Good afternoon, everyone. We'll get started with our next session, with Intercontinental Exchange. I'm delighted to have the chairman, founder of ICE, Jeffrey Sprecher. This is Jeff's ninth year in a row at this conference, hopefully we can get to 10 next year. As always, thank you for the time. It's always a pleasure interviewing you.
Great. Thank you, Christian, and thank you for those that are in the room here.
Good stuff. As always, you can ask a question through the Pigeonhole system. I'll try and get to it if we have time. Maybe, Jeff, let's just start with just the overall company and your strategy. You call it the all-weather model. It's certainly delivering. If I look at EPS, very strong. All three segments are growing. By almost any measure, the business is firing on all cylinders. The stock trades at a meaningful discount appears. What is the market missing, and what can you do to help close the gap between performance and fundamentals?
Yeah. Well, I feel like we're doing our job, and you people in the room here need to lift up a little bit here right now. No, I do think we've been caught up a little bit in the SaaS apocalypse. A big part of the exchange and financial services businesses that we run are the distribution sale of data. Similarly, we run a big network and software overlay for the U.S. mortgage industry. I don't know, when we talk to investors, they're just unsure right now of what the future looks like in terms of how data is going to be consumed and paid for, and how these networks that connect to markets like the mortgage space will evolve in a world of AI.
We think, and the numbers you just mentioned, that those are tailwinds for us, not headwinds, and are certainly building the business to take advantage of AI. We've been early and aggressive in adopting AI models ourselves and building AI models with and for our customers. I've been at this a while as the founder of the company, and from time to time, the performance of the company and the share price will disconnect, but we're markets people and I ultimately put my faith in the market, and I know the market will eventually find our value. It's really just for us, keep your nose down, keep doing the right thing, and the value will find us.
Okay. Maybe on the same strategy topic, the one question we do get is around the fact that you have three different businesses, and arguably there might be a conglomerate discount to the stock. How do you think about the investment case about three businesses together? Why do they create more value than having them separately?
Yeah. It's interesting because we have a common customer base that is consuming these businesses. Interestingly, when we bought the New York Stock Exchange, the market said, "Why would you ever want to own the New York Stock Exchange?" It's a legacy business. I mean, it's a real legacy business, right? 1792. One of the oldest businesses continuing in the United States. People were asking, "Why would you want this?" Well, our client base uses the New York Stock Exchange, and it opens doors for us to sell all these other services and network connectivity. It's a trusted source in terms of getting through your company's firewall and working with your IT department to be a part of our network. Anyway, I give you that anecdote just because everything we do is very network based and has a common customer base.
The trust that we've built with that customer base has allowed us to grow all these segments. Could they be separated? Maybe at some point. You've made the penetration, you've made the customer relationships and so on and so forth. The reality is, when we started the business, we were an energy commodity exchange, because I came out of the electric power business, and that's what I knew. I never in my wildest imagination thought that in 20 years you could still grow the energy business. We were talking about using less fossil fuels. Anyone, you and I as consumers, will never consume or buy a barrel of oil. I thought anyone that bought a barrel of oil was an oil company and was already on the platform. Again, I mention that just because we continue to grow our customer base.
It's amazing how big the financial services markets continue to grow even after 20 years. The core business which we wanted to diversify, continues to be a growth driver for the company.
Okay. Since we're on energy, I think we'll shift there. To your point, 20 years old business, but over the last three years, it's almost doubled in revenues, given the aftermath of Russia and Ukraine. As you think about Iran and Hormuz and the shift in energy supply chains that come from that, do you think it's another catalyst for potentially significant revenue growth over the next couple of years?
Yes. I think when you couple that with even on top of the current Middle East conflict is different trade deals that have been going on, where the U.S., in its most recent round of trade deals, was trying to equilibrate the balance of payments and was already putting pressure, particularly on Asia, to accept more U.S. energy. That's probably moved to the forefront now in terms of scarcity value. Yeah. You also have the actions in Venezuela that have, to a certain degree, rewired the supply chains and potentially massive future rewiring as the Venezuelan assets are exposed to the world. Particularly rewired in the Western U.S. as well.
