Figure Technology Solutions Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Figure Connect exceeds 50% of volume, accelerating a capital-light marketplace shift
Summary
Figure used Q4 to prove the operational thesis: Figure Connect is moving from pilot to core. For the first time, more than half of consumer loan marketplace volume flowed through Connect, pushing the company toward a capital-light model while enabling faster margins and repeatable distribution. Democratized Prime and the YLDS stablecoin are the plumbing that provide short-term financing and atomic settlement, and management says both are scaling quickly.
The quarter delivered strong top-line growth and operating leverage, with consumer loan marketplace volume of $2.7 billion (+131% YoY), adjusted net revenue of $158 million (+106% YoY), and adjusted EBITDA of $81.3 million (51.6% margin). Management reiterated a product expansion playbook, named auto and SMB as near-term adjacencies via partnerships, and launched OPEN, a blockchain-native share class. There are caveats: an employee-targeted phishing incident affected ~12,400 individuals, take-rate guidance shifts lower on product mix to 3.5-4%, and some claims around Democratized Prime scale merit scrutiny as the company migrates larger, first-lien flows onto its rails.
Key Takeaways
- Figure Connect hit a milestone, accounting for more than 50% of consumer loan marketplace volume in Q4, a fast ramp from its June 2024 launch and a structural step toward a capital-light model.
- Consumer loan marketplace volume was $2.7 billion in Q4, up 131% year-over-year, with 307 partners now on the platform.
- Adjusted net revenue was $158 million, up 106% year-over-year; adjusted EBITDA was $81.3 million, up ~426% year-over-year, with adjusted EBITDA margin expanding to 51.6%.
- GAAP net income was $15 million, a 9.4% margin; elevated share-based compensation in the quarter included one-time fully vested grants, and SBC is expected to normalize to about $21 million over coming quarters.
- Management expects net take rate to settle in a 3.5% to 4% range going forward, down from prior guidance, driven largely by product mix shifts into shorter-duration assets like auto and larger first-lien mortgages.
- First-lien originations rose to ~19% of originations (from 12% a year ago), positioning Figure to participate in the much larger mortgage market and capture larger-dollar loans even at lower basis point take rates.
- Democratized Prime reported nearly 10x quarter-over-quarter growth in matched offers, rising from $20 million to over $200 billion in matched offers according to management, and had more than 1,000 active participants, a figure that has almost doubled since the start of the year.
- YLDS stablecoin adoption accelerated, with the CEO saying circulation is nearing half a billion and the CFO reporting YLDS ended the quarter at $328 million, up ~20x since Q3 on Figure’s figures.
- Figure launched OPEN, an on-chain public equity network and the company's own blockchain-native share class, enabling 24/7 ATS trading, atomic settlement, self-custody, and programmable collateral features including up to 80% LTV borrowing.
- The company signed a major partnership with Agora Data to bring third-party auto finance assets onto Democratized Prime and Connect, expected to contribute tens of millions in near term volume and broaden third-party supply without originator cost exposure.
- Securitization progress helped execution and gain-on-sale premiums, with Figure having achieved AAA ratings from S&P and Moody’s; management cautioned new product securitizations will require seasoning and scale, typically several hundred million in assets.
- Loans held for sale increased to ~$404 million; loans on balance sheet may rise as Figure supplies collateral to Democratized Prime, but management expects this to normalize as third-party supply grows.
- Liquidity remains strong with ~$1.2 billion in cash and cash equivalents, and the board authorized a $200 million share repurchase program, to be executed disciplinedly and without fixed obligations.
- Security incident was a targeted phishing attack affecting loan inquiry records and ~12,400 individuals, not a blockchain or core transaction breach; management does not expect a material financial impact but has implemented enhanced controls.
Full Transcript
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Welcome to the Figure Technology Solutions fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants have been placed on a listen-only mode. The floor will be open for your questions following the presentation. If you would like to ask a question at that time, please press star one on your telephone keypad. If at any point your question has been answered, you may remove yourself from the queue by pressing star two. To get to as many questions as time permits, we kindly ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Others can hear your questions clearly, we ask that you pick up your handset for best sound quality. Lastly, today’s call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Brian Mikulesky, Head of Investor Relations.
Brian Mikulesky, Head of Investor Relations, Figure Technology Solutions: Thanks, Leo. Good afternoon and welcome to Figure’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. My name is Brian Mikulesky, Head of Investor Relations here at Figure. Joining me on today’s call are Michael Tannenbaum, our Chief Executive Officer, and Macrina Kgil, our Chief Financial Officer. Mike Cagney, our Executive Chairman and Co-founder, regrets not being able to join us today due to prior commitment at the White House. I’d like to note that in today’s call, we refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. These measures have been reconciled to their GAAP equivalents in the earnings re-release we issued today, as well as an appendix to our supplemental pre-slide presentation posted to our website. As a reminder, non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for GAAP results. Unless otherwise stated, our results we discussed today, including our net revenue and profitability, refer to their non-GAAP equivalents.
