AtlasClear Holdings Fiscal Second Quarter 2026 Earnings Call - Inflection: Revenue +84%, Net Income and Positive Equity
Summary
AtlasClear says the December quarter marked an inflection point. Revenue jumped to $5.1 million, up 84% year over year, while the company reported net income of $6.8 million and flipped stockholders' equity to a positive $21.7 million after a two‑year balance sheet cleanup. Management points to Wilson‑Davis as the operational engine, stronger liquidity, and a growing pipeline of correspondent clearing clients as the drivers of visible momentum.
Caveats remain. The near‑term upside hinges on onboarding announced clients, notably Dawson James, and executing a pending bank acquisition that is regulatory dependent. Dilution from outstanding financings still exists, and management stresses it will preserve regulatory capital while scaling. In short, AtlasClear is out of the weeds and into execution, but the next few quarters will test whether growth converts into sustainable operating leverage and shareholder value.
Key Takeaways
- Revenue for the quarter was $5.1 million, an 84% increase year over year.
- Reported net income was $6.8 million, which includes non‑cash fair value adjustments.
- Stockholders' equity turned positive to $21.7 million, up from a deficit of $6.8 million at fiscal year‑end; management says equity rose nearly $60 million since year‑end 2024.
- Cash and restricted cash totaled $46.2 million at quarter end, including $23.1 million in cash and cash equivalents.
- Total assets increased to $77.6 million, from $60.9 million as of June 30, 2025.
- Wilson‑Davis remains the core clearing engine, delivering increased commissions, stock locate services, and clearing activity; Wilson‑Davis net capital was $14.7 million at quarter end.
- Management identifies roughly $14 million of operating costs per year as the break point where the platform achieves meaningful operating leverage.
- Onboarding of correspondent relationships is the primary growth lever; Dawson James and another client are expected to begin trading soon and should materially improve revenue run‑rate when live.
- Proposed acquisition of Commercial Bancorp of Wyoming is pending regulatory approval; sellers will take 73% of the deal consideration in AtlasClear stock, and the bank reported roughly $1.9 million in revenue and $0.5 million in net income historically.
- Management plans to file a Fed application for the bank acquisition soon, and believes regulatory timelines have accelerated versus prior expectations, though approval is not guaranteed.
- Outstanding share count is about 150 million. Potential dilution includes roughly 43 million warrant shares at $0.75, about 14 million shares tied to a convertible note, and approximately 26 million original de‑SPAC warrants with a $690 strike that are effectively inert.
- Expenses rose with revenue, driven by variable compensation, clearing and data processing costs, and stock‑based compensation tied to new executives.
- Company recorded a modest net gain from firm trading activity, but management emphasizes revenue diversification rather than reliance on trading gains.
- Regulatory capital guardrails: management cited a minimum regulatory threshold of $10.5 million, said they are targeting a practical floor nearer $15 million for net capital, and will preserve capital while funding growth.
- Management frames the quarter as a transition from constraint management to execution, but next steps hinge on client ramps and regulatory approvals to convert momentum into scalable, profitable growth.
Full Transcript
Operator: Good morning. Welcome to AtlasClear Holdings Fiscal Second Quarter 2026 earnings call. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. Joining us today are John Schaible, Executive Chairman. Craig Ridenhour, President. Sandip Patel, Chief Financial Officer and General Counsel. Jeff Ramson of PCG Advisory, who will provide the safe harbor statement and manage Q&A. I will now turn the call over to Jeff Ramson.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Thanks, operator, and good morning, everyone. Before we begin, I’d like to remind listeners that today’s discussion may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. For additional information, please refer to AtlasClear’s Form 10-Q for the quarter ended December 31, 2025, and other filings with the SEC. AtlasClear undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking statements except as required by law. With that, I’ll turn the call over to AtlasClear’s Executive Chairman, John Schaible.
John Schaible, Executive Chairman, AtlasClear Holdings: Thank you, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. I want to start by taking a step back for a moment. Over the last couple of years, our focus has been on strengthening AtlasClear’s foundation, simplifying the balance sheet, improving financial flexibility, and ensuring our platform was positioned to operate the way we intend it to over the long term. The December quarter marks a clear inflection point for the company. From the very beginning, we’ve been very clear about our objective: to build a modern, technology-enabled financial infrastructure platform designed to serve smaller and mid-sized institutions, firms that are often underserved by larger incumbents. The work of the past two years was about creating the foundation to do that responsibly. In the December quarter, we’re now seeing that vision move into execution, and that progress showed up in our results.