You kind of have this duality of the East wanting more ship-borne energy, be it natural gas or crude oil from new suppliers, potentially, and then the Western world bringing on massive U.S. exports coupled with Venezuelan exports. We just think that there's a lot more risk in the supply chains and differentiation in supply chains and new players that are coming into those supply chains that are all looking to hedge and bring activity to our markets. You can see it in our numbers. It's pretty astonishing. It's not just more volume, but we actually have more participants. Those participants, in order to manage risk, are consuming more data. There's a flywheel effect that was probably accelerated by what's been going on in Iran.
Okay. double revenues next three years?
Get my CFO up here and let me listen to him.
Right. Just drilling on to your point around supply chains and U.S. energy being the sort of dominant incremental source of price discovery. Just talk about how that's impacting benchmarks globally. We're moving towards more Houston from Cushing as the pricing mechanism, and that's benefiting your ecosystem. Just talk about how you think about the different benchmarks over time and how that benefits you.
One of the flagship products that we trade is Brent crude oil. Brent was a grade of crude that came out of the North Sea between the U.K. and Norway, over time, the U.K. has shut in those oil fields. While we have this thing we trade called Brent, there's actually no Brent crude in Brent. We basically took that index, if you will, modified it, expanded it, to a certain degree, it is the optimal price of oil on a ship moving around the world. We did that partly because there was no more Brent in the Brent crude index, we needed to reconstitute the index. We caught this wave of U.S. energy dominance and oil exports and ship-borne oil moving around the world.
Then you couple that where years ago, I asked my colleagues, there's a pipe that goes between the U.K. and Europe, and we were trading natural gas on the U.K. side, and I asked my colleagues what trades on the European side, and they said nothing. So we created this index called TTF, which was just natural gas.
Okay
Dutch natural gas. It was really there in our minds to create a basis trade for the other end of this pipe. Because of a series of events, Europe is now a net importer of liquefied natural gas, and that marker has become the marker for natural gas at sea. Similarly, we have a marker called JKM, the Japan Korea Marker. Again, because of many of the trade deals and a rewiring of the energy markets, we really expect a lot from risk management around Asia natural gas. We, I don't know, WTI, which is the oil in the U.S., is actually oil in a pipe delivered to Cushing, Oklahoma.
While we still talk about WTI, and we still talk about the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the reality is, I think in the world of supply chain, it's export and import ship-borne oil and natural gas that is really helping to manage risk. The relevance of taking delivery of oil in Oklahoma is lessened, even though there's still a lot of trading in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and there's still a lot of trading in WTI, and I think it will continue. It's just these other grades, I think, is where the growth will be.
Great. Let's switch over to digital assets and tokenization. Clearly a lot of focus around tokenization today. You guys have an initiative to grow there. A lot of different players, traditional exchanges, crypto firms. Just talk through what you're doing, how that's different, and then ultimately, how do you think about the revenue or the monetization here? Is it more volume? Is it something else? I'd be curious.
I think the end state in my mind for this is one person's opinion, right? The end state in my mind is that we're going to exchange value over the internet, and it will be tokenized effectively and it will be encrypted. Why will we do that? The banking hours and the banking systems close. They have banker hours. What we just talked about was global supply chains, global energy movement, which we trade. We have 13 exchanges and six clearing houses around the world to do that. To a certain degree, we follow the sun, but the reality is that when banking hours close in a region, we basically have to close money movement.
I think as we move to 24 by seven, 365 trading of things around the world, the capital is going to move on the internet. The thing that could disrupt, I think that's already happening in the crypto world, I think that's going to be institutionalized in the world of you and I sitting in this room. The thing that could change that is if encryption could be broken, in which case we may move to a world like that, and then it may move. Either encryption will get better and outlive quantum computers, we all know and have read dozens of stories about crypto wallets that have been hacked and Bitcoin that's been stolen and what have you. If that's the case for traditional capital, then I think we'll move those tokens back on to some kind of private network banking system.
We will have gone 24 by seven, 365. The other thing it's doing is that we're dollarizing the world because we have people around the world that want to own the Magnificent Seven. That is dollar-denominated, people have figured out how to use Tether and USDC as stablecoin dollar-based collateral to buy these things. Other countries that have been slow to recognize the tokenization of money are being left behind. I really feel like we're just going to have global money movement. What does that do for my company? It allows for people to trade 24 by seven, 365. It allows us to, instead of having excess collateral in our six clearing houses, we can keep, let's just say, excess collateral for an institution in one of our clearing houses.
