Flywire at Goldman Sachs Communacopia: Strategic Growth Amid Challenges

Published 10/09/2025, 22:22
Flywire at Goldman Sachs Communacopia: Strategic Growth Amid Challenges

On Wednesday, 10 September 2025, Flywire Corp (NASDAQ:FLYW) participated in the Goldman Sachs Communacopia Conference, where CFO Cosmin Pitigoi shared insights into the company’s strategic direction. Flywire is navigating a complex environment with a focus on software-driven value and payments. While the U.K. market shows promising growth, challenges persist in Canada. The U.S. market remains unpredictable due to policy changes, but Flywire is committed to disciplined growth and operational efficiency.

Key Takeaways

  • Flywire is expanding its presence in the U.K., now a larger market than the U.S., driven by the WPM acquisition.
  • The U.S. market faces uncertainty, but payment values and retention rates are stable.
  • Canada experiences pressures, while Australia performs better than expected.
  • Flywire’s travel and healthcare segments show strong growth, supported by recent acquisitions.
  • The company focuses on long-term value, balancing strategic investments with cost efficiency.

Financial Results

  • Flywire reported larger payment values and increased retention in the U.S.
  • Revenue growth in the U.S. is expected to remain flat but outperform the market.
  • The U.K. market is expanding rapidly, with growth outpacing the company average.
  • Canada faces a dramatic impact on international students, while Australia exceeds expectations.

Operational Updates

  • The WPM acquisition accelerates Flywire’s growth in the U.K. market.
  • The Sertifi acquisition enhances the travel vertical, with growth above 35% post-acquisition.
  • Flywire’s B2B segment, powered by the Invoiced acquisition, is growing faster than the overall business.
  • Healthcare wins include integrations with Epic, driving meaningful growth.

Future Outlook

  • Flywire is focused on long-term strategies rather than short-term headlines.
  • The company aims to maintain margin expansion and operational excellence.
  • Capital allocation strategies include M&A and share repurchases, with $100 million already executed.
  • Flywire sees significant potential in EMEA and APAC regions, with low penetration rates and vast Total Addressable Market (TAM).

Q&A Highlights

  • Cosmin Pitigoi emphasized the importance of international intellectual capital and the role of AI and data acceleration.
  • Discussions covered the integration success of Sertifi and Invoiced, and the strategic focus on healthcare and travel verticals.
  • Flywire’s commitment to disciplined growth and shareholder value was reiterated.

Flywire’s strategic focus on software-driven payments and international expansion signals its commitment to growth. For a detailed view, refer to the full transcript below.

Full transcript - Goldman Sachs Communacopia Conference:

Will: All right. We’re getting started with the next session. We’re very excited to have Cosmin Pitigoi, the CFO of Flywire, here. I’m not going to try to pronounce your last name, although I think I could probably do it if I tried. Cosmin stepped into the role of CFO in 2024, and we’re delighted to have you at the conference again. What, how many years running now? 1, 2?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah, 2.

Will: 2 years.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Appreciate having you know me here. Thanks, Will.

Will: Awesome. All right. You’ve been in the CFO role for a year and a half. Can you walk us through why you’re still excited about the Flywire business and what are some of the key learnings since you joined?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. No, that’s a good question. I think if I was to split it up between what am I excited about, there’s a lot of the same things that I was excited coming in. First, I think our motto of software driving value and payment is even more relevant today than ever, especially for our sort of vertical, vertical specific, businesses. Second, as we all talk about AI and data and those capabilities, which are sort of passion areas for me, I think those are even more exciting kind of acceleration ideas on top of this. I think obviously there’s been a lot of discussion about the macro environment since I started. I remain excited as somebody who’s experienced this myself as an international student and moving across borders.

I feel that the value of being able to move across borders and the value of international movement of international sort of intellectual capital is really important to win in the tech space. I think in terms of learnings, to get maybe a little bit philosophical, I suppose it’s especially going through tough times, what I’ve learned as a CFO, but also as a leader, the team matters a lot.

