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International Money Express, Inc. (IMXI) Business

Verbatim Item 1 Business section from International Money Express, Inc.'s latest 10-K. Filing date: 2026-03-06. Accession: 0001628280-26-015647.

This page reproduces the company's own Item 1 Business text from the linked SEC filing. It is filer text, not grepcent analysis, scoring, or investment advice.

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ITEM 1.    BUSINESS

Overview

International Money Express, Inc. (the “Company” or “Intermex”) is a global leading omnichannel money remittance services company focused primarily on the United States of America (“United States” or “U.S.”) to Latin America and the Caribbean (“LAC”) corridor, which includes Mexico, Central and South America and the Caribbean. We also provide our remittance services to Africa and Asia from the United States and offer money transfer services from Canada to Latin America and Africa. We also provide remittance services from Spain, Italy and Germany to Africa, Asia and Latin America. We utilize our proprietary technology to deliver convenient, reliable and value-added services to consumers through a broad network of sending and paying agents. Our remittance services, which include a comprehensive suite of ancillary financial processing solutions and payment services, are available in all 50 states in the U.S., Washington D.C., Puerto Rico and 13 provinces in Canada, as well as in certain locations in Spain, Italy and Germany, where consumers can send money to beneficiaries in more than 60 countries in LAC, Africa, Asia and Europe. Our services are accessible in person through over 100,000 independent sending and paying agents and 118 Company-operated stores, as well as digitally through the Internet via our websites, co-branded websites with digital partners and mobile device applications. Additionally, our product and service portfolio include online payment options, pre-paid debit cards and direct deposit payroll cards, which may present different cost, demand, regulatory and risk profiles relative to our core money remittance business.

Money remittance services to LAC countries, mainly Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and the Dominican Republic, are the primary source of our revenue. These services involve the movement of funds on behalf of an originating consumer for receipt by a designated beneficiary at a designated receiving location. Our remittances to LAC countries are primarily generated in the United States by consumers with roots in Latin American and Caribbean countries, many of whom do not have an existing relationship with a traditional full-service financial institution capable of providing the services we offer. We provide these consumers with flexibility and convenience to help them meet their financial needs. We believe many consumers who use our services may have access to traditional banking services, but prefer to use our services based on reliability, convenience and value. We generate money remittance revenue from fees paid by consumers (i.e., the senders of funds), which we share with our sending agents and digital partners in the originating country and our paying agents in the destination country. Remittances paid in local currencies that are not pegged to the U.S. dollar, Canadian dollar or Euro can also generate revenue if we are successful in our daily management of currency exchange spreads. We also generate revenue from our Remittance-as-a-Service (“RaaS”) relationships with digital partners where we receive a fee for facilitating money transfers processed through our proprietary software systems, using our money transmitter licenses and payer network relationships.

Our money remittance services enable consumers to send funds through our broad network of locations in the United States, Canada, Spain, Italy and Germany that are primarily operated by third-party businesses, as well as by Company-operated stores, located in those jurisdictions. Transactions are processed and payment is collected by our agent (“sending agent(s)”) and those funds become available for pickup by the beneficiary at the designated destination, usually within minutes, at any Intermex payer location (“paying agent(s)”). We refer to our sending agents and our paying agents collectively as agents. In addition, our services are offered digitally through the Internet via our websites (intermexonline.com and online.i-transfer.es), co-branded websites with our digital partners and mobile device applications. For the year ended December 31, 2025, we have grown our agent network by approximately 5.4%. For the year ended December 31, 2025, principal amount sent decreased by approximately 2.2% to $23.8 billion, as compared to fiscal year 2024, and total remittances processed were approximately 53.9 million, representing a decrease of approximately 8.5%, as compared to fiscal year 2024 primarily related to decreased volume processed that we attribute to a contraction in the remittance market, particularly the Mexico corridor coupled with a change in consumer behavior remitting a lower number of money transfers but at a higher average principal sent per transaction. This overall decrease was partially offset by increased volume generated by our digital channels and European subsidiaries.

Pending Merger with The Western Union Company

On August 10, 2025, the Company entered into an Agreement and Plan of Merger (the “Merger Agreement”), by and among the Company, The Western Union Company, a Delaware corporation (“Western Union”), and Ivey Merger Sub, Inc., a Delaware corporation and wholly owned subsidiary of Western Union (“Merger Sub”). Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth therein, Merger Sub will merge with and into the Company and the Company will become an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Western Union. The Merger Agreement provides that each share of the Company’s common stock issued and outstanding immediately prior to the effective time of the Merger (subject to limited exceptions such as treasury shares or shares as to which dissenters’ rights have been properly exercised in accordance with Delaware law) will be cancelled and converted into the right to receive $16.00 per share in cash, without interest.

Consummation of the Merger is subject to the satisfaction or waiver of certain remaining customary closing conditions, including: (i) the absence of any judgment by any governmental authority of competent jurisdiction or any applicable law that enjoins, restrains or otherwise makes illegal, prevents or prohibits consummation of the Merger (“Restraint”), (ii) the receipt of applicable consents, approvals or other clearances required to be obtained under the Merger Agreement, including with respect to the Company’s or its subsidiaries’ money transmitter licenses, and (iii) other customary closing conditions.

