Jack Henry & Associates, Inc. (JKHY)
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Earnings Call: Q3 2026

May 6, 2026

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Jack Henry third quarter fiscal year 2026 earnings conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by 0. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star then 2. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Vance Sherard, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Vance Sherard
VP of Investor Relations, Jack Henry

Thank you, Danielle. Good morning, and thank you for joining the Jack Henry third quarter fiscal 2026 earnings call. Joining me today are Greg Adelson, President and CEO, and Mimi Carsley, CFO and Treasurer. Following my opening remarks, Greg will provide an overview of our business along with updates on our strategic initiatives. Mimi will then discuss the financial results and updated fiscal 2026 guidance provided in yesterday's press release, which is available in the Investor Relations section of the jackhenry.com. Afterward, we will open the lines for a Q&A session. Please note that this call includes forward-looking statements which involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. The company is not obligated to update or revise these statements.

For a summary of risk factors and additional information that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking statements, refer to yesterday's press release and the Risk Factors and Forward-Looking Statements sections in our 10-K. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures such as non-GAAP revenue and non-GAAP operating income. Reconciliations for these measures are included in yesterday's press release. Now I will hand the call over to Greg.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Thank you, Vance. Good morning, and thank you for joining today's call. As always, I want to begin by recognizing our associates for their hard work and dedication. They consistently go above and beyond to serve our clients and drive our success. I will share three key takeaways from the quarter and will then provide additional detail on our overall business. First, our financial performance. We produced record third-quarter results with non-GAAP revenue of $616 million, up 7.3% over last year's third quarter. Our non-GAAP operating margin was a strong 22.9% on par with last year's Q3. Second, our sales performance. Our sales and marketing team delivered an outstanding quarter with 17 competitive core wins, including five institutions with more than $1 billion in assets.

This represents our strongest third quarter for new core wins in 7 years and ties our best third quarter ever in over $1 billion wins. Year to date, we have won 43 core deals, 11 of which are institutions over $1 billion. That's up from 28 wins and 8 over $1 billion at this point last year. Based on our strong momentum, we are highly confident that we will exceed the 51 core wins achieved last year. Third, our higher value core wins. We continue to see a higher number of Trifecta solution wins. So far this year, 25 of our core wins, or 58% of the total, have included digital banking and card solutions. At this time last year, we only had 8 core deals that included digital banking and card solutions, just 29% of the total won.

This healthy growth in Trifecta wins reinforces the strength of our integrated platform and supports deeper, more valuable client relationships. Turning to our broader business. I will begin with our use of artificial intelligence, followed by updates on several innovative solutions and specific products. As I have shared at recent investor conferences, we view AI as a significant strategic opportunity and have been operating and expanding our capabilities for more than 3.5 years by establishing strong governance processes that support a responsible, bold, and balanced approach. Today, close to 100 AI tools are approved for internal use, ranging from general productivity platforms such as Gemini and Copilot to specialized business and development tools across all areas of our company. These tools support over 500 distinct use cases, delivering meaningful and measurable impacts. A few examples to share.

In lending, developers working on our new Jack Henry Origination solution online account opening solution have increased productivity by roughly 90%, driven by faster coding and quicker issue resolution. In digital, as part of the new Jack Henry Platform, we have built an AI-assisted recommendation system for exception item processing that is in closed beta with three banks. They all report that AI is reducing the time to close exceptions each day by 70%-80%. In customer service, our AI advisor bot is supporting our frontline representatives and has assisted with more than 3,700 complex support interactions over the past two months with a 96% success rate, surfacing answers in seconds from our knowledge resources. To further accelerate adoption, we have deployed an internal team of AI coaches who work directly with our associates through workshops and hands-on support.

We are also seeing meaningful productivity and efficiency gains from natural language development, sometimes referred to as vibe coding. For example, a non-technical associate recently developed an internal application for our travel program, allowing us to meet a business need without licensing additional software. This is one example of many where our teams have independently built more efficient ways to address specific business challenges. Overall, we believe our approach to AI education and adoption significantly helps us minimize competitive risks. Additionally, regulatory requirements, network certifications, and our role as the system of record make the banking industry very difficult to disintermediate. Shifting to our innovative solutions, we continue to make strong progress on our stablecoin strategy. Beta testing with clients to send and receive USDC is going well, and at this point, we are largely awaiting final regulatory guidance to proceed more expeditiously.

We are delivering stablecoin processing through the public cloud-native Jack Henry Platform. This is important because the platform is connected to all of our core systems, serving as a bridge between emerging capabilities and our foundational cores. This provides our clients fast, integrated access to capabilities such as stablecoin and our initial SMB solutions, Tap2Local and Rapid Transfers. Tap2Local, our SMB merchant payment solution, continues to see significant tractions as clients look to better serve SMBs, increase deposits, and recapture business from FinTechs. At the end of April, more than 700 banks and credit unions were live with Tap2Local. Since beginning targeted marketing just a few days ago, active merchants have doubled to more than 1,600, with several thousand additional merchants currently in the enrollment process.

We intentionally waited to begin marketing so we could ensure the product and infrastructure were fully operational. With that foundation now in place and marketing beginning to ramp up, we expect adoption to accelerate in the coming months. Client feedback has been very positive, particularly around Tap2Local's differentiated capabilities, including easy enrollment, tap-to-pay on both iOS and Android devices, and continuous account reconciliation. As an additional validation to the product's uniqueness, Tap2Local recently won the FinTech Breakthrough Award for Small Business Payments Solution of the Year. We are also seeing strong early momentum with Jack Henry Rapid Transfers, which enables both SMBs and consumers to quickly move funds between external accounts, eligible cards, and digital wallets. Rapid Transfers is now live with over 110 banks and credit unions, with an additional 190 at various stages of onboarding.

Transaction volumes have been healthy, particularly given that marketing has not yet begun. The average transaction size is approximately $260, which is double our original projections, and it's being driven by stronger than anticipated inbound transfers. Larger inbound transfers deliver one of the key value propositions, increased deposits for the financial institution. With higher average transaction sizes and consistent monthly activity without any marketing, Rapid Transfers is currently tracking well ahead of our initial modules, though we are still in the early innings of the rollout. As another key part of the Jack Henry Platform, we are developing a cloud-native deposit-only core. Client testing is underway and development was completed 6 months ahead of our original schedule announced in February of 2022. We will continue to broaden our testing as the year progresses.