Will: Mhmm.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: I am quite thankful and grateful for having an amazing team at Flywire. Not just the executive team and the board, but also the Flymates have incredible resilience, and we’ve all rallied together through this time. As you’ve seen, we continue delivering results, and the future as far as we see it, we continue to win share in our market.

Will: Great. Yeah. I’d also add the transparency as we’ve been going through the last couple of years of volatile times has been great. Appreciate all of that. It’s been great to be on the ride with you.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Uh-huh.

Will: Maybe we can talk through some of the international student visa trends. We’ve all been very hyper focused on the U.S. student visa trends, and know it may be a little early to talk through those, but maybe walk us through how we should interpret some of the macro data points that are coming out and hit on what you’re seeing today.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I’ll start with saying because I know we talk about the U.S. all the time. U.K. is now a larger market for us, and we’ve become increasingly much more diversified. I’ll start with that. Second, as far as the U.S., in terms of the guidance, maybe start there. What I guided to was an assumption that we will see, so it’s about roughly half of our revenue, the international revenue in the U.S. is from first-year students, which would be more correlated with the F1 visas, which we’re still waiting to see the latest results. I’d assume 20%. Even with that, because of the success we’re having on the domestic side, I’ve assumed roughly a flat revenue growth for the year, which, of course, would mean that we’re doing better than the market. What we’ve actually seen, we’ve now gone through the U.S. peak almost entirely.

While it’s still early, still talking to our universities and clients, what we’ve seen is performance that’s in line or a bit better than our expectations for the U.S. That’s been good to see. It’s sort of two insights, if you will, related to that. First, we’re seeing larger payment value, kind of tuition, holding up pretty well, which could suggest both a combination of longer type undergraduate type studies doing well versus maybe smaller programs, and the different types of schools performing better to drive that higher payment value. The other thing for us internally, which is good to see, is we’re seeing increased retention, and so that first-year cohort is becoming smaller. As we continue to obviously push for that retention approach, we’re seeing that in the U.S. Now, having said that, as you know, we’re going through the U.K. peak right now.

We’re still early, and we still have a lot of the quarter to go through and a lot of the month, but even in the U.K., we’ve seen trends so far be in line to also a little bit better than our expectations, which again, it’s good to see. Again, lots of macro and other aspects still playing out, but it’s good to see that those markets are doing in line or better than we expected.

Will: That’s great. The U.S. retention trends, is that a continuation of trends that you’ve seen in historical years, or have you seen a kind of a noticeable uptick in retention through successive years?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: I would say, more recently, we’re seeing it, it’s a bit more visible, and obviously, it ties well with a lot of the actions we’ve taken. For example, even once we add an SFS or a domestic capability for our school, we do see even the retention on the international side increase as you process more of those payments. Engaging with the higher level, the C-suite at universities, the agent engagement, all those things kind of drive that utilization for us. It’s been a good mix to see.

Will: Perfect. Okay. That brings us to Canada and Australia. What’s your latest thinking on these geographies and how they could play out?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. Canada, Australia, let’s start with Canada, which still remains, I think, the one market that no other market has followed as dramatic of an impact on their international students as Canada. There we continue to see pressures in terms of the way we framed it from a guidance perspective. Canada and Australia, I said roughly 15% of the business, and initially, earlier in the year, we had assumed it would be down 30%. What we’ve seen since then, Australia is actually performing better than we expected in the first two quarters. It’s good to see that. I think as everyone’s kind of watching what’s happening on the ground in Canada, the understanding and realization is that that’s probably not the model to follow.

Will: Right.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: To some extent, Australia now actually just announced slightly increased cap numbers for next year. Again, encouraging to see that at least so far this year versus what we had assumed initially in the guide, it’s playing out a little bit better. We still need to watch that. Both seem to be, hopefully, you know, we’ll see less of an impact. Canada, in particular, as you know, we have that timing element of STS to some extent.

Will: Yep.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: That’s something that even though the first half of the year, Canada was a larger kind of headwind, as we exit the year, that headwind should be a little bit less. Again, demand remains under pressure over there, and we’ll be watching closely what the government does.

