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false000009375100000937512026-04-172026-04-170000093751us-gaap:CommonStockMember2026-04-172026-04-170000093751stt:SeriesGPreferredStockDepositoryShareMember2026-04-172026-04-17

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
______________________
FORM 8-K
_________________
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): April 17, 2026
______________________
State Street Corporation
(Exact name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
____________________
Massachusetts 001-07511 04-2456637
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation) (Commission File Number) (IRS Employer Identification No.)
One Congress Street
Boston Massachusetts 02114
(Address of principal executive offices, and Zip Code)
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code:
(617)
786-3000
________________
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
☐    Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
☐    Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
☐    Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
☐    Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class Trading Symbol(s) Name of each exchange on which registered
Common stock, $1 par value per share STT New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares, each representing a 1/4,000th ownership interest in a share of STT.PRG New York Stock Exchange
Fixed-to-Floating Rate Non-Cumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock, Series G, without par value per share
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).
Emerging growth company 
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.  ¨



Item 2.02.    Results of Operations and Financial Condition.
On April 17, 2026, State Street Corporation ("State Street") issued a news release announcing its results of operations for the first-quarter 2026. Copies of that news release and accompanying first-quarter 2026 financial information addendum are furnished herewith as Exhibits 99.1 and 99.2, respectively, and are incorporated herein by reference.
Item 7.01.    Regulation FD Disclosure.
On April 17, 2026, State Street made available a slide presentation providing highlights of its first-quarter 2026 results of operations and related information as of March 31, 2026, which is being made available in connection with an April 17, 2026 investor conference call. A copy of that slide presentation is furnished herewith as Exhibit 99.3 and is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 9.01.        Financial Statements and Exhibits.
(d) Exhibits.
State Street's news release dated April 17, 2026, announcing its first-quarter 2026 results of operations and accompanying first-quarter 2026 financial information addendum are furnished herewith as Exhibits 99.1 and 99.2, respectively, and are incorporated by reference in Item 2.02 hereof; and a slide presentation providing highlights of State Street's first-quarter 2026 results of operations and related information, which is being made available in connection with an April 17, 2026 investor conference call, is furnished herewith as Exhibit 99.3 and is incorporated by reference in Item 7.01 hereof.

Exhibit No. Description
* 104 Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL)
 * Submitted electronically herewith




SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

STATE STREET CORPORATION
By: /s/ Elizabeth M. Schaefer
Name: Elizabeth M. Schaefer,
Title: Senior Vice President, Chief Accounting Officer and Interim Controller
Date: April 17, 2026

EX-99.1 2 a1q26earningspressrelease.htm EX-99.1 Document
imagea.jpg
Exhibit 99.1
State Street Corporation
One Congress Street
Boston, MA 02114
NYSE: STT
         www.statestreet.com
April 17, 2026
STATE STREET REPORTS FIRST QUARTER 2026 EPS OF $2.49; $2.84 EXCLUDING NOTABLE ITEMS
 See note (a) below for a description of the presentation in this news release
RON O’HANLEY
CHAIRMAN AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
$3.8B
TOTAL REVENUE, up 16% YoY
86BPS
TOTAL OPERATING LEVERAGE
“Our focus on being an essential partner to clients, supported by operational excellence and a diversified business model, enabled us to deliver a strong start to 2026 with growth underpinned by continued financial and strategic progress in the first quarter.”
O'Hanley added: “Reflecting that progress, we delivered record quarterly fee revenue, net interest income, and total revenue, generating meaningful year-over-year positive operating leverage and pre- tax margin expansion, excluding notable items. In a dynamic operating environment, the momentum across Investment Services, Investment Management, and Markets underscores the strength of our franchise.”
O'Hanley concluded: “Looking ahead, how the macro and geopolitical environment will evolve is uncertain. What we can control is how we run the firm—remaining disciplined, supporting our clients, and managing the company for resilience across a range of environments. We are encouraged by our momentum, appropriately mindful of risks, and confident in our ability to continue to grow and deliver even more as we move through the year.”
25.5%
PRE-TAX MARGIN
11.6%
ROE
17.6%
ROTCE(a)
Ex-notables(a):
616BPS
TOTAL OPERATING LEVERAGE
29.0% PRE-TAX MARGIN
13.3%
ROE
20.1%
ROTCE(a)
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
(Table presents summary results, dollars in millions, except per share amounts, or where otherwise noted) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25  % QoQ  % YoY
Income statement:
Total fee revenue $ 2,960  $ 2,862  $ 2,570  % 15  %
Net interest income 835  802  714  17 
Other income —  (67) nm
Total revenue 3,796  3,667  3,284  16 
Provision for credit losses 16  12  nm 33 
Total expenses 2,811  2,741  2,450  15 
Net income 764  747  644  19 
Financial ratios and other metrics:
Diluted earnings per share (EPS) $ 2.49  $ 2.42  $ 2.04  % 22  %
Return on average common equity (ROE) 11.6  % 11.3  % 10.6  % 0.3  % pts 1.0  % pts
Return on average tangible common equity (ROTCE)(1)
17.6  17.5  16.4  0.1  % pts 1.2  % pts
Pre-tax margin 25.5  25.0  25.0  0.5  % pts 0.5  % pts
AUC/A ($ billions)(2)
$ 54,515  $ 53,800  $ 46,733  % 17  %
AUM ($ billions)(2)
5,620  5,665  4,665  (1) 20 
(1) Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE, or return on average tangible common equity) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Addendum included with this news release for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures.
(2) As of quarter-end.
(a) Percentage changes noted reflect year-over-year 1Q comparisons, unless otherwise noted. See the "1Q26 Highlights" and "In This News Release" sections for a listing of notable items and further explanations of our disclosures in this news release. Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE, or return on average tangible common equity) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Addendum included with this news release for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures.
Investor Contact: Elizabeth Lynn +1 617-664-3477          Media Contact: Mark LaVoie +1 508-314-2807

1

                    
1Q26 HIGHLIGHTS
(All comparisons are to 1Q25, unless otherwise noted)
AUC/A and AUM
•Investment Servicing AUC/A as of quarter-end increased 17% to $54.5 trillion, mainly due to higher market levels, flows, and net new business
•Investment Management AUM as of quarter-end increased 20% to $5.6 trillion, mainly driven by higher market levels and net inflows
New business and strategy execution(a)
•New servicing wins in 1Q26
◦New servicing fee revenue wins: New servicing fee revenue wins of $56 million, primarily driven by back office and Alternatives, which includes private markets and hedge funds
◦AUC/A wins: New servicing AUC/A wins of $365 billion, with the majority from Asset Managers
•Future installations as of 1Q26
◦Servicing fee revenue: Quarter-end servicing fee revenue of $315 million to be installed in future periods
◦AUC/A: Quarter-end AUC/A of $2.7 trillion to be installed in future periods
•State Street Alpha®: 1 new mandate win
•Software services: Annual recurring revenue (ARR) increased approximately 12%, driven by continued SaaS client conversions and implementations
•Investment Management:
◦Record quarterly SPYM ETF inflows: #1 asset gathering ETF globally
◦Expanded capabilities with 57 new products and solutions
◦Earned 4 awards at the 2026 ETF.com Awards for ALLW and PRIV
◦Continued momentum and market share gains in U.S. Low-Cost ETF suite and positive momentum across U.S. Fixed Income, U.S. Sectors, and EMEA
•Markets: Integrated liquidity and financing solutions driving strong client volumes; Record FX trading volumes up 25%, average securities on loan up 20%

Revenue
•Total revenue increased 16%, driven by higher Fee revenue, Net Interest Income (NII), and the impact of currency translation
•Fee revenue increased 15%, reflecting broad-based strength across the franchise
◦Servicing fees increased 11%
◦Management fees increased 23%(b)
◦FX trading services increased 29%(b)
◦Securities finance increased 2%
◦Software services increased 7%(b)
◦Other fee revenue increased 8%(b)
•NII increased 17%, primarily driven by an increase of 16 basis points in Net Interest Margin (NIM) and a 1% increase in average interest-earning assets



(a) See the "In This News Release" section for explanations of AUC/A, new servicing fee revenue wins and revenue to be installed, and Software services ARR.
(b) In the first quarter of 2026, revenue related to distribution and marketing activities was reclassified from Foreign exchange trading services to Management fees. Additionally, Lending related and other fees, previously recognized within Software and processing fees, was reclassified to Other fee revenue, and the Software and processing fees caption has been changed to Software services. Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. These reclassifications had no impact on Total fee revenue, Total revenue or Net income, on either a consolidated or line of business basis.

2

Expenses(a)
•Total expenses increased 15%, reflecting the impact of notable items this quarter. Excluding notable items, total expenses increased 9%, driven primarily by higher revenue-related costs, continued investments, and the negative impact of currency translation
◦Compensation and employee benefits increased 14%, and excluding notable items, increased 8%(b)
◦Information systems and communications increased 28%, and excluding notable items, increased 18%(c)
◦Transaction processing services increased 10%
◦Occupancy decreased 2%, and excluding notable items, decreased 3%(d)
◦Other expenses increased 6%
Notable items
(Dollars in millions, except EPS amounts) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25
Repositioning charges(e)
$ (89) $ (226) $ — 
Client rescoping
(41) —  — 
Other notable items (net)(f)
—  20  — 
Total notable items (pre-tax) $ (130) $ (206) $ — 
Income tax impact from notable items (32) (49) — 
EPS impact $ (0.35) $ (0.55) $ — 
•Repositioning charges of $89 million in 1Q26 represents a $79 million charge reflected in Compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization and a $1 million charge reflected in Occupancy costs associated with real estate footprint optimization. Additional Repositioning charges include $9 million of operating model changes reflected in Information systems and communications
•Client rescoping of $41 million reflected in Information systems and communications
Capital and liquidity
•Standardized common equity tier 1 (CET1) ratio at quarter-end of 10.6% decreased 0.4% points compared to 1Q25 primarily due to continued capital return and higher risk-weighted assets (RWA) driven by the impact of markets, partially offset by capital generated from earnings, and decreased 1.0% point compared to 4Q25, primarily due to a normalization in RWA from episodically low levels in the prior quarter, the impact of markets, and continued capital return, partially offset by capital generated from earnings
•Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) for State Street Corporation was approximately 106%, and LCR for State Street Bank and Trust was approximately 139%
•In 1Q26, State Street returned a total of $633 million of capital to common shareholders, including $400 million of share repurchases and $233 million (or $0.84 per share) of declared dividends

(a) See the "1Q26 Highlights" section for a listing of notable items. Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Addendum included with this news release for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures.
(b) GAAP Compensation and employee benefits expenses of $1,441 million in 1Q26 included a notable item primarily from workforce rationalization of $79 million. Excluding this notable item, adjusted 1Q26 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,362 million increased 8% compared to GAAP 1Q25 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,262 million.
(c) GAAP Information systems and communications expenses of $637 million in 1Q26 included notable items from a client rescoping and operating model changes of $50 million. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Information systems and communications expenses of $587 million increased 18% compared to GAAP 1Q25 Information systems and communications expenses of $497 million.
(d) GAAP Occupancy expenses of $101 million in 1Q26 included a notable item related to real estate footprint optimization of $1 million. Excluding this notable item, adjusted 1Q26 Occupancy expenses of $100 million decreased 3% compared to GAAP 1Q25 Occupancy expenses of $103 million.
(e) 4Q25 Repositioning charges of $226 million represents a $111 million charge reflected in Compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization and a $69 million
charge reflected in Occupancy costs associated with real estate footprint optimization. Additional Repositioning charges included operating model changes of $24 million and $22 million reflected in Information systems and communications and Other expenses, respectively.
(f) 4Q25 Other notable items (net) of $20 million reflected in Other expenses associated with FDIC special assessment release of $60 million, partially offset by $40 million in Legal and related costs.
3

                    
INVESTMENT SERVICING AUC/A
The following table presents AUC/A information by product and financial instrument.
(As of period end, dollars in billions) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25  % QoQ  % YoY
Assets Under Custody and/or Administration(1)
By product classification:
Collective funds, including ETFs $ 18,338  $ 17,997  $ 15,430  % 19  %
Mutual funds 13,309  13,518  12,143  (2) 10 
Pension products 10,912  10,452  9,377  16 
Insurance and other products 11,956  11,833  9,783  22 
Total Assets Under Custody and/or Administration $ 54,515  $ 53,800  $ 46,733  % 17  %
By asset class:
Equities $ 32,243  $ 31,879  $ 27,508  % 17  %
Fixed-income 14,030  13,830  11,900  18 
Short-term and other investments(2)
8,242  8,091  7,325  13 
Total Assets Under Custody and/or Administration $ 54,515  $ 53,800  $ 46,733  % 17  %
(1) AUC/A values for certain asset classes are based on a lag, typically one-month.
(2) Short-term and other investments includes derivatives, cash and cash equivalents and other instruments.

INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AUM
The following tables present 1Q26 activity in AUM by asset class, geography, vehicle, and strategy.
(Dollars in billions) Balance as of December 31, 2025 Net Asset Flows Market Appreciation / (Depreciation) Foreign Exchange Impact Total Market and Foreign Exchange Impact Balance as of March 31, 2026
By Asset Class(1)
Equity $ 3,589  $ $ (94) $ (1) $ (95) $ 3,496 
Fixed-Income 734  28  (3) (3) (6) 756 
Cash(2)
570  —  581 
Multi-Asset 501  12  (6) (4) (10) 503 
Alternative Investments(3)
271  (1) 14  —  14  284 
Total Assets Under Management $ 5,665  $ 49  $ (86) $ (8) $ (94) $ 5,620 
By Geography(1)(4)
Americas $ 4,155  $ 10  $ (56) $ (1) $ (57) $ 4,108 
Europe/Middle East/Asia 841  29  (15) (10) (25) 845 
Asia-Pacific 669  10  (15) (12) 667 
Total Assets Under Management $ 5,665  $ 49  $ (86) $ (8) $ (94) $ 5,620 
By Vehicle(1)
ETF $ 1,951  $ 25  $ (36) $ —  $ (36) $ 1,940 
Separately Managed Accounts 2,127  30  (30) (7) (37) 2,120 
Other Commingled Funds 1,587  (6) (20) (1) (21) 1,560 
Total Assets Under Management $ 5,665  $ 49  $ (86) $ (8) $ (94) $ 5,620 
By Strategy(1)
Index Strategies and Solutions:
ETFs $ 1,936  $ 25  $ (35) $ —  $ (35) $ 1,926 
Other Index 2,986  13  (53) (8) (61) 2,938 
Total Index Strategies and Solutions 4,922  38  (88) (8) (96) 4,864 
Active, Alternatives and Other 173  (1) —  (1) 175 
Cash(2)
570  —  581 
Total Assets Under Management $ 5,665  $ 49  $ (86) $ (8) $ (94) $ 5,620 
(1) Our AUM disclosures have been updated to more closely reflect the investment strategies and capabilities within the Investment Management business. AUM disclosures are now organized around Index; Active, Alternatives and Other Strategies; and Cash. We have retained the supplemental views of AUM, including, but not limited to, views by asset class and by geography.
(2) Includes both floating- and constant-net-asset-value portfolios held in commingled structures or separate accounts.
(3) Includes real estate investment trusts, currency and commodities, including SPDR® Gold Shares and SPDR® Gold MiniSharesSM Trust, for which we are not the investment manager but act as the marketing agent.
(4) Geographic mix is based on client location or fund management location.

4

                    
(Dollars in billions) 1Q26 4Q25 3Q25 2Q25 1Q25
Beginning balance $ 5,665  $ 5,446  $ 5,117  $ 4,665  $ 4,715 
Net Asset Flows:
Index Strategies and Solutions:
ETFs 25  51  38  15  — 
Other Index 13  14  (7) 81  (12)
Total Index Strategies and Solutions 38  65  31  96  (12)
Active, Alternatives and Other (4) (15) (13) (2)
Cash 24  10  (1)
Total Flows, net 49  85  26  82  (13)
Market Appreciation/(Depreciation) (86) 148  310  318  (65)
Foreign Exchange Impact (8) (14) (7) 52  28 
Total Market and Foreign Exchange Impact (94) 134  303  370  (37)
Ending balance $ 5,620  $ 5,665  $ 5,446  $ 5,117  $ 4,665 
Memo: ETF Total Flows, net $ 25  $ 51  $ 37  $ 15  $


5

                    
REVENUE
(Dollars in millions) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25  % QoQ % YoY
Servicing fees $ 1,409  $ 1,388  $ 1,275  1.5  % 10.5  %
Management fees(1)
724  717  587  1.0  23.3 
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
435  350  337  24.3  29.1 
Securities finance 116  127  114  (8.7) 1.8 
Software services(1)
169  163  158  3.7  7.0 
Other fee revenue(1)
107  117  99  (8.5) 8.1 
Total fee revenue $ 2,960  $ 2,862  $ 2,570  3.4  % 15.2  %
Net interest income 835  802  714  4.1  % 16.9  %
Other income —  (66.7) % nm
Total Revenue $ 3,796  $ 3,667  $ 3,284  3.5  % 15.6  %
Net interest margin (FTE)(a)
1.16  % 1.10  % 1.00  % 6 bps 16
bps
(1) In the first quarter of 2026, revenue related to distribution and marketing activities was reclassified from Foreign exchange trading services to Management fees. Additionally, Lending related and other fees, previously recognized within Software and processing fees, was reclassified to Other fee revenue, and the Software and processing fees caption has been changed to Software services. Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. These reclassifications had no impact on Total fee revenue, Total revenue or Net income, on either a consolidated or line of business basis.
(a) Net interest margin (NIM) is presented on a fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) basis. Refer to the Addendum for reconciliations of our FTE-basis presentation.

Servicing fees increased 11% compared to 1Q25 and increased 2% compared to 4Q25, primarily driven by higher average market levels and the benefit of currency translation, plus organic growth.

Management fees increased 23% compared to 1Q25, driven by higher average market levels and net inflows. Management fees increased 1% compared to 4Q25, driven by net inflows and higher average market levels, partially offset by lower day count.

Foreign exchange trading services increased 29% compared to 1Q25 primarily due to higher volumes. Foreign exchange trading services increased 24% compared to 4Q25, driven by higher volumes and higher spreads associated with an increase in currency volatility.

Securities finance increased 2% compared to 1Q25, largely driven by higher client lending balances. Securities finance decreased 9% compared to 4Q25, reflecting lower day count and a reduction in U.S. Equity specials.

Software services increased 7% compared to 1Q25, primarily due to higher Professional services and Software and data revenues. Software services increased 4% compared to 4Q25, largely due to higher On-premises revenues, partially offset by lower Professional services revenues.
Other fee revenue increased 8% compared to 1Q25, primarily due to FX-related adjustments and market-related adjustments, partially offset by lower lending-related and other fees. Other fee revenue decreased 9% compared to 4Q25, primarily due to lower lending-related and other fees.

Net interest income increased 17% compared to 1Q25, primarily driven by an increase of 16 basis points in NIM and a 1% increase in average interest-earning assets. Net interest income increased 4% compared to 4Q25, primarily driven by an increase of 6 basis points in NIM and a 1% increase in average interest-earning assets.

Total revenues were positively impacted by currency translation of $63 million and $9 million compared to 1Q25 and 4Q25, respectively.



6

                    
PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES
(Dollars in millions) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25  % QoQ  % YoY
Allowance for credit losses:
Beginning balance $ 203 $ 201 $ 183 1.0  % 10.9  %
Provision for credit losses 16 8 12 nm 33.3
Charge-offs (40) (6) (9) nm nm
Ending Balance $ 179 $ 203 $ 186 (11.8) % (3.8) %
Total provision for credit losses was $16 million in 1Q26, primarily reflecting provisions for certain commercial loans and the evolving macroeconomic environment.



7

                    
EXPENSES
(Dollars in millions) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25  % QoQ  % YoY
Compensation and employee benefits $ 1,441 $ 1,331 $ 1,262 8.3  % 14.2  %
Information systems and communications 637 557 497 14.4  28.2 
Transaction processing services 283 256 258 10.5  9.7 
Occupancy 101 173 103 (41.6) (1.9)
Other 349 424 330 (17.7) 5.8 
Total Expenses $ 2,811 $ 2,741 $ 2,450 2.6  % 14.7  %
Total expenses, excluding notable items(1)
$ 2,681 $ 2,535 $ 2,450 5.8  % 9.4  %
Effective tax rate 21.2  % 18.6  % 21.7  % 2.6  % pts (0.5) % pts
(1) See "1Q26 Highlights" in this news release for a listing of notable items. Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Addendum included with this news release for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures.

Compensation and employee benefits(a) increased 14% compared to 1Q25, mainly due to the repositioning charge this quarter, performance-based incentive compensation, merit increases, and the impact of currency translation. Excluding notable items, Compensation and employee benefits increased 8% compared to 1Q25, mainly due to performance-based incentive compensation, merit increases, and the impact of currency translation. Compensation and employee benefits increased 8% compared to 4Q25, primarily driven by seasonal expenses, partially offset by a lower repositioning charge this quarter. Excluding notable items, Compensation and employee benefits increased 12% compared to 4Q25, primarily driven by seasonal expenses and contractor spend.

Information systems and communications(b) increased 28% compared to 1Q25 and increased 14% compared to 4Q25, primarily due to notable items this quarter and higher technology and infrastructure investments. Excluding notable items, Information systems and communications increased 18% compared to 1Q25 and increased 10% compared to 4Q25, largely related to higher technology and infrastructure investments.

Transaction processing services increased 10% compared to 1Q25 and increased 11% compared to 4Q25, reflecting higher revenue related sub-custody costs.

Occupancy(c) decreased 2% compared to 1Q25, driven by footprint optimization. Excluding notable items, Occupancy decreased 3% compared to 1Q25. Occupancy decreased 42% compared to 4Q25, due to the absence of a prior period notable item. Excluding notable items, Occupancy decreased 4% compared to 4Q25, largely driven by footprint optimization.

Other expenses(d) increased 6% compared to 1Q25, largely reflecting higher revenue-related expenses and marketing costs. Other expenses decreased 18% compared to 4Q25, mainly due to lower marketing costs and professional fee spend. Excluding notable items, Other expenses decreased 17% compared to 4Q25.

Total expenses were negatively impacted by currency translation of $52 million and $5 million compared to 1Q25 and 4Q25, respectively.




(a) GAAP Compensation and employee benefits expenses of $1,441 million in 1Q26 included a notable item primarily from workforce rationalization of $79 million. GAAP Compensation and employee benefits expenses of $1,331 million in 4Q25 included a notable item related to a repositioning charge of $111 million primarily from workforce rationalization. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,362 million increased 8% compared to GAAP 1Q25 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,262 million and increased 12% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,220 million.
(b) GAAP Information systems and communications expenses of $637 million in 1Q26 included notable items from a client rescoping and operating model changes of $50 million. GAAP Information systems and communications expenses of $557 million in 4Q25 included a notable item related to operating model changes of $24 million. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Information systems and communications of $587 million increased 18% compared to GAAP 1Q25 Information systems and communications expenses of $497 million and increased 10% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Information systems and communications expenses of $533 million.
(c) GAAP Occupancy expenses of $101 million in 1Q26 included a notable item related to real estate footprint optimization of $1 million. GAAP Occupancy expenses of $173 million in 4Q25 included a notable item related to a charge of $69 million associated with real estate footprint optimization. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Occupancy expenses of $100 million decreased 3% compared to GAAP 1Q25 Occupancy expenses of $103 million and decreased 4% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Occupancy expenses of $104 million.
(d) GAAP Other expenses of $424 million in 4Q25 included notable items related to an FDIC special assessment release of $60 million, legal and related costs of $40 million, and a charge related to operating model changes of $22 million. Excluding these notable items, GAAP 1Q26 Other expenses of $349 million decreased 17% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Other expenses of $422 million.

8

                    
TAXES(a)
The effective tax rate of 21.2% in 1Q26 decreased from 21.7% in 1Q25, primarily due to higher stock-based compensation benefits this quarter, and increased from 18.6% in 4Q25 due to lower discrete benefits this quarter. Excluding the impact of notable items, the effective tax rate of 21.6% in 1Q26 was roughly flat compared to 21.7% in 1Q25 and increased from 19.6% in 4Q25 due to lower discrete tax benefits this quarter.

CAPITAL AND LIQUIDITY
The following table presents preliminary estimates of regulatory capital and liquidity ratios for State Street Corporation.
(As of period end) 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25
Basel III Standardized Approach:
Common equity tier 1 ratio (CET1) 10.6  % 11.6  % 11.0  %
Tier 1 capital ratio 13.1  14.4  13.8 
Total capital ratio 14.5  16.1  15.3 
Basel III Advanced Approaches:
Common equity tier 1 ratio (CET1) 12.5  13.0  12.6 
Tier 1 capital ratio 15.5  16.1  15.7 
Total capital ratio 17.0  17.7  17.3 
Tier 1 leverage ratio 5.4  5.5  5.5 
Supplementary leverage ratio (SLR)
6.3  6.5  6.5 
Liquidity coverage ratio (LCR)(1)
106  % 106  % 106  %
LCR - State Street Bank and Trust(1)
139  % 143  % 139  %
(1) See the "In This News Release" section for further details on LCR and differences in the calculation between State Street Corporation and State Street Bank and Trust.
Standardized capital ratios were binding for all periods included above.

CET1 (Standardized) ratio at quarter-end of 10.6% decreased 0.4% points compared to 1Q25 primarily due to continued capital return and higher RWA driven by the impact of markets, partially offset by capital generated from earnings, and decreased 1.0% point compared to 4Q25, primarily due to a normalization in RWA from episodically low levels in the prior quarter, the impact of markets, and continued capital return, partially offset by capital generated from earnings.

Tier 1 leverage ratio at quarter-end of 5.4% decreased 0.1% points compared to 1Q25 and decreased 0.1% points compared to 4Q25, largely due to continued capital return and higher average balance sheet levels, partially offset by capital generated from earnings.

