Biggest changePossible events or factors that could cause results or performance to differ materially from those expressed in our forward-looking statements include the following: Events or Factors Related to Our Business and Industry • changes in general economic conditions and economic conditions in the regions and industries in which we operate, including global economic downturns and trade disruptions, or significantly slower growth or declines in the money transfer, payment service, and other markets in which we operate, including downturns or declines related to interruptions in migration patterns or other events, such as public health emergencies, epidemics, or pandemics, any changes arising as a result of the recent United States elections, civil unrest, war, terrorism, natural disasters, or non-performance by our banks, lenders, insurers, or other financial services providers; • failure to compete effectively in the money transfer and payment service industry, including among other things, with respect to price or customer experience, with global and niche or corridor money transfer providers, banks and other money transfer and payment service providers, including digital, mobile and internet-based services, card associations, and card-based payment providers, and with digital currencies, and related exchanges and protocols, and other innovations in technology and business models; • geopolitical tensions, political conditions, and related actions, including trade restrictions, tariffs, and government sanctions, which may adversely affect our business and economic conditions as a whole, including interruptions of United States or other government relations with countries in which we have or are implementing significant business relationships with agents, clients, or other partners; • deterioration in customer confidence in our business, or in money transfer and payment service providers generally; • failure to maintain our agent network and business relationships under terms consistent with or more advantageous to us than those currently in place; • our ability to adopt new technology and develop and gain market acceptance of new and enhanced services in response to changing industry and consumer needs or trends; • mergers, acquisitions, and the integration of acquired businesses and technologies into our Company, divestitures, and the failure to realize anticipated financial benefits from these transactions, and events requiring us to write down our goodwill; • decisions to change our business mix; 59 Table of Contents • changes in, and failure to manage effectively, exposure to foreign exchange rates, including the impact of the regulation of foreign exchange spreads on money transfers; • changes in tax laws, or their interpretation, any subsequent regulation, and unfavorable resolution of tax contingencies; • any material breach of security, including cybersecurity, or safeguards of or interruptions in any of our systems or those of our vendors or other third parties; • cessation of or defects in various services provided to us by third-party vendors; • our ability to realize the anticipated benefits from restructuring-related initiatives, which may include decisions to downsize or to transition operating activities from one location to another, and to minimize any disruptions in our workforce that may result from those initiatives; • our ability to attract and retain qualified key employees and to manage our workforce successfully; • failure to manage credit and fraud risks presented by our agents, clients, and consumers; • adverse rating actions by credit rating agencies; • our ability to protect our trademarks, patents, and other intellectual property rights, and to defend ourselves against potential intellectual property infringement claims; • material changes in the market value or liquidity of securities that we hold; • restrictions imposed by our debt obligations; Events or Factors Related to Our Regulatory and Litigation Environment • liabilities or loss of business resulting from a failure by us, our agents, or their subagents to comply with laws and regulations and regulatory or judicial interpretations thereof, including laws and regulations designed to protect consumers, or detect and prevent money laundering, terrorist financing, fraud, and other illicit activity; • increased costs or loss of business due to regulatory initiatives and changes in laws, regulations, and industry practices and standards, including changes in interpretations, in the United States and abroad, affecting us, our agents or their subagents, or the banks with which we or our agents maintain bank accounts needed to provide our services, including related to anti-money laundering regulations, anti-fraud measures, our licensing arrangements, customer due diligence, agent and subagent due diligence, registration and monitoring requirements, consumer protection requirements, remittances, immigration, and sustainability reporting, including climate-related reporting; • liabilities, increased costs, or loss of business and unanticipated developments resulting from governmental investigations and consent agreements with, or investigations or enforcement actions by, regulators and other government authorities; • liabilities resulting from litigation, including class-action lawsuits and similar matters, and regulatory enforcement actions, including costs, expenses, settlements, and judgments; • failure to comply with regulations and evolving industry standards regarding consumer privacy, data use, the transfer of personal data between jurisdictions, and information security; 60 Table of Contents • failure to comply with the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as regulations issued pursuant to it and the actions of the CFPB and similar legislation and regulations enacted by other governmental authorities in the United States and abroad related to consumer protection; • effects of unclaimed property laws or their interpretation or the enforcement thereof; • failure to maintain sufficient amounts or types of regulatory capital or other restrictions on the use of our working capital to meet the changing requirements of our regulators worldwide; • changes in accounting standards, rules and interpretations, or industry standards affecting our business; Other Events or Factors • catastrophic events; and • management’s ability to identify and manage these and other risks. 61 Table of Contents