I’d also highlight that certain statements made during today’s call may be considered forward-looking statements under federal securities law. The company cautions you that forward-looking statements involve substantial risks and uncertainties and a number of factors, many of which are beyond the company’s control, can cause actual results, events, or circumstances to differ materially from those described in the statements. Please see the risk factors we’ve identified in our most recent 10-Q and other SEC filings. We are not undertaking any commitment to update these statements if conditions change, except as required by law. Recording of the conversation will be made available on our website following the conclusions of today’s call. Following the conclusion of the prepared remarks, we’ll open the line for questions. Remind you to limit yourself to one question and one follow-up during this Q&A period.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Michael Tannenbaum. Michael, please go ahead.
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Thank you, Brian. Thanks to all of you who are joining us this afternoon. As many of you know, we previewed our results earlier this month, and what we’re reporting today is consistent with that update. Rather than walking through the numbers you’ve already seen, I want to focus our time today on what this quarter sets up going forward. As we look ahead to 2026, there are three areas that we’re focused on. First is continuing to scale our marketplace, particularly through Figure Connect and driving more volume into our capital-light exchange. Second is broadening the types of products that live inside that marketplace, especially across mortgage-adjacent categories where we already have strong partner relationships. Third is expanding the broader blockchain ecosystem around that marketplace, where tokenization, decentralized finance, and atomic settlement are setting the standard of how a modern capital marketplace should function.
Everything we’re doing across the business, from product launches to partnerships, ties back to those themes. They reinforce each other, and together, they move us further along the path of modernizing capital markets and bringing them onto blockchain. Let me start with the marketplace. Pillar 1, scaling the marketplace. Figure Connect is the operating system for how capital flows through our ecosystem. This past quarter, more than half of our consumer loan marketplace volume transacted through Connect for the first time ever. That milestone matters not only because of the speed at which it happened, reminder, we launched Connect in June 2024, but also because it represents structural progress in how the business operates. The more volume that flows through Connect, the less we rely on balance sheet intermediation. The model becomes more capital light, and our margins become more durable.
What’s also important, and often underappreciated, is how difficult it is to build and scale a marketplace to this level of integration. Marketplaces are not software features, they’re trust systems. They require standardized assets, consistent underwriting, clean data, transparent performance history, deep institutional relationships on both sides of the market, and credibility with rating agencies and securitization buyers. They require repeat investors who trust the standardization of the asset. You cannot simply AI your way into that. What AI can do is optimize processes and fuel growth, and we are leaning into that. We’ve been explicit that AI is primarily about fueling growth opportunities for us and our partner ecosystem rather than simply optimizing costs.
From an AI growth perspective, because our mortgage process is the fastest and lowest cost, again, as we’ve built our own integrated loan origination system and capital market that removes friction, it is the most optimized for AI. In fact, this month I was visiting with a partner, and they showed me a demo of an AI salesperson walking someone through their white label Figure product. They said to me, "We’re going to divert more to Figure versus Fannie Mae because the process is so simple, it’s much better suited for an AI workflow." I expect more partners to do the same in the coming months.
On the cost side, 2 weeks ago, we launched an AI customer service agent to streamline parts of our application flow with roughly 3 quarters of chat volume containment. Importantly, we can now deploy our staff to focus on either enhanced support, which expands our partner ecosystem, or more growth-oriented tasks, especially as many of our unlicensed partners need our licensed staff for true sales activities. We’ve also embedded AI into property title review workflows and as a parallel validation step against our underwriting guidelines. These tools reduce error and enhance the quality and homogeneity of our assets. More importantly, the agents we train on these workflows can then be deployed on third-party assets, making it easier for us to bring in new asset originators into our Democratized Prime short-term financing marketplace, something I will cover a bit later today.
Before that, I’ll make one final point on AI in our business here, particularly in the context of the market thinking about which companies benefit versus are disrupted. While AI can improve underwriting models, enhance servicing workflows, and further reduce costs in our origination flow, AI cannot create liquidity, nor can it replicate years of standardized asset performance across cycles. As I wrote last year, you can’t AI your way into AAA. Furthermore, Figure Connect works in tandem with Democratized Prime, our on-chain short-term financing marketplace that provides the working capital layer to fuel additional origination. Where Connect drives long-term liquidity and asset distribution, Democratized Prime provides programmable, decentralized short-term warehouse capacity. Together, they create a vertically integrated capital market stack from origination to financing to distribution. Each incremental originator and new product expands asset supply. Each additional investor, whether DeFi or traditional, improves price discovery.
Every transaction enhances performance history and transparency back to that durable ecosystem and moat. This is the formula we believe that builds durable marketplaces. Once they reach the levels of scale we’ve achieved, they’re not easily displaced. Our focus is to stick to the same formula, increase penetration, broaden liquidity, and continue shifting volume into this capital-light framework. Pillar two, product expansion. That brings me to our second pillar for 2026, expanding the types of products within our marketplace on the back of Figure’s second lien HELOC success. If Connect is the engine, product expansion is the fuel. Our goal here is straightforward, extend the Figure ecosystem into mortgage-adjacent verticals without changing the core architecture that makes the model work. Importantly, we’re not reinventing the system every time we enter a new product.
