Wise

Wise is expected to shift its primary listing from the UK to the US next month, it expects to begin trading on Nasdaq on May 11.

Co. said the listing would lead to ‘greater visibility’ in the US, having grown its staff to more than 750 there. As part of its efforts, it would report its 2026 results in dollars rather than sterling under US accounting standards.
Wise beat expectations in Q4, with underlying income increasing 24% to £435.3million, exceeding analyst expectations.

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Pole eelnevaga otseselt seotud, aga ehk on kasulik info veel mõnele Wise’i kasutajale. Avatasin juhuslikult, et neil ei ole kõik eurotsooni maksed tasuta (SEPA-maksed IBAN-numbriga). Oleksin peaaegu 70-eurose arve tasumisega koos u 50 senti teenustasu maksnud ja see oli veel kõige soodsam erinevate maksevariantide hulgas. Samas olen varem ka juriidilistele isikutele sealt eurodes ülekandeid teinud ja teenustasu ei olnud, ei tea, millest see sõltub. Võib-olla saaja pangast.

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Kaks nädalat tagasi Londoni metroos:

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5/8/2026
“Over the weekend, Wise is moving its primary listing from the London Stock Exchange to the Nasdaq in the US. The UK listing will stay in place as a secondary listing.”

Wise aktsia tänasel ajaloolisel Nasdaqi debüüdil +12%.
FY2026 esialgsete tulemuste põhjal piiriüleste maksete maht 243 miljardit dollarit, kasv aastaga +31%.
“With $43T moved across borders each year globally, we’re only getting started,” - Wise Chair David Wells.

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May 12 US GAAP presentation highlights margin pressures and growth normalization, triggering selloff.

The investor webcast at 10:00 a.m. ET detailed preliminary unaudited FY2026 (ended March 31) figures under US GAAP—previously released on the LSE under IFRS in April—including $243 billion in cross-border volume (+31% Y/Y) and approximately $2.5 billion in net revenue (+19%). While growth remained robust, the presentation and related analyst commentary (e.g., William Blair initiation) underscored expected pretax margin compression in FY2026–2028 from lower interest rates on customer balances (leading to higher payouts), ramped-up investments, and incremental costs tied to the Nasdaq listing. This echoed the company’s prior 6.6% drop in November 2025 after results citing slowing revenue growth, prompting traders to sell into the post-debut momentum from May 11 (when shares jumped ~12% intraday before closing lower). The move occurred amid typical volatility for a new U.S. listing.