Revenue grew 84% year-over-year. We reported net income of $6.8 million. Stockholders’ equity turned positive to $21.7 million, and this is an accomplishment that we need to highlight. It means from our year-end of 2024, we have increased our stockholders’ equity by nearly $60 million. Finally, we ended the quarter with $46.2 million in cash and restricted cash. Stepping back more broadly, the current market environment is becoming increasingly constructive for our model. As the market stabilized and expectations around interest rates evolve, we’re seeing greater engagement from broker-dealers and financial institutions focused on operating more efficiently, managing their risk, modernizing their infrastructure, is expanding beyond traditional equities into a wider range of products and services, and firms are placing greater emphasis on flexibility, capital efficiency, and operational control.
We believe this dynamic aligns really well with the strengths of AtlasClear’s clearing-centric platform. With that context, I’ll turn it over to our President, Craig Ridenhour, to walk through operational highlights from the quarter and how we’re entering 2026.
Craig Ridenhour, President, AtlasClear Holdings: Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. Operationally, the story this quarter is about momentum becoming visible and a growing sense of optimism about where the platform is headed. For the past year, we’ve been focused on getting the fundamentals right, tightening processes, being deliberate about where we put our resources, and making sure the organization was structured to support sustainable growth. Wilson-Davis continues to perform as the core clearing engine of the platform. During the quarter, we saw continued strength across commissions, stock locate services, and clearing-related activity, reflecting deeper client engagement and broader utilization of our services. Performance has been consistent, and the excess net capital we’re carrying provides the capacity to onboard additional relationships and expand services without stretching the balance sheet. What’s changed is not just the numbers, it’s the tone of the business.
We’re spending far less time managing around constraints and far more time executing on the opportunities in front of us. With that, I’ll turn it over to Sandip to walk through the financials in more detail.
Sandip Patel, Chief Financial Officer and General Counsel, AtlasClear Holdings: Thanks, Craig, and good morning, everyone. I’ll briefly walk through financial results for the quarter, touching on revenue, profitability, and our balance sheet and liquidity position. For the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2025, AtlasClear reported revenue of $5.1 million, representing an 84% increase year-over-year. Growth was driven by higher client activity across the platform, led by continued strength at our operating subsidiary. From a revenue mix perspective, commissions were the largest contributor at just over $3 million for the quarter, with clearing fees, stock locate-related activity, and other service revenues each contributing meaningfully. We also recorded a modest net gain from firm trading activity. Overall, this reflects broader utilization of the platform rather than reliance on any single revenue stream.
Expenses increased in line with revenue growth, primarily due to variable compensation, clearing and data processing costs, and stock-based compensation associated with new executive employment agreements. As activity scales, we are beginning to see improved operating leverage across the business. For the quarter, the company reported net income of $6.8 million, which includes non-cash fair value adjustments. More importantly, the quarter reflects a materially stronger underlying operating and financial profile than a year ago. Turning to the balance sheet, total assets increased to $77.6 million, compared to $60.9 million as of June 30, 2025.... Stockholders’ equity increased to $21.7 million, compared to a deficit of $6.8 million at fiscal year-end. Meaningful inflection point for the company. Liquidity strengthened significantly during the quarter.
We ended December with $46.2 million in cash and restricted cash, including $23.1 million in cash and cash equivalents, providing flexibility to support operations, regulatory requirements, and continued execution. At Wilson-Davis, net capital totaled $14.7 million at quarter end, supporting higher levels of client activity and providing capacity to onboard new correspondent relationships in a disciplined manner. Overall, the calendar fourth quarter reflects a substantially stronger financial position, with improved revenue generation, positive equity, solid liquidity, and capital strength that supports continued execution. With that, I’ll turn the call back to Craig.
Craig Ridenhour, President, AtlasClear Holdings: Thanks, Sandip. As we look ahead, our priorities are clear. First, we’re doubling down on what works. Wilson-Davis is the powerful engine driving our platform today. Continues to perform consistently, and we’re building around it by improving the client experience, increasing operational consistency, and making it easier for emerging and growing broker-dealers to onboard, operate, and grow with us. That means refining systems and workflows to reduce friction, pairing automation with experienced high-touch service, and deepening relationships with clients who value a more responsive clearing partner. Second, we’re scaling responsibly and with conviction. Continue to see a healthy pipeline of interest from firms seeking more flexible and efficient clearing infrastructure. Our approach is deliberate and execution-focused, onboarding the right clients, supporting them effectively, and growing in a way that strengthens the platform rather than strains it.