SLR at quarter-end of 6.3% decreased 0.2% points compared to 1Q25 and decreased 0.2% points compared to 4Q25, primarily due to continued capital return and higher leverage exposure, partially offset by capital generated from earnings.

LCR for State Street Corporation was approximately 106%, flat compared to 1Q25 and 4Q25. LCR for State Street Bank and Trust was approximately 139%, flat compared to 1Q25 and down 4% points from 4Q25.




(a) See the "1Q26 Highlights" section for a listing of notable items. Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Addendum included with this news release for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures.

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INVESTOR CONFERENCE CALL AND QUARTERLY WEBSITE DISCLOSURE
State Street will webcast an investor conference call today, Friday, April 17, 2026, at 11:00 a.m. ET, available at http://investors.statestreet.com. The conference call will also be available via telephone, at (805) 309-0220. The Participant Passcode is 68683#.

Recorded replay of the conference call will be available on the website beginning approximately two hours after the call's completion. The replay will be available for approximately one month following the conference call.

This News Release, presentation materials referred to on the conference call, and additional financial information are available on State Street's website, at http://investors.statestreet.com under “Investor News & Events" and under the title “Events & Presentations".

State Street intends to publish updates to its public disclosure regarding regulatory capital, as required by the Basel III final rule, and the liquidity coverage and net stable funding ratios, on a quarterly basis on its website at http://investors.statestreet.com, under “Filings & Reports". Those updates will be published each quarter, during the period beginning after State Street's public announcement of its quarterly results of operations and ending on or prior to the due date under applicable bank regulatory requirements (i.e., ordinarily, ending no later than 60 days following year-end or 40 to 45 days following each other quarter-end, as applicable). For 1Q26, State Street expects to publish its updates during the period beginning today and ending on or about May 10, 2026 and on or about May 15, 2026 for the liquidity coverage ratio.

State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT) is one of the world's leading providers of financial services to institutional investors including investment servicing, investment management and investment research and trading. With $54.5 trillion in assets under custody and/or administration and $5.6 trillion* in assets under management as of March 31, 2026, State Street operates globally in more than 100 geographic markets and employs approximately 51,000 worldwide. For more information, visit State Street's website at www.statestreet.com.
* Assets under management as of March 31, 2026 includes approximately $184 billion of assets with respect to SPDR® products for which State Street Global Advisors Funds Distributors, LLC (SSGA FD) acts solely as the marketing agent. SSGA FD and State Street Investment Management are affiliated.

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IN THIS NEWS RELEASE:
•In addition to presenting State Street's financial results in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, management also presents certain financial information on a basis that excludes or adjusts one or more items from GAAP. This latter basis is a non-GAAP presentation. In general, our non-GAAP financial results adjust selected GAAP-basis financial results to exclude the impact of revenue and expenses outside of State Street’s normal course of business or other notable items, such as acquisition and restructuring charges, repositioning charges, gains/losses on sales, as well as, for selected comparisons, seasonal items. For example, we sometimes present expenses on a basis we may refer to as “expenses ex-notable items", which exclude notable items and, to provide additional perspective on both prior year quarter and sequential quarter comparisons, may also exclude seasonal items. Management believes that this presentation of financial information facilitates an investor's further understanding and analysis of State Street's financial performance and trends with respect to State Street’s business operations from period-to-period, including providing additional insight into our underlying margin and profitability. In addition, Management may also provide additional non-GAAP measures. For example, we may sometimes present ratios, such as return on tangible common equity, based on an adjusted common shareholder equity metric, "tangible common equity", which reflects a reduction (net of deferred taxes) for goodwill and other intangible assets, as we believe this presentation provides additional context about our use of equity. As an additional example, we may present revenue and expense measures on a constant currency basis to identify the significance of changes in foreign currency exchange rates (which often are variable) in period-to-period comparisons. This presentation represents the effects of applying prior period weighted average foreign currency exchange rates to current period results. Non-GAAP financial measures should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or superior to, financial measures determined in conformity with GAAP. Refer to the Addendum included with this News Release for reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial information. To access the Addendum go to http://investors.statestreet.com and click on “Filings & Reports – Quarterly Results”.
•Stock purchases under our common stock repurchase programs may be made using various types of transactions, including open-market purchases, accelerated share repurchases or other transactions off the market, and may be made under Rule 10b5-1 trading programs. The timing and amount of any stock purchases and the type of transaction may not be consistent over the duration of the program, may vary from reporting period to reporting period and will depend on several factors, including our capital position and financial performance, investment opportunities, market conditions, regulatory considerations including the nature and timing of implementation of revisions to the Basel III framework, and the amount of common stock issued as part of employee compensation programs. The common share repurchase programs do not have specific price targets and may be suspended at any time. State Street’s common stock and other stock dividends, including the declaration, timing and amount, remain subject to consideration and approval by State Street’s Board of Directors at the relevant times.
•Servicing fee revenue wins (i.e., "sales") and backlog (i.e., "to be installed") represents estimates of future annual revenue associated with new servicing engagements State Street determines to be won during the current reporting period, which may include anticipated servicing-related revenues associated with acquisitions or structured transactions, based upon factors assessed at the time the engagement is determined by State Street to be won, including asset volumes, number of transactions, accounts and holdings, terms and expected strategy. These and other relevant factors influencing projected servicing fees upon asset implementation/onboarding will change from time to time prior to, upon and following asset implementation/onboarding, among other reasons, due to varying market levels and factors and client and investor activity and preferences. Servicing fee/backlog estimates are not updated to reflect those changes, regardless of the magnitude or direction of, or reason for, any change. Servicing fee revenue wins in any period include estimated fees attributable to both (1) services to be provided for new estimated AUC/A reflected in new investment servicing wins for the period (with AUC/A to be onboarded in the future) and (2) additional services to be provided for AUC/A already included in our end-of period AUC/A (i.e., for which other services are currently provided); and the magnitude of one source of servicing fee revenue wins relative to the other (i.e., (1) relative to (2)) will vary from period to period. Therefore, for these and other reasons, comparisons of estimated servicing fee revenue wins to estimated new investment servicing AUC/A wins for any period will not produce reliable fee per AUC/A estimates. No servicing fees are recognized until the point in the future when we begin performing the associated services with respect to the relevant AUC/A. Both AUC/A and servicing fee revenue, when presented on a "backlog" or "to be installed" basis, are presented as of period-end. See also the succeeding two bullets in this “In This News Release” section in reference to considerations applicable to pending servicing engagements, which similarly apply to engagements for which reported servicing fee revenue wins/backlog are attributable.
•New investment servicing mandates, including announced Alpha front-to-back investment servicing clients, may be subject to completion of definitive agreements, consents or assignments, approval of applicable boards and shareholders, customary regulatory approvals or other conditions, the failure to complete any of which will prevent the relevant mandate from being installed and serviced. New investment servicing mandates and servicing assets/fees remaining to be installed in future periods exclude new business which has been contracted, but for which the client has not yet provided permission to publicly disclose or anonymously disclose and is not yet installed. These excluded assets, which from time to time may be significant, will be included in new investment servicing mandates and reflected in servicing assets/fees remaining to be installed in the period in which the client provides its permission. Servicing mandates, servicing assets remaining to be installed in future periods and servicing fee revenues remaining to be installed in future periods are presented on a gross basis based on factors present on or about the time we determine the business to be won by us and are not updated based on subsequent developments, including changes in assets, market valuations, scope and, potentially termination. Such assets therefore also do not include the impact of clients who have notified us during the period of their intent to terminate or reduce their relationship with State Street, which from time to time may be significant.

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•New business in assets to be serviced is reflected in our AUC/A after we begin servicing the assets, and new business in assets to be managed is reflected in our AUM after we begin managing the assets. As such, only a portion of any new investment servicing and investment management mandates may be reflected in our AUC/A and AUM as of any particular date specified. AUC/A values for certain asset classes are based on a lag, typically one-month. Generally, our servicing fee revenues are affected by several factors, and we provide varied services from our full suite of offerings to different clients. The basis for fees will also differ across regions and clients and can reflect pricing pressures traditionally experienced in our industry. Consequently, no assumption should be drawn as to future revenue run rate from announced servicing wins or new servicing business yet to be installed, as the amount of revenue associated with AUC/A can vary materially. Management fees also are generally affected by various factors, including investment product type and strategy and relationship pricing for clients, and are more sensitive to market valuations than are servicing fees. Therefore, no assumption should be drawn from management fees associated with changes in AUM levels. Levels of AUC/A, AUC/A to be installed, Servicing fee wins to be installed and AUM are always presented as of the end of the relevant period, unless otherwise specifically noted.
•Software services ARR, an operating metric, is calculated by annualizing current quarter revenue for CRD and CRD for Private Markets and includes the annualized amount of most software and data revenue, including revenue generated from SaaS, maintenance and support revenue, FIX, and value-added services, which are all expected to be recognized ratably over the term of client contracts. ARR does not include software and data brokerage revenue, revenue from affiliates and licensing fees (excluding the portion allocated to maintenance and support) from On-premises software. Software services ARR was $373 million, $418 million, and $418 million in 1Q25, 4Q25, and 1Q26, respectively.
•Revenue and pre-tax income reflects the application of ASC 606. Revenue recognition under ASC 606 results in the acceleration of a significant portion of revenues for On-premises software agreements when a client goes live or renews their contract with us. The amount of revenue recognized in any given quarter will be driven in large part by client activity, including agreements that renew or are installed in that quarter.
•Unless otherwise noted, all capital ratios referenced in this News Release and elsewhere in this presentation refer to State Street Corporation, or State Street, and not State Street Bank and Trust Company. The lower of capital ratios calculated under the Basel III advanced approaches and under the Basel III standardized approach are applied in the assessment of our capital adequacy for regulatory purposes. Standardized ratios were binding for 1Q26. Refer to the Addendum included with this News Release for additional information. All capital ratios are estimated. Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) is a preliminary estimate based on a quarterly daily average.
•State Street Bank and Trust's (SSBT) LCR is significantly higher than State Street Corporation's (SSC) LCR, primarily due to application of the transferability restriction in the U.S. LCR Final Rule to the calculation of SSC’s LCR. This restriction limits the amount of HQLA held at SSC’s principal banking subsidiary, SSBT, and available for the calculation of SSC’s LCR to the amount of net cash outflows of SSBT. This transferability restriction does not apply in the calculation of SSBT’s LCR, and therefore SSBT’s LCR reflects the full benefit of all of its HQLA holdings.
•All earnings per share amounts represent fully diluted earnings per common share.
•Return on average common equity is determined by dividing annualized net income available to common shareholders by average common shareholders' equity for the period.
•Year-over-year (YoY) is the current period compared to the same period a year ago. Quarter-over-quarter (QoQ) is a sequential quarter comparison.
•Operating leverage is the rate of growth of total revenue less the rate of growth of total expenses, relative to the corresponding prior year period, as applicable.
•Fee operating leverage is the rate of growth of total fee revenue less the rate of growth of total expenses, relative to the corresponding prior year period, as applicable.
•"AUC/A" denotes Assets Under Custody and/or Administration; "AUC" denotes Assets Under Custody; "AUM" denotes Assets Under Management; "SPDR" denotes Standard and Poor's Depository Receipt; "ETF" denotes Exchange-traded fund; "nm" denotes not meaningful; "EOP" denotes end of period.
•"CRD" denotes Charles River Development; "SaaS" denotes Software as a service; "FIX" denotes The Charles River Network's FIX Network Service (CRN); "On-premises" denotes On-premises revenue as recognized in the CRD business.
•"RWA" denotes risk-weighted assets; "AOCI" denotes Accumulated other comprehensive income.
•"FTE" denotes fully taxable-equivalent basis; NIM is presented on an FTE-basis, and is calculated by dividing FTE NII by average total interest-earning assets. Refer to the Addendum for reconciliations of our FTE-basis presentation.

