Call Participants
Corporate Participants
Ato Garrett — Senior VP & Investor Relations Officer
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Sarah Youngwood — Executive VP & CFO
Analysts
William Katz — Analyst
Alexander Blostein — Goldman Sachs
Daniel Fannon — Jefferies
Benjamin Budish — Barclays
Owen Lau — Clear Street
Brian Bedell — Deutsche Bank
Y. Cho — Analyst
Elias Abboud — Bank Of America
Patrick Moley — Piper Sandler
Jeffrey Schmitt — William Blair
Ashish Sabadra — RBC Capital Markets
Alex Kramm — UBS
Michael Cyprys — Morgan Stanley
Nasdaq, Inc (NASDAQ: NDAQ) Q1 2026 Earnings Call dated Apr. 23, 2026
Presentation
Operator
Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Nasdaq’s First Quarter 2026 Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker, Ato Garrett, Senior Vice President and Investor Relations Officer. Please go ahead.
Ato Garrett — Senior VP & Investor Relations Officer
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today to discuss Nasdaq’s First Quarter 2026 Financial Results. On the line are Adena Friedman, our Chair and Chief Executive Officer; Sarah Youngwood, our Chief Financial Officer; and other members of the management team. After our prepared remarks, we will open the line for Q&A. The press release and earnings presentation accompanying this call can be found on our Investor Relations website.
I would like to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements on this call that involve risks. A summary of these risks is contained in our press release, and a more complete description in our Annual Report on Form 10-K. We will discuss our financial performance on a non-GAAP basis, excluding the impact of acquisitions and divestitures as well as the impact of changes in FX rates. Definitions and reconciliations of US GAAP to non-GAAP plus adjustments can be found in our earnings presentation as well as in a file located in the financial sections of our Investor Relations website at ir.nasdaq.com. And with that, I will now turn the call over to Adena.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Thank you, Ato, and good morning, everyone. Today, I will start with a review of our first quarter financial results, and will then review the operating performance across our divisions. I will then hand the call over to Sarah to walk through the financial results in more detail.
Nasdaq entered 2026 with strong momentum, and our first quarter performance reflects one of the strongest starts to a year in our company’s history. We delivered the highest Q1 organic growth since 2021 across net revenue, solutions revenue and operating income, as well as our highest ever quarterly revenue growth in the Financial Technology division. The results this quarter demonstrate the breadth and depth of the client engagement we are experiencing across our platform, which is resulting in meaningful growth.
As we outlined at Investor Day, the power of our platform enables us to serve as a trusted transformation partner to our clients, underpinned by our embedded client community, deeply integrated solutions, gold standard data, and engineering excellence.
This is a dynamic moment for the world and for markets, underpinned by an accelerated pace of technological change, persistent geopolitical tensions, and concerns about the stability of the private credit market, as well as overall complexity across the global economy. In the US, softer labor conditions and inflation pressures are offset by resilient spending from higher-income households and continued capital deployment in AI.
Investment in AI continues to be a meaningful driver of economic activity, especially in the United States, through large-scale data center and infrastructure build-outs. Within this overall environment, macroeconomic growth remains balanced and constructive in the US and across other major economies.
Smart regulation is also starting to take shape across the capital markets and banking industry, and as a result, clients are moving forward with investments in the modernization of their core infrastructure. Within the banking sector, we’re experiencing increasing demand for cloud-based, mission-critical solutions that include AI features to support workflow automation. Within capital markets, we’re experiencing demand for solutions and services related to the transition to always-on markets and the tokenization of assets. As the industry addresses these trends, Nasdaq is well positioned to reinforce its role as the trusted fabric of the global financial system.
Turning to our financial results. In the first quarter, we delivered $1.4 billion in net revenue, a 13% year-over-year increase. Our overall annualized recurring revenue or ARR grew 12% year-over-year to $3.2 billion. Expenses were $608 million, up 8% year-over-year. Operating income was $799 million, up 17%, and we delivered 21% diluted EPS growth. Within our divisions, capital access platforms generated 10% revenue growth and 7% ARR growth. Financial technology delivered 18% revenue growth and 16% ARR growth, and market services delivered 10% net revenue growth.
As we move into divisional performance, I’ll cover how our results reflect disciplined execution against our expand, evolve and transform — transform growth framework from delivering on One Nasdaq across our core franchises, to evolving our solutions with new innovations, to transforming the business in key strategic areas.
Starting with Capital Access platforms, where I’ll first discuss data and listings. In our US listings franchise, we welcomed 15 new operating companies, raising over $5 billion in proceeds during the quarter, including seven of the top 10 IPOs. Early in the second quarter, we are — we were pleased to welcome Arxis and Kailera Therapeutics, two of the biggest IPOs in Q2 so far.
While the IPO environment has been uneven amid market volatility, issuer engagement remains strong. Companies in our pipeline continue to prepare for market entry. We see encouraging environment — we are seeing an encouraging environment for improving IPO activity entering the second quarter, and we believe that we are well positioned to support that activity as momentum builds.
In our data business, we continue to deliver strong revenue growth, highlighted by 32% year-over-year growth of enterprise license agreements and continued momentum in Asia and the Middle East. Looking ahead, we see continued progress towards always-on markets, creating meaningful operations for our data business, enabling trading activity in regions where demand for Nasdaq’s proprietary market data is already rising.
Our index franchise delivered $79 billion in net inflows over the last 12 months, including $6 billion in the quarter, exiting the quarter with ETP AUM of $836 billion. Our average AUM this quarter increased 32% year-over-year to reach a record of $877 billion. Net inflows were modestly positive, impacted by sector rotation and a risk-off environment tied to market uncertainty in March. We view this impact as short-term tactical behavior and not representative of structural trends. Although we don’t view early quarter flows as predictive, we are encouraged by the momentum we’ve seen to date in the second quarter with $15 billion of net ETP inflows as of April 20th.
