Why S&P Global should be viewed as an information workflow platform, not just a ratings cycle trade
S&P Global is often framed as a debt-issuance proxy because Ratings remains a major earnings engine. That is too narrow. In its 2025 10-K, the company described itself as a global provider of benchmarks, data, analytics, and workflow solutions and said its mission is “Advancing Essential Intelligence” across capital, energy, commodity, and automotive markets (S&P Global 2025 10-K). Investors are buying not just a rating agency, but a set of embedded information businesses sitting inside customer workflows.
The first quarter of 2026 made that point clearly. S&P Global reported revenue of $4.171 billion, up 10% from the prior-year quarter. GAAP net income rose 28% to $1.395 billion, GAAP diluted EPS rose 32% to $4.69, and adjusted diluted EPS rose 14% to $4.97 (S&P Global Q1 2026 earnings release). Management said the growth was driven primarily by Ratings, Indices, and Market Intelligence.
Related Coverage
The cycle still matters, but a business with subscription products, benchmark-linked fees, and workflow data can monetize market activity in several ways at once. That is a better explanation for durability than treating the stock as a one-variable call option on credit issuance.
How Ratings, Indices, and Market Intelligence reinforce each other
The best way to understand S&P Global is to see the flywheel across its divisions. Ratings benefits from debt issuance and surveillance demand. Indices monetizes benchmark ownership through asset-linked fees, derivatives, and data subscriptions. Market Intelligence sells recurring tools and datasets that clients use every day. Those are different revenue models, but they all benefit from the same underlying position inside institutional decision-making.
The quarter offered several good signals. S&P Global said revenue from subscription products increased 6% year over year, while total quarterly revenue increased by nearly $400 million, driven primarily by Ratings and Market Intelligence (S&P Global Q1 2026 earnings release). In Indices, the 10-Q said ending ETF assets under management tied to its benchmarks rose 25% year over year to $5.385 trillion as of March 31, 2026, while average ETF AUM rose 25% to $5.574 trillion (S&P Global Q1 2026 10-Q). That is powerful because it shows the company is not only selling information once; it is participating in client assets and activity over time.
This structure is hard to replicate. Benchmarks become harder to dislodge as more products, licenses, and investment processes depend on them. Workflow tools also get stickier when they sit next to proprietary datasets customers already rely on. That is why S&P Global deserves to be thought of as infrastructure for financial and commodity markets, not merely as a transaction-sensitive ratings house.
Why cash returns and operating leverage still matter for SPGI
The other strength in the model is how much cash it throws off. In the first three months of 2026, S&P Global generated $1.037 billion of operating cash flow and $919 million of free cash flow, up from $953 million and $816 million, respectively, in the prior-year period (S&P Global Q1 2026 10-Q). In the first quarter, the company also repurchased $1 billion of shares and said it now expects to return 100% or more of adjusted free cash flow through dividends and repurchases in 2026 (S&P Global Q1 2026 earnings release).
That cash engine is not new. In 2025, S&P Global reported revenue of $15.336 billion, operating profit of $6.478 billion, and operating cash flow of $5.651 billion (S&P Global 2025 10-K). In the first quarter of 2026, reported operating profit margin increased 620 basis points to 48.0%, while adjusted operating profit margin increased 100 basis points to 51.8% (S&P Global Q1 2026 earnings release). That is the profile of a business with real operating leverage, not a low-visibility cyclical platform.
What investors should watch next across issuance, AUM-linked fees, and enterprise adoption
The next few quarters will still be judged partly on issuance conditions, and that is fair. Ratings can remain volatile around financing windows, and a weaker credit backdrop would matter. But investors should not stop there.
The more important watchpoints are whether benchmark-linked AUM keeps growing, whether subscription products keep compounding, and whether Market Intelligence remains embedded in enterprise workflows.
Management’s 2026 guidance also suggests confidence beyond the current quarter. S&P Global said it now expects reported revenue growth of 6.3% to 8.3%, organic constant-currency revenue growth of 6.0% to 8.0%, and adjusted diluted EPS of $19.40 to $19.65 for 2026 (S&P Global Q1 2026 earnings release). That points to strength across multiple engines, not just one cyclical window.
Key Signals for Investors
First-quarter 2026 revenue was $4.171 billion, up 10% year over year, and adjusted diluted EPS was $4.97.
Subscription-product revenue increased 6% in the quarter, showing the base business remains recurring.
ETF AUM tied to S&P Global benchmarks rose 25% year over year to $5.385 trillion as of March 31, 2026.
First-quarter 2026 free cash flow was $919 million, and the company repurchased $1 billion of shares in the quarter.
The long case depends on benchmark entrenchment and workflow depth across Ratings, Indices, and Market Intelligence, not only on debt issuance.
Sources
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/64040/000006404026000019/spgi1q2026-earningsrelease.htm
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/64040/000006404026000024/spgi-20260331.htm
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/64040/000006404026000013/spgi-20251231.htm
https://investor.spglobal.com/overview/default.aspx
https://data.sec.gov/submissions/CIK0000064040.json



















