Operator: Good evening. My name is Sophia, and I will be your conference operator today. Welcome to PagSeguro Digital Earnings Call for the Fourth Quarter of 2025. The slide presentation for today's webcast is available on PagSeguro Digital's Investor Relations website at investors.pagbank.com. Please refer to the forward-looking statements, a reconciliation disclosure in this presentation and in the company's earnings release appendix. [Operator Instructions] Today's conference is being recorded and will be available on the company's IR website after the event is concluded. Now I will turn the call over to Daniel Spencer Pioner, Head of IR.
Daniel Spencer Pioner: Good evening, everyone, and welcome to PagBank's Earnings Conference Call for the Fourth Quarter of 2025. I'm Daniel Spencer Pioner, PagBank's Head of Investor Relations, and I want to thank you for taking the time to join our webcast. I'm here with Ricardo Dutra, our Principal Executive Officer; Carlos Mauad, our CEO; and Gustavo Sechin, our CFO. After the presentation, we'll have a live Q&A session. Please note that during Q&A, we'll take only one question per analyst to ensure the best use of our time. Now I'd like to hand it over to Dutra. Please, Dutra.
Ricardo da Silva: Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining our full year and fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. In Q4, we continued to expand our credit and banking businesses, along with the reacceleration of acquiring volumes. As a result, we are pleased to report a robust performance, demonstrating our resilience sustained by disciplined execution and value creation focused on our long-term ambition. Going to Slide 4, we can see the key operational and financial highlights for the full year 2025. Compared to last year, our revenues reached BRL 13.4 billion, 16% growth, driven by an impressive 51% growth in banking revenues and 9% in payments revenues. Net income was up 4% and year-over-year. Later on the presentation, we will see the main impact on net income was due to the increase in financial expenses linked with the basic interest rate of Brazil, SELIC, which grew from an average of around 10.8% per year in 2024 to almost 14.5% per year in 2025. Going to the value creation for shareholders section. Our earnings per share reached BRL 7.99, growing 21% year-over-year. Buybacks and total dividends distributed in 2025 reached BRL 2.1 billion, leading to a 15% total shareholder yield. On Slide 5, we can see the highlights of the fourth quarter. Our TPV grew 10% quarter-over-quarter, marking an inflection point with sequential improvement in volumes. Our expanded credit portfolio reached BRL 50 billion. It is important to highlight the portion of the credit portfolio composed by loans, credit cards and working capital grew 33% year-over-year, with NPLs 90, approximately half of the industry average. These trends reinforce the underlying strength of our ecosystem and our ongoing commitment to expanding access to financial services in a responsible and sustainable way. On the funding efficiency initiative, our deposits reached BRL 40 billion, growing 13% year-over-year. Moving on to financial highlights. Our total net revenue, excluding interchange and card scheme fees increased 12% year-over-year, reaching BRL 3.5 billion. Our non-GAAP net income was BRL 678 million, 7.4% higher year-over-year, leading to annualized return on average equity of 18.4%, improved 100 basis points year-over-year. On Slide 6, I'm pleased to announce we successfully delivered our 2025 guidance despite strong headwinds such as macro volatility and sharp increase in Brazilian interest rates in 2025. Gross profit grew 6.9% for the year, within our expected range of 5% to 7%. GAAP diluted EPS increased 18.2% in 2025, above the guided range of 13% to 15% using the same share count as of December 2024. When you consider the benefit of buyback execution, reducing shares outstanding, EPS increased more than 20% year-over-year. Capital expenditures reached BRL 2.3 billion in 2025, landing at the upper end of our BRL 2.2 billion to BRL 2.3 billion range. Overall, the full delivery of 2025 guidance makes us confident about 2026 perspectives and reinforces our strong track record, as shown in the following slide. I'd like to briefly focus on our consistent track record in creating shareholder value. Since our IPO in 2018, GAAP diluted EPS has grown at a compounded annual rate of nearly 16% despite the global disruptions and macro volatility during this time frame. Throughout this journey, we have advanced in key strategic milestones, which broaden our addressable market, strengthened profitability and built a solid foundation for sustainable earnings growth. These efforts have increased the visibility and recurrence of our results, enhancing predictability and reinforces the resilience of our business model in generating long-term value. Now I'll pass the word to Carlos Mauad.