I also want to highlight early progress on our enhanced embedded payments capabilities following the acquisition of Victor Technologies last fall. The Victor platform, now branded as Jack Henry Payments Orchestrator, enables financial institutions to embed payment capabilities directly into third-party non-bank brands such as FinTechs and commercial customers. In Q3, we signed 1 bank and onboarded 3 FinTechs to the platform and have quickly grown our sales pipeline to more than 40 banks and or FinTechs. Moving on to our reporting segments. In core, in addition to the 17 competitive wins I mentioned earlier, we also secured 4 on-premise to private cloud contracts, including 1 institution over $1 billion. So far this year, we have signed 23 in-to-out contracts, with 8 being institutions over $1 billion. In payments, we continue to see strong growth in faster payments.

Over the past year, our clients' adoption of Zelle grew by 25%, RTP by 26%, and FedNow by 31%. In the third quarter, payment transaction volume across these channels increased 47% year-over-year. In complementary, we signed 36 new Financial Crimes Defender and Faster Payment Module contracts during the quarter. As of March 31, we have completed 168 Financial Crimes Defender installations and another 68 in various stages of implementation. We've also installed 168 Faster Payment Modules with an additional 256 in progress. The Banno Digital Platform had another strong quarter with 23 retail and 34 Banno Business signings. In total, we have 1,028 clients live on Banno, including 466 on Banno Business.

The platform now serves more than 15.5 million registered users, up 13% from a year ago. As a reminder, all of our Banno wins and growth thus far has occurred within our core base. As we look ahead, we believe we are at a meaningful inflection point. We now have a competitive feature set along with increased willingness among certain competitors to operate as open providers. As a result, we see an opportunity to begin expanding Banno beyond our existing base and more closely align it with our payment product strategy, where we have successfully sold outside the base for many years. We will provide more updates as we progress with this strategy.

On the technology spending front, we recently released results from our eighth annual strategy benchmark survey, which highlights technology spending priorities. While we monitor a number of industry surveys, this one is particularly meaningful because it reflects direct input from the CEOs of our bank and credit union clients. The results point to a clear and growing commitment to technology investment. 88% of respondents expect to increase their technology budgets over the next 2 years, up from 76% last year. Of those, the largest segment, 41%, plans to increase investments between 6% and 10%. These trends are consistent with other industry surveys pointing to increased technology spending. We asked CEOs where they plan to prioritize those investments. For the first time, artificial intelligence ranks as the top priority, cited by nearly 50% of the respondents, followed by digital banking and data analytics.

These priorities align directly with where Jack Henry has been investing in delivering innovation. Last week, we highlighted our differentiated innovation at the Jack Henry annual Strategic Insight Symposium in Salt Lake City. We featured presentations and panels that included both Jack Henry leaders and well-known industry experts covering key topics such as the macroeconomic environment, the Jack Henry Benchmark Survey, our technology priorities and progress, fraud initiatives, AI education and use cases, the impact of stable coins and tokens, and meeting the needs of Gen Z. We will provide updates on many of these topics along with additional innovation updates at our Investor Day on September 15th in our Dallas offices. We recently completed and published our 2026 sustainability report. The report is an outstanding information source on Jack Henry and is available to review on the investor relations page on jackhenry.com.

The report coincides with our 50th anniversary. It reflects our continued focus on preserving long-term value for our associates, clients, communities, stockholders, and the environment through responsible business practices. As part of our 50th anniversary celebration, our board is looking forward to ringing the closing bell at Nasdaq tomorrow, May seventh. This is one of the many activities we are doing throughout the year to mark this significant milestone. In closing, we remain focused on culture, service, innovation, strategy, and execution. These key differentiators will enable Jack Henry to continue to drive industry-leading revenue growth and margin expansion. With strong sales momentum, increased client technology spending, and a disciplined execution, we believe Jack Henry is extremely well positioned to capture the opportunities ahead. With that, I will turn it over to Mimi for more detail on our financials.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Thank you, Greg, and good morning, everyone. I would like to begin by thanking our associates who continually deliver value to our financial institution clients. The result is another quarter of solid revenue and earnings growth and continued momentum as we approach the end of our fiscal year. I will begin with our healthy Third quarter results, then conclude with our updated fiscal 2026 guidance. Q3 GAAP revenue increased 9%. Non-GAAP revenue increased 7% for the quarter and 8% year-to-date, a continuation of consistently strong performance. Third quarter deconversion revenue of approximately $19 million, which we previously announced, was up approximately $9 million for the quarter, reflecting a steady pace of M&A activity among financial institutions. As a reminder, the dollar amount of deconversion revenue has little correlation with the number of transactions or annual revenue impact.

The absolute amount of deconversion revenue can vary greatly quarter to quarter. We continue to see industry consolidation as largely neutral to slightly positive for our business. Now, let's look more closely at the details. GAAP services and support revenue increased 10% for the quarter, while non-GAAP increased 8%. Service and support growth during the quarter was primarily driven by strength in data processing and hosting revenues for both private and public cloud. Specific callouts include implementation services and license revenue. Private and public cloud offerings continue to drive strong growth. Cloud revenue increased 9% in the quarter. This recurring revenue contributor is 33% of our total revenue. Shifting to processing revenue, which is 43% of total revenue and another strategic component of our long-term growth model. We saw solid performance with 7% GAAP and 6% non-GAAP growth for the quarter.

Consistent with recent results, quarterly drivers included increased digital, card, and faster payments processing revenue. Leading commentary on revenue, I would highlight total recurring revenue was 91% for the quarter. Moving to expenses. Beginning with cost of revenue, which increased 7% on a GAAP and non-GAAP basis for the quarter. Drivers for the quarter are consistent with recent previous quarter results and include higher personnel costs, direct costs growing consistent with lines of revenue, and increased amortization of intangible assets. For modeling purposes, amortization of acquisition-related intangibles was $6 million for the quarter. R&D expense increased 15% for GAAP and 12% on a non-GAAP basis for the quarter.

Quarterly increase was primarily due to the net personnel costs driven by an increase in headcount over the trailing 12 months. Ending with SG&A expense for the quarter on a GAAP basis, it increased 9% and an increase of 8% on a non-GAAP basis. Results reflect an increase in personnel costs, specifically from headcount additions over the 12 months. We remain focused on generating annual compounding margin expansion. Q3 delivered consistent non-GAAP margin at 23%. Year-to-date non-GAAP margin improvement was 195 basis points with a non-GAAP margin of 25%. Non-GAAP margin benefits inherently from the leverage in our business model, strategic cost management, and leveraging our existing workforce as we continue to focus on enterprise process improvement and AI utilization. These strong quarterly results produced a fully diluted GAAP earnings per share of $1.71, up 12%.