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In addition, the consummation of the Merger was conditioned upon (i) the expiration or termination of the applicable waiting period under the HSR Act, which waiting period under expired on October 6, 2025, and (ii) approval of the stockholders of the Company, which approval was received at a special meeting of stockholders of the Company on December 9, 2025.

To date, money transmission regulators in 48 applicable U.S. states and territories have provided their approval of or non-objection to the Merger, and approval or non-objection is currently pending with the remaining 4 U.S. states and territories. Additionally, the parties have received approval from the United Kingdom Financial Conduct Authority and, therefore, the only approval from international money transmission regulators that remains pending is from the Bank of Spain. The Company cannot predict with certainty whether and when any of the remaining required closing conditions will be satisfied or if the Merger will close, but currently anticipates that the Merger will be consummated in the second quarter of 2026.

The Merger Agreement contains termination rights for the Company and Western Union, including a right for either party to terminate if the Merger is not consummated by May 11, 2026 (subject to certain automatic extensions to obtain certain regulatory approvals as set forth in the Merger Agreement). Upon termination of the Merger Agreement, (i) Western Union, upon termination of the Merger Agreement by the Company or Western Union due to a Restraint relating to any antitrust laws, or the failure to obtain necessary consents, approvals or clearances related to antitrust laws, will be required to pay the Company a termination fee equal to $27.3 million, and (ii) the Company, under specified circumstances, including termination of the Merger Agreement by (a) the Company to enter into a Company Acquisition Agreement that provides for a Superior Proposal (each, as defined in the Merger Agreement) prior to receipt of approval of the stockholders of the Company or (b) by Western Union as a result of an Adverse Recommendation Change (as defined in the Merger Agreement), will be required to pay Western Union a termination fee equal to $19.8 million.

Our Competitive Strengths

•Primary focus on profitable corridors. Unlike many of our competitors, who we believe prioritize global reach over growth and profitability, we are focused on certain geographical regions in which there is a concentration of a significant portion of the world’s money remittance volume. We believe the LAC, Africa and Asia corridors provide an attractive operating environment with significant opportunity for future growth. According to the latest available data published by the World Bank, the LAC corridor continues to be one of the largest remittance corridors in the world.

•Highly scalable, proprietary software platforms. We provide our money remittance services utilizing our internally developed proprietary software systems, which we believe enhance the productivity of our network of sending agents, enabling them to quickly, reliably and cost-effectively process remittance transactions. Also, our proprietary applications enable our consumers to rapidly process money transmissions through a variety of digital channel offerings. Our proprietary software systems are designed to incorporate real-time compliance functionality, which improves our regulatory compliance and helps to minimize fraud. Our developed platforms have the ability to handle traffic well in excess of the number of transactions we currently process. Our money remittance platforms have proven reliable, with our 2025 downtime being less than 0.05%.

•Highly selective sending agent recruitment process designed to identify productive long-term partners. We strategically target sending agents for our network only after a metric-based analysis of potential productivity and a thorough vetting process. In our sending agent selection process, we focus on geographic locations that we believe are likely to have high customer volume and demand for our services. By closely monitoring individual sending agent performance and money remittance trends, we can offer our sending agents real-time technical support and marketing assistance to help increase their productivity and remittance volume.

•Strong relationships with major banks and financial institutions. Our relationships with clearing, check processing, trading and exchange rate and cash management banks are critical to an efficient and reliable remittance network. We benefit from our strong and long-term relationships with a number of large banks and financial institutions. We maintain strong relationships with a number of other national and regional banking and financial institutions in the United States, Canada, Spain, Italy, the United Kingdom and Latin America. For example, we have maintained a long-term relationship with Wells Fargo, Bank of America and US Bank, among others. Due to increasing regulatory scrutiny of banks and financial institutions, we believe that new banking relationships may be difficult to develop for new, start-up competitors in the industry, hence creating a barrier to entry to new competition and making our existing relationships a competitive advantage.

•Powerful brand with strong consumer awareness and loyalty in the corridors we operate. We believe we are a global leading money remittance provider from the United States to the LAC corridor, processing 18.6% of the aggregate volume of remittances to Mexico according to the latest available data published by the Central Bank of Mexico in 2025 and 24.6% of the aggregate volume of remittances to Guatemala according to the latest available data published by the Central Bank of Guatemala in 2025. We believe that consumers associate the Intermex brand with reliability, strong customer service and the ability to safely and efficiently remit their funds. The information contained in this paragraph is based on “Revenues by Workers’ Remittances” published in the Central Bank of Mexico’s website and “Income from family remittance” published in the Central Bank of Guatemala’s website.

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•Strong compliance processes and procedures. We operate in a highly-regulated environment and are reviewed by regulators and external auditors periodically. We maintain a comprehensive and rigorous compliance process with policies, procedures and internal controls designed to exceed current regulatory requirements. Our software also includes embedded compliance systems that provide real-time transaction alerts and Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”) screening. Our risk and compliance management tools include programs by Equifax, Experian, LexisNexis and TransUnion, among others.

