Clearwater Analytics - Earnings Call - Q3 2025
November 5, 2025
Executive Summary
- Clearwater delivered a strong first quarter as an integrated company: revenue $205.1M (+77% YoY), non-GAAP gross margin 78.5%, and adjusted EBITDA $70.7M (+84% YoY); both revenue and EBITDA exceeded internal guidance, with revenue also above consensus. Hedge fund demand and margin efficiency from GenAI and integration were key drivers.
- Q4 2025 guidance was set at revenue $216–$217M and adjusted EBITDA $73M (34% margin), and FY 2025 guidance increased to revenue $730–$731M and EBITDA $247M (34% margin), signaling confidence in continued execution and synergy realization.
- KPIs remained durable: ARR $807.5M (+77% YoY), GRR 98%, and NRR 108% (down modestly from 110% in Q2 on lower AUM tailwinds and upsell), with organic ARR accelerating sequentially to $534.4M (+$21.7M QoQ).
- Catalysts: margin expansion ahead of expectations; new Q4 and raised FY guidance; deleveraging and buybacks; expanding cross-sell in alternatives and risk (70% bookings growth); and 800+ AI agents deployed across >$10T client assets supporting operational transformation.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong beat vs internal guidance: revenue topped the high end by >$1M and EBITDA was >$5M above guide; EBITDA margin expanded to 34.5% (+140 bps YoY) on integration and GenAI efficiency.
- Durable KPIs with broad-based bookings: ARR $807.5M (+77% YoY), GRR 98%, and momentum across insurance, asset owners, asset managers, and hedge funds; two recent seven-figure risk deals highlight Beacon traction.
- GenAI scaled in production: 800+ AI agents delivering 90% reduction in manual reconciliation, 80% faster report generation, and 50% faster financial close; management: “the use of GenAI is continuing to accelerate… we achieved 78.5% gross margins for the integrated business”.
What Went Wrong
- GAAP profitability impacted by integration-related costs and interest: GAAP net loss of $(10.5)M; GAAP gross margin declined YoY to 65.6% (Q3’24: 72.9%) despite non-GAAP margin stability.
- Net revenue retention stepped down to 108% from 110% in Q2, driven by lower AUM tailwind and lighter upsell contributions; hedge fund NRR weighed on consolidated expansion.
- Debt remains elevated post acquisitions ($838.9M total debt), though management is actively deleveraging ($40M repaid in Q3) and repurchasing shares ($8.9M within announced $100M buyback).
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the CWAN Third Quarter 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. I would like to welcome Kamil Mielczarek, Head of Investor Relations, to begin the conference. You may proceed.
Kamil Mielczarek (Head of Investor Relations)
Thank you, and welcome everyone to CWAN's Third Quarter 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. Joining me on the call today are Sandeep Sahai, Chief Executive Officer, and Jim Cox, Chief Financial Officer. After their remarks, we will open the call to a question-and-answer session. I would like to remind all participants that during this conference call, any forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, expressions of future goals, intentions, and expectations, including in relation to business outlook, future financial and product performance, expectations for the acquisitions of Enfusion, Beacon, and Bistro, and their expected benefits and similar items, including without limitation, expressions using the terminology may, will, can, expect, and believe, and expressions which reflect something other than historical facts are intended to identify forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties, including those discussed in the risk factor section of our filings with the SEC. Actual results may differ materially from any forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements in order to reflect events that may arise after this conference call, except as required by law. For more information, please refer to the cautionary statement included in our earnings press release. Lastly, all metrics discussed on this call are presented on a non-GAAP or adjusted basis unless otherwise noted. A reconciliation to GAAP results can be found in the earnings press release that we have posted to our Investor Relations website. With that, I'll turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Sandeep Sahai.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Thank you, Kamil . I'm pleased to report that Q3 was a very strong quarter for CWAN. The near-unanimous adjustation of our strategy from clients, partners, analysts, and employees is very inspiring, and we look forward to continuing to build the investment management platform of the future. We delivered revenues of $205.1 million, a 77% year-on-year growth. ARR reached $807.5 million, also up 77% year-over-year. Demonstrating the durability and predictability of our business model. I don't use the word "stunning" very often, but it is hard to use another word. For an adjusted quarterly EBITDA of $70.7 million. Up sequentially from $58.3 million in Q2. This was exceptional for several reasons. Number one, adjusted EBITDA for Q3 was 34.5% versus 32.1% in the second quarter. It is helpful to remember that the lower margin Enfusion business was a part of CWAN for only a portion of Q2.
Therefore, the expectation was that the overall margin would decline in Q3. Instead, it improved by 240 basis points. Number two, gross revenue retention, or GRR, for the combined company was 98%. An excellent metric that can be attributed to the exceptional work done by the operations teams. Number three. Our gross margin performance tells an even more compelling story. We achieved 78.5% gross margins for the integrated business. Hitting our targets meaningfully sooner than the two-year timeline we set with investors. In another significant achievement. Gross margin for the steady-state clients of the core business of Clearwater reached 82% in Q3. The use of GenAI is continuing to accelerate and is outpacing our own assessment of the margin improvement it can drive. We are working on several levers that allow us to continue identifying use cases for GenAI and improving the overall margin of the business.
