Jack Henry & Associates - Q2 2026
February 4, 2026
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good morning, and welcome to the Jack Henry second quarter fiscal 2026 earnings conference call. Today, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance during today's conference call, please signal for a conference specialist by pressing the star key, followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note that today's event is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Vance Sherard, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Vance Sherard (VP of Investor Relations)
Thank you, Chris. Good morning, and thank you for joining the Jack Henry second quarter fiscal 2026 earnings call. Joining me today are Greg Adelson, President and CEO, and Mimi Carsley, CFO and Treasurer. Following my opening remarks, Greg will provide an overview of our quarterly results and key performance metrics, along with updates on our strategic initiatives. Mimi will then discuss the financial results and updated fiscal 2026 guidance provided in yesterday's press release, which is available in the Investor Relations section of the Jack Henry website. Afterward, we will open the lines for a Q&A session. Please note that this call includes forward-looking statements, which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. The company is not obligated to update or revise these statements.
For a summary of risk factors and additional information that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking statements, refer to yesterday's press release and the Risk Factors and Forward-Looking Statements sections in our 10-K. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures such as non-GAAP revenue and non-GAAP operating income. Reconciliations for these measures are included in yesterday's press release. Now I will hand the call over to Greg.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Thank you, Vance. Good morning, and I appreciate each of you joining today's call. As always, I'd like to begin by thanking our associates for their hard work and commitment to our success by doing whatever it takes and doing the right thing for each other and our clients. Our focus on people-first culture, service excellence, technology innovation, and well-defined strategy, supported by consistent execution, continues to set us apart in the market and is reflected throughout my remarks. I will share 3 key takeaways from the quarter, then provide additional detail about our overall business. First, our financial performance. We produced record second quarter results with non-GAAP revenue of $611 million, up 6.7% over last year's second quarter. Our non-GAAP operating margin was 25.1%, representing a robust 355 basis points of margin expansion over last year's Q2.
Second, our sales performance. Our core sales team delivered an outstanding quarter with 22 competitive core wins. Of the 22 wins, four were financial institutions with over $1 billion in assets, and 15 included core digital banking and card solutions. We have continued to see an increase in trifecta wins over the past 12 months. 68% of new core wins this quarter included digital and card processing, as compared to 45% in Q2 fiscal year 2025. The recent announcement of core consolidation by one of our competitors has positively impacted our core payment and complementary solution sales pipelines. We expect our historical success rates within this base of clients to continue and most likely accelerate based on what we know today. It's worth noting that given the timing of their core consolidation announcement, our sales success in Q2 was minimally impacted by the news.
It had much more to do with our ability to continue demonstrating innovation and service differentiation in the market, not just relative to that competitor, but across the competitive landscape. Third, we continue to win in a consolidating market. We have outpaced our competitors for many years in core market share growth, even as the overall number of financial institutions has declined. Over the past 8 years, our core market share among banks has increased by 17%, while our credit union market share has expanded by 40%. Among institutions with more than 1 billion in assets, our market share has risen by 32% for banks and 12% for credit unions over that same time period. This growth occurred despite an average overall market contraction of 3% for both banks and credit unions over the past 8 years.
Our market share and asset size growth can be attributed in part to our bank and credit union clients' continued growth through M&A, acquiring both Jack Henry and non-Jack Henry institutions, as well as our success the past few years in winning mergers, winning the core merger business when a Jack Henry institution is acquired. Additionally, we have relationships with more than 80% of the financial institutions in the U.S. across our core, complementary, and payment segments. So in most consolidation events, we are already doing business with the acquiring institution, giving us a strong advantage in increasing the likelihood that the combined entity remains on some or most Jack Henry technology. Now for more detail on the overall business, starting with some recognition for the team. We are very proud, I'm sorry.
We placed that Jack Henry was recently named one of America's most loved workplaces, ranking twelfth out of 100 companies. We also earned spots on the Forbes list of Best Companies in America, Computerworld's ranking of Best Places to Work in IT, and Newsweek's list of Most Responsible Companies.... These honors reaffirm our unwavering people-first commitment to our associates. Turning to the significant progress we are making on key innovative solutions. We are extremely pleased with the strong reaction to our new cloud-native Tap2Local merchant acquiring solution. Tap2Local is offered exclusively through banks and credit unions, giving the FI a powerful way to win back deposits from small and medium-sized businesses that have shifted their card acceptance activities to other providers.
Built in partnership with Moov, Tap to Local delivers differentiated capabilities for SMBs, including easy enrollment, tap to pay on both iOS and Android devices without additional hardware, and continuous account reconciliation to the accounting platform of their choice. We are currently rolling the solution out in waves to all of our Banno clients. We took 300 clients live in November and December and just rolled out another 100 clients last week. We will continue to add 100 to 150 per month and expect to have some nice data points to share on the May earnings call. We're also seeing strong early success with Jack Henry Rapid Transfers, which allows both SMBs and consumers to quickly move funds between external accounts, eligible cards, and digital wallets to manage day-to-day transactions and personal finances.
We are the first provider to bring this unique capability to community banks and credit unions. This offering will help our clients grow deposits and attract younger, digital-native generations like Gen Z. Rapid Transfers is now live with 75 clients, with another 180 in various stages of onboarding. We will also share more data on Rapid Transfers on the May earnings call. We are very excited about the development and execution of our stablecoin strategy. As I mentioned on our last earnings call, we leveraged the Jack Henry platform to complete our proof of concept in 2 weeks. We are now in beta testing with multiple financial institutions to send and receive USDC. In addition, we are evaluating over 20 stablecoin infrastructure, compliance, and payment fintechs to ensure we have best-of-breed partners for this critical initiative.
Another important strategy I want to highlight is our focus on embedded payments and banking-as-a-service capabilities. Our integration of Victor Technologies, which we acquired on September 30, is progressing extremely well. As a reminder, Victor's modern innovative platform with direct-to-core connectivity enables financial institutions to embed payment capabilities into third-party, non-bank brands such as fintechs and commercial customers. Victor was already integrated with our SilverLake core banking system and Jack Henry PayCenter prior to the acquisition. We are now extending its capabilities to serve our Symitar Credit Union clients and to integrate directly with the Jack Henry platform. We also plan to leverage Victor's modern APIs to complement our treasury management offering. Many corporations are seeking no-touch processing and virtual accounts to streamline accounting and reconciliation.
