G reat. Thanks, everyone, for joining. My name is Tien-tsin Huang. I follow the payments and IT services sector, and super excited to have Mastercard back with us. With us for Mastercard, we have Sachin Mehra, the CFO. I was just saying, as time moves, I remember when he started was 2019 as CFO. After joining Mastercard in 2010, I interacted with Sachin a lot around B2B and corporate payments and learned a ton from him. I got to say, he's also a UVA MBA grad. Go Hoos on that, Sachin. Great to see you, you're a warrior, for being here. I hope you're good from a health perspective.
I'm great. Thanks, Tien-tsin. Thank you for having me here.
No, of course. We'll go through a few questions that we've gathered from the audience, if that's OK. If there's time, we'll take questions at the end, Sachin. Again, thank you for being here. It means a lot to me. Let's kick it off with the obligatory macro questions and give us a sense of what you're seeing on the ground with respect to consumer spending and the macro. I know there are a lot of leading indicators that investors ask us about. I'd love to hear from you what you track and what you're doing. If you see something change, how can the firm pivot to meet the financial targets that you've set?
OK, great. Good morning, everyone. Again, Tien-tsin, thank you for having me here. Look, I mean, from a macro standpoint, we've just come out of the earnings cycle. I'm sure some of you have had the chance to actually listen into what we shared there. Here's what I would say. I would say that there's the fact, and then there's the sentiment. The sentiment, which we call soft data, is slightly different than what the facts are. You saw we had a solid first quarter that was on the back of strong consumer spending. The consumer continues to be healthy, as we see it. We've seen the data through, like we shared at our earnings call, through the first quarter and then through the first four weeks of April, which is what we shared at our earnings call. Strong consumer.
When I look at spending trends, we kind of look at them sequentially to see how trends are actually shaping up. Sequentially, when you adjust for the fact that we had the leap year effect, again, I'm looking at growth rates here. When you adjust for the leap year effect, for the timing of holidays and of Easter, as well as some pull forward in spend, which took place into Q4 of last year, trends are stable. The consumer continues to be healthy. That is kind of what we're seeing from an overall standpoint. Different geographies, different things, and then different subsets of the consumer. We can talk about more specifically if you have an interest around that. Broadly, I would say the consumer is showing healthy spending trends. As it relates to leading indicators, there are a few things which we track.
Number one is unemployment levels. Unemployment levels are at record lows. They continue to be at record lows. You're seeing the data. We're seeing the data. Part of the reason this is important is, and this is common knowledge, but when people have jobs, they get paychecks. When people get paychecks, they tend to spend money. That's really important. That's one we keep a close eye on. The other thing which we look at is, what is the rate of wage growth relative to the rate of inflation? In the vast majority of markets, as we look across the globe, the rate of wage growth is exceeding that of inflation. Effectively, the spending power of the consumer is still very much intact. These are two important indicators.
There are several other indicators which we'd look at, things like the wealth effect, et cetera, et cetera. By and large, I would say these are the things which we're tracking. Right now, they look like they're in pretty good shape.
All right, good. Let's do cross-border, since you mentioned it, high-yielding product and solution for Mastercard. I know it's been very volatile coming into the year. Investors are tracking airline activity and all that good stuff. What are you seeing on the ground on cross-border?
Yeah. I think, again, remember, Mastercard, global company, diversified. We've got the benefits of diversification. When you hear about data as it relates to travel-related spend, and you hear about it in the context of domestic spend versus cross-border, you're hearing about it in the context of specific companies. In the instance of Mastercard, what you're seeing is the following in terms of cross-border. Overall, cross-border spending trends remain stable. There is one callout which we had as it relates to cross-border travel. Again, all of this is in the context of the first quarter data, as well as the first four weeks of April. We saw a little bit of moderation take place in cross-border travel spend in select markets in the Middle East and Africa. We bring this out. Oftentimes, people will ask, why are you calling that out?
