Earnings call transcript: Tradeweb Markets Q2 2025 sees stock rise on earnings beat

Published 30/07/2025, 17:56
 Earnings call transcript: Tradeweb Markets Q2 2025 sees stock rise on earnings beat

Tradeweb Markets Inc. reported its Q2 2025 earnings, slightly surpassing analysts’ expectations with an EPS of $0.87 compared to the forecasted $0.86. The company’s stock rose 5.63% in premarket trading, reflecting investor optimism driven by strong international growth and strategic investments in technology. According to InvestingPro data, eight analysts have recently revised their earnings estimates upward for the upcoming period, suggesting continued momentum. The company maintains a "GREAT" financial health score of 3.23 out of 5, indicating robust operational performance.

Key Takeaways

  • Tradeweb’s Q2 EPS exceeded forecasts, marking a positive earnings surprise.
  • Stock surged 5.63% in premarket, reaching $140.
  • Record revenues and strong international performance highlighted.
  • Continued focus on digital assets and AI-driven trading innovations.
  • Increased guidance on expenses due to strategic investments and new headquarters.

Company Performance

Tradeweb Markets demonstrated robust performance in Q2 2025, with record quarterly revenues of $513 million, a 26.7% increase year-over-year. This aligns with the company’s impressive trailing twelve-month revenue growth of 28.94% reported by InvestingPro. The company’s international segment contributed significantly, accounting for 42% of total revenue. With a market capitalization of $34.55 billion and a strong current ratio of 5.34, Tradeweb’s strategic focus on digital assets and AI-driven trading is expected to drive future growth, as evidenced by the launch of new products in Malaysian and Brazilian markets.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $513 million, up 26.7% YoY
  • Earnings per share: $0.87, slightly above the $0.86 forecast
  • Adjusted EBITDA margin: 54.2%, up 83 basis points from last year
  • Free cash flow: $952 million for the trailing twelve months
  • Dividend: Increased 20% to $0.12 per share

Earnings vs. Forecast

Tradeweb’s EPS of $0.87 surpassed the forecast of $0.86, resulting in a 1.16% earnings surprise. However, revenue came in at $512.97 million, slightly below the expected $513.17 million, a negligible miss of 0.04%.

Market Reaction

The stock of Tradeweb Markets surged by 5.63% in premarket trading, reaching $140. This movement is notable as it brings the stock closer to its 52-week high of $152.65. The positive market reaction is attributed to the earnings beat and strong international growth, aligning with broader trends in the financial services sector.

Outlook & Guidance

Tradeweb expects double-digit revenue growth in 2025, driven by investments in technology and market expansion. The company has increased its adjusted expense guidance to $1,000-$1,050 million, reflecting strategic investments in credit, digital assets, and a new headquarters in New York City. Based on InvestingPro’s Fair Value analysis, the stock currently appears to be trading above its intrinsic value. Get access to the complete Pro Research Report, available for Tradeweb and 1,400+ other top US stocks, to make more informed investment decisions.

Executive Commentary

CEO Billy Hult highlighted the company’s milestone achievement: "We achieved over $1,000,000,000 in revenue in the first half of this year." He emphasized the importance of digital assets, stating, "Digital assets to us are this next step in helping our clients trade smarter and more efficiently."

Risks and Challenges

  • Increased operational expenses due to new headquarters and strategic investments.
  • Potential regulatory impacts on market structure, particularly in digital assets.
  • Continued pressure to maintain market share amidst growing competition.
  • Fluctuations in global financial markets affecting international revenue streams.
  • Technological disruptions and cybersecurity threats.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about Tradeweb’s market share dynamics in U.S. Treasuries and pricing strategies in credit markets. Executives also discussed opportunities in digital assets and potential regulatory impacts, indicating a proactive approach to navigating future challenges.

Full transcript - Tradeweb Markets Inc (TW) Q2 2025:

Conference Operator: Good morning, and welcome to Tradeweb’s Second Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Conference Call. As a reminder, today’s call is being recorded and will be available for playback. To begin, I’ll turn the call over to Head of Treasury, FP and A and Investor Relations, Ashley Sorrell. Please go ahead.

Ashley Sorrell, Head of Treasury, FP&A and Investor Relations, Tradeweb: Thank you, and good morning. Joining me today for the call are our CEO, Billy Hult, who will review our business results and key growth initiatives and our CFO, Sarah Ferber, who will review our financial results. We intend to use the website as a means of disclosing material, non public information and complying with our disclosure obligations under Regulation FD. I’d to remind you that certain statements in this presentation and during the Q and A may relate to future events and expectations and as such constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Statements related to among other things, our guidance are forward looking statements.

Actual results may differ materially from these forward looking statements. Information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ from forward looking statements is contained in our earnings release, earnings presentation and periodic reports filed with the SEC. In addition, on today’s call, we will reference certain non GAAP measures as well as certain market and industry data. Information regarding these non GAAP measures, including reconciliations to GAAP measures, is in our earnings release and earnings presentation. Information regarding market and industry data, including sources, is in our earnings presentation.

Now let me turn the call over to Billy.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Thanks, Ashley. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our second quarter earnings call. We set a new high watermark for quarterly revenues once again, surpassing the record we set in the first quarter twenty twenty five. This strong momentum propelled revenues to exceed $1,000,000,000 in the first half of the year, and we expect 2025 to shape up to produce another year of double digit revenue growth. From tariff wars to detents, a rapidly evolving rates and equity market backdrop, a slowing housing market and stubbornly high inflation, global debate and strong client engagement was on display across our platform.

We believe the movement from the phone to the keyboard is a one way train. As we have seen in the past, extreme volatility creates temporary moments as we saw in April where our clients still can go back to the phone. Despite these moments, our electronic journey continued and we achieved record volumes in many of our asset classes this quarter, which bodes well for future market share growth. Our clients are becoming increasingly sophisticated around the search for liquidity and our dealer and non bank liquidity providers continue to invest to provide two way markets even in the most volatile conditions. While bid ask spreads widened, the liquidity crunch we experienced this quarter was only a fraction of what we witnessed in March 2020.

Encouragingly, unlike previous volatility periods, our clients leaned into newer innovations like AIX and portfolio trading. Momentum builds momentum, and we continue to be laser focused on the areas we can control, putting our clients first, investing in new solutions for paper and voice markets and strategically planting more flags across early stage ventures. Diving into the second quarter, strong client activity and risk on environment drove 26.7% year over year revenue growth on a reported basis. Our international business continues to set new records with 41% revenue growth as our strategic initiatives in EM and APAC continue to pay off. We continue to balance investing for growth and profitability as adjusted EBITDA margins expanded by 70 basis points relative to the 2024.