Will: Got it. I guess maybe to wrap up some of the macro commentary, what in your mind is kind of the biggest source of uncertainty in terms of your visibility going forward?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I mean, if you look across the big four, I would say, you know, Canada starts to, you know, hopefully be less of a headwind, might still continue to be a headwind, depending on the demand side. Obviously, in Australia, again, while it’s good to see the caps, there’s still sort of that pressure on the caps. The U.S. probably, I would say, remains kind of the big area of focus and questions, even though, again, it’s playing a little bit better than we thought. We need to, obviously, for us, the focus is long term, and we’ll be watching to see what any policies are. Obviously, there’s a lot of headlines.

Will: Right. Right.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: We try not to necessarily get, you know, distracted by the headlines or watch the policy and the data. I would say U.S. is a big focus area as far as kind of how that’s going to play out. U.K., they’ve put out a white paper, something that we’re looking at to understand. Again, it’s a proposal. It’s a conversation, and we’re going to watch the environment. So far, as you know, U.K. has been doing quite well overall, and not a ton of pressure.

Will: Yeah. Maybe let’s continue on the conversation with the U.K. I think back in 2022, you completed the acquisition of WPM, which was a really significant kind of cross-sell or accelerant to the traction in the U.K. market. Where are you on the execution of the top line synergies that acquisition brought you? Maybe if you could talk about the momentum that gave you to go chase the rest of the market.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. U.K., I think, now that we’ve talked about U.K. being larger than the U.S., I think it’s important to also understand that, you know, the summary would be that we’re still early, I think, in the U.K. Even with the success you’ve seen for us in the U.K., we’re early. Here’s kind of the way to think about it. If I go all the way back to when we started with the U.K. business, yes, it was focused on cross-border, but in the U.K., we also had this idea of going in, unlike in the U.S., with both cross-border and some of the domestic capabilities. We call that our one-door approach, which was the goal to try to manage as many of the key flows that really matter to us from a payment perspective. WPM helped, to some extent, with that progress.

Even there, I think we have a lot of opportunity. The way to think about the path forward is the U.K. is a bit different than the U.S. market from that perspective. There’s a lot of different integrations with the finance system software in the U.K. We’ve now built a capability with one of the main providers there that we’ve mentioned. That’s sort of allowing us to go after or accelerate about a quarter to about a third of the market through this integration.

Will: Wow.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: It’s a very unique kind of capability. Think of in the U.K., whether it’s the sort of real-time student billing, it is not something easy. We sort of expect it in the U.S. It’s not something that’s easily available. Also, that reconciliation into the system of record, which these integrations would allow us to do, that’s also a differentiating factor in addition to all the other capabilities that we bring. I’d say we’ve already, like I said, we’ve got this integration with this finance service system, and there’s a few more that we’re working on. The plan is to obviously kind of go in line and continue growing, and the value prop is there for both the education, the institution. Looking ahead, I would say the U.K., we’re still early on. This opens up a good portion of a large portion of the market.

I think generally we can assume U.K. grows higher than kind of our company average going forward for the foreseeable future.

Will: That makes sense. When you talk about opening up, you know, a quarter to a third of the market, what is the timeline on seeing that?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: I’d say it’s all multi-year. These are all sort of more enterprise type sales. I would say to some extent that helps. Because we’ve been growing so fast, maintaining or even having faster growth, obviously, there’s a very large business. There’s some law of large numbers, if you will, that plays in that, but we’re still growing much faster than the market overall. If you think about the U.K. last year, I think the visas were down, and we still grew multiples faster than the business.

Will: Yeah.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Significant growth, despite kind of the market, kind of the conversation.