The reason we bring this out is to actually just make sure that we can make sense of the data that we share with you, because you're going to see trends in the data. When you adjust for the anomalies, which I talked about earlier, like leap year and the pull forward of spend, there are generally stable trends from a cross-border spending standpoint. I mean, the fact is, year to date, through April 28, our cross-border volumes grew at approximately 16% on a local currency basis. Still very healthy spending trends there.
Good. Sorry, we just talked about the consumer. Let's go through, just for the sake of going through it, the rest of the year on the 2025 guide. I know there's a lot of different puts and takes. You have pricing. You've got the lapping of some new deals. You have FX volatility, which is suddenly a very popular subject in payments. Walk us through that.
OK, let's start with the first quarter, because I think that kind of sets the groundwork for the full year. Our first quarter performance came in slightly ahead of our expectations, primarily driven by two factors. Number one is FX volatility was higher than what we anticipated when we put our first quarter guidance out in the first place. Number two, the rebates and incentives we had were lower than what we had originally expected. As it relates to FX volatility, as I kind of do with the look forward on this, super hard to predict. I would tell you, coming into the second quarter and the first couple of weeks of April, FX volatility levels were higher, and they started to taper off. This thing will move around. Super hard to predict.
We do our best estimates as to where we think FX volatility will be when we provide you guidance for the year. As it relates to rebates and incentives, which is going to be an impactful fact as you go through the year, the slightly lower rebates and incentives, from my perspective, is more a timing issue. I said differently, we had lower rebates and incentives in the first quarter. We expect that, based on the deal pipelines we're seeing, that that'll catch up as the year kind of goes on. I kind of think about that more as a cadence thing. A few other points to note as you think about the year going forward. Number one, Mastercard has had several wins in terms of new portfolios coming on through the course of last year. We won the Citizens portfolio last year. That started to convert.
It started in the tail end of Q1 of last year. It really started to ramp up in Q2. We had the Wells Fargo win, which took place also. The conversion of that happened in Q2 of last year. You're going to see the lapping effects of that come through from a growth standpoint. The good news is, we'll take those wins every day. We love the fact that we've got new volume coming into the system. We've got new customers. We've got new ability to sell more in the nature of services, as well as enhance the growth of their portfolios. From a growth rate standpoint, you do have the math, which plays its part in terms of lapping. There's the lapping of select portfolios, which is going to take place as the year progresses.
The second thing I'd say is, there were certain things which we had rolled out from a product capability standpoint last year for which we priced. You're going to have the lapping of that pricing happen as the year progresses as well. Those would be the big things I would call out as you think about what is factored into our full year guidance. The last point I'd make is, and I've been asked this question before, as it relates to what is it that we've assumed on the Capital One debit book. I'll mention that, as I mentioned in the earnings call, we have put in our best estimate as to what we think the roll-off of the debit book will be from Capital One. Capital One has been a very good partner for Mastercard and continues to be a very good partner for Mastercard.
We expect that we will continue to do a ton of business with them, primarily on the credit side and the services side of the business. They have also been very clear that they will migrate the debit book, which is what we built into our outlook for the year, the best we can. Again, timing of this is TBD, only because as they go through the completion of the acquisition and they start the conversion schedules, we will know a little bit more. Suffice it to say, as we learn more, we will share that with you as well.
OK, good. You have won. Mastercard has won a lot of business over the last few years. You mentioned Capital One Discover as a portfolio that's up in the air. I think there's some news flow around the Apple Card as well, Sachin. Just to go a little bit deeper, what differentiates Mastercard enough for you to retain those businesses when there are decisions that are being made, like Capital One Discover, like perhaps Apple Card, that's going to change hands from the bank side?