Biggest changePossible events or factors that could cause results or performance to differ materially from those expressed in our forward-looking statements include the following: Events or Factors Related to Our Business and Industry • changes in general economic conditions and economic conditions in the regions and industries in which we operate, including global economic downturns and trade disruptions, or significantly slower growth or declines in the money transfer, payment service, and other markets in which we operate, including downturns or declines related to interruptions in migration patterns, slowdowns in travel, or other events, such as public health emergencies, epidemics, or pandemics, civil unrest, war, terrorism, natural disasters, or non-performance by our banks, lenders, insurers, or other financial services providers; • failure to compete effectively in the money transfer and payment service industry, including among other things, with respect to price or customer experience, with global and niche or corridor money transfer providers, banks and other money transfer and payment service providers, including digital, mobile and internet-based services, card associations, and card-based payment providers, and with digital currencies, and related exchanges and protocols, and other innovations in technology and business models; • geopolitical tensions, political conditions, armed conflicts or wars, and related actions, including trade restrictions, tariffs, and government sanctions, which may adversely affect our business and economic conditions as a whole, including interruptions of United States or other government relations with countries in which we have or are implementing significant business relationships with agents, clients, or other partners; • deterioration in customer confidence in our business, or in money transfer and payment service providers generally; • failure to maintain our agent network and business relationships under terms consistent with or more advantageous to us than those currently in place; • our ability to adopt new technology and develop and gain market acceptance of new and enhanced services in response to changing industry and consumer needs or trends; • the development, deployment, and use of AI, machine learning, and automated decision-making technologies in our operations, including risks relating to system performance, data quality, regulatory compliance, bias, or unintended outcomes; 60 Table of Contents • mergers, acquisitions, and the integration of acquired businesses and technologies into our Company, divestitures, and the failure to realize anticipated financial benefits from these transactions, and events requiring us to write down our goodwill; • decisions to change our business mix; • changes in, and failure to manage effectively, exposure to foreign exchange rates, including the impact of the regulation of foreign exchange spreads on money transfers; • changes in tax laws, or their interpretation, any subsequent regulation, and unfavorable resolution of tax contingencies; • any material breach of security, including cybersecurity, or safeguards of or interruptions in any of our systems or those of our vendors or other third parties; • cessation of or defects in various services provided to us by third-party vendors; • our ability to realize the anticipated benefits from restructuring-related initiatives, which may include decisions to downsize or to transition operating activities from one location to another, and to minimize any disruptions in our workforce that may result from those initiatives; • our ability to attract and retain qualified key employees and to manage our workforce successfully; • failure to manage credit and fraud risks presented by our agents, clients, and consumers; • adverse rating actions by credit rating agencies; • our ability to protect our trademarks, patents, and other intellectual property rights, and to defend ourselves against potential intellectual property infringement claims; • material changes in the market value or liquidity of securities that we hold; • restrictions imposed by our debt obligations; Events or Factors Related to Our Regulatory and Litigation Environment • liabilities or loss of business resulting from a failure by us, our agents, or their subagents to comply with laws and regulations and regulatory or judicial interpretations thereof, including laws and regulations designed to protect consumers, or detect and prevent money laundering, terrorist financing, fraud, and other illicit activity; • increased costs or loss of business due to regulatory initiatives and changes in laws, regulations, and industry practices and standards, including changes in interpretations, in the United States and abroad, affecting us, our agents or their subagents, or the banks with which we or our agents maintain bank accounts needed to provide our services, including regulations and guidance relating to digital currencies, stablecoins, and related technologies, the use of AI and automated decision-making systems, anti-fraud measures, our licensing arrangements, customer due diligence, agent and subagent due diligence, registration and monitoring requirements, consumer protection requirements, remittances, immigration, and sustainability reporting, including climate-related reporting; • liabilities, increased costs, or loss of business and unanticipated developments resulting from governmental investigations and consent agreements with, or investigations or enforcement actions by, regulators and other government authorities; 61 Table of Contents • liabilities resulting from litigation, including class-action lawsuits and similar matters, and regulatory enforcement actions, including costs, expenses, settlements, and judgments; • failure to comply with regulations and evolving industry standards regarding consumer privacy, data use, the transfer of personal data between jurisdictions, and information security; • failure to comply with the Dodd-Frank Act, as well as regulations issued pursuant to it and the actions of the CFPB and similar legislation and regulations enacted by other governmental authorities in the United States and abroad related to consumer protection; • effects of unclaimed property laws or their interpretation or the enforcement thereof; • failure to maintain sufficient amounts or types of regulatory capital or other restrictions on the use of our working capital to meet the changing requirements of our regulators worldwide; • changes in accounting standards, rules and interpretations, or industry standards affecting our business; Other Events or Factors • catastrophic events; and • management’s ability to identify and manage these and other risks. 62 Table of Contents
From time to time, we use interest rate swaps designated as hedges to vary the percentage of fixed to floating rate debt, subject to market conditions, although there were no such swaps outstanding as of December 31, 2024. As of December 31, 2024, our weighted-average effective rate on total borrowings was approximately 4.3%.
From time to time, we use interest rate swaps designated as hedges to vary the percentage of fixed to floating rate debt, subject to market conditions, although there were no such swaps outstanding as of December 31, 2025. As of December 31, 2025, our weighted-average effective rate on total borrowings was approximately 4.3%.