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FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS
This News Release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of United States securities laws, including statements about our goals and expectations regarding our strategy, growth and sales prospects, capital management, business, financial and capital condition, results of operations, the financial and market outlook and the business environment. Forward-looking statements are often, but not always, identified by such forward-looking terminology as “outlook,” “priority,” “will,” “expect,” “intend,” “aim,” “outcome,” “future,” “strategy,” “pipeline,” “trajectory,” “target,” “guidance,” “objective,” “plan,” “forecast,” “believe,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “seek,” “may,” “trend,” and “goal,” or similar statements or variations of such terms. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, are inherently uncertain, are based on current assumptions that are difficult to predict and involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Therefore, actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed in those statements.
Important factors that may affect future results and outcomes include, but are not limited to:
•We are subject to intense competition, which could negatively affect our profitability;
•We are subject to significant pricing pressure and variability in our financial results and our AUC/A and AUM;
•We could be adversely affected by political, geopolitical, economic and market conditions, including, for example, as a result of liquidity or capital deficiencies (actual or perceived) by other financial institutions and related market and government actions, changes in U.S. trade or other policies or those policies of other nations, the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and in the Middle East, major political shifts domestically or internationally (including the potential for retaliatory actions by governments, market participants or clients based on diverging perspectives or otherwise and, separately, the recent shutdown of the U.S. federal government), actions taken by central banks in an attempt to address prevailing economic conditions, changes in monetary policy or periods of significant volatility in the markets for equity, fixed income and other asset classes globally or within specific markets;
•Our development and completion of new products and services, including State Street Alpha® and those related to wealth servicing, alternative investment management or digital assets or incorporating artificial intelligence, may impose costs on us, involve dependencies on third parties and may expose us to increased risks;
•Our business may be negatively affected by risks associated with strategic initiatives we are undertaking to enhance the effectiveness, including the adoption or integration of new technologies such as artificial intelligence, and efficiency of our operations and of our cybersecurity and technology infrastructure or by our failure to meet the related, resiliency or other expectations of our clients and regulators, or as a result of a cyber-attack or similar vulnerability in our or business partners' infrastructure;
•Our risk management framework, models and processes may not be effective in identifying or mitigating risk and reducing the potential for related losses, and a failure or circumvention of our controls and procedures, or errors or delays in our operational and transaction processing, or those of third parties, could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, operating results and reputation;
•Acquisitions, strategic alliances, joint ventures and divestitures, and the integration, retention and development of the benefits of these transactions, pose risks for our business;
•Competition for qualified members of our workforce is intense, and we may not be able to attract and retain the highly skilled people we need to support our business;
•Our investment securities portfolio, consolidated financial condition and consolidated results of operations could be adversely affected by changes in the financial markets, governmental action or monetary policy. For example, among other risks, changes in prevailing interest rates or market conditions have led, and were they to persist or occur in the future could further lead, to decreases in our NII or to portfolio management decisions resulting in reductions in our capital or liquidity ratios;
•Our business activities expose us to interest rate risk;
•We assume significant credit risk of counterparties, who may also have substantial financial dependencies on other financial institutions, and these credit exposures and concentrations could expose us to financial loss;
•Our fee revenue represents a significant portion of our revenue and is subject to and may decline based on, among other factors, market and currency declines, investment activities and preferences of our clients and their business mix, as well as the timing of new business onboarding;
•If we are unable to effectively manage our capital and liquidity, our financial condition, capital ratios, results of operations and business prospects could be adversely affected;
•Our return of capital to shareholders through common share repurchases and common stock dividends may be variable and is subject to various business and financial factors and regulatory requirements and approvals of our Board of Directors;
•We may need to raise additional capital or debt in the future, which may not be available to us or may only be available on unfavorable terms;
•If we experience a downgrade in our credit ratings, or an actual or perceived reduction in our financial strength, our borrowing and capital costs, liquidity and reputation could be adversely affected;
•Our business and capital-related activities, including common share repurchases, may be adversely affected by regulatory requirements and considerations, including capital, credit and liquidity;
•We face extensive and changing government regulation and supervision in the U.S. and non-U.S. jurisdictions in which we operate, which may increase our costs and compliance risks and may affect our business activities and strategies;

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•Our businesses may be adversely affected by government enforcement and litigation;
•Our businesses may be adversely affected by increased and conflicting political, regulatory and client scrutiny of investment management, stewardship and sustainable investment strategies and services offered;
•Any misappropriation of the confidential information we possess could have an adverse impact on our business and could subject us to regulatory actions, litigation and other adverse effects;
•Our calculations of risk exposures, total RWA and capital ratios depend on data inputs, formulae, models, correlations and assumptions that are subject to change, which could materially impact our risk exposures, our total RWA and our capital ratios from period to period;
•Changes in accounting standards may adversely affect our consolidated results of operations and financial condition;
•Changes in tax laws, rules or regulations, challenges to our tax positions and changes in the composition of our pre-tax earnings may increase our effective tax rate;
•We could face liabilities for withholding and other non-income taxes, including in connection with our services to clients, as a result of tax authority examinations;
•Our businesses may be negatively affected by adverse publicity or other reputational harm;
•Shifting and maintaining operational activities to non-U.S. jurisdictions, changing our operating model, and outsourcing to, or insourcing from, third parties expose us to increased operational risk, geopolitical risk and reputational harm and may not result in expected cost savings or operational improvements;
•Attacks or unauthorized access to our or our business partners' or clients' information technology systems or facilities, such as cyber-attacks or other disruptions to our or their operations, could result in significant costs, reputational damage and impacts on our business activities;
•Long-term contracts and customizing service delivery for clients expose us to increased operational risk, pricing and performance risk;
•We may not be able to protect our intellectual property or may infringe upon the rights of third parties;
•The quantitative models we use to manage our business may contain errors that could adversely impact our business, financial condition, operating results and regulatory compliance, and lapses in disclosure controls and procedures or internal control over financial reporting could occur, any of which could result in material harm;
•Our reputation and business prospects may be damaged if investors in the collective investment pools we sponsor or manage incur substantial losses in these investment pools or are restricted in redeeming their interests in these investment pools;
•The impacts of global regulatory requirements and expectations, shifting client preferences, and disclosure requirements related to climate risks and sustainability standards could adversely affect us; and
•We may incur losses or face negative impacts on our business as a result of unforeseen events, including terrorist attacks, geopolitical events, acute or chronic physical risk events, including natural disasters, pandemics, global conflicts, or a banking crisis, which may have a negative impact on our business and operations.
Other important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by any forward-looking statements are set forth in our 2025 Annual Report on Form 10-K and our subsequent SEC filings. We encourage investors to read these filings, particularly the sections on risk factors, for additional information with respect to any forward-looking statements and prior to making any investment decision. The forward-looking statements contained in this News Release should not be relied on as representing our expectations or beliefs as of any time subsequent to the time this News Release is first issued, and we do not undertake efforts to revise those forward-looking statements to reflect events after that time.

14
EX-99.2 3 exhibit992-1q26earningsrel.htm EX-99.2 Document
                                
Exhibit 99.2
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
March 31, 2026
Table of Contents
GAAP-Basis Financial Information:
4-Year Summary of Results
Consolidated Results of Operations
Consolidated Statement of Condition
Average Statement of Condition - Rates Earned and Paid - Fully Taxable-Equivalent Basis
Selected Average Balances by Currency - Rates Earned and Paid
Investment Portfolio Holdings by Asset Class
Allowance for Credit Losses
Assets Under Custody and/or Administration
Assets Under Management
Line of Business Information
Capital:
Regulatory Capital
Reconciliations of Tangible Book Value per Share and Return on Tangible Common Equity
Non-GAAP Financial Information:
Reconciliations of Non-GAAP Financial Information
Reconciliation of Pre-tax Margin Excluding Notable Items
Reconciliations of Constant Currency FX Impacts
This financial information should be read in conjunction with State Street's news release dated April 17, 2026.


                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
4-YEAR SUMMARY OF RESULTS
(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts, or where otherwise noted) 2022 2023 2024 2025
Year ended December 31:
Total fee revenue $ 9,606  $ 9,480  $ 10,156  $ 10,980 
Net interest income 2,544  2,759  2,923  2,960 
Other income (2) (294) (79)
Total revenue 12,148  11,945  13,000  13,944 
Provision for credit losses 20  46  75  59 
Total expenses 8,801  9,583  9,530  10,154 
Income before income tax expense 3,327  2,316  3,395  3,731 
Income tax expense 553  372  708  786 
Net income 2,774  1,944  2,687  2,945 
Net income available to common shareholders $ 2,660  $ 1,821  $ 2,483  $ 2,717 
Per common share:
Diluted earnings per common share $ 7.19  $ 5.58  $ 8.21  $ 9.40 
Average diluted common shares outstanding (in thousands) 370,109  326,568  302,226  289,019 
Cash dividends declared per common share $ 2.40  $ 2.64  $ 2.90  $ 3.20 
Closing price per share of common stock (at year end) 77.57  77.46  98.15  129.01 
Average balance sheet:
Investment securities $ 111,929  $ 105,765  $ 104,784  $ 110,586 
Total assets 286,430  274,696  311,723  343,505 
Total deposits 222,874  205,111  225,611  253,002 
Ratios and other metrics:
Return on average common equity 11.1  % 8.2  % 11.1  % 11.5  %
Return on average tangible common equity(1)
17.4  13.3  17.9  17.9 
Pre-tax margin 27.4  19.4  26.1  26.8 
Pre-tax margin, excluding notable items(2)
28.4  26.4  27.6  29.2 
Net interest margin, fully taxable-equivalent basis 1.03  1.20  1.10  1.00 
Common equity tier 1 ratio(3)(4)
13.6  11.6  10.9  11.6 
Tier 1 capital ratio(3)(4)
15.4  13.4  13.2  14.4 
Total capital ratio(3)(4)
16.8  15.2  14.8  16.1 
Tier 1 leverage ratio(3)
6.0  5.5  5.2  5.5 
Supplementary leverage ratio(3)
7.0  6.2  6.2  6.5 
Assets under custody and/or administration (in trillions) $ 36.74  $ 41.81  $ 46.56  $ 53.80 
Assets under management (in trillions) 3.48  4.13  4.72  5.67 
(1) Return on average tangible common equity is calculated by dividing the net income available to common shareholders (GAAP-basis) for the relevant period by average tangible common equity (non-GAAP). Refer to the Reconciliations of Tangible Book Value per Common Share and Return on Tangible Common Equity page for details.
(2) Notable items include acquisition and restructuring costs, repositioning charges and legal and other notable items. Refer to Reconciliations of pre-tax margin excluding notable items for details.
(3) The capital ratios presented are calculated in conformity with the applicable regulatory guidance in effect as of each period end.
(4) The reportable ratios represent the lower of each of the risk-based capital ratios under both the Standardized Approach and the Advanced Approaches.
2    

                                
    
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts, or where otherwise noted) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Fee revenue:
Servicing fees $ 1,275  $ 1,304  $ 1,357  $ 1,388  $ 1,409  10.5  % 1.5  %
Management fees(1)
587  600  664  717  724  23.3  1.0 
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
337  393  364  350  435  29.1  24.3 
Securities finance 114  126  138  127  116  1.8  (8.7)
Software services(1)
158  169  167  163  169  7.0  3.7 
Other fee revenue(1)
99  127  139  117  107  8.1  (8.5)
Total fee revenue 2,570  2,719  2,829  2,862  2,960  15.2  3.4 
Net interest income:
Interest income 2,922  3,055  2,918  2,749  2,651  (9.3) (3.6)
Interest expense 2,208  2,326  2,203  1,947  1,816  (17.8) (6.7)
Net interest income 714  729  715  802  835  16.9  4.1 
Other income:
Gains from sales of available-for-sale securities, net —  —  nm (66.7)
Total other income —  —  nm (66.7)
Total revenue 3,284  3,448  3,545  3,667  3,796  15.6  3.5 
Provision for credit losses 12  30  16  33.3  nm
Expenses:
Compensation and employee benefits 1,262  1,280  1,162  1,331  1,441  14.2  8.3 
Information systems and communications 497  523  517  557  637  28.2  14.4 
Transaction processing services 258  260  276  256  283  9.7  10.5 
Occupancy 103  105  106  173  101  (1.9) (41.6)
Other 330  361  373  424  349  5.8  (17.7)
Total expenses 2,450  2,529  2,434  2,741  2,811  14.7  2.6 
Income before income tax expense 822  889  1,102  918  969  17.9  5.6 
Income tax expense 178  196  241  171  205  15.2  19.9 
Net income $ 644  $ 693  $ 861  $ 747  $ 764  18.6  2.3 
Adjustments to net income:
Dividends on preferred stock $ (46) $ (63) $ (58) $ (59) $ (58) (26.1) % 1.7  %
Earnings allocated to participating securities (1) —  (1) —  (1) nm
Net income available to common shareholders $ 597  $ 630  $ 802  $ 688  $ 705  18.1  2.5 
    


