Interactive Brokers Sees Q2 Revenue Dip despite 36% Jump in Clients

by Arnab Shome
  • The revenue generated from commission increased by 5 percent.
  • It ended the quarter with 1.92 million customer accounts.
Interactive Brokers
Interactive Brokers

Interactive Brokers (Nasdaq: IBKR) published its financials for the second quarter of 2022 on Tuesday, reporting net revenue of $656 million, with the adjusted figure at $717 million. There was a 13 percent decline year-over-year in net revenue, whereas the adjusted amount strengthened by 10.3 percent.

The revenue generated from commissions jumped 5 percent to $322 million. It was pushed by the higher customer options and futures trading volume with a lower stock volume.

Additionally, the net interest income of the broker increased 27 percent to $348 million. However, the income from the other sources dipped $175 million to a loss of $57 million. The disappearance of several non-recurrence gains pushed this segment to losses.

The currency diversification strategy of the broker in Q2 decreased its comprehensive earnings by $158 million, which was reported in other incomes.

The broker ended the quarter between April and June with a pre-tax income of $392 million, which is down from $541 million generated a year earlier. However, the adjusted number strengthened to $453 million from $437 million.

The pre-tax profit margin for the reported figures dropped to 60 percent from 70 percent in a year, whereas the adjusted figure witnessed a drop to 63 percent from 67 percent.

Client Metrics

Despite the declined reported net revenue and profits, the American broker witnessed a string quarter when it comes to some customer metrics. The number of customer accounts on the platform increased by 36 percent year-over-year to reach 1.92 million by the end of the quarter.

Moreover, customer credits jumped 13 percent to $92.5 billion.

However, the total DARTs for the quarter declined 6 percent to 2.17 million. The cleared DARTs came in at 1.93 million, which was 7 percent lower. Further, the customer margin loans witnessed a decline of 13 percent to $42.6 billion.

Interactive Brokers (Nasdaq: IBKR) published its financials for the second quarter of 2022 on Tuesday, reporting net revenue of $656 million, with the adjusted figure at $717 million. There was a 13 percent decline year-over-year in net revenue, whereas the adjusted amount strengthened by 10.3 percent.

The revenue generated from commissions jumped 5 percent to $322 million. It was pushed by the higher customer options and futures trading volume with a lower stock volume.

Additionally, the net interest income of the broker increased 27 percent to $348 million. However, the income from the other sources dipped $175 million to a loss of $57 million. The disappearance of several non-recurrence gains pushed this segment to losses.

The currency diversification strategy of the broker in Q2 decreased its comprehensive earnings by $158 million, which was reported in other incomes.

The broker ended the quarter between April and June with a pre-tax income of $392 million, which is down from $541 million generated a year earlier. However, the adjusted number strengthened to $453 million from $437 million.

The pre-tax profit margin for the reported figures dropped to 60 percent from 70 percent in a year, whereas the adjusted figure witnessed a drop to 63 percent from 67 percent.

Client Metrics

Despite the declined reported net revenue and profits, the American broker witnessed a string quarter when it comes to some customer metrics. The number of customer accounts on the platform increased by 36 percent year-over-year to reach 1.92 million by the end of the quarter.

Moreover, customer credits jumped 13 percent to $92.5 billion.

However, the total DARTs for the quarter declined 6 percent to 2.17 million. The cleared DARTs came in at 1.93 million, which was 7 percent lower. Further, the customer margin loans witnessed a decline of 13 percent to $42.6 billion.

About the Author: Arnab Shome
Arnab Shome
  • 6251 Articles
  • 79 Followers
Arnab is an electronics engineer-turned-financial editor. He entered the industry covering the cryptocurrency market for Finance Magnates and later expanded his reach to forex as well. He is passionate about the changing regulatory landscape on financial markets and keenly follows the disruptions in the industry with new-age technologies.

More from the Author

Retail FX