For the year-to-date period GAAP, period GAAP earnings per share was $5.41, an increase of 20%. Reviewing the 4 operating segments, we see positive performance across the board. Core segment non-GAAP revenue increased 9% for the quarter, with operating margin contraction of 27 basis points due to temporary product mix of lower margin revenue sources such as implementation and work orders. Payment segment quarterly non-GAAP revenue increased 5%. The segment again had outstanding non-GAAP operating margin growth with quarterly results of 159 basis points. Card processing revenue showed steady growth and was partly offset by lower network incentive revenue. The segment also benefited from continuing shift and significant growth from Faster Payments. The complementary segment quarterly non-GAAP revenue increased an impressive 7%, with healthy 99 basis points of non-GAAP margin expansion.

Quarterly revenue growth continued to reflect demand for our digital solutions and a beneficial product mix with sales sourced from new core wins, existing core customers, and non-core financial institutions. For the quarter, Corporate Services, formerly corporate and other, non-GAAP revenue increased 27%. This is primarily the result of increased hardware sales. Since the segment reflects expenses not allocated to other segments, we will not be discussing operating margins as it provides no meaningful insight. A review of cash flow and capital allocation. Q3 operating cash flow was $186 million, a 72% increase over the prior fiscal year Q3. Quarterly free cash flow of $122 million delivered a 137% increase over the prior fiscal year Q3.

Our consistent dedication to value creation resulted in a trailing-twelve-month NOPAT return on invested capital of 23%, compared to the 20% in the third quarter of the prior year. We are very proud of the durability of this metric and how it reflects our high-quality allocation of capital for our shareholders. I would highlight the following significant year-to-date capital decisions resulting from our strong free cash flow generation. $284 million in share repurchases, $127 million in dividends paid, plus the asset acquisition of Victor Technologies. We're proud to return meaningful cash to investors while maintaining a conservative balance sheet. The average purchase price of the shares repurchased was $160.

We ended the quarter with debt of $90 million, consistent with normal course of the business revolver usage, but expect to end the year, the fiscal year debt-free, barring acquisitions or other opportunities. During the quarter, we established a new $1 billion revolver credit facility to support future growth opportunities. I will now discuss our third consecutive increase to full-year guidance. As you are aware, yesterday's press release included updated increases to fiscal 2026 full-year GAAP guidance. The conversion guidance will continue to follow the conservative methodology introduced in fiscal 2024. Fiscal 2026 deconversion revenue guidance has been increased to $37 million. Full-year GAAP revenue growth guidance increases to a range of 6.1%-6.6%.

Based on our strong year-to-date results, we have tightened the range of non-GAAP annual revenue growth guidance, resulting in a new outlook of 6.6%-7.1%. Consistent with our budget plan and year-long messaging, Q4 will see relatively lower non-GAAP revenue growth compared to the previous three quarters. Drivers include projected digital revenue slowing from lower active user growth, card revenue growth, seeing pressure from risk management, and less one-time network incentive revenue. Expenses during the fourth quarter are expected to reflect relatively higher pressure from medical cost benefits returning to historical levels, cloud migration, infrastructure expense, and commission. Our expectation on fourth quarter revenue are below current analyst consensus.

At the same time, full-year revenue growth consensus is aligned. Reflecting that part of the difference is that some of the revenue analysts expected in the fourth quarter shifting to the third quarter. Margins are projected to contract in the fourth quarter based on previously disclosed factors. However, based on the full-year revenue growth and our robust financial model, we are increasing full-year guidance for non-GAAP margin expansion to a range of 75-95 basis points from the original 20-40 basis points on the August call. As a reminder, we see fluctuations in quarterly results related to software usage license components along with the timing of implementation. Therefore, the correct performance indicator for our business is the consistently strong fiscal year financial results. Q4 results are not aligned with our early expectations for fiscal 2027.

The presented results and guidance metrics are indicative that our business operations remain healthy and sound with growth opportunities across all four operating segments. The full-year GAAP tax rate estimate for fiscal 2026 is 23.25%. The above increased guidance metrics result in a stronger full-year outlook for GAAP EPS of $6.78 to $6.87 per share, a growth of 9%-10%. As a reminder, even updated deconversion revenue guidance potentially understates GAAP EPS growth. Full-year free cash flow conversion outlook for 95%-105% for fiscal 2026, with a bias towards the upper end of the range. In concluding, Q3 reflects another exceptional performance from our associates, leading to increased guidance. We're pleased by the continued performance momentum and resulting fiscal year outlook.

We remain strongly convinced that demand for our solutions, aligned with continued technology spend by our clients and prospects, all supported by industry-leading service excellence from our associates, will drive outstanding financial results and superior shareholder value. We appreciate the contributions of our dedicated associates that produce these superior results and our investors for their ongoing confidence. Danielle, please open the line for questions.

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speaker phone please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question please press star then two. The first question comes from Vasundhara Govil from KBW. Please go ahead.

Vasundhara Govil
Analyst, KBW

Hi, thank you for taking my question. Greg, first one for you. It was another very strong quarter on new core wins. I'm curious what's driving this trend, and if you are starting to already see some benefits from the competitive platform consolidation or if that's still on the come?

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah, thanks for the question. Yeah, I think it's a combination of both. We've been talking a lot about, you know, what we've been doing on the innovative side, and so that's continued to play out with the products, the solutions. Obviously, our customer service hasn't wavered a bit. I will tell you, of the 17 core wins, 13 of them came from one provider, one competitive provider. I will say that most of those, as you can imagine, you know, the core processing contracting side takes anywhere from 9-12 months, typically. A lot of those were already in motion ahead of whatever announcements were made. We did take some from really everybody, just so you know.

We had some wins from really all of our competitors. But again, the bulk of them came from one.

Vasundhara Govil
Analyst, KBW

Thank you for the color. Then maybe a quick one for you on the margin guide. You know, the guide obviously implies a meaningful step down in the fourth quarter, and I caught your comment on the normalized medical expenses you're baking in. Any other drivers there or just trying to get a sense of whether there's any conservatism baked into the guide? Thank you.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Yeah, you're welcome. Yes, you're accurate, and I appreciate you hearing the commentary regarding Q4, which is not indicative of the full-year performance, but more so due to some unique factors in Q4 that were expected as we thought about for the cadence of the year. You're right to call out the medical expenses returning to normalized levels. We also had some commission shift where we saw some benefit earlier in the year. We expect based on the timing of those implementations for the commissions some of that to hit in Q4. Additionally, just some of the mix we're seeing from some of the lower margin business, some of it related to work orders and implementation also lead to Q4 having less margin expansion or in fact margin contraction for the year.