Our index performance has been underpinned by our success in product innovation. 46% of inflows were driven by product launches over the last five years, and 25% were driven by launches over the last three years. Institutional adoption of our index products grew among annuity providers, contributing to a 30% increase in insurance-related revenues.
International expansion was driven by strong demand from EMEA and APAC this quarter. This contributed to 19% of total ETP AUM coming from non-US clients. We launched 31 new products in the quarter, including 12 international products and 11 in the institutional annuity space. We also launched the Nasdaq Private Capital Indexes, a way for investors to benchmark private market investment allocations, an asset class that has historically lacked transparency. We were also pleased to announce that we will expand access to the Nasdaq-100 later in the spring with two new carefully selected partners, BlackRock and State Street, while continuing to work closely with our long-standing partner, Invesco.
The pricing terms related to the index license for these upcoming new US-listed ETFs will be consistent with the QQQ pricing terms. We are excited to continue to grow and expand distribution of our flagship index to new investors across the US and globally with all of our high-quality partners. For example, with Invesco, we continue to create new marquee products to address investors’ evolving needs. Recently, we expanded the Invesco QQQ innovation suite with the launch of the Invesco QQQ Equal Weight ETFs. Additionally, with the expanded partnerships with BlackRock and State Street, we look forward to working with them to make the Nasdaq-100 more accessible to their investor universe, and to help drive additional institutional adoption.
Turning to Workflow and Insights, revenue grew 6%, driven by continued strength in Analytics. Analytics delivered solid revenue growth, underpinned by investment strong performance, which benefits from powerful network effects and sustained demand in volatile markets. Within investment, we continue to expand the reach of our data assets to meet the evolving needs of our clients and to enhance the value that we bring to asset owners and asset managers, including in private markets. This quarter, we integrated our data with Databricks to broaden entitled access to investments comprehensive institutional investor data.
Across analytics, we’re leveraging our goal standard data assets to support our clients AI strategy. Investment AI-ready data has been adopted by global asset managers, GPs, and institutional investors representing over $9 trillion in assets under management, and helped drive a 29% year-over-year increase in Q1 bookings.
In Corporate Solutions, AI adoption is strong with 74% of IR Insight users and 51% of Boardvantage users leveraging our AI solutions. Overall, the corporate buying environment remains muted, driven by lower IPO activity compared to historical levels.
Turning to Financial Technology, we delivered record revenue growth of 18%, driven by sustained global demand for our mission-critical technologies. We continue to deliver on our One Nasdaq strategy with strong bookings performance for Q1, signing 64 new clients, one cross-sell, and 85 upsells during the quarter. The division sustained compelling land and expand momentum, driving more than 50% year-over-year growth in ACB bookings, while supporting clients’ transition to cloud. Cloud-based solutions accounted for 80% of ACV bookings in the quarter.
I would like to call out a key expansion this year of an existing AxiomSL and Calypso Tier 1 bank client that brings our cloud, AI and One Nasdaq strategy to life. In Q1, we completed a significant renewal and expansion of AxiomSL, driven by our ability to deliver cloud and AI-enabled regulatory solutions. Early in the second quarter, we expanded the relationship further with the cross-sell for Nasdaq Verafin, our cloud-based, AI native, financial crime management solution. The expansion of this relationship illustrates the power of our platform as we deliver innovative technology to address our clients’ top regulatory and risk management needs.
Turning now to a review of the subdivisions, starting with Financial Crime Management Technology. Nasdaq Verafin delivered another strong quarter with 21% revenue growth across a growing client base of more than 2,800 clients, representing nearly $12 trillion in collective assets. During the quarter, we signed 58 new SMB clients, driving a 24% year-over-year increase in ACV bookings from that client segment. In Enterprise, we signed two renewals and one expansion with existing clients. And early in the second quarter, we added further momentum with an enterprise upsell and a new Tier 1 client cross-sell that I mentioned a moment ago.
Nasdaq Verafin is evolving its platform through strategic partnerships, including our recently announced partnership with FIS. This agreement expands our ability to deliver leading AML and fraud solutions to FIS’ banking and payments clients.
We continue to lead through advanced AI-driven innovation. Our Agentic AI workforce is now deployed by more than 500 clients, up 40% since Investor Day. Later this quarter, we will launch our new drug trafficking analytic, which embeds generative AI directly into our models and synthesizes open-source intelligence, social media, and third-party research to help clients more effectively detect potential drug trafficking activity.
Regulatory technology delivered sustained momentum supported by new capabilities introduced across our product suite, as well as structural trends impacting the industry. These trends include the transition to always-on markets, sustained investment in infrastructure modernization, and improving clarity of the regulatory environment. Specific to AxiomSL, this momentum is translating into meaningful client expansion and new wins across regions, as global institutions deepen their use of their — of our regulatory reporting and capital management solutions.
For instance, a large international bank significantly expanded its US footprint with us, extending the use of our platform to support CCaR reporting. Another large bank expanded into cloud-based, broker-dealer capital management and regulatory reporting, underscoring growing confidence in our cloud-enabled regulatory infrastructure. We also secured a new client in Europe for consolidated reporting across capital, liquidity, and financial regulatory requirements, highlighting continued momentum across the continent.
We are realizing the benefits from investments we’ve made in our cloud capabilities as approximately 90% of AxiomSL ACV bookings in Q1 have been for cloud-based solutions. We’re also experiencing strong interest in our AI solutions within AxiomSL, including Reg-Copilot, Reg-Simplify, Reg-Navigator and Reg-Investigator, the products we detailed during Investor Day.