Yeah. I mean, the short answer, Tinjun, on that is just strong engagement with the customer. And then you bring your suite of solutions, services, et cetera, et cetera. But if you do not engage and you do not understand on a consistent basis what are the objectives that our customer is trying to achieve, it is really hard to serve them. It is very easy for us as a company to get actually put into a box and just be a supplier and them treating us like a vendor. That is the last thing we need to do. Our approach as a company has been very much around solution selling, which is trying to truly understand what is it that our customer needs, what are their objectives, how can we help them grow their top line, how can we help them control their cost base.
We bring our solutions to bear to make that come to life. The solutions could be everything from our digital technologies, which we've got, to our services capabilities around safety and security products, to our consumer acquisition engagement capabilities, again, part of our services portfolio. There is a whole suite of services. No one kind of solution is necessarily true for every win which takes place. It is about early engagement, constant engagement, putting yourself in the shoes of the customer, driving towards helping them grow their top line and reduce their cost base, all while being competitive in the marketplace.
Got it. No, that's helpful. Sachin, let's talk about another type of deal. You did announce a strategic investment in partnership with Corpay. I know you and I have talked about corporate payments and B2B a bunch in your prior role here at Mastercard. Why do the minority investment, what does it bring to you on the cross-border and the commercial payment side?
Sure. Corpay has been an important partner for Mastercard for more than a decade, actually, much more than a decade. We've been doing a bunch of business with Corpay on the virtual card side. I mean, they've been exclusively Mastercard branded on virtual cards. When I step back and I think about the nature of the relationship, it actually ties back, Tinjun, to your prior question, understanding what exactly your customer needs, and at the same time, recognizing what your strategy is and how you can actually fill certain gaps in what might be there in Mastercard's portfolio as part of how we go about doing things. In the instance of Corpay, our minority investment is in their cross-border business. Let's just be clear. It's not at the parent company level. It's at the cross-border kind of payments business of theirs.
As part of this, there is an extension of our existing virtual card agreement with Corpay. Super important. That's kind of point number one. When we think about what Corpay brings in its cross-border services, they've got the capability to do large ticket account-to-account cross-border payments. They service primarily corporate clients. Yes, they've got some bit of capabilities where they're serving some of the smaller banks and financial institutions with their solution. They're primarily US-focused. When you think about what Mastercard brings, what Mastercard brings is a small ticket capability in cross-border account-to-account payments. They've got large ticket. We've got small ticket. We've got the global presence. We've got access to the FI channel. This is very complementary.
When you step back and you think about our ability, both as Mastercard and as Corpay, to be able to serve our client base, this is kind of the best way to go about doing it, which is to partner with someone who's got an excellent capability in terms of not only currency conversion, currency management, but also in terms of basic technology and platform and reach, right, to work with them to actually meet the need for Mastercard on the large ticket side. Simultaneously, what we're doing is we're taking our Mastercard Move capabilities and making it available to Corpay to provide their corporate client base. This is very synergistic for both companies in many ways. As we went into that discussion, we said, there's a ton of stuff we do on the virtual card side. There's more we can do on this cross-border account-to-account payment side.
Let's bring ourselves together to try and think about this more strategically as we approach our customer base, where we can give Corpay a broader customer base. They can give us a capability in the nature of large ticket payments. It is synergistic from that perspective. It made a lot of sense for both companies.
Yeah. No, I didn't appreciate how complementary it was on the large versus small ticket front. No, because cross-border is hard. I think you've talked about that. And B2B is tough. No, it'd be fun to see how that comes together. Let's spin it forward, talk a little bit about tech. I know agentic commerce is a big subject. I tuned into Stripe Sessions. There was a lot of discussion about that there. Sachin, you guys recently announced Mastercard Agent Pay. What's the pitch on Agent Pay from Mastercard? What's different about it? How does it fit into your overall AI strategy?