We are extending the same standardized blockchain-native infrastructure into new use cases, as I shared previously, leveraging AI to make it go faster. There are 3 important examples of this. First, adding third-party volume, meaning volume not originated by our loan origination system. One of the most powerful evolutions of our model is the ability to bring externally originated assets onto our capital markets rails. For example, we just signed a major partnership with Agora Data to bring auto finance assets into Democratized Prime. Agora is a fintech platform that provides analytics, capital markets access, and loan performance data solutions to auto finance lenders, helping them originate, fund, and manage auto loans more efficiently and profitably.
With our partnership, which is expected to bring tens of millions of dollars of auto finance to Democratized Prime and Connect in just the next few months, we are expanding distribution without owning the front end or powering the LOS. What matters is that the loan ultimately flows into a standardized marketplace with transparent underwriting, blockchain registry, preventing double pledging, and both institutional and DeFi liquidity. By integrating with third-party originators, we dramatically expand addressable supply without material costs. We effectively turn our marketplace into a capital markets highway, one that can accept assets from multiple on-ramps. That increases network liquidity and importantly, further strengthens Democratized Prime and Figure Connect. For the auto loan space, the road ahead is paved on-chain. Second, SMB loans. SMB is another clear example of how we extend the Figure ecosystem without changing the core architecture.
Many small business owners are asset-rich but liquidity-constrained, and oftentimes that core asset is their home. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, more than two-thirds of business owners also own their homes. At the same time, many entrepreneurs are boxed out of traditional capital sources. They may lack sufficient time in business, they may not meet minimum revenue thresholds, and may not fit conventional underwriting boxes. As a result, they often turn to higher-cost capital products because they believe those are their only options. We intend to be a big part of changing that. Given the substantial portion of these operators that own a home and have strong personal credit profiles, we can service these borrowers where most others can’t or won’t. In Q4, partners on our SMB platform did over $46 million of loans, twice as much as the prior period.
In this spirit, we’re very excited to announce that Figure is finalizing a strategic partnership with Newtek, a highly established and trusted leader in the small business financial services space. In the near term, we’re excited to support Newtek in delivering Figure’s HELOC for small business to Newtek’s deep network of loyal business owners through our partner-branded channel. Over time, we see this evolving into a fully embedded small business lending, banking, and money movement partnership anchored by our SEC-registered stablecoin, Yields, YLDS. This partnership reflects our shared commitment to serving small businesses and highlights how Figure’s full ecosystem can power transformative long-term growth. I’ll touch on a product category that, while not new, has been increasing in importance for us, first lien mortgage. As of Q4, first lien represents roughly 19% of our originations, up from 12% just a year ago.
That change in mix reflects both growing partner adoption and increasing investor comfort with the asset. The opportunity here is significant. First lien is a multi-trillion dollar market and represents the majority of our partners’ existing volume. Our existing partners do over $300 billion of first lien. If we want our marketplace to be the winner in all of housing finance, we have to participate meaningfully in that market, and that’s exactly what we’re doing. Over the past several quarters, first lien has moved from being an extension of HELOC to becoming a central driver of growth. That momentum gives us confidence that 2026 will be the year of the first lien for Figure. Chinese New Year was last week. That rang in the year of the horse. This is now the year of the first liens.
What differentiates our approach is the low cost and speed that we can offer our origination partners. Repetition does not spoil the prayer. We do a mortgage in less than $1,000 and in 5 days versus industry average of $11,045. Our first lien HELOC offers everything a mortgage does, but with the full redraw functionality and sits in the first position. That structure provides flexibility and unlocks a strong competitive differentiation against the GSE-driven conventional mortgage alternative. Today, when partners originate first lien mortgages, they are often routed into a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac channel by default. By offering an alternative with faster cycle times and lower costs, we provide a different path and one that integrates directly into our capital markets rails. The result is that mortgage partners no longer view us as their HELOC outlet.
They’re increasingly coming to us as a comprehensive mortgage platform. Pillar three, blockchain ecosystem expansion. The third pillar for 2026 is expanding our blockchain ecosystem. This is where our long-term differentiation becomes most visible. From the beginning, we’ve said blockchain is core to our strategy. It’s the critical infrastructure layer that allows us to modernize capital markets. Over the last several years, we’ve proven this thesis in private credit. We’ve shown that tokenized real-world assets can originate, trade, and securitize efficiently on public blockchain. We’ve demonstrated that transparency and immutability reduce friction, and we’ve built liquidity around standardized on-chain assets. We’re extending that infrastructure even further with the recent developments here. I’ll start with an update on Democratized Prime, our decentralized finance marketplace that competes with traditional warehouse lines and prime brokerage, but in a structurally different way.
Instead of relying on bilateral agreements, legal complexity, and bank intermediation, assets can be pledged, financed, and settled directly on-chain with programmable collateral management. This is not theoretical anymore. We’re seeing real traction. Democratized Prime delivered outstanding results with nearly 10x quarter-over-quarter growth, expanding from $20 million to over $200 billion in matched offers. We now have more than 1,000 active participants on the platform, demonstrating strong market demand for decentralized warehouse financing. We’ve almost doubled again this number since the beginning of the year. We successfully launched our Real World Asset Consortium partnership this quarter, extending Democratized Prime access into the Solana ecosystem. The cross-chain expansion allows DeFi participants to access U.S. real estate-backed yield, which is quite different versus the speculative assets typically seen in DeFi. We’ve brought institutional assets to a broader participant base.