Again, the right metric for our business is the annual, and we're pleased to be able to increase guidance on full-year margin expansion.

Vasundhara Govil
Analyst, KBW

Appreciate the response. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Peter Heckmann from D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.

Peter Heckmann
Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to talk a little bit about Anthropic's Mythos. Has Jack Henry been able to set up a timetable to access Mythos to look at their own systems to identify any cyber vulnerabilities? Do you think that's something that bank core customers are increasingly gonna demand from their vendors on a periodic basis?

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah, Pete, this is Greg. A couple things on Mythos. We've been, you know, heavily involved ever since it came out. I actually did a call with a lot of our competitors and others with the head of cybersecurity in Washington. We had, you know, as soon as everything was announced, you know, we were pulled in. Our cyber teams are, you know, been involved in a multitude of meetings. You know, Project Glasswing, which is now called Mythos Workshop, our teams are getting information associated with that and joining various meetings. We've obviously done a whole host of things that we need to do for operational readiness across the organization. Candidly, you know, we were doing that already.

You know, the other thing is that you probably heard that on April 29th, the Trump administration raised some objections. You know, there's still some delay on where some of this utilization will get done. Our teams are heavily involved both with not only at our organization and with Mythos, but also across the entire landscape of our industry. All of our competitors and Jack Henry are working together with Washington to make sure that we protect our banks and credit unions.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Greg, if I could add on to that. Mythos is just the current kind of attention in the industry, but we've made significant investments in fortifying and stepping up from a cybersecurity, from an awareness and observability, and a zero trust kind of resiliency philosophy over the last several years. We feel like we're in a much stronger position today than we had been over the last several years to be able to handle this type of situation.

Operator

The next question comes from Jason Kupferberg from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Tyler DuPont
Analyst, Wells Fargo

Hey, good morning, Greg and Mimi. This is Tyler Spahn on for Jason. Thanks for taking our questions. I wanted to just start by piggybacking off of the core questions and commentary. You know, given you signed 43 takeaways so far, fiscal year to date, you know, how should we be thinking about upside to that 50-55 annual target? You know, if I heard correctly in the prepared remarks, Greg, you suggested that you have confidence in exceeding last year's number. Given last 4Q, you guys won 23 deals, that would imply over 60 this year. I guess just, you know, given the success you've seen so far year to date, I'm wondering if you can help put sort of a finer point on expectations as we look to the rest of the year. Thank you.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

I appreciate the question. I can't really give a finer point. I can tell you that I'm very confident that we will be north of 51 and probably north of 55, somewhere in that range. I don't know exactly. You know, contracts are interesting as far as timing to go get them done. We've been completing a couple contracts recently that took a lot longer than we expected, and sometimes they get, you know, kind of turned over to the next quarter. In reality, it's not just the number of wins we have, but also the size of the wins.

you know, as we referenced, we had 11 over multi-billions, but we've also won just this past quarter, we won $3.5 billion, we've won $5 billion, we've won $7.5 billion. Just recently, we just won a almost $10 billion client that is coming with 1.2 million accounts, which is actually about 25% larger than any customer we have today, including our largest asset size and the number of accounts. Those contracts took a long, long time to secure. As you continue to go upmarket, contracts, you know, take longer. It's really hard to give you a definitive answer. The answer I'll give you is, our sales team is really kicking butt right now.

You know, obviously, a lot of the things that are going on in the industry are providing opportunities for us, and I think the best is still to come, based on feedback and pipelines that we have. Our pipelines are extremely strong, not just in core, but in payments and complementary as well. We're very bullish on that.

Tyler DuPont
Analyst, Wells Fargo

Great. You know, that's great to hear. I guess just as a quick follow-up, I just want to touch on free cash. You know, the $122 million in the quarter was pretty meaningfully above, it looks like both consensus and even your own historical trends. Can you maybe just touch on how we should be thinking about free cash flow going forward versus the 90%-100% conversion guide, sort of both as we look down the barrel to the final quarter and as we try to hone our models for next year?

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

I would say, Tyler, there were a couple of things as we look at trailing twelve months, you know, free cash flow. First and foremost, a tremendously strong operational foundation that led to strong cash. There was also impact, positive impact from the tax law, tax bill change that we saw come to clarity, as well as some small asset sales. Overall, we feel great, as we are improving the color this year for free cash flow conversion to that 95%-105% with a bias to the high side, sitting at around 109%, you know, 108%, 109%, year to date from a trailing twelve months. You know, we feel very good that we're returning to the historical norm levels of our free cash flow.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Great. I appreciate all the color. Thanks so much.

Operator

The next question comes from Rayna Kumar from Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.

Rayna Kumar
Analyst, Oppenheimer

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just given the volatile macro and political environment, as you talk to banks and credit unions, how are they thinking about IT spending for the next 6 to 12 months? Then, you know, separately, any initial read on FY 2027 revenue growth and margins? Thank you.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Rayna, I'll take the first one. You know, kind of as we talked about in my prepared remarks, and we just came out of our Strategic Insight Symposium with our top 150 or so clients. The focus and we actually had somebody from the U.S. come in and talk to our clients as well. It's based on what's going on in the macro environment, honestly, it's not affecting the banks and credit unions' focus on what they need to get done in the tech spending. As we referenced in our own benchmark survey that just came out, we had 88% said that they were going to increase their spending as compared to 76% last year.

With that average of, I think it was 41% is actually at 6%-10% of an increase. That, you know, really coincides with everything that we've been talking about for the last, you know, two or three surveys that we've referenced on our calls, Bank Director and others surveys. That remains. The only difference is really where they're talking about spending the money. AI, for the first time, became the number 1 priority for them. Obviously deposits, digital banking, in particular, fraud, other components are still up at the top. We're seeing it. I mean, again, you know, our pipelines are very, very robust right now, again, in all parts of our business, not just core.

Again, we're getting larger institutions. As I referenced, just, you know, just this year, we've already won, you know, the one I just referenced that was almost $10 billion in assets, but 1.2 million accounts, which is significantly larger than any one we have, which that comes with a lot of other products with it. Things along that line that continue to, you know, make us believe that the robustness of the technology spending will continue.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Rayna, I can take the second half of your question on building on that positive outlook that Greg just framed. It's a little premature to talk about FY 2027. We're just excited about ending 26 in a great spot. Again, I would just call out that the quarterly pace of the year is not indicative of any kind of launching off pad for 27. Although we are calling for a weaker Q4, it does not mean anything diminishes from our positive outlook for the full year and then next year. Even at roughly 91% recurring revenue, you would think a budgeting process would be easier, but we have a very comprehensive budgeting process here at Jack Henry.

