Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the TMX Group first quarter 2020 financial results call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your telephone. We ask that you limit yourself to one question and re-queue for any additional questions. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require any further assistance, please press star zero. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Julie Park, Manager, Investor Relations, TMX Group. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Operator. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us this morning for the first quarter 2020 conference call for TMX Group. As you know, we announced our results late yesterday, and a copy of our press release is available on tmx.com under Investor Relations. Today, we are all joining virtually from our homes and have with us John McKenzie, our Interim Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, and Paul Malcolmson, Managing Director of Investor Relations. Following opening remarks, we will have a question-and-answer session. Before we begin, I would remind you that certain statements made on today's call may be considered forward-looking. I refer you to the risk factors contained in our press release and reports that we have filed with regulatory authorities. With that, I will turn the call over to John.
Thank you, Julie. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for dialing into the call this morning. I want to start by wishing everyone the very best who's listening today and hope that you and your families are staying healthy and safe. As Julie mentioned, we are virtually here this morning to discuss TMX Group's financial performance for the first quarter of 2020. Although this date has been long marked on our calendar for TMX and for everyone joining us this morning, almost nothing about these last few weeks would be characterized as business as usual, as the COVID-19 pandemic has drastically changed the world in which we live and work.
Before we get into the details of our results this morning, on behalf of all of us at TMX, I want to send a message of hope and strength to all of those listening to the call today whose family has been affected by this terrible virus. Our thoughts are with you. I also want to sincerely thank all of the healthcare workers, first responders, and others providing essential services across our communities here in Canada and around the world. While we humbly salute those on the front lines, the fact is that even from our homes and remote work spaces, we all play a role in the fight against COVID-19. The response from our capital markets community to this unprecedented crisis has been impressive.
TMX applauds the efforts of our stakeholders, including listed issuers, as well as our trading and clearing participants, to help our communities cope from manufacturing of safety products for healthcare workers to generously donating funds and volunteering time to support agencies. From a broader economic standpoint, while the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic will be deeply felt for some time, the resiliency of Canada's financial industry is something to be proud of and bodes well for the future measures to reopen the country and reinvigorate the economy taking shape. TMX is firm and as clear-eyed as ever in our commitment to fulfill our core mission in operating Canada's capital markets. We feel strongly that it is both in the public interest and in the best interest of all of our stakeholders that at all times, and especially in times of crisis, markets must remain open and available.
Our markets are functioning well and doing what they were designed to do: provide investors with liquidity and ensure issuers have a world-class venue to raise capital. While much of the economy has been put on hold, we are not at all at a complete standstill. Businesses of all sizes across the country are up and running and working as hard as ever to adapt to the realities of an evolving operating landscape while preparing for a future that has yet to be clearly defined. As the broader recovery begins to take shape, TMX remains a steadfast partner in helping to ensure that the future for our entire market ecosystem is as bright as possible. Now, let me turn to our first quarter performance.
TMX achieved strong financial results compared to Q1 of 2019, reflecting the extreme volatility and a surge in activity as markets reacted to the COVID-19 pandemic. Our revenue was CAD 220 million, a 12% increase over Q1 2019. Earnings per share was CAD 1.24 on a diluted basis, up 14%, and CAD 1.53 on an adjusted basis, an 18% increase from Q1 2019. Cash flows from operating activities were CAD 79 million, reflecting a 50% increase compared to Q1 of last year. The increase in revenue was somewhat offset by a small increase in operating costs in the quarter. Trading statistics for Q1, and particularly for the month of March, indicated a degree of turbulence across the marketplace. Volume traded on Toronto Stock Exchange in the first quarter was up 36% over last year, and March TSX volumes more than doubled in comparison to March of 2019.