Turning to slide five, our rates business produced a record revenue quarter driven by continued organic growth across swaps, global government bonds and mortgages. Record credit revenues were led by the strength across global corporate bonds, munis and credit derivatives. Money markets revenue growth was led by the addition of ICD and aided by record quarterly revenues across global repos. While the ICD business has continued to see strong new client growth in the first half of the year, the business was negatively impacted by the recent market volatility as some large clients drew down their money market fund balances during the quarter to tactically buy back shares in the market and increase spend ahead of the potentially higher global tariffs. Equities posted record results, up 50% year over year, led by growth in our global ETF and equity derivatives business.

Finally, market data revenues were driven by growth in our proprietary data products. Turning to slide six, I will provide a brief update on two of our focus areas, U. S. Treasuries and ETFs, and then I will dig deeper into U. S.

Credit and global interest rate swaps. Starting with U. S. Treasuries, the quarter started out with the U. S.

Treasury markets experiencing one of the most significant periods of volatility in years. Ten year U. S. Treasury yields moved nearly 50 basis points between April 4 and April 11, the fourth largest five day move in yields since the financial crisis. All in, revenues were up 11% year over year, with our institutional business climbing to new highs.

Stepping back, we saw a tale of two cities unfold. Automation remained resilient, while voice activity increased temporarily. Specifically, institutional U. S. Treasury AIX average daily trades were stable year over year.

On the other hand, our second quarter market share of 22% declined year over year, driven by an industry wide mix shift towards mainly voice centric basis and swap spread trades. These are two areas of the market where we continue to invest. And while behavior change takes time, we believe we are well positioned to build solutions to these complex workflows, particularly now with our connection to the futures market through RateFin. On a relative basis, we continue to exceed 50% market share in institutional U. S.

Treasuries versus our main electronic competitor in rates for the fifth consecutive quarter. Turning to our U. S. Treasury wholesale business, we delivered another record revenue quarter. This was driven by record adoption of our streaming protocol and growing adoption of our sessions and rate fin solutions.

Wholesale continues to be a strategic priority as we focus on expanding our network of liquidity providers and strengthening our liquidity pools in alignment with our multi protocol platform strategy. In equities, our ETF business generated record revenues as market volatility drove frequent rebalancing and risk management and as we continue to deepen integration with our clients. Our efforts to broaden our equity presence beyond our flagship ETF franchise continue to pay off, with record institutional equity derivatives revenue up 30% year over year. Looking ahead, we’re continuing to make inroads by onboarding new clients and the pipeline remains strong as the benefits of our electronic solutions continue to resonate with a key differentiator being our AIX solution. Despite the extreme volatility experienced during the quarter, our clients strongly relied on AIX across ETFs with average daily trades increasing over 125% year over year.

Turning to Slide seven for a closer look at credit. Double digit revenue growth for the quarter was driven by strong double digit revenue growth in both credit derivatives and municipal bonds. Global corporate credit delivered mid single digit revenue growth due to product and volume mix as retail corporate credit revenues were down 17% year over year, primarily reflecting the better relative yields our clients are getting across money markets and munis. Overall, automation continues to resonate with Global Credit AIX average daily trades increasing over 15% year over year. We achieved a record block share in fully electronic U.

S. Investment grade and U. S. High yield at 95% respectively. This growth was driven by continued adoption of our portfolio trading, RFQ and sessions protocols.

Our institutional U. S. Credit business continued to scale with revenues up 15% year over year as clients leveraged our diverse suite of trading solutions. Institutional RFQ average daily volume grew over 35% year over year, with strong double digit growth in both IG and high yield. Our efforts to expand into RFQ are seeing early signs of success, with our RFQ share of overall TRACE achieving a new quarterly record.

Portfolio trading average daily volume also increased 15% year over year, with record volumes across high yield and our second highest across IG. Portfolio trading has become a widely used, reliable method for executing trades and managing risk, particularly during periods of market volatility. As the market continues to evolve, we expect adoption to expand as it further embeds itself as an essential part of Credit Traders’ toolkits. All Trade had a strong quarter with over $200,000,000,000 in volume, with average daily volume up almost 10% year over year. Our all to all average daily volume grew over 50% year over year, while our dealer RFQ average daily volume rose by nearly 20% year over year.

The team remains focused on expanding our network and increasing the number of responders on the AllTrade platform. In the second quarter, we achieved record ETF market maker participation across our institutional credit business. Looking ahead, U. S. Credit remains a key area of focus.

We believe there is still a long runway for growth with plenty of opportunity to innovate alongside both buy side and dealer clients. Despite the success to date, we believe we can continue to deepen our penetration across RFQ and further enhance our portfolio trading and session offerings. Core to our strategy is attacking more parts of the block market through our differentiated liquidity, proprietary data and unique liquidity pools, coupled with continued expansion of our product and sales teams. Beyond U. S.

Credit, we’re continuing to prioritize our emerging markets credit expansion efforts. We continue to broaden out our liquidity provider set across key markets, work with our OMS partners on key integrations, and expand the functionality around key differentiators such as asset swaps. While still early in the journey, EM credit revenues grew nearly 40% year over year in the second quarter, signaling strong momentum. Moving to Slide eight, Global Swaps delivered record revenues driven by a combination of strong client engagement in response to a dynamic macro backdrop, a favorable mix shift towards risk trading and a 4% increase in weighted average duration. Altogether, global swaps revenues grew over 45% year over year.

Our core risk market share, which excludes compression trading, was a record, rising two forty basis points year over year. Total market share declined from 23.6% in the 2024 to 22.6% in the 2025, largely due to a significant reduction in U. S. And European client related compression volumes, which carry much lower fee rates. During the quarter, we achieved the highest share in our history across other G11 and our second highest share across EM denominated currencies.

The second quarter highlighted the continued global expansion of our swaps business in terms of both geographic reach and broader client engagement. International swaps achieved record revenues growing over 55% year over year, with record EM and APAC revenues. Our strong performance was supported by a 13% year over year increase in global active users. As our global footprint continues to expand, we’re not just adding new clients, but enhancing the value of the platform for the broader client base, with the average number of currencies traded per client almost doubling over the past five years. Finally, we continue to make progress across emerging market swaps and our rapidly growing RFM protocol.