Number four. Another data point that was very impressive. Compared to the standalone Q3 margin in 2024, the integrated business delivered an additional 140 basis points of EBITDA in Q3 of this year. Think about that. We integrated two businesses with meaningfully lower profitability profiles and still expanded our margins very meaningfully. It's all about the team, relentless execution, and the power of the platform. I want to now spend some time discussing the incredible opportunity we have to grow our business into an industry powerhouse. There are several vectors of growth worth noting. Number one, our TAM has grown to roughly $23 billion and is balanced across geographies and markets. This is not a passive opportunity. There is real need driving a yearning for next-generation technology. The move to alternative assets, globalization of portfolios, increased need for risk and performance.
Increasing complexity related to regulatory and compliance needs, all result in the need for technology like ours. Number two. Our platform gives us a very deep technological moat. Our ability to build and deliver an open, modular, extensible front-to-back platform is, we believe, largely uncontested. Finally, number three. A highly favorable competitive landscape leaves us with multiple avenues for growth. This stance and our competitive position should provide an extended runway for us to continue growing. Let me talk about our current achievements. Number one. While it is becoming harder to identify the revenue associated with each individual business, core Clearwater grew close to 21% year-to-date over last year. That resilience is what we expect. Number two, we expect Enfusion to grow 12% for the year and are very energized by the continued booking execution in Q2 and Q3. Number three, Beacon continues to perform very well.
That was our number one priority. Ensuring that the core platforms and businesses continue to grow. It is reassuring to see the progress we have made in the last two quarters. Growth in Q3 booking was very evenly spread across insurance, asset management, asset owners, and hedge funds. For the first time, on a year-to-date basis, asset management accounted for the highest booking, matching the opportunity size as defined by available time for each market. In new client acquisition, we signed a global multi-billion hedge fund with a record three-month sales cycle, while also creating expansion opportunities across asset classes. Our wins in the hedge fund market during the quarter were very balanced between launches and conversions and geographies: North America, Europe, and Asia. Insurance continues to do very well, powered by our strength in alternatives.
LPX, MLX, Risk, and Prism all had a strong quarter, reflecting the growing breadth of our solution. We are establishing ourselves as the partner of choice for the asset owner sector. We welcomed a leading global AI platform to CWAN. Our relationship with another global AI leader continues to flourish. In the government market, Texas Treasury Safekeeping Trust chose us to account for $30 billion in state assets, winning against multiple providers. Our differentiated ability to address complex alternative assets with LPX and fund accounting was the key differentiator. Internationally, our expanding global capabilities continue to drive growth. A global asset manager selected our premium close and income analytics solutions, while expanding with us into their U.K. operations, leveraging our U.K. GAAP and Solvency expertise. The Latin American Reserve Fund, a regional financial institution supporting central banks through credit facilities and international reserve management, chose CWAN.
Finally, I could not be more excited about our risk, valuation, and performance capabilities. In just the last week, we signed two seven-digit deals with leading financial institutions. Cross-selling has become in earnest, and we entered Q4 with the best pipeline we have had in our history. We expect cross-selling to power growth in Q4 and in 2026 and beyond. Overall, our growth plans for each platform remain the same, and we approach 2026 with renewed confidence. Specifically, the growth plans are for Core Clearwater. Number one, insurance. Continue to win new logos and accelerate wins in Europe and Asia on the strength of our recent wins there. Beyond new logos, providing a more comprehensive solution with a back-to-base motion is a key driver, and we expect to provide solutions for alternative assets, comprehensive risk and valuation capabilities, and a front-middle office-backed solution.
Number two, combining the capabilities of the Enfusion and Clearwater platforms, we are seeing very high traction with asset managers. We continue to invest and grow in that segment. We expect this platform to continue to mature. It will become the platform of choice for the industry. Helping global asset managers provide a comprehensive reporting solution to the clients is another avenue of continued growth. Number three. Asset owners continue to be a very important growth sector. Corporates, trusts, foundations, state and local governments, REITs, pensions, and regional banks are all significant opportunities for our platform. Number four. Executing against opportunities across geographies, markets, and products will allow us to continue our current growth trajectory. Those were the vectors of growth for Core Clearwater. Now let's talk about growth of the Enfusion platform. Number one, we have a dedicated product and engineering focus.
We want to ensure client delight across the entire spectrum of clients. Number two, there is significant time available. We expect the core business to accelerate. With the addition of Beacon and Wiltshire, we now have an outstanding solution for various subsegments, including global macro hedge funds and funds that focus on risk-aware investing. Number three, we have begun work on the commercial model, and we expect that to have impact in 2026. Number four, finally, we are building a strong back-to-base motion that includes providing risk, client reporting via Prism, and expanded reconciliation using our internal tool HELIOs. Each platform's growth is very important. The driving force behind the combination of these businesses was our ability to build and deliver an integrated, open, modular, and extensible front-to-back platform.