Reminder that Democratized Prime adds an important cog into our flywheel by providing critical working capital for loan origination for our partners while generating fee income for Figure. It is also the most natural way that third-party assets enter our ecosystem because it’s easier to offer short-term financing than permanent capital. We see Democratized Prime with an upsell of Figure Connect as the baseline go-to-market approach for third-party assets. The aforementioned Agora Data Auto Finance partnership is a consummate example. Next, I’ll touch on YLDS, the settlement layer of our ecosystem. YLDS is not just a stablecoin. What makes it differentiated is that it’s regulated, yield-bearing, and natively integrated into our capital markets infrastructure. It can settle loans, it can finance assets, it can move across chains, and over time, it can serve as a bridge between traditional financial institutions and on-chain markets.
As the oil of the machine, YLDS growth directly correlates with increased activity across our lending marketplace and Democratized Prime platform. You see this reflected in the results this quarter and to date, with YLDS in circulation nearing half a billion, increasing by over 20x since the end of the third quarter. We expect YLDS adoption to continue to accelerate on this exponential curve as more partners recognize the efficiency benefits of blockchain-based atomic settlement and as regulatory clarity continues to favor compliant stablecoin structures over less regulated alternatives. As mentioned previously, Newtek, as one example, is exploring funding loans in YLDS, thereby reducing the interest burden for borrowers and settlement expenses for itself. Finally, last week, we demonstrated something that underscores the broader opportunity in front of us. We became the first public company to launch a blockchain-native share class of our own security.
Listed on an exchange, we purpose-built to enable others to participate in the same model. The equity marketplace is called OPEN, On-Chain Public Equity Network. This isn’t a tokenized wrapper of a DTCC security or a synthetic representation of legacy infrastructure. We issued equity that is native to the blockchain from day one, with its registry, trading venue, settlement layer, custody model, and financing rails fully integrated on chain. Let me explain why this is important. First, we rebuilt the transactional structure. Trades occur 24/7 on our ATS, with atomic settlement. Investors can self-custody through wallet connectivity. Ownership is recorded directly on chain through an integrated transfer agent model that reduces friction, cost, and restores direct control to the shareholders and issuers. Second, and most economically meaningful, is holders realize the benefits of true ownership and self-custody through financing and DeFi integration. Equity on OPEN is programmable collateral.
Shareholders can borrow against it at up to 80% LTV. They can cross-collateralize with other on-chain assets inside Democratized Prime. They can lend their shares directly through transparent limit order books, retaining stock loan economics rather than ceding them to opaque prime broker structures. This is a structural shift in who captures value in equity markets. Third, this is the beginning of issuers forming direct relationships with their shareholder base. On chain, issuers can access their shareholders directly for communication, rewards, governance without intermediaries like brokerages or proxy advisors. Shareholder communication is increasingly important to issuers, especially as a broader segment of retail enters the public markets. OPEN offers important keys for issuers to navigate this dynamic. When you step back and look at what we’ve accomplished this year, the through line is clear.
2025 was about proving that this model works operationally and financially, and about establishing real first-mover advantages and building out marketplace infrastructure. 2026 is about compounding that momentum. We believe we’re still early in the transition towards more efficient on-chain capital markets, but we are operating with increased scale. Before we move on, I want to briefly address a recent security incident. To be clear, this was not a blockchain or protocol-related event. This incident involved a targeting phishing attack that affected our loan inquiry records and a limited number of customer accounts in our loan products. There was no compromise of our blockchain infrastructure or core transaction processing systems. The impacted information includes names, loan account numbers, addresses, and dates of birth, as well as Social Security numbers for approximately 12,400 individuals.
We have begun notifying individuals and are offering appropriate support. We moved quickly to contain the incident and implemented additional safeguards, including enhanced authentication controls, expanded employee training, and further monitoring to reduce the likelihood of similar events in the future. We take information security extremely seriously, and we will continue investing in our controls and processes. At this time, the incident is not expected to have a material impact on our financial results. I’ll now turn the call over to Macrina to walk you through our financial results for the quarter.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Thank you, Michael. I’ll walk through our results touching on our growth, scale, profitability, and balance sheet for the quarter. With growth, we reported exceptional consumer loan marketplace volume this quarter, reaching $2.7 billion, an increase of 131% year-over-year, primarily driven by new partner expansion with 307 partners and continued growth in volume from nascent products such as SMB loans and DSCR loans. As a reminder, the winter months from November to February represent seasonally low levels of activity for home-based lending. Despite this, we reported sequential quarterly growth in our consumer loan marketplace volume, with contribution from new partners and newer product categories offsetting the seasonal headwinds.