Across all of our equity markets, trading volumes were up 24% in the quarter, 73% in March compared to last year. On Montréal Exchange, overall derivatives volume traded in Q1 2020 was up 27% compared with Q1 of 2019, with a 33% increase during the month of March compared with last year. In a quarter marked by unprecedented events, we did see some consistency in terms of the impact marketplace trends have on other areas of our balanced business model. High volatility had a negative impact on capital raising conditions in Q1 compared to Q1 of last year. Additional financing activity on Toronto Stock Exchange decreased compared with Q1 of 2019, particularly the number of larger transactions as issuers chose to avoid unpredictable and severe swings in the market.
As a result, revenue from our capital formation business was down CAD 1.7 million, or 4% year- over- year, somewhat offsetting the increase in the overall revenue in the quarter. As the world begins to emerge from the initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic and contemplates the next important steps to recovery, the future is harder to predict than ever. I want to ensure all of our stakeholders that even as the company has taken necessary measures to adapt how we work in the new business world, TMX's roadmap for growth remains in place. Our comprehensive digital capabilities have enabled us to keep markets running and allow us to stay connected to our clients despite physical dislocation. All of our trading platforms and the vast majority of our client offerings and processes are fully electronic.
As we survey the still evolving and uncertain business landscape, timeline-specific initiatives may require some tweaking. TMX's corporate strategy and competitive value proposition fundamental to our success has not changed. TMX remains focused on executing our comprehensive and cohesive long-term global strategy centered around our growth champions: capital formation, derivatives, and Trayport. In the capital formation business, while capital may remain on the sidelines to some degree over the near term, we continue to target specific regions where TMX's unique ecosystem and sectoral expertise give us a competitive edge. By necessity, our immediate focus is on supporting this crucial and core element of our business. History has shown public markets fuel progress, and we are confident that public markets will again play a leading role in the economy finding its feet.
The capital formation process is critical in the funding of entrepreneurship and innovation while creating jobs for Canadians and fueling economic growth. Over the past two months, TMX has undertaken various issuer support initiatives, including relief measures and successful government policy advocacy campaigns. We continue to work together with all listed companies and all of our stakeholders to weather the COVID-19 crisis and lay the groundwork for future success. Perhaps now more than ever, sustainability is a priority topic for all companies. With an eye on helping issuers meet evolving investor standards and build their companies stronger and more resilient into the future, we launched ESG 101 in March. This new centralized hub features resources designed to help TSX and TSX Venture issuers understand the fundamentals of environmental, social, and governance, or ESG reporting.
Over the last few years, ESG factors have become priority criteria for investors and asset owners, and sustainability practices have become increasingly important considerations for companies across all sectors. We are proud to announce today that TMX has reached a new milestone in our own ESG reporting. The inaugural TMX Group environmental, social and governance r eport will be made available shortly on our website. The goal of this report is to inform all of our stakeholders of our progress of incorporating ESG matters into the TMX Group's corporate strategy, process, and operations. It's an important first step for TMX, and we look forward to hearing your feedback. Now, to turn to our derivatives business. Our team is moving forward on our strategy to capitalize on the growing global demand, particularly on the buy side for derivative products by expanding TMX's presence in foreign markets.
Initiatives previously announced remain on track at this point, including the launch of a new Canadian overnight repo rate average or CORA future product planned for mid-June, and the next phase of TMX's extended hours initiative to sync with markets in Asia scheduled for 2021. On to Trayport. Revenue from the core subscriber business, including Visotech, was up 16% in Sterling over Q1 2019, with a 10% increase in trader subscribers and an 8% increase in total subscribers. Activity in the signature European and Asian benchmark LNG contracts was strong in the first quarter. Volumes in the TTF contract increased 44% in the first quarter of 2020 compared with the same period in 2019, and record average daily volumes were recorded for the JKM contract in recent months.
The increase in volumes in these markets results in an expansion of the market participants, which drives growth in the number of subscribers connecting with Trayport to these products. The trend of algorithmic power trade in New York intraday markets continues to grow. In the first quarter, intraday volumes on the EPEX Spot grew by 37% over the same period in 2019. In closing, I want to share a quick observation and pass along one more very important thank you. For TMX, as for many of our issuers, early May is typically a very busy time, both operationally and for our corporate reporting functions. I can tell you from personal experience, the escalating pace of work during the days leading up to results is a familiar and near tangible element of a public company's reporting process.
