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XP Inc. Reports 1Q22 Financial Results

XP Inc. (NASDAQ: XP) (“XP” or the “Company”), a leading tech-enabled platform and a trusted pioneer in providing low-fee financial products and services in Brazil, reported today its financial results for the first quarter of 2022.

Business Metrics

1Q22

1Q21

YoY

4Q21

QoQ

Operating and Financial Metrics (unaudited)

 

 

 

 

 

Total AUC (in R$ bn)

873

715

22%

815

7%

Active clients (in '000s)

3,504

2,993

17%

3,416

3%

Retail – gross total revenues (in R$ mn)

2,425

2,088

16%

2,725

-11%

Institutional – gross total revenues (in R$ mn)

548

294

86%

326

68%

Issuer Services – gross total revenues (in R$ mn)

121

234

-48%

270

-55%

Digital Content – gross total revenues (in R$ mn)

11

23

-53%

16

-33%

Other – gross total revenues (in R$ mn)

166

145

14%

110

51%

 

 

 

 

 

Company Financial Metrics

 

 

 

 

 

Gross revenue (in R$ mn)

3,270

2,784

17%

3,447

-5%

Net Revenue (in R$ mn)

3,121

2,628

19%

3,260

-4%

Gross Profit (in R$ mn)

2,231

1,787

25%

2,363

-6%

Gross Margin

71.5%

68.0%

346 bps

72.5%

-104 bps

Adjusted EBITDA1 (in R$ mn)

1,191

1,043

14%

1,390

-14%

Adjusted EBITDA margin

38.2%

39.7%

-150 bps

42.7%

-448 bps

Adjusted Net Income1 (in R$ mn)

987

846

17%

1,086

-9%

Adjusted Net Margin

31.6%

32.2%

-56 bps

33.3%

-169 bps

(1) See appendix for a reconciliation of Adjusted Net Income and Adjusted EBITDA

New Verticals Metrics

KPIs from New Verticals (unaudited)
Total Gross revenue from Selected Products (in R$ mn)

247

81

205%

223

11%

Pension Funds (in R$ mn)

74

43

72%

74

1%

Credit Cards (in R$ mn)

97

7

1240%

86

12%

Credit (in R$ mn)

54

17

212%

46

17%

Insurance (in R$ mn)

23

13

69%

18

29%

as a % of Total gross revenue

7.6%

2.9%

465 bps

6.5%

109 bps

Operational Performance

1. Investments

Assets Under Custody (in R$ billion)

Total AUC was R$873 billion as of March 31, up 22% year-over-year and 7% quarter-over-quarter. Year-over-year growth was driven by R$207 billion of net inflows and R$49 billion of market depreciation.

Total Net Inflow¹ (in R$ billion)

Despite a very challenging conjuncture with a new Covid peak in Brazil and the Russo-Ukrainian conflict, total net inflows were R$46 billion on 1Q22 vs R$48 billion on 4Q21, 5% lower sequentially. Adjusted by concentrated custodies, net inflows were R$30 billion, reinforcing the resilience of our business model amid the challenging scenario.

This environment weighed mainly on capital markets and client activity, which bottomed in January. Since then, a quick improvement of operating trends took place, with stronger performance in March across all our channels and businesses. Our long-term purpose is stronger than ever as we continue to improve peoples' lives and disrupt the Brazilian financial industry, of which we represent less than 2% of the total revenue pool.

¹Concentrated custodies are custodies greater than R$ 5 billion per client/economic group. These custodies are more volatile by nature.

Active Clients (in ‘000)

Active clients grew 17% and 3% in 1Q22 vs 1Q21 and 4Q21, respectively, totaling 3.5 million.

IFA Network (in ‘000)

Our IFA network comprised a total of 10.7 thousand IFAs in 1Q22, up 4% quarter-over-quarter and 24% year-over-year. We intend to maintain our current leadership and further develop the IFA profession in Brazil over the long run, as we estimate that the total number of IFAs in the country could more than triple in the upcoming years.

Retail Daily Average Trades² (million trades)

Retail DATs totaled 2.3 million in 1Q22, down 28% year-over-year and 7% quarter-over-quarter. Aligned with market trends, the decrease in DATs reflected the less favorable environment for equities in 1Q22.

²Daily Average Trades, including Stocks, REITs, Options and Futures

NPS (Net Promoter Score)

Our NPS, a widely known survey methodology used to measure customer satisfaction, was 76 in March 2022, vs 74 in March 2021, reflecting our ongoing efforts to provide superior customer service at a lower cost. Maintaining a high NPS score remains a priority for XP since our business model is built around client experience. The NPS calculation as of a given date reflects the average scores in the prior six months.

