Day, welcome to the Houlihan Lokey Fiscal Year and Fourth Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to the company. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator, and hello, everyone. By now, everyone should have access to our fourth quarter and fiscal year 2026 earnings release, which can be found on the Houlihan Lokey website at www.hl.com in the investor relations section. Before we begin our formal remarks, we need to remind everyone that the discussion today will include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements, which are usually identified by use of words such as will, expect, anticipate, should, or other similar phrases, are not guarantees of future performance. These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we expect, and therefore, you should exercise caution when interpreting and relying on them. We refer all of you to our recent SEC filings for a more detailed discussion of the risks that could impact our future operating results and financial condition.
We encourage investors to review our regulatory filings, including the Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2026, when it is filed with the SEC. During today's call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe can be useful in evaluating the company's financial performance. These non-GAAP financial measures are not intended to be considered in isolation from, as a substitute for, or as more important than the financial information prepared and presented in accordance with GAAP. In addition, these non-GAAP measures have limitations in that they do not reflect all the items associated with the company's results of operations as determined in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is available in our earnings release and our investor presentation on the hl.com website.
Hosting the call today, we have Scott Adelson, Houlihan Lokey's Chief Executive Officer, and Lindsey Alley, Chief Financial Officer. They will provide some opening remarks, and then we will open the call to questions. With that, I'll turn the call over to Scott.
Thank you, Christopher. We ended fiscal year 2026 with a record $2.6 billion in revenue, up 10% versus last year, and adjusted EPS of $7.56, up 20% versus last year. Both Corporate Finance and Financial and Valuation Advisory produced record revenues for the year, and our Financial Restructuring business had one of the strongest years on record. Delivering these results against the backdrop of significant geopolitical uncertainty and macroeconomic pressures underscores the strength and resilience of our business. Since we went public 10 years ago, we have reported annual revenue growth in nine of the 10 years. We ended the fourth quarter with revenues of $636 million and adjusted earnings per share of $1.63. It is worth highlighting that our CF and FVA businesses each produced their highest fourth quarter revenues ever.
Our quarterly results are typically more volatile than our annual results due to both external macro events and the timing of revenues. In FR, our fourth quarter results were impacted as the closing of two larger transactions extended beyond the quarter end. While the growth in our fourth quarter results in CF and FVA were impacted by recent external market disruptions, including renewed geopolitical uncertainty from the conflict in the Middle East and market volatility affecting the software sector. Notwithstanding the turbulence exhibited in the marketplace over the last few months, our business is in the best shape in its history. We have a record level of backlog and pipeline. We have a record number of managing directors, and we have a record number of corporate acquisition opportunities in various stages of potential completion.
In the fourth quarter, CF continued to see solid backlog growth and improved transaction metrics across most of our industry groups, technology being an exception. In addition, CF revenues outside the U.S. grew significantly faster than U.S. revenues in both the fourth quarter and fiscal year. Capital Solutions performed well in fiscal year 2026, and we enter year fiscal 2027 with strong backlog and high expectations for those services. Segments of our FVA business saw the same disruption from macro events in the fourth quarter, while others did not. Momentum for that business has returned to more normal levels, and we expect growth in fiscal year 2027. In FR, our expectations for fiscal year 2027 have improved. We are seeing multiple tailwinds, widening credit spreads, dislocation in private credit and the software sector, and energy volatility.
These factors are driving increased activity levels, including several notable recent wins, leading to higher expectations for fiscal year 2027. Based on these dynamics, we expect this business to continue to perform at elevated levels in fiscal year 2027. We successfully closed two previously announced transactions in the fourth quarter, welcoming new colleagues from Audere Partners and Mellum Capital. Additionally, we hired four Managing Directors in the quarter, bringing our total hired and acquired for the fiscal year to 33. We are also pleased to announce that we promoted 25 colleagues to Managing Director in the first quarter of fiscal year 2027. I would like to congratulate our new partners and recent promotes and wish them great success in the years to come. As we enter fiscal year 2027, our diversified business model positions us well to navigate whatever market conditions emerge.
This diversification has consistently enabled us to perform through volatile periods, and we believe that advantage remains as strong as ever. Our global workforce continues to be the key differentiator. We recognize with gratitude the strength of our talented workforce, now more geographically diverse and with a wider range of expertise and specialties than ever before. We continue to see a strong hiring market for senior talent. On the M&A front, our acquisition pipeline is as active as it has ever been, with no shortage of compelling opportunities to further strengthen our platform. I would like to thank our more than 2,700 employees for continuing to deliver excellence to our clients and to one another. I would also like to thank our clients and shareholders who continue to entrust us on our journey of building the best investment banking advisory business in the world.