Democratized Prime ended the quarter with a balance of $206 million, and YLDS ended at $328 million, reflecting continued adoption following Prime’s expansion onto Solana and our broader RWA Consortium initiatives adding momentum for these products. Shifting to scale, we reported adjusted net revenue of $158 million, an increase of 106% year-over-year. Adjusted net revenue benefited from the higher consumer loan marketplace volume and by servicing and interest income, which are asset balance-based revenue lines. Year-over-year adjusted net revenue directly correlated to consumer loan marketplace volume grew 130%, while servicing and interest income combined grew by 47%. Net take rate was 3.8% this quarter, 40 basis points higher year-over-year, with better gain on sale execution as the primary driver of increase.
Last year, we had very little Connect volume in Q4. This year, 54% of our volume comes from Connect, where we primarily earn a net take rate on volume traded. Compared to the prior quarter, net take rates were lower from a decline in gain on sale premium, in line with broader market execution, which was wider from increase in deal flow during Q4 of 2025. Secondarily, we saw net take rate was slightly lower quarter-over-quarter due to business mix. For example, as we introduced first lien securitizations to c-credit buyers, premium on the loans, what we call gain on sale, is more attractive to the buyers, which means it’s lower for Figure.
Another would be as we scale with larger Connect partners who bring more volume to our marketplace, they benefit from lower ecosystem fees due to the sliding scale rate we offer for higher volumes. It’s important to note we manage the business to optimize for marketplace volume growth and long-term profitability, rather than to maximize our net take rates for each quarter. This approach aligns with the broader strategy Michael outlined today. To our near to medium-term outlook on net take rates, we believe the range will be between 3.5%-4%, which takes into account factors such as product mix, marketplace participation, and capital market conditions. That range may fluctuate quarter to quarter, but our focus remains on scaling long-term marketplace, margin durability, and capital efficiency, not short-term pricing optimization at the expense of marketplace slowdown. Turning now to profitability.
GAAP net income for the quarter was $15 million, representing a margin of 9.4% compared to 7% in Q4 of last year. GAAP net income was impacted by higher overall share-based compensation expenses in the quarter, which were primarily driven by one-time fully vested grants to third-party advisors and for certain of our restricted stock units that incurred accelerated recognition of expense to earlier years within the vesting period. We expect stock-based compensation to normalize around $21 million over the next few quarters. Adjusted EBITDA was $81.3 million, up approximately 426% year-over-year, and adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 51.6% compared to 20.2% in the prior year period. This quarter, we recognized additional public company-related costs of $2 million, and we expect this trend to continue into 2026.
Our medium-term goal for adjusted EBITDA margin is to be above 60%. Our progress this quarter can be explained as follows: First, we are growing volume and assets in Figure Connect and Democratized Prime that reduce balance sheet usage and improve contribution margins as more volume moves into our capital-light marketplace. Second, we are seeing our contribution margin from partner-branded volume continue to be around 80% as we have built out the core infrastructure that powers Figure Connect and our partner branded initiatives. Third, we continue to execute on operating leverage across both fixed and variable expense categories, where our volume increased 131% and our operating expenses, excluding share-based compensation, increased 13% over the same period. I’ll move on to our balance sheet and liquidity. We ended the quarter with approximately $1.2 billion in cash and cash equivalents.
Loans held for sale was approximately $404 million at the end of the year, an increase of $15 million this quarter. As a reminder, our loans held for sale balance typically reflect the periodic timing of loan sale and securitization programs, as we generally hold on to loans for a few weeks. As we scale Democratized Prime and supply Figure loans for collateral to meet the demand, we may extend the time we hold certain loans on our balance sheet. This could increase the balance sheet in future periods, while our loans represent available lend supply for this product. As more third-party lending supply comes onto the platform, like Agora that Michael mentioned earlier, we expect loans held for sale balances to normalize back to historical trends.
In addition to our strong operating results, I’d like to highlight our announcement today that our board has authorized a $200 million share repurchase program. We are taking this step as a reflection of the strength of our balance sheet, the durability of our operating profile, and our confidence in the long-term opportunity in front of us. I’d note this program does not obligate us to acquire any specific amount of shares, and it will be executed in a disciplined manner, consistent with our liquidity position and strategic priorities. We expect to maintain substantial financial flexibility to continue investing in marketplace expansion, product innovation, and growth across our businesses. In summary, Q4 demonstrated strong volume growth, significant operating leverage, and continued migration toward a capital-light marketplace model.
As we enter into 2026, we remain focused on margin durability, balance sheet efficiency, and further scaling our marketplace as the primary drivers of long-term profitability. With that, I’d like to thank everyone for joining us today and for your continued interest in Figure. Leo, we’re now available for questions.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. The floor is now open for questions. At this time, if you have a question or comment, please press star 1 on your telephone keypad. If at any point your question is answered, you may remove yourself from the queue by pressing star 2. Again, we kindly ask that you limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up, and pick up your handset when posing your questions. Thank you. Our first question is coming from Dan Dolev with Mizuho. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Dan Dolev, Analyst, Mizuho: Hey, guys. Michael, Macrina, really nice results. Very impressive, as always. Wanted to ask you about the Agora partnership. It looks like a very exciting development here, third-party originated auto loans. Can you maybe frame the opportunity here and how much upside this should be adding to Figure over time? This seems like a phenomenal business in our view. Thank you.