This creates an opportunity for financial institutions to deliver in embedded payments to their corporate customers, giving them more options for seamlessly integrating payments into their business processes. We already had a sales team in place focused on selling embedded payments to financial institutions. To build upon that momentum, we have added a team that will work directly with fintechs to bring new opportunities to our clients. This expansion supports our broader strategy to help financial institutions compete and grow revenue. All of these innovative solutions are made possible by our technology modernization strategy and public cloud-native, API-first Jack Henry platform. We have developed 22 components on the platform and will have multiple clients testing our new cloud-native deposit-only core functionality in the second quarter of this calendar year. I will now provide a few updates on specific products.
In our core segment, I talked earlier about our 22 competitive wins in Q2. We also secured 10 on-premise to private cloud contracts, and 5 of those were with institutions that had more than $1 billion in assets. In the first six months of this fiscal year, 7 of our private cloud contracts were with clients holding over $1 billion in assets, compared with just 2 at this time last year. This is important because we earn an average of approximately 2 times more revenue from clients in the private cloud than those operating on-premise. Today, 78% of our core clients are operating in the private cloud. In our payments segment, we continue to experience outstanding growth in our faster payment solutions.
Over the past year, the number of financial institutions using Zelle has grown by 22%, The Clearing House's RTP network by 26%, and FedNow by 32%. In Q2, payment transaction volume through these channels increased by 49% over the prior year, same quarter. In our complementary segment, we signed a total of 48 new Financial Crimes Defender and faster payment module contracts in the quarter. As of December 31, we had 164 financial crimes installations completed and another 64 in various stages of implementation. We also have 141 faster payment modules installed and 227 in various stages of implementation. We had a very strong sales quarter with our Banno digital platform. For the quarter, we signed 84 clients to our Banno platform, with several large competitive takeaways.
We currently have 1,037 Banno retail clients and 435 live with Banno Business. We now serve 15.2 million registered users on the Banno platform, up 15% from a year ago. A couple of additional items before I wrap up. Some of you may have seen Cornerstone's annual survey of bank and credit union executives published last week. According to the study, 84% of banks and 83% of credit unions expect to increase their technology spending in 2026. That's up from 73% of banks and 79% of credit unions a year ago. We are currently conducting our annual Jack Henry strategy benchmark study with our clients, and we'll share those results on our May earnings call.
We were honored to celebrate the 40th anniversary of our IPO by ringing the Nasdaq opening bell on November 21. To put that milestone into perspective, Jack Henry is one of approximately 200 companies out of the 3,400 on Nasdaq that has remained public for 4 decades. This long-standing stability is the perfect lead-in to another major milestone this year, as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of Jack Henry's founding with associates, clients, and investors. In closing, we are extremely pleased with our first half performance and remain very optimistic about the rest of our fiscal year based on the strong demand environment, our robust sales pipeline, and our exceptional competitive win rate. We will continue to focus on our key differentiators of success, culture, service, innovation, strategy, and execution. All of these position us extremely well for the future.
With that, I'll turn it over to Mimi for more detail on our financials.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Thank you, Greg, and good morning, everyone. I would like to begin by thanking our associates, who remain focused on serving our financial institution clients. The result is another quarter of solid revenue and earnings growth and continued momentum for a healthy fiscal year. I'll begin with our robust second quarter results, then conclude with our updated fiscal 2026 guidance. Second quarter and fiscal year-to-date, GAAP revenue increased 8%. Non-GAAP revenue increased 7% for the quarter and 8% for the year, a continuation of consistently solid performance. Quarterly non-GAAP revenue growth was negatively impacted by the shift of our Connect client conference into Q1 from Q2. Without this timing shift, quarterly non-GAAP revenue growth would have been a more pronounced 8%.
Second quarter deconversion revenue of approximately $6 million, which we previously announced, was up approximately $6 million for the quarter, reflecting a steady pace of M&A activity among financial institutions. It should be noted that the dollar amount of deconversion revenue has little correlation with the number of transactions or annual revenue impact. We continue to see industry consolidation as largely neutral to slightly positive for our business. Now, let's look more closely at the detail. GAAP services and support revenue increased 7% for the quarter, while non-GAAP increased 6%. Services and support growth during the quarter was primarily driven by strength in data processing and hosting revenue for both private and public cloud. Private and public cloud offerings continue to drive strong growth. Cloud revenue increased 8% in the quarter. This recurring revenue contributor is 33% of our total revenue.
Shifting to processing revenue, which is 44% of total revenue and another strategic component of our long-term growth model, we saw a robust performance with 9% GAAP and 8% non-GAAP growth for the quarter. Consistent with recent results, quarterly drivers include increased digital, card, and faster payment processing revenue. Completing commentary on revenue, I would highlight total recurring revenue exceeded 92%. Next, moving to expenses. Beginning with cost of revenue, which increased a modest 5% on a GAAP and non-GAAP basis for the quarter. Drivers for the quarter included higher direct costs, consistent with growth in lines of revenue, higher personnel costs, partly offset by lower benefits costs, and increased amortization of intangible assets, which have been consistent throughout the first half of the year. For modeling purposes, amortization of acquisition-related intangibles was $6 million for the quarter.
Next, R&D expense increased 3% on a GAAP and 2% on a non-GAAP basis for the quarter. The quarter minimal increase was primarily due to tempered net personnel costs, which has also been consistent year to date. Ending with SG&A expense, for the quarter on a GAAP basis, it decreased 13% and it decreased at 10% on a non-GAAP basis. Results reflect the timing of our client conference moving into Q1, in conjunction with our continued focus on managing costs. Aided by our consistent revenue growth, we remain focused on generating annual compounding margin expansion. Q2 delivered 355 basis point increase in non-GAAP margin to 25%. This contributed to year-to-date non-GAAP margin improvement of 291 basis points and a non-GAAP margin of 26%.
Non-GAAP margin benefited in the quarter and year to date from inherent leverage in our business model, strategic cost management, and leveraging existing workforce as we continue to focus on enterprise process improvement and AI utilization, and further aided by lower self-insured medical costs, which we anticipate to be non-sustainable. We are focusing on a normalized benefit growth trajectory in the second half of the year, which is expected to noticeably impact results. These strong quarterly results produced a fully diluted GAAP earnings per share of $0.72, up 29%. For the first half of the fiscal year, GAAP earnings per share was $3.70, an increase of 24%. Reviewing the three operating segments, we see positive performance across the board. Core segment non-GAAP revenue increased 7% for the quarter, with operating margin increasing five basis points.