Suffice to say, the Q1 2020 reporting has been a very different experience. The buzz around the office has been replaced by a new virtual working reality. Over 95% of all TMX employees are working from home and have been for almost two months now. At the outset of this pandemic, necessary precautions were taken to protect our critical operations staff, and they have been on site as needed. On behalf of our senior leadership team, I want to thank TMX employees for their perseverance, adaptability, and above all, exemplary dedication to the company throughout these last two months. Your consistent focus on maintaining continuity and service excellence to our clients across the marketplace is most appreciated.
While we are fortunate to be able to do our jobs remotely and maintain high operational standards, we look forward to the days ahead when the office is once again abuzz and we can enjoy face-to-face interactions with our coworkers and our friends. In closing, I want to emphasize that as its recovery measures begin to take shape, TMX remains firmly focused on serving clients across all of our markets with excellence and executing against our global growth strategy. With that, I will turn the call over to Paul, who will provide further color on our first quarter results. Thank you.
Thank you, John. Before commenting on the financial results, I want to echo John's comments and extend my sincere gratitude to healthcare providers, first responders, and essential service workers fighting the COVID-19 pandemic on the front lines.
On behalf of Julie as well, I want to send our best wishes to everyone listening on the call. We are fortunate to have gotten to know so many of our shareholders and the analysts who cover TMX Group over the years, and we hope that you and your families are keeping safe and healthy. Now, turning to our results. As John said, revenues were up 12% from Q1 of last year. This was driven by significant increases in trading and clearing revenue with the high volatility, particularly in the month of March. We also continued to see strong revenue growth from Trayport, as was the case in 2019. Operating expenses were up 2% over Q1 of 2019. With our operating leverage, we saw a 23% increase in income from operations over last year and an EBITDA margin of 59%.
To recap, diluted EPS was CAD 1.24, up 14% from last year. The growth was somewhat reduced by a tax adjustment of over CAD 7 million, or CAD 0.13 per common share, related to a change in the U.K. tax rate. Our adjusted EPS, excluding this tax item and the amortization of acquired intangibles, was CAD 1.53, and up 18% over last year. Looking at revenue, the high market volatility during Q1 and extreme volatility in March drove substantially higher trading and clearing volumes. The average VIX was over 31 in Q1 of 2020, compared with 16.5 in Q1 of 2019. In March 2020 alone, the average VIX was over 57 versus 14.5 in March of 2019. In equities and fixed income trading, there was a 27% increase in r evenue in Q1 2020 compared with last year, driven by the substantially higher volumes on both TSX and Alpha.
As John said, the overall volume of securities traded on our equity marketplaces increased by 24%. CDS revenue increased by 12% from Q1 of 2019, reflecting higher clearing and settlement revenue due to the higher volumes, increased custodial and event management fees, as well as higher international revenue. In addition, recoverable costs of CAD 1.1 million related to CDS's clearing operation that were netted last year were included in both CDS revenue and SG&A expenses in the first quarter. The increases in revenue were partially offset by higher rebates. The 24% increase in derivatives trading and clearing revenue was also driven by substantially higher market volatility and also by uncertainty around interest rates, particularly in the month of March. As John indicated, there was a 27% increase in volumes on MX. The impact from the higher volumes was somewhat offset by lower revenue per contract due to an unfavorable client mix.
There was also an increase in revenue from repo clearing in Q1 compared with last year. Now, looking at global solutions insights and analytics, or GSIA, revenue in Q1 2020 was up 7% over 2019, driven by increased revenue from Trayport. Revenue from Trayport, including VisoTech, which was acquired in May of 2019, was up 16% in both Canadian dollars and in Sterling terms. As John mentioned, this was driven by a 10% increase in the trader subscribers and an 8% increase in the total subscribers. Revenue from TMX Datalinx increased by 1% from Q1 2019 to 2020, driven by higher revenues related to benchmarks and indices, as well as colocation. This was partially offset by lower revenues related to underreported usage of real-time quotes in prior periods, as well as advertising.