Our second quarter EM swaps revenue produced another strong growth quarter and we believe there is still significant room to grow given the low levels of electronification. This quarter, we launched Malaysian swaps and executed the first click to trade in Brazilian swaps as we continue to broaden our offering. Our RFM protocol also saw average daily volume more than double year over year, with adoption picking up. Looking ahead, we continue to believe the long term growth potential for swaps remains significant. Recent market volatility and macro uncertainty have only reinforced the value of electronic trading and the strength of our network globally.

With just 30% of the cleared swaps market currently electronified, there is substantial runway to digitize workflows alongside our clients. As the global swaps landscape grows, we are focused on continuing to lead with innovation across the cleared market and making inroads into the uncleared swaps market in partnership with our clients. And with that, let me turn it over to Sarah to discuss our financials in more detail.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Thanks, Billy, and good morning. As I go through the numbers, all comparisons will be to the prior year period, unless otherwise noted. Slide nine provides a summary of our quarterly earnings performance. As Billy recapped earlier, this quarter we saw record revenues of $513,000,000 that were up 26.7% year on year on a reported basis and 24.7% on a constant currency basis given the weakening dollar. We derived approximately 42% of our second quarter revenues from international clients, and recall that approximately 30% of our revenue base is denominated in currencies other than dollars, predominantly in euros.

Our variable revenue increased by 30%, and total trading revenues increased by 28%. Total fixed revenues related to our four major asset classes were up 25% on a reported basis and 23% on a constant currency basis. Rates fixed revenue growth was primarily driven by an increase in minimum fee floors for certain dealers and by the addition of dealers to our mortgage and U. S. Government bond platforms.

Credit fixed revenue growth was primarily driven by the previously disclosed introduction of minimum fee floors and the migration of certain dealers to subscription fees. Other revenues increased 32%, primarily driven by $1,800,000 earned from our work with the Canton network, where we are compensated in Canton coins. This line item will be variable quarter to quarter, reflecting fluctuations in the number of earned Canton coins, Canton coin prices, and periodic tech enhancements for retail clients. This quarter’s adjusted EBITDA margin of 54.2% increased by 83 basis points on a reported basis when compared to our twenty twenty four full year margins. Moving on to fees per million on slide 10 and a highlight of the key trends for the quarter.

You can see slide 16 of the earnings presentation for additional detail regarding our fee per million performance this quarter. For cash rates products, average fees per million were down 7%, primarily due to a mix shift away from retail within U. S. Government bonds, which carries a comparatively higher fee per million, as well as lower fee per million across mortgages and European government bonds. For long tenor swaps, average fees per million were up 40%, primarily due to a decline in compression activity.

For cash credit, average fees per million decreased 11% due to the migration of certain dealers from fully variable plans to fixed plans across the institutional and wholesale U. S. Credit business and a mix shift away from retail within U. S. Credit, which carries a higher fee per million.

For cash equities, average fees per million increased 15% due to higher fee per million in U. S. ETFs and a mix shift toward EU ETFs, which carry a relatively higher fee per million. Recall in The U. S, we charge per share and not for notional value traded.

Finally, within money markets, average fees per million increased 49% primarily due to the inclusion of ICD and were partially offset by a mix shift away from retail CDs, which carry a comparatively higher fee per million. Slide 11 details our adjusted expenses. At a high level, the scalability and variable nature of our expense base allows us to continue to invest for growth and grow margins. We have maintained a consistent philosophy here. Adjusted expenses for the second quarter increased 24% on a reported and 22% on a constant currency basis.

Given the strong environment to invest for long term growth, during the second quarter, we continued investments in digital assets, consulting, and client relationship development. Adjusted compensation costs grew 23%, with the vast majority as a result of discretionary and performance related compensation and a 20% increase in headcount, with more than 50% of the headcount increase related to the addition of ICD. Technology and communication costs increased 25%, primarily due to our previously communicated investments in data strategy and infrastructure. Adjusted professional fees grew 6%, mainly due to an increase in tech consultants as we augment our offshore technology operations and build incremental scalability. This was partially offset by lower legal fees.

Adjusted general and administrative costs increased 55%, primarily due to unfavorable movements in FX. Unfavorable movements in FX resulted in a $2,200,000 loss in the ’5 versus a $1,700,000 gain in the ’4. Excluding FX, adjusted general and administrative costs grew 21%, mainly due to a pickup in travel and entertainment and marketing expenses. Slide 12 details capital management and our guidance. On our cash position and capital return policy, we ended the second quarter in a strong position, with $1,600,000,000 in cash and cash equivalents, and free cash flow reached approximately $952,000,000 for the trailing twelve months.

Our net interest income of $14,500,000 decreased due to a combination of lower cash balances and interest yields. With this quarter’s earnings, the Board declared a quarterly dividend of $0.12 per Class A and Class B shares, up 20% year over year. Turning to guidance for 2025. In light of the continued strong business momentum, we are increasing our adjusted expense guidance to $1,000,000,000 to $1,050,000,000 and we are currently trending towards the midpoint of this range. Overall, we are seeing opportunity to invest for future growth and continue to accelerate investments in the 2025 relative to the first half of the year.

Specific areas of investment include U. S. And European credit, specified pools and mortgages, global repos, and digital assets. Starting in the third quarter, in line with an acceleration in our data and infrastructure strategy, we expect an approximately $5,000,000 increase in our noncomp expense run rate across tech and communications and professional fees. Lastly, primarily due to the move to our new New York City headquarters, which we expect in September, we estimate second half twenty twenty five occupancy expenses to rise 40% year over year, including approximately $650,000 in duplicate rent related expenses.

All in, with these investments, we continue to expect our 2025 adjusted EBITDA margin to exceed twenty twenty four levels, although expansion will be more modest than last year as we support our current and future organic growth. One final point. We continue to expect 2025 revenues generated under the master data agreement with ELSEG to be approximately $90,000,000 up approximately 10% from 2024. Now I’ll turn it back to Billy for concluding remarks.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Thanks, Sarah. I am extremely proud of the Tradeweb team that continues to push the boundaries on where electronic trading can go in the fixed income markets. As I mentioned at the outset of this call, we achieved over $1,000,000,000 in revenue in the first half of this year. And to put that in perspective, we produced $776,000,000 in all of 2019, the year of our IPO. What was once thought of as headwinds to electronification are now turning into tailwinds for future growth.