Will: Great. Just rounding out the geographical discussion, we always have so far focused on the big four geographies in the business. It seems like you’ve made a lot of progress outside. Can you just talk about, you know, one, I’m sure there are some kind of substitution effects between the geographies with all the volatility across different major education markets. More importantly, what has the customer acquisition been outside of the big four markets? If you had to take a guess, any guesses on what the fifth will be over time?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. That’s a good question. I think for us, for now, what we are seeing and one of the trends we’re watching is this diversification away from the, you know, top four markets. I think students as they’re looking at the uncertainty, they may choose to go somewhere else. We’ve built a great business in EMEA and APAC outside the top four. Roughly speaking, just to size it, it’s, you know, in the low to mid-teens of revenue, total revenue last year is from, kind of non-top four, you know, EDU, revenue. It’s growing faster. I think if some of these trends kind of continue, you could see those areas growing faster. I think the markets, I’m not going to pick one, but I would say, you know, I’ll just sort of talk about a few that we’ve heard talking to our agent side.

Will: Sure.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Saying where students already are looking at. In Europe, you would have Germany, France, Spain are three that are major markets for us, and then on the APAC side or LATAM, you have Mexico, you have Japan, Singapore, and other markets where you can see the fact that there’s interest in those markets, those schools, and an opportunity to actually capture some of this share. We’ve invested. We have people on the ground. We’re investing. It’s an area of investment for us from a go-to-market and product capability, and we know we have a unique product capability for those markets in particular. We’re quite excited. Of course, I would say in general, we have what we call our pay any product, which is sort of a white label. We’re available to pay in pretty much any market if you need to accept payment. That’s another thing that we have available.

Very excited about that area. Of course, it’s a big, big opportunity for us.

Will: Got it. I wanted to ask a high-level question on domestic or SFS. You signed a number of schools to the SFS platform year to date in the U.S. and U.K. I was wondering if you could talk about how this impacts the trajectory of the business and just what your expectations are for normal course SFS wins over time.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. Maybe we start with the U.S. and move to the U.K. there. In the U.S., we’ve signed, I think it was about 9 schools so far with the product. We’ve, you know, the pipeline is actually building. Obviously, the way we think of it is, you know, and this is a very relevant product right now. As you can imagine, schools, universities are struggling from an education kind of, you know, budget pressure. Our, you know, the ability to consolidate vendors, for example, is a good opportunity to save dollars and automate manual flow. That’s one of our core kind of capabilities. In addition to, as you look at our competitive kind of environment in the U.S., our cloud native, mobile native kind of, you know, experience is very different built. We’re, that’s very much resonating.

When we do go from a cross-border to a domestic kind of account in terms of sizing, it’s about, we’ve talked about a 3 to 5x kind of multiplier on revenue depending on sort of how many international students you have and that kind of stuff. It’s a meaningful multiplier. Those 9 accounts, again, it sort of depends when they go live between kind of peak now and peak later. It’s more of a first half. You sort of sign some of these, and they go live over the next, you know, few, sort of several quarters depending on that timing. We’ve also built a pretty healthy pipeline. That’s going well in the U.S. In the U.K., as I’ve said, with this new integration that we’ve built, we’ve announced 4, call them design partners that help us then make sure that we adjust the product.

As we build the other integrations, we’re quite excited that we should be able to build. Those have gone live already. We know we have a pretty fast kind of turn if we, you know, depending on when we work with the school. Obviously, that’s usually where, you know, if they need our help, we’re there to help. Quite excited about both. The domestic opportunity is obviously a big one for us, you know, across not just those markets, but certainly in those markets is major.

Will: Great. I want to ask a question on organic growth that can try to strip aside some of the geopolitical impacts on the business. If you were an investor, what would you look at to gauge the underlying growth of the business? Is it new schools signed up? Is it the number of underlying students signed up, tuition dollars? What are you gauging to measure kind of the execution internally, when you’re having this sort of external same-store sales impact forced on you?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. So, I mean, I think from a growth algorithm standpoint, it hasn’t really changed for us. You still have, to some extent, yes, you have the macro tuition components of it, which we know, obviously, there’s a pressure on the macro. Internally, you know, and UCF adding 200 clients, you know, with pretty healthy ARR, you know, overall, every year. We’ve got the ramp new sales. We have sort of the new product and cross-sell, and so the land and expand, as we’ve talked about, is still there. What I’ve tried to size this year for everyone is to provide a little bit of a sort of an estimate of what the macro pressure is. We’ve given a kind of mid to high single-digit pressure from macro, and that is a combination of Canada, a bit of Australia, and the U.S. all putting pressure on that.