In addition, there was a favorable impact from a weaker Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar this past quarter compared with 2019. This also drove the increase in the other revenue line, where we recognize net foreign exchange gains on net monetary assets. Really, the only area of revenue decline was in capital formation, as John mentioned. The trend we saw in 2019 around lower secondary market activity has continued into 2020, particularly noticeable in March with the extreme market volatility. The decline in additional listing fee revenue on TSX in Q1 was the largest factor driving the decrease in capital formation revenue of 4%. The number of transactions billed at the maximum listing fee of CAD 250,000 on Toronto Stock Exchange declined from 27 to 18, or by 33% from last year.
The decline was somewhat offset by an increase in additional listing fee revenue on TSX Venture, where there was an increase in both the total number of financings and total financings the dollars raised. There was also a decrease in sustaining listing fees, reflecting a decline in revenue from issuers on TSX Venture and also NEX, which is a board for issuers that have fallen below TSX Venture listing standards. This decline was attributable to a decrease in the amount of annual sustaining listing fees from an increased number of suspended issuers and a small decline in the market cap of issuers from the end of 2018 to the end of 2019. Somewhat offsetting the decrease, there was a slight increase in sustaining listing fees on Toronto Stock Exchange, as we expected, due to the increase in the market cap from the end of 2018 to the end of 2019.
Initial listing fees in the quarter decreased year- over- year, primarily due to a decline in the amount of deferred initial listing fees recognized in Q1 of 2020 compared with Q1 of 2019. While actual IPO activity was slightly lower in Q1, we were still number two globally in terms of new listings, according to the World Federation of Exchanges. Revenue from TSX Trust increased slightly compared to 2019, reflecting higher revenue from transfer agent fees, somewhat offset by lower corporate trust fees and recoverable revenue. As I mentioned, operating expenses were up 2% from Q1 of 2019. The increase in cost was partially due to higher employee performance incentive plan costs. In addition, there was an increase in SG&A expenses related to projects and recoverable costs related to CDS's clearing operation, as well as higher expenses related to VisoTech.
Offsetting these increases, there were strategic realignment expenses of CAD 3.3 million in Q1 of 2019, with no similar costs in Q1 2020, as well as a reduction in travel and entertainment costs. Looking at our results on a sequential basis, revenue was up 9% from Q1 of 2019, largely attributable to increases from equities and fixed income trading, derivatives trading and clearing, GSIA, including Trayport, as well as other revenue. Operating expenses in Q1 2020 were up 3% from Q1 2019. The increase in costs was largely related to higher employee performance incentive plan costs of CAD 8.1 million. There was also an increase in payroll taxes of CAD 3 million. Offsetting these increases, the recoverable costs related to CDS's clearing operations that were reclassified to SG&A expenses were CAD 5.3 million for Q4 of 2019, compared with only CAD 1.1 million in Q1 of 2020.
This is what drove the sequential decline in CDS revenue as well. In addition, there was also a decrease in travel and entertainment expenses, as well as in recruitment costs from Q1 2019 to Q1 2020. Income from operations increased by 15% from Q1 2019 to Q1 2020, largely due to the higher revenue and somewhat offset by the higher operating expenses. Just to comment briefly on the month of April, our market stats varied, as you might expect, with our diversified business model. We saw a 50% increase in equity volumes compared with April of 2019, which was not surprising, with the average VIX being 42 for the month. In our derivatives business, with current interest rates being so low and less uncertainty around rates, we did experience a 4% decline in volumes in April compared with the same month last year.