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Thank you, Dan. Agora, in many ways, is like Figure. They’re innovative, they’ve got a huge partner network. In their case, it’s dealers, and they have a really successful capital markets franchise. They’re also really big believers in blockchain. For them, standardizing the capital market infrastructure is going to help them grow faster. In terms of the opportunity set, it’s really threefold. One, it’s an entrance into the massive auto finance sector with about $1.5 trillion outstanding. It’s also a huge opportunity for us from a Democratized Prime perspective, because we’re bringing third-party assets onto the platform, which is how we monetize Democratized Prime.
Lastly, it is also a connect upsell opportunity, because as Agora standardizes its assets onto Figure, we will have the exposure to our buyers, who will then be able to participate in Figure Connect and transact in permanent acquisition of loans, rather than just temporary financing on Democratized Prime. A really massive opportunity across all of our capital-light products.
Patrick Moley, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Very impressive. Thanks again.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. We’ll now move on to Patrick Moley with Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.
Patrick Moley, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Wanted to talk about loan origination partner ads. You’ve almost doubled it in the last six months, up 25% sequentially in the fourth quarter. I was hoping you could maybe pull back the curtain and help us get a better sense for where those partner ads are coming from, the nature of those partners. Given the accelerated pace of growth we’ve seen there recently, could this be a leading indicator of an acceleration in loan origination volumes in 2026? Thanks.
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: We’re firing on all cylinders in terms of partner acquisition. We have three primary motions that are all working really well. We have the license approach, which is split into a focus on independent mortgage banks, and then separately, depositories, which includes banks and credit unions, and we see significant traction in both of those. We also have the non-licensed approach, where we have the SMB channel we talked about, doubled quarter-over-quarter, and we’re seeing activity in fintech and broader real estate. I haven’t spent as much time talking about residential transition loans and DSCR, but that whole ecosystem and market of investors, people that fix and flip loans and properties, is a really massive opportunity. It’s considered broadly non-QM, and the Figure product is a perfect fit for that space. A lot of our non-licensed activity is partnering with those types.
To directly answer your question, I do think it is indicative of a really strong pace of consumer loan marketplace volume growth that we continue to see into 2026.
Patrick Moley, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Great. Thanks for that color, Michael.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. We’ll now move on to Ryan Tomasello with KBW. Your line is now open.
Dan Dolev, Analyst, Mizuho0: Hi, everyone. Echo the congrats on the strong execution and the initiatives. Wanted to double-click on the Agora partnership, specifically on the monetization. You know, I think we know that the Democratized Prime fee rate is roughly 50 BPS, so that’s pretty clear. You know, in terms of upfront tokenization fees, you know, what the Figure Connect monetization looks like relative to, you know, first-party assets. Anything to help size that math would be helpful. Thanks.
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: I’ll start, and I’ll turn it over to Macrina. From a monetization standpoint, I think the important point is that this is pure margin. We’re not incurring the expenses to originate the asset, maintain the LOS. It’s really about leveraging our capital market infrastructure. I’d also say that 50 basis points is the estimate that we’ve shared for assets, but as we enter into different conversations and asset classes, we see generally upside towards that number. Without being specific about this transaction, I do think that you’ll see, as we add additional third-party assets, the contribution dollars and basis points of margin from Democratized Prime to go up. Macrina, what would you add?
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Thanks, Ryan, for asking the question. I would also add, Michael mentioned earlier that, you know, this will be going into Figure Connect, as we see more standardization in the loan product for auto. We do anticipate this impacting the overall volume coming into Figure Connect, which is great. Additionally, a securitization for this type of auto loans are developed. We’d also be getting the securitization sponsor fee. Just keep in mind, I did allude to a net take rate range of 3.5%-4%. That is taking into account these auto loan types, because these are shorter duration, and so they will likely command a lower take rate rather than the HELOC, which have a longer duration.
We are thinking ahead to think of different types of asset classes being added, and being helpful to us in the overall volume coming into our marketplace.
Dan Dolev, Analyst, Mizuho: Great. Thanks for the color.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. We’ll now move on to Rob Wildhack of Autonomous Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Rob Wildhack, Analyst, Autonomous Research: Hi, guys. Just sticking with the take rate. I think previously you were suggesting the take rate to be stable around 4%, and now you’re saying more like 3.5%-4%. Can you just unpack what’s changed structurally there in the last couple of months?
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Sure. you know, in 2025, our main products were really the second lien HELOCs, as part of our overall ecosystem. As we move into 2026 and we add different types of products, the product mix is changing into auto and more first lien coming across. Auto, I gave the example earlier. These are shorter-term loans, and they’re going to have a different type of profile and different types of buyers that come into Connect Marketplace. We do anticipate the take rates really coming down for the shorter duration products. It’s gonna depend on really the product mix going forward. At the end of the day, we really want to be able to continue to grow our marketplace.
The goal for us has always been to add different types of assets coming into our marketplace, not just the one HELOC second lien. First lien products or auto or any different types of loans in the future will have an impact on take rate.