•Experienced and proven management team. Our management team consists of financial services industry veterans with a track record of achieving profitable growth. Our team is led by our Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) and President, Robert Lisy, with a successful 30-plus year track record in the retail financial services and electronic payment processing industry.

Our Growth Strategy

Our strategies to maintain and grow our business include:

•Invest in the marketing and adoption of our digital channels and value-added services to expand our customer base and revenue generation. Our money remittance platforms currently enable consumers to send funds from the United States, Spain, Italy and Germany to the LAC corridor, Europe, Asia and Africa through the Internet via our websites (intermexonline.com and online.i-transfer.es), co-branded websites with our digital partners and mobile device applications. We intend to continue the level of investment in enhancing and marketing our digital applications to increase consumer adoption of our safe, easy-to-use digital platforms for remitting funds and performing other financial services. We believe these digital channels expand our potential customer base as digital transaction capabilities have become more relevant to consumers in the LAC and other corridors. Our digital channels offering also generates growth from various demographic groups as consumers continue to migrate to conducting financial transactions digitally.

•Expand our market share in our largest corridors. The three largest remittance corridors we serve are the United States to Mexico, United States to Guatemala and United States to the Dominican Republic. According to the latest available data in the World Bank Remittance Matrix, the United States to Mexico remittance market continues to be one of the largest in the world. We aim to continue to expand our market share in those states where we are currently well-established and poised for continued profitable growth within those markets via targeted regional penetration. We believe that we can leverage our current customer data to increase repeat customer usage, track and effectively recapture one-time users of our service and improve sending agent productivity to drive growth in these states. We also execute a targeted marketing effort to realize significantly increased market share growth in large states where we are underrepresented.

•Expand our services into new corridors and emerging markets. We believe that there is significant room to grow our business in underserved geographic regions in the LAC corridor where there is demand from consumers and agents for our value-added approach to money remittances. Specifically, we continue to target future growth opportunities via new corridors from the United States to other non-Spanish speaking regions, including the Caribbean and other continents. In recent years, we expanded our services to allow remittances to Africa and Asia from the United States, began offering sending services from Canada to Latin America and Africa, and completed acquisitions which further strengthen our presence in Latin America and position us to grow in the Europe to Africa, Asia and LAC corridors.

Segments

Our business is organized around one reportable segment that provides money remittance services primarily between the U.S. and Canada to Mexico, Guatemala and other countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia through a network of authorized agents located in various unaffiliated retail establishments and 118 Company-operated stores throughout the U.S., Canada, Spain, Italy and Germany, as well as digitally through the Internet via our websites and mobile device applications. This is based on the objectives of the business and how our chief operating decision maker, the CEO and President, monitors operating performance and allocates resources.

Operations and Services

Money remittance services to LAC countries, primarily Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and the Dominican Republic, are the primary source of our revenue. These services involve the movement of funds on behalf of an originating consumer for receipt by a designated beneficiary at a designated receiving location. Our remittances to LAC countries are primarily generated in the United States by consumers with roots in Latin American and Caribbean countries, many of whom do not have an existing relationship with a traditional full-service financial institution capable of providing the services we offer. We provide these consumers with flexibility and convenience to help them meet their financial needs. We believe many consumers who use our services may have access to traditional banking services, but prefer to use our services based on reliability, convenience and value. We generate money remittance revenue from fees paid by consumers (i.e., the senders of funds), which we share with our sending agents in the originating country and our paying agents in the destination country. Remittances paid in local currencies that are not pegged to the U.S. dollar, Canadian dollar or Euro also earn revenue through our daily management of currency exchange spreads. We also generate revenue from our RaaS relationships with digital partners

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where we receive a fee for facilitating money transfers processed through our proprietary software systems, money transmitter licenses and payer network relationships.

The majority of our money remittance transactions are generated through our agent network of retail locations and Company-operated stores where the transaction is processed and payment is collected by our sending agent. Those funds become available for pickup by the beneficiary at the designated receiving destination, usually within minutes, at any Intermex payer location. In select countries, the designated recipient may also receive the remitted funds via a deposit directly to the recipient’s bank account, debit cards, mobile wallets, and home delivery in selected markets. Our locations in the United States, Canada, Spain and Italy, also referred to as our sending agents, tend to be individual establishments, such as multi-service stores, grocery stores, convenience stores, bodegas and other retail locations. Our payers in LAC countries are referred to as paying agents, and generally consist of large banks and financial institutions or large retail chains. Grupo Elektra, S.A.B. de C.V. (“Elektra”) is our largest paying agent and processes a significant portion of remittances in the LAC corridor. Each of our sending agents and our paying agents are primarily operated by third-party businesses where our money remittance services are offered. Additionally, we operate a number of retail locations in the United States, Canada, Italy and Germany, which we refer to as Company-operated stores and where our money remittance services are available. We also operate subsidiary payer networks in Mexico and Guatemala. These networks provide coverage of payer locations that reach some of the most remote areas in those countries, providing increased convenience to consumers in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Guatemala.