Payment segment, quarterly non-GAAP revenue increased 6%. The segment again had outstanding non-GAAP operating margin growth, with quarterly results of 200 basis points. Revenue growth was due to the resilience in our card-related services, consistent growth in the EPS business, and continuing a large percent growth from faster payments, albeit on a smaller dollar base. Finally, complementary segment, quarterly non-GAAP revenue growth increased an impressive 9% with healthy 58 basis points of non-GAAP margin expansion. Quarterly revenue growth continued to reflect digital solution demand and beneficial product mix, and sales sourced from both new core wins, existing core customers, and non-core financial institutions. Now a review of cash flow and capital allocation. Q2 operating cash flow was $153 million, a $63 million increase over the prior fiscal year, Q2.
Quarterly free cash flow of $103 million delivered $74 million increase over the prior fiscal year, second quarter. Our consistent dedication to value creation resulted in a trailing twelve-month non-GAAP return on invested capital of 23%, compared to 19% in the second quarter of prior year. We're very proud of the durability of this metric and how it reflects our high-quality allocation of capital for our shareholders. Additionally, I would highlight the following significant capital decisions: $125 million in share repurchases, $84 million in dividends paid through the end of the calendar year 2025, plus the asset acquisition of Victor Technologies. The average purchase price of shares repurchased was $157.
We ended the quarter with minimal amount of debt, consistent with our normal course revolver line usage, but expect to exit the year debt-free, barring acquisitions or other opportunities. I will now discuss our second consecutive increase to full-year guidance. As you're aware, yesterday's press release included updated increases to fiscal 2026 full-year GAAP guidance. Deconversion guidance will continue to follow the conservative methodology introduced in fiscal 2024. Fiscal 2026 deconversion revenue guidance has been increased to $28 million. Aligned with our guidance methodology, we will update the outlook as we confirm more activity throughout the year. Full-year GAAP revenue growth guidance increased to a range of 5.6%-6.3%. For emphasis, GAAP revenue remains understated due to the conservative deconversion revenue guidance.
Based on our strong year-to-date results, we've increased and tightened the range of non-GAAP annual revenue growth guidance, resulting in a new outlook of 6.4%-7.1%. The second half of the fiscal year will see relatively lower non-GAAP revenue growth compared to the first half. Drivers include projected cloud revenue showing significant continued strength, offset by anticipated slower momentum in one-time revenue and card. Expenses during the second half are expected to reflect the relatively higher pressure from medical cost benefits, returning to historical levels, cloud migration, infrastructure expense, and commissions. Our expectations on the second half revenue are consistent with our current analyst consensus. As a reminder, fiscal 2026 and the first quarter of fiscal 2027, Victor acquisition-related financial impacts will be excluded as part of non-GAAP reporting.
Based on the above revenue growth and our resilient financial model, we expect to again generate sustainable, accretive sources of margin. We're increasing full-year guidance for non-GAAP margin expansion to a range of 50-75 basis points. Margins are projected to contract in the back half of the year due to the benefits cost returning to normalized levels and the timing of workforce expense increases. As a reminder, we see fluctuations in quarterly results relating to software usage license components, along with the timing and implementation. Therefore, the correct performance indicator of our business is consistently strong fiscal year financial results. All of the presented results and guidance metrics are indicative that our business operation remains healthy and sound, with near-term growth opportunities across all three operating segments. The full-year GAAP tax rate estimate for fiscal 2026 is 23.25%.
The above increased guidance metrics results in a stronger full-year outlook for GAAP EPS of $6.61-$6.72 per share, growth of 6%-8%. As a reminder, even updated conservative deconversion revenue guidance likely understates GAAP EPS growth. Full year free cash flow conversion outlook is for 90%-100% for fiscal 2026, matching our expected range, range target, but with a bias to the higher end of the range. Concluding, Q2 results reflect another outstanding performance from our associates, leading to increased guidance. We're pleased by the continued performance momentum and remain positive on the financial year outlook. Demand for our solutions, aligned with continued technology spend by our clients and prospects, will drive superior shareholder value.
We appreciate the contributions of our dedicated associates that have produced these superior results and our investors for their ongoing confidence. Chris, will you please open the line for questions?
Operator (participant)
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you may press Star then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw it, please press Star then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Today's first question comes from Rayna Kumar with Oppenheimer. Please proceed.
Rayna Kumar (Managing Director of Fintech Equity Research)
Good morning. Good results here. It sounds like the second quarter sales results were very strong, and I'm just wondering, based off of what you're seeing, do you expect the 3Q sales results to come in better? And are you starting to see the impact from the core consolidation news from one of your competitors at this point?
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, Rayna, thanks for the comments. Yeah, a couple things. So I can't comment on whether Q3 will be better. Q3 is starting off very well, don't know, you know, where we're gonna end up at this point in time. As I mentioned, you know, the Q2 results, which were significant, really had very little impact on the announcement, just because all those deals were kinda in the timing of expectation to be done, and were already in motion. As you know, a lot of these core deals can take up to a year or longer to actually secure. I will tell you, the pipeline is growing, not just in core opportunities, but across all of our, you know, complementary and payment products as well.
So we're continuing to see some nice uptick there. And so I'll be able to report more definitively, obviously, at the end of the quarter, but we are seeing some nice uptick in the pipelines and in the opportunities with some larger opportunities as well.
Rayna Kumar (Managing Director of Fintech Equity Research)
That's helpful. And just staying on the competitive environment, can you talk a little bit about what you're seeing out there in terms of pricing for core systems and ancillary services? Any changes you're seeing in pricing?
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
No, not really. I think it's been very consistent to what it's been over the last couple of years, so I wouldn't say anything has been significantly changed as, you know, as a byproduct of the announcement or what we had been seeing, you know, within the rest of the competition over the last couple of years. Pretty consistent. And, you know, the fact that we won 22 of them in the quarter is pretty good indication because we're never the lowest cost provider. So, I think that's a pretty strong statement as well.
Rayna Kumar (Managing Director of Fintech Equity Research)
Good stuff. Thank you.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from Vasu Govil with KBW. Please proceed.
Vasundhara Govil (Managing Director)
Hi, thanks for taking my question, and congratulations on a really solid print here. Greg, maybe just the first one. There's been a lot of investor focus on how AI could reshape software economics across industries, and we've seen that concern reflected in pretty meaningful stock moves in the last few days and weeks. So maybe you could talk about how you think about AI's impact on your business model over the long term, and where you see it as an opportunity versus a risk.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, I'm really glad you asked that question because of what happened yesterday. So, yeah. So a couple things. One, you know, from a standpoint of affecting companies, not just Jack Henry, but others in our space, I think it's really a misinformation. Because when you think about what AI does in the development of technology and the development of building, whether that be a core system or other very complex solutions that we support in this industry, it's not just as simple as doing things faster. It's way more complicated than that. It creates some concerns for, you know, maybe some of the other areas where people are doing seat licenses and other stuff, so some of the other larger enterprise-wide solution sets.