As the trading moves, we can quickly transfer funds and always keep everything in balance. That's what I really think crypto and tokenization is doing. I think we're already working with three large banks who are tokenizing deposits. While we have stable coins right now, and that's a very popular retail product for institutions like us, we may just be using a different set of wires to move the money that we already have in our accounts. It may move a lot faster, a lot more efficiently, and cheaper. I've talked to senior people in the U.S. government, senior people in Europe and U.K. government about could you really extend the legacy pipes of the banking system? The answer is no. The answer is those are controlled by government entities. They're slow to react.
They kind of depend on closing the banks so that you can resolve a failing bank, like a Silicon Valley Bank. They kind of take the idea that M&A and other things can happen over the weekend, and we can have Monday morning surprises. I do think that that attitude is going to be overtaken by the private sector, which it already is. We've been, I think, aggressive and quick to embrace it because I think it will yield better, faster, cheaper risk management, and ultimately that will increase our volumes and our earnings and cash flow.
Okay. You're taking stakes or at least partnerships with two prominent digital players, OKX and then Polymarket. On OKX, just talk through the rationale behind that investment, what you're trying to get done, and maybe your vision for that partnership.
Sure. One of the things we have done is we've applied to the SEC to tokenize stocks at the New York Stock Exchange. The reality is the market doesn't want us to tokenize stocks at the New York Stock Exchange. What we've done is we've set up a sister company, which they call an ATS, an alternative trading system. We've asked the SEC to allow us to trade 24 by 7, 365 stocks. We're well along that process of getting approval, and we think we will get approval, and we believe the SEC has the authority to approve this under existing U.S. law. It does not require the crypto bill, called the Clarity Act, to pass. Assuming that we do that, on day one, I would expect no one in this room would want to participate.
There's a broad resistance to trading over the weekends and trading at night, and it's just not how the infrastructure has been set up. There is a demand for it. We ask the question, "Well, who's going to show up to distribute this?" OKX is the second largest crypto exchange after Binance. Both Binance and OKX, they were brother, sister. CZ, who started Binance, was the chief technology officer of OKX, and eventually left to start his own. These are two Asia-based crypto exchanges. OKX got into trouble with the U.S. under the Biden administration, paid a large fine, and agreed to a monitor, and agreed to do KYC, AML, and really get to know their customers so that they could follow U.S. law. We liked that about them. We said, "Okay. They want to enter the U.S. lawfully and legally.
We want to distribute tokenized 24/7 equities in Asia, which is where that incremental volume would come from. We'll help them effectively become broker-dealer and FINRA-regulated and with SEC oversight, and they'll help us by distributing into Asia. You all can sleep and not worry about it, and then wake up in the morning and see what happens, I think.
Yeah.
Anyhow, similarly, we invested in the prediction markets, in the Polymarket, because Polymarket is a true DeFi exchange. It, in its absolute form, has no oversight. The market determines what's going to happen, what products trade, how the things settle. Their stablecoin collateral is algorithmically attached to each trade. The trades settle algorithmically. I mean, it's very different than what we do that has human oversight, human responsibility, and has a clearinghouse, a separate entity that settles trades. We're just interested in that technology. It doesn't fit with U.S. regulation. We've been helping Polymarket articulate what could be modified to allow it to be U.S. compliant. We've been spending a lot of time with the CFTC to talk about the core principles that legacy exchanges like we are subject to, and how those might apply to a DeFi exchange.
We're distributing their data to you all, the institutional market. We do think that over time, a lot of what's being talked about is sports betting and even politics. We do think that there's going to be a tremendous growth of economic data that gets benchmarked and traded in prediction markets and on legacy exchanges. It's going to bring institutional investors and retail investors together to discover prices and inputs. We just wanted to be a part of it, and we wanted to fully understand the DeFi movement. It was kind of a marriage of, we'll help you help us, and let's see if we can move the market along.
Okay. Some of these crypto-native plays are also coming after some of your markets. Hyperliquid has gotten a lot of attention in the energy markets. What do you make of that platform as a competitive threat? How do you think about being responsive to what they're doing?