Rob Wildhack, Analyst, Autonomous Research: Okay. I guess if the take rate’s gonna be that much lower going forward, but you’re still targeting, 60% margins, how do you bridge the gap there? Is that just more volume or lower costs in the longer term?
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: I’ll start. Michael, if you want to add anything, please go ahead. I think the important part is as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, our contribution margin has been around the 80%. It’s not that we’re gonna be spending additional expenses. As we mentioned for Agora, it’s not that we’re gonna be adding more, different types of LOS systems and having to spend. So we do anticipate the contribution margin still to be higher than that 60% mark, in the future with different types of assets.
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Might also be worth adding. First lien 19% this quarter, 12% last quarter, same period. Excuse me, last year, same period. When you think about first lien in particular, those are larger loans. As a result, take rate happens to be lower basis points on loan amount, but the dollars that we earn and the profit dollars are actually higher because the unit costs are the same for us to do so. I wouldn’t look at take rate as an input metric or any decline in take rate as saying anything about maybe partners in a more competitive environment or renegotiating take rate. Nothing like that. It’s simply product mix. The 12 versus 19 is pretty material, and we’re actually leaning into that. We want more of these larger first lien loans.
We started doing the smallest loans available, call it $100,000. As we work our way up, remember, disruption starts at the bottom. We’re doing a loan at $1,000 versus industry average of 11. We’re able to continue to work our way up towards our partners’ volume, doing larger and larger loans, being more and more competitive with Fannie Mae. That take rate may not be 4%, but the unit economics of that loan is gonna be better just given the size. We are classically disrupting that market. As I mentioned in my remarks, our existing partner base does $300 billion of first lien production annually, more than that, conservative number, and we’re adding partners all the time. This is definitely a positive. Just wanna make sure that’s clear.
Rob Wildhack, Analyst, Autonomous Research: It is. Yeah. If I could just one clarification, because I think, you know, growing in first lien has been the priority for the company for some time, but the take rate outlook is softer. Is that just a function of even more first lien loans that you’re expecting or even larger dollar first lien loans than you were expecting a couple of months ago?
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Yeah. I mean, if you think about it, right, we’re growing 100% year-over-year, and we moved from 12% to 19%. I don’t think at the time of the IPO, we expected first lien to have as much traction as we do. Many of our conversations today with partners are about first lien because at the end of the day, that’s the biggest part of their business. If we wanna be as helpful and as disruptive as we can to the status quo, we’re moving into that market. Our product is getting pulled in that direction.
Rob Wildhack, Analyst, Autonomous Research: Okay. Helpful. Thank you.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. We’ll move now to James Yaro with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
James Yaro, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Good afternoon, thanks for taking the question. I just wanted to touch on the ramp-up in volumes for new originating partners. Is there a rule of thumb you could lay out for us for how long partners take before they’re fully scaled up and originating volumes on your platform? Maybe could you comment on the composition of year-on-year growth in origination volume between new partners versus existing partners?
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Hi, James. Our sales team would say it’s three months because that’s how the compensation structures work. In general, that’s roughly what we see. There’s gonna be different dynamics. Our partner base is diverse. Some are licensed, some are not licensed, some use an API, some are bigger, and they take more time. Some of the partners we announced last quarter, even some of the larger ones, they’re still not fully ramped because especially as we expand into that first lien ecosystem, and as we do things like DSCR and SMB loans and add things like yields, right? All of these opportunities are a big reason why upsell is such a large part of our go-to-market motion. For us, we continue to see new products being added.
In terms of the core, first and second lien HELOC, that’s going to be about three months.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: James,
James Yaro, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Sorry.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Just to add to what Michael had mentioned as well. I would say that, you know, our partner count is getting up to 307. It’s not that new partners are the ones that are contributing the most to this. We also have existing partners who continue to grow within our ecosystem as they move on to Connect. We also see that new partners are joining us as Figure acting as an intermediary or going on directly to Connect, and some of them are taking a lot of the share within Q4, which is great, and these are newer partners that have joined in the second half.
James Yaro, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Excellent. Thank you for the color there. Just a quick ticky-tacky one for you, Macrina. Any ability for you to comment a little bit on the seasonality in the first quarter? You touched a little bit on the seasonality in fourth. Maybe you could just comment a little bit around the first quarter as well.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Sure. We are still in the deep throes of winter months in New York as well. It’s very cold. What we do see is that from November to February, those tend to be the months where we see less volume than the rest of the year, and so we’re just exiting out of that and going into March. We do anticipate higher growth in March, as it was in the historical trends.
James Yaro, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Thank you so much.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one now on your telephone keypad. We’ll now move on to Randy Benner with Texas Capital. Please go ahead.
Randy Benner, Analyst, Texas Capital: Hey, thanks. I was just hoping you could update on the securitization process, you know, how that’s going for the HELOC loan products. I guess, like for these newer products, if there’d be a longer period of time where you gather loans before you’d be able to place those in the securitizations as well.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Sure. Hi, Randy, it’s Macrina. What we are seeing in, you know, Q3, Q4, Q1, just a reminder for this group, we earned our AAA on our securitization from S&P and Moody’s over the summer, and that has greatly helped us in terms of higher gain on sale premium that we are realizing for Q3 and Q4. You are seeing that in the trends compared to 2024, which has been very helpful for us. As you, as you allude to in terms of newer products, first lien, we did our second securitization actually in Q4. The first one we did in Q3 for the first time, it does take some months to be able to gather the new products before we can move on from a whole loan direct from Connect sale to a securitization vehicle.
