SSNC April 23, 2026

SS&C Technologies Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Raising Guidance Amid AI Transformation and Macro Headwinds

Summary

SS&C Technologies delivered a resilient first quarter, posting record adjusted revenue of $1.648 billion and adjusted EPS of $1.69, despite a backdrop of geopolitical tension and volatile oil prices. The company leveraged strong performance in its GIDS and GlobeOp segments to raise its full-year 2026 guidance, signaling confidence in its ability to navigate macro headwinds through deep domain expertise and technological scale.

A central theme of the call was the strategic pivot toward AI-driven services. By integrating agentic workflows via Blue Prism and rebranding its largest revenue line as 'technology-enabled services,' SS&C is positioning itself not just as a software provider, but as an essential infrastructure layer for the next generation of financial and healthcare operations. Management emphasized that while AI offers significant internal productivity gains—estimated at $200 million in annual savings—it also serves as a structural tailwind for client-facing innovation.

Key Takeaways

  • SS&C raised its full-year 2026 guidance following a record Q1 with adjusted revenue of $1.648 billion (up 9%) and adjusted EPS of $1.69 (up 14%).
  • The company rebranded its largest revenue line item to 'technology-enabled services' to better reflect the integration of software, data, and infrastructure.
  • AI is being treated as a structural tailwind rather than a threat; management expects AI agents and workflow orchestration to drive both client revenue and internal efficiencies.
  • Internal deployment of digital workers through Blue Prism has already resulted in approximately $200 million in annual savings.
  • The fund administration business showed significant momentum, adding $581 billion in assets under administration (AUA) since Q1 2024.
  • GIDS (Global Investment Data Services) saw strong growth of 10.4%, while GlobeOp grew by 6.7%.
  • Management addressed private credit concerns, noting that most funds are closed-end structures, making fee revenue relatively immune to daily redemption fluctuations.
  • The healthcare segment is seeing a turnaround, driven by massive market scale and opportunities in specialized therapies like GLP-1s.
  • SS&C remains aggressive with capital allocation, returning 98% of allocated capital in Q1 through share repurchases ($168 million) and dividends ($65 million).
  • The company views blockchain and tokenization as cost-saving enablers rather than disintermediation risks for its core services.
  • Expansion in the Australian market is a key growth focus, following the significant Insignia contract win.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the SS&C Technologies first quarter 2026 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Justine Stone, Head of Investor Relations.

Justine Stone, Head of Investor Relations, SS&C Technologies: Welcome, and thank you for joining us for our Q1 2026 earnings call. I’m Justine Stone, Investor Relations for SS&C. With me today is Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Rahul Kanwar, President and Chief Operating Officer, and Brian Schell, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we get started, we need to review the safe harbor statement. Please note the various remarks we make today about future expectations, plans, and prospects, including the financial outlook we provide, constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the safe harbor provisions under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors, including those discussed in the Risk Factors section of our most recent annual report on Form 10-K, which is on file with the SEC and can also be accessed on our website.

These forward-looking statements represent our expectations only as of today, April 23rd, 2026. While the company may elect to update these forward-looking statements, it specifically disclaims any obligation to do so. During today’s call, we’ll be referring to certain non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to comparable GAAP financial measures is included in today’s earnings release, which is located in the investor relations section of our website at www.ssctech.com. I will now turn the call over to Bill.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Justine, and welcome everyone. The first quarter of 2026 included a war in Iran, tariffs galore, spiking oil prices, and other macro headwinds. Nevertheless, we delivered strong first-quarter results underscoring SS&C’s resilience. Based on our performance and visibility today, we are raising 2026 guidance. We recently rang the NASDAQ closing bell to celebrate SS&C’s 40-year anniversary of powering mission-critical systems our financial services and healthcare clients rely on every day. Our business is built on deep domain expertise, strong trusted client relationships, and constant innovation guided by what we call our Customer Zero strategies. These strengths position us well as our industry enters the next phase of technology transformation driven by AI. We are updating the name of our largest revenue line item to better reflect the deeply embedded technology framework powering our services business.