At sending agent locations, consumers may initiate a transaction directly with an agent, or through a direct-dialed telephone conversation from the agent location to our call centers. Many of our sending agents operate in locations that are open outside of traditional banking hours, including nights and weekends. Our sending agents understand the markets that they serve and coordinate with our sales and marketing teams to develop business plans for those markets. We hold promotional events for our sending agents to help familiarize them with our brands and to incentivize the agents to promote our services to consumers.

Our money remittance services are also available on the Internet via our websites (intermexonline.com and online.i-transfer.es), co-branded websites with our digital partners and mobile device applications, enabling consumers to send money conveniently 24 hours a day from their computer or mobile devices. Consumers are able to select a variety of sending methods, including cash pickup at thousands of locations, direct deposit into bank accounts, debit cards, mobile wallets, and home delivery in selected markets. Also, our enhanced digital mobile money remittance applications provide consumers with safe, easy-to-use features for remitting funds with a debit or credit card. Our internet-based money transmission services and digital channel offerings continue to grow at a faster pace as compared with our services provided by our network of sending agents or Company-operated stores.

We maintain call centers in Mexico and Guatemala, providing call center services 365 days per year and customer service in English, French, Italian and Spanish, as well as the possibility of service in many of the regional dialects that our customers speak. Our call centers are able to provide customer service for inbound customer calls and have technology available for direct calls from customers at our agent locations in processing remittance transactions.

Cash Management Bank Relationships

We buy and sell a number of global currencies and maintain a network of settlement accounts to facilitate the timely funding of money remittances and foreign exchange trades. Our relationships with clearing, check processing, trading and exchange rate and cash management banks are critical to an efficient and reliable remittance network. We benefit from our strong and long-term relationships with a number of large banks and financial institutions. We maintain strong relationships with a number of other national and regional banking and financial institutions in the United States, Canada, Spain, Italy, Germany, the United Kingdom and Latin America. In addition, we have benefited from our long relationship with US Bank, which manages our main operating account, and from strong relationships with Wells Fargo and Bank of America, which serve as our primary banks for exchange rate management with respect to the foreign currencies in which we transact.

Information Technology

Currently, all of our money processing software used in the United States, Spain, Italy, Germany and Canada is proprietary and has been developed primarily by our internal software development team. Our money processing software acts as a point of sale for our money remittance transactions and incorporates real-time compliance functionality, which improves our regulatory compliance and helps to minimize fraud. Our money processing software is critical to our operations while our back-office software is critical for settling our transactions.

Also, our money remittance platforms enable consumers to send funds through the Internet via our websites (intermexonline.com and online.i-transfer.es), co-branded websites with our digital partners and mobile device applications from consumers' computers or mobile devices. Our enhanced digital mobile money remittance applications provide consumers with safe and easy-to-use features for remitting funds.

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In addition to our money remittance software, digital platforms and mobile applications, we continue to develop programs and defenses against cyber-attacks. The foundation of our cybersecurity program is based on recognized best practices and standards for cybersecurity and information technology that include the Center of Internet Security (“CIS”) Critical Security Controls Framework. The CIS Critical Security Controls Framework is a prioritized set of safeguards to mitigate the most prevalent cyber-attacks against systems and networks. We utilize a number of third-party vendors and automated tools that monitor our systems and inform us of any attempted attacks. Our Chief Information Officer (“CIO”) reports periodically to our board of directors regarding our cybersecurity policies and practices. See Item 1C - Cybersecurity for additional detail.

In addition to our proprietary and internally developed software systems, we utilize historical and predictive data to analyze market trends, performance of market territories, agent performance and consumer habits in real time.

We continually invest in our technology platforms to ensure they have the capacity to handle traffic well in excess of the number of transactions we currently process. A load balancing configuration between tier-1 datacenters, in addition to failover redundancy, provides uptime performance. Our technology platforms have experienced limited downtime, with our 2025 downtime being less than 0.05%.

Our Transaction Processing Engine (“TPE”) allows us to process money remittances reliably and quickly by leveraging a proprietary rules engine to apply granular-level product feature customization. The TPE also leverages real-time risk management algorithms to improve our regulatory compliance and helps to minimize fraud.

Our internally developed and proprietary payer Application Programming Interface (“API”) platform securely and efficiently integrates our TPE directly with the platforms of our paying agents, so that we can rapidly deliver money remittances to our paying agents while optimizing the efficiency/speed of adding new payers to our network and integrating payers’ software and systems with our software and systems.

Intellectual Property

The Intermex brand is critical to our business. In the markets in which we compete, we derive benefit from our brand, as we believe the Intermex brand is recognized for its speed, cost effectiveness and reliability for money remittances throughout the United States, the LAC corridor, Canada and Africa. We use various trademarks and service marks in our business, including, but not limited, to Intermex, International Money Express, IntermexDirect, LanDirect, CheckDirect, La Nacional and Amigo Paisano, some of which are registered in the United States and other countries. In addition, we rely on trade secret protection to protect certain proprietary rights in our information technology, trademarks, and licenses. See the section entitled “Information Technology” for more information.

We rely on a combination of patent, trademark and copyright laws and trade secret protection and invention assignment, confidentiality or license agreements to protect our intellectual property rights in products, services, expertise, and information. We believe the intellectual property rights in processing equipment, computer systems, software and business processes held by us and our subsidiaries provide us with a competitive advantage. We take appropriate measures to protect our intellectual property to the extent such intellectual property can be protected.