3    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS (Continued)
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts, or where otherwise noted) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Per common share:
Basic earnings $ 2.07 $ 2.20 $ 2.83 $ 2.46 $ 2.53 22.2  % 2.8  %
Diluted earnings 2.04 2.17 2.78 2.42 2.49 22.1  2.9 
Average common shares outstanding (in thousands):
Basic 288,562 286,281 283,434 280,008 278,434 (3.5) (0.6)
Diluted 292,716 290,490 288,163 284,806 282,874 (3.4) (0.7)
Cash dividends declared per common share $ 0.76 $ 0.76 $ 0.84 $ 0.84 $ 0.84 10.5  — 
Closing price per share of common stock (as of quarter end) 89.53 106.34 116.01 129.01 126.56 41.4  (1.9)
Book value per common share $ 80.13 $ 83.16 $ 85.33 $ 87.01 $ 87.33 9.0  0.4 
Tangible book value per common share(2)
51.23 53.56 55.57 56.13 56.59 10.5  0.8 
Balance sheet averages:
Investment securities $ 110,070  $ 112,083  $ 111,821  $ 108,376  $ 107,157  (2.6) (1.1)
Total assets 337,291 353,779 340,480 342,448 351,714 4.3  2.7 
Total deposits 243,036 260,745 254,509 253,585 258,081 6.2  1.8 
Ratios and other metrics:
Effective tax rate 21.7  % 22.0  % 21.9  % 18.6  % 21.2  % (0.5) % pts 2.6  % pts
Return on average common equity 10.6  10.8  13.4  11.3  11.6  1.0  0.3 
Return on average tangible common equity(3)
16.4  16.7  20.9  17.5  17.6  1.2  0.1 
Pre-tax margin 25.0  25.8  31.1  25.0  25.5  0.5  0.5 
Pre-tax margin, excluding notable items(4)
25.0  29.6  31.1  30.7  29.0  4.0  (1.7)
Net interest margin, fully taxable-equivalent basis 1.00  0.96  0.96  1.10  1.16  0.2  0.1 
Common equity tier 1 ratio(5)(6)
11.0  10.7  11.3  11.6  10.6  (0.4) (1.0)
Tier 1 capital ratio(5)(6)
13.8  13.3  13.9  14.4  13.1  (0.7) (1.3)
Total capital ratio(5)(6)
15.3  14.8  15.5  16.1  14.5  (0.8) (1.6)
Tier 1 leverage ratio(5)
5.5  5.3  5.6  5.5  5.4  (0.1) (0.1)
Supplementary leverage ratio(5)
6.5  6.3  6.4  6.5  6.3  (0.2) (0.2)
Assets under custody and/or administration (in billions) $ 46,733  $ 49,000  $ 51,664  $ 53,800  $ 54,515  16.7  % 1.3  %
Assets under management (in billions) 4,665  5,117  5,446  5,665  5,620  20.5  (0.8)
Average securities on loan(7)
358,869  386,730  404,378  411,166  431,100  20.1  4.8 
(1) In the first quarter of 2026, revenue related to distribution and marketing activities was reclassified from foreign exchange trading services to management fees. Additionally, lending related and other fees, previously recognized within software and processing fees, was reclassified to other fee revenue, and the software and processing fees caption has been changed to software services. Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. These reclassifications had no impact on total fee revenue, total revenue or net income, on either a consolidated or line of business basis.
(2) Tangible book value per common share is calculated by dividing the period end tangible common equity (non-GAAP) by the total common shares outstanding at period end. Refer to the Reconciliations of Tangible Book Value per Common Share and Return on Tangible Common Equity page for details.
(3) Return on average tangible common equity is calculated by dividing annualized net income available to common shareholders (GAAP-basis) for the relevant period by average tangible common equity (non-GAAP). Refer to the Reconciliations of Tangible Book Value per Common Share and Return on Tangible Common Equity page for details.
(4) Excluding notable items is a non-GAAP presentation; refer to Reconciliations of non-GAAP Financial Information pages for details.
(5) The capital ratios presented are calculated in conformity with the applicable regulatory guidance in effect as of each period end. Capital ratios as of March 31, 2026 are estimates.
(6) The reportable ratios represent the lower of each of the risk-based capital ratios under both the Standardized Approach and the Advanced Approaches. Refer to Regulatory Capital for details on Standardized and Advanced Approaches ratios.
(7) End-of-period securities on loan were $376,269 million, $387,070 million, $397,730 million and $394,277 million at March 31, 2025, June 30, 2025, September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2025, respectively, and $431,805 million at March 31, 2026.
nm Denotes not meaningful
4    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CONDITION
As of % Change
(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts) March 31, 2025 June 30, 2025 September 30, 2025 December 31, 2025 March 31, 2026 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Assets:
Cash and due from banks $ 4,658  $ 4,020  $ 4,756  $ 4,433  $ 6,518  39.9  % 47.0  %
Interest-bearing deposits with banks, net 119,464  118,835  122,642  126,930  123,574  3.4  (2.6)
Securities purchased under resale agreements 7,971  8,275  7,730  6,812  8,187  2.7  20.2 
Trading account assets 743  791  884  827  842  13.3  1.8 
Investment securities:
Investment securities available-for-sale, net 67,444  70,603  69,443  67,154  71,645  6.2  6.7 
Investment securities held-to-maturity, net(1)
45,505  43,286  40,934  38,171  36,732  (19.3) (3.8)
Total investment securities 112,949  113,889  110,377  105,325  108,377  (4.0) 2.9 
Loans 44,685  47,279  46,660  46,782  49,190  10.1  5.1 
Allowance for credit losses on loans(2)
176  179  190  193  168  (4.5) (13.0)
Loans, net 44,509  47,100  46,470  46,589  49,022  10.1  5.2 
Premises and equipment, net(3)
2,784  2,942  3,080  3,174  3,313  19.0  4.4 
Accrued interest and fees receivable 4,280  4,589  4,476  4,395  4,708  10.0  7.1 
Goodwill 7,763  7,918  7,916  8,159  8,121  4.6  (0.5)
Other intangible assets 1,046  1,014  958  935  872  (16.6) (6.7)
Other assets 66,526  67,344  61,781  58,468  78,631  18.2  34.5 
Total assets $ 372,693  $ 376,717  $ 371,070  $ 366,047  $ 392,165  5.2  7.1 
Liabilities:
Deposits:
   Non-interest-bearing $ 32,265  $ 34,569  $ 34,395  $ 35,267  $ 39,643  22.9  12.4 
   Interest-bearing - U.S. 168,362  169,444  169,013  168,079  174,723  3.8  4.0 
   Interest-bearing - Non-U.S. 71,429  79,011  76,591  71,004  78,975  10.6  11.2 
Total deposits(4)
272,056  283,024  279,999  274,350  293,341  7.8  6.9 
Securities sold under repurchase agreements 3,524  2,377  206  841  969  (72.5) nm
Other short-term borrowings 11,849  9,844  9,825  3,821  3,981  (66.4) 4.2 
Accrued expenses and other liabilities 33,726  28,254  28,710  34,051  40,899  21.3  20.1 
Long-term debt 24,846  25,911  24,688  25,143  25,233  1.6  0.4 
Total liabilities 346,001  349,410  343,428  338,206  364,423  5.3  7.8 
Shareholders' equity:
Preferred stock, no par, 3,500,000 shares authorized:
Series G, 5,000 shares issued and outstanding 493  493  493  493  493  —  — 
Series I, 15,000 shares issued and outstanding 1,481  1,481  1,481  1,481  1,481  —  — 
Series J, 8,500 shares issued and outstanding 842  842  842  842  842  —  — 
Series K, 7,500 shares issued and outstanding 743  743  743  743  743  —  — 
Common stock, $1 par, 750,000,000 shares authorized(5)(6)
504  504  504  504  504  —  — 
Surplus 10,693  10,698  10,704  10,705  10,701  0.1  — 
Retained earnings 29,959  30,373  30,938  31,392  31,864  6.4  1.5 
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (1,792) (1,321) (1,172) (1,043) (1,282) 28.5  (22.9)
Treasury stock, at cost(7)
(16,231) (16,506) (16,891) (17,276) (17,604) (8.5) (1.9)
Total shareholders' equity 26,692  27,307  27,642  27,841  27,742  3.9  (0.4)
Total liabilities and equity $ 372,693  $ 376,717  $ 371,070  $ 366,047  $ 392,165  5.2  7.1 
(1) Fair value of investment securities held-to-maturity
$ 40,424  $ 38,485  $ 36,654  $ 34,166  $ 32,560 
(2) Total allowance for credit losses including off-balance sheet commitments
186  192  201  203  179 
(3) Accumulated depreciation for premises and equipment
6,635  6,824  6,979  7,046  7,170 
(4) Average total deposits
243,036  260,745  254,509  253,585  258,081 
(5) Common stock shares issued
503,879,642  503,879,642  503,879,642  503,879,642  503,879,642 
(6) Total common shares outstanding
288,676,229  285,561,974  282,217,819  279,077,907  276,924,993 
(7) Treasury stock shares
215,203,413  218,317,668  221,661,823  224,801,735  226,954,649 
nm Denotes not meaningful
5    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
AVERAGE STATEMENT OF CONDITION - RATES EARNED AND PAID - FULLY TAXABLE-EQUIVALENT BASIS(1)
The following table presents average rates earned and paid, on a fully taxable-equivalent basis, on consolidated average interest-earning assets and average interest-bearing liabilities for the quarters indicated. Tax-equivalent adjustments were calculated using a federal income tax rate of 21%, adjusted for applicable state income taxes, net of related federal benefit.
Quarters % Change
1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
(Dollars in millions; fully-taxable equivalent basis) Average balance Average rates Average balance Average rates Average balance Average rates Average balance Average rates Average balance Average rates Average balance Average balance
Assets:
Interest-bearing deposits with banks, net $ 92,780  3.36  % $ 98,321  3.23  % $ 88,130  3.03  % $ 94,987  2.83  % $ 100,363  2.81  % 8.2  % 5.7  %
Securities purchased under resale agreements(2)
7,716  8.66  9,169  7.83  8,643  7.82  7,398  8.47  8,051  7.65  4.3 8.8 
Trading account assets 756  0.15  791  0.06  806  0.90  872  0.65  837  0.71  10.7  (4.0)
Investment securities:
Investment securities available-for-sale, net 63,428  4.57  67,718  4.45  69,898  4.43  68,858  4.32  69,862  4.04  10.1  1.5 
Investment securities held-to-maturity, net 46,642  2.07  44,365  2.11  41,923  2.15  39,518  2.19  37,295  2.22  (20.0) (5.6)
Total investment securities
110,070  3.51  112,083  3.52  111,821  3.58  108,376  3.55  107,157  3.41  (2.6) (1.1)
Loans(3)
43,730  5.17  45,277  5.08  46,500  4.98  47,599  4.77  48,588  4.53  11.1  2.1 
Other interest-earning assets 34,464  5.49  39,007  5.38  39,557  4.92  29,999  5.00  28,118  5.00  (18.4) (6.3)
Total interest-earning assets 289,516  4.09  304,648  4.02  295,457  3.92  289,231  3.77  293,114  3.67  1.2  1.3 
Cash and due from banks 4,516  4,058  4,336  3,633  3,912  (13.4) 7.7 
Other non-interest-earning assets 43,259  45,073  40,687  49,584  54,688  26.4  10.3 
Total assets $ 337,291  $ 353,779  $ 340,480  $ 342,448  $ 351,714  4.3  2.7 
Liabilities:
Interest-bearing deposits:
U.S. $ 154,462  3.54  % $ 159,770  3.50  % $ 157,132  3.49  % $ 153,865  3.13  % $ 154,634  2.91  % 0.1  % 0.5  %
Non-U.S. 63,677  1.38  76,807  1.55  73,428  1.49  73,577  1.34  73,962  1.34  16.2  0.5 
Total interest-bearing deposits(4)
218,139  2.91  236,577  2.87  230,560  2.86  227,442  2.55  228,596  2.40  4.8  0.5 
Securities sold under repurchase agreements 4,530  4.54  3,160  4.42  1,002  3.44  161  1.90  272  2.84  (94.0) 68.9 
Other short-term borrowings 11,848  4.64  10,179  4.51  10,069  4.88  6,320  3.81  3,857  4.05  (67.4) (39.0)
Long-term debt 23,742  5.00  25,864  4.98  25,273  4.93  25,126  4.77  25,256  4.53  6.4  0.5 
Other interest-bearing liabilities 5,471  11.76  3,543  18.35  3,445  11.39  3,678  13.27  4,310  12.82  (21.2) 17.2 
Total interest-bearing liabilities 263,730  3.40  279,323  3.34  270,349  3.23  262,727  2.94  262,291  2.81  (0.5) (0.2)
Non-interest-bearing deposits(5)
24,897  24,168  23,949  26,143  29,485  18.4  12.8 
Other non-interest-bearing liabilities 22,554  23,232  18,850  25,851  31,823  41.1  23.1 
Preferred shareholders' equity 3,263  3,560  3,560  3,560  3,560  9.1  — 
Common shareholders' equity 22,847  23,496  23,772  24,167  24,555  7.5  1.6 
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity $ 337,291  $ 353,779  $ 340,480  $ 342,448  $ 351,714  4.3  2.7 
Total deposits $ 243,036  $ 260,745  $ 254,509  $ 253,585  $ 258,081  6.2  1.8 
Excess of rate earned over rate paid 0.70  % 0.68  % 0.69  % 0.83  % 0.86  %
Net interest margin 1.00  % 0.96  % 0.96  % 1.10  % 1.16  %
Net interest income, fully taxable-equivalent basis $ 714  $ 729  $ 716  $ 802  $ 835 
Tax-equivalent adjustment —  —  (1) —  — 
Net interest income, GAAP-basis(4)
$ 714  $ 729  $ 715  $ 802  $ 835 
(1) Average rates earned and paid on interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities include the impact of hedge activities associated with our asset and liability management activities where applicable.
(2) Reflects the impact of balance sheet netting under enforceable netting agreements of approximately $232 billion, $253 billion, $251 billion and $234 billion in the first, second, third and fourth quarters of 2025, respectively, and approximately $228 billion in the first quarter of 2026. Excluding the impact of netting, the average interest rates would be approximately 0.28%, 0.27%, 0.26% and 0.26% in the first, second, third and fourth quarters of 2025, respectively, and approximately 0.26% in the first quarter of 2026.
(3) Average loans are presented on a gross basis. Average loans net of expected credit losses were approximately $43,562 million, $45,113 million, $46,321 million and $47,411 million in the first, second, third and fourth quarters of 2025, respectively and approximately $48,421 million in the first quarter of 2026.
(4) Average rates includes the impact of FX swap expense of approximately ($83) million, ($42) million, ($31) million and $ ($39) million in the first, second, third and fourth quarters of 2025, respectively, and approximately ($29) million in the first quarter of 2026. Average rates for total interest-bearing deposits excluding the impact of FX swap expense were approximately 3.07%, 2.94%, 2.91%, and 2.62% in the first, second, third and fourth quarters of 2025, respectively, and approximately 2.45% in the first quarter of 2026.
(5) Average non-interest-bearing deposits are primarily composed of deposit balances denominated in U.S. dollars.
6    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
SELECTED AVERAGE BALANCES BY CURRENCY - RATES EARNED AND PAID(1)
1Q26
USD EUR GBP Other Total
(Dollars in millions, except where otherwise noted) Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates
Interest-bearing deposits with banks $ 48,444  3.74  % $ 27,712  1.99  % $ 6,188  3.77  % $ 18,019  1.25  % $ 100,363  2.81  %
Total investment securities 84,397  3.42  9,285  2.41  6,673  4.13  6,802  3.88  107,157  3.41 
Loans 39,988  5.01  6,824  1.63  1,221  4.98  555  4.76  48,588  4.53 
Total other interest-earning assets(2)
33,825  5.61  163  1.14  94  2.23  2,924  4.36  37,006  5.48 
Total interest-earning assets
$ 206,654  4.18  $ 43,984  2.03  $ 14,176  4.06  $ 28,300  2.29  $ 293,114  3.67 
Total interest-bearing deposits(3)(4)
$ 153,794  3.10  $ 37,805  1.12  $ 11,536  1.74  $ 25,461  0.39  $ 228,596  2.40 
Central Bank Rate(5)
3.75  2.00  3.75 
4Q25
USD EUR GBP Other Total
(Dollars in millions, except where otherwise noted) Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates
Interest-bearing deposits with banks $ 41,670  4.00  % $ 28,599  1.96  % $ 6,460  3.96  % $ 18,258  1.17  % $ 94,987  2.83  %
Total investment securities 86,018  3.56  9,263  2.49  6,538  4.43  6,557  3.94  108,376  3.55 
Loans 38,802  4.90  6,931  3.87  1,288  5.74  578  4.52  47,599  4.77 
Total other interest-earning assets(2)
34,841  5.74  164  1.80  56  1.92  3,208  3.83  38,269  5.57 
Total interest-earning assets
$ 201,331  4.27  $ 44,957  2.36  $ 14,342  4.31  $ 28,601  2.17  $ 289,231  3.77 
Total interest-bearing deposits(3)(4)
$ 151,750  3.35  $ 38,879  1.14  $ 11,984  1.83  $ 24,829  0.21  $ 227,442  2.55 
Central Bank Rate(5)
4.01  2.00  3.96 
1Q25
USD EUR GBP Other Total
(Dollars in millions, except where otherwise noted) Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates Average Balance Average Rates
Interest-bearing deposits with banks $ 42,137  4.52  % $ 25,385  2.71  % $ 5,709  4.68  % $ 19,549  1.30  % $ 92,780  3.36  %
Total investment securities 91,215  3.47  7,339  2.51  5,487  4.52  6,029  4.42  110,070  3.51 
Loans 35,740  5.27  6,085  4.54  1,349  6.00  556  3.70  43,730  5.17 
Total other interest-earning assets(2)
40,091  6.10  203  2.28  138  3.47  2,504  4.35  42,936  5.97 
Total interest-earning assets $ 209,183  4.51  $ 39,012  2.96  $ 12,683  4.76  $ 28,638  2.28  $ 289,516  4.09 
Total interest-bearing deposits(3)(4)
$ 153,068  3.74  $ 33,657  1.63  $ 10,772  1.94  $ 20,642  (0.65) $ 218,139  2.91 
Central Bank Rate(5)
4.50  2.76  4.60 
(1) Average rates earned and paid on interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities include the impact of hedge activities associated with our asset and liability management activities where applicable.
(2) Average total other interest-earning assets include securities purchased under resale agreements, trading account assets and other interest-earning assets. Refer to average statement of condition - rates earned and paid - full taxable-equivalent basis for details.
(3) Average rates for interest-bearing deposit balances denominated in U.S. dollars include both client and wholesale deposits.
(4) FX swap costs for interest-bearing deposits are included in other currencies.
(5) Central Bank Rate represents the quarterly average Federal Funds Target Rate for USD, European Central Bank Deposit Facility Rate for EUR, and the Bank of England's Bank Rate for GBP.
7    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS BY ASSET CLASS
Quarters
1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26
(Dollars in billions, except where otherwise noted) Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate
Available-for-sale investment securities:
Government & agency securities $ 41.3  4.29  % $ 42.6  4.15  % $ 42.8  4.08  % $ 42.1  3.96  % $ 42.7  3.70  %
U.S. Treasury direct obligations 26.5  4.48  26.4  4.43  25.5  4.37  24.4  4.19  24.0  3.91 
Non-U.S. sovereign, supranational and non-U.S. agency 14.8  3.96  16.2  3.70  17.3  3.66  17.7  3.65  18.7  3.44 
Asset-backed securities 7.8  5.09  8.5  4.75  8.7  4.58  8.2  4.47  8.0  3.99 
Mortgage-backed securities 7.0  5.06  9.2  5.09  11.3  5.33  12.2  5.16  13.6  4.85 
CMBS 4.3  4.86  4.2  4.74  3.9  4.80  3.3  4.73  2.7  4.21 
Other 3.0  5.16  3.2  5.14  3.2  5.12  3.1  5.02  2.9  5.15 
Total available-for-sale portfolio $ 63.4  4.57  $ 67.7  4.45  $ 69.9  4.43  $ 68.9  4.32  $ 69.9  4.04 
Quarters
1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26
(Dollars in billions, except where otherwise noted) Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate Average Balance Average Rate
Held-to-maturity investment securities:
Government & agency securities $ 8.6  0.75  % $ 7.2  0.78  % $ 5.6  0.83  % $ 4.4  0.88  % $ 2.7  1.02  %
U.S. Treasury direct obligations 5.0  0.66  3.9  0.67  2.4  0.67  1.6  0.69  0.4  0.70 
Non-U.S. sovereign, supranational and non-U.S. agency 3.6  0.89  3.3  0.92  3.2  0.95  2.8  0.99  2.3  1.08 
Asset-backed securities 2.4  5.32  2.4  5.17  2.4  5.21  2.3  5.17  2.2  4.55 
Mortgage-backed securities 30.5  2.22  29.7  2.21  28.8  2.20  27.8  2.22  27.3  2.22 
CMBS 5.2  1.88  5.1  1.89  5.1  1.89  5.0  1.88  5.1  1.85 
Total held-for-maturity portfolio $ 46.7  2.07  $ 44.4  2.11  $ 41.9  2.15  $ 39.5  2.19  $ 37.3  2.22 
Total investment securities $ 110.1  3.51  $ 112.1  3.52  $ 111.8  3.58  $ 108.4  3.55  $ 107.2  3.41 