Yeah. Look, this is really exciting. As far as I'm concerned, as we see what's going on in the world of AI and then how that's translating into the world of commerce, we think Mastercard Agent Pay is going to be a key enabler of this. Let's step back and really think about what's been going on from a generative AI standpoint, right? We're all familiar with the fact that Gen AI is being used to enable search and has been used to enable search. Those companies who are doing search are now enabling commerce as the next extension of doing search. It's not only about finding what you're looking for, but it's about closing the sale thereafter. To close the sale, there's one thing which needs to get done, which is a payment needs to be made.
Mastercard needs to be at that inflection point where that commerce transaction ultimately needs to be completed. That is what Mastercard's Agent Pay solution is all about. Really, what it is, is bringing our tokenization capabilities to be able to authenticate and register when a commerce transaction is done by an agent. The simplest way to think about this is the following, which is when you and I do a search today, if you're not utilizing an agent, we'll do the search. We'll identify a product. We'll go into the website. We'll click buy. We'll enter our credentials, our payment credentials, and we'll close the transaction that this will be shipped to you.
The world going forward could very well be in a situation where instead of you and I actually closing that transaction, an agent is authorized by the individual, by the human being, to close that commerce transaction. For an agent to be authorized to do it in a safe and secure manner, you need a Mastercard at that point with a tokenization capability, with our franchise rules, with our safety and security products, with an acceptance network to allow for that transaction to close. That is what Mastercard Agent Pay is in the simplest way possible. That is the only way I know how to explain it, which is in the simplest way possible. If you ask me the technical parts of this, I am going to get the product guy in front of you. That is the way I understand it.
I think it's important because the best analogy I can think about is the following. Let's go back a decade ago. When the likes of Uber, Uber Eats, Lyft, et cetera, were coming around, they were in the business of enabling mobility. They were in the business of enabling commerce or whatever, meeting the needs from an Uber Eats standpoint. They needed to actually have the way to close the commerce transaction in that instance, which was the payment vehicle of choice. The payment vehicle of choice, we were at the inflection point. We made our capabilities available as a network to allow for that transaction to close when the likes of Uber needed that capability. If you believe that going forward, commerce will get done by agents, we need to be there. That's what we're doing here through Mastercard Agent Pay.
Our job is not to pick winners and losers. Our job is to be available for any new emerging technology, which is going to present itself in the nature of a commerce opportunity to allow for us to be the network of choice to drive that capability.
Yeah. No, that's good. That's a good summary. I think I've definitely appreciated how difficult it is to close the transaction and all the rules you mentioned from an agent perspective. It sounds like a lot of this stands on the technology of tokens. And tokenization, I think, is a big theme for the networks, for payments in general. We've been calling out as one of the biggest probably breakthroughs to drive growth. Tell us where we are with tokenization. How penetrated is it today across your processing book? Where do you see it going? What's the monetization potential for Mastercard? Because there's clearly benefits from better authorization rates and lower fraud and now empowering agentic commerce.
Yeah. Look, I mean, tokenization is certainly one aspect of agentic commerce. We've talked about the various other capabilities which come along with agentic commerce. I think your question is more specific to what's the runway which is there on tokenization? What are the benefits around that? Here's what I tell you. I'd say, first of all, what does tokenization do? It provides for a much safer and secure checkout experience. The idea is, how can we do this in a more seamless manner with less friction and with less fraud? Roughly 35% of all of Mastercard's switch transactions today are tokenized transactions. We've seen exponential growth on that. Growth doesn't happen because Mastercard wills it to happen. Growth happens because people see value in that. The value they see is exactly what I'm saying, frictionless commerce, safety, and security.
The other thing they see is improvement in their performance. We have seen when merchants tokenize, for example, anywhere between a 3%-6% increase in approval rates. An increase in approval rates means you are taking out that friction point which normally exists when you and I, as a consumer, go to checkout and my transactions decline. Merchants do not want friction because you tend to lose a consumer when friction takes place, right? Tokenization is incredibly powerful for that. Roughly 35% of our transactions, switch transactions globally, are tokenized. We not only provide tokenization, we provide token services as well. The services are what we charge for. These are things like authentication. This is like lifecycle management. It is like cryptogram validation. That is a tongue twister. There are capabilities that we provide as part of tokenization, which are very valued.