For secondaries in our capital formation business, additional listing fees billed on Toronto Stock Exchange were relatively unchanged on a year-over-year basis for April. However, there was a decline in financing dollars raised and the number of financings on TSX Venture compared with April of last year. Turning to CapEx, we just want to give you a brief update on the modernization of our clearing platforms, specifically on phase II related to CDS. As you know, we spent almost CAD 44 million up to the end of 2019 on capital expenditures related to phase II. An additional CAD 7.4 million of CapEx was spent in Q1 of this year. Overall, we now expect to incur between CAD 100 million-CAD 110 million in capital expenditures over the previous range, which was CAD 95 million-CAD 105 million.
We still plan to complete this project by the end of 2021 and will continue to provide updates on the CapEx and also on the timing. Just to comment on the balance sheet, we reduced our debt by about CAD 8 million from the end of 2019 to March 31st. We also spent CAD 10.5 million to repurchase 100,000 of our common shares under our normal course issuer bid through to the end of March. With the strong EBITDA in Q1, our debt-to-adjusted EBITDA ratio was exactly 2 at March 31, down slightly from 2.1 at the end of 2019. We also held CAD 267 million in cash and marketable securities at the end of the quarter, which was CAD 82 million in excess of the CAD 185 million we target to retain for regulatory and credit facility purposes.
Yesterday, our board declared a dividend of CAD 0.66 per common share payable on June 12th to shareholders of record on May 29th. At 43% of our adjusted EPS, this is well within our target payout ratio of 40-50%. I would now like to turn the call back to Julie.
Thanks, Paul. Operator, could you please outline the process for the question-and-answer session?
Certainly. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one on your phone in order to queue for a question. We do ask that you limit yourself to one question. Our first question this morning comes from Nik Priebe from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Okay, thanks. Good morning. I just wanted to ask you to talk a little bit about how you'd expect your data business to be impacted by elevated market volatility, as well as this transition to a virtual work environment, if at all, perhaps both with respect to Trayport as well as professional market data subs for your core trading venues.
Good morning. Thanks, Nick, for the question. That's a great way to start with that one today. Let me take those two pieces in part. With respect to our more traditional market data business, the market data subscriptions really isn't impacted by whether or not people are working physically in office or remote. It's more of a subscription-based model based on users. There are two things in this market activity that can drive change there over the long term. One is when we go through spikes and valleys in activity that can lead to usage-based quotes being picked up higher when there's more retail activity from non-pro users. A lot of those we've actually moved on to enterprise contracts to take some of that volatility out. Over the long term, it really is a factor of industry employment.
As long as industry employment remains robust, whether or not they're in office or remote, that would drive what the subscription base would be for that business. On the Trayport side, again, it's a similar model, and Trayport's clients are largely working remote as well. It is, again, subscription-based. It's enterprise agreements more so with Trayport, so it's less subject to kind of the ins and outs of day-to-day activity, and those contracts are generated longer term over multiple years. Even during this dislocation, during the people working remote, Trayport has actually been continuing to renew contracts with long-term clients in multi-year agreements. That is very positive.
Now, when you think about Trayport, you think, "What worries you in this market?" It's just certainly the health of some of the clients because the energy sector has some of the most volatility in it. As we've seen so far, because we can monitor the client's usage of the Trayport system, we've seen 90-95% of those traders are continuing to be active on the platform. At this stage, everything looks very positive going forward.
Okay, that's great. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Melinda Roy from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, everyone, and thank you for taking my question. Could you talk a little bit about the outlook for the capital formation business in the near term? How long do you expect secondary financing levels to remain depressed, and what criteria are necessary for IPOs to come back into the market in a substantial way?
That is a fantastic question, Melinda. If I could answer that with accuracy, I would probably be the most popular person on the street right now. Candidly, in terms of when we think about the market and we think about how to model going forward, we look back to previous market dislocations. 2007, 2008, in terms of financial crash, other market downturns like that, where you see a step down in capital raising activity. What usually follows, and we have all this historical information. If you do not have it, we can provide it offline, is a substantial uptick in capital raising to come later.