In surveillance, we delivered strong growth this quarter supported by upsells and renewals, including a renewal of a global Tier 1 bank. We are experiencing interest in our crypto surveillance services, both with new clients and upsell opportunities. We are also continuing to invest in our core product to sustain strong client engagement and demand. For example, we recently introduced our Calibration Copilot, an AI-powered tool that’s enabling clients to optimize workflows, reduce false positives and increase accuracy of detection. In the second quarter, we will release our GenAI platform extension, which connects news and market events to trade data. In beta, this capability has proven to be an effective solution for clients to uncover risks faster and more effectively.
Capital Markets Technology delivered an excellent quarter with strong demand driven by broad-based growth across the subdivision. In Trade Management Services, we had outstanding results driven by robust demand and pricing increases that Sarah will address in her remarks.
In Market Technology, we continue to experience momentum in our Managed Trading Services business with a new cloud-hosted trading client for tokenized assets, in addition to an expansion of services with several of our large clients.
We also continued progress on the rollout of our Eqlipse product suite with two significant client implementations for trading and clearing completed in the first quarter. This progress demonstrates the strength and readiness of our modern cloud-enabled platform.
In Calypso, we delivered four new sales, including one cross-sell. One of these wins was a new cloud-based booking for an enterprise-wide derivatives platform with a large US insurance company, supporting the company’s broader technology transformation efforts.
Now turning to market services. The division delivered 10% organic net revenue growth driven by record volumes in our US markets in both US equity options and US equities as well as elevated volumes in our European markets. We’re experiencing strong industry-wide momentum in short-dated options, and our market share and volumes align with our established leadership and equity options. We also continue to expand our opportunity within index options, with revenue more than doubling year-over-year.
Looking ahead, we’re excited to be leading the transition to always-on markets. With SEC approval to extend our market operations to 23/5, we are focused on expanding access, resiliency, and continuity for global market participants with the projected launch of December 6, 2026. We are excited to set a new standard for how regulated markets operate in an increasingly global and digital economy.
In parallel, the SEC’s approval of our proposal to enable the trading of tokenized securities allows us to enhance how investors access markets and how issuers connect with shareholders. We will continue to collaborate with DTCC and the industry to build the infrastructure needed to launch tokenized equities. Building on this foundation, we’re advancing the Nasdaq Equity token design that takes modernization a step further by putting issuers at the center of ownership rights. This approach will give issuers greater control over how their shares are represented and managed in tokenized form. As stated in our initial announcement, we expect to provide early benefits of the Nasdaq token design in the first half of 2027.
Looking ahead, the broader forces shaping the global financial system, including rising complexity, investment in AI, and the need for resilient, trusted infrastructure continue to reinforce the role that Nasdaq plays at the center of the financial ecosystem. Supported by the scale of our platform and disciplined execution across our priorities, we remain confident in our ability to create durable value for clients, as well as long-term value for our shareholders. And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Sarah to walk through our financial results in more detail.
Sarah Youngwood — Executive VP & CFO
Thank you, Adena, and good morning, everyone. In the first quarter of 2026, Nasdaq delivered exceptional results, headlined by solutions revenue growth of 14%, record financial technology revenue growth of 18% and diluted EPS growth of 21%. The strong performance in the quarter demonstrates the engine of profitable and durable growth we have created, and the outstanding execution of our teams, particularly in the context of the volatile macro-environment throughout the quarter.
Let’s start with quarterly results on Slide 11. We reported net revenue of $1.4 billion, up 13%, with solutions revenue of $1.1 billion, up 14%. Operating expense was $608 million, up 8%, leading to an operating margin of 57% and an EBITDA margin of 60%, both up 2 percentage points. This resulted in net income of $549 million and diluted EPS of $0.96, up 21%.
Slide 12 shows the drivers of our 13% net revenue growth for the quarter. We generated 10 percentage points of Alpha, driven by new and existing clients and product innovation. Meanwhile, beta factors contributed 3 percentage points of growth this quarter, driven by higher overall volumes in market services, one-time items in FinTech, representing just under 1 percentage point of beta and higher volumes in index derivatives.
Let’s review division results starting on slide 14. In Capital Access platforms, we delivered revenue of $565 million, up 10% with ARR growth of 7%. Data and listings revenue was up 9% in the quarter with ARR up 8%. Data revenue growth was strong and driven primarily by up-sales and pricing. Listings revenue benefited from the improving IPO environment, pricing increases, and a $2 million one-time benefit from prior-period application fees, partially offset by de-listings and lower amortization of prior-period initial listing fees, in line with our previous comments.
Index revenue was up 14% in the quarter, with ARR up 6%, driven by record average ETP AUM of $877 billion. The quarter’s performance reflects Index’s ability to deliver inflows in a volatile macro-environment, including the Nasdaq-100 declining 6% in market performance in the first quarter. ETM AUM reflected $79 billion in net inflows over the last 12 months, including $6 billion in the first quarter. As Adena said, we are encouraged by the momentum of ETP inflows we are experiencing earlier in the second quarter, with $15 billion of net inflows as of April 20th.
AUM-based growth was partially offset by a decline in volume-based revenue versus the prior year period, driven by continued mix shifts in derivatives volume from higher-priced E-mini contracts to lower-priced micro E-mini contracts due to higher retail volumes, and a year-over-year decline in capture. Those factors were partially offset by record derivatives volumes, up 9% in the quarter.
In workflow and insights, revenue was up 6% in the quarter, with ARR growth also at 6%. The revenue increase was driven primarily by analytics, mainly investment and data link, with both businesses benefiting from strong sales momentum, client engagement through the platform’s AI capabilities and demand for data to power AI. Corporate solutions revenue was essentially flat; driven by the trends we have previously described. Quarterly operating margin for the division was 62%, up 2 percentage points versus the prior year period.