But, you know, as you know, we don't do seat licenses here, so we don't have that challenge. Building the technology and restructuring technology is use cases that we can, you know, whether that's taking code and moving it or things along that line, but it's not as straightforward as it might be in some other industries. The other component that I'll say is that we at Jack Henry have been spending a lot of time using AI, both in the back office and in our product set. All of our new platform products do contain some form of AI. And then a lot of the things that we're doing to control our headcount costs, to do improvements and things along that line are all, you know, by products of AI.
So from our standpoint, and I think honestly from an industry standpoint, it's a much different perspective than what I believe that is being kind of, you know, played out there in the space, you know, specifically with some other enterprise-wide solution sets.
Vasundhara Govil (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you for that color. And then I know you touched on this a little bit before, but just bank M&A, that's continuing at an accelerated pace, including some deal announcements involving some of your larger clients recently. So just curious if you're still feeling good that bank M&A will still be a net neutral to maybe even a positive as we move forward from here? And that, you know, the conversion merge activity will sort of increase and will offset any deconversion revenue. Just curious on your latest thoughts there.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yes, absolutely. I mean, we've already seen it. So as I kind of mentioned a little bit in my opening remarks, I mean, not only have we seen significant market share growth during this, you know, last 8 years, where there's been 3% decline overall. We're seeing it across, you know, opportunities today, even in, you know, 1 very large one that was announced a year ago, or close to a year ago, then, you know, we're having opportunities for other products within that set. And in some cases, these other products can be even more valuable than the core itself.
So, you know, we are very bullish on what we're doing, how we're doing it, and the opportunities that continue to come our way, even when an acquisition of one of our accounts has taken place. We're right in there, in some cases, winning the overall core deal prior to the conversion. In other cases, having conversations post, as we talk about complementary payment and potentially our digital core products, as part of their long-term strategy.
Vasundhara Govil (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you for the color.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from Jason Kupferberg, with Wells Fargo. Please proceed.
Jason Kupferberg (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Hey, guys. Thank you. I wanted to start on the revenue side. I was curious which segments exceeded expectations, perhaps in the quarter. I mean, versus our model, there were some nice upside on the complementary side, so would love to hear about product drivers there. And then if you can just comment on how we should think about second half growth rates by segment and maybe hone in on the payments piece a little bit. I think that's maybe tracking a little bit below the medium-term guide, halfway through the year, so should we expect any acceleration there?
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Jason, I would say, first off, we continue to be pleased by the across-the-board performance across all three segments, both quarter and year to date. Let's roll through each one of them. I would say most of the performance that we've seen above and beyond our expectations in the first half, you saw a decent card performance relative to the more modest expectations we had going into the year. We do think that the back half will be a little bit more challenging relative to the first half in payments. So even though that is a touch below historical, our growth algorithm expectations, that segment's doing really well, and we have some strong resuscitation of, like, our bill payments business.
We've talked about the contribution from our faster payments, even on a smaller dollar revenue, but great growth rates, and healthiness in card. But we do expect that to slow a little bit in the back half, just as a bit of a you have both weather at the beginning of the calendar year, but then just it's the natural seasonality of as you climb into the back half, it's just getting a little bit higher, and you have some comps from a grow-over perspective. Complementary is doing great. We continue to see success in the newer products, things like Financial Crimes Defender, our treasury management products, our digital products, all being continued strong drivers, and we would expect that to continue. And then in core, core has been great the last couple of years.
In fact, even stronger growing than the growth algorithm. Part of that is based on the success that Greg talked about, the multi-year success from new core wins, and the organic growth of our clients, and just that continued shift from on-premise to private cloud. This quarter, we also saw a little bit of the convert merge benefit and other one-times that I would say drove up some of the core revenue that we don't necessarily expect to in the same pace in the back half.
Jason Kupferberg (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Okay, that's all good color. And, maybe I just wanted to ask a follow-up on margins. I know you guys called out the lower medical insurance claims cost. Can you just quantify that piece? I mean, the margin beat was huge, for lack of a better word, versus consensus. I know you guys don't guide it for the quarter, but just trying to get a sense of how big that benefit was, and is that something that reverses out in the second half, or is that, you know, a full year? How much of a full-year tailwind is that?
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Well, Jason, I appreciate you acknowledging the importance of full year versus quarterly guide. I continue to encourage everyone to look at our performance on the consistent annual basis, not the quarterly. Sometimes you just have kind of quarters that, either from a year-over-year perspective or a cohort perspective or conference timing perspective, just may create a picture that is less than consistent with kind of the full year. But if we look at margins on the full year, increasing our full year guide from the 30-50 to now the 50-70, is indicative of our belief of just delivering in totality. It was very front-end heavy. Part of that is some cost savings. Part of that is some cost timing.
So some of the lower-than-expected benefits costs related to our self-insured medical plan is a savings, but a savings that we don't necessarily expect to continue in the second half. Other things we just naturally, as part of our plan, we expect higher to be in the second half than the first half. So if I think about just the pace of some of the commissions, as I think about some of the infrastructure costs as we move more migration loads and planning for our data center, longer-term initiatives, some of that spend is higher in the second half than the first half.
So, yes, we're pleased by the incredible performance and margin in the first half, but more so, we're really proud of the three-year compounding margins that we've been able to deliver and our ability to increase the guide for the full year.
Jason Kupferberg (Senior Equity Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Welcome.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Will Nance with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
William Nance (Managing Director)
Hey, good morning. Nice results, and appreciate you taking the question. I wanted to circle back to the question on AI, and, you know, was wondering if you could put more of a positive spin on the AI theme for this space. I think the core processing space is kind of, you know, known for having, you know, fairly outdated code bases, a lot of COBOL around, not a lot of programmers who can actually, you know, maintain it. And, you know, AI is one of those things that, you know, could actually accelerate the modernization of the code bases, which has been a process that you guys have been on for a long time now. So maybe can you talk about that in the context of your next-gen platform and the journey that you've been on for the last couple of years?
And, you know, how do you see AI as an accelerant to that strategy? And, you know, something that could, you know, perhaps even improve the competitive positioning of what, you know, historically has been thought of as, you know, a good industry with low switching costs, but, you know, a lot of software that may be in need of some modernization.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah. So good, good question. Appreciate the follow-up. So I mean, you know, obviously, Will, we've been involved with AI for many years as part of this, not only what we're building with our new platform, but what we've been doing on the back end to, you know, move some of our foundational cores and foundational code over to, you know, other ways of doing things. And we've been able to do it faster, but also with less people. When you look at the number of initiatives that we have going on with some significant technology, you know, innovation, and still look at our headcount growing at less than 1% over the last several years during that time frame, that's all apparent because it's being done with utilization of AI and other tools.