Technology-enabled services encompasses our proprietary data streams, domain expertise, software, private cloud, data center infrastructure with ISO and SOC certifications, and the redundancy and multilayered cybersecurity measures required by our sophisticated client base. First quarter results were adjusted revenue of $1.648 billion, up 9%, and adjusted diluted earnings per share of $1.69, a 14% increase. We delivered adjusted consolidated EBITDA of $651 million, up 10%, and an adjusted consolidated EBITDA margin of 39.5%. The dollar figures I just said are all Q1 records. Adjusted organic revenue growth was 5%, with performance driven by GIDS, which grew 10.4%, GlobeOp, which grew 6.7%, and our recent acquisitions are executing ahead of expectation, strengthening our global capabilities and expanding our addressable markets. Intralinks grew 3.2% with positive leading indicators and an increasing adoption of its next generation AI-enabled DealCentre AI platform.

The resilience of our business is highlighted by the $581 billion in assets under administration we have added to our fund administration business since Q1 of 2024. Across SS&C, we are leveraging AI to enhance software development, increase our speed to market, accelerate implementations, improve customer experience, and drive efficiencies. These initiatives support both revenue opportunities and cost leverage over time. All of our teams are partnering closely with Blue Prism to scale our AI operations in a governed and secure manner. For the three months ended March 31st, 2026, cash from operating activities was $300 million, up 10% year-over-year. In Q1, we returned $233 million to shareholders, which included 2.3 million shares repurchased for $168 million at an average price of $72.60 and $65 million in common stock dividends.

Through share repurchases and our dividend policy, 98% of our allocated capital in Q1 was returned directly to our shareholders. At current levels, our conviction around share repurchase has strengthened, and we are prioritizing repurchases absent high-quality accretive acquisitions. We remain bullish on our opportunities and continue to view AI as a structural tailwind for our business. Our platforms are deeply embedded in our clients’ day-to-day operations, serving as systems of record and execution. That positioning makes SS&C a natural partner as clients look to advance their AI strategies, I mean, their artificial intelligence strategies. I’ll now turn it over to Rahul.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies1: Thanks, Bill. We had a strong first quarter. GIDS and GlobeOp built on last year’s sales performance with additional new logo wins and continued upsell and cross-sell activity. Across the business, disciplined attention to our clients is generating new opportunities. SS&C’s pipelines are robust, and as always, execution remains the priority. Our AI capabilities, including agents and workflow orchestration, are accelerating how services are delivered. Our Customer Zero strategy is working as intended. Internal adoption of agentic capabilities is driving product maturity, credibility, and faster time to market. Deep product expertise is the prerequisite for harnessing these tools, and we are well-positioned. We serve the largest and most sophisticated firms in the world, and as their businesses grow more complex, our platforms grow with them. We sit at the center of their operating models with deeply embedded workflows. These workflows form the natural foundation for further innovation.

As Bill mentioned, we’ve renamed our largest revenue line to technology-enabled services. Our clients are buying services such as NAV computations, tax returns, regulatory filings, investor interactions, risk calculations, and hundreds of others. These services are usually tied to contracts for services rather than software license agreements. Delivery requires deep domain knowledge, expertise operating complex workflows refined over decades, the networks we operate across counterparties, and secure, resilient infrastructure. We estimate that software, largely in the form of subscriptions, represents 11% of this category. With that, I’ll turn it over to Brian to walk through the financials.