We are still working with each of our operational leaders to talk about next year's plan, and rigorous prioritization around investment and spending. We will give more color to that when we talk about full year results, next quarter. Overall, we're thinking a positive direction for FY 2027.

Rayna Kumar
Analyst, Oppenheimer

Very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Madison Schaar from Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Madison Suhr
Analyst, Raymond James

Hey, good morning. I appreciate you taking the questions. I just wanted to start on the Trifecta wins. I think you mentioned 58% of wins this year were those Trifecta wins. Just given what you're seeing in the pipeline, I mean, do you think this elevated level of cross-sell is sustainable not only for the quarter, but just as we think about kind of the next year or so?

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

I do. I appreciate you asking the question. I mean, I think we've seen the results of all the work and innovation that we put into both our digital platform and our card platform. We've made a lot of changes through the years and, you know, you've heard us reference over the last couple in particular about getting to a level of feature parity that we needed to compete with some of the larger digital-only providers, and we're starting to see that. We're starting to get some wins from all of the players, candidly. They're not just coming in core wins, which is great, obviously, but you have to wait for those to be installed.

We're also getting some current Jack Henry clients that were on competitive digital platforms that are now making the decision to move to Jack Henry Banno instead. Short answer to your question is, I do feel very strongly that the work that we've done and are continuing to add with features like, you know, Rapid Transfers and Tap2Local that are not available anywhere else, are big differentiators for us to winning deals.

Madison Suhr
Analyst, Raymond James

Okay, great. I did want to follow up just on the payments business. you know, it grew 5% in the quarter. Just curious from your guys' vantage point, what kind of the key buckets or key things that could accelerate growth in payments from here, just given I know that mid-single is maybe slightly below where you guys want to be. Thank you.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

We continue to see steady growth in card, the resilience of the consumer spending. On top of that, you get a boost from continued rebounded growth in remit and bill pay. Bill pay, I would call out, even though it's not huge growth numbers, the increase has been quite positive, and that's a signaling of the resurgence post-acquisition of Payrailz. On top of that, you have just tremendous growth, almost 50% growth in faster payments. It's across the board. Volumes for card are good. You have extra growth from other areas of the business.

Madison Suhr
Analyst, Raymond James

Okay. Thank you so much, guys.

Operator

The next question comes from Dominick Gabriele from Loop Capital. Please go ahead.

Dominick Gabriele
Analyst, Loop Capital

Hey, good morning, everybody. Thanks for taking the question. I guess, you know, Jack Henry is always focused on an open platform versus a walled garden. I think that's really been a benefit to the business over time in gaining customers. You know, do you expect to partner with various AI potential financial providers with their products? You know, how would you think about that relationship? Would you take it similar to the types of partnerships for with third parties, allowing their products to be on your platform and really focusing on, you know, Jack Henry's added value when the customers ultimately decide to choose Jack Henry products regardless? Thanks so much.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah, it's a good question. I appreciate. A couple things. We are doing that today. Several of the AI-related companies are partnering with us today. That's how we're using some of the tools and also some of the we're incorporating some of it into some of the products that we are working on. We are being very careful on that. You know, partner is a really difficult word to use because in some cases, a partnership infers a lot of revenue changing hands on both sides. A lot of what I would call it is more of a integrated relationship. In some cases, they're creating more financial gains for both of us and others. They're just creating opportunities for us to leverage tools that we're licensing.

That is happening today and will continue to happen. We have a whole host of folks that we have hired to evaluate those tools and doing that. We're being very careful because everybody's got, you know, something new to talk about. That will continue. To your point, we've been by far the most open platform through the years. We look at AI, we look at fintech opportunities, we look at fintechs that are using AI that's already embedded into their solutions as opportunities. We'll evaluate them one at a time.

Dominick Gabriele
Analyst, Loop Capital

Great. Maybe just as a follow-up, you know, if you look at the various growth rates of the segments, you know, core's been doing quite well. You know, outside of the comments you just made on payments complementary, you know, double digits. I'm just curious of the quarter-over-quarter kind of implied reduction in the other two pieces of the business, given there is some momentum there. If you could just help walk through kind of that, I'd really appreciate it. Thanks so much.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Sure. You know, as we always say, not to look at one quarter, but to look at the full year, particularly because some of these products, as you look at the install calendar, and even though we're thrilled to be looking at over 50 for wins, the revenue we're getting today is based on the wins we had, especially for core that we locked in last year. Some of the complementary products can be installed sooner. But the profile of those customers does impact the revenue. If you have years where the size of the install base is different, or the mix of the products they're taking, it can impact both revenue and margin.

On top of that, what we've seen is some of the one-time service revenue related to work orders and implementation is also, it's been a nice added revenue source. I would say that kind of varies as well, from quarter to quarter. That's really the biggest driver causing for the fourth quarter, in addition to just some grow over challenges from last year's strength.

Dominick Gabriele
Analyst, Loop Capital

Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Darrin Peller from Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.

Darrin Peller
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Hey, guys. Thanks. It's Eric Teller from Wolfe. I just wanted to understand a little bit more. When I, when I think about the beginning of the year, you guys had called out pricing, M&A, and some other variables, credit union account growth, as having been potential risks or headwinds that decelerated what otherwise would have been a 78% algorithm for your year. Ended up doing better than that as the year is progressing and not seeing those headwinds as materially. You're seeing better core growth also, I think, than probably you anticipated at the beginning of the year. Putting all those pieces together, you know, where do you see the business positioned now in terms of your normal 7%-8% trajectory?

Do you think you have enough pillars for that business to sustain 7% to 8% in the next couple of years again, without specifically guiding to 27? I'm just curious if you think the building blocks are there.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Eric, appreciate the question. Yeah, that we haven't really talked about some of those headwinds as we progress through the year. We've grown over them. It's not that they've disappeared. We, we had it in our budget plan. We knew of some of the departures. We knew of some of the new contract renewals that were gonna face a bit of compression from a renewal perspective. We've just been able to grow over them. I don't wanna say, like, those pressures have abated. It's just we've been able to perform in spite of them. As we look at next year, again, too premature to put any refinement on it, but I think the growth algorithm is certainly still intact.

As we've talked about, I think even on as much as on last quarter's call, the new exciting areas of innovation, and business opportunity, like the ones that Greg highlighted in SMB, faster payments, et cetera, it's gonna be 2 years till that has a meaningful contribution to the revenue growth that would kind of push us towards the upper bound of our growth algorithm and beyond. We feel confident that next year is looking in line with the guidance we have historically given.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah. The only one thing I wanna add to that is that we did talk about that, you know, typically we start to even out over the year with M&A. That is starting to play out exactly as we had said. We had some in the early parts of the fiscal year when we were finishing our budgets and everything else, we had a little bit more of an upside down, but that started to balance itself out like we thought. The other thing is we referenced the changes we made in the renewal processes.

