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MARKETAXESS HOLDINGS INC (MKTX)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $208.6M, down 1% YoY and up 3% QoQ; EBITDA margin rose to 51.5% (vs. 47.8% in Q4), while GAAP EPS fell to $0.40 due to a $54.9M reserve for uncertain tax positions; excluding notable items, EPS was $1.87 .
- Versus Wall Street consensus (S&P Global), MKTX delivered an EPS beat ex-notable ($1.87 vs. $1.813*) and an EBITDA beat ($106.6M vs. $102.3M*), with revenue slightly below estimates ($208.6M vs. $210.0M*) .
- Management raised full-year GAAP effective tax rate guidance to 41–42% (from 23.5–24.5%), while maintaining services revenue and capex guidance and refining OpEx to the low end of the prior range; the Board declared a $0.76 dividend .
- Strategic progress: record ADV across key protocols (Open Trading $4.8B, portfolio trading $1.3B, dealer RFQ $1.8B), with strong April momentum (record total ADV $57.4B and U.S. high-grade market share 19.4%), positioning for near-term share gains as volatility rises .
- Near-term catalysts: launch of high-touch block solution in U.S. credit, enhanced Mid-X for dealers this quarter, and X-Pro rollout in Europe; April record volumes suggest positive estimate revisions and share trajectory into Q2 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record protocol activity: Open Trading ADV $4.8B (+8% YoY), portfolio trading ADV $1.3B (+78% YoY), dealer RFQ ADV $1.8B (+40% YoY), highlighting diversified growth engines .
- International strength offset U.S. credit: EM commission +6% and Eurobonds +5% while services revenue reached a record $27.2M (+7% YoY) on CP+ adoption and net new data contracts .
- CEO quote: “Open Trading activity reached record levels in 1Q25, and we continue to see higher levels of velocity… new capabilities should help drive higher levels of market share in U.S. credit” .
What Went Wrong
- U.S. credit commission revenue fell 7% on lower fee per million (FPM) and estimated market share; total credit FPM declined to $139 (–10% YoY), pressuring fee capture .
- GAAP EPS compressed to $0.40 due to a $54.9M reserve tied to a NY state tax court opinion impacting prior-period uncertain tax positions, elevating the GAAP effective tax rate to 84.3% .
- U.S. municipal market share softened to 6.4% in March and 4.8% in April, partly due to mix shifting to larger-sized notional trades, despite record ADV growth .
Financial Results
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We generated record daily volumes… record portfolio trading ADV and record block trading ADV across both emerging markets and eurobonds… new capabilities… should help drive higher levels of market share in U.S. credit” .
- CFO: “We reported diluted EPS of $0.40 or $1.87 per share, excluding notable items… we established a reserve for uncertain tax positions… GAAP tax rate now expected 41%–42%” .
- CEO on rates algos: “Clients… execute billions in treasuries with 97% passive execution rates” .
- CEO on PT: “U.S. high-grade portfolio trading market share was 19%… high-yield 18%… 92% of portfolio trades on X-Pro” .
- CFO on guidance: “Expect OpEx at the low end of $505–$525M; effective tax rate 41%–42% GAAP, 26%–27% ex notable” .
Q&A Highlights
- Share outlook: Management expects sustained volatility and multiple protocol launches (block, Mid-X, European X-Pro) to drive share gains across channels .
- Fee capture drivers: Mix shift toward PT and dealer-to-dealer lowers FPM, partially offset by higher duration, greater high-yield activity, and Open Trading utilization; core client-to-dealer RFQ pricing remains stable .
- PT traction: Benchmark PT enhancements, net hedging, auto spotting, and analytics via X-Pro driving adoption; single-dealer PT can swing monthly share .
- Alternative liquidity providers: Growing demand from systematic funds and ETF market makers; highest use case is anonymous all-to-all RFQ; settlement-facing limitations remain .
- Pricing stance: Price by protocol; dealer-to-dealer is price sensitive (Mid-X priced accordingly); client-to-dealer pricing stable; competition centered on workflow/data vs. price .
Estimates Context
- Revenue: Slight miss vs consensus ($208.6M actual vs. $210.0M*).
- EPS (normalized/ex-notable): Beat ($1.87 actual vs. $1.813*). GAAP EPS ($0.40) reflects the tax reserve and is not comparable to normalized consensus .
- EBITDA: Beat ($107.4M actual vs. $102.3M*).
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Where estimates may adjust:
- Positive momentum in April (record ADV, higher HG share) and protocol launches could drive upward revisions to PT/dealer-initiated volumes and EBITDA; however, lower FPM from mix and elevated GAAP tax rate temper EPS trajectories .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term trading setup is constructive: April records and rising velocity support Q2 revenue/EBITDA tailwinds, though mix-driven FPM headwinds persist; watch Open Trading and high-yield activity trends .
- Focus on normalized EPS: Excluding notable items, EPS beat suggests underlying earnings power; GAAP tax reset (41–42%) will compress reported EPS until reserve dynamics normalize .
- Share recovery in U.S. credit: Block trading rollout, strengthened PT/X-Pro, and Mid-X should lift market share across client- and dealer-initiated channels through 2025 .
- International and rates diversification: EM/Eurobonds services and rates algos broaden growth drivers, reducing reliance on U.S. corporate credit cycles .
- Watch fee capture sensitivities: Duration (HG) and high-yield mix support FPM; PT/dealer-to-dealer mix dilutes FPM but is high-margin with lower variable costs .
- Capital deployment: Ongoing buybacks ($52M YTD through April) and dividend ($0.76) indicate confidence, balanced with RFQ-hub consolidation costs already reflected in OpEx guidance .
- Tactical lens: Momentum indicators (April share/ADV, protocol launches) are potential positive stock catalysts; macro volatility and rate path remain key variables for mix, volumes, and fee economics .