Carlos Mauad: Thank you, Dutra. Good evening. In this section, we will take a look at the operational and commercial performance of our units in this past quarter. Let me start on Slide 9, where we highlight our main growth opportunities. As we've highlighted in recent quarters, as we tap into new verticals, there is a substantial room for expansion across our platform. in many areas of our banking business, our market share remains below 1%, which reinforces our conviction that we are only at the beginning of what we can build whether through deeper cross-sell or a stronger and more efficient deposit franchise or a broader, more diversified credit portfolio. I will manage with discipline in a long-term view. On the next slide, we will highlight our customer-centric approach demonstrated by increasing transactionality and engagement of our ecosystem. The evolution of our cash-in metric, which represents inflow not related to acquiring remains one of the most important indicators of our client activity on our platform in the fourth quarter of 2025. Cash-in reached more than BRL 90 billion, an increase of 11% compared to the same period of last year. On a per client basis, the figure rose to BRL 5,300, up 10% year-over-year. As a reminder, cash-in is mainly composed by PIX transactions received showing how PIX has become an important and profitable component of our business. We are also seeing an increase in our platform usage as measured through the amount of bill payments, fixed transaction and the penetration of investment and insurance products signing deeper relationships and improved monetization as clients increasingly rely on us for a wider portion of their financial needs. These trends underscore the strength of our ecosystem and the growing intensity of customer engagement across our base. On Slide 11, let's speak about our credit performance. We can see credit as a strategic driver of engagement across both our banking and payment business enabling deeper transactional activity and unlocking meaningful cross-sell opportunities. In the fourth quarter, our total credit portfolio reached BRL 4.6 billion, a 33% year-over-year increase. Since the second half of 2024, we have been gradually accelerating underwriting for unsecured products with a particular focus on working capital. This progress reflects ongoing improvements in our risk assessment and collections capabilities increasingly supported by AI. While originating typically slows in the fourth quarter due to the seasonal pattern. Working capital originations were still 26% higher than in Q3, showing a healthy and consistent traction. When we include financial operations linked to merchant prepayment supported by our instant settlement feature. Our expanded credit portfolio now approaches BRL 50 billion, up 3% over the last 12 months despite lower volumes. Turning to asset quality, as shown on the bottom right of the slide, our NPL 90 ratio remains well below market average due to our disciplined approach to risk and product mix. The small increase we observe is a natural consequence of the greater mix of unsecured products in the portfolio. On the next slide, we present the continued strength of our deposit base and the progress we are making in improving our funding efficiency. During the quarter, total deposits reached more than BRL 40 billion, growing 13% year-over-year, a resilient performance despite the macro environment. deposits are the cores of our funding structure. In this quarter, we saw a meaningful shift towards on-platform deposits which reached 95% of the total, reinforcing strong client engagement and the growing relevance of our digital channels. Importantly, this was the seventh consecutive quarter of reduction in our funding cost as a percentage of the CDI. This range highlights the effectiveness of our strategy to broaden and diversify our funding mix with cost efficiency, and it contributes to the resilience of our liability structure and support the expansion of our credit portfolio. Finally, as shown on the right-hand side of the slide, our loan to funding rate to improve from 113% last year to 111% this quarter as we continue to grow credit with caution and prioritize a well-balanced structure. With that, I will hand it over to Gustavo, who will walk you through the financial highlights of the quarter of 2025. Gustavo, please?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Thanks Mauad. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Let's focus now on our consolidated financial results. In this first slide as a consequence of the increase in transactionality and engagement, total revenue and income, net of interchange and card scheme fees reached BRL 3.5 billion in the fourth quarter, up 12% year-over-year. This performance captures the expansion of the banking business and also the repricing measures we began implementing in the payment at the end of 2024, which has been essential to offset higher financial costs and to reinforce the sustainability of our revenue base. It is very important to highlight that revenue growth has once again outpaced TPV, showing that our pricing strategy effectively supported profitability. Disciplined execution drove resilient results in 2025 position us to sustain solid performance into 2026 despite macro uncertainty. Banking revenue reached BRL 757 million, growing over 7%, year-over-year, driven by the expansion of our credit portfolio, higher engagement and stronger monetization supported by the positive growth and increased fee generation particularly from card usage and account-related services. As a result, banking gross profit grew 54% year-over-year with a 72% margin of revenues. The combination of stronger banking results and our repricing efforts helped partially offset the impact of higher interest rates throughout the year. Consolidated gross profit reached BRL 2.1 billion for the quarter, an increase of 8.7% year-over-year when we exclude the negative effect of BRL 54 million of buyback and dividend