Moving to Financial Technology on slide 15. The quarter reflected record revenue and ARR growth. Revenue was $517 million, up 18% with ARR growth of 16%. Our business continues to experience strong demand across all fintech subdivisions and high levels of client engagement. We had very strong ACV bookings growth of more than 50% in the quarter versus the prior year period, setting a new first quarter bookings record as we executed on our land and expand strategy. 80% of those ACV bookings were cloud-based deals, reflecting our position as a trusted transformation partner to drive modernization for our clients.
The division signed 64 new clients, 85 upsells, and one cross-sell in the quarter with another cross-sell signed early in the second quarter. Cross-sells continue to represent over 15% of the Financial Technology division’s pipeline with strength across all three subdivisions.
Financial Client Management technology revenue grew 21% in the quarter, with ARR growth of 17% and net revenue retention of 110%. We signed 58 new SMB clients in the first quarter compared to 35 in the prior year period, with a 24% year-over-year increase in ACV bookings from SMBs. In Enterprise, we signed one extension and two renewal deals during the quarter, as well as one new Tier 1 cross-sell and one upsell early in the second quarter. As we discussed last quarter, the sequential revenue improvement in the fourth quarter was primarily driven by professional services fees related to SMB and enterprise client implementations. And as such, we did not expect to maintain those levels over the first half of 2026 based on the implementation timing for deals signed in the second half of 2025.
Regulatory technology delivered revenue growth of 12% and ARR growth of 13%. Revenue growth in the quarter reflects strong performance in surveillance and solid growth in AxiomSL, driven by our successful sales execution, as well as sequentially improved professional services revenue, consistent with our previous comments.
Capital Markets Technology revenue grew 20% with ARR growth of 18%. This quarter’s exceptional performance reflects ongoing momentum and broad-based demand across Calypso market technology and trade management services. Specifically, we had strong demand for data center services as well as a pricing increase in trade management services, a large increase in upfront revenue recognition versus a year ago, related to on-prem Calypso deals signed and renewed in the quarter, and two one-time items, which were termination fees related to M&A in market tech operators, representing 4 percentage points of Capital Markets tech revenue growth in the quarter. Financial Technology quarterly operating margin was 47%, up nearly 3 percentage points versus the prior year period.
Turning to Market Services on slide 16. We had record net revenue of $317 million, up 10%. Growth was primarily driven by record market volumes in US equities and US options, volumes increasing in European equities and strong volumes in Canadian equities due primarily to market volatility in commodities. We also continued to deliver alpha as reflected in strong revenue growth in index options, elevated market share in US equities and US options, strong initial adoption of newly launched short-dated options products, and elevated capture in European derivatives. This was partially offset by lower capture in US equities and US options; driven by the strong volumes we mentioned in the quarter coming with a mix-shift towards lower revenue capture order flow.
We continue to manage effectively the balance between capture and market share, while maintaining a strong lead in US equities capture and in US options market share. Quarterly operating margin for the division was 63%, up 2 percentage points versus the prior year period.
Moving to expense on slide 17. We had operating expense of $608 million in the first quarter, an increase of 8%, driven by investments in people and technology to support revenue and drive innovation, and higher compensation costs related to delivering strong revenue performance. The first quarter operating margin was 57% and the EBITDA margin was 60%, both up 2 percentage points versus the prior-year period.
We are updating our non-GAAP expense guidance for the year to a range of $2.485 billion to $2.545 billion from $2.455 billion to $2.535 billion given the strong revenue performance we have experienced year-to-date. Our updated guidance assumes an FX impact consistent with our previous expectations. Looking ahead, we expect a higher expense growth rate in the second quarter than the first quarter, driven in part by the timing of our annual compensation cycle, consistent with the prior year. We maintain our 2026 non-GAAP tax-rate guidance of 22.5% to 24.5%.
Turning to capital allocation on slide 18. Nasdaq generated free-cash flow of $629 million in the first quarter and $2.1 billion in free cash flow over the last 12 months, at a conversion ratio of 102%. Without the impact of the timing of tax payments, the conversion ratio would have been 108%.
We paid a dividend of $0.27 per share or $153 million in the quarter, representing a 29% annualized payout ratio. As a reminder, we announced at Investor Day that our Board has approved an increase in our dividend by $0.04 per share to $0.31 per share going forward, which will be reflected in the June payment.
We ended the quarter with a gross leverage ratio of 2.8 times within the mid-to-high target we established at Investor Day. We took advantage of market volatility and accelerated our share repurchases. In the first quarter, we repurchased $548 million as compared to a total of $616 million of repurchases in all of 2025. In combination with the dividend, Nasdaq returned over $700 million to shareholders in the first quarter.
In closing, Nasdaq delivered excellent results in a dynamic operating environment, reinforcing our track-record of delivering profitable and durable growth across macro cycles. As we highlighted at our Investor Day in February, we are the trusted transformation partner to our clients, as they navigate structural shifts in the financial markets and accelerate their AI journeys. The exceptional solutions revenue growth, and record financial technology performance we delivered in the first quarter are important proof points of the Nasdaq story. They give us the confidence that we are achieving our ambitious strategic objectives and generating long-term value for our investors. With that, I’ll open the call for Q&A.
Question & Answers
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And I show our first question comes from the line of Bill Katz from TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
William Katz
Okay. Thank you very much for taking the question. Good morning, everybody. So, at the Investor Day, I thought you guys did a great job of just sort of debunking some of the concerns around Agentic AI, and it seems like some really good stats here this morning as well to that score. So maybe a two-part question. Number one, can you maybe step back and help us frame out the Agentic AI capabilities for the Nasdaq platform itself? And then secondly, can you unpack some of the growth that you saw in the first quarter from clients just in terms of where you see the greatest uptake around Agentic AI adoption? Thank you.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Great. Hey, Bill. And when you say, just so I can understand, when you say the Nasdaq platform itself, are you — what do you mean? What are you referring to?