Brian Schell, Chief Financial Officer, SS&C Technologies: Thanks, Rahul, and good day, everyone. Unless noted otherwise, the quarterly comparisons are to Q1 2025. As disclosed in our press release, our Q1 2026 GAAP results reflect revenues of $1.647 billion, net income of $226 million, and diluted earnings per share of $0.91. Our adjusted non-GAAP results include revenues of $1.648 billion, an increase of 8.8%, and adjusted diluted EPS of $1.69, a 14.2% increase. The adjusted revenue increase of $133 million was primarily driven by incremental revenue contributions from GIDS of $38 million, GlobeOp of $29 million, and a favorable impact from foreign exchange of $22 million. As a result, adjusted organic revenue growth on a constant currency basis was 5%, and our core expenses increased 2.9% or $27 million, which also excludes acquisition and impact of FX.

Adjusted consolidated EBITDA was a first quarter record of $651 million, reflecting an increase of $59 million or 10% and a margin of 39.5%, a 40 basis point expansion. Net interest expense for the quarter, for the first quarter of 2026, was $105 million, flat year over year. Adjusted net income was $418 million, up 11.1%. Our effective non-GAAP tax rate was 22.5% this quarter. Note for comparison purposes, we have recast the 2025 adjusted net income and EPS to reflect the full-year effective tax rate of 22%. Also note the Q1 diluted share count is down 247.6 million from 254.9 million year over year, primarily due to lower dilutive shares and continued impact of treasury share repurchases. Cash flow from operating activities growth of 10% was driven by growth and earnings. SS&C ended the first quarter with $421 million in cash and cash equivalents and $7.5 billion in gross debt.

SS&C’s net debt was $7.1 billion, and our last 12 months consolidated EBITDA was $2.6 billion. Resulting net leverage ratio was 2.76x. As we look forward to the second quarter and full year of 2026 with respect to guidance, we will continue to focus on client service and assume that retention rates will be in the range of our most recent results. We will continue to manage our business to support our long-term growth and manage our expenses by controlling and aligning variable expenses, increasing productivity and leveraging technology to improve our operating margins and effectively investing in the business, especially with respect to R&D, sales, and marketing. Specifically, we have assumed short-term interest rates remain at current levels, an effective tax rate of approximately 22.5% on an adjusted basis. Capital expenditures to be 4.4%-4.8% of revenues and a stronger weighting to share repurchases versus debt reduction.

Second quarter of 2026, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.64-$1.68 billion and 5.6% organic revenue growth at the midpoint. Adjusted net income in the range of $408-$424 million. Interest expense excluding amortization, deferred financing costs and original issue discount in the range of $102-$104 million, and adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $1.64-$1.70. For the full year 2026, we increased our expectations for revenue to be in the range of $6.664-$6.824 billion and 5.3% organic revenue growth in the midpoint. Adjusted net income in the range of $1.665-$1.765 billion.

Adjusted diluted EPS in the range of $6.74-$7.06, reflecting approximately 12% growth at the midpoint, and maintaining our targeted annual EBITDA expansion of 50 basis points with a goal of 40% margin in Q4. Now back to Bill.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Thanks, Brian. Next week, SS&C will launch SS&C Blue Prism WorkHQ, our agentic workflow orchestration platform designed to coordinate automation, AI agents, and human decision-making across enterprise workflows. Feedback from early adopters has been positive, and we’re excited to share more at our launch event, which will be open to virtual attendees, and registration right now is over 2,000 people. It’s also available at blueprism.com or by reaching out to Justine. With that, I will now open it up to questions.

Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press one one again. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. One moment for questions. Our first question comes from Kevin McVeigh with UBS. You may proceed.

Kevin McVeigh, Analyst, UBS: Great. Thanks so much, and really just exceptional results given the environment we’re in. Bill, you beat on everything. Would the results have been even stronger if not for the environment that we’re in? I know the business is pretty predictable, but is there anything that kind of held it back, just given the environment?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Well, you get hesitancy, Kevin, as you well know, right?

Kevin McVeigh, Analyst, UBS: Sure.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: When you have tariffs come flying out at billions and billions and billions, and then you have war, and then you have spiking oil prices, which generally is going to increase inflation. There’s a lot of macro headwinds. At the same time, I think people need to have the technology to run their businesses. We just had the GAIN conference, which is a big hedge fund conference in Cayman Islands, and we had a bunch of our clients there and it was a spectacular event for us. They were happy. They were investing in us and buying more services and products, and we’re pretty bullish on 2026.