2. New Verticals

Pension Funds

Total Pension Funds AUC³ (in R$ billion)

As per public data published by Susep, XPV&P continues with roughly 50% market share in net new money for pension funds in 1Q22. Despite our consistent growth, we still represent only 3.3% of the total market, as of March 2022.

Total Pension Funds AUC was R$50 billion in 1Q22, up 45% year-over-year and 5% quarter-over-quarter. AUC from XPV&P, specifically, grew over 115% year over year.

³Total Pension Funds AUC includes AUC from XP Vida e Previdência and from third party funds distributed in our platform.

Cards

Credit Card TPV (in R$ billion)

Total TPV reached R$4.5 billion in 1Q22, versus R$0.5 billion and R$4.4 billion in 1Q21 and 4Q21, respectively. The normalized pace of growth reflects seasonality seen in 4Q21, driven by Black Friday and end of year celebrations.

Active Cards (in ‘000)

Total active cards surpassed 308 thousand in 1Q22, a growth of 27% quarter-over-quarter and 316% year-over-year. The recent increase in active cards relates to our decision to lower the threshold for credit card eligibility to a minimum of R$5,000 invested within XP’s30k platform in early December, democratizing access to Visa Infinite cards to most of our clients in XP brand.

These results are helping us to confirm how important investments are as a differentiator for cross-selling lower switching-cost products, such as credit cards. Based on client’s data and assumptions, we estimate that over 50% of our cardholders have XP’s card as their primary one. On top of that, we see cardholders with a 4x lower churn.

Credit

Credit Portfolio4 (in R$ billion)

Our Credit portfolio reached R$11.5 billion as of March 2022, expanding 12% quarter-over-quarter and 142% year-over-year. The average maturity of our credit book was 3.2 years, with a 90-day Non-Performing Loan (NPL) ratio of 0.0%.

4This portfolio does not include Intercompany and Credit Card related loans and receivables

Total Gross Revenue

Total Gross Revenue (in R$ mn)

Total gross revenue grew 17% from R$2.8 billion in 1Q21 to R$3.3 billion in 1Q22. This growth was mainly driven by both Retail and Institutional businesses. Capital Markets did not perform well in the 1Q22, mostly due to market volatility and uncertainty, leading to many postponed offerings. On the flip side, we saw the same factors benefiting the Institutional business, that reached record high volumes and revenue. This reinforces the importance of the portfolio effect, also present in non-retail businesses.

Retail

Retail Revenue (in R$ mn)

Retail revenue grew 16% from R$2.1 billion in 1Q21 to R$2.4 billion in 1Q22, as we continued to see revenues that benefit from higher interest rates performing well in the current scenario, mainly floating and fixed income. In the 1Q22, we had our all-time high activity in the fixed income platform, following the trends from 4Q21, despite lower volumes in primary offerings.

New Verticals are getting more relevant, growing three times in one year and already representing 7.6% of total retail revenue.

In 1Q22, Retail-related revenues represented 71% of consolidated Net Income from Financial Instruments, as per the Accounting Income Statement, and were composed of Derivatives, Fixed Income secondary transactions and Floating, among others.

LTM Take Rate (LTM Retail Revenue / Average AUC)

The take rate for the last twelve months ended March 31st 2022 remained stable at 1.3%, as it has been since our IPO. Our ability to add new products and services to the platform coupled with a diversified revenue profile, kept our take rate stable.

Note: LTM Take Rate (LTM Retail Revenue / Average AUC). Average AUC = (Sum of AUC from the beginning of period and each quarter-end in a given year, being 5 data points in one year)/5

Institutional

Institutional Revenue (in R$ mn)

Institutional gross revenue totaled R$548 million in 1Q22, up 86% from R$294 million in 1Q21. Market volatility boosted overall volumes in trading desks, mainly the ones related to derivatives strategies. The aforementioned circumstances led clients to a peak demand for hedging their positions, creating unique opportunities regarding client’s flow in this quarter, which may not be recurring in next ones, leading us to all-time high revenue and volumes.

In 1Q22, Institutional revenue accounted for 18% of consolidated Net Income from Financial Instruments, as per the Accounting Income Statement, and was composed mostly of Fixed Income secondary transactions and Derivatives, among others.

Issuer Services

Issuer Services Revenue (in R$ mn)

Issuer services revenue decreased 48% year-over-year from R$234 million in 1Q21 to R$121 million in 1Q22. The same factors that led to record-high Institutional revenues also caused higher overall uncertainty and volatility, leading to a weaker industry activity in Capital Markets in the quarter, mainly in the first two months, across both ECM and DCM. In March, we saw better signs for DCM offerings, with pent-up demand creating a robust pipeline looking forward.