With that, I will turn it over to Lindsey.
Thank you, Scott. Revenues in Corporate Finance were $434 million for the quarter, up 5% compared to the same period last year. We closed 171 transactions this quarter, up from 147 in the same period last year, and our average transaction fee on closed deals decreased. M&A deal timelines have extended due to the geopolitical uncertainty created around the war in the Middle East and its ripple effects. We expect that dynamic to persist as long as there is uncertainty. These timeline shifts may moderate our growth a bit in our first quarter for fiscal year 2027, similar to the impact on our growth in the fourth quarter. While the near term may show variability due to closing timing, the fundamental trajectory of the Corporate Finance business for the full year remains encouraging.
Financial Restructuring revenues were $110 million for the quarter, ending the fiscal year with revenues of $529 million, down 3% from fiscal year 2025. We closed 30 transactions this quarter, down 21% from the same quarter last year, and our average transaction fee on closed deals decreased. For Financial and Valuation Advisory, revenues were $91 million for the quarter, a 3% increase from the same period last year. We had 1,248 fee events during the quarter compared to 1,224 in the same period last year, a 2% increase. Turning to expenses, our adjusted compensation expenses were $391 million for the quarter versus $410 million for the same period last year.
Our only adjustment was $18 million for deferred retention payments related to certain acquisitions. Our adjusted compensation expense ratio for the fourth quarter in both fiscal 2026 and 2025 was 61.5% . We expect to maintain our long-term target of 61.5% for our adjusted compensation expense ratio for fiscal 2027. Our adjusted non-compensation expenses grew 10 .5% to $94 million for the quarter compared to $85 million for the same period last year. For the quarter, we adjusted out of non-compensation expenses $5.8 million in acquisition-related costs and $1.7 million in non-cash acquisition-related amortization. Our adjusted non-compensation expenses grew 10.7% for the year, and we ended fiscal 2026 with an adjusted non-compensation expense ratio of 13.9%.
We expect to see similar growth in adjusted non-compensation expenses in fiscal 2027. Our adjusted effective tax rate for fiscal year 2026 was 23.7% compared to 29.8% for fiscal year 2025. The decrease was primarily a result of the change in our policy where we are no longer adjusting out the impact of stock compensation deductions on our effective tax rate.
For fiscal 2027, similar to last year, we expect our first quarter adjusted effective tax rate to benefit from the vesting of shares in May at grant prices for which the majority were significantly below where our stock is currently trading. Based on where our stock is trading today, we think that benefit may reduce our adjusted effective tax rate in our first quarter for fiscal 2027 to about half of our fourth quarter adjusted effective tax rate. Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with approximately $1.4 billion in cash and investments. As a reminder, a significant portion of our cash is earmarked to cover accrued but unpaid bonuses for fiscal year 2026 that will be paid this month and in November.
Also, in our fourth quarter, we repurchased approximately 300,000 shares as part of our share repurchase program. We will continue to evaluate balance sheet flexibility for acquisitions versus excess cash for share repurchases. The board approved an increase on our quarterly dividend to $0.70 per share, 17% higher than our quarterly dividend in fiscal year 2026. The first quarter dividend will be paid in June. With that, operator, we can open the line for questions.
We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question you may press star then one on your touch tone phone. If you are using a speaker phone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. At this time we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question is from Brennan Hawken with BMO. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, Scott and Lindsey. Thanks for taking my question. You flagged really some pretty constructive comments in the outlook even though it was maybe couched by some uncertainty to start out the year in 1Q. I'd love to drill down on Restructuring. Last quarter you guys said you expect Restructuring to face some revenue pressures, now you've got an improved outlook. Does that mean that you're no longer seeing the pressures and you think that stability or growth are possible? You know, is it possible to put a finer point on that?
Yeah. Thanks, Brennan. Appreciate the question. I think that what you're seeing is kind of the flip side of the troubles that occurred on the Corporate Finance side during the quarter also created opportunity on the Restructuring side. I think that a number of people had the perspective even going in. We were being a bit conservative last quarter when we talked about it because we did not actually see the new mandates coming in and the pace of that change. After the, really the events in software and the war and energy all started to converge, we have seen that really change and the activity levels in Restructuring pick up materially.