distributions. Turning to the next slide. Fourth quarter delivered operational leverage, reflecting continued efficient gains across the platform. Our disciplined approach to managing expenses and deliver operational leverage remains a key pillar of our strategy, and it played an important role in helping us navigate the impact of higher financial costs in this period, allowing us to balance sustainable growth with continued profitability. On the cost side, financial costs increased 39% year-over-year, driven mainly by the higher interest rate environment and the effects of recent capital structure adjustments as highlighted earlier. On the other hand, sequentially, financial costs reduced 1% due to the progress we have made in diversifying our funding structure and reducing our funding costs. At the same time, total losses declined 8%, reflecting improvements in our loyal customers and onboarding process, which led to fewer chargebacks. This benefit was partially offset by the natural increase in expected credit losses as we continue to accelerate our credit operation. Operating expenses decreased 2% year-over-year, clearly showing our commitment to efficient cost management. This reduction reflects lower personnel expenses and more disciplined marketing investments. As a result, operating leverage improved significantly by 320 basis points compared to the same period last year. Moving on to the next slide. We reported non-GAAP net income of BRL 678 million in the quarter, represents 7% year-over-year growth and an increase of 16% on our EPS diluted. On the right side of the slide, you can see our return on average equity improving by 100 basis points year-over-year, reaching 18.4% compared to 17.3% in the fourth quarter of 2024. Even with the conservative capital structure, we have consistently managed to deliver solid returns, and it becomes clear the positive impact in this metric as we progress in improving our capital structure as shown in the next slide. Now moving on to the next slide. Let's focus on the initiatives that drive shareholder value and improve our capital structure. In order to achieve our Basel index target level of 18% to 22% in the next coming years, we have used not only dividends, but also buyback as an additional tool to enhance shareholder value as it can be adjusted to market conditions and liquidity. In our point of view, dividends offer stability and predictability while buybacks provide tactical flexibility, and it's important to use both tools to improve our capital structure. Throughout 2025, we maintained a consistent momentum in our buyback program, repurchasing over 27 million shares. In February, 5 million common shares held in treasury were canceled. Furthermore, we paid BRL 617 million in cash dividends during 2025 and in 2026 last month, roughly BRL 200 million out of the BRL 1.4 billion dividend announced for the year were already paid. The remaining balance will be distributed in 3 tranches over the course of this year. This schedule reinforced the consistency of our capital return framework and our focus on predictable value creation. Let me address our CET1 and the impacts from the new regulatory tax framework. Due to the tax framework approved last year, a new 10% withholding tax on intra-group dividends is effective in Brazil. Dividends declared by the end of December 2025 will remain exempt from this tax provided they are effectively paid by 2028. This transition rule gave companies the ability to optimize internal capital flows ahead of the new framework, and we are managing this process in a disciplined manner. As a result, in the fourth quarter of 2025, we declared dividends in certain subsidiaries, reducing the equity component of our regulatory capital at the entity level, while the consolidated capital base remained stable. Our Basel index ratio decreased temporarily this quarter, placing our Basel index below our intended target of 18%, 22%. It's important to highlight that this effect is purely accounting driven and does not impact on our cash position nor our ability to support growth. The reallocation of excess capital is consistent with our long-term capital efficiency strategy. As we look ahead, the actions we took in 2025 position us well for the next phase of this plan and sustainable growth and strengthens our ability to navigate 2026 with confidence. Bearing that in mind, let's move to the next slide, where we outline our 2026 guidance and walk through the key drivers that will shape our performance expectations for the year. This includes the operational priorities, credit initiatives and efficiency opportunities that support our trajectory and reinforce the foundations for long-term value creation. Starting this year, we are evolving the way we communicate with the market by aligning our annual guidance with our long-term ambition for 2029. This shift reflects the confidence we have in the structural levers of our business and the visibility we have built into our key growth drivers. In this context, our full year guidance will focus on 4 pillars: the expansion of our credit portfolio, the acceleration of gross profit, the continued progress toward delivering non-GAAP diluted EPS and also capital expenditure, all in line with our long-term path. We expect our 2026 credit portfolio growth to be in the range of 25% to 35%, supported by the expansion of underwriting in our core credit products, including working capital. Gross profit growth outlook is expected to be in the range of 6% to 9%, reflecting an increased contribution on our banking segment in a still pressured financial cost scenario. Diluted non-GAAP EPS is expected to be in the range of 9% to 13%, consistent with our long-term profitability road map and the operational efficiency we are driving across the company. Finally, capital expenditure is expected to be in the range of BRL 1.8 billion and BRL 2.0 billion, reflecting our focus on efficiency and disciplined approach. With that, I will invite Mauad for the closing remarks.
