According to InvestingPro analysis, the stock appears slightly undervalued based on its Fair Value calculations.

Key Takeaways

  • Total income growth of 8.7% on a constant currency basis.
  • Organic growth reached 7.8%.
  • £245 million of a £500 million share buyback program completed.
  • New partnerships and product launches planned for 2025.
  • Stock price decreased by 0.51% following the earnings report.

Company Performance

LSEG demonstrated resilience in Q4 2024, with robust growth across its diversified business model. The company’s subscription services were particularly strong, contributing significantly to its organic growth. With an impressive gross profit margin of 86.76% and EBITDA of $3.7 billion for the last twelve months, LSEG’s performance reflects its strategic focus on innovation and market expansion, positioning it well against competitors in the financial services industry. InvestingPro subscribers can access over 30 additional financial metrics and exclusive ProTips about LSEG’s competitive positioning.

Financial Highlights

  • Total income growth: 8.7% on a constant currency basis.
  • Organic growth: 7.8%.
  • Share buyback: £245 million of £500 million completed.

Outlook & Guidance

LSEG reaffirmed its full-year financial guidance, maintaining a positive outlook for 2025. With a strong analyst consensus rating of 1.67 (Buy) and revenue growth of 5.72% in the last twelve months, the company is set to launch new products, including OpenDirectory in the second half of 2025, and continues its strategic partnerships with tech giants like Microsoft and AWS. These initiatives are expected to drive further growth and innovation. For detailed analysis and growth projections, investors can access LSEG’s comprehensive Pro Research Report, available exclusively on InvestingPro.

Executive Commentary

"We have started the year well with total income growth of 8.7% on a constant currency basis," stated Matt, CFO. CEO David Schwimmer highlighted the strength of LSEG’s model, saying, "The strength of our model is that we have a broad diversified platform serving customers across different asset classes." Schwimmer also noted the positive performance of workflows, adding, "We continue to feel good about how [workflows] is performing."

Risks and Challenges

  • Market volatility: Slight fluctuations observed could impact trading volumes.
  • Cloud migration: Ongoing efforts may face technical or logistical challenges.
  • Competitive pressures: Maintaining market share in a highly competitive industry.
  • Regulatory changes: Potential impacts from changes in financial regulations.

LSEG’s strategic initiatives and strong financial performance, including substantial free cash flow of $4.16 billion and an impressive one-year total return of 33.09%, underscore its robust market position, despite a minor decline in stock price post-earnings. The company’s focus on innovation and partnerships is expected to sustain its growth trajectory in the coming years. Discover more insights about LSEG’s valuation and growth potential through InvestingPro’s extensive financial analysis tools and expert research reports.

Full transcript - London Stock Exchange Group PLC (LSEG) Q1 2025:

Conference Operator: Good morning and welcome to the Investor and Analyst Call for Elseq’s First Quarter twenty twenty five Trading Update. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session through the phone lines and instructions will follow at that time. I would like to remind all participants that this call is being recorded. I will now hand over to Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, to open the presentation.

Please go ahead.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG: Thanks, Paulie. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to LSEG’s first quarter update. I’m here with David and Matt. Matt will make some brief opening remarks on our Q1 performance, and then we’ll open up to questions on the conference call line. So let me hand over to him right now.

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Thanks, Peregrine, and good morning, everyone. Glad to be with you today. We have started the year well with total income growth of 8.7% on a constant currency basis. This includes 90 basis point of m and a benefit mainly from the ICD acquisition within Tradeweb. That leaves organic growth of 7.8%, and I will actually refer to this metric through the rest of my comments.

Our subscription businesses all performed well with DNA showing continued slight acceleration, while our market businesses capture the upside of higher volumes. So this good all around performance shows the strengths of our diversified all weather model. Turning first to data and analytics. Organic growth was 5.1, a slight acceleration from the previous quarter, 4.8%. All three businesses performed well.

Workflows revenue was up three dot 4% with commodities, an area of particular strengths in the quarter. We continue to enhance the platform with a very strong pipeline of new features in the months ahead. We are closely supporting customers on the final icon migration, and we are on track to sunset icon at the June. In data and feeds, growth of 6.6% was a little ahead of the q four rate, with both real time and PRS performing well. We continue to add new low latency feeds and cloud solution, and we saw good demand for fixed income corporate action data and our expanded evaluated pricing offering.

