[10-Q] LESAKA TECHNOLOGIES INC Quarterly Earnings Report
Lesaka Technologies, Inc. reported stronger results for the quarter ended March 31, 2026, moving to net income attributable to Lesaka of $552 thousand from a prior-year loss. Quarterly revenue rose to $183.1 million from $161.5 million, and operating income improved to $4.1 million from $366 thousand, helped by higher sales and tighter cost control. For the nine months, revenue reached $533.2 million with a small loss of $461 thousand. The company continued to expand through acquisitions, including Atom and Mobilemart, and invested in microlending and merchant finance, with finance loans receivable growing to $99.4 million. Lesaka also recorded a $2.6 million impairment tied mainly to ATM and goodwill write-downs and revised prior-period financials to correct indirect tax and depreciation presentation errors. As of March 31, 2026, total assets were $675.0 million and total Lesaka equity was $186.6 million, with 83.2 million common shares outstanding net of treasury.
Positive
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Insights
Lesaka swings toward breakeven with higher revenue and active balance-sheet management.
Lesaka delivered year-over-year revenue growth to $183.1 million for the quarter and turned a large prior loss into modest net income of $552 thousand. Operating income improved to $4.1 million, showing better underlying profitability despite higher allowance for credit losses and amortization.
The balance sheet reflects an expanding lending book, with finance loans receivable at $99.4 million, funded partly by South African credit facilities totaling just over $201.6 million of long-term borrowings and $35.8 million of short-term overdrafts. Goodwill and intangible assets remain substantial at more than $331 million, and the quarter included a $2.6 million impairment focused on ATMs and Switchpay goodwill.
Management also corrected prior indirect tax and depreciation errors, increasing cost-of-sales-related expenses and other payables, though it concluded earlier financials were not materially misstated. Investors may focus on sustainability of lending growth, future impairment risk linked to large intangibles, and the impact of upcoming South African reference rate changes on borrowing costs under the ZARONIA-based facilities.
Key Figures
Key Terms
microlending finance loans receivable financial
merchant finance loans receivable financial
impairment loss financial
accumulated other comprehensive loss financial
ZARONIA financial
Common Terms Agreement financial