So that's been a big part of our strategy, you know, for a long time and continues to be. You know, we have some of the top-notch talent in this industry that we've brought in, that are helping push that across the entire organization, not just in certain aspects of our business. The other thing is on that, what I was referring to earlier, from the question from, I believe it was either Rayna or Vasu, but, around the complexity of building out cores, it's not just the ability to move, you know, foundational core stuff to something else. And by the way, you know, it's taken us almost five years to get where we are, so if you haven't started, you're a little behind.
But from where we are today, and the work that we've done, when you look at a lot of the international cores that have tried to come into the United States and haven't been very successful, it's because of the level of complexity that you need to build, and not just the core itself. Because, again, you can build some core, headless core that has components on it, but it's the full integration, and it's the full suite of connections to the payment networks and everything else that goes with that, that really makes it complex. And that isn't just done with AI. Some of that's done with a lot of hard work and people.
And like, like our team likes to say, "It's dirt digging." And so that stuff is where the complexity really makes it more difficult. So I think what we have done, where we have gone and been able to utilize AI as part of our overall strategy, is what differentiates us, not just from innovation, but from speed of innovation.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
If I could add on to that, Greg, I would say that because of the investment we've made and started making over five years ago, of moving our infrastructure to the public cloud, allows us to take advantage of the DevOps environment. If we think about something like Banno and the number of new feature releases we're able to do on that, and now similarly with the Jack Henry platform being API first digital cloud native, we'll be able to increase that velocity of solution enhancements for our clients, that others cannot because they're still on that journey to public cloud.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, and just one other point, just 'cause I know this is a big topic for probably everybody, is that, you know, as they say, "No, no, no data, no AI," right? So the things that we have been doing and focused on, so not just what Mimi is referring to with various product sets, but what we've been focused on with our data, has allowed us to take more advantage of AI as well. And again, in our industry, there's a lot of complexity, and a lot of differentiation on how pricing and everything else is orchestrated versus what I think is being thrown in to these other enterprise providers, where they're selling seat licenses, and we're pricing by transaction or active user or, you know, asset size or whatever it is. It's a whole different model.
William Nance (Managing Director)
That's great. Appreciate the really thorough answer. And just if I could switch gears and ask about the payment side. I was wondering if you could talk around competitive dynamics on payments and card. There's just been, I think, a resurgence in chatter on new entrants in that space and you know, the community bank space may be evaluating, you know, beyond the kind of traditional competitive set. Just wondering if you could, you know, talk about anything that you've seen recently. Thank you.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, yeah. I mean, I know, I mean, I mean, there's a couple of them, you know, I'll call out. You know, there's a couple of names that have presented themselves into space, but they're more, I would say, compartmentalized offerings. They're not full suite debit and credit offers. Most of the ones that I think you're referring to are more on the commercial card side, and I think have limited availability on the debit side as of today. And so, as you know, that is the stronger part of our particular card processing today, even though we've had a lot more success on credit deals lately than in years past, because of some changes we've made.
But I will tell you that, you know, one of the reasons why I wanted to call out the number of what we call trifecta wins around here, is because we are seeing more and more opportunities in this space, because of the solution set that we built, to allow us to sell digital and card as part of a core deal, or sell digital and card individually, outside of a core deal. And that's been a big part of our strategy and will continue to be, but I haven't seen anybody that's come into the market that I would say has, you know, has disrupted the market. There's a lot of names that are saying they're doing things, but the level of success into our space, you know, we just haven't seen it yet.
William Nance (Managing Director)
Got it. Appreciate you taking the question today. Nice results.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Sure. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from Darrin Peller with Wolfe Research. Please proceed.
Darrin Peller (Managing Director)
Hey, guys, thanks. Nice quarter. I just wanted to touch again on the core wins. You highlighted another strong quarter at 22. I know you had about 11, I think it was, this time last year's quarter. So just that includes some of the larger institutions. Maybe just help us understand how we should think about the near term versus long-term revenue cadence around some of those. And I know it takes time to really come into the run rate, but just as importantly, I mean, what are you seeing that's giving you the right to win in these banks that maybe in a slightly accelerated rate, as well as the larger, as you move up market, and you've been having more and more success? So maybe just help us understand what's going well there.
If this is a better run rate that we can see in terms of cores, maybe given industry dynamics. Thanks, guys.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, thanks for the comments. Yeah, I mean, you were right. We did 11 last second quarter. You know, as we like to say, same thing with everything else, it's fiscal year results, right? So some quarters are bigger than normal. Q2 and Q4 are typically our largest quarters, our fiscal quarters. That's just the end of the year for the customer, the end of the year for us, you know, just tends to have a lot more activity, even though we try to spread it more evenly than that. You know, as I mentioned before, the pipelines are growing fast, you know, with a lot of the news that's happened in the space, not just core, but across all of our channels.
You know, we're pretty excited about some things that we can't announce yet, just because of the timing. But the reality is, we're continuing to move the needle in all of those products at a pretty fast pace. What I would say from a core standpoint, though, to answer your question, you know, we're winning really. And even on some of these deals that were referenced earlier that our customer was purchased, we're in there already talking to them about a variety of products.
You know, we're hearing some really positive news on what we are doing differently than our competition, and it really starts with our ability to, what I say all the time on these calls, our culture comes through on those meetings very fast, and people that there's a lot of people that wanna a partner that has a similar culture. I just met with a bank this week, that was their comment. They said, "The first thing we noticed was your culture and alignment in culture." Obviously, our service reputation is 50 years of doing the right thing and doing whatever it takes. The level of innovation that we've built over the last 5 years is not matched by anybody in the industry, and we've said that multiple times.
When people are able to see what we are able to already compete and do with a lot of these innovative things, not just Tap2Local and Rapid Transfers, but stablecoin, things that we've done with the platform, things along that line, it just shows that level. If you wanna, if you wanna grow your institution and you wanna make sure that you got deposits and lending capabilities or building efficiency, which are the three most talked about things that they wanna do, Jack Henry has been the provider and is the provider that can make that happen. And then, you know, we don't change our strategy. We've been very focused on our strategy, and our execution is second to none.
So when you take those five words that I say all the time, honestly, those are the reasons why we win. It comes through with the products-
Darrin Peller (Managing Director)
Okay.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
and the level of innovation we show them.