Sales and Marketing

The majority of our money remittance transactions are generated through our agent network of retail locations and Company-operated stores where the transaction is processed and payment is collected by our sending agent or store. Sending agent locations include multi-service stores, grocery stores, convenience stores, bodegas and other retail locations. The vast majority of our sending agents are provided access to our proprietary money remittance software systems, while others have access to our combination telephone and fax/tablet set up, which we call telewire, enabling direct access to our call centers for money remittance services. In all of our independent sending agent locations the agent provides the physical infrastructure and staff required to complete the remittances, while we provide the central operating functions, such as transaction processing, settlement, marketing support, compliance training and support, and customer relationship management. We also maintain 118 Company-operated stores in the United States, Canada, Italy and Germany. We retain customer data, which enables us to increase repeat customer usage, track and effectively recapture one-time users of our service and improve sending agent productivity. During 2025, we invested in, and expect to continue investing during 2026 and thereafter to increase our penetration of, the digital market, to add digital customers, enhance our digital offerings and increase digital revenues, while maintaining and continuing to develop our retail service offerings.

We market our services to consumers in a number of ways, including directly and indirectly through our sending agents and paying agents, promotional activities, traditional media and digital advertising.

Our Industry

We are a global leading money remittance service company primarily focused on the United States to the LAC corridor. We utilize our proprietary technology to deliver convenient, reliable and value-added services to consumers through a broad network of sending and

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paying agents. The three largest remittance corridors we serve are United States to Mexico, United States to Guatemala, and United States to the Dominican Republic.

Trends in the cross-border money remittance business tend to correlate to immigration trends, global economic opportunity and related employment levels in certain industries such as construction, information technology, manufacturing, agriculture and hospitality, as well as other service industries.

Current political, social, economic and market conditions in the United States, including recent economic, trade and immigration enforcement actions taken by the current administration in the U.S., as well as in foreign countries, including those that are destinations for money transfers or in which we currently operate remain volatile. There is uncertainty as to the economic and financial impact of such conditions. Our business has generally been resilient during times of economic instability as money remittances are essential to many recipients, with the funds used by the receiving parties for their daily needs; however, continued enhanced immigration enforcement activities in the U.S. or long-term sustained appreciation of the Mexican peso or Guatemalan quetzal as compared to the U.S. dollar could negatively affect our revenues and profitability.

Another significant trend impacting the money remittance industry is extensive regulation on money remittance providers, banks, and other financial institutions, making it difficult for money remittance companies to develop and maintain strong banking relationships and for sending agents to open operating bank accounts. Regulations in the United States and elsewhere focus, in part, on cybersecurity, anti-money laundering and consumer protection. Regulations require money remittance providers, banks and other financial institutions to develop systems to prevent, detect, monitor and report certain transactions. In coming periods, we expect these and future regulatory requirements, as well as investigatory and enforcement activities by law enforcement agencies, will continue to result in changes to certain of our business and administrative practices and may result in increased costs.

Government Regulation

As a non-bank financial institution in the United States, we are regulated by the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”), the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”), the Department of Banking and Finance of the State of Florida and the equivalent regulatory authorities in all of the states, the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, in which we hold an operating money transmission license. We are duly registered as a Money Services Business (“MSB”) with FinCEN, the financial intelligence unit of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. We are also subject to a wide range of regulations in the United States and other countries in which we operate, including: minimum capital or capital adequacy requirements; safeguarding of customers' funds; anti-money laundering laws and regulations; financial services regulations; currency control regulations; anti-bribery laws; money transfer and payment instrument licensing laws; escheatment laws; privacy, data protection and information security laws, such as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (“GLBA”); and consumer disclosure and consumer protection laws, such as the California Consumer Privacy Act (“CCPA”) and the Colorado Privacy Act (“CPA”).

Regulators worldwide are exercising heightened supervision of money remittance providers and requiring increased efforts to ensure compliance. Failure to comply with any applicable laws and regulations could result in restrictions on our ability to provide our products and services, as well as the potential imposition of civil fines and possibly criminal penalties, including suspension or cancellation of an affected license. We continually monitor and enhance our compliance programs to stay current and compliant with legal and regulatory changes.

Anti-Money Laundering, Counter-Terrorism Financing and Sanctions Compliance

Our money remittance services are subject to anti-money laundering laws and regulations of the United States, including the Bank Secrecy Act (“BSA”), as amended by the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001, as well as state laws and regulations and the anti-money laundering laws and regulations in many of the countries in which we operate. The countries in which we operate may require one or more of the following:

•reporting of large cash transactions and suspicious activity;

•transaction screening against government watch-lists, including the sanctions list maintained by OFAC;

•prohibition of transactions in, to or from certain countries, governments, individuals and entities;

•limitations on amounts that may be transferred by a consumer or from a jurisdiction at any one time or over specified periods of time, which require aggregation over multiple transactions;

•consumer information gathering and reporting requirements;

•consumer disclosure requirements, including language requirements and foreign currency restrictions;

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•notification requirements as to the identity of contracting agents, governmental approval of contracting agents or requirements and limitations on contract terms with our agents; and

•registration or licensing of us or our agents with a state or federal agency in the United States or with the central bank or other proper authority in a foreign country.