That gave us the, as well as we said in our remarks, including some recent important wins to really give us confidence that we can continue to operate in Restructuring at elevated levels next year and probably beyond that as well.
Excellent. Thanks. Thanks for that. Appreciate that, Scott. Then, you spoke to the backlog building in Corporate Finance, maybe aside from tech. We've been hearing about the need for sponsors to begin to transact. You know, what are you seeing in regards to sponsors and the pressure for them to actually monetize? You know, how is the setback that maybe they're seeing in some of the tech-oriented investments playing through? And how do you expect that to impact as far as transaction volumes go when we move forward on Corp Fin?
Let's take that in two separate pieces. Let's park tech for a moment. Just overall, if you look at sponsor activity, before really the conflict started, what we had said was we had really seen things picking up quite a bit. Then obviously that started and it created much more of a stop, wait, we gotta figure what's going on here for a moment. Then if you really look, the activity levels from a pitch standpoint, even in February before it started, were really quite strong. More important metric is really the go-to-market when deals actually kick off. As we sit here today, even the last few weeks have been the most active we have seen in years. That activity level is increasing again at a pace that we feel good about.
Software is tech. I haven't talked really about software more than tech. Software is clearly a sector that is going to be impacted, and I don't think anybody really has an answer on how much yet. I do think that there is a throwing the baby out with the bathwater problem at the moment that everything that looks or smells like software is all of a sudden not in favor. I think that will change as people dig in, and there will be winners and losers like there are in every sector that you see a dislocation in. It clearly will not be all software.
To put a finer point on it, Brennan, we have assumed that software will be affected in fiscal year 2027 in our comments.
Excellent. Thanks so much for taking my questions.
Thanks, Brennan.
Have a good one.
The next question is from Devin Ryan with Citizens JMP. Please go ahead.
Great. Hi, Scott. Hi, Lindsey.
Hey, Devin.
I wanna ask another one on sponsors, slightly different angle. I'm just trying to think about, like, order of magnitude of pent-up activity. You know, we've seen larger deals in the market. You know, I think the argument of sponsors are going to come and be more active. Just trying to think about, like, how much more active. Do we have record duration of portfolios? There's record dry powder in the market. How do you guys think about that? The other part of the question is just, you know, Are buyers and sellers gonna get aligned on price? You know, the current vintage, you know, some of those assets were bought at high valuation.
Is that a risk or just not something that you guys see as an issue here as we get to maybe sponsors being able to exit some of these positions?
We talk about this a lot. We talk about the velocity of transactions, and the velocity has, again, it is picking up. We need to have some level of certainty in geopolitical issues where it's not gonna hit these road bumps along the way. Everything we are seeing is that sponsors want to begin to transact. You are correct that there are certain companies that will be under the price differentials that will be too difficult for them to deal with. There's no doubt about that. That is, from every indication we have, that is not the preponderance of the deal flow that is out there or anywhere near it.
It really is there's different qualities, if you will, of assets that come out, and the outstanding assets throughout the cycles have traded at really healthy prices with really no price degradation at all. It is really the ones below that. As the market heats up, there is a greater receptivity to those companies in believing that you can really improve them and make them better and add. That those companies are the ones that we are really start to see in a healthier market begin to transact on a more regular basis.
Devin, we have a pretty compelling graph in our investor presentation, courtesy of PitchBook, that just shows the number of transactions within private equity, the growth over the last 10 years, and the aging in this last year as of December 31st. Over half of them are over five years old. I mean, to answer your question with an exclamation point, there is a lot of pent-up demand, and we had started experiencing it well before the fourth quarter. I'd say it slowed down a bit in fourth quarter, and we're seeing it tick right back up to where it was.
The market has gotten some comfort that, you know, that there is at least containment in what's going on in the Middle East, and software, I think, is a different story.
Got it. Appreciate that color. As a follow-up, in Financial and Valuation Advisory, is that benefiting or going to benefit from the, you know, call it scrutiny on private credit valuations or even just private equity more broadly? You know, thinking that maybe that could drive more demand for valuation work and you guys could get involved in more situations with your clients. Just curious if that's maybe a second derivative of some of this focus on private credit. Thank you.
Yeah, we've talked about that a fair amount. That's really our portfolio valuation group, which has been growing quite nicely through all cycles, and we feel very good about where that business is heading. That is, and that TAM is continuing to grow, and some of the things that you're talking about just are what grows it. Getting marks more regularly is certainly one of those things and situations like we are seeing in private credit is a great example of why they need those marks on a more regular basis.