Other*

Other Revenue*

Other revenue and digital content increased 5% in 1Q22 vs 1Q21, from R$168 million to R$177 million. Interest on gross cash was higher due to increases in interest rates, along with results coming from asset and liability management, partially offset by a lower digital content revenue.

In 1Q22, other revenue accounted for 10% of consolidated Net Income from Financial Instruments, as per the Accounting Income Statement, composed mostly of interest on adjusted gross cash and results related to our asset and liability management.

*Other and Digital Content Combined

COGS

COGS (in R$ mn) and Gross Margin

COGS rose 6% from R$841 million in 1Q21 to R$891 million in 1Q22 and decreased 1% quarter-over-quarter, with a gross margin of 71.5%, approximately 350 bps higher year-over-year and 100 bps lower than the previous quarter. Improving margins, on an annual basis, were driven by a product mix towards fixed income and floating revenues, resulting in a lower growth in COGS.

SG&A Expenses

SG&A Expense (ex-Share-Based Compensation) (in R$ mn)

SG&A expenses (excluding share-based compensation and other operating income, net) totaled R$1,051 million in 1Q22, up 34% from R$783 million in 1Q21. The increase was mainly related to our headcount expansion over the last year, with a 60% increase year over year. Most of the headcount increase is associated with our investments in client experience and technology, protecting the core and expanding our business to new verticals. When comparing to 4Q21, adding back the R $233 million coming from other operating income, net, mostly related to incentives received from third parties, our SG&A actually decreased roughly 14% in the quarter. We highlight those incentives received in 4Q21 should be seen as seasonal on a quarterly basis.

*Considers Other Operating Income, Net.

Share-Based Compensation (in R$ mn)

In 1Q22, Shared-Based Compensation expenses were 19% higher, from R$178 million in 1Q21 to R$212 million in 1Q22, following additional grants made in 4Q21. We have granted approximately two thirds of the current approved program authorizing dilution of up to 5%. We expect to use the approved dilution as originally planned: within five years from the IPO.

Adjusted EBITDA

Adjusted EBITDA¹ (in R$ mn) and Margin

Adjusted EBITDA grew 14% year over year, from R$1,043 million to R$1,191 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 38.2%, down 150 bps year-over-year, driven mainly by higher relative SG&A expenses due to our investments in new verticals. Despite the high growth and increasing contribution of the new verticals, they are still far from maturity, considering market size.

¹ See appendix for a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA.

Adjusted Net Income

Adjusted Net Income¹ (in R$ mn) and Margin

Adjusted Net Income grew 17%, from R$846 million in 1Q21 to R$987 million in 1Q22, in connection with the factors explained in the Adjusted EBITDA and a lower normalized effective tax rate. The effective tax rate, normalized by withholding taxes, was 16.0% in 1Q22, from 17.4% in 1Q21. Our Adjusted Net Margin decreased by 169 bps to 31.6% in 1Q22, still above our medium-term guidance.

¹ See appendix for a reconciliation of Adjusted Net Income.

Adjusted Cash Flow

(in R$ mn)

Adjusted Net Cash Flow (Used in) from Operating Activities¹

1Q22

4Q21

1Q21

Cash Flow Data

 

 

 

Income before income tax

856

1,121

784

Adjustments to reconcile income before income tax

(554)

503

233

Income tax paid

(237)

(305)

(236)

Contingencies paid

(1)

(0)

(1)

Interest paid

(7)

(69)

(0)

Changes in working capital assets and liabilities

(1,251)

50

(122)

Adjusted net cash flow (used in) from operating activities excluding net cash flow (used in) from securities, repos, derivatives and banking activities

(1,194)

1,299

658

Net cash flow (used in) from securities, repos, derivatives and banking activities (i)

2,313

182

157

Brazilian government bonds (Assets)

(4,435)

(2,597)

(12,024)

Securities from Private Pension Liabilities

(4,260)

(5,230)

(3,516)

Other Securities (Assets and Liabilities)

1,637

(1,018)

285

Derivative financial instruments (assets and liabilities)

(986)

1,919

(315)

Securities trading and intermediation (assets and liabilities)

1,622

(4,396)

(2,038)

Securities purchased (sold) under resale (repurchase) agreements

684

1,023

12,529

Loan operations

(1,626)

(2,297)

(1,122)

Market funding operations

5,338

5,214

1,711

Private pension liabilities

4,285

5,210

3,509

Foreign exchange portfolio (assets and liabilities)

370

(17)

32

Credit cards operations (liabilities)

290

656

256

Other activities

(607)

1,715

850

Adjusted net cash flows (used in) from operating activities

1,119

1,481

815

Adjusted net cash flows (used in) from investing activities

(126)