Well, first of all, we know them well. I've met with them a number of times personally, and to talk about what they're doing, what we're doing, where there may be some common overlap that we can work together on. They have gotten attention because they've been trading oil on the weekends when our traditional oil markets are closed. It just so happens in this time of conflict in the Middle East, there have been a lot of activity that happens, a lot of decisions and things happen on the weekends. It's gotten a lot of interest. I think the reality is, it's going to go to the next level. They've listed SpaceX for trading, or they've listed a derivative of SpaceX for trading.
I think it's going to be really interesting to watch on June 11th when SpaceX goes public, what this private market has discovered as the price and whether that price impacts the IPO. I think regulators and market participants are going to say either it was irrelevant or it was highly relevant. To a certain degree, I guess I'll withhold judgment for another few weeks. Other than the people that have built that exchange are extremely smart. That is a true DeFi exchange. It's attracted a lot of market makers and other market participants, early adopter market participants that would ordinarily be in our traditional markets are there exploring this technology and this way of doing business. It is on a blockchain. It is settled with stable coins, algorithmically settled. It has very high margining.
You can have up to 100 to 1 leverage, which is part of the allure. It means going back to SpaceX, depending on how much leverage is allowed, you're going to have retail are essentially, mathematically, are going to be putting a lot of capital at risk on that IPO. Depending how big this is, it could be bigger than the IPO. That's why I say I don't think you can ignore it. I don't know yet whether we embrace it or hate it. I think we'll all have an opinion in June. I salute these guys for doing it. These are some very, very smart people.
Just on the energy and oil side, clearly they've tapped into a demand-
Yes
there. Is there anything ICE can do to at least help satiate that demand and bring that volume back to you?
Yeah. We went to all the major oil companies and said, "Good news, we can stay open. We follow the sun. We have people around the world, so we can stay open on Saturday. Good news." It wasn't very good news, honestly. The market hated it. What you're going to see us do is stay open very late on Friday and open very early on Monday, and so essentially narrow down the window that there isn't traditional trading. I think it's a wake-up call for the industry because while most of our institutional clients are not trading on blockchain, and these are unregulated foreign entities, and most of our clients don't even have the ability, the internal controls don't give them the ability to trade on these things. They're all watching it.
They're watching the price discovery, and whether they admit it or not, it is being part of the zeitgeist of when our markets do open really early on Monday. So in that sense, they're important, and we just think that like it or not, markets have become much more global, much more dollarized. Just like the equity markets that many of you participate in here, the rise in retail in the equity markets is phenomenal, and that's happening in all markets. I think we're just going to have to get used to the interplay of retail and professional trading 24/7/365.
Okay. Sounds like you're a founder. Sounds like you have some at least admiration for those founders.
I love them. I love what they did.
Love what they're doing.
I wish I was younger and doing it. By the way, the number of billionaires that are being created doing this. This Hyperliquid that we're talking, if you haven't heard about it's bigger than Nasdaq. Okay? It's 11 people. You look at it, you're like, "Wow, that's pretty something.
Right. There's been some reports and then yourselves and CME have raised some concerns with regulators around the risks of the Hyperliquid venue. I guess how do you answer skeptics? Well, what are the risks that you see, one, and how would you answer skeptics that think, or simply say, use regulation to slow down a fast-growing sector?
Yeah. There was an article written where it had us in the headline that we were all freaked out about it. We're not freaked out about it. We're actually talking to these people and learning about it. They're learning what we're doing. We're helping them understand our world. They're helping us understand their world. In that sense, a joint admiration. What we are saying to the regulators is, can we do that? Why are you prohibiting us from doing this when it's already happening? Can't we have a level playing field? By the way, this stuff is global. The U.S., under this Administration, is very pro-digitization. How do we square that circle? Because we'd like to do more of it if you think it's lawful.
If you don't think it's lawful, then how come they're not getting the same nasty letters that you send us? The thing that is trading right now, which you'll hear a lot about, is the thing called the perpetual future. In our world, it's called a swap. In our world, Dodd-Frank was passed, and Dodd-Frank says exactly how swaps are reported to the government, and who is a swap dealer, and how much you can margin, and how these things get liquidated. Title VII of Dodd-Frank is a whole multi-page set of laws that was designed specifically after the financial crisis to prevent the trading of swaps. Now we call these things perpetual futures, and they're highly levered and very liquid.