Okay, great. Thanks so much.
Appreciate it. Thanks.
The next question is from Brendan O'Brien with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, thanks for taking my questions. I guess to start, your comment on activity in Europe last year, certainly caught my attention. There's obviously a lot of interesting dynamics at play in the region at the moment. You know, on the one hand, you have higher reliance on energy or an exporter of energy, more sensitive to the price shock. There's also clearly a push towards deregulation and more economically favorable or stimulative policies. Just want to get a sense as to what you're seeing or hearing from clients in the region at the moment and whether you expect that outperformance in terms of growth rate, to persist.
You know, I think some of this is we just have a differentiated business in Europe at this point, that is continuing to grow, and the market is continuing to understand that. Obviously, our recent acquisition in France only adds to that. So some of that growth is just we are in earlier stages in our business there, and the market is really recognizing our differentiated product. The activity levels in Europe, broadly defined, we continue to see as being strong. There's no doubt that some of the headwinds that you're discussing exist. Whether or not those wind up having a material impact on the year, we will see. We feel good about our European and Asian businesses. As we've said, even our Asian business even grew faster.
Right. I guess for my follow-up, I guess on the FVA business and specifically just AI implications for that business. You know, on the one hand, I do see this as an area where you could see significant productivity gains given there are a lot of recurring costs. However, I've also been hearing some concerns on pricing pressures if this becomes more commoditized. Just wanted to get a sense as to how you're thinking about the implications of AI for this business longer term, how you're investing to kinda get ahead of the curve, and how you see that kind of impacting overall profitability of that business over time.
Great, thanks. The couple things. We have been investing ahead of that technological curve for a very long time actually in FVA, and one of our acquisitions in the U.K., I think it was two years ago, was along those lines as well. We certainly understand those pressures and that none of those are new to us. Yet we think that TAM is going to, and it has been growing, as you can tell by our performance, faster than any decline in pricing.
We have experienced pricing pressure on our FVA products for a decade, as Scott said, or more. You know, we have sort of reacted by growing our TAM at a rate significantly faster than the pricing pressure, and we expect that to continue. We will continue to see pricing pressure. We also believe, you alluded to it at an earlier question, or it was alluded to in an earlier question, that market for our TAM product, especially if private equity opens, is gonna double. We're, I think, pretty excited about all of that. The other advantage is, you know, very few firms have the wherewithal to invest in technology at the same pace that we are or that the Big Four accounting firms are.
You know, there is going to be a consolidation in this industry. A lot of the boutiques that are in it now just won't be able to keep up, and we think that for firms the size of Houlihan, that is a huge competitive advantage for a business that requires a fairly significant spend in technology over the next three to five years.
Yeah, we've talked about it before, but the data that we have from the enormous amount of marks that we do obviously just makes our models that much better.
That's great, guys. Thank you for taking my questions.
Thanks, Brendan.
The next question is from Ryan Kenny with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon.
Hey, Ryan.
Just a follow-up there on the need to spend on technology. Is there any update on non-comp outlook for this year or maybe longer-term need to spend on non-comp?
No. I mean, I think the technology spend you've seen us making over the last several years is not expected to change. Non-comp is, you know, as I'd mentioned on the call, expected to look a lot like fiscal 2026 non-comp increases. You know, I think one thing important, when we spend money on technology for our portfolio valuation business or FVA business, that technology spend is transferable to our Corporate Finance business. You know, both businesses are high-volume businesses, we're able to spread the investments we make, whether it's in AI or whatever, across really those two businesses in particular. Also will benefit our Financial Restructuring business as well. It's incorporated in the numbers and the assumptions we've made.
And then separately-
I think the other thing about it.
Oh, go ahead.
No, I'm sorry about that. I think it's really more a matter of shifting priorities and to accomplish that.
Got it. Separately on the capital side, you guys raised your dividend. Any update on how you're thinking about capital allocation to buybacks versus dividend versus potentially M&A?
It, it hasn't changed. I think the quarterly dividend is really, increase is a measure of our continued growth and our outlook for the next year. Our priority continues to be making acquisitions that we think are incredibly accretive to our shareholders and share repurchases after that. Now, having said that, our goal is to maintain our share count, which we've done a pretty good job over the last several years. But we have, you know, maintained that balance sheet flexibility to make the acquisitions similar to what we did in February. As Scott mentioned, we, you know, we're going into fiscal 2027, I think, quite optimistic about the outlook for M&A for us this year.
Thank you.