(1,011)

(550)

Investment in IFA Network

-

(484)

(388)

Acquisition of PP&E and Intangible

(14)

(39)

(139)

Investments/Acquisitions in associates and subsidiaries

(112)

(489)

(23)

Adjusted net cash flows (used in) from financing activities

(41)

(119)

(93)

 

 

 

Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents

952

351

172

Our net cash flow used in Operating activities represented by Adjusted net cash flow (used in) from operating activities (which in management views as represents a more useful metric to track the intrinsic cash flow generation of the business) decreased to R$1,119 million in 1Q22 from R$1,481 million in 4Q21, and R$815 million in 1Q21, driven by:

  • Higher balance of securities and derivatives that we hold in the ordinary course of our business as a Retail investment distribution platform and as an Institutional broker dealer (with respect to the sale of fixed income securities and structured notes);
  • Our strategy to allocate excess cash and cash equivalents from treasury funds, from Floating Balances and from private pension balances to securities and other financial assets. These balances may fluctuate substantially from quarter-to-quarter and were the key drivers to the net cash flow from operating activities figures;
  • Increases in our banking activities from loans operations, market funding operations mainly derived from deposits (time deposits), structured operations certificates (COEs), financial bills and other financial liabilities as a result of our expected growth in banking services;
  • Our income before tax combined with non-cash expenses consisting primarily of (i) Net foreign exchange differences of -R$881 million in 1Q22 and R$148 million in 4Q21, (ii) share based plan of R$155 million in 1Q22, R$171 million in 4Q21 and R$141 million in 1Q21 and (iii) depreciation and amortization of R$61 million in 1Q22, R$52 million in 4Q21 and R$70 million in 1Q21. The total amount of adjustments to reconcile income before income taxes was -R$554 million in 1Q22, R$503 million in 4Q21 and R$233 million in 1Q21.

¹ Excluding net cash flow (used in) from securities, repos, derivatives and banking activities.

Adjusted Net Cash Flow Used in Investing Activities

Our adjusted net cash used in investing activities decreased from R$1,011 million in 4Q21 and R$550 million in 1Q21, to R$126 million in 1Q22, primarily affected by:

  • Investments related our IFA Network decreased since 4Q21, from a use of R$484 million to zero;
  • Investment in intangible assets, mostly IT infrastructure, software development and property and equipment which decreased from R$39 million in 4Q21 and R$138 million in 1Q21, to R$14 million in 1Q22;
  • Our investments in associates and joint ventures, decreased to R$112 million in 1Q22, from R$489 million in 4Q21.

Adjusted Net Cash (used in) from Financing Activities

Our adjusted net cash used in financing activities decreased from R$119 million in 4Q21 and R$93 million in 1Q21, to R$41 million in 1Q22. This relates mainly to our payment of R$25 million in borrowings and lease liabilities.

Reconciliation of Adjusted Cash Flow

In addition to cash flow from operating activities presented in accordance with GAAP, we use adjusted cash flow, a non-GAAP measure, to measure liquidity.

We present Adjusted Cash Flow because we believe it is a useful indicator of liquidity that provides information to management and investors about the amount of cash generated from our core operations after changes in working capital.

Adjusted Cash Flow has limitations as an analytical tool, and you should not consider Adjusted Cash Flow in isolation or as an alternative to cash flow from operating activities or any other liquidity measure determined in accordance with GAAP. You are encouraged to evaluate each adjustment. In addition, in evaluating Adjusted Cash Flow, you should be aware that in the future, we may incur changes similar to the adjustments in the presentation of Adjusted Cash Flow. In addition, Adjusted Cash Flow may not be comparable to similarly titled measures used by other companies in our industry or across different industries.

The table set forth below presents a reconciliation of our cash flow from operating activities, investments and financing activities to Adjusted Cash Flow:

1Q22

4Q21

1Q21

Adjusted Cash Flow Reconciliation

 

 

 

 

 

 

Accounting net cash flow (used in) from operating activities

1,103

993

361

(+) Investments in IFA's Network

-

484

388

(+) Financing instruments payable

16

4

67

Adjusted net cash flows (used in) from operating activities

1,119

1,481

815

 

 

 

Accounting net cash flow (used in) from investing activities

(126)

(528)

(162)

(-) Investments in IFA's Network

-

(484)

(388)

Adjusted net cash flows (used in) from investing activities

(126)

(1,011)

(550)

 

 

 

Accounting net cash flow (used in) from financing activities

(25)

(114)

(26)

(-) Financing instruments payable

(16)

(4)

(67)

Adjusted net cash flows (used in) from financing activities

(41)