One that has the capacity to disrupt our industry and dramatically alter the efficiency and operations of our clients. With that aim in sight, we have started to make progress on, number one, a single security master. Number two, a single comprehensive data platform that incorporates all asset classes. Number three, a single interaction layer that allows clients to talk to the data. Number four, a single interchange layer that allows effective internal and external connectivity. This is incredibly exciting. We expect to bring these to market in H2 2026 and early 2027. Now let's talk about generative AI. We believe that generative AI represents the most important technological advancement of our lifetime. We embraced the technology early in 2023, used it to drive very meaningful gross margin improvements, and have brought this technology to our clients.
We have built out a team of GenAI experts who are actively automating internal and client processes. We have partnered with global leaders like AWS to build our own agentic platform. In fact, AWS recognized us as an early adopter of Amazon Bedrock Agent Core, which was made generally available last month. Unlike experimental AI tools or copilots layered on legacy systems, CWAN GenAI is fully integrated and deployed into production on a front-to-back platform. Our platform hosts over 800 AI agents created by internal teams and clients and is available to act across more than $10 trillion in institutional assets. We are, we believe, uniquely positioned to lead our industry in bringing the full potential of GenAI to our clients. It is fair to ask, why are we so uniquely positioned?
Generative AI leadership rests on three foundational pillars, which are very difficult for our competitors to replicate without many years of investment. First is the modern architecture of our platform. We have a single-instance multi-tenant architecture where all the data flows into a single logical data store. All our clients are on this single platform. A decades-long history of ingesting data, aggregating it, and reconciling it are all recorded on the platform. This makes it relatively easy for GenAI agents to learn. The agents are only as powerful as their ability to learn. Without this foundation, you cannot properly leverage generative AI. Our competitors will need to rebuild their entire tech stack to reach parity. Second, the breadth of data on our platform is extensive. We connect to approximately 4,000 data sources.
This ecosystem of complex data permissions, website scraping, cleaning, and unifying thousands of data sources, and incorporating constantly changing accounting, tax, and regulatory rules, this would be incredibly difficult to replicate without many years of investment. The analytics related to valuation, risk calculations, accounting values, and performance are generated by our platform, providing valuable insights for the CWAN GenAI agents to learn from. In addition to this, details about many alternative assets are not publicly available. If any one of our clients wants us to track and account for it, we add it to our security master. What we already have is a production-grade generative AI platform, live in the market, transforming how our clients operate. While others are still talking about what GenAI may do, we are already executing at a global scale. Our clients have seen 90% reductions in manual reconciliation.
80% faster regulatory reporting, and 50% faster financial close cycles. We believe that it is not a 6- or 12-month lead, but a multi-year competitive moat, positioning us to capture significant market share. Before closing, let me review the strategic and financial merit of the acquisitions we did. Strategically, the expansion of our TAM, the ability to provide an open, modular, and extensible platform, has changed our position in the market and dramatically enhanced our ability to cross-sell and compete with all providers of legacy technology in our industry. Financially, with an approximately 15% dilution in share count, the quarterly revenue has grown 77% year-on-year, and EBITDA has grown 84%, partially from our organic growth, but the majority of it from these acquisitions. We have already improved the margin and profitability profile of these businesses to a level close to ours.
Expect to improve growth over the next year and a half. We see this as incredibly accretive to our shareholders and very valuable to our clients. We are very excited about the two recent board appointments of Dr. Mukesh Aghi and Bas NieuweWeme , as well as several key leadership hires across multiple functions. We are very proud of the progress we have already made and the platform we are building for our clients. With that, I'll hand the call to Jim to dive deeper into our financial details.
Jim Cox (CFO)
Thanks, Sandeep. Q3 2025 marks a milestone for us as we delivered solid results with the first full quarter contributions from Enfusion, Beacon, and Bistro acquisitions. We achieved revenue of $205 million. That equates to year-over-year growth of 77% and exceeded the high end of our guidance by over $1 million.
The hedge fund market was a key contributor to the revenue upside this quarter, reflecting the growing confidence clients have in the breadth and depth of our combined offering. Annualized recurring revenue, or ARR, at the end of Q3 was a record $807.5 million. Again, up 77% year-over-year. While our combined net new ARR growth lapsed several large wins, we are excited about our trajectory as organic ARR improved to a multi-quarter high. On an organic basis, ARR accelerated to $534.4 million, an increase of $22 million from June 2025. Stepping back, I wanted to share that as we've gone through the process of integrating these businesses, I've become significantly more confident in our competitive positioning. The tide has turned, and the internal goals that we laid out are coming to fruition. Clients were saying this in words when we started. Now they're voting with their wallets.