William Katz
So, your core business like your expense structure, innovation, that kind of efficiency, etc.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah, I just wanted to make sure. Okay, great. I just wanted to make sure we were on the same page. So, thank you for the comments and the questions. So, as we mentioned at Investor Day, we do have an internal program to drive AI adoption within the operations of Nasdaq, and we say that’s AI on the business. And we are focused in some key areas, and we have a program in place where we are striving to achieve $100 million of expense efficiencies by the end of 2027. And we also did mention that the majority of that will show up in 2027, because we also are making investments in AI to make sure that we can achieve those efficiencies.
And so, as we are focused, where we’re focused is certainly on making sure we’re automating key elements of the product development lifecycle, making sure we’re creating new automations and capabilities for our clients in the client success area in terms of client service, implementations, and managing our client interactions as they’re working with our systems and our products.
And then also, we have other areas across our expert teams too. We have automation and finance, in marketing, legal, HR, all of those areas have benefits that are coming in from the GenAI capabilities that we see across the business. It’s an exciting time, I have to tell you, to understand and tap into the technology and the benefits can provide.
If I were to highlight on product development, I think the most exciting part of that is our ability to speed up the ability to deliver new capabilities to clients, to use automation to really make sure that the code that we’re delivering is really clean, it’s fit for purpose. It’s really — and you can be more creative as a product team if you know you can deliver things faster. So, it’s pretty exciting in terms of how we’re thinking about the product roadmaps as well. So hopefully that answers your question on that.
In terms of the areas where our clients are seeing the most benefit from our AI capabilities, anti-fin crime is a key area because we have so many ways to automate workflows associated with financial crime management in terms of, there’s a lot of manual work that goes into investigating potential actors to managing on the regulatory reports. And that — all of that we have automation tools around. We’re now bringing some of those automation tools into the surveillance area and into the AI, into the AxiomSL regulatory reporting areas. So, we’re also kind of building ones, deploying many in terms of the skills that we’re learning from these deployments.
And then, as you mentioned, AxiomSL we have some clients that are signing up and going to our cloud-based solutions because we are only offering our AI capabilities through the cloud-based solutions, and they really like the automations that we can bring in from a regulatory reporting perspective.
And then in CAP, we have AI deeply embedded in our Boardvantage tool to summarize Board documents and Board — and also Board agendas to make it so you can auto-build Board agendas in addition to an IR. So, it’s kind of everywhere. Some of the products we purposely charge for and some of the products are embedded in the product so that we work with our clients on thinking about the value that they’re getting upon renewal.
William Katz
Thank you.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And I show our next question comes from the line of Alexander Blostein from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Alexander Blostein — Analyst, Goldman Sachs
Hi, good morning. Thank you for the question. I was hoping we can double-click on trends you’re seeing in fintech, in particular in cap markets tech. Sarah, you highlighted to a couple of drivers this quarter. But given the really strong momentum in ARR even sequentially, I was hoping you can give us a little bit more detail of where you’re seeing the incremental uptake, particularly within cap markets, as well as your view for the rest of the year within that segment.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Great. Thank you. So there — as we mentioned, there’s actually good momentum across all three elements of the Capital Markets Tech business. We start with trade management services where we offer connectivity services to our clients who trade within the Nasdaq exchanges. There we’re definitely seeing more and more interest in having — bringing in more connectivity capabilities, to make sure that they can manage the volumes in the markets, but also to drive new strategies that they want to execute within our markets. And so that has been — and also, as a reminder, we did expand our data center last year. So, I think that two years ago, sorry. So, we have more opportunity to offer capabilities to our clients now with the larger data center footprint that we have.
But it does, and we’re working on some new innovations within the data center too in terms of making some investments in liquid cooling and other things to really continue to allow our clients to drive new strategies in the markets. So that’s exciting. And as Sarah mentioned, and I think I did too, that we did have a pricing increase as well in that business this year.
With regard to Calypso, the key areas that we’re really seeing — we’re seeing a lot of demand across the world for one thing. The second thing is collateral management, as you know, is one of our strongest modules within Calypso, and we definitely are seeing really strong momentum in collateral management on demand from our clients. And then I think that within — and also international, it’s really — we have a lot of demand actually both I think domestically and internationally in Calypso.
In market technology, we definitely see a lot of trading opportunities with new asset classes, new areas of new markets that are coming up, in addition to modernizing our core clientele. We have had really good success in bringing our clients into the next-generation trading and clearing solutions. And then also, we have launched an intelligence suite, which we allow our clients, we have it internally, but basically a modern way for them to manage all their data within their infrastructure. And that’s been a really great, I would say, add-on sale to our clients as they’re thinking about how they leverage AI. They’re leveraging us to kind of help them modernize their data management infrastructure.
So, those are the areas of demand, Alex, that we’re really focused on, and it is driving good momentum. We don’t give outlook kind of specifically. We give long term, or medium-to-long term outlook, but we are definitely seeing really good demand and momentum across all three areas of fintech and capital markets, sorry.
Operator
Thank you. And I show our next question comes from the line of Dan Fannon from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Daniel Fannon — Analyst, Jefferies
Thanks. Good morning. So wanted to expand upon your comments on the strength in data. I think, you’ve mentioned 24/5 in some of the growth internationally from clients. So, I was hoping you could just expand a bit upon that, and how you see that progressing as we think about the year.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Sure. Well, it’s been interesting over the last really five years to six years, we’ve seen a broad-based increase in demand internationally for Nasdaq’s market data. And I think, part of it is the fact that there’s just more demand for the companies that are listed on Nasdaq and US equities in general from global investors. The second thing is that retail investors have really grown and expanded around the world, and there’s just more accessibility to the US markets by retail investors. And so, retail brokerage platforms around the world want to be able to provide real-time access to the market data from our markets.