If you think about the fundamentals, it's really about what's going on with the clients themselves, balance sheets that are already stretched, already stretched through 2019 because it was a down market for capital raising from an equity standpoint and a lot of low-cost debt. We go into this crisis, and companies are adding more debt onto the books, and there will be a need across the board for equity refinancing on these companies. The challenge is I can't give you guidance in terms of when that can happen. We can give you guidance to look to the other periods in the past to see what those recoveries have been, whether they've been three months or six months or twelve months. What I would guide you to is that some of the best capital raising markets come after downturns.
All right. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Our next question comes from Jaeme Gloyn from National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thank you. Good morning.
Good morning, Jamie.
Questions just related to the balance sheet and capital management outlook for the remainder of the year. Balance sheet, obviously, in a very good spot with leverage at the lower end of your targets. Cash flows are really solid. I was hoping you can give us a commentary around how you're thinking about capital deployment and specifically as we think about other large-cap Canadian financials where dividend and share buybacks are restricted. How are you thinking about dividend increase going into the end of the year?
Yeah, so a couple of components that are in there, James. Number one, we recognize that we are a company that is in a strong position in this marketplace. Our balance sheet is in a strong position, and our strategy is intact. Look for us to continue to have a priority around using capital to advance our strategy. We are going to be actively looking for investment opportunities that make sense to accelerate strategy, continuing with all the same discipline we've had in the past and making sure that they create value for shareholders. We are not going to step away from the market in terms of looking at investments in this period.
Now, in the abundance of caution in the near term, from a balance sheet priority standpoint and a use of free cash flow, I'm going to prioritize keeping our debt level low over things like executing in the buyback in terms of where we prioritize first. I think that's just prudence in this environment. We do not see any change in our approach to dividend going forward. We would expect to maintain our target range, and as earnings continue to grow, we would expect the dividend to grow with it.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Jeremy Campbell from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Hi guys. This is Jason Weber on for Jeremy. The call around Trayport so far has been—how's it going? The call around Trayport so far has been very helpful. I believe you guys are about six months into your partnership with the Nodal Exchange. Given all the volatility that we've seen in the energy markets, can you talk about how this has impacted your partnership for going forward? Thanks.
Yeah, thanks. That's a great question. I mean, the partnership going forward is strong and will continue as is. Clearly, there are some disruptions as you have with people being dislodged in terms of the timing of rolling things out. That being said, one of the silver linings is when we've had Nodal traders at home working remotely, there's been capacity to do things like test the Trayport system. That rollout continues. We continue to work on that expansion. It's one of the important pieces of expanding into the U.S. I believe, and I don't have these stats on me, that Nodal has performed quite well in the U.S. market during this disruption. All things continue forward.
Like any of other initiatives, we could see some months push here or there just because of the availability and access to people when they're disrupted and at home. No change in the partnership.
Perfect. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Geoff Kwan from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Just wondering if there's any update on the CEO search and is the kind of COVID-19 market environment impacting the timeline?
Yeah, thanks, Jeff. No update today. The board is, I mean, you can imagine they're quite active on this. This is the number one file for the board. Their search committee process was fully underway at the beginning of this year, looking at embedding both the internal and external candidates. There is some impact around timeline as we respect to COVID-19, just in terms of availability and access to people, but they are working through that and don't expect there to be any long-term hurdles associated with it. I don't have an update for you around timeframe other than that the process continues to be well underway.
Okay, thank you.
Our next question comes from Paul Holden from CIBC. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning. I want to talk a little bit about the TSX trading engine and the disruptions that happened in Q1 as a result of the spike in volume. Two parts to the question. One is, what actions have you implemented internally to prevent a repeat of that occurrence, i.e., to increase capacity? Two, has there been any regulatory response or conversations in light of the trading engine issues?
That's a really important question, Paul. Please stay on. If I do not get all this for you, feel free to clarify anything at the end of it. Going back to the disruption we had on February 27th, and we can talk a bit more about what caused that. That disruption was caused by a spike in messaging levels, not just daily messaging. Messaging that was coming in on a per-second basis at levels not only not seen before in our marketplace, but not even scaled to or tested to. We build our systems at multiples of previous peaks. Previous average for messaging had been about 70 million transactions a day, or, sorry, messages per day.