We charge for that. When you deliver value, you can charge for it. We have been charging for it. There is a lot of runway, which still remains. The reality is this will happen. As adoption increases, you'll have the opportunity to not only charge for existing services, but you'll have the opportunity to deliver additional services, which you can charge for. Again, it's about being in the flow, enabling the tokenization to take place, delivering services on it, and then charging for the same.
Good. Tokens, that's a good summary there, Sachin. Tokens fit within, I think, the broader services category, which has been growing very, very fast for Mastercard. I still get a lot of questions around the composition of services and what builds up to that growth that you've been putting up. Can you just walk us through that for those that are less familiar?
OK, sure. Look, I mean, you've seen our financial statements, and you see we break out payment network and value-added services and solutions. I'm going to talk about the value-added services and solutions component of it. There are several categories of capabilities which sit in value-added services and solutions. Let's go through each one of them. Number one, and this is no particular order, but I'm going to kind of just list them out for you first, and then we'll talk about each one of them. First is what we call our security products. It's exactly what it sounds like. Basically, how do we help our customers, whether they're issuers, acquirers, or even the end merchants, reduce the amount of fraud that might be taking place? How do we help them prevent cyber instances, so on and so forth? That sits in the security products capability.
Huge TAM, fast-growing TAM, and something which we've been actually building capabilities both organically as well as doing acquisitions in this space. That's point number one. The next capability which sits in value-added services and solutions is what we call consumer acquisition and engagement. It's exactly what it sounds like, helping our customers acquire consumers, who is what they care for, right, and engage those consumers. This is everything from our loyalty capabilities to our marketing services. We've got personalization capabilities to the acquisition of a company called Dynamic Yield, which is doing incredibly well. You've got that sitting in that bucket, right? The next bucket over is what we call our business insights capabilities. This is the analytics and the insights we provide our customers to help them grow their portfolios. Remember, I talked about how we can help our customers grow their top line?
This is a key enabler of that. This is our consulting capabilities. These are things we do from a data analytics and insights standpoint, which we can share with our customers to help them be even more efficient in terms of their growth of their portfolios. We have gateway and issuer processing capabilities. That is the next capability. We have a capability set, which we call other solutions, which includes everything from our real-time payment assets to our cross-border account-to-account services capabilities to our open banking capabilities, all of that kind of sits in there. There is a pretty wide variety of capabilities which sits in value-added services and solutions.
I think it's important not to actually get hung up on what is the number of products or what are the kinds of products, but what is the philosophy that Mastercard adopts when it goes after these capabilities? I've oftentimes been asked the question, when you do services, are they always going to be tied to your payment rails? The short answer is we'd like for a tie-in to the payment rails, but that is not an imperative. What is an imperative is to be able to solve for pain points of our customers. You will see we recently acquired a company called Recorded Future. I can talk a little bit more about Recorded Future if you want. The reality is what we're trying to do is we're trying to solve for pain points which our customers are expressing to us when we engage with them.
It goes back to your original question, Tien-tsin, which is how do you win portfolios? You win portfolios by listening to what your customer needs. Our services portfolio has basically grown by virtue of that. That does not mean everything my customer needs, I am going to supply to them. What that means is if it makes sense for us, if we can scale it, if it is a big addressable market, and if it is fast-growing, and we can deliver on that, it is going to be hugely beneficial. What we shared with you at Invest Today was a couple of data points which might be instructive to think about how the growth of our value-added services and solutions is actually triggered, right? One, approximately 60% of our value-added services and solutions revenue is what we call network-linked.