We try to look at, we’d like to try to look at that from a sort of market perspective to understand what is that pressure from visas in particular. Obviously, add that back to our kind of guidance, you get to a higher growth rate, but again, that’s the kind of question, is that macro.

Will: Yeah.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: The macro impact.

Will: That is the next question. When we roll forward that kinda mid to high single digits, maybe if you go geography by geography, where do you have visibility to some of that pressure easing versus where do you think it’s likely to kinda remain or where it’s too close to call?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I mean, I think in Canada, like I said, I think it was obviously heavily negative in the first half, starts to dissipate a little bit. I don’t know if it necessarily goes entirely away. That’s part of the demand destruction question, but certainly gets a little bit better than the first half as we exit the year. Australia, to some extent, remains a question. We’ve guided to down 20% across both Australia and Canada. Again, at least externally, what we see from Australia is that they’ve put the caps up a little bit, and maybe it’s a sign that they realize the value of the students. For us, it’s not just seeing what a government announces or a policy that’s put out there. We also have to watch how does it actually play out in the market, how does it play out in our numbers.

There’s multiple effects that can take sometimes, obviously, as we’ve seen with Canada and others, it can take years to kind of play out. I’d say Australia is still, though, it seems like it’s a bit better than we thought, obviously, because we’ve now done better. The U.K., I’d say, again, something we’re watching. We’ll see kind of where it is. That leaves us with the U.S., which is, I think, one of the major sort of questions. Like I said, at least so far, for this peak season, it’s done kind of in line, a little bit better than we thought, which is certainly good. For us, it’s more of a with the multi-year.

Will: Right.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Kind of impact. I would go back to my first point, which I think in the U.S. still remains the market where everyone wants to study. If not, they certainly want to work here. One of the lowest unemployment rates, even recently, still versus other markets. It is still the area where people want to come and work.

Will: Got it. That’s great. I think that’s a good place to leave it on education. Why don’t we pivot over to the travel business? I still remember when travel was in that kind of mid-single digits range on revenue, and it’s sustained really impressive growth over the past couple of years. I think up over 50% in 2024. Can you talk about who the clients are, what’s driving the growth, and your visibility to sustaining those elevated levels?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. Travel, as you know, sort of origin story was out of the, if you will, almost the B2B kind of innovation lab, where we saw some of these early travel clients, especially destination management companies, basically struggle with the same issues that we were solving on the education side. Regulatory or, you know, to reconcile the system of record and, you know, being able to split payments. What we saw and what we went after actually grew the business during COVID, which is hard to imagine you build a travel business in the middle of COVID, but.

Will: Right.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: It’s exactly at that point where your clients need you the most, a little bit like what we’re seeing with the schools now. That was kind of our existing business where we’re solving with this kind of very solid product-market fit approach, especially in international. You know, we’re approaching it that way. We’ve got, obviously, after the destination management companies, we’ve got tour operators and ocean experiences and other subverticals that now we’ve added. That sort of business that was growing at 50% is still growing quite healthy this year. Now as you add Sertifi to that, I would say as you look into next year, travel will be not quite a quarter of the business, but it starts to approach that size of a business. Obviously, a very big, very healthy, and much faster growing vertical for us than, again, the company average.

You know, very much a strong sales pipeline and performance in that area. That team is doing really well.

Will: Great. I want to talk a little bit more about the Sertifi acquisition. Back in February, you announced this with earnings. How’s that integration been going? Can you just talk about what that business is, how it differs from the core travel business, and how you see it driving growth going forward?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. So Sertifi, you know, I think we’re even more excited today than we were even when we bought it. I think, as you probably have seen from some of the disclosures, the business itself was very healthy. Growth is sort of above 35% the first couple of quarters in the disclosure. So very strong growth. It very much fits in our M&A playbook. So the software, so what Sertifi does is basically digitizes some of those hotel, like the hospitality workflow specifically. Think of it, events and catering as an example. They’ve built these very unique relationships with the major clients. Our existing travel business, we obviously were with the smaller, smaller type, kind of providers in travel. The Sertifi team has built relationships with the biggest brand names.