Anti-money laundering regulations are constantly evolving and vary from country to country. We continuously monitor our compliance with anti-money laundering regulations and implement policies and procedures to stay current with legal requirements in the jurisdictions in which we operate. Our money remittance services are primarily offered through third-party agents under contract with us, but we do not directly control these agents. As a MSB, we and our agents are required to establish anti-money laundering compliance programs that include internal policies and controls; a designated compliance officer; employee training and an independent review function. We have developed an anti-money laundering training manual and a program to assist with the education of our agents and employees on the applicable rules and regulations. We also offer in-person and online training as part of our agent compliance training program, engage in various activities to enable agent oversight and have adopted compliance policies that outline key principles of our compliance program to our agents. We have developed a regulatory compliance department, under the direction of our Chief Compliance Officer, whose foremost responsibility is to monitor transactions, detect suspicious activity, maintain financial records and train our employees and agents. Independent third-party consulting firms periodically review our policies and procedures to ensure the efficacy of our anti-money laundering and regulatory compliance programs. Key milestones in the compliance processes include: (1) mandatory fields and identification requirements at the time the sending agents initiate a transaction; (2) the sender and receiver are screened against government-required lists (for OFAC and other purposes); (3) before the transaction is sent to the paying agent, it is screened and any flagged exceptions are sent to the compliance unit for investigation and release or rejection; and (4) the transaction is screened for limit restrictions, velocity levels, structuring and identification requirements.

In connection with, and when required by regulatory requirements, we make information available to certain U.S. federal and state, as well as certain foreign, government agencies to assist in the prevention of money laundering, terrorism financing and other illegal activities and pursuant to legal obligations and authorizations. In certain circumstances, we may be required by government agencies to deny transactions that may be related to persons suspected of money laundering, terrorism financing or other illegal activities, and it is possible that we may inadvertently deny transactions from consumers who are making legal money transfers.

Licensing. In most countries in which we operate, either we or our agents are required to obtain licenses or to register with a government authority in order to offer money transfer services. Almost all states in the United States, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, as well as certain provinces in Canada, Mexico, Guatemala and certain countries in Europe, require us to be licensed to conduct business within their jurisdictions. Licensing requirements may include requirements related to net worth, providing surety bonds and letters of credit, operational procedures, agent oversight and maintenance of reserves to cover outstanding payment obligations. Acceptable forms of such reserves will vary based on jurisdiction and the applicable regulator, but generally include cash and cash equivalents, U.S. government securities and other highly rated debt instruments. Many regulators require us to file reports on a quarterly or more frequent basis to verify our compliance with their requirements. We are also subject to periodic examinations by the governmental agencies with regulatory authority over our business.

Escheatment. Unclaimed property laws of each state in the United States in which we operate, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico require us to track certain information for all of our money remittances and payment instruments and, if the funds underlying such remittances and instruments are unclaimed at the end of an applicable statutory abandonment period, require us to remit the proceeds of the unclaimed property to the appropriate jurisdiction. Applicable statutory abandonment periods range from three to seven years. We have an ongoing program designed to comply with escheatment laws as they apply to our business.

Data Privacy and Cybersecurity. We are subject to federal, state and international laws and regulations relating to the collection, use, retention, security, transfer, storage and disposal of personally identifiable information of our customers, agents and employees. In the United States, we are subject to various federal privacy laws, including the GLBA, which requires that financial institutions provide consumers with privacy notices and have in place policies and procedures regarding the safeguarding of personal information. We are also subject to privacy and data breach laws of various states.

Consumer Protection. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”) imposes additional regulatory requirements and creates additional regulatory oversight over us. The Dodd-Frank Act created the CFPB which issues and enforces consumer protection initiatives governing financial products and services, including money remittance services, in the United States through the CFPB’s Remittance Transfer Rule. Its requirements include: a disclosure requirement to provide consumers sending funds internationally from the United States enhanced pre-transaction written disclosures, an obligation to resolve certain errors, including errors that may be outside our control, and an obligation to cancel transactions that have not been completed at a consumer’s request. As a “larger participant” in the market for international money transfers, we are subject to direct examination and supervision by the CFPB.

In addition, under the Dodd-Frank Act, it is unlawful for any provider of consumer financial products or services to engage in unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices. The CFPB has substantial rule making and enforcement authority to prevent unfair, deceptive, or

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abusive acts or practices in connection with any transaction with a consumer for a financial product or service. We expect the new presidential administration will seek to implement a regulatory agenda that is significantly different from that of the prior administration, which may affect the rulemaking, supervision, examination and enforcement priorities of the CFPB.

In addition, each state in the United States may from time to time, enact new laws and regulations, such as the CCPA and the CPA, which create new consumer rights relating to the access to, deletion of, and sharing of personal information that is collected by businesses. We have taken the necessary steps to review, modify and implement, as needed, policies and procedures designed to comply with the CFPB’s Remittance Transfer Rule and the various state laws. The number of comprehensive state privacy laws are expected to continue to increase, creating additional risks and complexity due to variations among applicable state laws.