If you're a believer that there's inherent growth in our payment network, which is going to happen, you're going to see the growth take place on the value-added services and solutions as well, to the extent there's about 60% of that which is network-linked. The second data point we shared with you is that approximately 85% of our value-added services and solutions revenues are, sorry, I've got a little problem with my eye here. 85% is based on recurring revenue. Recurring revenue is, again, important because people say, how do we know this is sustainable revenue growth, which is going to take place? These were important data points for us to share with you. We're very excited about not only our existing set of capabilities, but what the opportunity set ahead is to continue to penetrate.
Growth in this area is going to be delivered not only by the underlying trends of growth in the payment network, but also by deepening penetration of our existing solutions across our existing customer base, tapping into new customers, and then growing our addressable market by getting into new services.
Right. Good. No, you covered a lot in the short period. You did mention Recorded Future. I have to ask you about that. I think on the security software side, that was a well-respected asset, I think, within threat intelligence. So pretty large acquisition on a relative basis. Why is it important to own that asset, Sachin? And how does it fit for Mastercard?
Yeah. Look, I mean, it's important because the world is just going increasingly digital. As the world goes digital, crime tends to go where the world is going. If the world is going more digital, that's where crime and cybercrime is going to go. What Recorded Future is, is it is the largest threat intelligence company in the world. It has north of 1,900 customers and operates in about 75 countries globally. We love the asset. It's got a capability set. It's interesting, the customer base is a very diverse customer base. It's certainly corporates, but there are lots of governments who use it. They see a lot of value. What does threat intelligence mean?
What these guys do is they leverage their AI capabilities, their deep data, which they've got by virtue of having tremendous access across all sorts of data, which is out in the public domain, by the way. This is across the internet, in the dark web, et cetera, et cetera. It is one thing to have everybody's got access to that data. The question really is, what do you do with that data? This is where Recorded Future is really good, which is they've built the capability to be able to mine that data to provide real-time insights on when an impending cyberattack might take place. Customers care deeply about that. It is about sharing with our customers, whether they're issuing institutions, acquiring institutions, corporations, it doesn't matter who you are. You're vulnerable. You're going to have some sort of cyber potential threat, which is taking place.
You want to hear about that quickly. You want to hear about that early. You want to be told what you can do to actually fix it. That's what Recorded Future does and does really well. Why does it make sense for Mastercard? It makes sense for Mastercard because when you bring the power of what they do with their technology and their access to data, along with Mastercard's data, it makes the model that much more efficient. You kind of bring the power of the data of what we can bring and they can bring along with their technology. You can make this a much more powerful product. We bring a distribution channel, which is incredibly powerful as part of this. We're very excited about it. I mean, look, we closed the acquisition at the end of December last year.
We're about four months into the acquisition. Things are going well. The integration is actually progressing very much to plan. We remain very excited about what the potential of this company is.
All right. Good. No, I've heard they picked up on some incredible signals and predicted some pretty wild things. I am glad you guys owned that. We talked about Corpay. You made a minority investment in that. We just talked about Recorded Future. I would imagine, Sachin, Mastercard gets so many looks at things to buy or invest in. How do you prioritize that? Has that changed at all? What is your appetite for doing deals? I would imagine not doing a lot of auctions is probably a lot of sole source stuff. Just walk us through that quickly.
Yeah. Look, I mean, M&A has been a—and I put M&A into the big bucket of straight-up full acquisitions, minority investments, call it what you want, right? I mean, it's been a core part of how we have actually looked at growth in our business. It all starts, though, with the strategy. People will oftentimes come and ask me the question, you know, things must be cheap right now. Why aren't you buying them? The answer is, look, we're not looking to buy stuff because it's cheap. We're looking to buy stuff because we can buy it at fair value. Sure, I'd like to get it cheap, but I would buy it at fair value. The real question is, can you buy it, scale it, and drive exponential growth beyond what that company today represents? That is what we're interested in doing.