Carlos Mauad: Thank you, Gustavo. Before we conclude, let's move to the next slide for a few final remarks. First, we can see credit growth accelerate, supported by discipline in underwriting and healthy asset quality. The continued momentum in our unsecured working capital solutions, driven primarily by our own active client base reinforces both the relevance of our products and the quality of the risk management approach. Secondly, acquiring volumes have been recovering steadily since mid-third quarter, marking a clear inflection point. This recovery is now consolidating into a strong foundation for positive trends as we move into 2026, reflecting healthier client activity and the effectiveness of our commercial initiatives. And finally, improved funding efficiency and consistent cost control have played an important role in protecting margins. These efforts allowed us to sustain net income growth even in a still challenging interest rate environment. Together, these elements demonstrated our ability to execute with discipline, manage macroeconomic pressure and continue advancing our long-term goals. As a reminder, our 2029 strategic targets include BRL 25 billion in credit portfolio with a balanced mix of secured and unsecured products, emphasizing working capital loans and AI-enabled solutions such as private payroll and PIX financing, above 10% gross profit CAGR driven by stronger banking contribution, cross-sell opportunities and efficiency gains and above 16% EPS CAGR as we continue converting growth and operational improvements into consistent shareholders' returns. These target reflects our confidence in the scalability of our platform and the strength of our execution.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Mario Pierry with Bank of America.
Mario Pierry: I wanted to focus on your gross profit guidance of 6% to 9%. Trying to understand because this looks conservative to us because, as you mentioned, right, your TPV growth accelerated quarter-over-quarter to 10%. However, you're guiding for 6% to 9%. And then when we think about your financial expenses in 2026, they should be coming down as rates come down. So I'm trying to understand, are you expecting a slowdown revenue growth? Or what kind of SELIC rates do you have embedded on your forecast? And maybe that's the reason why gross profit is growing single digits. And again, right, this number is below your medium-term outlook of at least 10% growth. And trying to understand then what gives you confidence that this growth can accelerate going forward? I understand that you're introducing more banking products and you're accelerating the credit product. But I just wanted to understand a little bit better the single-digit growth in gross profit.
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Mario, it's Gustavo here. Thank you for your question. You are right that we are posting for this year lower gross profit when we compare it to our long-term ambition. But you're going to remember that when we release our long-term ambition and also given to the macro uncertainty that we are right now facing and still facing, we should assume that the performance in 2026 should be a little bit below the long-term ambition. And also, it's important to consider as we ramp up the credit business, it also consumes higher provisions and also reduce the gross profit and also reduce the EPS in the first year of our long-term ambition trend. But we are totally confident that we are on track to deliver the long-term ambition in all lines, credit as we posted, the EPS CAGR and also the gross profit CAGR. When we talk about the SELIC rate, that's very important when we talk about the financial cost. When we look and what we expect for 2026, despite that we will face cuts in the interest rate along the year, the average SELIC probably is going to be quite close to the 2005 SELIC rate. And at the same time, we also assume that and included that in our 2026 guidance.