And so, all of that has been driving a longer-term trend of global expansion of data. We have though seen some acceleration of that in the last, I would say, year. So, it’s not just in this quarter, but over the last year, as 23/5 trading in US equities is both — there is some trading that already occurs within the dark today. But as these firms are getting ready for 23/5 trading with lit markets like ours and central transparency, I think they’re getting themselves ready to be able to offer those capabilities so they can trade in domestic hours, and that is definitely driving more demand for enterprise license deals with our clients around the world.
Operator
Thank you. And I show our next question in the queue comes from the line of Benjamin Budish from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Benjamin Budish — Analyst, Barclays
Hi, good morning, and thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask about index revenues in the quarter. They were down a bit sequentially when your volumes are quite good, the average AUM was up. I know there’s a dynamic with the CME fee sort of resetting at the beginning of the year, but it looks like the volumes are quite strong. So, I’m curious if there’s anything else going on in the quarter, if there’s any color on the timing of that fee reset, and what that means for Q2? Thank you.
Sarah Youngwood — Executive VP & CFO
Sure. So, what we’ve experienced is a mix-shift in futures, and I talked about that as the retail is driving more micro volumes and that’s at a lower capture than mini. So that was the main driver. Their volume in futures was actually good. And then there is a second, but let’s say smaller driver, which is a little bit of a continued mix-shift, and that’s the story we’ve been telling in the TPA UNs as we go towards a bit more institutional.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah. And on the reset, I think that definitely we achieved — you’re right that the fees, the kind of sharing agreement resets at the beginning of every year, and we saw that we kind of had — we’ve now gone to the higher tier as of the end of Q1. So that will come into — start to come in at a higher level in Q2.
Benjamin Budish — Analyst, Barclays
All right. Very helpful. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And I show our next question in the queue comes from the line of Owen Lau from Clear Street. Please go ahead.
Owen Lau — Analyst, Clear Street
Good morning and thank you for taking my question. So, for your tokenization strategy, could you please give us an updated timeline on your tokenized trading capabilities? I know, you have 23/5 trading going on, but what are the remaining hurdles you need to cross before you can execute the first trade? Thanks.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Sure. Well, we are very active in working with DTCC and with the industry to make sure that we’re doing this in lockstep, and we’re doing it in an organized way. I think that DTCC has significant efforts underway, and they have at least expressed an interest in trying to get to that first trade that you mentioned before the end of the year. So that’s, I think that the goal that they have, and they’re working collaboratively with us as well as with industry players to go through the whole process, make sure that they’re advancing their systems, doing some — they’re going to want to do test trades as they get further into the year, and that allows us to be able to get to that, as you say, first trade. I would say though it’s likely that this will still be an early adopt — kind of an early phase by the end of the year to make sure that we’re — the end-to-end is working seamlessly. So, it’s going to be a little while, Owen, but it’s work — I mean, we’re doing a lot of work together and it’s going well so far.
Benjamin Budish — Analyst, Barclays
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And I show next question comes from the line of Brian Bedell from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Brian Bedell — Analyst, Deutsche Bank
Great. Thanks. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe just — Adena, you talked about the impact of always-on markets helping data, but can you also talk about the potential impact across your fintech platform, as the clients increasingly need to respond to always-on, particularly in the Eqlipse and capital markets business. I know we talked about in the past the initial guidance from the Adenza businesses didn’t contemplate crypto as much and that’s already been a help. To what extent do you see this always-on dynamic on advancing growth in these businesses?
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah. So, I think that the areas that we’re seeing — we’re having a lot of conversations with clients, and in some cases, already clients are signing up for expanded services. I would say the first one is surveillance. So even without the established markets being there, they do want to be able to surveil activity, trading activity if they are, in fact offering it to clients during the international hours that exist today. So that’s already driving demand in terms of surveillance clients.
Also, our trading. So, our clients around the world who are — other markets who are looking at how do they want to expand their trading hours and really kind of continue to modernize their infrastructure around trading, that is driving more demand for our Eqlipse trading platform because it is built to be able to support 24/7.
And then the third thing is in Calypso, as you mentioned, collateral management, risk management, capital management, just core trade infrastructure. While Calypso generally supports OTC instruments, there is just a move and desire to make sure that they are able to support collateral management across all their markets, and they are connected into both clearing firms and clearing houses. And as certainly the US markets moved there, I think that that’s something that they’re definitely seeing more demand for collateral management.
And then trade management services within capital markets tech also, as firms are thinking about how are they going to be able to support 23/5 markets themselves, and they want to come in and have more co-location capabilities that’s also driving some demand. So those are areas that we are having active dialog with clients as we prepare for 23/5.
Brian Bedell — Analyst, Deutsche Bank
Great color. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Michael Cho from J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.
Y. Cho
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to touch on the index business again. I think one of the benefits you cited in terms of licensing it to BlackRock and State Streets is around access to new investors. And so, just wondering what kind of incremental investor segments do you think BlackRock and State Street might provide for Nasdaq?