And in analytics, we showed strong acceleration to 7.4% driven by demand for yield book and Lipper and enhanced by the good take up of our analytics API, one of the first products we’ve built with Microsoft. Product development with Microsoft continues to make good progress with a significant, a number of significant launches in the second half of twenty twenty five, including OpenDirectory. Finally, a couple of weeks ago, we were delighted to announce the co heads of DNA. We have hired Gianluca Biagini from S and P, bringing over twenty five years of financial information industry experience with him. And he will be joined by Ron Lefferts, who moves over from his role running sales and account management.

They bring together highly complementary skills and track records. Turning now to FTSE Russell, our index and benchmark business. Overall organic growth was nine dot 6%, very similar to the growth rate seen through 2024. Subscription growth was eight dot 2%, reflecting ongoing demand for flagship equity indices and benchmarks. Asset based revenue was up 12 dot 5%, supported by good inflows and higher average market values.

The decline in US markets over the past weeks as well as flows from The US fund into global fund will likely lead to a slightly lower contribution to growth from asset based fees in the coming quarters. Risk intelligence continued to grow double digit at 10 dot 7%. WorldCheck maintained its strong momentum, and our digital identity and fraud business also performed well. Now a word on ASV, which encompasses all of the subscription business of the three division I just covered. ASV growth stood at 6.4% at the end of q one, a small increase from the end of q four.

Within this, D and A has improved strongly year on year, reflecting the good progress we’ve made with new products and displacement. FTSE Russell and Risk Intelligence are showing slightly slower ASV growth than a year ago, which just reflects some normalization of their growth rates. Moving on to our new markets division, which combined the previous capital markets and post trade division. This reflects both their management under Daniel Maguire and also how customers think about their own businesses. Growth in q one was 10 dot 7%, a slight improvement on q four and a continuation of the double digit growth over the last four quarters.

Fedweb started the year well, combining strong execution with favorable market conditions. The business continued to grow its shares in rates and credit. Fixed income growth overall was 17 dot 3%. ICD acquired in August is performing very well, and the integration is progressing as planned. Equities growth was three dot 1%.

We saw strong volume driven growth in secondary markets, although this was partly offset by subdued primary of new growth. FX achieved a third consecutive quarter of double digit growth at 12 dot 3%, mainly reflecting a very active market. We have continued to see strong trading volumes across all asset classes throughout April. Moving on to our post trade businesses. Performance here continue to be very strong considering the headwinds of the Euronext exit, which will last through August of this year with an impact of around £30,000,000.

OTC derivative was up 16.8%, reflecting elevated financial market volatility in the period and greater uncertainty over the global outlook for of risk in the market, but have subsequently fallen back again. And I will end my opening remarks on capital allocation and our balance sheet. As you know, we announced a buyback with our full year result in February. And as of last night, we have completed £245,000,000 of the £500,000,000 program at an average price of a hundred and 10 pounds and 30 1 pence. We also undertook another tender offer of our twenty thirty one bond.

: They’ve lost audio on the Zoom line,

: so it looks like the microphone’s dropping out. Just bear with me one moment.

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Okay. Let me start again. So and I I I I go back to the capital allocation and the balance sheet. Okay? So as you know, we announced the buyback with our full year results in February.

And as of last night, we had completed £245,000,000 of the £500,000,000 program at an average price of a hundred and £10.31. We also undertook another tender offer of our 2031 bond, buying back a further $250,000,000 in a repeat of our December tender in another NPV positive transaction. So all in all, it has been another good quarter, and we have started the year well. The combination of attractive goals in our in our subscription businesses and the market exposure in our high quality market infrastructure platform is continuing to deliver positive results. The rate of investment and innovation remains high, ensuring a strong pipeline of new services in the months and years ahead.

And we are reconfirming all our financial guidance, demonstrating the resilience of our all weather model in the face of an uncertain outlook. And so now we are happy to take your question there again.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG: Thank you, Matt. Operator, please, would you open the line to questions? Again, please, can you limit yourselves to one question and a follow-up? Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. And your first question comes from the line of Arnaud Gibla from BNP Paribas Exane. Please go ahead.

Arnaud Gibla, Analyst, BNP Paribas Exane: Yes, good morning. I’ve got my question follow-up on the FTSE Russell division, please. I was wondering if you could give us a bit more color on the drivers behind the subscription growth at FTSE Russell. You mentioned the flagship equity products doing particularly well, but I was just wondering if you could split out the growth for me in terms of maybe new products, new clients, pricing. I mean, a bit more color there could be helpful.