How we think about it is usually we want to be able to have size of about several hundred million for each of the securitization products. The new products that we talked about that are less than $100 million for this quarter, it’s going to take some seasoning over the next few quarters before we can enter the market.
Randy Benner, Analyst, Texas Capital: Okay. Those loans held on the balance sheet will just be higher, but that’s the reason why, and so that’s all helpful. Just on auto, is the auto product also.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Randy, sorry to interrupt. On these types of loans, we actually just sell them through whole loans. Connect is really a whole loan marketplace where sellers come into the marketplace to be able to sell different types of loans, so they are being sold directly on Connect. Securitization is a different vehicle where Figure has stood up a shelf, worked with the rating agencies, and we collect a sponsor fee on those types of vehicles. It does take time, actually a few quarters and more size for these loans to go through a securitization, but that’s additive to us in terms of take rate.
Randy Benner, Analyst, Texas Capital: Okay, understood. The last follow-up is just on the auto product. Is that going to be direct, or would some of that be held for securitizations over time?
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Just want to make sure that we’re 100% clear. With auto, Agora already has their own securitization shelf, and so what they’re looking to do with Figure is to standardize that approach on our blockchain rails, take advantage of, for example, our registry and the fact that we prevent things like double pledging, as you saw in the Tricolor bankruptcy, those types of things, and get better execution over time by introducing also competition into the Democratized Prime marketplace as well as in Connect. We won’t be taking those loans onto our balance sheet. Similarly, when we talk about, for example, DSCR loans, those loans today aren’t living on our balance sheet.
In fact, they are living on one of the originating partners’ balance sheets. What we do is we work with the rating agencies and those partners over time to build out a shelf that then our partners can contribute into. As Macrina mentioned, when the securitization ultimately happens, it’s a fee-based event for us. We take a securitization fee as part of that transaction, but it’s the contributors who own the assets that contribute those assets into the securitization.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: All right. That’s really helpful. Appreciate the clarification.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. Once again, that is star 1 if you would like to ask a question. Star 1 on your telephone keypad. We’ll move now to Kyle Peterson with Needham. Your line is open.
Kyle Peterson, Analyst, Needham: Hey, good afternoon, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Wanted to start out, you know, particularly on, you know, private credit, and it’s been pretty topical of late. I think there’s been some jitters about it. I know at least a decent chunk of, you know, some of the whole loan and securitization buyers kind of are private capital and private credit investors. Has there been any change in, you know, whether it’s kind of tone or activity or anything like that, you know, in buyer appetite in the last couple months as, you know, some of these concerns have creeped up? I know it’s, you know, seems like it’s more, you know, kind of isolated commercial credits, but just wanted to see if there’s any, you know, change in sentiment or contagion concern with your partners.
Macrina Kgil, Chief Financial Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Hey, Kyle, thanks for the question. What we have seen in the market at the end of the day is that we actually haven’t seen any change in the demand for Figure loans. That’s because we’re in the market very often. People understand our product. We are in the market with securitization vehicles as often as well. As you alluded to, the private capital, private credit capital jitters that you’re seeing is really on the commercial loans rather than these residential mortgage type of loans. We aren’t actually seeing that. With that said, though, as a reminder, our loans actually get originated within 9 days on average, as fast as 5 days.
If we do see anything, it’s going to take a long time for other loan originators to shift to meet the appetite. We have a very short time, and we’re able to change trends as needed as quickly to accommodate the market. That isn’t something that we see today.
Kyle Peterson, Analyst, Needham: Okay. That’s really good to hear. Then, you know, I guess just a follow-up. Wanted to touch on, you know, the crypto-backed loans. I know that’s, like, a smaller kind of ancillary product now, but how has that, you know, product performed? I know there’s been some recent volatility in crypto prices, but, you know, has the credit performance and, you know, collateral held up, you know, on par with your underwriting standards? I guess just how has that book performed over the last few months as there’s been a little more volatility in crypto prices?
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: It’s a dream asset class from the perspective of the investor or owner of the loan, because you have the ability to liquidate that asset basically at any time because of the way the Bitcoin market works. Even though there’s been volatility, we’ve actually had a really easy time liquidating in the event we drop below LTV thresholds. We’ve been handling that nicely. There’s been zero losses in crypto-backed loans to date. You know, in general, while you note there is an environment that people are spending more time on private credit, we’re seeing across all of our products, securitization execution at all-time tights, including even earlier this month. Definitely there is some distinction across asset classes and across issuers, and so we feel really good about the position that Figure’s in.
Kyle Peterson, Analyst, Needham: Great. Thank you for taking my questions. Nice results.
Michael Tannenbaum, Chief Executive Officer, Figure Technology Solutions: Thank you.
Leo, Conference Call Operator: Thank you. This concludes today’s Figure Technology Solutions fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. Please disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day.