Better data, a growing set of execution tools, straight through processing and post trade solutions are providing our buy side clients and dealers with more opportunities to trade on screen even during the most volatile of environments. We see significant opportunity to use technology and innovation to electronify more areas of the fixed income markets over the coming years alongside our dealers and clients. We’re also focused on new areas such as digital assets to further enhance our one stop shop offering. With two important month end trading days left in July, which tends to be one of our strongest revenue days, overall an average daily revenue growth are trending approximately 20% higher relative to July 2024. The diversity of our growth remains a theme as we are seeing double digit volume growth across global swaps, mortgages, European government bonds, U.

S. And European credit, munis, European ETFs and global repo. Our IG share is tracking above June levels, while our high yield share is tracking in line with June levels. Finally, I would like to thank our clients for their business and partnership in the quarter and recognize my colleagues for their efforts that contributed to the record quarterly revenues and volumes at Tradeweb. With that, I will turn it back to Ashley for your questions.

Ashley Sorrell, Head of Treasury, FP&A and Investor Relations, Tradeweb: Thanks, Billy. As a reminder, please limit yourself to one question only. Feel free to hop back in the queue and ask additional questions at the end. Q and A will end at 10:30AM Eastern Time. Operator, you can now take our first question.

Conference Operator: Thank you. One moment. The first question comes from the line of Alex Kramm of UBS.

Alex Kramm, Analyst, UBS: Yes. Hey, good morning, everyone. Just wanted to come back to the market share trends in U. S. Treasuries.

Billy, I think you proactively talked about this a little bit, but those have been certainly looking lower in recent quarters. So can you just maybe unpack it a little bit more? Is this just mix, phone versus electronic, wholesale institutional? Or are there some other underlying trends that you and we should be watching? And if so, what are you doing to recapture that share?

Thanks.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Yeah. Alex, how are you? Great question. Actually, before I get into the answer, Alex, let me just say one thing very quickly. You know us very well as being a very genuine and authentic company.

That’s what we strive to be. I want to say this just very quickly. What happened on Monday was obviously very devastating, Monday evening in Midtown, and the company expresses its thoughts and prayers, for everyone involved. We’ve always had a very historically strong relationship with Blackstone, a tragedy that occurred. And so I just wanted to say very quickly in an authentic and genuine way how much we’re thinking of everyone involved.

And I’ll segue, Alex, to your excellent question. From my perspective, really, as I think about how you laid it out, the story of Tradeweb has been really about a story of expansion from one marketplace way back when to now we’re in 50 different markets, a rate platform to kinda credit ETFs and EM. So I say this all the time, like ambitious companies are always looking for the next opportunity. But more importantly, I would say ambitious companies can never take their eye off the ball. And so from my perspective, the ball has always really been kind of US treasuries, because I think we see it as probably the most fundamentally important market inside of the fixed income complex, but maybe more importantly, as that market that creates links for us to all of these spread based products.

So our leadership position there is exceptionally important. I also say all the time, and I want you to hear me on this, that from my perspective really, our biggest competition is really the phone. It’s not Bloomberg. It’s not CME. You know, it’s the phone.

And so we kinda ask the question, but really, it’s really about solving for the problem. It’s kind of like, why does phone based trading still exist in 1995? Like, why does phone based trading still exist in 2025 like it’s 1995? Right? Like pass the Philly cheesesteaks at 10:00 in the morning kind of stuff, right?

And so what we think about very clearly is sort of like two reasons really, right? Why does phone based trading still exist in government bonds? Like two reasons. Risk trades still tend to get done on the phone and I think we’re doing a lot to solve for that through micro protocols like request for market and also AIX, which I think is really kind of getting after those big kind of block trades. And then maybe more importantly, I would say complexity a lot of times still gets done and transacted on the phone.

So when we think about complexity, think about kind of package trading, basis trades, swap spread trades, those kinds of trades. And without question, which I think goes to the sort of like the heart of your question now, it’s like higher volatility led to a pickup in these pockets of those types of trades. And so this shift in composition created, from my perspective, I would say, a temporary headwind around electronification, which caused this decline of about 400 basis points year over year and I think contributed the decline in share that you alluded to. So on a micro protocol level, what we do is kind of roll up our sleeves, right? So we’re rolling out U.

S. Dollar swaps and treasuries really like a multi asset package trading protocol. We’re making some changes to increments around swap spreads. I step back and I kind of say, for the most part, never satisfied, but for the most part, our treasury business is pretty much firing on all cylinders. We’ve gained about, I would say, two fifty basis points versus Bloomberg.

So on the electronic side, we’ve gained two fifty basis points versus Bloomberg year over year. I think as we continue to be the leader around algo execution, continuing to grow across our wholesale business really by giving clients a full suite of protocols that meet them where they are. So if you take a step back, I do think it’s really like a great time to be in the global rates business broadly, right? So let’s keep those kind of parameters in mind. Debt levels continue to climb.

Central banks continue to step back. There continues to be this kind of real debate around the shape and level of the yield curve. And importantly, and I say this I think very, very strongly, the banks are back. They’re strong, they’re active, and they’re very willing to and are warehousing risk. And so when you think about those dynamics, my instinct is I think they play well to how Tradeweb manages market structure.

I think it plays to our advantage on some level as that kind of quote unquote kind of trusted marketplace that we take very seriously. And so our job is always like how do we help clients trade smarter? How do we make their workflow better? How do we try to do that consistently? And so my instinct is micro protocols like request for market which mimic the cadence of voice behavior, I think it gives us credibility that we go after these kinds of voice trades the right way.

It really is also, from our perspective, why we acquired RateFin earlier this year. It brought listed futures into our world. It gave us a chance I think to partner more deeply with these relative value clients that can be voice oriented to electronify a part of the market that still is kind of that kind of paper market. And it’s another step towards building a more complete, more efficient experience for our clients. And so excited about the future.

I say this like all the time. We try to stay humble and for sure unsatisfied, so I appreciate your question. We’re confident. I think we think the opportunity in front of us to keep solving for these issues are real. And we’re always going to work on earning the trust of our buy side and dealer clients.

I think that we’ve shown that we understand how to navigate behavior change. And I think in a positive way, I would say more and more we try to become that platform of choice. And I appreciate your question always, Alex. Good to hear your voice. Thank you.

All right. Thanks for all the good color. Yep.

Conference Operator: One moment for your next question. The next question comes from the line of Craig Siegenthaler of Bank of America.

Craig Siegenthaler, Analyst, Bank of America: Hey. Good morning, Billy, Sarah. Hope everyone’s doing well. Our question is on pricing and credit. So we’re curious.

What has been the initial client reaction to the new buy side fees and high yield? And what are your thoughts on employing a similar strategy in investment grade nets?