Mario Pierry: Okay. And Gustavo, let me follow up then when we look at your EPS, right, growing faster than gross profit, then you are implying, I think, efficiency gains here. If you can just explore a little bit where these efficiency gains are coming from? And just to be sure, the EPS of 9% to 13% does not imply right a reduction in the share count, correct?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Yes, you are right. We are not assuming the same share base for the EPS guidance. And also, we are considering continue to generate operational leverage through our operation. We understand that we have different initiatives that we are working on. Some of them we put in place. And all of those initiatives will deliver a continuous operation leverage.
Operator: Our next question comes from Guilherme Grespan with JPMorgan.
Guilherme Grespan: Just one clarification before I jump into my question. The EPS guidance, should I read it as same share count, meaning EPS is the same as earnings growth or should I dilute it with the buyback of the year? This is just a clarification. And then my question is actually on the TPV recovery. It was a nice quarter. Just want to get your views and update on what is the diagnosis you have on why you're missing clients and potentially having churn and what you sold so far? And looking ahead, if it still has any bottleneck that you feel that you need to fix? And basically, this whole diagnosis with what is happening, what you already did and what's still to be done in early 2026?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Gustavo again. Thank you for your question. Just to make clear, we are not considering the buyback in our EPS. So if we continue and we intend to continue working on our buyback program, it will be dilutive for the EPS.
Carlos Mauad: And thank you for your question here. This is Mauad. Regarding the TPV recovery, we did have some operational enhancements on the second half of last year. We deployed our new logistics operations by August. We are reviewing everything related to the set of terminals that we have with our customers. The banking platform is gaining quality and a new set of products. So everything that we are doing here under the operational perspective is helping up to keep up with the customer database and to recovery TPV. Remembering that on the last call that we had with you guys here, we mentioned that the low part of the curve in terms of TPV was in August, and we keep seeing the recovery month after month. And on the beginning of this year here, we keep seeing the same movement that we saw throughout the second half of the year.
Ricardo da Silva: And just to complement here, remember, we -- of course, TPV is one of the metrics that we follow here. but TPV per se is not the main metric. We look at the revenues that we've been growing year-over-year. We reached 16% revenue growth. If you consider the financial services companies in Brazil, including fintechs and banks, is one of the largest growth in the year. So we are trying to do here to optimize the growth of TPV combined with revenues and combined with gross profit.
Guilherme Grespan: That's clear. Indeed, the gross profit had a rebound, right? It went from 2% year-over-year to 7%, 8%.
Operator: Our next question comes from Arnon Shirazi with Citi.
Arnon Shirazi: I have 2 brief questions. The first one is related to the NPL increase compared to 3Q. We saw 30 basis deterioration. What's behind that? And my second one is related to the CapEx guidance for '26. It is expected to be below 25 in BRL 400 million. What's behind that?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Arnon, this is Gustavo. Our CapEx guidance for this year includes a reduction or savings around BRL 4 million when compared to last year. And basically because we are implementing some initiatives, as I said in the first question of Mario, not related only the OpEx, but also related to the CapEx that we intend to deploy along through the year, and it will reduce both the demand for POS and also the demand for technology investments that we have in plan.
Ricardo da Silva: Can you repeat the first part of the question because it cut a little bit of connection here. First part of the question, please.
Arnon Shirazi: No, problem at all. We saw a 30 basis deterioration in NPLs in this fourth quarter. What's behind that trend?
Carlos Mauad: Here, it's Mauad. I'm just going to make sure if I understood it right. You were asking about the NPL 30 bps that we saw quarter-over-quarter, right? So I'm getting to that. We have I would say, 2 main effects here. First, it is the new regulation here where we keep accruing interest revenues until 90 days that makes the balances to go up. So that's an artificial movement due to the regulatory milestone and plus there is the unsecured products that we are deploying that pushes the NPL 90 a little bit up. Remembering that we have pretty much half of the industry in terms of NPL that's leaving us a lot of room to keep pushing up our credit outstanding.
Arnon Shirazi: Great. If I may, just a follow-up on CapEx. You mentioned that we will reduce demand for POS. What is driving that? Is it going to be tap on phone or anything else? Why would it reduce the demand?