Our work is not yet done, but we feel we're firmly on the right path forward. Let me provide some more details about our growth, starting with revenue retention. The gross revenue retention rate was 98% at September 30, 2025, for yet another quarter, as clients increasingly recognize the strategic benefits of consolidating their investment management software around the CWAN suite of offerings. We have achieved 98% or better gross retention in 26 of the last 27 quarters. That is nearly seven years of consistent 98% gross retention. That is the definition of durability. Our net revenue retention rate was 108% in Q3, a slight decline from Q2's 110%, driven by a lower contribution from AUM growth and asset-based upsells, as we lapped several large wins in September 2025.
We remain confident in the path to 115% net revenue retention, supported by the drivers we laid out at our investor day. Let me discuss the drivers of our NRR expansion and provide color on this quarter's performance. We have four drivers of NRR growth that we manage and measure. The first key to achieving NRR of 115% is maintaining gross retention of 98% across the entire business. As we stated, we achieved 98% this quarter across the entirety of the business. The second element is price increases and commercial model alignment. At scale, we expect 4%-5% contribution in the long run. In the third quarter, we achieved just under 3% net increase across the entirety of the business. As Sandeep mentioned in his remarks, we've begun the commercial model work for the new businesses and expect to see the impact of these changes in 2026.
The third element is the cross-sell of incremental products. In the long run, we aspire to have up to 8% of our growth derived from the cross-sell of solutions across our clients. The impact of cross-sell in the current quarter was just under 3%. We have obviously the most opportunity here, and we're excited to say that we are seeing good momentum in this area. In this quarter, we saw a 70% increase in bookings for our core cross-sell modules, which include LPX, MLX, Prism, and Risk. This growth does not yet factor in contributions from what I call our hero products, the Accounting, Portfolio Management System, OEMS, and Risk, for which we're ramping up those cross-sell motions and seeing great opportunities for Q4. The fourth element of NRR growth is upsell of existing products to existing clients.
Many clients choose our solutions because they know we will invest, and we will enable them to grow their business, and consequently, we grow with them. In the quarter, upsell was just under 3% on a consolidated basis compared to our longer-term target of 5%. These trends in upsell were evident when looking at NRR within our target markets. NRR in insurance was the strongest, followed by strong performance in asset owners and asset managers. Our current NRR in the hedge fund market weighed on the company's combined net expansion rate. We are excited about the potential for improvement as we evolve the commercial model to align with the growth in that market and offer our risk offerings to our hedge fund clients. The final element to NRR expansion is other, which typically captures other movements in NRR that are not included in those four metrics.
Historically, we've experienced a small uptick in growth from AUM expansion at our clients. In our September 2025 results, this improved NRR by less than 1%. Compared to nearly 3% in the June 2025 quarter. Although a small contribution from AUM and other, and a lower contribution from upsell, led to a sequential decline in net revenue retention, we saw significant improvements in the strategically important drivers, such as new product cross-sell, gross retention, and uplift within our broader portfolio. Now let's turn to profitability. Our Q3 gross margin reached 78.5%. Flat year-over-year. In line with the 2027 targets, not Q3 2025, 2027 targets, we set at our investor day. This showcases the incredible progress the team has made in integrating the businesses and the benefits we are seeing from utilizing GenAI. Adjusted EBITDA was $70.7 million in the quarter, more than $5 million above our guidance.
EBITDA margin expanded meaningfully to 34.5%. That is 140 basis points better than the Q3 2024 EBITDA margins. This EBITDA achievement reflects the efficiency being generated within the business, which is important to all investors because it provides additional strategic optionality for all of us. For example, this strong EBITDA enables us to both pay down $40 million in debt in the quarter and repurchase more than 800,000 shares of CWAN stock at the same time. This strong EBITDA evidences our confidence in rapidly deleveraging the business. If you annualize our Q3 EBITDA, our first full quarter as a consolidated basis, our net debt to annualized Q3 EBITDA leverage ratio is 2.7x, already comfortably below our targeted 3x leverage. Now turning to guidance, for the fourth quarter of 2025, we expect total revenue to be $216 million-$217 million, representing a year-over-year growth rate of 71%-72%.
For the full year 2025, we expect total revenue to be between $730 million and $731 million, representing year-over-year growth rates of approximately 62%. We expect fourth quarter EBITDA to be $73 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 34%. That results in expected EBITDA of $247 million for the full year 2025. That is a full year margin of 34% for 2025, and that is 180 basis points better than the 2024 margins, even after including multiple businesses with significantly lower margins. I think we can all agree that any question about margin synergy can be put to bed. Now we are squarely focused on growth of the combined C1, and we are very optimistic about our opportunities. In summary, we are truly better positioned than ever to capture this massive growing total addressable market. Despite closing these acquisitions just one quarter ago, our gross revenue retention and margins.