Darrin Peller
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Yep

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

with how we went to renewals, and that has worked really, really well, candidly.

Darrin Peller
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Right.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

I do think what Mimi just referenced with some of the new products and services that are still in earlier stages, but starting to gain some traction, that's where we get a lot of our confidence for the longer term in getting to the numbers you're talking about.

Darrin Peller
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Okay. Thanks. Greg, I just want one follow-up on the Core wins. It came up a couple of times, I still feel a little bit hungry for an understanding of what's actually driving the incremental step up in the magnitude of the wins, then the run rate. Like you said, these were basically formed from probably a few quarters ago in terms of the deals being signed or at least close to signed. It wasn't really the industry changes we're hearing from competitors right now that caused the increase. What did cause it to really kick in a few quarters ago already?

Because it seems like if you add on what we're seeing in the competitive landscape, that could be additive even more so than the 55 going into next year, you know, when you take the two together.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah, I agree with you. I mean, you know, I think you all have heard me enough talk about the differentiators of, you know, I bring them up every time because we're still getting some folks that don't fully understand it. We are building things that nobody else is building, and we're doing it at a level of execution that nobody else is doing. When you get an industry that's completely full right now of competitive uncertainty that is happening specifically with our largest competitors, we are the provider that is absolutely executing on the things that we said we were gonna do and hasn't lost a step in customer service and never has. You know, I mean, I'm getting inbound calls from larger institutions that wanna talk to us.

I'm getting inbound calls from the largest consulting firms in the world that wanna learn more about what we're doing. We've been showing these large consulting firms our technology, and their quote is, "We are blowing them away." They never thought a core provider could do what we were doing with what we built on the platform. You know, when you take all of that and the years of a lot of effort of building out the technology and now to a point where we can actually demonstrate it and have live products, that is really, you know, driving it. Again, with the unrest of what's going on with our competitors.

I do believe it's gonna continue because we're gonna continue to execute as we have been, and our products are only gonna get further and further ahead of where our competition is.

Darrin Peller
Analyst, Wolfe Research

Yeah. Makes sense. Thanks, Greg. Thanks, Mimi.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Sure.

Operator

The next question comes from Kenneth Suchoski from Autonomous Research.

Ken Suchoski
Analyst, Autonomous Research

Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question here. I wanted to get your high-level thoughts on how AI can play a role in the core processing industry. We noticed one bank with over $25 billion in assets expanding its collaboration directly with OpenAI. I'm curious to get your take just on, 1, how much of a risk is there that banks or credit unions work directly with these AI companies? 2, how involved is the core provider if that does happen, or how does the core provider's role change in that scenario? Thank you.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah. I think there's a couple things. I think you referenced the $25 billion institution, and I do think the larger institutions, as you continue to move up, they probably have more opportunity, more wherewithal, money-wise and talent-wise, to work with some of these providers directly. You may see that. I can tell you in the community bank space, as I said on our benchmark survey, the number 1 priority was AI. Our community and regional banks that Jack Henry works with, they don't have the wherewithal in most of the cases to build that out. They're relying on us, which is why we've taken such a proactive way of doing this for the last three and a half years.

As I mentioned, you know, not only are we building the level of efficiency and effectiveness inside of the organization, we have 14 different POCs that we have going on right now with products. We have a whole host of things that we've built in our financial crimes solution, including things like SAR reports, you know, suspicious activity reports that go out and doing those using AI. Creating things that provide efficiency gains for our banks and credit unions with various tools, like exception item processing that I referenced in the script. Things along that line that I think will continue to drive opportunities for people like us, at least that are very innovative and building out that level of innovation with our customers.

Could there be a few that go around? Yes, maybe, but they're gonna be fewer and far between than they are at the larger institution side.

Ken Suchoski
Analyst, Autonomous Research

Yeah, that makes sense, Greg. Maybe just one for Mimi, just on the payments non-GAAP revenue growth rate, just because we're getting some questions on. I think I heard lower network incentives this quarter. Is that more of a one-time issue, or does that carry through to future quarters? Just trying to think through the growth rate there and if it can accelerate from the 5%. Thank you.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Yeah, of course. The network incentive thresholds are kind of negotiated kind of year by year and sometimes intra-year. I don't see that as a headwind kind of going forward in any kind of structural change way. It just happens that it has more of an impact this year in Q4 on top of a throwover from an already strong year. To me, the underlying trends of the strength in card volume, the strength in our enterprise payments business makes me feel comfortable about the ongoing growth rate in that segment.

Ken Suchoski
Analyst, Autonomous Research

Perfect. Thank you, Mimi.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Of course.

Operator

The next question comes from Cristopher Kennedy from William Blair. Please go ahead.

Cris Kennedy
Analyst, William Blair

Good morning. Thanks for taking the question. It's great to hear about the larger wins. Seems like you're making a lot of progress there. Can you just remind us of the dynamics and/or the economics to Jack Henry as you move up market? Thanks.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Thanks, Chris. The economics obviously change based on the amount of products that they buy with us. Again, you know, I just referenced this larger one that we just literally won, was not part of the count that I gave you, we just won over the last couple of weeks. That one is, you know, asset size isn't, it's roughly $10 billion in assets, which for us would be the second-largest win in our history as a brand-new core as far as asset size. More importantly, it's the number of accounts. They have 1.2 million accounts, which is, like I said, 25% greater than any of our current customers.

They're buying a whole host of products from Jack Henry, so that creates a larger scale of opportunity for us than, you know, maybe some of the other institutions that are buying, you know, only a handful. The key of why I keep referencing Trifecta is because Trifecta for us really is the, you know, the opportunity for us to drive three of our largest revenue products in with a single client. Really the rest of it becomes gravy. It really does depend, Chris, but when we go in to sell a deal, we try to sell them everything we have. Some of it also could be timing.

If the contract terms on some of the other products are not coterminus with the core, you sometimes have to wait to go back and win the digital or the card or other things like that to drive that. Economics really truly vary. Like I just said, the $10 billion opportunity could look a lot greater than a lot of our other opportunities, and it's smaller in asset size.

Cris Kennedy
Analyst, William Blair

Great. Thanks for taking the question. Appreciate it.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Sure.