Kevin McVeigh, Analyst, UBS: The results speak to that. Just maybe you remind us, because one question we get a lot is on the AUA growth, just in different market environments, it obviously continues to grow. Is that just client balances increasing or just the way they’re running their asset allocation? It’s just, again, just been another terrific part to the story.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Well, as we said in the press releases or in our comments, is that we grew AUA $581 billion since the first quarter of 2024. I don’t know where $581 billion would put you in the league tables, but probably pretty high. That’s just our growth. That’s market appreciation, which obviously the NASDAQ and the S&P 500 hit new records, I think, this past week. The equity markets have been pretty robust. We also have almost all of the large global macro funds, and they have been getting increasing allocations from all of the different allocators and large-scale pension funds and insurance companies that are investing in hedge fund solutions. Hedge funds have been stronger over the past couple quarters than they have been over the past couple years.

Kevin McVeigh, Analyst, UBS: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Dan Perlin with RBC Capital Markets. You may proceed.

Brian Schell, Chief Financial Officer, SS&C Technologies: Thanks, and good evening, everyone. I had a question around private credit. Obviously, it’s incredibly topical these days. I think that falls into your GlobeOp operations. I’m wondering, from what you can tell and what you see and hear, specifically around potential redemptions, how does that impact your business? Do you see that as any kind of perceived risk? To the extent the assets do get redeemed, what kind of recapture rate do you historically see in other areas of your portfolio?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Like a lot of things in the news, some of these maybe fears might be a little bit overblown, but I think we’ve got some structural things too that do protect us in any event. The primary one being, by far, the vast majority of our private credit funds are closed-end fund structures, which generally means that our fees are predicated on things that are fairly static, whether that’s committed capital or some volume-based metric like number of investments or investors or something like that. We’re pretty

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies1: Immune from day-to-day fluctuations, and that’s probably the biggest one. To be honest, most of our big clients that are private credit managers still continue to grow with us.

Dan Perlin, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Yep. No, that’s great color. On GIDS, another really strong performance here. I’m just trying to think through the cadence throughout the year. I feel like in the past you talked about first half obviously being kind of in the high single digits or maybe even better, certainly given the one, two performance. You got more difficult comps heading into the back half. Does that still hold true that you’re expecting kind of a mid-single digit in the back half embedded or are things changing in and around, let’s say, the Australian market that’s giving you maybe more conviction that that might actually prove to be too conservative? Thank you.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: I think that we are making great strides. You mentioned Australia, which we’re up to over 3,000 people in Australia, and obviously everyone knows we signed Insignia, which has about $321 billion in assets. The superannuation market in Australia is $4 trillion. There’s a lot of room to grow and we’re the new kid on the block and we’re really working hard to satisfy our clients there and then grow our market share. We’re very optimistic about that. We also have some tremendous opportunities in North America and in Europe. I think that, if I was a betting man, and sometimes I am, I would guess that GIDS is going to do very well in 2026.

Dan Perlin, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: That’s great. Thank you so much and great results.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Jeff Schmitt with William Blair. You may proceed.

Jeff Schmitt, Analyst, William Blair: Hi, good afternoon. What segments do you think have the most risk from AI? In what segments do you feel most confident you’re protected against disintermediation?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: We have some very pointed software businesses that are not large, but they’re in all total, maybe $100 million in revenue. We are so embedded in the things that we do that we don’t really look at AI as a threat. Yes, there can have some disruption. The internet had disruption and client server had disruption and lots of things have disruption, but people still have to get their work done. They still have to file a tax return. They still have to file their Q’s and their annual statements. It’s not just in the United States, it’s everywhere around the world. We do that everywhere, whether it’s the Australian Securities Exchange, and they have some rules about short sales that you have to give them notification. The Ministry of Finance in Tokyo has all kinds of requirements, and OSFI up in Ottawa.