Are again near all-time highs. Meanwhile, our comprehensive product offering, compiled through both our organic build and inorganic investments, puts us in the best position we have ever been to obtain market share. I do not know if it is because the demand environment has improved overall or the fact that we have so many different entry points with our clients and prospects. What I do know is that our client conversations, our pipeline, and the cross-selling we are seeing today is the richest I have seen. This gives me incredible confidence and a clear path for accelerating growth. With that, I will pass it back to Sandeep for closing remarks.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Thank you, Jim. We have made incredible progress in integrating the businesses, and I am very excited about the opportunity to build the leading platform of our industry. We believe that we are well on our way to doing that. Thank you, and we look forward to answering your questions.
Operator (participant)
We will now begin the Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to remove your question, press star followed by two. Again, to ask a question, press star one. As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking a question. We will pause here briefly as questions are registered. The first question comes from the line of Dylan Becker with William Blair. You may proceed.
Dylan Becker (Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, guys. Appreciate the question here. Maybe. It seemed like a key theme here, Sandeep and Jim, was around kind of the quality of the pipeline and enthusiasm going into the fourth quarter. I know we signed a large deal last quarter.
It sounds like there are several others that were signed here and maybe others that are progressing throughout the balance of the year. Can you just kind of give us a general sense or update on maybe any particular segments of the market that you're seeing elevated strength? It feels a little bit more broad-based, but kind of receptivity into that unified platform vision and how maybe some of those early proof points that you guys are bringing to bear in the market are starting to resonate and drive conviction in that pipeline activity. Thanks.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah, thank you for the question, Dylan. I think booking across the quarter was very evenly spread, I think, as I said in my remarks. If you were to ask for which areas do we see the most growth in, one is alternatives. The core alternatives of LPX and MLX and Risk and Prism, we found that grew like 70% year-on-year in terms of booking. We continue to see a very expanded pipeline for that. Alternative continues to be a driver across the world. The second thing we're most excited about is Risk. When we went out and acquired Beacon, we were hopeful, but we also thought that these would have long sale cycles. What we have been able to do is get seven-figure deals much quicker than we thought. If you look at the pipeline and the opportunity for Risk, I think it is tremendously higher than we had expected. The pipeline for alternatives continues to be really high. Those are the two I would call out. I think the expansion in insurance for Europe is another positive one.
I would be remiss if I did not add the last one, which is hedge funds did really well in Q2 and backed that up by doing really well in Q3 and are forecasting a really good Q4 after Q1 was not good. Q1 booking for hedge funds was much slower than we thought. Q2, Q3, and now Q4, we expect really good numbers. Jim, did I miss anything that you added?
Jim Cox (CFO)
No, that is it. You are right, Dylan. It is across every vertical. And across QS.
Dylan Becker (Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. That is helpful. Maybe, Jim, for you, I think kind of the implied performance and maybe some of the revised Enfusion guide would suggest that the core business continues to grow pretty steadily at that 20% clip. I know that has been kind of an internal barometer for you guys. Could you just help us kind of reconcile that versus the 17% for ARR growth in the quarter? Is there kind of any nuance to be aware of there? I know these are some large, lumpy deals that are subjective to when they come online, but maybe reconcile what feels like a pretty healthy kind of sustained core business momentum here. Thank you.
Jim Cox (CFO)
Yeah. I think we feel great about the revenue in the quarter. I think also the acceleration of the organic ARR within the quarter on the Clearwater business was strong and nice to see. You combine that with what we talked about of the recent booking in the pipeline, and I think we feel very good about that. Sandeep did mention that the Enfusion business in Q1 was slower but had great Q2 and Q3.
It takes a while for that to flow in both through revenue and ARR in that side of the business. I think if you look back at what we put up at our September investor day and how those pieces fit together, it was a very—it was, again, obviously a strong Q3, and Q4 looks very similar to that. It looks very similar. Very helpful. Thank you both. The impression that we put up at that time.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from the line of Alexei Gogolev with J.P. Morgan. You may proceed.
Alexei Gogolev (Executive Director)
Thank you very much. Hi, Sandeep. Hi, Jim. I wanted to double-check and follow up on Dylan's questions just now. How should we think about the ARR growth of 17% of the core business? Obviously, it's coming off a high pace. Looking into 2026, how does that dynamic. Compare to your comments about the strongest pipeline you're seeing?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. Actually, this is Sandeep. Thank you for the question here. Look, I think that the business has trended toward doing larger deals, and that does create a little bit of lumpiness in ARR when it comes online. We do expect these to match though over time. I think if we look at the overall business, we said revenue grew 77% year-on-year, but ARR also grew 77% year-on-year. That can be a little bit of a difference, and that can come from a year-end growth and the lumpiness. Over time, I'd like to say you would expect that if we continue to grow the core business at a certain rate, then the ARR would match it. It just does not match quarter-to-quarter. I think we obviously had two quarters of $18 million each of ARR growth. I think Q3 had $22 million. You should expect to see some acceleration there in Q4, I would think.