8    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO HOLDINGS BY ASSET CLASS (continued)
Ratings
(Dollars in billions, or where otherwise noted) UST/AGY AAA AA A BBB <BBB NR Fair Value % Total
Net Unrealized Pre-tax MTM Gain/(Loss)
(In millions)(1)
Fixed Rate/
Floating Rate(2)
Available-for-sale investment securities:
Government & agency securities 56  % 26  % 12  % % % % % $ 44.3  61.9  % $ (47)  94% / 6%
U.S. Treasury direct obligations 100  —  —  —  —  —  25.0  56.4  25  100% / 0%
Non-U.S. sovereign, supranational and non-U.S. agency —  59  29  19.3  43.6  (72) 84% / 16%
Asset-backed securities —  94  —  —  —  —  7.9  11.0  —   0% / 100%
Mortgage-backed securities 100  —  —  —  —  —  —  14.0  19.6  15  43% / 57%
CMBS 100  —  —  —  —  —  —  2.5  3.5  (12) 8% / 92%
Other —  12  23  60  —  —  2.9  4.1  19   60% / 40%
Total available-for-sale portfolio 58  % 27  % % % —  % —  % % $ 71.6  100.0  % $ (25)  69% / 31%
Fair Value $ 41.5  $ 19.3  $ 6.6  $ 3.2  $ 0.3  $ 0.2  $ 0.5 
Ratings
UST/AGY AAA AA A BBB <BBB NR Amortized Cost % Total
Net Unrealized Pre-tax MTM Gain/(Loss)
(In millions)(1)
Fixed Rate/
Floating Rate(2)
Held-to-maturity investment securities:
Government & agency securities 12  % 40  % 41  % % —  % —  % —  % $ 2.4  6.5  % $ (37)  100% / 0%
U.S. Treasury direct obligations 100  —  —  —  —  —  —  0.3  12.5  (2) 98% / 2%
Non-U.S. sovereign, supranational and non-U.S. agency —  45  47  —  —  —  2.1  87.5  (35) 100% / 0%
Asset-backed securities —  93  —  —  2.2  6.0  (24)  5% / 95%
Mortgage-backed securities 100  —  —  —  —  —  —  27.1  73.6  (3,669)  100% / 0%
CMBS 100  —  —  —  —  —  —  5.1  13.9  (442)  98% / 2%
Total held-for-maturity portfolio 88  % % % % —  % —  % —  % $ 36.8  100.0  % $ (4,172)  94% / 6%
Amortized Cost $ 32.5  $ 1.0  $ 3.0  $ 0.3  $ —  $ —  $ — 
Total Investment Securities(3)
$ 108.4  78% / 22%
(1) At March 31, 2026, the after-tax unrealized MTM gain/(loss) includes after-tax unrealized loss on securities available-for-sale of $17 million, after-tax unrealized loss on securities held-to-maturity of $2,952 million and after-tax unrealized loss primarily related to securities previously transferred from available-for-sale to held-to-maturity of $241 million.
(2) At March 31, 2026, fixed-to-floating rate securities, which excludes the impact of hedges, had a book value of approximately $233 million or 0.22% of the total portfolio.
(3) State Street has a highly liquid balance sheet, with more than half of total assets deemed HQLA. Based upon fair value as of March 31, 2026, approximately 87% of our investment portfolio was held in HQLA.
9    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
ALLOWANCE FOR CREDIT LOSSES
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in millions) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Allowance for credit losses:
Beginning balance $ 183  $ 186  $ 192  $ 201  $ 203  10.9  % 1.0  %
Provision for credit losses (funded commitments)
11  27  11  15  36.4 66.7
Provision for credit losses (unfunded commitments)
(1) (3) nm
Provision for credit losses (all other) —  (1) —  nm
Total provision 12  30  16  33.3 nm
Charge-offs (9) (24) —  (6) (40) nm nm
Ending balance(1)
$ 186  $ 192  $ 201  $ 203  $ 179  (3.8) (11.8)
Allowance for credit losses:
Loans $ 176  $ 179  $ 190  $ 193  $ 168  (4.5) (13.0)
Unfunded (off-balance sheet) commitments 11  10  10  11.1 25.0
All other (50.0)
Ending balance(1)
$ 186  $ 192  $ 201  $ 203  $ 179  (3.8) (11.8)
(1) The allowance for credit losses on unfunded commitments is included within Other liabilities in the Consolidated Statement of Condition.
nm Denotes not meaningful