Thanks a lot.
Next we have James Yaro with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon.
Good afternoon. Thanks. Interesting question. Scott, Corporate Finance did slow quickly relative to your previous guidance for the quarter having better than normal seasonality. You did talk about things already beginning to improve. How quickly can these deals turn back on and close? Then stepping back, do you think that there have been any permanent impacts to the Corporate Finance client backdrop from any of the either geopolitical or software issues?
I don't think there's been the software, I don't know, just flat out. Can't, don't know. I don't think that it should have a permanent effect. I think it will have a permanent effect on some, and certainly I don't think it should have on all, but I don't know. On the overall business, not at all. We've talked about it throughout, we have been operating in a world where we have had a, just a elevated level of uncertainty, particularly geopolitical uncertainty. When it rises above a level, for whatever reason, in this case it was conflict in the Middle East, people put their foot on the brakes and they say, "Wait a minute. I need to understand what is going on." That is what we saw. It clearly impacted our results.
As Lindsey pointed out, as it has subsided and people really just keep getting their head around higher levels of uncertainty and say, "We have to get on with business." Being an optimist, I do look at that and recognize there's a given the level of uncertainty, when it does subside to any reasonable level, there is such a strong demand for activity to really ramp back up because we are seeing it in its early stages today, but again, there still is a reasonable amount of uncertainty. If that continues to subside, it will only get better and better.
Okay, great. Thank you. Just one more on Restructuring. You talked about in the press release lower average transaction fees on closed transactions. I'd just love to get your perspective on what. In addition, you know that there, that's not a trend, but maybe just comment on why this isn't a trend, what happened in the quarter. Also you talked about two, I think you talked about two deals that stretched beyond the quarter. Does that mean that we should have a seasonally elevated fiscal first quarter?
It's a good question. Look, I think that the transaction, the average transaction size for restructuring, there are no trends. Some quarters it's higher than others simply because of size of transaction. Corporate Finance does have an upward trend to it. And FVA in some cases is flat given some of the comments we've made. Financial Restructuring is gonna vary quarter by quarter just depending on the size and makeup of the transactions that close that quarter. Nothing to read into there. I think with respect to the second part of your question on.
The two deals.
The two transactions, we're very comfortable saying they're gonna close in fiscal 2027. When you start pinning us down for quarters, we get a little bit antsy. We do think that one of the reasons why we're comfortable at elevated for restructuring revenues for fiscal 2027 is simply because those two transactions are included in it, along with all of the other things that Scott mentioned. We do expect them to close and you know, likely in the first half of the year, as I said, but I don't really want to pin it on a specific quarter.
They don't I think based upon what I know today, it's unlikely for them both to close in the same quarter as it sits today. If that were the case, I think we might say something different to you. I think that because they're gonna be spread out, it is something that I think to just think about it as a normal elevated level.
Gotcha. Okay. Thanks for clarifying that. Really helpful.
Super. Thanks as always.
The next question is from Nathan Stein with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking the question.
Hey, Nathan.
I wanted to ask about the revenue split for the M&A and Capital Solutions businesses within Corporate Finance. What was this revenue split in the fourth quarter, and do you expect those levels to be sustained in fiscal 2027?
We don't, we won't give splits by quarter, but our Capital Solutions business is above 20% of our Corporate Finance revenues, think of it that way. And in, you know, I'd say the last couple years, that number has gotten higher as a percentage of the overall Corporate Finance business. What, you know, what happens next year, I don't want to get into that level of detail, but we have said before that business, the outlook for that business and the momentum in that business is exceptional.
You know, love to be able to comment looking backwards a year from now and give you a bit more color, but looking forward, I don't want to get into that level of detail for Capital Solutions, but over 20% is kinda how I would think about it.
Okay, thanks. Then I guess just on AI, do you have any updates for investors as to how you're looking at implementing AI across your business?
I can get in an awful lot of detail depending on how much time you really want me to take. I, yeah, I mean, we are embracing it fully. I, there's really one thing about it, there's multiple ways to think about it. There's a front-end component to it. There's a workflow component to it. There's a operational or back office component to it. There's a moon shot component to it. We have basically work streams in all those areas occurring.
The next question would be from Alex Bond with KBW. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, everyone. I heard the commentary on the strengthening M&A backlog, which is obviously good to hear. Curious, you know, how you would describe, you know, maybe how, if at all, the pre-announced pipeline has shifted in terms of composition recently, whether it be sponsors versus strategics or any geographical mix shift. I'm just trying to drill down on where you've seen, you know, activity be most prevalent at the moment given everything that's going on in the market. Thank you.