Carlos Mauad: So here, there are many factors that we are working on under the product perspective and under the logistics perspective that help us out to optimize the terminal CapEx. So we are developing here a reverse logistics to make sure that every time we have to replace a terminal, we get the terminal that carries a kind of problem to remanufacture that and to reinclude that on our logistic network. And on top of it, we also have the tap on phone that helps out, especially on the terminals that are simpler to create this CapEx saving over time. So here, when you see a number which is below what we have on 2025, there is no customer impact. In fact, we are going to keep pushing forward the customer database throughout 2026.
Operator: Our next question comes from Kaio Prato with UBS.
Kaio Penso Da Prato: If -- First, before my question, if I can just clarify if the -- so the EPS, the non-GAAP growth that you mentioned is basically today considered the same as the net income. And also, you basically sent us like the guidance on the non-GAAP. Just would like to understand if you are assuming same level of share-based compensation for 2026 or if we can see any acceleration? And then I can follow up with my question, please.
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Gustavo, again. Yes, we are considering for the EPS as the base, the net income non-GAAP as the base for calculation for the EPS. And also, as I said, we consider we're going to consider the number of shares that we will find in each period that we are going to calculate. So that's very important to consider that because in both case, as we have been balancing buybacks and dividend, we understand that it is better to track the EPS trend and also it consider better. It eliminates the long-term investment -- long-term plan that we have here in the company. So we reduced that variable for the calculation of the EPS. When I said the share-based compensation, okay, just to make it clear. So it eliminates when we use the net income non-GAAP, it eliminates for the EPS calculation, the share-based remuneration.
Kaio Penso Da Prato: Yes. But just wondering if there is any potential acceleration on the share base just to understand what would be the gap?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: No. We could assume the same levels. We do not have any plan to accelerate that.
Kaio Penso Da Prato: Okay. Great. And in terms of like my main question would be on your engagement metrics. I think all of them were quite good this quarter. So encouraging trends across the board. And my question is, especially in the banking, if you can break down this metric between pure individuals and actually pure merchants. So just wondering about the performance of each of them. And in your strategy, I would like to understand how relevant can be individuals actually only going forward? Any metric that you can share in terms of engagement, especially on pure individuals would be good. And if you can link that in terms of the expectation on the breakdown of your portfolio by the end of 2026. You already sent the guidance in terms of growth, but it would be interesting to see how could be the breakdown of that in terms of working capital for merchants and also individuals.
Carlos Mauad: Yes. We are not guiding exactly those numbers like between individuals and entrepreneurs here. But I can assure you that both are growing, both are gaining engaging. And remembering that for the kind of customers that we have, especially on the payment side, the individual, the SMB is pretty much the same, let's say, the same set of products or the same set of needs that those customers has. But again, when we take a look at the product evolution here, we have initiatives on both sides on payments, on credit products for small enterprises and for individuals also as the private payroll loan and that it already started to pilot inside the company. So sorry that I couldn't answer completely your question. But again, it is something that is growing on both sides.
Operator: Our next question comes from Thiago Paura with BTG. I believe he left the queue, we are going to go with Tito from -- Tito Labarta with Goldman Sachs.
Daer Labarta: Just a follow-up, I guess, more on the capital return. Gustavo you mentioned, I guess you're assuming a similar share count. I mean we know you have the dividend, which is around 8% yield and you completed 70% of the buyback. So if you complete the other 30%, that's maybe another 2% of shares. But should we assume that any additional buyback? Or like how are you thinking about capital return beyond that? Is that it for 2026? And then we should start thinking about further buybacks or dividends more in 2027? Or is there a potential for additional buybacks perhaps in 2026?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Tito it's Gustavo here. I think that as you mentioned, we have been working on the buyback at the same time as we have been working on dividends. And we intend to use both tools and try to balance both tools because that's important to -- they give us some flexibility in terms of when we use buyback and also dividends, they bring some stability in terms of return. So we have the third buyback program that was launched last May. It remains open. we have been executing since then, approximately 80% of this buyback programs have been executed, and we're probably going to deploy the rest of this problem in the upcoming months. At the same time, it's very important to remember that we have released the BRL 1.4 billion in terms of dividend that is going to be paid along this year in more 3 tranches. And just remember, last Friday, last February, we paid the first one of BRL 200 million.
Operator: Our next question comes from Daniel Vaz with Safra.