My second question is on the asset based part of the business. Historically, you had a bit less you weren’t as sensitive to growth in AUM. You have less pass through in terms of revenue growth, and that seems to have changed. I was just wondering what’s happening. Is this a dilution of Vanguard contracts?

Or are you having more AUM that are better priced? Bit more color there could help as well. Thank you.

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Hi. Maybe maybe I I I take the the first part of the question on the on the growth, and and David will will answer on the second part of your question. So, I mean, the the the main message here on on FTSE also is that we we really see a a solid performance both in subscription and in and in AUM. In regards to the the contribution of price to gross, actually, it has not substantially changed, and it’s very similar to the to the rest of of DNA. And as far as the different product are concerned, to give you some some color, we really had an increasing usage of our flagship equity indexes benchmarking products, particularly global equity index series as well as a very strong demand for our multi asset offering across across the the the the board.

David, do you want to give more color?

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Sure. Arnaud, morning. On on your second question, you’re absolutely right that we do have, collar structures on some of our relationships with respect to FTSE Russell. Just so happens that in the context of the flows that we’ve seen, over the past quarter or so, We have exposure in some areas where we don’t have those kinds of collars in place, and so we’re just being transparent around that. But, again, you’re right about the broader picture.

We do have collars on a number of the different products, so we tend to see muted performance on both the upside and the downside.

Arnaud Gibla, Analyst, BNP Paribas Exane: Alright. That’s helpful. Thank you very much.

: Sure.

Conference Operator: Your next question is from the line of Russell Quelch from Redburn Atlantic. Your line is open.

Russell Quelch, Analyst, Redburn Atlantic: Yes. Good morning, Matt and David. Thanks for having us on the call. I want to ask a question on the ASV growth. So now we’ve fully lapped the impact of Credit Suisse and the data access deal, both that came in the first quarter of last year.

You would have got the 70 basis points back in the ASV base in Q1. But the 10 basis points improvement we’ve seen in the quarter appears about 60 basis points short, all else being equal. I was wondering why we’re not seeing that coming back. Has there been a deterioration in growth in subscription revenue outlook across the business to offset that? If you can unpack this as much as possible, that would be great around pricing retention because I think it’s key to people’s outlook for growth in the subscription businesses.

Thanks.

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Hey, Russell. Thank you for the question. So a couple of data points here. So ASVs this quarter is is six dot four, so about 10 bps more than q four twenty twenty twenty twenty four. When you compare with q one twenty twenty four to a 6%, and we explained at the time that Credit Suisse was was driving it down by 30 bps.

So, you know, when you take the 6% plus the 30 bps, that’s six dot three. We we posting six dot four. So, I mean, overall, I think we, you know, we are in line there. And, again, I’m just repeating what we we we’ve said at at previous calls, which is I I don’t think you should be hanged on on, you know, variation of ASV from one quarter to another since the the most important thing is the is the trajectory. Now if you look at the at, you know, at the at the dynamics of the of the ASV, what we what we have in there in this quarter is an acceleration of DNA, which is continuing on its on its on its trajectory.

And we have a normalization of of FTSE and and And that’s what makes the the combination at six dot 4%.

Conference Operator: Okay. Thanks, Matt. Your next question is from the line of Hubert Lam, Bank of America. Your line is open.

Hubert Lam, Analyst, Bank of America: Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. First one is on the sales cycle. I’m just wondering if you’ve seen any changes to the sales cycle, the sizes of potential contracts or any delayed decision making just given the macro uncertainty. Is this uncertainty delaying any potential wins that you may be getting?

And that’s the first question. And I guess my follow-up question is on the Microsoft pipeline. I think Matt, briefly mentioned around Open Directory. Just wondering if the pipeline is still on track for most of the products to be launched by year end, particularly around Workspace? Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Thanks, Hubert. So no real change that we’re seeing in terms of the sales cycle. And, again, I think, pipeline looks good. So really nothing nothing dramatic to report on there. In terms of Microsoft pipeline, we’ve got a lot going on this year.

And Matt touched on some of this in his remarks, but we are continuing to build out the content sets in data as a service. We’re adding some functionality in terms of the Excel add in coming into Workspace, the interoperability with Workspace, more coming with OpenDirectory back half of this year. You’ve seen some early impact from, the new functionality and analytics. So as I said, a lot of activity, and we’re excited to keep delivering.

Hubert Lam, Analyst, Bank of America: Great. Thank you.