Alexei Gogolev (Executive Director)
Now that we're sort of already in November, is it possible to give an estimate of organic ARR for the full year?
Jim Cox (CFO)
I think we'll do that for—you're saying for 2026? I think we'll do that in the February call, Alexei.
Alexei Gogolev (Executive Director)
Okay. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from the line of Michael Infante with Morgan Stanley. You may proceed.
Michael Infante (VP of Equity Research)
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to ask on Enfusion, obviously early days in terms of the actual conversations with customers on the pricing and contract structure revision. How are you sort of thinking about the timing and the magnitude of the potential uplift in 2026? I mean, obviously, on a run rate basis, we all know the four points. I'm just curious how quickly you expect to sort of act on these revisions. Obviously, you have your own sort of history in terms of executing on this. I'm curious how you would frame that for us.
Jim Cox (CFO)
Yeah, I think we're underway in the program, and the target of that program is to roll out the new pricing model for all new clients starting January 1, 2026. All new clients at that point in time. We'll go through that, and then we will roll through the existing client base [following that program].
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah, I would just add to that, our intention isn't to raise prices. Our intention is to align value with the price a client pays, and this approach is very similar to what we did with Clearwater about two and a half years back. That's point number one. Point number two is when you have devised a new commercial model, you simply try and implement that with all the new clients. That is step two. Step three, you go back and see where it is most misaligned, and you start to go back and talk to those clients and change contractually what the pricing model is. I think, like we said in our remarks, we expect that to take all of 2026. By the end of 2026, we should be substantially done. Just like I think in the last time we ran this program, we took a year to do it, and we expect sort of a similar pace. It is a nuanced thing. I do not think it is everybody you can follow the same process. You cannot. Different for hedge funds, different for asset managers, different for large hedge funds. You want to do this with care. That is a process that Jim and a whole team sort of kicked off this quarter.
Jim Cox (CFO)
I think just the other thing to add, when I talked about the NRR, we talked about it being roughly 3% in the September 2025 numbers and our goal of that being 4-5%. That is not about increasing the percent. It is about broadening the applicable base of ARR that is subject to those periodic pricings.
Michael Infante (VP of Equity Research)
Makes sense. Just as a quick follow-up, you have obviously signed several deals of late delivering some pretty material EBITDA upside. Maybe just in terms of the trade-off between that and more aggressively allocating incremental implementation resources to speed up some of the revenue go live, how are you thinking about that? Thanks, guys. Yeah.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. Thank you. We were literally talking about that, is should we continue to make a harsher trade-off? I do think that the trade is not between dollars. It is with the use of generative AI and accelerating onboarding using that. Eventually, we feel quite strongly that the benefits we have seen already in being able to use generative AI to onboard clients faster is what is going to deliver a result in a more sustained way. More self-service, more agent-driven onboarding. I think that's sort of more of the future rather than should we go hire 20 more people to help onboard clients faster. We do think it's about the tech. We're focused on the tech. Could we spend some more money on marketing and things like that, perhaps? That is something which I think Jim and I will have to think about. For the rest of the quarter here as we look at 2026.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from the line of Peter Heckmann with D.A. Davidson. You may proceed.
Peter Heckmann (Managing Director, Equity Research)
Hey, good afternoon. Just wanted to follow up that reasonably difficult comparisons with the prior year in terms of ARR growth at the core Clearwater in the third and fourth quarters last year. Just in terms of thinking about the run rates for Enfusion, if we're looking for about 12% revenue growth this year over what they reported last year, you still feel like I know it's going to take some time, but do you still think that can accelerate by maybe a couple hundred basis points for 2026?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. I would just say that very little, very, very little of the thesis has changed. We believe that the Enfusion platform is robust. We feel it is scalable. We feel it is stable. We feel we can drive growth. There are two ways we think about growth. One is dedicated engineering and product teams focusing on just hedge funds. Separating that out, that has been done. We now have the leadership to drive that. Would that drive 12% or a little bit more? Yeah, we expect that. We also think, like Jim said, a commercial model to be put in place over 2026, and that can drive growth in revenue. The third thing, which is perhaps the most exciting thing for the client base, is to go take back Risk to the hedge fund world. To take back managed services and client reporting. We think all those three products can be sold or solutions can be sold. We've had good early success with that in Q3, so we feel really good about it.
We do believe that the core business can grow and perhaps accelerate from 12. We feel the commercial model can help, and we feel selling more products to our current client base in terms of risk, managed services, and client reporting all can help contribute to growth. Now, what's the magnitude of all these three things put together? I think we'll have probably a better view of that in the February timeframe when we guide for 2026. I think we also said that this will take us about a year and a half. We'd ask for re-acceleration coming out fully, so to speak, in 2027 in the first half. None of that has changed. I do want to say that we are very pleasantly surprised and happy about the momentum of booking in Q2 and Q3.