Darrin Peller (Managing Director)
That's, that's helpful. And then, guys, I just wanna follow up one more time on, on the way we think about guidance for this year, and even an early thought in terms of what's trending for next year, just fiscal year. Just given you've been inching up your guide now, you're obviously having success with the SMB initiatives that's starting to early, but show now, show result in numbers. And I think that's a key factor to getting back to that 70%-80% range. So, I mean, is your confidence growing into fiscal 2027 even, that we can get back to that 7%-8% again, based on everything you're seeing in the, in the run rate and some of your results from investments?
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Darren, I love, I love your long-term view there. Just a little too premature from our perspective. We are heads down focused on executing in 2026. We're starting to have budgetary conversations and strategy conversations about 2027. But I think it's, it's, you know, it's sticking to the fundamentals, really. It's, it's about the execution. It's about every day, you know, coming in and hitting the singles, and just continuing to execute. So yeah, we're super excited about the onboarding progress from our SMB offerings. We're super excited about the feedback we're getting from customers that are validating the direction that we've talked about.
But I would say, you know, for this year, it's about continuing to drive on the implementations from the sales pipeline of closures, and it's about card and payments, and it's about getting continuing traction on the complementary side on some of our newer products. As we look into 2027, I think certainly we will be past some of those potholes that we've talked about previously, that the deconversion created. And our growth rate on some of these new wins of sizable institutions that Greg mentioned, will be coming into the fold from an implementation perspective, and that is super exciting.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
One other point, you know, I mentioned earlier on that we had made a lot of strides in changing how we go about, you know, our renewal processes and things along that line, and those changes are starting to pay significant dividends for us. And so it's been a big part of the strategy and focal point, but also another reason why we're very bullish on where we're going.
Darrin Peller (Managing Director)
Great. Great. All right, thanks, guys. Thanks, Greg. Thanks, Mimi.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Thank you, Darren.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Madison Suhr with Raymond James. Please proceed.
Madison Suhr (Research Analyst)
Hi, good morning, everybody, and thanks for taking the questions. I also wanted to start on the SMB strategy with Rapid Transfer and Tap to Local. I guess, you know, more broadly, what are you seeing in terms of adoption for those products? What's the longer term opportunity look like? And maybe any color on how the competitive set may differ from a traditional Jack Henry competitor?
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, Madison, thanks for the question. I have some data, but as I said, I'd prefer to really talk more about it in May, when I have more data in months, because it's still very early. As I said, we rolled out 300 customers in two months, and we just rolled out another 100. So as people are starting to ramp up, you know, I'll give you one anecdote, though. There was a client that wasn't sure they wanted to keep it on, and they called as soon as it was turned on, and two hours later, they asked us to turn it off.
And we said: "Did you know that you already had 30 people signed up for it?" And they said, "No." And they said: "Okay, keep it on." So my point is that there's that type of opportunity that's forming, and, you know, we're just now really working with them on the marketing. So there's a whole aspect of this that we think we'll have a lot better data points. To answer your question on the level of differentiation, though, it's significant to what a Stripe or Square is doing in the space, and I'll make it very short. First of all, Stripe and Square are taking deposits away from our institutions, and they're not getting them back because then they're lending to them or they're doing other things. And so once those deposits go, they're gone.
The other part is that the level of sophistication that we're able to give these sole proprietors or very small SMBs with not only instant account approval, where we're approving about 75% of everybody instantaneously. In the market, that's a 2-3-day process, if not longer. And then, you know, we're able to do both iOS and Android devices for tap-to-pay. Very few people in the United States are doing that today. Stripe and Square are, but very few others. And then, but the biggest one is our patent-pending account reconciliation component, where the actual SMB can upload all their transactions onto their device and hit a button and upload it into QuickBooks or Xero or any of their accounting package choices instantaneously. Those are all things that can't happen today in the market.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
I would add on to that, the knowledge we have from the core systems really enable us to have a frictionless experience from the get-go of sign-on all the way to the account reconciliation that Greg mentioned. So we really believe in this case, it's a fragmented industry, and we believe that it's small businesses should be multi-acquirer, the same way a sophisticated treasury customer has, you know, more than one bank account. It's just smart business. We think that small and sole entrepreneurs will be multi-acquiring.
Madison Suhr (Research Analyst)
Okay, that's very helpful. Yep.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, Madison, another point.
Madison Suhr (Research Analyst)
Go ahead.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
We have a very long roadmap for SMB. This is not just a one-hit wonder with Tap2Local and Rapid Transfers. We have a lot of things we're going to be rolling out over the next 18 months, and some of them are already done. We're just waiting to put them into play.
Madison Suhr (Research Analyst)
Certainly. Seems like an interesting and opportunity for you guys. Just brief follow-up here on capital allocation. I mean, maybe just talk to the priorities right now, appetite for buybacks, and just anything to call out in terms of M&A pipeline. Thanks, guys.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Of course, first and foremost, we're super excited to get back to the very strong free cash flow and the very high free cash flow conversion of 90%-100%, to be on the other side of the tax legislation and have certainty, and to have a year where, you know, a pretty significant contribution of roughly, call it $100 million, from clearing up that tax uncertainty and kind of a clarifying from a go-forward perspective. From a capital allocation, our priorities remain consistent. We have a long-standing dividend policy that we are committed to. We are always looking at M&A prospects and opportunities, although we have less gaps strategically.
We're always looking for things that may be an accelerant, or enhancement to solutions and our ways of meeting customer needs. We continue to invest significantly in internal development and moving our strategies and innovations forward. And then share repurchases. We were excited by the $125 million of shares we purchased thus far year to date. And we said, you know, previously, we, we'd feel comfortable if that went to 200 or more this year. So it sort of really depends on, you know, purchase price and what M&A opportunities come into the marketplace. But we will be dynamic capital allocators, but continue with our conservative balance sheet.
Operator (participant)
The next question today comes from Kartik Mehta with Northcoast Research. Please proceed.
Kartik Mehta (Managing Director and Research Analyst)
Good morning. Greg, one of the strategies you implemented was going about pricing renewals differently, and I'm wondering if that's gained traction, and are you seeing it manifest in financial results yet, or will that take a little bit more time?
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, great question. Appreciate you bringing that up. Yeah, we are starting to see it in our financial results, and on our approach for the percentages of new versus renewals in our wins and our overall numbers for the team. So, congrats to the entire sales team for embracing what we've put in place, because it was, you know, it was a change, and it is working very well. So we are really the percentage of new versus renewals is significant, as compared to last year, which is, you know, which is obviously great for a lot of reasons. But the other part is that it's allowing us to hold much more steady in the market.