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Yeah. Hey, Greg. How are you? Good question. And so I think my instinct is sort of the heart of your question is really kind of speaks to, I think from our perspective, really like how we try to build markets.

And we try to build markets with innovation credibility and then I described before and you know this very well, this sort of relentless focus on really delivering value to our clients. So as I say that, when we introduced buy side fees into high yield, to make an obvious point, it wasn’t about just pushing through a change, right? It was really about recognizing kind of where the platform is today. And so I say this like pretty strongly, like we’re not a niche player in high yield anymore, right? We’re not a niche player in high yield.

And so when I say that, what I mean is we’ve built scale, we’ve built trust, and I think clients understand the value that we’re delivering, right? So we probably did what you expected us to do, which is we communicated early. We were transparent. And since the rollout, our institutional high yield share has gone up. And so from my perspective as CEO, that’s the market telling us at a minimum we got that positioning right.

And reminder, Craig, to your question, like this isn’t as you know, this isn’t new for us. So we’ve had buy side fees in IG since 2016. I think the market expected this move in high yield as we grew. We know our competitors are there too, but we believe we’re leading the space because of the investments we’ve made across really across technology, protocols and liquidity, which are really from our perspective the three pillars of innovation. I think the second quarter numbers back that up.

So record share in fully electronic block trading 9% as you know in IG, 5% in high yield, 35% year over year growth in institutional RFQ average daily volume, record high yield portfolio trading volumes. I’m giving a little shout out to the credit team. Record high yield portfolio trading volume, second highest IG quarter. ETF trade count was up 125% year over year and our AIX usage continues to grow up 15% in credit. So all of this is kind of good news.

My instinct is a part of this really is our integration with Aladdin, which does continue to deepen. The connectivity allows us really to embed Tradeweb directly into the client workflow, helping them access liquidity, automate execution, manage risk. My instinct is and our instinct is that kind of integration makes it easier for clients to scale with us. And that’s why we’re focused there. It makes it harder for them to leave us, harder for them to go anywhere else.

So we want to be practical always. You know that. Pragmatic and practical. Yes, price matters. But the value you create on real efficiency, we do think matters more.

And I say that I think very consistently and my instinct is clients are starting to respond to the quality really of what we built. So we’re going to keep investing. Big picture credit still has a ton of runway. We’re attacking more of the block market, enhancing our view, expanding portfolio trading, continuing to, as I described before, I think scale all trade, broadening out our EM credit business, and continuing to expand our sales and product teams to support it all. That’s like a big piece of it.

We don’t always have the perfect answers, you know that. We’ve been doing this too long to know all of this stuff is not like straight line stuff. But our instinct is this is the recipe for how to grow. And so that’s how we’re going to lead and that’s how we want to stay in front of things. It’s a great question.

Thanks very much, Craig.

Conference Operator: One moment for your next question. The next question comes from the line of Benjamin Butish of Barclays.

Conference Operator: Hi, good morning and thank you for taking the question. I wanted to ask about ICD. I mean, my high level question is about the progress in your cross selling of additional products across that embedded customer base. But Billy, I was also wondering if you could maybe unpack some of your comments from your prepared remarks about volatility impacting balances in the quarter. Just anything you can share like anecdotally or from what the company has seen in the past?

How long does it typically take for balances to recover? How should we think about the next few months or quarters there? Thank you.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Sure, Ben, it’s Sarah. Why don’t I take a stab at that and Billy can kind of chime in? Nice to hear from you. So, I’ll kind of take it in parts. Big picture, as we approach the one year mark for ICD, we remain really excited about the long term opportunity with the company on two angles.

One for future growth, and we’ll talk about some of the cross selling opportunities, and also from an enhanced diversification aspect, which we’re also focused on for the company. Big picture, client retention remains high. We’ve added 34 clients so far this year and balances in revenue are up modestly over the twelve months. That said, what Billy highlighted in his prepared remarks, I can kind of pull back a little bit more on. In the second quarter, we did see some cash balance volatility around the prospects of tariffs.

And so if you think about some of the large cap clients in the tech and energy space, what we saw were people taking advantage of some share price dislocations that we saw in the market at that time by increasing buybacks, as well as what looks to be accelerated CapEx purchases versus maybe their historical patterns, which we think really is related to some of that speculation around how much things would cost later in the year. It looks very episodic, the wallet, the market share with those clients is unchanged and remains strong, so there’s no actual change in our relationship, it’s really just a function of what they’re doing with their cash balances. I would say if you looked at it versus other years, historically the second quarter you do see some dips, maybe a little bit around taxes, but nothing as pronounced as we saw this year. And I would say from where they were in the April lows, we’re seeing those bounces slowly build back. So it’s an AUM based business, so the impact really is on the forward revenue, and you’ll see us climb out of it.

I’d expect if the business follows the historical seasonality, I think the second half of the year typically ends up being a little bit stronger. But nothing structurally there. Ironically, I think the same sort of market environment that worked really well for our trading businesses is the one that creates a little bit of dislocation with the cash balances. So again, that portfolio effect. Some things go up and other things come down.

But going back to the cross sell and really the long term durability and opportunity with ICD, there’s two main areas we’re focused on and we’ve talked about this. The first is really expanding ICD’s product reach by adding our products onto the portal so corporate treasurers can access them directly. Pleased to announce at the end of this quarter, we completed the build and integration of T Bills that we’ve been talking about, and we have a growing pipeline of clients that are interested. And the next phase for us is really focused on changing client behavior, getting them used to accessing that product on the portal. We know well from our experience in electronifying markets that change doesn’t happen overnight.

Billy uses this phrase, it’s a marathon, not a sprint. But we remain confident in the value proposition. We’re getting good feedback, and we believe that change will just happen over time. I’d say it’s the first step over a longer horizon. We see the potential, as we’ve talked about earlier when we did the acquisition, to expand into other products.

Longer dated US Treasuries, international bonds, probably the next ones on the agenda. The second major aspect of cross selling is really about expanding ICD’s reach, their client reach, and really leveraging our client network, especially in the financial institution space, our salespeople and regulatory infrastructure, especially internationally. And so we’ve already made strides and have some milestones there in terms of expanding the sales footprint. We have our first employee in Singapore. We’ve expanded the ICD presence in the Nordic and Western European countries.