Daniel Vaz: I'm looking at your credit portfolio guidance nearly at midpoint of 30% year-over-year. This implies, right? I think we've already covered that in your strategic update that the 2027 to 2029 window would be essentially a regime in changing pace, right? So it would not be a continuation of the current trajectory. So I wanted to understand further on your confidence and the macro assumptions you embed in that back-end acceleration, right? So what terminal SELIC rate are you using? And maybe how much of that growth is a function of the rate cycle rather than structurally achievable market share gains, right? So that would be my question, and maybe I'll do a follow-up later.
Carlos Mauad: Hello. This is Mauad. Thank you for your question. We are looking pretty much at the same level as focus for the SELIC and at between like 12.5% and 13%. But again, there are many other matters that explain a lower growth on the first year of our long-term guidance here. There are the product evolution that we are deploying as we speak here with you guys. So there is a lot of products that are going to our value prop throughout the year. So that is some learnings that are the credit strategy to be deployed. And that is the macro environment also that it is a little tougher. So we expect that on 2027, 2028 to be softer and have a better credit environment so we can evolve. So it is a mix between the macro environment, the product evolution and the credit strategy to make sure that we have the right pace and the right credit performance to push the portfolio up to BRL 25 billion.
Ricardo da Silva: And just to complement, remember that the credit portfolio is based on different cohorts, and then we start making these cohorts in '25, '26 and there is stack up. So it's not a linear growth. That's why when we gave the update, the strategic update in September '25, we said that '26 would not grow on average the necessary pace to reach the BRL 25 billion. So that's why we are giving this guidance 25% to 35%. Of course, it could be higher than that. But remember that effect that we have with the cohorts that can stack up. And also, I would like also to remember that today, we are operating with NPLs that are half of the industry average, which gave us comfort and room to grow and to accelerate in a sustainable way, not to one step forward, 2 step back. We're going to do it in a sustainable way. And again, there's this mathematical or mechanical movement, the cohort is going to stack up and then it's going to grow not in a linear way in '27, '28.
Daniel Vaz: And maybe a follow-up. So -- is the target -- basically, we're saying that the target is contingent on a constructive macro scenario, right? I guess everything you said on your perspective of better models, stronger underwriting, product development, but still contingent on the constructive macro, right? I mean if anything changes on the fiscal side on the trajectory of the interest rates, we would probably be looking at the revision for this number. Am I correct?
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Yes. I think you -- you are right. It includes that mark uncertain. It's Gustavo here, just to clarify. So in our guidance, it includes that kind of market uncertainty that we are facing and that is room for acceleration. So as we -- as the macro brings more opportunities to grow, we are going to do that. So it's included.
Daniel Vaz: No, pretty clear.
Ricardo da Silva: But just to complement, it's too far to plan when you think about 2 years ahead. Remember, we were in a scenario last week and last Saturday, we had a new war in the world in Middle East with oil prices going up and down. So there are many variables. What we're trying to send the message here is that regardless of this macroeconomic movements, we're going to try to grow in a sustainable way. Of course, there's going to be cycles, credit cycles, but we are confident with the guidance for '26, and we are confident with the long-term ambition that BRL 25 billion in 2029.
Operator: Our next question comes from Thiago Paura with BTG.
Thiago Paura Mascarenhas: I believe I have accidentally left in the previous call. But just a follow-up on the volumes, maybe a double-click here. on the dynamics that you are seeing. Given the change that you have been kind of releasing recently in the TPV disclosure, just to have -- get a sense from you regarding the mix behind incremental volumes growth. So basically more recently and what to expect going forward regarding the main drivers for TPV growth? Is it being more driven by nano merchants, more SMBs, larger accounts, just to get a sense on this kind of client profile on the payment side?
Carlos Mauad: Thank you for your question. Just answering straightforward, the focus of the company is still SMBs. So we are talking about small and medium enterprise. The nano merchant, it is part of our strategy on the tap on phone on the organic inflow that we have here in terms of customers. And we put our efforts, our capabilities, our marketing investment for SMBs, which is still the growth frontier of the company. So nothing different than that. We're going to keep pushing small and medium enterprises.