Our credit and non-credit losses have been less than 2% of our consolidated revenues in each of the periods presented. 58 Table of Contents FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS This Annual Report on Form 10‑K of The Western Union Company and materials we have filed or will file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (as well as information included in our other written or oral statements) contain or will contain certain statements that are forward-looking within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Our credit and non-credit losses have been less than 2% of our consolidated revenues in all periods presented. 59 Table of Contents FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS This Annual Report on Form 10‑K of The Western Union Company and materials we have filed or will file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (as well as information included in our other written or oral statements) contain or will contain certain statements that are forward-looking within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
As of December 31, 2024, a hypothetical uniform 10% strengthening or weakening in the value of the United States dollar relative to all other currencies in which our net income is generated would have resulted in a decrease/increase to pre-tax annual income of approximately $18 million, based on our forecast of unhedged exposure to foreign currency at that date.
As of December 31, 2025, a hypothetical uniform 10% strengthening or weakening in the value of the United States dollar relative to all other currencies in which our net income is generated would have resulted in a decrease/increase to pre-tax annual income of approximately $40 million, based on our forecast of unhedged exposure to foreign currency at that date.
We use contracts with maturities of up to 36 months at inception to mitigate some of the impact that changes in foreign currency exchange rates could have on forecasted revenues, with a targeted weighted-average maturity of approximately one year. We believe the use of longer-term foreign currency forward contracts provides predictability of future cash flows from our international operations.
We use contracts with maturities of up to 36 months at inception to mitigate some of the impact that changes in foreign currency exchange rates could have on forecasted revenues, with a targeted weighted-average maturity of one to two years. We believe the use of longer-term foreign currency forward contracts provides predictability of future cash flows from our international operations.
As of December 31, 2024, borrowings of $800 million under our Term Loan Facility were subject to floating interest rates. The interest on these borrowings was calculated using a selected SOFR plus an interest rate margin of 1.35%. Borrowings under our commercial paper program mature in such a short period that the financing is effectively floating rate.
As of December 31, 2025, borrowings of $800 million under our Term Loan Facility were subject to floating interest rates. The interest on these borrowings was calculated using a selected SOFR plus an interest rate margin. Borrowings under our commercial paper program mature in such a short period that the financing is effectively floating rate.
The same 100 basis point increase/decrease in interest rates, if applied to our cash and investment balances on December 31, 2024 that bear interest at floating rates, would result in an offsetting increase/decrease to annual pre-tax income of approximately $15 million.
The same 100 basis point increase/decrease in interest rates, if applied to our cash and investment balances on December 31, 2025 that bear interest at floating rates, would result in an offsetting increase/decrease to annual pre-tax income of approximately $10 million.
A hypothetical 100 basis point increase/decrease in interest rates would result in a decrease/increase to annual pre-tax income of approximately $8 million based on borrowings that are sensitive to interest rate fluctuations, net of the impact of hedges, on December 31, 2024.
A hypothetical 100 basis point increase/decrease in interest rates would result in a decrease/increase to annual pre-tax income of approximately $12 million based on borrowings that are sensitive to interest rate fluctuations, net of the impact of hedges, on December 31, 2025.
As a result, the analysis is unable to reflect the potential effects of more complex market changes that could arise, which may positively or negatively affect income. 56 Table of Contents Interest Rates We invest in several types of interest-bearing assets, with a total value as of December 31, 2024 of approximately $2.8 billion.
As a result, the analysis is unable to reflect the potential effects of more complex market changes that could arise, which may positively or negatively affect income. 57 Table of Contents Interest Rates We invest in several types of interest-bearing assets, with a total value as of December 31, 2025 of approximately $2.4 billion.
Approximately $1.5 billion of these assets bear interest at floating rates. These assets primarily include cash in banks, money market investments, and state and municipal variable-rate securities and are included in our Consolidated Balance Sheets within Cash and cash equivalents and Settlement assets.
Approximately $1.0 billion of these assets bear interest at floating rates. These assets primarily include cash in banks and money market investments and are included in our Consolidated Balance Sheets within Cash and cash equivalents and Settlement assets.
In addition, we are exposed to losses directly from consumer transactions, particularly through our digital channels, where transactions are originated through means other than cash 57 Table of Contents and are therefore subject to “chargebacks,” insufficient funds, or other collection impediments, such as fraud, which are anticipated to increase as digital channels become a greater proportion of our money transfer business.
In addition, we are exposed to non-credit losses directly from 58 Table of Contents consumer transactions, particularly through our digital channels, where transactions are originated through means other than cash and are therefore subject to “chargebacks,” insufficient funds, or other collection impediments, such as fraud.
As of December 31, 2024, there were no outstanding borrowings under our commercial paper program. We review our overall exposure to floating and fixed rates by evaluating our net asset or liability position and the duration of each individual position. We manage this mix of fixed versus floating exposure in an attempt to minimize risk, reduce costs, and improve returns.
As of December 31, 2025, there was $392 million in outstanding borrowings under our commercial paper program. We review our overall exposure to floating and fixed rates by evaluating our net asset or liability position and the duration of each individual position.
Our exposure to interest rates can be modified by changing the mix of our interest-bearing assets as well as adjusting the mix of fixed versus floating rate debt. The latter is accomplished primarily through the use of interest rate swaps and the decision regarding terms of any new debt issuances (i.e., fixed versus floating).
The latter is accomplished primarily through the use of interest rate swaps and the decision regarding terms of any new debt issuances (i.e., fixed versus floating).