The regulators have a choice to make, which is, do they create some new category of regulated perpetual future, or do they call them swaps and suck them into Dodd-Frank and EMIR in the EU, and there's similar regulation in Japan? We don't know the answer to that, and I'm not sure the regulators know the answer to that right now. On the one hand, people want there to be innovation. They want there to be competition. On the other hand, the incumbents like us, we want to make sure that we understand the rules and that it's fair competition. I think people will start to settle around a common view of this stuff.
Okay. Just quickly on how you think about strategy and attacking this whole digital asset space. Seems like it's been very much about taking equity stakes, as we roll forward three to five years, is there a vision of ICE having its own on-chain platform, et cetera, as opposed to sort of the stakes approach?
Yeah. We have already hooked the New York Stock Exchange, to a blockchain market for settlement. We're running that in our own data center. It's not public. We proved we can do it. I think, like I say, I think as we digitize collateral, I think we're ready to go. We understand what to do. What I said to you, though, is we hooked the New York Stock Exchange market to a blockchain because we do 1.7 trillion transactions a day. The volume on the New York Stock Exchange is staggering. It's more than Google Search, I think. There's no chain that can handle the kind of volumes that we do.
Second thing is on a blockchain, the way it's decentralized is you have proof of stake or proof of work, but basically you have to have multiple oracles that are multiple validators that agree that title has transferred, and that takes time. We all live in a world where algorithmic traders are in microseconds making markets on our platforms. I don't think the market wants to go back in time on latency. I think the market has figured out how to deal with fast speed. It wants the kind of digital settlement that I described earlier against that speed. I think blockchain as it exists today, even the best chains are good enough to net positions relatively quickly and move collateral near instantaneously but not at the same speed and the same velocity that the trades are being done.
I think that will be a relatively easy and painless transition for most people because collateral movement against the positions that you all take is done by your back office. It's well understood how to move capital. I think this is just a different set of pipes. The big banks that are working with us are going to accommodate that wiring and network, I think eventually most people will coalesce around a single chain or multiple chains that can talk to each other. I think it will happen pretty organically, but relatively quickly.
Okay. Let's move from digital assets and instant settlement and speed and innovation to mortgage technology. Can't get any more different than that. On mortgage, maybe just firstly, more of a macro question. I think there's certainly hopes of rates coming down.
Yeah.
This year, that sort of flipped. The business seems like it's beginning to turn around irrespective of the macro, but just talk through how changing rate expectations impact how you think about the business over the next year or so.
Yeah. What we didn't have was consumer rates, which is really, let's call it the cash market. We have a lot of derivative markets. We wanted to have a counterweight to our business in order to create an all-weather name. We thought as interest rates, if they were to go down, home mortgage volume would go up and derivatives volume would go down. The opposite has happened. Interest rates have stayed high. The best product we have at our company and the fastest-growing product we have are the interest rate derivative markets. The all-weather strategy has worked. It's just frustrating that there's this one leg there that we thought it was going to go the other way. It hasn't. What we have been doing in the interim, we run this network.
Pretty much everybody in the U.S. mortgage industry touches our network. Probably over 90% of all mortgages at some point go across our network. When they go across our network, we're gathering the data and distributing mortgages. Lenders don't write mortgages and then hold the mortgage on their books for 30 years the way maybe they did in the '50s. Mortgages are either packaged and sold into mortgage-backed securities. The servicing rights can be, and often are, stripped off and sold, and mortgage are packaged in different ways, or they're given to Fannie and Freddie or Ginnie Mae, who then turn around and repackage them and put them into other kinds of government-backed securities. These mortgages are moving around, and we run this network.
What we're finding now in a world of AI is that that is a foundational layer for which everybody is interested in improving the velocity of executing a home mortgage. Because they change hands, the data set also has to change hands and has to be auditable. The government has, Fannie and Freddie have now come out and said, "We do not want mortgages that AI has underwritten because we don't know what's underneath those mortgages. We want a foundational data layer that is auditable. We don't care if you use AI to help automate some of your workflow, but the mortgage itself has to have this foundation layer." We've been working around with the government and with major market participants to put AI heads on top of this network to streamline the way things flow.