We’re prioritizing opportunities that are accretive and fit our infrastructure, regulatory framework, and capital profile, not growth for growth’s sake. Third, we’re advancing the full AtlasClear vision. That includes continued progress toward the proposed acquisition of Commercial Bancorp of Wyoming, subject to regulatory approval and customary closing conditions. More broadly, it reflects our belief that the environment for modern, regulated financial infrastructure is becoming increasingly constructive. Smaller and mid-sized institutions want flexibility, responsiveness, and reliability, and we believe AtlasClear is increasingly well-positioned to meet that demand. Overall, the focus is execution, continuing to deliver for clients, expanding thoughtfully, and building a platform designed for long-term, durable growth. With that, I’ll hand it back to John for closing remarks.
John Schaible, Executive Chairman, AtlasClear Holdings: Thanks, Craig. I’ll close with a broader perspective. As we enter 2026, AtlasClear is operating from its strongest position yet. Wilson-Davis performing as the operational backbone of our platform. We have a significantly strengthened balance sheet, and two years of foundational work is now translating into clarity, momentum, and, most importantly, long-term value for the shareholders. Our path forward is focused and deliberate, enhancing the core clearing business with smarter technology, improving connectivity across workflows, and ensuring the platform remains adaptable as markets, client needs, and areas like fintech and regulated digital assets continue to evolve. All approached with the same disciplined standards that define our company. Thank you to our employees, our clients, our partners, and especially thank you to the shareholders for your continued trust and support.
We value that trust deeply and look forward to sharing our progress as AtlasClear continues to move forward.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Thank you, John. During today’s call, we received some good questions from shareholders, which I’ll now direct to management. There’s been meaningful capital structure simplification over the past year, but investors are still focused on dilution and convertibles. Can you walk through what the fully diluted share count looks like today, and whether we’re largely past the heavy conversion phase?
Sandip Patel, Chief Financial Officer and General Counsel, AtlasClear Holdings: Great question, and thank you. I will take this one. The current outstanding share count is approximately 150 million shares. The only remaining viable conversions is from the October 8th financing, which has allowed the company to progress its agenda. On a fully diluted basis, at the current exercise price of $0.75 a share, this would be approximately an additional 43 million shares on the warrants granted in the units and a little over 14 million shares on the convertible note if converted. I should mention the original de-SPAC warrants are still outstanding, which represents approximately 26 million shares, but at a strike price of $690 per share, I think we would all be very ecstatic to see them convert. Finally, we cannot predict what happens in the future, but we fully expect any additional dilution to be accretive.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Okay, thank you. Another, another question. You ended the quarter with over $46 million in cash and restricted cash. How should investors think about true corporate liquidity versus regulatory capital? And are we now in a position where the business can fund growth internally?
John Schaible, Executive Chairman, AtlasClear Holdings: I’ll take that one, Jeff. From a regulatory capital perspective, the threshold that we really always have to stay above is $10.5 million. So while we’ll be sitting on that cash, we never want to go below it, but we can’t maintain our correspondent license if we go below it. Fortunately, we’ve been able to significantly increase our regulatory capital as well. So the $23.1 million that I think Sandip referenced earlier is cash that we could spend, but we don’t ever want to go below the $15 million that we’re presently holding for net capital.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Got it. Got it. Very good. Okay, next question. Wilson-Davis continues to be described as the engine of the platform... At what revenue level does the clearing business begin to generate consistent operating leverage? And what does the path to scaled profitability look like from here?
John Schaible, Executive Chairman, AtlasClear Holdings: Well, I think that’s going to be an even bigger inflection point, Jeff. I’ll, I guess I’ll just keep going. Even bigger inflection point than the quarter that we just had. You know, our operating costs last year were in the neighborhood of $14 million. And that’s what we have to spend to be able to provide the services as a correspondent clearing firm, all the risk management, trading and technologies and the staff to get the work done. Once we cover that, then we can scale tremendously upon our platform. And so, you know, we’ve announced the relationship with Dawson James and a third client. We’re excited for when Dawson James begins trading. We’ll certainly make an announcement when that happens, because that’ll be above our operational costs, and everything from then on becomes variable.
You know, our margins are solid. It’s really like a $14 million threshold. Beyond that, we really get to maximum operating leverage, and we can scale significantly more than we have today, and we think that’s going to happen through 2026. The customer channel is very robust.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Great. Great. Okay, next question is kind of along those lines: Can you provide more clarity on the expected ramp timeline for the new introducing brokerage firms, and, and when investors should begin to see measurable impact reflected in revenue or account growth?