It starts with strategy. We look at whether, to meet our strategy, we need to build, buy, or partner. To the extent we're going to build, that's going to happen organically. To the extent we're going to buy, or partner, that's going to happen through acquisitions. That's been our philosophy historically. That will be our philosophy going forward. From a focus area standpoint, it's the same principles. It's about, can we buy the company and drive revenue synergies? Because really, it's all about driving growth to the top line. Number two, is it a big enough addressable market for Mastercard to be involved in? And is it a fast-growing addressable market? Because, I mean, call it what you want. We might come across as saying we're super brilliant and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, all of that kind of good stuff.
The reality is, yeah, you can be really, really good. What you also need is to be in the right space, which has got good secular tailwinds. That is what we're looking to do, which is why you can see in our services portfolio, the things we've gone after are large addressable markets with fast growth potential to them.
Yeah. No, we pay attention to what you buy because we learn a lot from it. We're five minutes left. I have like three or four questions left. I noticed we had a bunch of questions on stablecoins. I'll pick that, and then we'll close it out with one more. Stablecoins, how should I ask it? Friend or foe? Stablecoins, when you think about stablecoins, is it friend or foe for Mastercard?
Look, I mean, as far as we're concerned, stablecoins are an important evolution, and they will continue to be something we'll be involved in. We've been involved in stablecoins for some time now. The question really is, you know I think it's really important to understand what the philosophy of Mastercard is. Again, we don't pick winners and losers. We want to just be present with whatever's coming in the nature of evolving technologies and evolving capabilities. Stablecoins is nothing other than one more of those. As I think about stablecoins, I think about the following, which is stablecoins today have been rapidly growing. They've been growing in a space which has been primarily towards the use of stablecoins to enable crypto-related purchases and sales, right?
However, as they start to proliferate into an environment where people want to actually get settled up in stablecoins, we have made our network available for that. Our network is enabled to settle in stablecoins. If an acquirer chooses to get stablecoins as a settlement mechanism, not a problem. If you really peel back the onion, what does a stablecoin do? How is it different from the US dollar? It is ultimately backed by the US dollar to the extent you're talking about USDC or it doesn't matter which stablecoin you're talking about, right? There's a fiat currency, but it's behind it. We enable the settlement of numerous currencies on our network today. I kind of think about this as one more capability which will be enabled for settlement over our network. We act as the on-ramp. We act as the off-ramp.
We enable people to actually get into stablecoins using our card products. We enable people to actually use their stablecoins when they choose to use their stablecoins. If they want to get a purchase done at a merchant who does not want to accept stablecoins, we will act as the off-ramp by enabling our card products to be available there. Look, I mean, there is a lot of opportunity here. There is opportunity in the payment stream. There is opportunity on the services side of this, all of which we are very engaged with.
All right. Good. We're just about out of time, Sachin. It's so great to have you here in person. I always wish we had more time. We've covered a lot. We talked about technology and services and tokens and, of course, the macro. You talk to investors a lot, Sachin, and different analysts. What do you think is not discussed enough? Do you have any closing sort of messages here without getting lost in all this detail that we just went through?
Yeah. Look, I mean, the one thing which is very clear is the world continues to be a very volatile place. The way I kind of like to think about it is there are things which we control and there are things we do not control. The things we do not control, we cannot worry about. The things we control, we should be actually heads down executing on. Mastercard as a company happens to be, you know, we have explained what our strategy is. We think that strategy is largely being driven by strong fundamentals. We are executing on the various pillars of our strategy. There are strong secular tailwinds. We are winning share. We are growing in new and emerging spaces like commercial and new payment flows. That services portfolio provides that virtuous cycle which we need to actually help drive the overall mandate for the company.
I think it's well understood, Tien-tsin. I wouldn't say it's not well understood. I think what's important is in volatile environments, companies like Mastercard, right, have got various pillars which go well beyond the macro. That's something to keep in mind.
Yeah. No, that's important. Don't want to get caught up in the day-to-day on the macro side. Sachin, thank you so much for being with us.
Thanks a lot.
Thank you so much.