And we’ve leveraged our existing sales force in France to cover clients. We’ve also done a lot of work on the back end, which simplifies onboarding around consolidating regulatory venues in Europe and certain licenses we need in Asia, which we see as a big opportunity as well. So all in all, making progress on the cross sell step by step, recognizing the sales cycle takes time and changing behavior takes time, and feel really confident about the underlying quality of the relationships and retention that ICD is seeing.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Alright. That was all really helpful. Thank you, Steve. Great. Awesome.

Conference Operator: One moment for your next question. The next question comes from the line of Alex Blostein of Goldman Sachs.

Conference Operator: Hey, good morning. Thanks for the question. I want to switch gears a little bit and maybe talk through some of the fee per million dynamics in the rates business, particularly related to swaps. You guys continue to see a pretty nice improvement there. It’s been a driver of revenue growth for the company, of course, as well.

I know it’s tough to predict, so maybe we can hold the mix dynamic constant, especially when it comes to compression trades. But I’m curious how you should think about how we should think about the outlook for fee per million in swaps over the next one to two years more from a structural perspective? Thanks.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Sure. Thanks, Alex. Look, to answer your question really directly from a structural aspect, we feel good that we can maintain or modestly grow the fee per million in swaps from the levels we’re seeing now, absent changes in levels of compression and duration and business mix dynamics, which was sort of loaded in your question. I will say that compression has kind of trended down, which is a positive for fee per million lately. The reality is feet per million is an output, not an input.

And so even though we’re holding all those things constant, product mix will likely be the main driver over the next year or two. And we’re seeing faster growth on a relative basis from some of the higher priced products and protocols that we offer. So higher priced emerging markets and RFM offerings in particular, which we’re bullish on and have talked about not only the growth rate, but there’s tons of room to run just in terms of electronification and ability to solve problems for clients. So I think that’s one of the most strong tailwinds. As we grow, I think there are always natural offsets to fee per million.

Dealers move from variable to fixed plans. Generally, as volumes increase, you see some reduction in fee per million. But net net, we’re constructive on where this plays out. I think the biggest thing that we try to do is be nimble and make sure that we are navigating how the movie plays out by balancing, getting the alignment right with both dealer clients and buy side clients. The ability to grow our revenue line as they are getting better value proposition, that alignment is really what we’re focused on and that allows us to both grow our businesses.

And then the only thing that I would add in swaps, which I think is also really interesting, not directly on fee per million, more around absolute revenue, is really we do see an opportunity in bilateral swaps to electronify that market. Now that’s something that we do think takes time. It’s likely neutral to fee per million. But again, we always talk about fee per million, we’re really focused on growing revenue, so I don’t want to lose sight of the actual pie of having an opportunity to get a step function bigger too. So hopefully that gives you a little bit more color.

We feel good client engagement here and overall it’s one of the opportunities for us where there’s a lot of opportunity to electronify the market and deliver new solutions.

Conference Operator: Yep. No, that’s perfect. And we care about revenue too, so that helps.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Okay. Well, that’s good.

Ashley Sorrell, Head of Treasury, FP&A and Investor Relations, Tradeweb: Thanks so much.

Conference Operator: One moment for your next question. The next question comes from the line of Chris Allen of Citi.

Chris Allen, Analyst, Citi: Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. In your prepared remarks, you noted that you’re seeing higher levels of growth overseas in The US. So I’m just wondering if you could dig in a little bit, maybe talk to where management is focused from a regional perspective, where the best growth opportunities from a regional country perspective? And and what which asset classes or products?

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Yeah. Chris, how are you? It’s a good question. It’s not that, like, our international business doesn’t get as much attention as it should. It’s that we have to but we I think we do have to keep telling that story consistently.

So I appreciate, you know, the question because I think the instinct that Sarah and I have is that that business is really, you know, really hitting its stride. You know, I wanna start by saying, like, you know, Enrico Bruni, who’s been here for, you know, an extremely long time, he co runs the global markets business with with Troy Dixon. They are in sync together, and we feel really strong about that management team and how that business continues to do. So in a simple way, which is always kind of like good for me, our goal has always been pretty consistent globally, which is connect the top buy side clients with the right dealers and try to do it really well, hopefully faster, smarter, more efficient than the phone. Pretty simple stuff kind of, right?

And in a good way, as the markets are more connected than ever, in the second quarter, our international revenue was up over 40% year over year. It’s not just kind of like one region, one product. It’s really broad based growth across rates, credit, ETFs, and repo. So from my perspective, highlights European swaps, kind of starting with that up 40% plus. Emerging market swaps, which has been a big focus for the company up 80%.

APAC swaps doubled. European ETFs and EM credit both showing very strong strength there. And our instinct is European repo is moving in the right direction. So regionally, Europe was up 35%, Asia up over 40%. And we are seeing something I think very important.

Sarah talks about cross selling a lot. We’re seeing a lot more engagement from North America and Asian clients trading international products. That’s important. So that’s up over 15%. In Europe, one of the things that’s important, we’re seeing strong traction with something we call AI Snap.

I’m wondering if there might be a better name for it, but it’s smart dealer selection tool. And so in June, over 10% of risk in GBP and European swaps used AISNAP, lowers transaction costs, which is something very important. We are also expanding AIX there. So specifically speaking across European credit, right now it’s handling about a quarter of our volume and that’s that point that I was making before about helping clients trade bigger, faster and with less market impact, like really, really important principles that the European business has gotten right. So outside of Europe, I think where we’re focused very specifically is Asia and Australia.

So in Asia, we’re expanding across swaps, ETFs and government bonds. We do think Japanese swaps market is, if not right for more electronification, we think it’s really getting there, especially as the BOJ shifts gears. And in Australia, as you know, we’ve been focused there. And so we’re building momentum in swaps and bonds, really pushing deeper into multi trades, and I think importantly, continuing to expand our hedge fund relationships there. On the emerging market side, we’re focused on LatAm and The Middle East.

These are two regions where we see significantly long term upside there. And Sarah talked about ICD. We’re also very focused on growing the ICD brand internationally, which gives us more ways to reach institutional clients. We say this all the time, I like this branding. Meeting them where they are, that’s important.

And so the takeaway, I think we’re making the right moves, really strong team there with the right tools. We’re growing and feel very, very strong about how the international business is set up and very proud of the team there. It’s a good question, and thanks a lot.

Ashley Sorrell, Head of Treasury, FP&A and Investor Relations, Tradeweb: Thanks for the color.

Conference Operator: One moment for your next question. The next question comes from the line of Ken Worthington of JPMorgan.