And then just longer term, how are you thinking about the potential for AUM and product expansion from the index licensing versus any licensing fee changes that might emanate in the coming years? I’m just looking at the evolution of other flagship index providers who have been more susceptible to that than Nasdaq in the past. Thanks.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Sure. So, well, just to touch on the pricing point, just to make sure we’re clear, with the new relationships that we have with BlackRock and State Street, the index pricing licensing terms are the same as for QQQ. So that’s not changing our pricing paradigm. What we’re really focused on with BlackRock and State Street is they have their own unique investor universes. They have incredible distribution out into the institutional ecosystem, as well as broad-based retail on investor base, and they complement Invesco, who has been and continues to be an amazing partner to us. So, we’re at this point where the Nasdaq-100 is really becoming a core component of an investment strategy among asset owners, insurance companies, and we want to make sure that we can distribute it out through the channels that they usually use, right? So, they’re not having to — they can leverage the relationship they already have with BlackRock or State Street in order to get access to these products in a seamless way. And so, it does feel like the right next step for us in a way, a new chapter of growth and expansion for the Nasdaq-100 as we continue to execute on global growth as well as institutional growth of that index. It also — we already do work with State Street and BlackRock and other product areas. So, it just kind of continues to — like it’s like an evolution of our relationships there to make sure that we can leverage the strength of their platforms for our flagship product, while we also work with them on new product expansion.
In terms of just generally across the index business, we are very fortunate to have an index franchise that’s really focused on innovation-oriented and thematic indexes, that we work really collaboratively with our partners. We use all of our marketing assets to be able to drive the distribution and adoption of those products. And I think the way that we partner with our clients allows us to have a fee base that we feel very confident, that we’re delivering great value to them, but also value to us. And we would expect that to continue as we launch other new products.
Y. Cho
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Eli Abboud from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Elias Abboud — Analyst, Bank Of America
Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Anthropic’s new Mythos model is expected to pose significant cybersecurity risks for financial institutions. So, as one of the largest bank software vendors, I was wondering if you’ve previewed Mythos, and if you can speak to the extent to which the release poses risks or creates liability for Nasdaq? And then separately, does it create any new opportunities? Is bank cybersecurity an interesting adjacency for you or is that too far afield from your current business?
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah. So, I’ll answer the second question first, which is that there are amazing cyber companies, many of which are listed on Nasdaq that provide very, very advanced cyber capabilities to us and to our bank clients. And we would expect that we will continue to partner with them, and we’d expect the banks to continue to partner with them.
And speaking of them, we have a lot of engagement with our cyber partners, with our hyperscaler partners, with the banks and with the government on how new models are being introduced into the financial industry. We’re very careful in how we bring new models into Nasdaq. We do leverage Bedrock, which is AWS’s AI platform infrastructure to support a lot of our AI infrastructure here at Nasdaq, as well as we work with Microsoft and Microsoft Azure. So, we have these great partners that help us make sure that we’re protecting ourselves. We do a lot of extra protection. And then we will test models extensively before we can — before we bring any new models into our infrastructure. We do a lot of testing of models. So, we’re not going to just race forward with any new model and bring it in. We do a lot of work first to determine if it’s got utility and then to do incredible IT security reviews on it. And then we’ll bring it in and determine how it can be best used for our purposes.
I also think as these new models come in, there obviously are going to be new protections that both the LLM providers, but also their partners will provide to make sure that they can be brought in securely.
Elias Abboud — Analyst, Bank Of America
Thank you.
Operator
And I show our next question comes from the line of Patrick Moley from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
Patrick Moley — Analyst, Piper Sandler
Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. A big picture one for me on tokenization. You mentioned the equity token design putting issuers at the center of ownership rights, governance, investor experience. So, as tokenized settlement and 24/5 trading becomes a reality, Adena, I’m wondering if you see this fundamentally transforming the IPO process itself, particularly as it relates to expanding global retail access, and reducing some of the frictions and costs associated with traditional underwriting? And if so, does this represent any sort of structural opportunities that investors might not be [Indecipherable] Nasdaq’s ability to grow — grow those?
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah. So, I think the first thing I would say is there are multiple paths to the public markets today in terms of you can have a direct listing, you can have SPAC combination, you can have an IPO. So, there are choices. In terms of 23/5 trading and tokenization changing, I mean, I do think that the nature of securities, I mean the actual construct of the underlying CUSIP and the technological capabilities it provides are interesting, and obviously allow for the free flow capital, allow potentially for companies to have more direct interaction with investors over-time.
But I also think that the IPO process or the go-public process is a huge undertaking to engage with both institutional and retail investors, to make sure that you’re unlocking that demand prior to the day that you enter the public markets. And there is value to that process, whether it’s through a direct listing or through an IPO or SPAC combination, that engagement with investors leading up to it, and in some — certainly the underwriting for new capital being raised and making sure that you’re getting support in the stock in the first few days and weeks of trading, I think is important.
But, you know, I can’t say that I think that tokenization has an opportunity to unlock and expand investor reach during that process. It can improve engagement with retail investors as they’re going through that process. But I’m not envisioning a fundamental change in the IPO process, I have to say. I think only time will tell if that’s an opportunity.
Patrick Moley — Analyst, Piper Sandler
Great. Thanks, Adena.
Operator
Thank you. And I show our next question comes from the line of Jeff Schmitt from William Blair. Please go ahead.
Jeffrey Schmitt — Analyst, William Blair
Hi, good morning. You mentioned you’re working on outcome-related options in market services. Would these be similar to prediction market products? And could you just provide some more detail on what you’re doing there?
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah, sure. Yeah, they are — essentially, you can call them outcome-oriented or event options. Think about them as the first one that we are seeking approval for — from the SEC is an option on predicting the future performance of the Nasdaq-100. So, it’s like what some people call binary option, yes/no, is it going to go up or down kind of thing. And so, it is a way to bring the notion of a prediction — a prediction market construct into a regulated market.
The nice thing is with our options business, it is fully overseen by the SEC. And we have a lot of regulatory controls in place. We were working with OCC, which is the clearing house to make sure that we think about the risk models around it and the margin models. So that we can kind of introduce the notion of what I would call entry-level options into a marketplace that has a regulatory framework that’s very well established. So, it is our first — our first effort in that area.