Ricardo da Silva: Thiago, if I can add, I would just -- I would like to highlight, I think that we have a unique combination in terms of product and service, Pro for MSMB. So we have a very seamless digital experience. we have a full digital bank here with all set of products and service. And it gives us -- it generates multiple revenue streams that we will deliver to our customers. And at the same time, we will continue to grow our operation. And right now, on top of that, we have been working on the credit avenue of growth. So those opportunities give us the confidence that we're going to be on track to deliver ourresults.
Thiago Paura Mascarenhas: Great. And if I may, just a follow-up on the EPS guidance because several questions are being -- are coming from clients. Just to double check that. So given the share count by the end of the year will be lower than mechanically, even if net income grows like 0 or it remains flat, that would imply something like this high single-digit EPS growth that is embedded in the guidance. That's the idea behind just to double check that.
Carlos Mauad: Mathematically speaking, yes, you are right, but you can assume that the net income will still grow.
Unknown Executive: We will still be growing.
Operator: Our next question comes from Neha Agarwala with HSBC.
Neha Agarwala: Just a clarification on the volume growth that you mentioned. So we saw good growth in fourth quarter, but how should we think about the sustainability of this growth? Some of your competitors might also be putting in more effort to retain clients. So how do you see the competition in 2026? And what efforts would be required for you to ensure that you retain the customers, especially given the fact that you have a lot of operational efficiency focus and you want to control the costs. So if you could talk about that. And second one is just on the effective tax rate. We had a bit of volatility in fourth quarter, and you explained about the change in tax rate. If you could elaborate a bit on that and tell us how -- what kind of level should we expect going forward in '26, '27, roughly any range that would be very helpful.
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Thank you for your question, Neha. Here, in terms of TPV growth, if I understood right, the first part of your question, we're not going to guide volumes throughout the year. But again, I will reinforce the same trend that we saw in the second half of last year, we see on the first quarter of this year here. So we are very confident on our customer acquisition strategy. And also, we are quite confident on the way that we are engaging our customers to control churn over time. So again, -- of course, the competitiveness arena is quite hot, as you guys know, but we have a very powerful set of products here to keep up growing or recovering TPV over -- throughout the year.
Ricardo da Silva: And Neha, just to complement, the competition is the same that we've been seeing in the last years. When you have an interest rate of the country with 15% per year, everyone needs to be rational. We don't see anyone trying to buy market share. Everyone is trying to look for profitability. And I know you mentioned about the cost control that we are doing, but all the cost control we are looking for and that we are reaching at this time does not affect the customer service, our go-to-market and things like that. We are looking for efficiency. We are using artificial intelligence in many fronts in such a way that we can have lower cost without any problem or any impact in service for our clients or the way that they go to the market. Just to be clear here, we are going to keep accelerating the way we've been doing in the past years and have more efficient in this go-to-market and all the back office and logistics and so on. Regarding the tax rate, Gustavo can.
Gustavo Bahia Sechin: Neha, good to see you. Talking about the tax, I think that the main message is structurally tax rate should increase over time, especially because the increase of the banking revenue pool. But for this year, you should -- we should tax around mid, mid-teens for the full year.
Ricardo da Silva: Neha, just to complement, I just want to reinforce here that we have a very powerful ecosystem. We -- I know you already know, but it's worth to mention that we have this digital bank account that we've been working on since 2019 or 2018 that makes the difference when you go to the market. We see some other players that believe in other synergies and now they are talking about banking, but they are too much behind us, I would say. So we have this powerful combination of the digital account that serves SMBs and all the powerful that we have in the payments that was the origin of the company. But just to be clear here, we are using all the advantage that we have in this go-to-market. And it's worth to mention in Q4, we grew 10% quarter-over-quarter, while the market grew 5%. So we could double of the market in Q4 compared to Q3.
Neha Agarwala: That's very helpful. Probably I missed and mentioned previously, what is the SELIC assumption you have for 2026 as well as for the long-term guidance that you posted?
Carlos Mauad: For this year, we are including 12.5% for the year-end, which will give us an average SELIC quite similar for -- with the 2025. For the long-term guidance, we assume some reduction. But in this period, they will be above 10% in 2027 and also in 2008.
Operator: This concludes today's presentation. You may now disconnect, and have a nice evening.