We have several of those regulatory bodies here in the United States as well. We are very steeped in that, and it’s pretty detailed, it’s pretty arcane, and the regulators can change it whenever they want.

Jeff Schmitt, Analyst, William Blair: Okay. Thank you. Share buybacks were lower than they’ve been since, I think, 2023 or 2024. Is there potential for you to get more aggressive there with the stock down, I guess, so much over the last few months?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: However much cash we generate, that tends to be our favorite investment. I think we bought $168 million in Q1. While Q1 is we have our bonuses paid, we have taxes, so we have other uses for our cash. Yeah, we’re quite bullish.

Jeff Schmitt, Analyst, William Blair: Okay, great. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Surinder Singh with Jefferies. You may proceed.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies2: Thank you. Bill, can you maybe expand upon the Blue Prism offering and the new platform offering, I guess? It’s something you guys have been working on for a while now. Is the idea here that it’s a game changer where maybe we begin to see a material inflection in the growth rate within that segment? Or how should we think about the rollout, the cadence, the initial feedback that you’ve been getting here?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Again, we’re very vertical as a company. When we go out and talk with people that large scale places like you guys at Jefferies and others, everyone is really studying the market and trying to figure out how do we implement this in the best way with governance. My talks at these different conferences, I’m always saying, "Look, AI is not just a gas pedal. Somebody better have a break, and you better understand what you’re doing. And if you don’t, you can get hurt." I think it’s pretty important that you have a company that really, primarily we’re a bunch of accountants and systems people. We understand what controls are. We’re kind of a little nerdy when it comes to internal controls. We think they’re important. We really think some silly people ought to reconcile their checking accounts.

We reconcile all of our customers’ checking accounts. I think that’s what you’re going to be able to use AI for, is different things that are primarily mundane. It will get increasingly sophisticated over time, but it’s very difficult to replace human judgment, to replace human trust, and then also years of delivery and the ability to attack problems and solve them.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies2: Thanks. That’s helpful. Maybe turning to the expense side of the equation here, I think you talked about maybe some investments in R&D and sales. Can maybe you provide a bit more color on the scale of those investments that you’re thinking at this point, and then maybe how do we think about the potential impact on the range of outcomes on the margin for that? I think the target is the 50 basis points, but is that kind of fully loaded with all of the investments? Is there some flexibility there that maybe there’s a bit more, a bit less? Any color there would be.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Well, I think, Surinder, there’s a lot of opportunities for us to drive margin. What we’ve done over the last number of years is try to plow money back into our infrastructure and our ability to deliver new services and new products quickly and efficiently, and that’s expensive. We’ve been able to maintain our margins at really close to 40%. I think, I’ve spoken for a few years, that if we want to move it up to 41 or 42, that’s certainly within our grasp. I don’t know if that’s enough money to take away from R&D or other initiatives that we have going on. We have a lot of flexibility. I think last year we generated about $7 a share in cash. We have a lot of flexibility with buying back shares, looking at acquisitions, and paying down debt.

We have opportunities to use our cash, and it’s nice to have plenty of it.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies2: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Peter Heckmann with D.A. Davidson. You may proceed.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies0: Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to talk about the emerging developments around tokenization of different asset classes. Where do you see the pain points for your customers? How do you view SS&C’s preparedness to have some portion of different asset classes being tokenized in process versus some of your competitors?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies1: Like a lot of these things, we’re really viewing the technology itself as an enabler, right? We want to make sure. Look, that’s true for the broader AI question too, right? We want to make sure it helps us get whatever our clients are looking to have happen faster. We’re fully prepared. We have customers that are tokenized today. We have customers that are in the process of becoming tokenized. We’re helping them get on the right digital platforms and chains. We’re maintaining the IDs. We’re doing all the work that’s associated with it. The primary impact that we’ve seen is in those instances, and we’re talking about still a pretty limited subset of examples that we have. The onboarding process for investors is obviously simpler, but the rest of the work stays exactly the same, right?

