Timothy K. Jugmans
Thanks, Lachlan. Turning to slide five for the consolidated financial results, we delivered another quarter of exceptional earnings performance. Adjusted EBITDA rose 36% to $70.3 million, with margin expanding 260 basis points to 19%. Diluted EPS improved 34% to $0.55. These results reflect the operating leverage embedded in our model as we scale. Total revenues reached a record $374.5 million, up 17%. Improvement was broad-based with meaningful contributions from PSC merchandise sales and a significant increase in scrap reflecting elevated gold prices. PLO also increased 12% to $307.3 million, marking an all-time Q1 high, fueled by sustained consumer demand and high average loan sizes across all geographies. PSC revenue rose 11% to $129.6 million, generally in line with PLO. On the retail side, merchandise sales climbed 10% to $205.2 million, with same-store sales up 7%. Merchandise margin expanded 230 basis points to 37%, reflecting improved pricing, execution, and product mix. Scrap margins also expanded significantly from 23% to 34% as we benefited from higher gold prices. Gross profit of $218.9 million improved 18%, supported by contributions across all three revenue streams. G&A rose 9%, primarily due to higher incentive compensation and professional fees related to the acquisition activity. With top and bottom-line growth meaningfully outpacing operating expenses, we're demonstrating the scalability and operating leverage inherent in our platform. Before I turn it to the segments, I'd note our presentation change this quarter. We've modified how we allocate certain administrative expenses. These are now reported within corporate G&A rather than allocated store expenses at the segment level. Prior periods have been recast to conform. There's no impact on operating expenses or net income, but please see slide 22 in the earnings presentations for reference. Moving to the US segment on slides six and seven, we ended the quarter with 547 stores across 19 states. Total revenues increased $37.6 million or 16% to $269.8 million. Roughly half of this improvement is attributed to higher scrap sales, which benefited from elevated gold prices and increased jewelry purchasing activity. PLO expanded 9% to $239.9 million, with same-store PLO up 8%. Average loan size rose 12% to $231, largely due to higher prices on jewelry. Jewelry now represents 68% of US PLO, up 310 basis points. PSC improved 8% to $95.2 million, supported by same-store PLO gains. On the retail side, merchandise sales climbed 8%, with same-store sales up 7%. Merchandise margin improved 170 basis points to 38%. Jewelry scrap gross profit rose $8.6 million, reflecting our ability to efficiently monetize inventory in this gold price environment. Inventory increased 29% to $190.9 million, fueled by PLO expansion, higher merchandise purchases, including continued growth of our lightweight product, as well as a decline in turnover from 2.5 times to 2.2 times. This reflects a higher mix of jewelry, which naturally carries a longer sales cycle. Layaway provides customers a flexible path to ownership and supports healthy sell-through and inventory velocity. In addition, jewelry that doesn't sell through retail can be monetized through scrap, providing a natural floor on inventory risk. Despite lower turns, aged general merchandise remains manageable at 3.1% of total GM inventory, or $1.7 million. We have prioritized efforts to optimize inventory velocity and reduce the HGM. Segment EBITDA improved 28% to $73.5 million, as margins expanded 260 basis points to 27%, supported by robust gross profit performance and effective expense management. Same-store expenses were up 6%. Turning to Latin America on slides eight and nine, we ended the quarter with 836 stores across all countries. During the period, we opened seven de novo stores, including in Guatemala, one in Mexico, and one in Honduras, and acquired 14 stores in Mexico. Total revenues rose $16.7 million or 19% to $104.7 million. Roughly half of this improvement is attributable to merchandise sales, reflecting solid retail execution across the region. PLO expanded 23% to $67.4 million, with same-store gains of 12%. Average loan size improved 16% to $102, 9% on a constant currency basis, largely reflecting higher jewelry prices. Jewelry now represents 47% of Latin American PLO, up 650 basis points. PSC rose 18%, supported by the same-store PLO gains and contributions from new stores. Merchandise sales climbed 15%, with same-store sales up 8%. Merchandise margin improved 380 basis points to 34%. Inventory increased 10% to $56.1 million, fueled by PLO expansion. Importantly, inventory turnover improved to 3.1x from 3x. Aged general merchandise increased to 3.6% of total GM inventory, representing $1.2 million. We are applying best practices to reduce aged GM. Segment EBITDA improved 23% to $21.4 million, and margins expanded 70 basis points to 20%, reflecting continued expansion despite a 16% rise in same-store expenses, mainly due to labor costs, including minimum wage increases. From a balance sheet perspective, our robust position of $465.9 million in unrestricted cash will enable us to fund organic expansion, pursue compelling acquisition opportunities, and thoughtfully return capital to shareholders over time. As Lachlan noted, subsequent to quarter end, we completed two acquisitions that meaningfully expand our footprint. On January 2, we closed the SMG transaction. The transaction was funded through a conversion of existing preferred equity investments and notes receivable, plus approximately $9 million of cash for a total consideration of approximately $64 million. This results in approximately 75% economic interest in SMG. Following the transaction, we will consolidate 100% of SMG's financial results, with net income allocated to noncontrolling interest reflected below the net income line. We also provided SMG with an intercompany debt facility to replace its third-party financing. This intercompany debt and associated interest will be eliminated upon consolidation. Also in January, we acquired El Buffalo Pawn, adding 12 stores in Texas, for $27.5 million. Both transactions represent disciplined deployment of capital to drive longer-term shareholder value. Looking ahead on a consolidated basis, we remain focused on expanding PLO, improving inventory efficiency, and scaling operational best practices across all geographies. Based on the current trends, we expect Q2 momentum to remain favorable. Tax refund season typically drives increased loan redemption and retail activity, and the current gold price environment continues to support elevated scrap contributions. With respect to scrap, we're not in the business of predicting gold prices. We can say gold has continued to rise through the quarter. As long as that continues, we expect elevated scrap gross profit contributions. As you will note in the last quarter, once gold stabilizes, we'd expect approximately two quarters of elevated scrap gross profit margin before margins begin to normalize towards historical levels. On expenses, we remain disciplined. That said, we do expect a sequential increase through the year as we onboard our recent acquisitions and continue scaling operational best practices across all geographies. Our M&A pipeline remains active in the US and Latin America as we approach each opportunity with rigorous financial discipline. With 1,500 stores across 16 countries, we've reached a significant scale milestone and are well-positioned to capitalize on further consolidation opportunities. Now I'd like to turn it back to Lachlan for closing remarks.