Jeffrey Schmitt — Analyst, William Blair
Okay. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. I show our next question comes from the line of Ashish Sabadra from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Ashish Sabadra — Analyst, RBC Capital Markets
Thanks for taking my question. Very strong ACV momentum in Verafin, and you also talked about the Tier 1 plant signed in 2Q. And my question was, can you talk about the pipeline for Tier 1, Tier 2 clients? And just a follow-up there would be, as we think about these implementations going live, is it fair for us to assume that we start getting the ARR growth back into the mid-term range as we get into the back half of the year? Thanks.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Great. Thank you. Well, actually, as Sarah had mentioned, with a lot of the signings that we had in the latter half of last year. So, our momentum in enterprise signings really picked up as we went through last year. We had, I think, more than double — it’s not triple the number of signings last year versus the prior year, but a lot of those happened in the second half. So — and we don’t recognize ARR in the clients until they’re fully implemented. So, we are still in implementation mode for a fair number of those clients in addition to obviously anything we signed in the first quarter. So, we do anticipate that the benefits of those deals will start to flow in later in this year.
I think, the second thing is that our pipeline is very strong. We have amazing engagement across a wide range of clients, either in POC where they’re testing us or in contract negotiation, or we’re having really just good dialog with them as we’re thinking about modernizing their AFC capabilities. So, the pipeline is strong, the activity and the signings have been very strong, and we’re excited to start to show the benefit of that as we implement the clients.
Ashish Sabadra — Analyst, RBC Capital Markets
That’s great color. Congrats.
Operator
Thank you.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Thank you.
Operator
And I show our next question comes from the line of Alex Kramm from UBS. Please go ahead.
Alex Kramm — Analyst, UBS
Yes. Hey, hello, everyone. I just wanted to come back quickly on the capital markets disclosures that Sarah gave on those cancellations. So, first of all, is that now fully in the run rate or is that still coming out of ARR? I think you mentioned a 4% one-timer. So does that mean that maybe there’s a 1% headwind to growth or maybe you can just size up what kind of headwind that is? And then overall, as we think longer term with the expectation that bank M&A may be picking up, do you expect to see more of these, or do you think these are kind of like one-time events here or unusual events? Thank you.
Sarah Youngwood — Executive VP & CFO
So, I would say that the impact going forward is actually not very much on that, and the 4 percentage points you have, very correct, which is that is a positive this quarter, which we have put on as described as M&A related. It’s M&A of market operators, which is really different than bank M&A. And so, we’re not seeing very much of that happening. It just so happens that we had to — that hit this quarter, and those have been a long time incoming in terms of like our awareness of them. So, we’re not seeing a sequence of those as a trend at all.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
And I think, Sarah, also the termination fees are not commensurate with the actual ACV value. It is different. So, the ACV value of these as they’re going to come out of ARR is quite modest, versus the termination fees that we received as a result of the changes.
Alex Kramm — Analyst, UBS
Good. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And I show our last question in the queue comes from the line of Michael Cyprys from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Michael Cyprys — Analyst, Morgan Stanley
Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Just wanted to ask about 23/5 trading that’s expected to launch. I heard you mentioned on December 6. I was hoping you could update us on the steps that you’re taking between now and then? How do you see this rolling out? What sort of milestones do you anticipate in the first year? We also hear some hesitation from certain market participants out there, some hesitation just around, including around potentially limited liquidity in the overnight session. So, I guess, just what sort of steps are you taking to address some of those concerns out there?
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Yeah. Sure. So, in terms of — I’ll actually take the last question first. I would say, anytime that you have change in the industry, there are people who are excited about it and people who get nervous about it, that’s just — I think it’s actually quite healthy, because you want to make sure that you’re thinking through concerns as you’re trying to progress the markets.
Today, if you look at the volumes that occur today, so we operate from 4 a.m. to 8 p.m. our systems are open for trading during that period of time. Outside of our hours, so from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. US time, the — there is about 2% of volumes is occurring today, so 2 percentage points of volume. So, there is actual — there is volume occurring outside the hours of operations for our business. So, we are excited to be able to tap into that — that demand and that market activity, but also to really use the infrastructure that we’re putting in place and that the industry is putting in place to make sure we can grow that.
And so, what we’re doing is making sure that as we go forward as of December 6, not only is Nasdaq launching its venue, but the tape has announced that they’re launching the consolidated tape to make it so that all national best bid and offer, and last sale will be available. Obviously, our market data will be available. And so, you’ll have a more lit market environment. You’ll also have — we also have market watch, expanding our hours of market watch, expanding hours of our market operations team, our tech ops, our network ops, all of those organizations will be expanded to make sure we can support the clients that are coming in and trading across the — across the globe.
And then we also will make sure that as we launch that we have a lot of investor education. We want to make sure that we’re working with retail brokers and through the — when we make a sale of our market data, we often work with them also on education and other things that they can do to promote and make sure that their investors are ready to be able to trade our securities. So, it’s a holistic effort, and we would expect over time, but I also would say it’s an evolution, not a revolution, to see expansion of investor interest across the globe to have the opportunity to trade in their home hours, and to have liquidity throughout the 23-hour period.
I would point out that the Nasdaq Futures, Nasdaq-100 Futures trades 24/5 today. So, the idea of being able to trade in the future, trade the ETFs and trade the underlying all-in domestic hours for that — for those stocks is exciting, but it is going to be offered to every stock across the US equities market. So, I see it as a natural next step here, but it will take time to make it so that there’s a lot of penetration.
Operator
Thank you. That concludes our Q&A session for today. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Adena Friedman, President and CEO, for closing remarks.
Adena Friedman — CEO & Chairman
Great. Well, thank you very much. We are very pleased with the performance and momentum across Nasdaq, as we execute our strategy to modernize markets, power the innovation economy and build trust in the financial system. Thank you very much for joining the call, and have a great day.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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