We’re fully prepared to help to be a part of the process and help them any way we can, and Calastone is a big part of that for us.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Which we spent $1 billion to acquire. As usual, with things that we believe in, we don’t dabble. We go get it, and then we deliver it to our clients, and we have several very happy clients with our Calastone acquisition already.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies0: That’s great. Acquisition revenue from acquisitions a little bit higher than what we were thinking. Did Calastone outperform in the quarter, or is there a bit of seasonality for them in the first quarter?

Brian Schell, Chief Financial Officer, SS&C Technologies: Yeah, they did. This is Brian. They continued to perform well, and so that was a strong quarter by them, yes.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies0: Okay. Thank you very much.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Alexei Gogolev with J.P. Morgan. You may proceed.

Bela Kamarajan, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Hi, this is Bela Kamarajan for Alexei. Thanks for taking our question. Just looking at Intralinks’ sequential improvement, would you say that’s driven more by the market or by share gains? And are there any metrics such as win rates or room volumes or retention that you feel best evidence that?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies1: I think it’s a little bit. Maybe there are three or four things. One, the market has come back a little and is helping us, and you’re starting to see that show up in the numbers, but we’re seeing it even more in kind of the early indicators that we have of what it might be a quarter, two quarters from now. I think we have also invested a fair amount in the product itself. Some of that is building out services capability around the data rooms and things like that. Some of that is putting more AI-enabled modules within the data room itself, and that’s helped us gain some market share.

Bela Kamarajan, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Understood. Looking at healthcare, that segment posted a nice turnaround this quarter. How sustainable do you view this growth throughout 2026? What are the largest points of excitement that give you optimism throughout this year?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Well, I think the biggest thing we like about healthcare is how big the market is. It is really enormous. As more medicines and therapies come out, the more people are going to use those. GLP-1s obviously are a big deal, and the government’s, I think, going to use Humana, which is one of our great clients, to administer that program for the government. We’re excited about that. We have DomaniRx making some inroads at places. It’s big healthcare places. It does not move with extreme rapidity. They are very testing-oriented and very detailed. At the same time, there’s tremendous opportunities, similar as financial technology. A lot of it that runs Wall Street is decades old.

If you can get people to take the leap to change, a lot of people in their 40s don’t want to change systems because they want to wait until they retire. Keep thinking that’s 20 years away. Let’s go. That’s very difficult for people, and people have had a big aversion to risk. We think there’s a lot of opportunity in healthcare, and we think that we could be a winner.

Bela Kamarajan, Analyst, J.P. Morgan: Great. That’s very helpful. Thanks for taking our questions.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from James Faucette with Morgan Stanley. You may proceed.

James Faucette, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Thanks very much. A lot of our questions have been answered, but I wanted to quickly touch on the wealth business. Just wondering if you can help us unpack a little bit of what was driving the growth there. I guess really kind of what we want to be cognizant of is going into Q2, is there any deal slippage there into Q2 or any tough license comps we should be aware of from the first quarter?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Our wealth business primarily is Black Diamond and some other products that we have embedded around that, whether that’s Salentica or Tier1 or our Entrust. We have made great strides with Black Diamond Trust Suite, where a lot of the RIAs, as their customers get older, they’re going to move their assets into their kids, and they’re often going to do it through trusts. You’re going to have to be able to do trust accounting, or you’re going to lose your best customers. That’s been a nice tailwind for us. Plus, we did the Morningstar transaction, I guess, about a little more than a year ago, and that gave us 6,700 more RIAs. Black Diamond continues to execute, and it’s got a lot of very strong and satisfied clients, and we would guess it’s going to continue to grow in excess of double digits.