Operator

The next question comes from Will Nance from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Will Nance
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Hey, thanks for squeezing me in here. Mimi, I wanted to ask another kind of guidance-oriented question. You know, very clear that, you know, the fourth quarter is not kind of indicative of a jumping-off point. I just wanted to pressure test a couple of things in the fourth quarter on that statement. When we think about some of the things you called out, I think on the complementary side, lower digital account growth, and then on the margin side, you know, normalization of commissions and healthcare as well as the commencement of some of the of some of the public cloud spend and some of the duplicative costs there.

I was wondering if you could just maybe talk to either why those wouldn't continue into next year or, you know, if they are and, you know, we're supposed to kind of take from that, you know, you're factoring that into the budgeting process as you go through it. You know, if you could just kind of speak to your confidence about, like, levers that you have to offset those things because, you know, you obviously have pretty good visibility on them as of today. Thank you.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Yeah. Happy to, Will. Appreciate your acknowledgement that it's a little early for FY 2027. Yeah, I think particularly some of the headwinds that we see in Q4, around the digital account growth, it just happens to be the size of some of the wins previously. We have some bluebirds that are scheduled to come on, and we'll see what the mix for the remaining year of the sales team wins look like as it impacts next year's implementation. No concerns there at all. You know, as Greg mentioned, we feel great from a competitive parity perspective, and our both the robustness of the pipeline and the wins we're getting.

No concerns there of that being a carryover into FY 2027. On some of the expenses that you mentioned, we mentioned, you know, in previous quarters that some of that savings, you know, particularly around some of the timing on the commissions as well as some of the timing from the expense, medical claims being lower, really just created an opportunity for more of like a one-time windfall, if you will. We've seen that the beginning of the year, we talked about the 20-40, and we're now set to deliver 75-95. We'll see where we start next year. We always start conservative with the ambition that that's the floor, and look to produce more.

Nothing structural, but you're right, we expect kind of a normalization that should probably produce a little bit of a front half grow over challenge relative to the savings we saw this past year. We continue to look at every position and every project with a refined eye to making sure it makes sense for the business.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Hey, Will, one thing I do want to emphasize related to the digital backlog is that, you know, the importance of us winning these deals from with existing Jack Henry clients from our competitors is why we continue to emphasize this. Right now in our digital backlog, the digital wins with existing Jack Henry clients from competitors is twice the size of the backlog for the core wins. That puts that in perspective of again, we are winning some larger deals back in the Jack Henry base of deals that we did not win years ago.

Will Nance
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. That's super helpful. I appreciate all that color. Maybe if I could just ask a little bit more longer term of a question, and I share your knowledge, you know, despite some of the headwinds that you mentioned earlier this year, you know, this is one of the best years that Jack Henry has put up from a margin expansion perspective in many years, you know, and that's despite, you know, a more flattish back half of the year. I just wanna acknowledge that you're kind of doing that with some of the headwinds that I think an earlier question mentioned.

Just wondering, as you look out, you know, particularly in the context of the acceleration and core wins and a lot of the sales momentum that you have, you know, how do you kind of think about that long-term margin expansion target? You know, just given what could be a faster pace of top-line growth, like is there, you know, is there room to operate at the higher end of that margin expansion target, you know, while the sales momentum is going strong? Thank you, and nice job today.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Yeah. I think your goals are in line with our goals. You know, we know that margin expansion is one of the key pillars from a shareholder value creation, and we are highly motivated to drive that. Not talking about any particular year, so this is not a reference to 27, but more of kind of the near-term horizon. We've talked about there is a number of great tailwinds that will help us, whether that is the mix of the new products coming to fruition at higher margins, whether that is, you know, moving to a public cloud environment, whether that is AI and continuous improvement efficiencies. We think there's, you know, definitely opportunities to improve the margin profile of the company.

Will Nance
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Appreciate you taking the question.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Of course.

Operator

The next question comes from David Koning from Baird. Please go ahead.

Dave Koning
Analyst, Baird

Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks. Nice job. One thing corporate, just that segment grew super fast. Hardware you called out, I think that's pretty lumpy. You made a comment that you expect growth in all four segments. Historically, corporate was kind of a decliner. Is there something that's changed there, and is it maybe less lumpy or is there some extra growth you expect? Maybe just discuss that a little bit.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Yeah. I appreciate the question, Dave. You know, I agree, hardware can be lumpy. We saw that as a big headwind this, you know, last year. It's hard to say, you know, what we expect for next year yet in terms of hardware. We did have an increase a little bit this year that's produced some wins. I would say in general that segment, while we manage it, you know, quite tightly, it doesn't have the same operating characteristics as our other segments. It tends to be a little bit more ancillary services than key areas of revenue.

Dave Koning
Analyst, Baird

Yeah. That's, that's fair. Just one last one on network. The network incentives, I get what they are. Just from a magnitude standpoint, I know it's lumpy, but is that like a 1%-2% headwind in Q3 and Q4, just so we can understand kind of normalized?

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Yeah. You know, I would say probably, you know, combined, looking at it from a combination perspectively and holistically across it, I would focus more on the card volume itself as being more of an indicator forward. You know, that strength, that continued strength of the consumer, we think will lead to network incentives. This year, just the threshold was pretty high.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah. The other thing is on network incentives. It's an aggregate of all of our card association relationships, and a lot of it is also predicated on average spend, not necessarily transactions. We get paid on transactions. Obviously, the interchange is generated at the larger spend dollars. Some of that is predicated on spend dollars going down, but not necessarily our transactions going down. For the network incentives.

Dave Koning
Analyst, Baird

Got you. No, that makes sense. Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Kartik Mehta from North Coast Research. Please go ahead.

Kartik Mehta
Analyst, Northcoast Research

Hey, good morning, Greg and Mimi. Hey, Greg, I realize there hasn't been as much M&A activity, at least so far in 2026 as some anticipated. If M&A activity picks up, do you think that impacts at all the number of RFPs that might be there for the core over the next couple of years?

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

I do. I do think that a lot of opportunities that tend to happen are folks that are undetermined on what they're going to do in the long term on whether potentially being acquired is an alternative or kind of preparing themselves for that through the process. As you can tell, a lot of folks that maybe are going to be potentially looking to be purchased, they're gonna be less likely to do an RFP at that point in time. It can have an impact on both ways. Based on what we have seen, to answer your question, Kartik, we've seen a really steady dose.

I think that if you take the average number of RFPs that we typically talk about in a year, which is roughly 200, I think that number will be closer to 250-275 over the next couple of years with, 1, the unrest that's going on at some of the competitors, but also just the whole M&A story itself.

Kartik Mehta
Analyst, Northcoast Research

Even with increased in M&A, it should actually increase your opportunities.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

In both ways, right?