Craig Ridenhour, President, AtlasClear Holdings: Sure, Jeff, this is Greg. I’ll jump in. I’m sure people have missed my voice. No, but as far, as far as it goes, you know, this is a great question to follow up on, John, because, you know, for us, scaling the correspondent clearing business is crucial to what we’re doing with Wilson-Davis, and it’s also, just a highly untapped market. You know, to refresh everyone’s memory, we’re going to really approach smaller institutions to mid-sized institutions that are really lacking some of these solutions because they can’t get direct lined into some of the larger clearing operations. So for us, it’s a huge scalable, platform for us. But as far as what we’re doing and where we’re at with this process, you know, as John mentioned, Dawson James had previously been announced.
It’s taken a little bit longer to get them up and moving. That’s because internally, we had to go in and restructure and turn on some different technology lines to get the right correspondent clearing suite in place, which we’re comfortable that we’re now just about at that point. So we’re optimistic that they’ll be trading here momentarily. As John mentioned, we’ll note to the street when that happens. But what that allows us to do is for the correspondent clearing firm that we’ve signed, that needs to remain nameless at this point. They should be up and operational fairly quickly, and every subsequent correspondent clearing client for us should come on much more quickly and with greater ease. So we’re excited about our ability to ramp that quickly.
And going to the question of, you know, kind of the timing and the impact and reflected revenues, you know, these scale exceptionally well for us, and very, you know, and very timely. So I would think that over the next few quarters, some of our numbers should begin to reflect that, and it should reflect, you know, very positively for us. So we’re excited about where we are.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Very good. Very good. Thank, thank you, Greg. Last question I have here is, on the proposed Commercial Bancorp acquisition, can you provide realistic update on timing, regulatory visibility, and what the financial profile of AtlasClear looks like with or without that transaction?
Craig Ridenhour, President, AtlasClear Holdings: Well, I’ll take this one as well. You know, it’s a great question. We get it often. Of course, we had an announcement earlier in the week. You know, we just executed or updated an agreement to a new stock purchase agreement, which really you know puts us in a great position. So that goes into the timing. We really need to get that in place. We are preparing to file our application with the Fed. We’re optimistic that will be in the very near future. And that basically will put us into the Fed in for the approval and or the re-review, which we ultimately hope results in approval, and we’re optimistic we’ll get there.
And so realistically, looking at it, you know, the regulatory environment has changed completely over the last 12-18 months, in particular, the last 6. The regulators seem to be moving more quickly. What we thought was going to maybe be a 1-year to 18-month process, we think could be, you know, shortened considerably. You know, again, things can happen, but certainly things that are going on, from an approval process right now for other institutions seem to be moving more quickly. So we’re optimistic that this will move along more quickly, and we’ll ultimately get the approval. And then as far as the financial profile of AtlasClear, what it looks like with or without, let me address the without.
Without, we build Wilson-Davis as a correspondent clearing firm, focusing on the small institution space. And if you look at correspondent clearing firms that are out there, and some of the ones that have been in the press and in the public eye, you know, they’re tremendous institutions with great margins, great scalability, and alone, Wilson-Davis, we can build a highly profitable company that reflects in great shareholder value and equity pricing. So we’re... That’s without, you know, Commercial Bancorp of Wyoming. With Commercial Bancorp of Wyoming, what it does is it creates a full licensing platform. We’ll have correspondent clearing services for securities with the custody and banking services of a Fed member bank.
We combine those together under the same umbrella, layer in technology, and now we create a one-stop solution that provides tremendous opportunities and leverage to our client base that we’ll be going after. So although we can be incredibly profitable and are on our way with Wilson-Davis, you combine the two entities together upon effective approval, and we think, you know, we really think the sky’s the limit. We’re really in a sweet spot, and we’re very excited over the next several years. And, you know, great question.
John Schaible, Executive Chairman, AtlasClear Holdings: Can I, can I just... This is John. Can I just add a couple of things on that? Because it’s important for the bank acquisition. The terms that we announced last week, the sellers are accepting 73% of the acquisition in our stock, and they’re doing that because they see the vision, they believe in the vision, they want to be part of the vision. Then just from a straight economic perspective, the bank will be immediately accretive to us. 25, the bank had about $1.9 million in revenue, with $500,000 in net income. This is an incredibly...
It’s small, but it’s an incredibly well-run Federal Reserve member bank, and that allows us to come in and put the right technology in and do for the bank exactly what we’ve done with Wilson-Davis, which is increase revenues by 84% and tie it together in the way that Greg mentioned it. So we’re super excited about the bank acquisition. Post pending approval.
Jeff Ramson, PCG Advisory Representative, PCG Advisory: Thank you, everyone. That concludes our quarterly call. We appreciate everyone joining.
Operator: Thank you. You may now disconnect, and thank you for your participation.