What we saw on February 27th by the time we needed to close the market was 170 million messages, spiking in more than 10,000 a second across all the partitions that we operate. That is what created the backlog in our messaging layer. We never want to be closed. I want to make sure that is clear from the outset. Our commitment to our clients is that we are there and we are open and we are reliable. This was not where we wanted to be. We do take a lot of pride in the way that the team rallied around, immediately was able to triage what that issue was, and put a fix in place that night to substantially expand the capacity of the disk space or messaging layer that handles all that throughput of messaging. The after-effect of that is twofold.
I'll talk about performance in March, and then we'll talk about also what we're doing with the systems. Performance in March, with the volatility, we saw days that were in excess of 2x what we saw on February 27th. In terms of the fix being in place, more than substantial capacity to manage everything we saw in March, which was more than we'd even seen in February. The fix was right to do what we needed to do. In addition to that, we've added a lot more monitoring capacity in terms of reporting availability, capacity utilization, new statistics that we share both broadly throughout the organization and with the board. We were doing that before. We upped that as well. Now, would that have caught something that had happened in February 27th?
Not likely, because that accelerated in terms of market activity so quickly from the previous averages that it would not have been an indicator regardless. Now, long term, we already have a team that is working on what are the next steps on modernization on this platform. Priorities on 2020 include both capacity and capital upgrades that we will be doing to that system, as well as some design changes that we have identified from an engineering standpoint to look for where there are those types of choke points and take them out of the architecture and reorganize around it. There will be more changes we will be doing to the systems throughout later this year.
We're not doing that right now in the midst of this environment because there would be a high degree of risk in terms of executing that both when the markets were so volatile or in the distributed work environment. That'll be our focus going forward. Paul, let me pause there and see. Does that cover off what you're looking for, or is there any follow-up questions on it? I want to make sure we get this right.
Yeah, no, that makes—I think all of that makes sense from an internal response standpoint. Finally, I guess, was there any kind of conversation or response from regulators on this?
Right. Yeah, from a regulatory standpoint, I mean, this is the kind of thing where we treat regulators like partners. All throughout this, right from the beginning, we're letting the regulators know what the issue is, what we're doing about it, and they are actively responding, asking questions. There's no regulatory action that's coming out of this. The proactive actions on our part to ensure that we can operate the markets effectively and reliably. As we continue to do that, we'll keep the regulators up to date on our progress.
Thank you. I think that covers it.
Our next question comes from Graham Ryding from TD Securities. Please go ahead.
Good morning, Graham. Can I just touch on expenses? When I look at sort of the pieces that were driving the expenses this quarter, it does not seem like anything in there is too one-time in nature. It seems like stuff like around CDS and compensation around higher share-based compensation, etc., could be a recurring theme. Can you maybe just speak to if there was any seasonality or any reason why expenses would deviate from what we saw this quarter?
Yeah, I mean, the only seasonal piece is Q1 is generally a higher quarter for us because that's when we see higher payroll expenses with respect to payroll taxes, those types of things. There is always a spike in Q1, and I'll leave it with Paul and Julie offline to actually give more color on that. Other than that, there is no kind of material one-times in the quarter. It's a really reasonable, clean quarter. The uptick that we saw in terms of compensation costs was a reflection of, obviously, performance in the quarter and the performance of the stock price as compared to a year ago as it affects our long-term plans. No significant one-times.
Maybe I'll just add in that number John talked about on the payroll taxes was CAD 3 million. The other thing to think about in Q2 and Q3 is just the treatment we've had around the recoverable expenses in CDS, where you're going to see them showing up both in revenue and also in SG&A expenses for Q2 and Q3, and then kind of back to normal for Q4 when we made the adjustment last year.
Got it. That's helpful. Thank you.