James Faucette, Analyst, Morgan Stanley: Got it. I wanted to ask, it’s a topic that’s increasingly been coming up with investors, not just about Assistancy, but generally. Wanted to ask about your AI efforts specifically, and how do you think about kind of what you’re doing there and how much may be aimed at external revenue generation or AI-driven products versus internal productivity? Are we getting much benefit internally today versus what you may be able to charge or monetize later? I just love to hear from you how you’re thinking about that as an enabler.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Well, James, in 2022, we bought Blue Prism, and Blue Prism got us deep into robotic process automation, machine learning, natural language processing. With that, we have deployed close to 4,000 digital workers, and now what we’re doing is it’s improving them by turning them pretty much into AI agents. We’re doing this throughout our business, and we feel like the deployment of all these digital workers has maybe saved us $200 million a year. Now you say, "Well, why isn’t that all dropping into margin improvement?" Well, I don’t know if you’re aware, but getting compute and larger data infrastructure is not cheap. Even though we’ve done all that, we’ve maintained our margins, and we’ve gone in and we’ve built DomaniRx, and we’ve built a number of other new systems that we’re rolling out now.

We’re pretty comfortable with what we’re doing. Rahul’s running a number of projects in the AI space, and maybe you could talk about that, Rahul.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies1: Thanks, Bill. It’s the speed of software development. We are seeing a positive impact there. We’re also seeing we have deep domain expertise, right? It’s 40 years of processing things in very complicated, very regulated ways. We’re very deeply embedded in our customers and their operating models. Taking that, taking sort of that knowledge and turning that into skills, right? Having those skills be things that AI agents can run, we think is a massive opportunity. Not to kind of give too much away from our event next week, but I think one of the things we’re going to do is preview some of what we’ve built already in a very short period of time, and we’re pretty excited about what else we’re going to be able to do.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: It has a lot of enthusiasm by the earliest adopters that we have rolled this out to. There’s real opportunity here, and it’s orchestrating it, like the delivery, the pricing, and having the right teams install it and train our clients. We’re excited about it.

Operator: That’s great color. Thanks, guys. Thank you. Our next question comes from Patrick O’Shaughnessy with Raymond James. You may proceed.

Patrick O’Shaughnessy, Analyst, Raymond James: Hey, good evening. How are you thinking about the application of blockchain technology from the perspective of services that your GIDS business provides, such as transfer agency? Is there any disintermediation risk that you’re thinking about?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies1: I think it’s mostly an opportunity. At least, one, just in terms of context, right now, the number of examples we’re seeing of folks that are interested in sort of blockchain and tokenization is still fairly small. Like I said, we’ve got a few up and running. We’ve got a few that are doing it. But in the examples we have and the data we have, not only are we a big part of enabling them, which is a revenue stream for us, but it simplifies our work, which is a cost opportunity for us. The rest of our work, which is probably 95% of the work being done, stays exactly the same or grows a little. Net-net, we think it’s actually beneficial.

Patrick O’Shaughnessy, Analyst, Raymond James: Got it. That’s helpful. Thank you. GlobeOp organic growth 6.7% in the quarter, down from 9.6% last quarter. Anything to read into that or just kind of the natural ebbs and flows of the business?

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Yeah, I think it just depends on when you win some of these very large global macros. You’ve got to get those assets locked. We get paid when they’re not live, but we’re getting paid like maybe an eighth. If we’re getting, say, $2 million, then when we get them live, we get $16 million. It just depends timing-wise on how that works. Sometimes there’s some renewals where GlobeOp might pick up in a particular quarter based on a renewal.

Patrick O’Shaughnessy, Analyst, Raymond James: All right. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. I would now like to turn the call back over to Bill Stone for any closing remarks.

Bill Stone, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, SS&C Technologies: Well, hey, we really believe we had a strong quarter. We believe we have really a lot of momentum. We believe we’re bringing out stuff that’s going to give us more momentum, and we look forward to talking to you at the end of the second quarter. Thanks for dialing in, and thanks for your questions. We’ll talk to you in about 90 days, I guess.

Operator: Thank you. This concludes the conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.