Conference Operator: Yep. Thank you. Your next question is from the line of Ben Batist of RBC. Please go ahead.

Ben Batist, Analyst, RBC: Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. It’s on the data analytics division. You’ve recently announced appointment of new co heads there. Just wondering if you could shed some more light on the thinking behind that decision and perhaps how different you envisage Ron’s role being going forwards in terms of involvement in the sales effort that for data and analytics?

Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Sure. Thanks, Ben. So data and analytics is a big division. We got a lot going on there. And as we looked at that, we thought it made sense to have a co head structure, with complementary leaders.

You all, know Ron, you know, who’s done a great job in terms of, leading the sales function over the last few years. He obviously knows our customers and knows our product really well. Excuse me. And then John Luca has terrific experience in this industry, having worked for three of our big peers or competitors, and just a great, level of expertise in, in the data space. So lots of complementary skills, a good geographic mix.

One will be based in Europe. 1 will be based in New York. And we think that that structure will work very, very well. We also have a good leadership cadre beneath them. And, again, the performance of this biz business, this division continues to go well.

So I’m pleased with the construct that we have in place.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG0: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Your next question is from the line of Enrico Bolzoni from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG1: Good morning and thanks for taking my questions. So one on workflow. The sequential growth quarter over quarter in constant currency has stopped in Q1 after three quarters of marginal improvement sequentially. So I was wondering whether you could provide any color there and whether you can confirm that this is the line that we should see accelerating from later part of this year or perhaps early next year once the new products with Microsoft are launched? And alongside that, given the stability in growth quarter on quarter, can you give maybe some color on new client wins competitor displacement that might have occurred during the quarter?

Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Sure. Thanks, Enrico. So first, I I wouldn’t get too hung up on quarter over quarter over quarter trajectories here. You know, with workflows, this this is a business segment that you will recall very well a few years ago, was basically shrinking, and there was a lot of skepticism about this segment. And we now and we said a few years ago that we would get it, growing to low single digit growth.

I think the performance there has been, consistently positive. And so, again, I I wouldn’t get too hung up over one quarter where you see, no change in terms of the quarter over quarter growth trajectory. As I just mentioned, we have a lot of new product coming in that area. Workspace is landing very well, and lots of the additional features and functionality coming out over the, the back half of this year. So, we continue to feel very good about how that is performing.

I would, say the last part of your question on displacements. We continue to see displacements. We do not win everything, but, it’s a very different business today compared to what it was a few years ago where, you know, this this was a market share donor for many, many years, and now we are gaining share. So we continue to feel good about that as well.

Ben Batist, Analyst, RBC: Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Thank you.

Conference Operator: Your next question is from the line of Bruce Hamilton of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG2: Hi, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my question. That was useful color on the no change in the sales cycle. I just wanted to check on the data as a service progress. Can you give a bit of an update on where we are in terms of, you know, sets migrating, how many, you know, clients have signed up, maybe, you know, how that sort of momentum is building as we move through next year?

I think previously, you said sort of critical mass in terms of data moving to the cloud would be probably sometime in mid twenty twenty six. Is that still kind of the case? Just came to get some more color on that. Thanks.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Yeah. That that still holds, Bruce. You know, we’re making good progress in terms of the migration and some of the various datasets. We have the ESG dataset up there. I think we’re making progress on some of the fundamentals datasets, but you you nailed it.

Basically, if you are a customer using a number of our different datasets, it’s not ideal for you to, be partially in the old world and partially in the new world until, so so it’s more likely that we’ll have that critical mass in place before we see a lot of, the customer activity in the new world, if I can put it that way.

Conference Operator: Great. Thank you. Thank you. You have a question from Michael Warner at UBS. Your line is open.

: Thank you very much for

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG3: the presentation guys. A quick question on swap agents. Just wanted to know if there was an update as to the progress there within LCH. And yes, just wanted to see if any information with regards to kind of revenue contribution or how you anticipate the trajectory of that contribution in the coming quarters would be helpful. Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Oh, thanks, Michael. Nothing, in particular around SwapAgent. It it continues to do fine. And we have seen good strong growth across the different businesses in, post trade. You know, swap clear tends to get a lot of the focus, but we have seen good performance in forex clear.

We’ve seen good performance in CDS clear, and swap agent as well. You know, It’s not a clearing part of the business, but it’s a nice piece of the post trade solutions capability, in the uncleared space, and that also continues to do well.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Thank

Arnaud Gibla, Analyst, BNP Paribas Exane: you.