Does all of that show up in ARR? No. It does take some time for it to go from a contract and a booking into ARR and revenue. We are very happy, very happy with what we achieved in the last quarters.
Peter Heckmann (Managing Director, Equity Research)
Okay. That's helpful. Just on Bistro, I guess you feel like the functionality of Bistro is applicable to all of your current insurance carrier customers. I guess when would you expect to secure a contract with the first couple of customers on that solution?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. Thank you. Look. I feel it is all about the alternatives. I say that a little bit slightly hyperbolic, but I do think it's about alternatives and risk. Those two are huge. I think Bistro helps us provide sort of best-in-class visualization and reporting for alternatives. I think it's strategically incredibly important.
We did have the work of taking it out from that environment to the Clearwater environment, and that has been largely completed. Integrating it with the rest of the core platform, that's underway. There is some work needed here. Is it the right thing to do? Creating depth in our offerings around alternative assets? Without question. Is it driving growth already? No, it's not. It is out of that environment into the Clearwater environment. I think we're going through the steps, and we do expect to see traction of that in 2026.
Peter Heckmann (Managing Director, Equity Research)
All right. That's helpful. Thank you.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Thanks.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from the line of Max Persico with RBC. You may proceed.
Max Persico (Equity Research Associate)
Awesome. Thanks for taking the question, guys. I've got two quick ones here.The first, on the international business, is there any way to quantify how that business performed in the quarter, maybe relative to the overall business? Any metrics you're willing to share there? Second, on the core Clearwater retention, I know last quarter we disclosed that it was stable at 114%. Could you comment maybe just directionally on how retention kind of trended in the quarter on the core business?
Jim Cox (CFO)
Yeah. Let me do these two quickly. Number one, you can see in our investor deck the split between ARR by GEO, and you'll see that it's consistent in Q3 as it was in Q2. As far as the core Clearwater, all of those metrics we've given are across the entirety of the business. Obviously, AUM and Upsell are pieces that are mostly within the core Clearwater business. That's the delta there.
Do you want to go to the next one? I'm just writing that.
Max Persico (Equity Research Associate)
Okay. Thanks for taking the question.
Jim Cox (CFO)
Thanks. Good. Next question.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from the line of Brian Schwartz with Oppenheimer. You may proceed.
Hi. This is [Edon Gutkin] sitting in for Brian Schwartz. Thank you for taking our question. If I'm curious, in terms of adoption of the combined company assets, is there a particular end market or geography that sticks out where customers are adopting the combined assets first?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. I think that. The one we were pleasantly surprised with is asset management now becoming the largest. When you look at YTD on a year-to-date basis, the largest booking industry. I mean, that has never happened. As you know, we've wanted that to happen for a long time only because that is the largest scam we've had.
That is one thing we feel strongly about. I think the right way to think about it would be a lot more traction in risk-related offerings up and down the stack. I think that is one big change. Alternatives is the other big one. In terms of what has already happened and where we already see traction, I would say asset management is meaningfully different. I would say risk is meaningfully different, and alternatives are meaningfully different. Kind of Jim with the response on that.
Jim Cox (CFO)
That is good. That is good.
Thank you. Are you seeing any responses or changes to competitor behavior in the market given the company transformation at Clearwater?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. I think we get a lot more phone calls. Look, I think comparatively. This puts us in a position to compete with absolutely anyone and up and down the stack, up and down the size. Is it all together yet already? No, it's not. There is work to be done to bring all these things together and to sort of get the growth from it. But comparatively, do people or clients, more importantly, and analysts sort of appreciate that we have a chance to build something very special? I think that's evident to most people. I think we talk about generative AI quite a bit. And we feel really strongly that the fact that we have a single instance multitenant model with a single security master, our ability to deploy and use generative AI is just meaningfully different. Look, we really like our competitive environment right now. I'm not sure that's the right thing to say, but we like it.
Yeah. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from the line of [Maura Ahn] with Goldman Sachs. You may proceed.
Hi. This is [Maura Ahn] for Gabriella. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to follow up on the 70% increase in bookings for the core cross-sell. I know that you've discussed in the past kind of a path to penetration for LPX specifically across all the Clearwater customers. Can you just level set us on where you are in the current penetration and adoption for modules and how you see the white space for more adoption?
Jim Cox (CFO)
Yes. I think we're making really strong progress. And over the next few years, we hope to have LPX across our entire insurance client base. I think we're a few years away from that, but making great progress on that.
Right behind that, where we're quite nascent, is the product we call MLX, but it's really mortgages, private credit, private debt. That is, again, we're seeing great momentum in there as well, as well as within Prism and with some of our risk solutions. I do see LPX kind of flowing through to the entirety of our insurance client base within the next few years, given the adoption that we're seeing there. The next thing will be, okay, what else can we do? What could we do for our asset owner segment or other folks around that?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. If I can add one thing. When you just think of the overall market, sort of level setting at the highest level, and you think of accounting as being of a certain size, what you will find is that risk is also of similar size.