(119)

(93)

Floating Balance and Adjusted Gross Financial Assets (in R$ mn)

Floating Balance (=net uninvested clients' deposits)

1Q22

4Q21

Assets

(2,489)

(1,406)

(-) Securities trading and intermediation

(2,489)

(1,406)

Liabilities

18,313

15,598

(+) Securities trading and intermediation

18,313

15,598

(=) Floating Balance

15,824

14,192

 

 

Adjusted Gross Financial Assets

1Q22

4Q21

Assets

150,528

128,226

(+) Cash

3,222

2,486

(+) Securities - Fair value through profit or loss

64,600

58,180

(+) Securities - Fair value through other comprehensive income

33,604

32,332

(+) Securities - Evaluated at amortized cost

6,379

2,239

(+) Derivative financial instruments

21,442

10,944

(+) Securities purchased under agreements to resell

6,061

8,895

(+) Loans and credit card operations

14,432

12,820

(+) Foreign exchange portfolio

788

332

Liabilities

(118,619)

(95,847)

(-) Securities

(7,410)

(2,665)

(-) Derivative financial instruments

(21,345)

(11,908)

(-) Securities sold under repurchase agreements

(24,132)

(26,281)

(-) Private Pension Liabilities

(36,207)

(31,921)

(-) Deposits

(14,093)

(9,899)

(-) Structured Operations

(8,576)

(7,636)

(-) Financial Bills

(2,792)

(2,588)

(-) Foreign exchange portfolio

(1,253)

(425)

(-) Credit card operations

(2,813)

(2,523)

(-) Floating Balance

(15,824)

(14,192)

(=) Adjusted Gross Financial Assets

16,084

18,188

We present Adjusted Gross Financial Assets because we believe this metric captures the liquidity that is, in fact, available to us, net of the portion of liquidity that is related to our Floating Balance (and therefore attributable to clients). We calculate Adjusted Gross Financial Assets as the sum of (1) Cash and Financial Assets (comprised of Cash plus Securities – Fair value through profit or loss, plus Securities – Fair value through other comprehensive income, plus Securities – Evaluated at amortized cost, plus Derivative financial instruments, plus Securities (purchased under agreements to resell), plus Loans and Foreign exchange portfolio (assets) less (2) Financial Liabilities (comprised of the sum of Securities loaned, Derivative financial instruments, Securities sold under repurchase agreements and Private pension liabilities), Deposits, Structured Operation Certificates (COE), Financial Bills, Foreign exchange portfolio (liabilities), Credit cards operations and (3) less Floating Balance.

It is a measure that we track internally daily, and it more intuitively reflects the effect of the operational profits we generate and the variations between working capital assets and liabilities (cash flows from operating activities), investments in fixed and intangible assets and investments in the IFA Network (cash flows from investing activities) and inflows and outflows related to equity and debt securities in our capital structure (cash flows from financing activities).Our management treats all securities and financial instrument assets, net of financial instrument liabilities, as balances that compose our total liquidity, with subline items (such as, for example, “securities at fair value through profit and loss” and “securities at fair value through other comprehensive income”) expected to fluctuate substantially from quarter to quarter as our treasury manages and allocates our total liquidity to the most suitable financial instruments.

Other Information

Web Meeting

The Company will host a webcast to discuss its 1Q22 financial results on Tuesday, May 3rd, 2022, at 5:00 pm ET (6:00 pm BRT). To participate in the earnings webcast please subscribe at 1Q22 Earnings Web Meeting. The replay will be available on XP’s investor relations website at https://investors.xpinc.com/

Important Disclosure

IN REVIEWING THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS RELEASE, YOU ARE AGREEING TO ABIDE BY THE TERMS OF THIS DISCLAIMER. THIS INFORMATION IS BEING MADE AVAILABLE TO EACH RECIPIENT SOLELY FOR ITS INFORMATION AND IS SUBJECT TO AMENDMENT.

This release is prepared by XP Inc. (the “Company,” “we” or “our”), is solely for informational purposes. This release does not constitute a prospectus and does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. In addition, this document and any materials distributed in connection with this release are not directed to, or intended for distribution to or use by, any person or entity that is a citizen or resident or located in any locality, state, country or other jurisdiction where such distribution, publication, availability or use would be contrary to law or regulation or which would require any registration or licensing within such jurisdiction.