Furthermore, as our operations and services involve the collection, storage, and processing of personal data of consumers globally, we are subject to the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”) and similar data protection laws outside the United States. The GDPR imposes strict requirements on how businesses collect, process, store, and share personal data, as well as mandates that consumers have specific rights, including the right to access, correct, and delete their data. For especially severe violations, the GDPR fines can be up to €20 million, or in the case of an entity, up to 4% of its total global revenue for the preceding fiscal year, whichever is higher. We continue to enhance our efforts to ensure compliance and adapt to evolving data privacy laws and the increased exposure of our operations to such laws as a result of our geographic expansion.

The Company’s communications, advertising and sales practices and that of its agent network are subject to regulation by, among other things, state and federal consumer protection laws including the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (“TCPA”). The Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission have issued regulations under the TCPA that place restrictions on, among other things, unsolicited automated telephone calls or text messages to residential and wireless telephone subscribers by means of automatic telephone dialing systems and the use of prerecorded or artificial voice messages. The Company has taken steps to insulate itself from any such wrongful conduct, including conduct engaged in by its agents, by, among other things, requiring its agents to comply with the TCPA and such regulations.

Anti-Bribery Regulation. We are subject to regulations imposed by the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (the “FCPA”) in the United States and similar anti-bribery laws in other jurisdictions. These laws may impose recordkeeping and other requirements on us. We maintain a compliance program designed to comply with anti-bribery laws and regulations applicable to our business.

Risk Management

The Company maintains certain of its cash balances in various U.S. banks, which at times, may exceed federally insured limits. In addition, the Company maintains various bank accounts in Mexico, Guatemala, Canada, the Dominican Republic, Spain, the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy, and short-term investments in Mexico, which may not be fully insured. Management believes it is not exposed to any significant credit risk regarding these accounts as it performs periodic reviews of the creditworthiness of the financial institutions the Company uses.

At times, we are exposed to credit risk related to receivable balances from sending agents and digital partners in the money remittance process if agents or digital partners do not timely make payments to us.

We continually monitor fraud risk, perform credit reviews before adding agents to our network and conduct periodic credit risk analyses of agents and certain other parties that we transact with directly. For the year ended December 31, 2025, our provision for credit losses was equal to 1.3% of our total revenues.

Through our online and digital platforms, we also are exposed to credit risk directly from transactions that are originated through means other than cash, such as credit and debit cards, and therefore are subject to “chargebacks” for insufficient funds or other collection impediments, such as fraud.

Given the nature of our business, we are also subject to liquidity risk as the timing of the funds to be remitted by our sending agents or digital partners may extend in comparison with the timing when we make the funds available to the money transfer beneficiary in the destination country. Our current liquidity sources as well as our ability to generate free cash are mitigating factors in our liquidity management strategy.

We are also exposed to changes in currency rates as a result of remittances paid in currencies other than the U.S. dollar, Canadian dollar or Euro. We manage our currency exposure primarily by settling with our payers using foreign exchange tom and spot transactions.

Our indebtedness bears interest at variable rates, which exposes us to interest rate risk as a result of fluctuations on market interest rate benchmarks.

Seasonality

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We do not experience meaningful seasonality in our business. We may experience, however, increased transaction volume around certain holidays, such as Mother’s Day and the December holidays.

Competition

The market for money remittance services is very competitive. Our competitors include a small number of large money remittance providers, financial institutions and banks as well as a large number of small niche money remittance service providers that serve select regions. We compete with larger companies, such as Western Union, MoneyGram International, Inc. (“MoneyGram”), Remitly Global, Inc. (“Remitly”) and Euronet Worldwide Inc. (“Euronet”), and a number of other smaller competitors. We generally compete for money remittance agents on the basis of value, service, quality, technical and operational differences, commission, and marketing efforts. As a philosophy, we sell credible solutions to agents, not discounts or higher commissions as is typical for the industry. We compete for money remittance customers on the basis of trust, convenience, service, efficiency of outlets, value, technology and brand recognition. We believe that our ongoing investments in new products and services will help us to remain competitive in our evolving business environment, given the increasing competition from digital platform providers.

We expect to encounter increasing competition as new technologies emerge that enable consumers to send and receive money through a variety of channels, but we do not expect adoption rates to be as significant in the near term for the consumer segment we serve. Regardless, we continue to innovate in the industry by differentiating our money remittance business through programs to foster loyalty among agents as well as consumers and have expanded our channels through which our services are accessed to include online and mobile offerings in preparation for consumer adoption.

Human Capital

We invest in our workforce by offering a competitive total rewards package that in addition to a salary, includes performance incentives and comprehensive benefits that are intended to be competitive in the market and focused on the needs of our employees in order to attract and retain highly qualified talent. Our incentives are primarily measurable and performance-based, and are designed to align compensation to our business strategy and goals. We have enhanced our onboarding process and plan to further improve training and development programs to drive quicker integration, development and higher productivity of new employees, as well as the ongoing development of team members to ensure robust recruitment and retention.