Conference Operator: Your next question is from the line of Benjamin Goy of Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG4: Yes, hi. Good morning. In Workflows, you mentioned it was particularly strong in commodities, which is one of your strong business historically. I was wondering, going forward with the product innovation, should we expect commodities and FX outperform? Or do you expect to catch up in other business like equities or maybe wealth management or with you as wealth managers?

Thanks,

Conference Operator: Benjamin.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: So we have seen strong performance in commodities. We also saw a pretty strong performance in in a few other asset classes. It’s hard to know exactly how that will play out over the coming quarters. I think it’s really one of the strengths of our business that we don’t have a particular concentration or over, over concentration of exposure to any particular asset class or to any particular customer segment or to buy side or sell side. So I’m tempted to say that your guess is as good as mine in terms of how the volatility will play out across different asset classes in the coming quarters.

But the strength of our model is that we have a broad diversified platform platform where we’re serving customers across lots of different asset classes, lots of different geographies, buy side, sell side. You know, that includes wealth management, that includes equities. So I think it’s the strength of that diversification that is really an important part of our model.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Thank you. You have a question from Andrew Coombs at Citi. Your line is open.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG0: Yes, a couple for me, please. One on the markets revenues versus volumes and then just a factual one on the gain on the bond purchase. Let me start with the latter because it’s kind of a very quick one. Can you just quantify the gain on the GBP $250,000,000 bond purchase in March? And then on the revenue versus volumes, both on the equities and the OTC derivatives line.

On the equities line, UK value trade is up 28% year on year. Obviously, the revenue growth is much more subdued, which you flagged is due to lower primary, but perhaps you can just pick that one a little bit. And then on the OTC derivatives, notional traded up 14% on swap clear, but the number of client trades is up 37%. And yet, the revenues are up 17% in that line. So again, anything you can unpack there would be helpful.

Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Sure, Andrew. Maybe Matt will take the the bond question.

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Yeah. Sure. So, Andrew, we we we executed, as I I was referring to, we executed a a second bond buyback in this first quarter for the the same amount in NPV positive transaction. It will derive, you know, pretty much the same positive impact on on net financial expense. But overall, it will compensate the the increased interest cost coming from our debt because of the of the of the the the share buyback.

So overall, I think, you know, you we’ll have a a a slight positive, I would say, but, you know, one is kind of compensating the other.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: And let me let me unpack the question on kind of volumes on the equities, and I’ll go through this pretty high level. Well, hopefully, this gets you there, Andrew. Equities volume growth about 28%. We have volume based discounts for a number of our customers. So if you include that, then it’s about a 16% growth there.

Then there was a small onetime item in q one of twenty twenty four, and then we had a a modest price decline in turquoise, which is in the same line. So you put all that in there, that gets you to about 8% growth quarter over or year over year. And then the secondary trading revenue is roughly half of that business. And as you all are very well aware, the the primary market, the capital raising has been relatively subdued. So that gets you down to the the 3% numbers.

That hopefully, that helps there. And then on the OTC derivatives, some sort of, similar math, although slightly different dynamic as you’ve mentioned. You know, client trades in swap clear up 36.8%. But, as you will recall with our cuss our our members, they’re on more of a fixed fee model. And so, to go from that 36.8% down to the 16% or so, is really how you get to that.

Does that help?

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG0: Very helpful. Thank you.

Conference Operator: Sure. Your next question is from the line of Ian White of Autonomous Research. Your line is open.

: Morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just two from my side, please. Firstly, could you provide some detail around how sign ups and usage of meeting prep have developed over the last few months. I think this was something that you highlighted with the the full year update that this was something now people could sign up for via Teams, if I remember correctly.

And I was just trying to understand kind of how that has tracked so far. And secondly, just any thoughts on evolution in the sort of M and A dynamics, seeing more pressure on the private industry in terms of ability to exit investments. And I wondered if that had created any new or or different conversations for you in terms of looking at bolt on acquisitions. Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Sure. Thanks, Ian. So meeting prep, we’ve got it out there with our customers. It’s at it’s really at the what we call the minimum viable product phase, and we’re looking at subsequent developments in that, and adding additional capabilities, additional features in that as, as we go forward. And then on the m and a dynamics, I would say we continue to look at a lot.

No change in terms of our capital allocation policy. And, we continue to be very focused on what makes sense for us in terms of strategic fit and, really making sense from a strategic perspective, but also financially, what makes sense in terms of financial returns. To the extent that we are entering an environment where sellers have, more realistic value expectations, that would be a helpful thing for us. But I I can’t tell you at this point, you know, that there are there’s a a massive flow of distressed sellers, But we continue to evaluate the opportunities that are out there.