You know, one of the questions early on was pricing pressures, and, you know, we've been negotiating more at a position of strength than I think we have in years past.
Kartik Mehta (Managing Director and Research Analyst)
And then just a follow-up, Greg. You know, early on, you talked about bank spending and, maybe a couple of the reports that have come out that say bank spending should continue or is expected to continue in 2026. Is, is there a difference, at least as you're talking to clients from an asset size and what they want to spend? And the reason I'm asking is, you know, there's so much talk about consolidation and maybe consolidation happening, with smaller banks, you know, smaller asset size banks. So I'm wondering if there's any hesitation for those banks to spend money, or if you're seeing any kind of bifurcation.
Yeah, you know, just to be, you know, candid, you do see it sometimes, but I think you can also probably see them on the market the next week, or the next, you know, quarter or whatever, because you really can, Kartik, determine when technology isn't being bought. You know, Dave, Dave coined this line a long time ago, and we like to use it, which is, you know, everything that needs to happen in this space, if you want to grow, technology can do for you. And so, you know, from our standpoint, we are very focused on making sure that's why the level of innovation.
So the short answer is yes, there's some institutions that, you know, are going to spend way more than the 10% or 6%-10% that's been forecasted, you know, based on whatever their needs are or their desires, and there's others that don't. Sometimes they'll take a better financial deal and less impressive technology, and you tend to see those are the ones that are on the market down the road.
Perfect. Thank you very much. I appreciate it.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Sure. Thanks.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from Chris Kennedy with William Blair. Please proceed.
Christopher Kennedy (Equity Research Analyst)
Yeah, good morning. Thanks for squeezing me in here. Greg, just wanted to follow up on the trifecta wins that you talked about. What's driving that? Are financial institutions consolidating vendors? Is it from changes in your go-to-market strategy, or are you moving up market? Any more color would be great.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, it's a great question. It's a combination of a few things. One is, as we've been mentioning, you know, we have done a much better job of building out the Banno solution set to be much more competitive on the business side. You know, we've always had, you know, what we think is the best retail application, but the team's done a great job of building that out. So as that has gotten more sophisticated and improved, it's allowed us to not only win more deals, but win larger deals, as you referenced, and it has happened as well. Same thing on the card side. You know, we've really improved the commercial aspects of our card platform with some other things that we're working on.
And so those two things combined have allowed us to get involved in each of those deals. And as I mentioned, you know, 15 of the 22 deals included all three. But it is by design, and it will continue to be by design as we continue to not only go up market, but also as we go after some of these new opportunities in the consolidating base.
Christopher Kennedy (Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks for that. Just as a follow-up, separately, I think you've launched a new enterprise account opening platform. Can you just talk about the opportunity with that new solution?
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah, Chris, I will say that we're still in what I would call closed beta, or what we call closed beta, still pretty early. There are some feature gaps that I want to get closed before I want to release it out into what we would call generally available. I'll talk more about that in coming months as it becomes more relevant. But it will be a very unique platform, where you'll have a single platform for both consumer and commercial, with account opening embedded. So it'll be something that's very unique in the market, but it still needs a few more things completed before we're ready to talk too broadly about it.
Christopher Kennedy (Equity Research Analyst)
Great. Thanks for taking the questions.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Sure.
Operator (participant)
Our next question comes from Dave Koning with Baird. Please proceed.
David Koning (Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah. Hey, guys, great job. I guess my question is really on complementary. You've done a really good job, and I think Greg called out that some of the platform consolidation in the space is creating more wins in complementary, and we often think of it driving core. But if it's driving complementary, too, is that faster? Those are, you know, a little smaller products. Are those faster to implement? And then secondly, you've had really good growth. You hit a tougher comp. Is that new kind of win rate or the additional complementary work going to allow you to keep growing as fast, even though you hit a tougher comp?
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Well, yeah, it's good insight. I think it depends on a couple of things, Dave. I mean, if some of these are sold with core deals, some of these are, you know, tied to the timing there. You know, there are actually we had several nice independent wins outside of core and digital and financial crimes for this particular quarter. So those typically are 6-9 months, maybe less, depending on their sense of urgency and timing in their contracts. But they're, you know, they're definitely sooner than what would be tied to a core deal.
One of the things that we are doing, and, and it's starting to be, you know, I won't say successful, but, but being interesting to some folks, is we're really going to them and, and talking to them about integrating the digital offering even before the core. And this could also be part of our, or is part of our outside the base strategy to drive some opportunities sooner than waiting on core. So we're working through some of the logistical parts of that, but as that starts to take fold, I think that will create even more of an opportunity for us to do what we've really envisioned in, even on our core platform, right? Doing things in a more modular or componentized approach and, and doing it incrementally than doing it all at once.
So, we'll kind of give you more context on that as it happens. But absolutely by design, absolutely by, you know, by continued improvements in those products.
David Koning (Senior Research Analyst)
Great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from James Faucette with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.
James Faucette (Managing Director)
Great. Thank you very much. A couple of questions for me. First, obviously, I think everybody understands and very excited about the tailwinds your business is likely to see from some competitors' core platform consolidation. How do you think about, like, what your execution requirements are? Kind of what keeps you up at night in terms of things that could trip you up, whether it be timing or magnitude or, you know, just trying to get it from you, the checklist of things you need to do to potentially take advantage of the opportunity.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah. So, James, I mean, it's candidly number one priority here right now based on, you know, kind of a I won't say once in a lifetime, but a very few times in a lifetime opportunity where you see this. And so between the sales team, the operations teams, the finance teams, the marketing teams, they're all very much aligned, working regularly in conjunction with our go-to-market stuff that we've done. You know, I don't want to share openly the opportunities that we have in front of us at this point, but as I mentioned, there are significant numbers that are already in the pipeline, not just, you know, ones that are, quote, out there, but already in our current pipeline for all products, not just core.
And then there's again work that we've done on the operational side to ensure that we're ready. As you can imagine, I mean, especially on a core deal, you know, even if we sell the core deal like we did this quarter, it's still going to be another 15-18 months. So our ability to get ready on the operational side is honestly the easier part. It's more about what we needed to do to gear up on the marketing, sales, and finance sides, and the teams have done a great job of that. We are humming right now. It's absolutely in all full gear. And so I'm very proud of the team on how fast they reacted and what they did.