Craig Siegenthaler, Analyst, Bank of America: Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to focus on digital. Given the passing of stablecoin legislation,

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: how do you

Craig Siegenthaler, Analyst, Bank of America: view stablecoins and tokenized money market funds impacting the short term treasury market and Tradeweb more specifically including ICD? There seems to be a lot of buzz in the rates world, so curious your thoughts there. And Billy, both you and Sarah mentioned investing in digital markets multiple times throughout the call. I think you previously invested in Securitize and the Canton network. Where are you investing now in the digital world?

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Yes, it’s a good question, Ken. As always, like very timely. I think it’s an important question. And so maybe for a second, I’ll start. And Terry, you support as needed.

My instinct is maybe slightly tongue in cheek, I’ll say we’re bullish on digital assets for sure, and we see stablecoins and tokenized money market funds as real game changers, especially now to your point that the regulatory environment is improving dramatically there, right? And so just as a reminder, our platform already supports traditional money market funds. And so what we’re really doing is we’re exploring tokenized versions based on client demand. And from our perspective, what this does is gives us real flexibility to support innovation. I think very importantly, it gives us flexibility to support innovation without disrupting our core institutional relationships.

And so what we are is focused on modernizing the structure really kind of three tenets, three pillars. One is trusted, shareable data, two are smart contracts, and three is tokenization with synchronized data. And so to your point, the regulatory tailwinds are real. The EU and these pilot regimes are for sure kind of paving the way. And in The US, the Genius Act I think gives institutions this kind of clear path to use stablecoins.

And as you know well, I think the Clarity Act take that even further. So we’re focused here. Right? What we’re doing is we’re building this distributed interoperable fixed income ecosystem using permissioned DLT starting with post trade settlement collateral workflows, especially in financing and issuance marketplaces. And so I’m getting a little kind of technical here, but I think it’s important that you hear our language around this.

The goal is really ultimately to be the go to venue for ultimately secondary trading in digital fixed income. And the way you do that is by connecting pre trade execution and settlement to enable capital efficiency, 20 fourseven trading, instant settlement, and then reduced reconciliation. And I think we’re kind of on the right track as we think about this. So Sarah will talk about this also. Very involved, as you know, with the Canton network.

Think extremely highly of them. We’re a validator and a super validator. We’re also exploring new app development where we can earn Canton coins as part of that work. We also know that this is not gonna be a one network world. So we’re spreading our wings a little bit.

We co led the digital asset series C with our friend Don Wilson alongside major players in the space like Goldman and Citadel and DTCC. In Europe, we’re doing things like building a new trading and settlement venue, working very closely with Goldman Sachs, DAP, and exploring The UK’s initiative for digital guilds. So stablecoins are exceptionally important as the cash lag in all of these DLT based workflows. Crypto remains extremely interesting to us. Again, I say this all the time, as an ambitious company, you’re always looking for these new opportunities.

I think the instinct is custody still needs to evolve there. At our core, Ken, and you know this in terms of how we operate, we’re a technology partner. Digital assets to us are this next step in helping our clients trade smarter and more efficiently. And so the instinct that we have here, and Sarah’s gonna pick up all of my rambling in this space, is to expect to see more investments, more partnerships, and without question, we plan to stay really on the forefront of this extremely important evolution in our space.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Now I think you covered it quite well. If I were adding a little bit just in terms of two things to take away, I’d say we’ve been looking at the digital space for a long time. And so our strategy has been it’s an incredibly decentralized space. It’s a place where you can spend a lot of money that can be not productive. And so we’ve been really strategic about choosing the right partners.

Billy And mentioned DRW and Don Wilson, we also have invested in Securitize, which is with BlackRock. We’ve picked partners that we think help develop the marketplace because our track record and our belief is this is going to be something that requires participation across the board. It’s not going to be a singular thing developed in its lone channel. And so the partnerships and the investment strategy that we’ve had, we’re at an inflection point now where people are coming to us as a leader in the space. And those partnerships and investments weren’t just financial in nature.

We have taken our own technology resources and really internalized the technology capability you need to build on VLT. And so when we talk about the Canton network, Billy mentioned we’re a validator and super validator, which means we, from a technology perspective, are really in charge of overseeing those transactions and payments. So it’s very different than being a financial investor. And so for us to take the leap as our markets evolve and become more digitally native or tokenized, we have that type of expertise as a result of these investments in the strategy embedded throughout our technology platform and capabilities across people. So I think that’s maybe just one other layer that we think is really important as it relates to digital.

Craig Siegenthaler, Analyst, Bank of America: Great. Thank you very much.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Thanks, Jen. Nice to hear from you.

Conference Operator: One moment for your last question. The next question comes from the line of Patrick Mobley of Piper Sandler.

Patrick Mobley, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Yes, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. So Bill, you recently made some comments about potentially having an appetite to do some larger M and A. I was hoping you could just expand on those comments, what that could mean, and just as we sit here today, what part of the business do you think could benefit the most from M and A? You talked about crypto there a little bit.

Is crypto an area where you think growing out your digital asset presence through M

Craig Siegenthaler, Analyst, Bank of America: and A makes sense? Thanks.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Yeah, it’s a very good question Patrick. How are you? Hope you’re doing great. As I think about your question, let start by saying it kind of this way for a quick second. When I stepped into the CEO role about two and a half years ago, sometimes it feels like two and a half decades ago, I really wanted to, you know, very truthfully kind of work hard starting with Sarah.

And then also, as you know very well, Patrick, you know, I have a fortunate because I have a great a great board. But really to sort of like prioritize this kind of like very clear strategic framework of for capital deployment and one that has to align tightly with our long term vision and leverage our strengths. I also want to stay significantly collaborative and coordinated with David and LSEG senior management team. So I think we’ve done that really well. So over the past two years, we’ve really executed on three very important acquisitions, Yieldbroker, Rate Fin and ICD.

Each transaction from our perspective was targeted, additive. I think it did expand our capabilities across regional access, what we describe as workflow automation, and then Sarah talks a lot about institutional cash management, like three really important pieces of the businesses from our perspective. But in parallel, and I think this is a little bit about what you’re describing, we also entered into these what we describe as strategic partnerships with key market infrastructure players and innovators. And that’s the Goldman Sachs DApp, that is the kind of Don Wilson, the Canton Network piece, Alpha Ledger. Sarah mentioned BlackRock Securitize.

And really what this does, as you know very well, is position Tradeweb at the center, hopefully near the center of this kind of structural change in the digital ecosystem. This is I think like pretty ambitious stuff here. Importantly, and we’re very, very focused on this from an integration standpoint, Yieldbroker and RatesFin now are fully absorbed into the business. And by the way, we do remain on track and Sarah talked about this, we’ll remain on track with ICD. I think from my perspective very clearly these integrations are and this is something I’ve really worked hard with my board on.