: Thanks. Just to just to clarify on meeting prep, is it is it kind of the case at the moment that you you have this with a set of sort of core clients, if you like, and we wouldn’t necessarily see more meaningful growth or sort of heavier usage until you had done some of the developments that you mentioned? Or is this a product where you see significant usage and value add for customers already? Is there any detail you can provide around that, please?

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Yeah. Sure. No. That that’s a that’s a a good question. I would say it’s more of the former.

In other words, that’s why I described it as kind of MVP, minimum viable product. The technology is changing. And when we put it out there, there was no real concept of AgenTik AI. And so we’re looking at whether, there are ways that we should be adjusting it, and changing the product and working with our our key customers to evaluate what could make the most sense in terms of adding the most value for them.

: That’s great. Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: You got it.

Conference Operator: We have a question from Julian Dobrovolsky of ABN AMRO. Your line is open.

: Good morning, gentlemen, and thanks for taking my questions. I have a follow-up on Workspace and then another one on a different topic. To begin with the Workspace, given your plan for migration away from Python by June ’55, I was just wondering if you could remind us again on the pricing, but also timing strategy of that from from from the, say, June 2025 onwards, assuming that all users will be on the new product as of the third quarter two thousand twenty five? And then one on a a different topic. So the recent announcement of your partnership with AWS, I was wondering if you could share more color which services you plan to migrate to AWS and which will go to the Microsoft cloud, broadly speaking.

But, also, if you could share some thoughts behind the decision making. For example, why sticking to AWS cloud and and not Microsoft keeping your long term partnership agreement with them?

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Sure. So first of all, the Workspace migration continues to go well and and very much on track. I think implied in your question was an expectation about pricing change when we switched from ICON to Workspace, and that’s not the way it works. And I think one of the reasons we’ve seen a very successful migration

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Retention.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Yeah. And retention doing the migration is that we’ve been giving our customers a significantly better product in Workspace at the same price that they were paying for Icon. And so that will continue for the customers that are going through that migration this year. And then the price adjustment, will take place as it does every year, on an annual basis in January. So no no pricing change in year, during the migration.

Excuse me. On the question around AWS, a do AWS has has long been partner of ours, and we have been very clear throughout the very successful partnership with Microsoft that we will continue to work with other cloud providers. There’s no exclusivity to the Microsoft relationship either way. It continues to be very productive, I think, for both sides. But the cloud relationship with AWS is also a strong one for us, an important one for us.

We have other cloud relationships as well. Just to break it down, and I think the press release on AWS mentioned this, but for a number of years, we have had, cloud activity, for FTSE risk intelligence and, different parts of our markets business, with AWS, and that is the extension that we announced, earlier this week.

: Got it. Thank you.

Ben Batist, Analyst, RBC: Thanks, John.

Conference Operator: Thank you. Your next question is from the line of Thomas Mills of Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Peregrine Riviere, Head of Investor Relations, LSEG5: Good morning, guys. I hear what you’re saying on the sales cycle earlier, which was reassuring. I’m just wondering, buy and sell side end markets feel a little bit less healthy at the April, perhaps people are expecting immediate post the U. S. Election.

I’m just curious if you see any early modifications in the nature of the conversations you’re having with either of those types of counterparties? Is there any greater willingness to expand the scope of enterprise agreements, product bundling in environment to try and generate incremental savings?

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: So excuse me. These enterprise agreements, tend to be multi month discussions, in some cases, longer than that. So I wouldn’t say that we have seen over the last month or so any kind of dramatic change in terms of interest in those kinds of conversations. We do have, a number of those conversations ongoing, but I wouldn’t say it’s driven by the volatility over the last month or two. And so that’s why I would say we we haven’t seen any meaningful change in terms of the sales cycle or or any of those kinds of dynamics.

Ben Batist, Analyst, RBC: Great. Thank you.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Thank you.

Conference Operator: And there are no further questions on the conference line. I will now hand the presentation back to David Schwimmer, CEO of LSEG, for closing remarks.

David Schwimmer, CEO, LSEG: Well, thank you all for your questions and for your interest. Of course, you know where Peregrine and the team are if you have any further questions, and, we look forward to seeing you all soon.

Matt, CFO, LSEG: Thanks. Thank you.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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