This release was prepared by the Company. Neither the Company nor any of its affiliates, officers, employees or agents, make any representation or warranty, express or implied, in relation to the fairness, reasonableness, adequacy, accuracy or completeness of the information, statements or opinions, whichever their source, contained in this release or any oral information provided in connection herewith, or any data it generates and accept no responsibility, obligation or liability (whether direct or indirect, in contract, tort or otherwise) in relation to any of such information. The information and opinions contained in this release are provided as at the date of this release, are subject to change without notice and do not purport to contain all information that may be required to evaluate the Company. The information in this release is in draft form and has not been independently verified. The Company and its affiliates, officers, employees and agents expressly disclaim any and all liability which may be based on this release and any errors therein or omissions therefrom. Neither the Company nor any of its affiliates, officers, employees or agents makes any representation or warranty, express or implied, as to the achievement or reasonableness of future projections, management targets, estimates, prospects or returns, if any.

The information contained in this release does not purport to be comprehensive and has not been subject to any independent audit or review. Certain of the financial information as of and for the periods ended of December 31, 2021 and December 31, 2020, 2019, 2018 and 2017 has been derived from audited financial statements and all other financial information has been derived from unaudited interim financial statements. A significant portion of the information contained in this release is based on estimates or expectations of the Company, and there can be no assurance that these estimates or expectations are or will prove to be accurate. The Company’s internal estimates have not been verified by an external expert, and the Company cannot guarantee that a third party using different methods to assemble, analyze or compute market information and data would obtain or generate the same results.

Statements in the release, including those regarding the possible or assumed future or other performance of the Company or its industry or other trend projections, constitute forward-looking statements. These statements are generally identified by the use of words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “could,” “expect,” “should,” “plan,” “intend,” “estimate” and “potential,” among others. By their nature, forward-looking statements are necessarily subject to a high degree of uncertainty and involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will occur in the future whether or not outside the control of the Company. Such factors may cause actual results, performance or developments to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements and there can be no assurance that such forward-looking statements will prove to be correct. These risks and uncertainties include factors relating to: (1) general economic, financial, political, demographic and business conditions in Brazil, as well as any other countries we may serve in the future and their impact on our business; (2) fluctuations in interest, inflation and exchange rates in Brazil and any other countries we may serve in the future; (3) competition in the financial services industry; (4) our ability to implement our business strategy; (5) our ability to adapt to the rapid pace of technological changes in the financial services industry; (6) the reliability, performance, functionality and quality of our products and services and the investment performance of investment funds managed by third parties or by our asset managers; (7) the availability of government authorizations on terms and conditions and within periods acceptable to us; (8) our ability to continue attracting and retaining new appropriately-skilled employees; (9) our capitalization and level of indebtedness; (10) the interests of our controlling shareholders; (11) changes in government regulations applicable to the financial services industry in Brazil and elsewhere; (12) our ability to compete and conduct our business in the future; (13) the success of operating initiatives, including advertising and promotional efforts and new product, service and concept development by us and our competitors; (14) changes in consumer demands regarding financial products, customer experience related to investments and technological advances, and our ability to innovate to respond to such changes; (15) changes in labor, distribution and other operating costs; (16) our compliance with, and changes to, government laws, regulations and tax matters that currently apply to us; (17) other factors that may affect our financial condition, liquidity and results of operations. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements included herein speak only as at the date of this release and the Company does not undertake any obligation to update these forward-looking statements. Past performance does not guarantee or predict future performance. Moreover, the Company and its affiliates, officers, employees and agents do not undertake any obligation to review, update or confirm expectations or estimates or to release any revisions to any forward-looking statements to reflect events that occur or circumstances that arise in relation to the content of the release. You are cautioned not to unduly rely on such forward-looking statements when evaluating the information presented and we do not intend to update any of these forward-looking statements.

Market data and industry information used throughout this release are based on management’s knowledge of the industry and the good faith estimates of management. The Company also relied, to the extent available, upon management’s review of industry surveys and publications and other publicly available information prepared by a number of third-party sources. All of the market data and industry information used in this release involves a number of assumptions and limitations, and you are cautioned not to give undue weight to such estimates. Although the Company believes that these sources are reliable, there can be no assurance as to the accuracy or completeness of this information, and the Company has not independently verified this information.

The contents hereof should not be construed as investment, legal, tax or other advice and you should consult your own advisers as to legal, business, tax and other related matters concerning an investment in the Company. The Company is not acting on your behalf and does not regard you as a customer or a client. It will not be responsible to you for providing protections afforded to clients or for advising you on the relevant transaction.