Yeah. Thanks, Alex. Good question. I mean, it really has been across the board. I mean, our mix sponsor, non-sponsor doesn't change that dramatically. I know a lot of people talk about that a lot, but it is fairly constant. It's points different from period to period, there aren't these dramatic swings that I think people may expect. Clearly, a number of the when we talk about, you know, pitch pipelines and things that have just kind of more visibility to it that tends to be more sponsor driven simply because they just there's a cadence to that. That is clearly picking up. That as we were saying. In terms of U.S. is clearly a part of that. Europe is a part of that.
We have said Europe is growing faster, to be fair, it's from a smaller base. Asia is growing faster than that, but that's from a smaller base. We are seeing activity in all three regions, I would say appropriate for way, where they are in their maturation.
Alex, I mean, look, if there's some optimism in our voice, even given sort of the uncertainty of the last quarter, it's 'cause it's firing on all cylinders across industry, across geography with the one exception of technology. Technology has pressure on it, and we've incorporated that into our thinking, and technology's a decent sized business for our softwares. But the other industries are, and again, not hard to point to why. It goes right back to that there is a huge pent-up demand, particularly from private equity to transact, and we're kind of right in the middle of that.
Great. Appreciate all the color there. I'll jump back in the queue. Thank you.
Great.
Next question is from Michael Brown with KBW. Please go ahead.
Hey, good evening, Scott and Lindsey. How are you guys doing?
Hey, Mike.
Hey, Mike.
You doing?
Hey, I wanted to ask on Restructuring, maybe just to kind of narrow in a little bit there. The activity levels there seem like they can be certainly broadening out, and I think you talked about an element of that they can stay elevated. They've been running at a healthy pace here for a while, so maybe just help us kind of frame what elevated kind of means now. When we look at fiscal 2027, and obviously it's early days here, but fiscal 2027 versus fiscal 2026, does that just kinda mean potential for growth here? Is it possible in your view that we see kind of a new record for the business as we get to fiscal 2027? Any kind of view on that based on what you're seeing in the activity?
I would answer it this way. We have been saying elevated levels for the last three years for Financial Restructuring. We're using the same terminology. I would just start there.
Right. Okay. Okay, great. Maybe just switch gears to the follow-up on the capital allocation question earlier and the M&A question. You talked about how the M&A pipeline's as active as ever. Maybe just talk a little bit about what's your top criteria there. You did some acquisitions in Europe, maybe anything you kind of, you know, do geography wise or industry vertical capability. What deal size are you targeting now? Are you starting to think maybe about some larger size deals that, you know, could have more of a needle mover on the franchise? Is that just kind of too hard to do just given the size and scale of the platform now?
I think we've talked about it before. I mean, first of all, there are geographic ones, there are product ones, there are industry ones. There is a complete portfolio. Really what drives it is cultural fit. I mean, that is the single most important thing to us. much more so than size or any of the other attributes that I just articulated. It really is cultural fit. When we find groups of people that really fit with our culture and we believe will be successful in our organization, we work on getting those deals done. I feel comfortable that you will see more of that in the years to come. It will vary in size, but what hopefully won't vary is the cultural fit.
You know, it's we have a lot of flexibility. I mean, remember, we keep saying, you know, the market is huge, we are an incredibly small player in a huge market. Our last three transactions we've done are good examples of just the variability you're gonna continue to see. You know, the Waller Helms transaction was a transaction within the FIG space in a couple of niches within FIG where we were meaningfully underweighted, it has been incredibly successful. The transactions that we did in February, one was on the product side in our Capital Solutions business. We were underweighted in real estate, particularly in Europe, we had a transaction that identified an opportunity to fill that in. Finally, we were significantly underweighted in the markets in France, we found a geographic fit.
There are more of each of those. It's hard to answer the questions about what we're focused on. As Scott said, we have so many unfilled areas in product, geography, and industry that it is much more about finding the right partners than it is about, you know, focusing on a particular niche because we're underweighted in it.
Great. Thank you both.
Thanks, Mike.
Thanks
Well, with this question, this is our last question in the queue. If there are no further questions, this concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Scott Adelson for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Debbie. I wanna thank you all for participating in our fourth quarter and fiscal 2026 earnings call. We look forward to updating everyone on our progress when we discuss our first quarter results for fiscal 2027 this summer.
This concludes our conference. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.