When we bought them, it’s, you know, we got, you know, obviously a much, you know, breadth or the breadth of, kind of client and then the depth of product immediately kind of expanded in both directions. The way I think about Sertifi and the synergies there, so in itself, as we said, the existing business is growing well. That’s sort of layer one of the cake. Layer two is Sertifi itself is growing well, you know, organically. Even before we acquired it, they had started down the path of payments monetization. Obviously, there’s a lot of capabilities that we can, we will help them build. We’re working on that. The third is the synergies between the two. That’s kind of the third layer of the cake, which is, and we called out three of them specifically. First is the sort of roughly $3 billion volume that we can monetize.

Again, they started down the path. We’re going to obviously help them there. Second is about $100 million from going international. Sertifi is pretty much entirely U.S. You know, our existing business was almost entirely non-U.S.

Will: Yeah.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: It is very easy to see the synergies. In the last earnings call, we gave a stat of around 12% of their new sales actually came from international already. Early on, I would say that’s the easiest place to go. Obviously, you need to put some people on the ground to help with that, but that’s great to see. The third synergy was about $50 million of just cross-sell from both Sertifi to our legacy business and vice versa. There is lots of opportunity. That team is very exciting, executing very well. Overall, I think we are very excited about the travel vertical for us.

Will: Great. I wanna shift over to B2B. You referred to B2B as kind of a sandbox for testing out new products and services. Could we see B2B evolve into something more resembling the travel vertical over time? Are you starting to see signs that you’re anywhere closer to an inflection in that part?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: I think B2B is a call that, yeah, the innovation lab or kind of ideas lab for us, where we try to find these other verticals that look like ones that we have. Insurance and others, franchising and other areas like that seem like an opportunity. We try to approach it. Obviously, B2B is such a broad term. We try to approach it, as you’ve seen us in the past, in a very disciplined way. We’re going into these subverticals and looking at them. I would say the addition of Invoiced has really powered up that business. We’re now about to hit the anniversary of that acquisition, and it’s doing great. M&A playbook, it’s the buy the software, monetize the payments.

We’re seeing that demand, and it’s solving, I think, a lot of the use cases around accounts receivable, tying into a system of record and the capability that Invoiced has. You can call it AI or not, as it’s a machine learning capability to help you see that. B2B, again, growing multiples faster than the business. As you saw last year, we continue to expect, again, a smaller base, but growing similarly fast in the future.

Will: Great. I guess that leads us to healthcare. I think there was a bit of a COVID hangover in this part of the business, but it’s really picked up more recently. You talked about a really sizable new win coming on board in the second half, considering we’re in the beginning of September. I was wondering if you have any more visibility into that rollout, and it’d be great to hear just how things in general are going in that segment.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I think the healthcare team, I know it’s been sort of a journey, but I would say the excitement in that channel, if you will, that team is very excited about the wins. Obviously, the big win that we announced, but now also the upsell with Endeavor, both of which I think we’ve said are sort of, you know, integrations with Epic, are big wins that, you know, on a base of, call it, $30 million of revenue, these are meaningful growth drivers. I’ve guided this year healthcare in the high single digits. That assumes only some portion of this goes live. So far, it’s still early, but so far, well on track with those integrations, with the rollout for those large clients, with the one large client. It will be more of a next year kind of dynamic, but so far, so good.

The team’s doing well in terms of making sure that we serve that client and we expand. Again, we changed a lot of things. Obviously, we changed in terms of the sales and the approach and the sales team, but also the product and expanded the product suite to include a number of other payment acceptance methods. There’s just a lot there, I think, that is to be excited about for the first time in a long time, and the team is executing really well.