We value opportunity, fairness and merit, and strive to create a work environment where all of our employees feel valued and devoted to their careers. As of December 31, 2025, approximately 96% of our U.S. team members identified themselves as racially or ethnically diverse. Also, approximately 63% of our U.S. team identified themselves as female. In 2026, we intend to continue to promote greater community involvement through philanthropic and volunteer efforts, with a focus on diversity, community improvement, and STEM programs.

As of December 31, 2025, we had 531 employees in the United States, of whom 19 are part-time and 512 are full-time. We also have 518 employees in Mexico, of whom 144 are part-time and 374 are full-time, 131 employees in Guatemala, all of whom are full-time and, 90 employees in Spain, Italy, Germany and the United Kingdom, of whom 79 are full-time and 11 are part-time.

In addition, five of the eight members of our board of directors are considered diverse based on gender or ethnic backgrounds.

Available Information

The Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, and amendments to those reports are available free of charge through the “Investor Relations” section of the Company’s website, www.intermexonline.com, as soon as reasonably practical after they are filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). The SEC maintains a website, www.sec.gov, which contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information filed electronically with the SEC by the Company. In addition, you may automatically receive email alerts and other information when you enroll your email address by visiting the “Investor Relations” section of our website. We use our website as a channel of distribution for important Company information, including press releases, investor presentations and financial information, which may be accessed by clicking on the Investors Relations section. We may also use our website to expedite public access to time-critical information regarding our Company in advance of or in lieu of distributing a press release or a filing with the SEC disclosing the same information. Therefore, investors should look to the Investor Relations section of our website for important and time-critical information. The content of any website referred to in this document is not incorporated by reference into this document.

Information about our Executive Officers

Set forth below is certain information regarding the Company’s current executive officers as of February 27, 2026:

Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4Column 5
NameAgePosition

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Robert Lisy68Chief Executive Officer, President and Chairman of the Board of Directors
Andras Bende51Chief Financial Officer
Joseph Aguilar64President and General Manager - Latin America
Christopher Hunt50Chief Operating Officer

Robert Lisy has served as a director of International Money Express, Inc. since 2018. Mr. Lisy served as a director of International Money Express Sub 2, LLC’s predecessor entities from 2009 to 2018. Mr. Lisy is the Chief Executive Officer, President, and Chairman of the Board of Directors of International Money Express, Inc. and its predecessors, which he joined in 2009. Mr. Lisy has more than 30 years of experience in the retail financial services and electronic payment processing industry in various positions, including three years as the Chief Marketing and Sales Officer of Vigo Remittance Corp., a money transfer and bill payments service in the United States and internationally, and over seven years at Western Union in various sales, marketing and operational positions of increasing responsibility. Mr. Lisy was a founding partner of Direct Express/Paystation America, which offered, among other things, prepaid debit cards to federal benefit recipients, where he served as Chief Operating Officer and on the board of directors. He was an integral part in the efforts to successfully sell Direct Express in 2000 to American Payment Systems. Mr. Lisy holds a bachelor’s degree in Finance from Cleveland State University.

Andras Bende joined International Money Express, Inc. as Chief Financial Officer in December 2020. Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Bende served as the Chief Financial Officer of Computer Services, Inc., a financial technology company, from 2018 to 2019, where he helped guide the company during a period of significant growth and share price appreciation. Prior to his time at Computer Services, Inc., Mr. Bende held several international Chief Financial Officer and Controller roles at GE Capital from 2005 to 2017. Mr. Bende is a graduate of GE’s Financial Management Program and the GE Corporate Audit Staff and holds a bachelor’s degree in financial management from Clemson University.

Joseph Aguilar joined International Money Express, Inc. in September 2019 as Chief Operating Officer. Mr. Aguilar has served as President and General Manager - Latin America since 2023. Prior to joining Intermex, Mr. Aguilar was a senior executive at Sigue Corporation, a money transfer company; starting in 2005 as the Chief Auditor, where he established the Internal Audit function for its U.S. and Mexico Operations. Following several successful audit cycles, he was promoted to Chief Operating Officer, responsible for all operations and technology functions of the global organization. In 2014, Mr. Aguilar was promoted to President of SGS, Ltd. UK, the International Division of Sigue Corporation, with responsibility for all aspects of the business in the EU, Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia and South Asia. Prior to his roles at Sigue Corporation, Mr. Aguilar held senior roles at BBVA Bancomer, California Commerce Bank and Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank of California. Mr. Aguilar holds a bachelor’s degree in English from University of California at Santa Barbara.

Christopher Hunt joined International Money Express, Inc. in March 2021 as Chief Information Officer. Mr. Hunt has served as our Chief Operating Officer since 2023. Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Hunt was the Chief Technology Officer of Bankers Healthcare Group, a financial services company (“Bankers”), from 2013 to 2021. Prior to his role at Bankers, Mr. Hunt worked at several companies where he held a variety of IT positions with increasing responsibility for all aspects of overall IT strategy, product development, compliance and cybersecurity. Mr. Hunt earned a bachelor’s degree in Business Management with a concentration in Decision Information Sciences from the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida.

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