Kartik Mehta
Analyst, Northcoast Research

Yeah.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

We typically win more than we lose, right, in the M&A side. I think with the opportunities for us to continue to win our fair share of pure competitive takeaways.

Kartik Mehta
Analyst, Northcoast Research

Hey, then just one last question for you or Mimi. In the past, you've talked about whenever there is some kind of a economic event, you know, if banks get a little skittish, there's a portion of the business that might be impacted because it's a little bit faster sales cycle than the core or some of your other products. You know, at this point in time, you know, what % of the business do you think could be at risk if the economy slows or banks get a little bit worried about what's happening?

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Overall, we have not seen volatility related to the economic, related to global, issues happening. I would say, and something we've mentioned historically is the card business has the most sensitivity to macroeconomic. Overall, we have not seen a big change in the mix of that kind of exposure, if you will, to the economy.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah.

Kartik Mehta
Analyst, Northcoast Research

Perfect.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Consumer sentiment drives a lot. As you know, we have the bulk of our business is debit, and that tends to be the one that gets pushed. But regardless, I mean, I don't know any of the products that we've seen, and again, the we just came out of our SI event in Salt Lake, and the feedback from our clients was, I mean, they're gonna spend more and more because they know that that's their way to combat a lot of things. You know, technology solves a lot of their problems.

Kartik Mehta
Analyst, Northcoast Research

Thank you both. Appreciate it.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from James Faucette from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

James Faucette
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Thank you very much. Greg, I want to circle back to a comment you made a few minutes ago that you're seeing increased engagement with consulting and systems integrators. You know, just wondering with those conversations, if you view that as a potential source of better implementation efficacy, especially if you can enlist the SIs to do a lot more of the work. Then, just thinking about that as a potential incremental channel or point of leverage.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

I'm really glad you asked the question. Thank you. Absolutely. The things that we have found through these conversations, and we've had a multitude of conversations with two particular firms in, in, you know, in particular. I would say that, one, they are able to help validate the things that we were doing in the space as compared to others, and giving us, that feedback. We feel really good about that. Two is what you described, which is they're providing an entree into some of the larger institutions. In fact, I had two inbound calls, from institutions that came as references from these, consulting firms, and we haven't even inked a deal with either one of them yet.

They're providing that level of validation that, hey, Jack Henry can play, you know, in this larger market. Thirdly, to your point, do they become potential implementation partners or other aspects? The answer is yes. We're entertaining all of those things as opportunities present themselves.

James Faucette
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Thanks for that additional commentary there, Greg. Greg or Mimi, I just wanted to touch quickly on some of the things that you're doing in the payment segment. Continue to be intrigued by those. I'm wondering, excuse me, how we should think about the margin profile of Tap2Local relative to the current segment margin. Is the move economics model initially dilutive because of onboarding support, or can it be accretive because of the way the distribution runs through existing Banno and FI relationships? How should we think about those trajectories over time?

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Thanks for asking the question, James. I would say that some of those new growth initiatives are exciting on two fronts, both from a top-line revenue perspective, still very early days. Greg shared some of the exciting momentum metrics, from a revenue contribution perspective, it's still very small, and expected to grow quite nicely over the next several years. From a margins perspective, because of the nature of the rev share, because of the limited amount of development work we've had to do to get that solution in market, because of the partnerships we have on the marketing side, with the network, it's gonna be great margin. Excited when that comes to fruition.

When I look about long-term growth momentum drivers for the business, those are certainly areas that I think will continue to accelerate payment size within our business and overall growth rate.

James Faucette
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Thanks so much, guys.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Thank you.

Mimi Carsley
CFO and Treasurer, Jack Henry

Thank you.

Operator

The next question comes from Timothy Chiodo from UBS. Please go ahead.

Timothy Chiodo
Analyst, UBS

Great. Thanks a lot. I apologize if this was already addressed. I'm joining late from another earnings call. I realize it's maybe challenging to talk a little bit about large name competitors, but it's just coming up in a lot of investor discussions with the recent Wells Fargo win for Pismo and Visa overall. I was hoping you could just let us in the investment community know how you're thinking about them as a potential new competitor that might not have been a part of the thought process maybe 2 years ago and now appears to be gaining some degree of traction. Thanks.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Yeah. It has not been asked, Tim, we'll forgive you for going to the other one first. That's okay. Hey, here's the answer to the question. You know, Pismo is not a full core. You know, if you even compare it to, I think some folks had made comparisons to Finxact and Thought Machine and others. By the way, they left us out of there from a comparison standpoint with the things that we've built in the platform. What I would say is that it is the term core is really what's been the challenging component here. It has the ledgering capability. That is it.

It does not have any of the other. People are calling it a headless core because of the UI and lacking of that. It doesn't have any of the pure functionality of a core itself, which is why somebody like Wells Fargo can spend the money to build that out based on the Visa relationship that they have, and they can hold them accountable for executing based on the Visa relationship that they have. I think there's a lot of dynamics in a deal like that that are way more impactful than just what, you know, they're supposedly gonna be doing with building out a potential core. I really believe that they could be using some of it more as a side core solution set, using the general ledger as a baseline for that.

There isn't any true deposit capabilities or lending capabilities in Pismo today. I validated that with Visa. I mean, you know, we obviously have a strong relationship with Visa, and I have validated that at very top levels. I think there's a little bit of an overreaction to what is truly going on with Pismo today. You know, we are not seeing them. I actually talked to our sales folks and I said, "Do we see them in any single deal?" The answer is no. Obviously, we do see them in card deals sometimes with what they're trying to do with DPS, and bringing those two things together.

You know, that's my answer for today based on what I know, based on conversations I've had with Visa directly and what our sales team has brought back to me.

Timothy Chiodo
Analyst, UBS

Okay. Well, thank you, Greg. I'm glad we tackled that one because I think that really helps. Really great answer. Thank you.

Greg Adelson
President and CEO, Jack Henry

Thank you.

Operator

This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Vance Sherard for closing remarks.

Vance Sherard
VP of Investor Relations, Jack Henry

Thank you, Danielle. Management will be participating in multiple investor events over the next 2 months, and we look forward to our conversations with investors. As Greg mentioned, we will be having our Investor Day on September 15th at our office in Dallas, and that will obviously be webcast. However, if you would like to attend in person, please reach out to Steve Fine on our IR team for more information. In conclusion, we extend our appreciation to all Jack Henry associates for their outstanding efforts, which have set us up to finish a successful fiscal 2026. Thank you for joining us today. Danielle, please provide the replay number.

Operator

The replay number for today's call is 855-669-9658. The access code is 4124634. The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

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