You'll find that alternative assets, which is what LPX and MLX and bank loans, all of them do, is sort of of a similar size. Front to back, the middle back office, middle front office is also of a similar size. The way to think about this contextually is if we have a certain ARR in accounting, you should be able to generate a similar ARR in alternative assets, a similar ARR in risk, and a similar ARR in front middle office. That is why we've always talked about this one to four basis points. The reason we sound excited is, yeah, now we're seeing some numbers. We're seeing a 40% growth year-on-year. We also see 2026 to have similar or even faster growth in booking in this segment.
We have talked about one to four basis points for a period of time, but to see it come to fruition in terms of signed contracts is frankly what you sort of, I guess, detect the excitement about that.
Great. Thanks. On the VKB deal that you discussed last quarter, bringing together components of Clearwater, Enfusion, and Beacon, can you talk a bit about how that integration is trending and any takeaways as you compile the more unified platform that you intend to go to market in QH 2026 and 2027?
Yeah. These are the two perfect questions we found. Yes. We are also very laser-focused on bringing this to bear in front of a client. Obviously, we feel strongly that we've done it. Other clients have already integrated these platforms, so our ability to integrate them should be high. Obviously, it's not live yet.
I think it's expected to go live to the middle of next year. It's proceeding quite nicely, and we expect to deliver that in time with the functionality they expect. Yeah, we have put it out there saying we're going to go deliver it publicly, and we expect to do that.
Great. Thanks, for the color.
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
Next question comes from the line of Yun Kim with Loop Capital Markets. You may proceed.
Yun Kim (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. Thank you. Sandeep, a lot of moving parts here, but if we focus on the core Clearwater business. Alternative asset was a key driver for you guys a couple of years ago. I know that you mentioned alternative here and there in the call today, but if you can update us, at least qualitatively, how much of your new bookings is driven by alternative assets today versus a couple of years ago and how that has been trending?
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. Firstly, I would just say to you that alternative assets is a big vector of growth. So that's just point number one. Like I was saying, over time, we expect that alternative asset booking to be, or ARR, to be similar to the accounting ARR. I don't have a number straight up for alternative assets and how much it is driving, but I don't even know what I can say. But we used to talk about 24%-25% of our booking coming from alternatives. And we know it is, at this point, north of 35%.
It is to give you a sense of context. We do expect that to continue to accelerate, though. We do think more and more of our booking is going to come from alternatives and risk. You should continue to expect that in 2026 and beyond. Yeah.
Jim Cox (CFO)
The number we talked about was year-to-date 70% increase year over year. That includes more than just alternatives, but that is kind of, look, alternatives is a big piece of that. If that helps contextualize it for you.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
The 70% was Q1, Q2, right?[crosstalk]
Jim Cox (CFO)
Yeah. Year-over-year growth in Q3.
Yun Kim (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. On the agentic AI front, it looks like there is a lot of progress there. Based on the separate press release today. If you can remind us, what is the pricing model there? What is the go-to-market motion? Is that primarily focused on existing customers? If you can share any insights from some early adopters. Thanks.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. The best thing you can find is gross margin. Look at the gross margin and look at the movement. I think we had talked about 80% for a long time, and we changed that to 82% gross margin. We also said today in our remarks, I think, that the core Clearwater business, the steady-state clients, are already at 82% versus an expectation they'll get there in three to four years. We feel very excited about our ability to drive efficiency in our company using generative AI. That is one section. The second area where it can have major impact is enhanced client reporting. We think about client interaction with the data, and what is going to happen, and clients are already using it as such, is clients' ability to talk to their data.
That is an area which will show up, I think, in additional booking for products like Prism. It is not like we are selling generative AI as, "Here's GenAI giving this amount of money for it." That is not how we are doing it. We are taking products clients can use and pay us for that. Therefore, it is just next generation of client interaction which clients are doing. The only other one I would point out is, because of the success we have had in our internal processes, we have taken this technology to clients, and they are building processes which automate the internal things. We talked about 90% improvement in manual reconciliation and things like that. At a user conference, I think, in September, we had a client actually present what they have done with our technology and continue to sort of use our platform for.
I do not think we are charging separately for generative AI as in, "Hey, pay me this for generative AI." It is more about the products we are building using generative AI, which we are charging clients for.
Jim Cox (CFO)
We have been tracking engagement. Engagement since the Connect conference has been just extremely impressive, the growth in engagement there.
Yun Kim (Managing Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay. Great. Thank you so much.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Thank you too.
Operator (participant)
Due to the interest of time, that was our last question. I would now like to pass the conference back for any closing remarks.
Sandeep Sahai (CEO)
Yeah. Just want to close by thanking all of you for your continued interest in Clearwater. I think we had a very solid quarter, the integrated company for the first quarter. We look forward to the quarter four and 2026 with a lot of confidence. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
That concludes today's call.Thank you for your participation and enjoy the rest of your day.