This release includes our Floating Balance, Adjusted Gross Financial Assets, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjustments to Reported Net Income, which are non-GAAP financial information. We believe that such information is meaningful and useful in understanding the activities and business metrics of the Company’s operations. We also believe that these non-GAAP financial measures reflect an additional way of viewing aspects of the Company’s business that, when viewed with our International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) results, as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board, provide a more complete understanding of factors and trends affecting the Company’s business. Further, investors regularly rely on non-GAAP financial measures to assess operating performance and such measures may highlight trends in the Company’s business that may not otherwise be apparent when relying on financial measures calculated in accordance with IFRS. We also believe that certain non-GAAP financial measures are frequently used by securities analysts, investors and other interested parties in the evaluation of public companies in the Company’s industry, many of which present these measures when reporting their results. The non-GAAP financial information is presented for informational purposes and to enhance understanding of the IFRS financial statements. The non-GAAP measures should be considered in addition to results prepared in accordance with IFRS, but not as a substitute for, or superior to, IFRS results. As other companies may determine or calculate this non-GAAP financial information differently, the usefulness of these measures for comparative purposes is limited. A reconciliation of such non-GAAP financial measures to the nearest GAAP measure is included in this release.

For purposes of this release:

“Active Clients” means the total number of retail clients served through our XP Investimentos, Rico, Clear, XP Investments and XP Private (Europe) brands, with an AUC above R$100.00 or that have transacted at least once in the last thirty days. For purposes of calculating this metric, if a client holds an account in more than one of the aforementioned entities, such client will be counted as one “active client” for each such account. For example, if a client holds an account in each of XP Investimentos and Rico, such client will count as two “active clients” for purposes of this metric.

“Assets Under Custody (AUC)” means the market value of all client assets invested through XP’s platform and that is related to reported Retail Revenue, including equities, fixed income securities, mutual funds (including those managed by XP Gestão de Recursos Ltda., XP Advisory Gestão de Recursos Ltda. and XP Vista Asset Management Ltda., as well as by third-party asset managers), pension funds (including those from XP Vida e Previdência S.A., as well as by third-party insurance companies), exchange traded funds, COEs (Structured Notes), REITs, and uninvested cash balances (Floating Balances), among others. Although AUC includes custody from Corporate Clients that generate Retail Revenue, it does not include custody from institutional clients (asset managers, pension funds and insurance companies).

Rounding

We have made rounding adjustments to some of the figures included in this annual report. Accordingly, numerical figures shown as totals in some tables may not be an arithmetic aggregation of the figures that preceded them.

Unaudited Managerial Income Statement (in R$ mn)

1Q22

1Q21

YoY

4Q21

QoQ

Managerial Income Statement

 

 

 

 

 

Total Gross Revenue

3,270

2,784

17%

3,447

-5%

Retail

2,425

2,088

16%

2,725

-11%

Institutional

548

294

86%

326

68%

Issuer Services

121

234

-48%

270

-55%

Digital Content

11

23

-53%

16

-33%

Other

166

145

14%

110

51%

Net Revenue

3,121

2,628

19%

3,259.63

-4%

COGS

(891)

(841)

6%

(896)

-1%

As a % of Net Revenue

(28.5%)

(32.0%)

3.5 p.p

(27.5%)

-1.0 p.p

Gross Profit

2,231

1,787

25%

2,363

-6%

Gross Margin

71.5%

68.0%

3.5 p.p

72.5%

-1.0 p.p

SG&A

(1,051)

(765)

37%

(989)

6%

Share Based Compensation1

(200)

(158)

27%

(133)

51%

EBITDA

980

864

13%

1,241

-21%

EBITDA Margin

31.4%

32.9%

-1.5 p.p

38.1%

-6.7 p.p

Adjusted EBITDA

1,191

1,043

14%

1,390

-14%

Adjusted EBITDA Margin

38.2%

39.7%

-1.5 p.p

42.7%

-4.5 p.p

D&A

(61)

(70)

-12%

(52)

16%

EBIT

919

795

16%

1,189

-23%

Interest expense on debt

(48)

(10)

406%

(57)

-16%

Share of profit or (loss) in joint ventures and associates

(14)

(1)

1214%

(11)

-209%

Taxable equivalent adjustments2

161

105

53%

157

2%

EBT (Taxable equivalent)

1,017

889

14%

1,278

-20%

Tax expense (Normalized)

(163)

(155)

5%

(287)

-43%

Effective tax rate (Normalized)

(16.0%)

(17.4%)

1.4 p.p

(22.5%)

6.4 p.p

Net Income

854

734

16%

991

-14%

Net Margin

27.4%

27.9%

-0.6 p.p

30.4%

-3.0 p.p

Adjustments

133

111

19%

95

40%

Adjusted Net Income

987

846

17%

1,086

-9%

Adjusted Net Margin

31.6%

32.2%

-0.6 p.p

33.3%

-1.7 p.p

¹ A portion of total Share-Based Compensation is related to IFAs and allocated in COGS. ² Tax adjustments are related to tax withholding expenses that are recognized net in our gross revenue.