The most amazing thing that we discovered, which AI has helped us do, is that we have this amazing topology on our network, because we see pretty much everybody and everybody's data. We know who does business with who, we know where the mortgages go, how they originated, where they go. We know in a company which employees have access to which data, because data is segregated depending on what your role is in a company in order to protect the consumer. We've now been working using Claude and Anthropic to create a topology layer that is, we think, going to be really valuable to help automate the workflow, not just inside a company, but across the whole industry.
Knowing who does business with who and where the mortgages went and how to reconstruct them, and if there is a default or foreclosure, what the origination of that mortgage was and who's liable for the sharing of the pain. Anyway, kind of the opposite, I think, of what people thought about that business, that everybody would just go write their own code and write their own platform. The reality is that data, foundational data piece, we think is very, very valuable.
Okay. To your point, the data piece and your platform, Encompass, is the dominant loan origination system. There are a couple of new AI native players. One in particular, Vesta, has been pretty visible with a couple of competitive wins from your platform. Ian, how real is this threat from these sort of players? Is there anything you're doing in your business to sort of neutralize that threat?
Yeah. Well, first of all, I would say there's a lot of experimentation going on around with AI, including in my own company in the way we're using it for our own needs. There are startups that are running out and saying, "Look, give me 10 loans and let me show you how my thing works." Most of this stuff is very, very good if you're dealing with vanilla ice cream. What you find in the mortgage space is we're a very diverse population with a very, very diverse housing set and very, very diverse outcomes on what happens with a mortgage. The edge cases are the ones that regulators care about, honestly, and the ones that catch people by surprise. Going through a foreclosure, for example, is a legal process.
If you, for those that are my era, remember that during the financial crisis, lenders were showing up with loan documents in court that had what they called robo-signatures. In other words, they were not the original wet signature, and the courts would not honor the foreclosure. Our system of dealing with the resolution of mortgages is very, very deeply ingrained in the legal process, and there's a process in every state and jurisdiction on what has to happen. An AI model, maybe that helps a lawyer deal with that better. The reality is it is not something that the courts want to see automated. Everybody learned that in the financial crisis with these robo-signatures. Those are areas where we just don't think the incumbents understand.
Like I say, I don't think people were prepared for Fannie and Freddie to say, "We're not gonna underwrite those kinds of mortgages." You can understand why they're saying that. This could be the next financial crisis if we don't understand what the algorithm is doing or what data it's using, or is it hallucinating and is it discriminatory? It's just a highly regulated area in the most important decision that a consumer will make that has a lot of empathy by lawmakers to make sure that they're treated fairly and properly, and that's very hard right now to automate. We can do little workflow things to make sure that the people that are in charge are doing it fast and efficient. I think people are overestimating putting AI into regulated markets. There are other markets where you could do AI and have it adopted.
Regulated markets are tough, I'm telling you. We run regulated markets, and we have a lot of expertise, and we get dinged all the time, and every one of our lenders gets dinged all the time. We have 3,500 lenders that are on this network, and that thing is completely audited from soup to nut. Every lender is audited on the behavior on that network. It's something that puts us in a very strong strategic position, if you will.
Okay. Let's switch over to your fixed income and data business. Pretty interesting launch you had on private credit data with Apollo as the anchor.
Yeah.
Just talk about how that came about. How do you ultimately take what is, I guess, a single partnership into an industry standard? Any thoughts on the vision for this over time?
Yeah. I think, first of all, a lot of credit to Apollo, Marc Rowan, and Apollo. They are one of the leaders in the private credit space. In talking to Marc, starting maybe a year and a half ago or more, they felt like the market was not appreciating the quality of the loans that they had originated and their ability to put their own credit standards on things. Now with the recent downturn in share prices for people in the private credit space, Marc and the team there wanted to provide more transparency into what they've done because they think the market has overreacted. How do they want to do that? We've set up a relationship with them where, so far, they've given us We've been working on this for over a year.