Will: Great. All right. Maybe switching to special topics, the theme of the summer was stable coins, and it’s been a hot topic on conversations in the broader cross-border space. Are there any parts of the business where stable coins can either improve the client experience or improve the internal kind of treasury managed efficiency of Flywire?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I mean, we’re looking at all opportunities around it. We have announced the partnership recently as our new Chief Payments Officer is looking at this. I would say, you know, for us, I see it as an opportunity. It’s an incremental opportunity, especially in markets where you have either regulatory or high inflation or the lack of stability around the local currency. You have an ability with the stable coin to maybe do something or just in general with crypto to help with that. That would be incremental to us. From a cost perspective, our payment rails are already typically efficient and cost efficient, so it’s not a huge difference from that perspective, but I think it’s an incremental capability. We’ll obviously listen to our clients and as we see the interest, we’ll certainly always offer, you know, pay however you want.

I think for now, I see it as an opportunity in those markets that are most impacted. Ultimately, we see the value that we bring in the software, like I said upfront, in the reconciliation system of record, those capabilities, the KYC and compliance. Those are the capabilities that I think differentiate us in terms of how we price our products.

Will: Great. You also announced a couple of quarters ago an operational review. Could you kind of level set with everyone what you’re looking to accomplish and just where you are in that journey?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I think, in general, it’s a board-level exercise, and it’s comprehensive. Everything’s on the table. We’re looking at every area of opportunity to streamline the business, drive long-term shareholder value. Whether it’s on how we run and which areas we invest in from a geo, from a product perspective to be much more streamlined and looked at. Again, as you know, different growth rates in the past will then, this is an opportunity for us to then look and see, like, where do you invest? There’s areas that we just talked about that we’re investing a lot more and making those trade-offs. On the cost side, obviously, that’s the other side of this, just becoming more efficient. I would say investing in scale. How do you build so that you can double the size of the business and be able to still scale with a lot lower cost?

It’s both a growth investment along with the scale investment, and you have an opportunity to look at things. It’s not something you do for a long period of time because these are pretty big changes like we announced with the new consolidation of the payments team and the Chief Payments Officer.

Will: Mhmm.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: These are organizational and other changes that you can do in this umbrella, but it’s sort of comprehensive, and that’s focused on long-term value.

Will: Got it. I guess on that similar vein, I think despite all the revenue impacts from the macro environment of the past couple of years, you’ve done a great job maintaining that margin trajectory. I think the revisions to EBITDA have been much less severe. Just, has there been any element of pull forward? Do you still feel good about the ability to continue to sustain margin expansion, particularly once the revenue growth trajectory comes back?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. I mean, look, our business has natural scale, and we’re historically a very disciplined business. I see that continuing. Obviously, we’ve beat every expectation historically. I want to look at when I look at sort of growth versus margin, I want to make sure that we continue winning. We have this great business, and you have very low sort of penetration with huge TAM opportunities. We are going to continue to ensure that we’re investing in the areas where we see that opportunity. I look at it on a gross profit dollar kind of view, and I look at OpEx growing well below that gross profit dollar. Expect margins to continue to increase within that framework.

Will: Got it. Lastly, thoughts on capital allocation. You’ve been transparent about wanting to be acquisitive. That showed through this year with the Sertifi acquisition. You’ve leaned into share repurchases as well. Can you update us on appetite for M&A and what conversations and pipelines look like, and how aggressive you could be on share repurchases in the near term?

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Yeah. Look, we have a great M&A playbook, a great corp dev team. We’ve identified, obviously, we’ve done well there in terms of execution, but we’ve done two acquisitions in the last 12 months. We’re obviously focused on integrating those. We’ll always look at the environment. I would say on the stock buyback, obviously, we’ve done about $100 million out of the $150 million announced in expansion. Still feel the stock is dislocated. We are going to continue to look at that again. All of that within a very disciplined IRR, versus cost of capital and kind of driving long-term value for the shareholders.

Will: Great. I think that basically takes us to time. Cosmin, thanks so much for being here. Really appreciate the conversation and appreciate your support of the conference.

Cosmin Pitigoi, CFO, Flywire: Awesome. Thanks, Will. Appreciate it. Thanks, Emily.

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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