Accounting Income Statement

(in R$ mn)

1Q22

1Q21

YoY

4Q21

QoQ

Accounting Income Statement

 

 

 

 

 

Net revenue from services rendered

1,265

1,455

-13%

1,552

-18%

Brokerage commission

560

641

-13%

541

4%

Securities placement

291

469

-38%

493

-41%

Management fees

329

310

6%

381

-14%

Insurance brokerage fee

36

32

13%

33

9%

Educational services

8

19

-58%

11

-28%

Banking Fees

93

17

446%

77

21%

Other services

89

102

-13%

165

-46%

Taxes and contributions on services

(141)

(136)

4%

(149)

-5%

Net income from financial instruments at amortized cost and at fair value through other comprehensive income

(145)

31

-569%

(543)

-73%

Net income from financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss

2,001

1,143

75%

2,250

-11%

Total revenue and income

3,121

2,628

19%

3,260

-4%

Operating costs

(864)

(837)

3%

(866)

0%

Selling expenses

(19)

(44)

-57%

(64)

-70%

Administrative expenses

(1,293)

(966)

34%

(1,344)

-4%

Other operating revenues (expenses), net

0

18

-100%

233

-100%

Expected credit losses

(26)

(3)

665%

(30)

-13%

Interest expense on debt

(48)

(10)

406%

(57)

-16%

Share of profit or (loss) in joint ventures and associates

(14)

(1)

1214%

(11)

-209%

Income before income tax

856

784

9%

1,121

-24%

Income tax expense

(2)

(50)

-96%

(130)

-98%

Effective tax rate

(0.3%)

(6.4%)

6.1 p.p

(11.6%)

11.3 p.p

Net income for the period

854

734

16%

991

-14%

Balance Sheet (in R$ mn)

1Q22

4Q21

Assets

 

 

Cash

3,222

2,486

Financial assets

150,281

127,745

Fair value through profit or loss

86,041

69,124

Securities

64,600

58,180

Derivative financial instruments

21,442

10,944

Fair value through other comprehensive income

33,604

32,332

Securities

33,604

32,332

Evaluated at amortized cost

30,635

26,289

Securities

6,379

2,239

Securities purchased under agreements to resell

6,061

8,895

Securities trading and intermediation

2,489

1,406

Accounts receivable

358

469

Loan Operations

14,432

12,820

Other financial assets

917

462

Other assets

4,960

4,688

Recoverable taxes

168

153

Rights-of-use assets

269

285

Prepaid expenses

3,972

3,983

Other

551

268

Deferred tax assets

1,376

1,273

Investments in associates and joint ventures

2,163

2,013

Property and equipment

298

314

Goodwill & Intangible assets

794

821

Total Assets

163,093

139,340

 

 

1Q22

4Q21

Liabilities

 

 

Financial liabilities

110,397

91,358

Fair value through profit or loss

28,755

14,573

Securities

7,410

2,665

Derivative financial instruments

21,345

11,908

Evaluated at amortized cost

81,643

76,785

Securities sold under repurchase agreements

24,132

26,281

Securities trading and intermediation

18,313

15,598

Financing instruments payable

28,997

24,429

Accounts payables

463

868

Borrowings

1,691

1,929

Other financial liabilities

8,048

7,680

Other liabilities

37,127

33,534

Social and statutory obligations

443

1,022

Taxes and social security obligations

435

550

Private pension liabilities

36,207

31,921

Provisions and contingent liabilities

31

29

Other

11

11

Deferred tax liabilities

28

29

Total Liabilities

147,552

124,921

Equity attributable to owners of the Parent company

15,538

14,417

Issued capital

0

0

Capital reserve

15,148

14,923

Other comprehensive income

(292)

(335)

Treasury

(172)

(172)

Retained earnings

854

-

Non-controlling interest

3

3

Total equity

15,541

14,420

Total liabilities and equity

163,093

139,340

Adjusted EBITDA (in R$ mn)

1Q22

1Q21

YoY

4Q21

QoQ

EBITDA

980

864

13%

1,241

-21%

(+) Share Based Compensation

212

178

19%

149

42%

Adj. EBITDA

1,191

1,043

14%

1,390

-14%

Adjusted Net Income (in R$ mn)

1Q22

1Q21

YoY

4Q21

QoQ

Net Income

854

734

16%

991

-14%

(+) Share Based Compensation

212

178

19%

149

42%

(+/-) Taxes

(79)

(67)

19%

(54)

46%

Adj. Net Income

987

846

17%

1,086

-9%

 

Contacts

Investor Relations Team



André Martins

Antonio Guimarães

Marina Montemor

ir@xpi.com.br

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