These integrations are really kind of critical proof points. We don’t just like acquire assets, we operationalize and scale them within the platform. And that I think is a very, very important comment, right? So from a financial standpoint, I believe we’re operating from a position of strength. Sarah talks about like strong free cash flow, the cash reserves, etcetera.

And I think what this does, and we talk about the concept of really momentum building on momentum, I think it gives us real flexibility to be opportunistic while we always talk about very clearly maintaining discipline. Ambitious companies, right? So when we talk about bigger M and A, I think what it does is it really reflects my openness, the company’s openness to be more transformative around opportunities. It’s always going to be acquisitions that could expand our total addressable market. I talk a lot about the kind of network effects.

And this could mean extending into new asset classes, I think geographies. We’re gonna stay very open minded on this. I mentioned the concept of culture a ton. And as we look at this framework that I described, I think the culture of the company that we’ve identified or potentially identify is a high priority for us. Feel very, very strongly about culture that lives and breathes inside of Tradeweb.

And so that will always sort of be an important piece of information as Sarah and I and the team address these kinds of things. I’m sure you have some

Ashley Sorrell, Head of Treasury, FP&A and Investor Relations, Tradeweb: I way to think out

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: think you covered it. Just compliment that by saying it’s great to be in a position of strength, which we feel like we are, but also reality is it makes the bar high. And we are really disciplined about it fitting our strategic eye, but also financial discipline. Just because we have $1,000,000,000 of cash on the balance sheet doesn’t mean that we don’t have the rigor around making sure the acquisitions are adding something from a revenue growth prospect, really talked about TAM, and clearly our goal is to have them be accretive within a couple of years. So I think the whole package works together and we’re certainly spending a lot of time on using our advantage to really capitalize on the opportunities we see.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Thanks for the question, Patrick. Good to hear your voice.

Patrick Mobley, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Yeah, thank you.

Conference Operator: One moment for the last question. The last question comes from the line of Dan Fannon of Jefferies.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Great. Thanks for squeezing me in. So Billy, just in terms of regulatory reform, how should we think about potential capital relief from SLR and other potential regulatory changes at the largest dealers and maybe what that means for velocity in the rates market if any change at all? Yeah.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Sure. Maybe I’ll chime in and then you wrap it up. I’ll quote Billy, so it feels

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: like it’s

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: nice to hear from you, Dan. I would say big picture, it’s a great time to be in these markets and in markets businesses. And Billy, I think you mentioned this earlier when we were answering questions. Our bank partners have never been stronger, more plush with cash and capital. And they are looking for ways to warehouse more risk and in some cases even enter new trading areas, which is good for our clients.

And at a high level, SLR plays into that. We think changes with that ratio could be one of the most impactful to increase both the resilience and the liquidity of the Treasury market specifically. It means the banks are going to have more capital available to hold US Treasuries. That in turn facilitates more trading, potentially lowering yields, and improving market depth. Overall, we think that’s a real positive.

The SLR ratio, I think we talked about this last quarter too, not only does it reduce the required percentage of capital against their bank assets, but it’s a risk insensitive capital ratio, meaning all securities, corporate bonds, treasuries with different maturities, they all contribute equally to SLR exposure. So today, banks have to hold the same level of capital potentially for lower revenue margin business, maybe in US Treasuries market making, as they would for higher revenue margin businesses like high yield credit. And so generally, as that constraint is relaxed for banks that were bumping up against that, we think that in particular allows them to really hold those larger treasury positions. I think from our business perspective, obviously being a leading player in rates, that’s a great thing. And also, I would expect it could lead to increased swaps activity.

So, there’s a lot of different places we think this is a positive. SLR specifically, we saw impacts in COVID when the Fed exempted treasuries from SLR and you saw in those cases, very specifically SLR constrained banks increased this treasury position. So I don’t think this is totally theoretical. We have some empirical evidence around it. But all in all, would say, look, whether it’s regulatory change or just where the banks are positioned, generally speaking, we think the rates environment is quite constructive.

Bill, you really talked about it.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Yeah. And then spot on, if we were going to say, Sarah, like, what’s the environment that we like? We want the banks to be strong. We want the volatility in the marketplace to create high levels of profitability for their businesses, and we want the citadels of the world to continue to move forward and keep everyone on their toes. And that becomes a great kind of recipe for the further and the next leg of electronification in our world.

And that’s how we kind of see things unfolding. Because as strong as the kind of banks are and as well as they’ve done and as good as everyone feels about this of this movement to your question about kind of less regulation, the advancement of technology and the ambition that firms like Citadel bring to the equation are just straightforward and one way. And that has the added effect of really creating the level of awareness that you need for the further investments around technology growth. And that we see as a very, very important almost second part of your question. But as always, it’s a great one and thanks very much.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Thanks.

Conference Operator: This does conclude the question and answer session. I’ll now like to turn it back over to Billy for closing remarks.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Thank you all for joining us this morning. As always, if you have any follow-up questions, please feel free to reach out to Ashley, Samir and the team. Have a great day. I know it’s busy. Thanks all very much.

Sarah Ferber, CFO, Tradeweb: Thank you.

Billy Hult, CEO, Tradeweb: Bye bye.

Conference Operator: Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.

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

Latest comments

Risk Disclosure: Trading in financial instruments and/or cryptocurrencies involves high risks including the risk of losing some, or all, of your investment amount, and may not be suitable for all investors. Prices of cryptocurrencies are extremely volatile and may be affected by external factors such as financial, regulatory or political events. Trading on margin increases the financial risks.
Before deciding to trade in financial instrument or cryptocurrencies you should be fully informed of the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite, and seek professional advice where needed.
Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. The data and prices on the website are not necessarily provided by any market or exchange, but may be provided by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual price at any given market, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Fusion Media and any provider of the data contained in this website will not accept liability for any loss or damage as a result of your trading, or your reliance on the information contained within this website.
It is prohibited to use, store, reproduce, display, modify, transmit or distribute the data contained in this website without the explicit prior written permission of Fusion Media and/or the data provider. All intellectual property rights are reserved by the providers and/or the exchange providing the data contained in this website.
Fusion Media may be compensated by the advertisers that appear on the website, based on your interaction with the advertisements or advertisers
© 2007-2025 - Fusion Media Limited. All Rights Reserved.