James Faucette (Managing Director)
That's great color there, Greg. And then wanted to ask about the attach rate and bundling strategy. As you win more competitive core deals, how are complementary attach rates trending at signing and maybe at 12 months post-conversion? Just looking for any quantified examples of bundles you're seeing more frequently.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Well, the most frequent one is what I called out, which was, again, to us, is the trifecta of card and digital. So that is frequent. You know, there's always some products that get thrown in that, you know, some variation of account opening or, you know, the lending platform or whatever, but those three in particular. We're still averaging about what we have been. And again, remembering that we're doing some small levels of end-of-lifing or product rationalization as part of our initiatives. But we're still seeing anywhere from 35-50 products, typically in a deal, as we have in years past. The key is that, you know, the more lucrative ones, candidly, are, you know, card, digital, financial crimes, things along that line.
James Faucette (Managing Director)
Got it. Thanks for that, Greg.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Okay, sure.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Charles Nabhan with Stephens. Please proceed.
Charles Nabhan (Equity Research Analyst)
Good morning, and thanks for squeezing me in. I noticed that you tightened the outlook for free cash flow conversion from 90-100, from 85-100. And I know your bias was towards the higher end of that range last quarter, but curious what led to that increased visibility. And as a follow-up to that, you know, it sounds like there's no shortage of opportunity that you're investing in to pursue. Love any comments on capital expenditure and the level of investment necessary to pursue that opportunity that you're seeing across your markets.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
All good questions, Chuck. So, yeah, we continue to see positive progress on the free cash flow and free cash flow conversion. I think now just having a crisper first outlook of understanding all of the puts and takes of the legislative changes, that we did have a number of just small asset sales as well, having clarity on those, just makes us more confident on the projections for the full year and to have a bias towards the higher end of that range from a free cash flow. In terms of an allocation or an investment, we continue to be hovering around that 14%-15% of R&D. As Greg mentioned earlier, we've, in the last 5 years, ex M&A, have kept headcount growth less than 1%.
So we feel like we're able to make the strategic bets and solution progress, while still maintaining a very tight workforce. So that's through our continuous improvement efforts, that's through the deployment of AI, that's through being very strategic on where those headcounts are going and are they fueling strategic initiatives. So we feel pretty good on our ability to continue to accelerate our growth, our progress against our strategic initiatives without needing to step up and increase our spending.
Charles Nabhan (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. As a follow-up, I wanted to get your specific comments on the credit union market, and if you're seeing anything different in terms of competitive dynamics, demand trends, and just generally how you see that opportunity.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah. So, you know, we're getting a little bit of the still residual from the core consolidation from one of the competitors. You know, we've done a lot to increase our solution set on our Symitar platform over the last couple of years. That's starting to pay some dividends. You know, we're winning a good number of the mergers that are happening, so that continues to be a positive. And then, the bigger thing that's happening is our ability to penetrate the complementary and payments market with our core solution set.
So we are driving a higher penetration rate than we have in years past in the credit union business, both with existing clients and with wins, new competitive wins, with, again, taking digital or payments as a for instance.
Charles Nabhan (Equity Research Analyst)
Got it. Great quarter, and appreciate you squeezing me in.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
For sure. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Ken Suchoski with Autonomous Research. Please proceed.
Kenneth Suchoski (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for squeezing me in. I'll ask one since it's getting late. But Greg, you talked about not seeing a benefit on the core competitive takeaway side this quarter, but obviously lots of work happening behind the scenes by Jack Henry. But you mentioned that service differentiation is really driving your success. And one of the competitors has talked about increasing its service levels and reinvesting on the support side. So I'm curious how you think about maintaining your differentiation relative to other providers when it comes to that support and service. Thank you.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Yeah. Thank you. You know, I'll kind of say it this way. You know, we have a 50-year head start on how we've been handling service at this company. And, you know, it's been in our DNA all the way back to Jack and Jerry and every other leader that's come before me. And I will tell you, we're actually at all-time highs right now, as far as how our survey results are and things along that line.
And, you know, and I know there's a motion at really both of our two largest competitors to improve service, and you know, I applaud them for that from a standpoint of the industry perspective, but it's hard to move, you know, a big ship, when you don't have that mindset built in, as we do at this company. And so, you know, could they have some improvements? Sure. Don't know, you know, what that will take and is that bodies? It's not always bodies, it's usually a mindset. And so when you do whatever it takes and do the right thing like we do here, it just gets embodied into our everyday, you know, offering.
So I just think it's gonna be really difficult to, quote, "catch us," and we're sure not gonna take off the gas here. So, you know, we'll continue to keep that as part of what we think is a huge differentiator and hear it from people that come over to us.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Yeah. The only point I would add on that is, well, Greg aptly said, you know, we have not seen a tremendous, meaningful impact from the consolidation yet in the pipeline, 'cause deals take, you know, quite some time to walk through and to hammer out. But our track record over the last several years and our increase in market share and our gains against both competitors are indicative of that service that Greg just talked about and of our innovation. So, we have a track record, so it's not, you know, we feel very strongly in this opportunity and our ability to continue to win. And that's backed up by the wins we've been doing. From the last number of years. So it's not new that people have wanted to leave competitors, and it's not new that they're coming to Jack Henry.
Yeah, and I think one just last point, since you're on, Ken, is that, you know, the 50-plus wins that we've had for multiple years kinda emphasize what Mimi just said. The last part that I wanna emphasize is, though it didn't have a significant impact in Q2, as I mentioned before, our pipelines are growing faster because of that news. And so I anticipate that not just this year, but over the next several years, which a lot of these contracts will have several years still remaining, but conversations could be taking place now, where you're gonna see not only just the number of opportunities increase, the size of the opportunities increase, much to what we've been focused on, as we said, going upmarket.
Kenneth Suchoski (Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst)
Yeah. Makes sense. Thanks, Greg. Thanks, Mimi.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Sure.
Mimi Carsley (CFO and Treasurer)
Thank you.
Gregory Adelson (President, CEO, and Board Member)
Thank you.
Operator (participant)
This does conclude today's question and answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Vance Sherard for any closing remarks.
Vance Sherard (VP of Investor Relations)
Thank you, Chris. Management will be participating in 8 investor events over the next 2 months, and we look forward to continuing our engagement with the investor community. We also extend our appreciation to all Jack Henry associates for their exceptional commitment and execution, which delivered a strong first half of fiscal 2026. Thank you for joining us today. Chris, please provide the replay number.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. As a reminder, the replay number for today's call is 855-669-9658. Again, that is 855-669-9658, and the access code is 420-6506. Today's conference has now concluded. I would like to thank everyone for attending today's presentation, and you may now disconnect your lines.