Our final question today comes from Jaeme Gloyn from National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. I just wanted to follow up on some of the activity in the U.S. from the NCC around market data and they're maybe putting a little bit more controls on that. Do you have any commentary on what's going on in the U.S. and just confirm to us that things are still in a very stable place here in Canada or surrounding that topic?
Yeah, James, I'm happy to. I prefer never to commentary on things that are going on in the U.S. for lots of reasons. With respect to market data, it does seem to be that they're getting to some closure on that file. We did actually see some of the pieces that the SEC was objecting to that they've actually relented on in terms of some of the access fees that actually let go through now. They've certainly put more scrutiny now around future data changes across the marketplaces. I don't see that as having any material impact on the Canadian market at all. We already have a fairly robust regulatory regime around both market data fees, how they're priced, how they're shared amongst the marketplaces. We were already farther along in that regime than the U.S. was.
I don't see anything there that indicates any change for us, and we're not getting any feedback from the regulators that would look at anything different from our own market data business at this point.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Graham Ryding from TD Securities. Please go ahead.
I just wanted to throw one more question if I could. On the CDS fee increases that you mentioned that you were going to the regulator with last quarter, I believe, just could you give us some update there on perhaps does that process get delayed because of the remote backdrop that we're operating in? More importantly, given any sort of feedback you got from the industry, how are you feeling about how likely it is that you'll get these CDS fee increases?
With respect to the way that started the question, in terms of the regulatory backdrop, that's a reasonable expectation. This is going to take a while to work through the process. The priorities for ourselves and the regulators are more on continuity of operations, ensuring both issuers and participants can continue to operate in this market environment. These are files that are difficult to advance in the near term. We certainly did get feedback from the industry in terms of the public commentary process. You can imagine if you're making a recommendation to change fee structure that you don't usually get clients to write letters of support. There are two themes that came back from the feedback that we got. One was around whether or not this technology innovation and infrastructure investment needs to get done at all.
There are some industry participants that would be happy to stay on the type of system that we're on already. The other feedback being, is this the right piece for participants to pay? We think we're in a very strong position in terms of the reasonableness of the approach. We operate with some of the lowest clearing fees in the world, and we're putting in modern technology. It is a win-win for the participants. The fee change we're looking for is modest in that regard. We are going to continue to push that ahead with the regulators over time. On the earlier piece of feedback about whether or not this is really a thing that the industry needs to do, March has proved that out for us. We talked early in the call around the disruption around the trading systems.
What we have not talked about is other pieces of the systems that are also critical for the marketplace. The clearing system is, while it is very reliable, it is extremely robust. It does operate on mainframe technology that is up to 20 years old in terms of that type of technology. It, frankly, is not scalable the way the trading system is. That ability that we had to go into our trading system and expand capacity on an almost real-time basis, you cannot do that with the clearing system. To give you some examples of how important this is, our clearing system was originally designed and scaled for about 7 million transactions a day. In March, we hit a peak day of 5.7 million. Too close for comfort.
Now, the team has been quite responsive to that, to going back to the system, deprioritizing some processes, and virtually expanding the capacity in it. We believe we can actually get more like 10 million messages or transactions a day out of it. It does reinforce the need for modernization that for a system that's so critical to the underpinnings of the flow of capital in the country and the risk management systems that we rely on, it needs to be on market architecture. I think that argument has now passed in terms of why this needs to be done. We'll keep working through with the regulators on how to fund it.
That's it for me. Thank you.
This concludes the Q&A portion of our call. I would like to turn it back to Julie Park for final comments.
Thanks, Carol. Thank you, everyone, for listening in today. If you have any further questions, contact information for media as well as investor relations is in our press release, and we'd be happy to get back to you. This is also just a reminder that our annual and special meeting of shareholders will take place in a virtual format at 2:00 P.M. this afternoon. We invite all of you to join us through the Loomi webcast. Finally, in closing, we wish you the very best. Please stay well and be safe.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.