So far, they've given us about 12,000 loan documents that cover about 1,100 loans. We've been going through their loan documents and essentially building a data set of 350 unique qualities that we jointly agree sort of define a loan. Of those 350 attributes, there's about 65, in our mind, somewhere around there, that if you were going to buy a loan from them or have a loan on your books, you would be interested in those 65 attributes. To the extent that there's a change in credit quality, like what has happened to those 65 attributes. There's probably 20 or 25 of those attributes that if you were actually going to do secondary trading of a loan, you'd want those updated all the time so that you could see the real value of that loan.
Anyway, we're starting with just let's just get transparency into what these loans are, how they're constructed. Apollo, on its choosing, will allow certain of its limited partners to have access to that data set. As Apollo marks these to market, those people that are on the receiving end have some visibility into what are the attributes that are in that loan and what are the attributes that Apollo is looking at when they're coming up with the marks. We've been talking to most of the other major private credit entities who are all interested in what we're doing and are in various stages of determining whether or not they want us to do that for them. If I had to guess, I think a lot of the LPs, they'll like having more visibility because these things are on their books.
I think there'll be I don't know. My experience is that it's hard to get transparency. Floor traders didn't want to give up their position on the floor, and people like dark pools because they don't want to have people think that they can see what they're doing in a lit market when in reality, dark markets have the same participants as lit markets. I'm not sure there's a lot of difference. Over time, we've all kind of gotten used to, okay, I'm going to be more transparent. I think that will happen to the private credit market. Kudos to Marc and the team at Apollo for wanting to take a leadership role there.
Okay. A quick question on just your infrastructure. You've chosen, unlike your peers, to own your own data centers.
Yes.
It's certainly been, from the revenue side, that's been a great efficient at least in the last year or so. Remind us again why you chose that, and then how you think about just demand sustainability for occupancy data centers, et cetera, over the next couple of years.
Yeah. There was a period maybe, I don't know, 10 years ago when everybody was moving to the cloud. We have a lot of business in the cloud, and we work with all of the major cloud providers. For you all that do business with us, we're cloud agnostic. You can show up with your own cloud, but you will pay for it. What we figured in the early days of cloud is we couldn't control the expenses for the cloud. Our people were using more and more and more of it, and the price was going up and up and up. We were like, as a manager, it's like, this is not a good situation. We said, we run the New York Stock Exchange, for crying out loud.
We have everybody and their brother in finance wants to take data and information from us. We should have our own data center network. Beyond that, we should build our own network. We should have our own pipes and wires and create our own cloud. So we have a thing called the ICE Cloud, which is how many financial services companies take data and information from us. There's been a demand as we moved from floors to screens, from mouses to algorithms, there's been more and more demand to be located in our data centers. We created a concept of you give us your hardware. You pick your hardware, you give us your hardware.
We'll put it in our data center, and we'll manage it for you, and we'll co-locate it, and we will guarantee that no one has priority over anyone else by literally down to microseconds, making sure that the data distribution is even across all players. That caused us to start building data center capacity and then NVIDIA took off maybe a couple of years ago, and we decided maybe we should get some of these GPU chips and maybe we should build more data center capacity and we need to get electric power and cooling and everything else. We luckily, I guess, sort of beat the curve. We've got a brand-new data center that sits next to the New York Stock Exchange data center is still not built completely full. We're going to fill it up here pretty soon.
Now we've got a second data center about the same size that's sitting next to it that will allow us to expand for years. So we run auctions for space for people that want to be a part of that data center. Now, with all the AI stuff that I mentioned to you, we can use the cloud if people want to use the cloud for running inference and learning, or we can use our own GPU stack. I don't know. We're in a really good position. As Christian's alluding to, we have a lot of clients that are like, "Okay, that sounds good to me. How do I get into it?
Great stuff. We're almost out of time, but I wanted to squeeze in one last one, and we have one minute left on this one. It's just the next five years or so in the company. If I think through last 10 years or so, you've added a new big segment.
It was first fixed income and data, then mortgage. What's next? What's the next big segment?
Well, to a certain degree, we talked about we're moving into private credit. We're moving into tokenized collateral. We're moving into 24 by seven, 365 access to everything we do. Without doing anything other than the organic growth that I just mentioned to you, I think it's going to transform the company.
Great stuff. As always a pleasure. Thank you very much, Jeff.
Great. Thank you, Christian. Thank you.