10    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
ASSETS UNDER CUSTODY AND/OR ADMINISTRATION
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in billions) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Assets Under Custody and/or Administration(1)
By Product Classification:
Collective funds, including ETFs $ 15,430  $ 16,728  $ 17,795  $ 17,997  $ 18,338  18.8  % 1.9  %
Mutual funds 12,143  12,641  13,209  13,518  13,309  9.6  (1.5)
Pension products 9,377  9,679  10,321  10,452  10,912  16.4  4.4 
Insurance and other products 9,783  9,952  10,339  11,833  11,956  22.2  1.0 
Total Assets Under Custody and/or Administration $ 46,733  $ 49,000  $ 51,664  $ 53,800  $ 54,515  16.7  1.3 
By Asset Class:
Equities $ 27,508  $ 29,311  $ 31,124  $ 31,879  $ 32,243  17.2  1.1 
Fixed-Income 11,900  12,122  12,874  13,830  14,030  17.9  1.4 
Short-term and other investments(2)
7,325  7,567  7,666  8,091  8,242  12.5  1.9 
Total Assets Under Custody and/or Administration $ 46,733  $ 49,000  $ 51,664  $ 53,800  $ 54,515  16.7  1.3 
By Geographic Location(3):
Americas $ 33,340  $ 35,028  $ 36,698  $ 37,422  $ 37,265  11.8  (0.4)
Europe/Middle East/Africa 10,303  10,803  11,570  12,918  13,563  31.6  5.0 
Asia/Pacific 3,090  3,169  3,396  3,460  3,687  19.3  6.6 
Total Assets Under Custody and/or Administration $ 46,733  $ 49,000  $ 51,664  $ 53,800  $ 54,515  16.7  1.3 
Assets Under Custody(4)
By Product Classification:
Collective funds, including ETFs $ 13,335  $ 14,487  $ 15,478  $ 15,619  $ 15,874  19.0  1.6 
Mutual funds 9,725  10,060  10,506  10,762  10,598  9.0  (1.5)
Pension products 7,731  7,975  8,371  8,487  8,875  14.8  4.6 
Insurance and other products 3,046  3,026  3,144  3,484  3,537  16.1  1.5 
Total Assets Under Custody $ 33,837  $ 35,548  $ 37,499  $ 38,352  $ 38,884  14.9  1.4 
By Geographic Location(3):
Americas $ 25,407  $ 26,705  $ 28,058  $ 28,462  $ 28,398  11.8  (0.2)
Europe/Middle East/Africa 5,861  6,215  6,606  6,968  7,360  25.6  5.6 
Asia-Pacific 2,569  2,628  2,835  2,922  3,126  21.7  7.0 
Total Assets Under Custody $ 33,837  $ 35,548  $ 37,499  $ 38,352  $ 38,884  14.9  1.4 
(1) Consistent with past practice, AUC/A values for certain asset classes are based on a lag, typically one-month.
(2) Short-term and other investments includes derivatives, cash and cash equivalents and other instruments.
(3) Geographic mix is generally based on the domicile of the entity servicing the funds and is not necessarily representative of the underlying asset mix.
(4) Assets under custody are a component of assets under custody and/or administration presented above.
11    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
ASSETS UNDER MANAGEMENT
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in billions) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Assets Under Management by Category(1)
By Asset Class:
Equity $ 2,901  $ 3,218  $ 3,465  $ 3,589  $ 3,496  20.5  % (2.6) %
Fixed-Income 633  700  720  734  756  19.4  3.0 
Cash(2)
518  525  540  570  581  12.2  1.9 
Multi-Asset 390  449  477  501  503  29.0  0.4 
Alternative Investments(3)
223  225  244  271  284  27.4  4.8 
Total Assets Under Management $ 4,665  $ 5,117  $ 5,446  $ 5,665  $ 5,620  20.5  (0.8)
By Geography(4):
Americas $ 3,431  $ 3,713  $ 3,982  $ 4,155  $ 4,108  19.7  (1.1)
Europe/Middle East/Asia 690  771  806  841  845  22.5  0.5 
Asia-Pacific 544  633  658  669  667  22.6  (0.3)
Total Assets Under Management $ 4,665  $ 5,117  $ 5,446  $ 5,665  $ 5,620  20.5  (0.8)
By Vehicle:
ETF $ 1,554  $ 1,690  $ 1,848  $ 1,951  $ 1,940  24.8  (0.6)
Separately Managed Accounts 1,776  1,985  2,074  2,127  2,120  19.4  (0.3)
Other Commingled Funds 1,335  1,442  1,524  1,587  1,560  16.9  (1.7)
Total Assets Under Management $ 4,665  $ 5,117  $ 5,446  $ 5,665  $ 5,620  20.5  (0.8)
By Strategy:
Index Strategies and Solutions:
ETFs $ 1,541  $ 1,677  $ 1,834  $ 1,936  $ 1,926  25.0  (0.5)
Other Index 2,424  2,737  2,896  2,986  2,938  21.2  (1.6)
Total Index Strategies and Solutions 3,965  4,414  4,730  4,922  4,864  22.7  (1.2)
Active, Alternatives and Other 182  178  176  173  175  (3.8) 1.2 
Cash(2)
518  525  540  570  581  12.2  1.9 
Total Assets Under Management $ 4,665  $ 5,117  $ 5,446  $ 5,665  $ 5,620  20.5  (0.8)
(1) Our AUM disclosures have been updated to more closely reflect the investment strategies and capabilities within the Investment Management business. AUM disclosures are now organized around Index; Active, Alternatives and Other Strategies; and Cash. We have retained the supplemental views of AUM, including, but not limited to, views by asset class and by geography.
(2) Includes both floating- and constant-net-asset-value portfolios held in commingled structures or separate accounts.
(3) Includes real estate investment trusts, currency and commodities, including SPDR® Gold Shares and SPDR® Gold MiniSharesSM Trust. We are not the investment manager for the SPDR® Gold Shares and SPDR®Gold MiniSharesSM Trust, but act as the marketing agent.
(4) Geographic mix is based on client location or fund management location.
12    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
ASSETS UNDER MANAGEMENT (Continued)
Quarters
(Dollars in billions) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26
Net Asset Flows by Category(1)
By Asset Class:
Equity $ (37) $ 14  $ $ 28  $
Fixed-Income 51  13  11  28 
Cash(2)
(1) 10  24 
Multi-Asset 13  25  12  12 
Alternative Investments(3)
(7) (8) 10  (1)
Total Flows, net $ (13) $ 82  $ 26  $ 85  $ 49 
By Geography(4):
Americas $ $ 29  $ 36  $ 75  $ 10 
Europe/Middle East/Asia (29) 18  —  10  29 
Asia-Pacific 12  35  (10) —  10 
Total Flows, net $ (13) $ 82  $ 26  $ 85  $ 49 
By Vehicle:
ETF $ $ 15  $ 37  $ 51  $ 25 
Separately Managed Accounts (7) 50  (20) 30 
Other Commingled Funds (7) 17  30  (6)
Total Flows, net $ (13) $ 82  $ 26  $ 85  $ 49 
By Strategy:
Index Strategies and Solutions:
ETFs $ —  $ 15  $ 38  $ 51  $ 25 
Other Index (12) 81  (7) 14  13 
Total Index Strategies and Solutions (12) 96  31  65  38 
Active, Alternatives and Other (2) (13) (15) (4)
Cash(2)
(1) 10  24 
Total Flows, net $ (13) $ 82  $ 26  $ 85  $ 49 
(1) Our AUM disclosures have been updated to more closely reflect the investment strategies and capabilities within the Investment Management business. AUM disclosures are now organized around Index; Active, Alternatives and Other Strategies; and Cash. We have retained the supplemental views of AUM, including, but not limited to, views by asset class and by geography.
(2) Includes both floating- and constant-net-asset-value portfolios held in commingled structures or separate accounts.
(3) Includes real estate investment trusts, currency and commodities, including SPDR® Gold Shares and SPDR® Gold MiniSharesSM Trust. We are not the investment manager for the SPDR® Gold Shares and SPDR®Gold MiniSharesSM Trust, but act as the marketing agent.
(4) Geographic mix is based on client location or fund management location.
13    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
LINE OF BUSINESS INFORMATION
Three Months Ended March 31,
Investment Servicing % Change Investment Management % Change
Other(1)
% Change Total % Change
(Dollars in millions) 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
 vs.
1Q25
1Q26
 vs.
4Q25
1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
 vs.
1Q25
1Q26
 vs.
4Q25
1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
 vs.
1Q25
1Q26
 vs.
4Q25
1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
 vs.
1Q25
1Q26
 vs.
4Q25
Servicing fees $ 1,275 $ 1,388 $ 1,409 10.5  % 1.5  % $ $ $ —  % —  % $ $ $ —  % —  % $ 1,275 $ 1,388 $ 1,409 10.5  % 1.5  %
Management fees(2)
—  —  587 717 724 23.3  1.0  —  —  587 717 724 23.3  1.0 
Foreign exchange trading services(2)
337 350 432 28.2  23.4  3 —  —  —  —  337 350 435 29.1  24.3 
Securities finance 108 121 110 1.9  (9.1) 6 6 6 —  —  —  —  114 127 116 1.8  (8.7)
Software services(2)
158 163 169 7.0  3.7  —  —  —  —  158 163 169 7.0  3.7 
Other fee revenue(2)
101 113 102 1.0  (9.7) (2) 4 5 nm 25.0  —  —  99 117 107 8.1  (8.5)
Total fee revenue 1,979 2,135 2,222 12.3  4.1  591 727 738 24.9  1.5  —  —  2,570 2,862 2,960 15.2  3.4 
Net interest income 709 800 832 17.3  4.0  5 2 3 (40.0) 50.0  —  —  714 802 835 16.9  4.1 
Total other income 3 1 nm nm —  —  —  —  3 1 nm (66.7)
Total revenue 2,688 2,938 3,055 13.7  4.0  596 729 741 24.3  1.6  —  —  3,284 3,667 3,796 15.6  3.5 
Provision for credit losses 12 8 16 33.3  nm —  —  —  —  12 8 16 33.3  nm
Total expenses 2,019 2,048 2,189 8.4  6.9  431 487 492 14.2  1.0  206 130 nm (36.9) 2,450 2,741 2,811 14.7  2.6 
Income before income tax expense $ 657 $ 882 $ 850 29.4  (3.6) $ 165 $ 242 $ 249 50.9  2.9  $ $ (206) $ (130) nm (36.9) $ 822 $ 918 $ 969 17.9  5.6 
Pre-tax margin 24.5  % 30.0  % 27.8  % 3.3  % (2.2) % pts 27.7  % 33.2  % 33.6  % 5.9  % 0.4  % pts 25.0  % 25.0  % 25.5  % 0.5  % 0.5  % pts
(1) Represents amounts that are not allocated to a specific line of business, including repositioning charges, employee costs, acquisition costs, revenue-related recoveries and certain legal accruals.
(2) In the first quarter of 2026, revenue related to distribution and marketing activities was reclassified from foreign exchange trading services to management fees. Additionally, lending related and other fees, previously recognized within software and processing fees, was reclassified to other fee revenue, and the software and processing fees caption has been changed to software services. Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. These reclassifications had no impact on total fee revenue, total revenue or net income, on either a consolidated or line of business basis.
nm Denotes not meaningful
14    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
REGULATORY CAPITAL
Basel III Advanced Approaches(1)
Basel III Standardized Approach(2)
(Dollars in millions) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26
Ratios and Supporting Calculations:
Common equity tier 1 capital $ 14,362  $ 14,791  $ 15,156  $ 14,812  $ 14,798 $ 14,362  $ 14,791  $ 15,156  $ 14,812  $ 14,798
Total risk-weighted assets 114,274  118,652  115,731  114,357  118,311 130,208  137,677  134,168  127,263  139,811
Common equity tier 1 risk-based capital ratio 12.6  % 12.5  % 13.1  % 13.0  % 12.5  % 11.0  % 10.7  % 11.3  % 11.6  % 10.6  %
Tier 1 capital $ 17,921  $ 18,350  $ 18,715  $ 18,371  $ 18,357  $ 17,921  $ 18,350  $ 18,715  $ 18,371  $ 18,357 
Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio 15.7  % 15.5  % 16.2  % 16.1  % 15.5  % 13.8  % 13.3  % 13.9  % 14.4  % 13.1  %
Total capital $ 19,799  $ 20,226  $ 20,608  $ 20,261  $ 20,085  $ 19,978  $ 20,418  $ 20,792  $ 20,446  $ 20,234 
Total risk-based capital ratio 17.3  % 17.0  % 17.8  % 17.7  % 17.0  % 15.3  % 14.8  % 15.5  % 16.1  % 14.5  %
Tier 1 capital $ 17,921  $ 18,350  $ 18,715  $ 18,371  $ 18,357  $ 17,921  $ 18,350  $ 18,715  $ 18,371  $ 18,357 
Adjusted average assets (Tier 1)(3)
328,520  344,822  331,553  332,978  342,329  328,520  344,822  331,553  332,978  342,329 
Tier 1 leverage ratio 5.5  % 5.3  % 5.6  % 5.5  % 5.4  % 5.5  % 5.3  % 5.6  % 5.5  % 5.4  %
On-and off-balance sheet leverage exposure $ 286,035  $ 300,585  $ 300,388  $ 294,138  $ 299,379  $ 286,035  $ 300,585  $ 300,388  $ 294,138  $ 299,379 
Less: regulatory deductions (8,771) (8,957) (8,928) (9,470) (9,385) (8,771) (8,957) (8,928) (9,470) (9,385)
Leverage exposure (SLR) 277,264  291,628  291,460  284,668  289,994  277,264  291,628  291,460  284,668  289,994 
Supplementary leverage ratio(4)
6.5  % 6.3  % 6.4  % 6.5  % 6.3  % 6.5  % 6.3  % 6.4  % 6.5  % 6.3  %
(1) CET1, tier 1 capital, total capital and tier 1 leverage ratios for each period above were calculated in conformity with the advanced approaches provisions of the Basel III final rule. Capital ratios as of March 31, 2026 are estimates.
(2) CET1, tier 1 capital, total capital and tier 1 leverage ratios for each period above were calculated in conformity with the standardized approach provisions of the Basel III final rule. Capital ratios as of March 31, 2026 are estimates.
(3) Adjusted average assets (Tier 1) is equal to average consolidated total assets less applicable Tier 1 capital deductions.
(4) We are subject to a minimum Supplementary Leverage Ratio or SLR of 3%, and as a U.S. G-SIB, we must maintain a 0.5% SLR buffer in order to avoid any limitations on distributions to shareholders and discretionary bonus payments to certain executives.
15    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
RECONCILIATIONS OF TANGIBLE BOOK VALUE PER SHARE AND RETURN ON TANGIBLE COMMON EQUITY
The tangible book value per common share (TBVPS) and return on average tangible common equity (ROTCE) are ratios that management believes provides context about State Street's use of equity. The TBVPS ratio is calculated by dividing the period end tangible common equity by total common shares outstanding. The ROTCE ratio is calculated by dividing annualized net income available to common shareholders for the relevant period by average tangible common equity. Period end and average tangible common equity reflected in the TBVPS and ROTCE ratios, are both non-GAAP measures which reduce period end and average common shareholders' equity, by period end and average goodwill and other intangible assets, net of related deferred taxes. Since there is no authoritative requirement to calculate the TBVPS and ROTCE ratios, our TBVPS and ROTCE ratios are not necessarily comparable to similar measures disclosed or used by other companies in the financial services industry. TBVPS and ROTCE are non-GAAP financial measures and should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or superior to, financial measures determined in accordance with GAAP or other applicable requirements. Reconciliations with respect to the calculation of these ratios are presented below.
Quarters
(Dollars in millions, except per share amounts, or where otherwise noted) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26
Tangible common equity - period end:
Total shareholders' equity $ 26,692  $ 27,307  $ 27,642  $ 27,841  $ 27,742 
Less:
Preferred stock 3,559  3,559  3,559  3,559  3,559 
Common shareholders' equity 23,133  23,748  24,083  24,282  24,183 
Less:
Goodwill 7,763  7,918  7,916  8,159  8,121 
Other intangible assets 1,046  1,014  958  935  872 
Plus:
Related deferred tax liabilities 465  479  473  478  480 
Tangible common shareholders' equity - Non-GAAP $ 14,789  $ 15,295  $ 15,682  $ 15,666  $ 15,670 
Total common shares outstanding - period end (in thousands) 288,676  285,562  282,218  279,078  276,925 
Book value per common share $ 80.13  $ 83.16  $ 85.33  $ 87.01  $ 87.33 
Tangible book value per common share - Non-GAAP 51.23  53.56  55.57  56.13  56.59 
Quarters
(Dollars in millions, except where otherwise noted) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26
Tangible common equity - average:
Average common shareholders' equity $ 22,847  $ 23,496  $ 23,772  $ 24,167  $ 24,555 
Less:
Average goodwill 7,717  7,854  7,906  7,971  8,154 
Average other intangible assets 1,065  1,029  982  962  902 
Plus:
Related deferred tax liabilities 462  472  476  475  479 
Average tangible common shareholders' equity - Non-GAAP $ 14,527  $ 15,085  $ 15,360  $ 15,709  $ 15,978 
Net income available to common shareholders $ 597  $ 630  $ 802  $ 688  $ 705 
Net income available to common shareholders, excluding notable items(1)
597  733  802  845  803 
Return on average tangible common equity - Non-GAAP(2)
16.4  % 16.7  % 20.9  % 17.5  % 17.6  %
Return on average tangible common equity, excluding notable items - Non-GAAP(2)
16.4  19.4  20.9  21.5  20.1 
(1) Refer to Reconciliations of non-GAAP Financial Information pages for a reconciliation of net income available to common shareholders, excluding notable items.
(2) Return on average tangible common equity, excluding notable items - non-GAAP is calculated by dividing annualized net income available to common shareholders, excluding notable items for the relevant period by average tangible common equity.
16    

STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
RECONCILIATIONS OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL INFORMATION
In addition to presenting State Street's financial results in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, management also presents certain financial information on a basis that excludes or adjusts one or more items from GAAP. This latter basis is a non-GAAP presentation. In general, our non-GAAP financial results adjust selected GAAP-basis financial results to exclude the impact of revenue and expenses outside of State Street’s normal course of business or other notable items, such as acquisition and restructuring charges, repositioning charges, gains/losses on sales, as well as, for selected comparisons, seasonal items. For example, we sometimes present expenses on a basis we may refer to as "expenses ex-notable items", which exclude notable items and, to provide additional perspective on both prior year quarter and sequential quarter comparisons, also exclude seasonal items. Management believes that this presentation of financial information facilitates an investor's further understanding and analysis of State Street's financial performance and trends with respect to State Street’s business operations from period-to-period, including providing additional insight into our underlying margin and profitability. In addition, Management may also provide additional non-GAAP measures. For example, we present capital ratios, calculated under regulatory standards scheduled to be effective in the future or other standards, that management uses in evaluating State Street’s business and activities and believes may similarly be useful to investors. Additionally, we may present revenue and expense measures on a constant currency basis to identify the significance of changes in foreign currency exchange rates (which often are variable) in period-to-period comparisons. This presentation represents the effects of applying prior period weighted average foreign currency exchange rates to current period results.
Non-GAAP financial measures should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or superior to, financial measures determined in conformity with GAAP.
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in millions) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Fee Revenue:
Total fee revenue, GAAP-basis $ 2,570  $ 2,719  $ 2,829  $ 2,862  $ 2,960  15.2  % 3.4  %
Less: Notable items:
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  (3) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  24  —  —  — 
Total fee revenue, excluding notable items $ 2,570  $ 2,740  $ 2,829  $ 2,862  $ 2,960  15.2  3.4 
Total Revenue:
Total revenue, GAAP-basis $ 3,284  $ 3,448  $ 3,545  $ 3,667  $ 3,796  15.6  % 3.5  %
Less: Notable items:
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  (3) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  24  —  —  — 
Total revenue, excluding notable items $ 3,284  $ 3,469  $ 3,545  $ 3,667  $ 3,796  15.6  3.5 
Expenses:
Total expenses, GAAP-basis $ 2,450  $ 2,529  $ 2,434  $ 2,741  $ 2,811  14.7  % 2.6  %
Less: Notable items:
Repositioning charges(3)
—  (100) —  (226) (89) nm (60.6)
Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
—  (18) —  —  (41) nm nm
Other notable items(4)
—  —  20  —  —  nm
Total expenses, excluding notable items
2,450  2,412  2,434  2,535  2,681  9.4  5.8
Seasonal expenses (155) —  —  —  (169) 9.0  nm
Total expenses, excluding notable items and seasonal expenses $ 2,295  $ 2,412  $ 2,434  $ 2,535  $ 2,512  9.5  (0.9)
Fee Operating Leverage, GAAP-Basis:
Total fee revenue, GAAP-basis $ 2,570 

$ 2,719 

$ 2,829 

$ 2,862  $ 2,960 

15.18  % 3.42  %
Total expenses, GAAP-basis 2,450  2,529  2,434 

2,741  2,811  14.73  2.55 
Fee operating leverage, GAAP-basis(5)
45  bps 87  bps
Fee Operating Leverage, excluding notable items:
Total fee revenue, excluding notable items (as reconciled above) $ 2,570  $ 2,740  $ 2,829  $ 2,862  $ 2,960 

15.18  % 3.42  %
Total expenses, excluding notable items (as reconciled above) 2,450  2,412  2,434  2,535  2,681 

9.43  5.76 
Fee operating leverage, excluding notable items(6)
575  bps (234) bps
Operating Leverage, GAAP-Basis:
Total revenue, GAAP-basis $ 3,284  $ 3,448  $ 3,545 

$ 3,667  $ 3,796  15.59  % 3.52  %
Total expenses, GAAP-basis 2,450  2,529  2,434 

2,741  2,811  14.73  2.55 
Operating leverage, GAAP-basis(7)
86  bps 97  bps
Operating Leverage, excluding notable items:
Total revenue, excluding notable items (as reconciled above) $ 3,284  $ 3,469  $ 3,545  $ 3,667  $ 3,796  15.59  % 3.52  %
Total expenses, excluding notable items (as reconciled above) 2,450  2,412  2,434 

2,535  2,681  9.43  5.76 
Operating leverage, excluding notable items(8)
616  bps (224) bps
17    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
RECONCILIATIONS OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL INFORMATION (Continued)
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in millions, except earnings per share, or where otherwise noted) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Income Before Income Tax Expense:
Income before income tax expense GAAP-basis $ 822  $ 889  $ 1,102  $ 918  $ 969  17.9  % 5.6  %
Less: Notable items
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  (3) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  24  —  —  — 
Repositioning charges(3)
—  100  —  226  89 
Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
—  18  —  —  41 
Other notable items(4)
—  (1) —  (20) — 
Income before income tax expense, excluding notable items $ 822  $ 1,027  $ 1,102  $ 1,124  $ 1,099  33.7  (2.2)
Net Income:
Net Income GAAP-basis $ 644 $ 693  $ 861  $ 747  $ 764 

18.6  % 2.3  %
Less: Notable items
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
(3) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
24  —  —  — 
Repositioning charges(3)
100  —  226  89 
Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
18  —  —  41 
Other notable items(4)
(1) —  (20) — 
Tax impact of notable items (35) —  (49) (32)
Net Income, excluding notable items $ 644 $ 796  $ 861 

$ 904  $ 862  33.9  (4.6)
Net Income Available to Common Shareholders:
Net Income Available to Common Shareholders, GAAP-basis $ 597 

$ 630 

$ 802  $ 688  $ 705 

18.1  % 2.5  %
Less: Notable items
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  (3) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  24  —  —  — 
Repositioning charges(3)
—  100  —  226  89 
Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
—  18  —  —  41 
Other notable items(4)
—  (1) —  (20) — 
Tax impact of notable items —  (35) —  (49) (32)
Net Income Available to Common Shareholders, excluding notable items $ 597  $ 733  $ 802 

$ 845  $ 803  34.5  (5.0)
Diluted Earnings per Share:
Diluted earnings per share, GAAP-basis $ 2.04  $ 2.17  $ 2.78  $ 2.42  $ 2.49 

22.1  % 2.9  %
Less: Notable items







Foreign exchange trading services(1)
(0.01)
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
0.06
Repositioning charges(3)
0.26 0.60 0.24

Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
0.05 0.11
Other notable items(4)
(0.05)
Diluted earnings per share, excluding notable items $ 2.04 $ 2.53 $ 2.78 $ 2.97 $ 2.84 

39.2  (4.4)
18    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
RECONCILIATIONS OF NON-GAAP FINANCIAL INFORMATION (Continued)
Quarters % Change
(Dollars in millions, except earnings per share, or where otherwise noted) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26
vs.
1Q25
1Q26
vs.
4Q25
Pre-tax Margin:
Pre-tax margin, GAAP-basis(9)
25.0  %

25.8  %

31.1  %

25.0  % 25.5  %

0.5  % pts 0.5  % pts
Less: Notable items








Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  (0.1) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  0.7  —  —  — 
Repositioning charges(3)
—  2.7  —  6.3  2.4 

Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
—  0.5  —  —  1.1 
Other notable items(4)
—  —  —  (0.6) — 

Pre-tax margin, excluding notable items 25.0  %

29.6  %

31.1  %

30.7  % 29.0  %

4.0  (1.7)
Return on Average Common Equity:
Return on average common equity, GAAP-basis 10.6  % 10.8  % 13.4  % 11.3  % 11.6  % 1.0  % pts 0.3  % pts
Less: Notable items
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  (0.1) —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  0.4  —  —  — 
Repositioning charges(3)
—  1.7  —  3.7  1.5 
Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
—  0.3  —  —  0.7 
Other notable items(4)
—  —  —  (0.3) — 
Tax impact of notable items —  (0.6) —  (0.8) (0.5)
Return on average common equity, excluding notable items 10.6  % 12.5  % 13.4  % 13.9  % 13.3  % 2.7  (0.6)
Effective Tax Rate:
Effective tax rate, GAAP-basis 21.7  % 22.0  % 21.9  % 18.6  % 21.2  % (0.5) % pts 2.6  % pts
Less: Notable items
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
—  —  —  —  — 
Client rescoping (revenue impact)(2)
—  0.1  —  —  — 
Repositioning charges(3)
—  0.4  —  1.1  0.3 
Client rescoping (expense impact)(2)
—  —  —  —  0.1 
Other notable items(4)
—  —  —  (0.1) — 
Effective tax rate, excluding notable items 21.7  % 22.5  % 21.9  % 19.6  % 21.6  % (0.1) 2.0 
(1) Amounts in 2025 consist of a revenue-related recovery associated with the proceeds from a 2018 foreign exchange benchmark litigation resolution, which is reflected in foreign exchange trading services revenue.
(2) Client rescoping of $41 million in the first quarter of 2026 reflected in information systems and communications. Amount in 2025 related to a client rescoping which decreased income before income taxes by $42 million, of which $24 million is reflected in front office software and data revenue and $18 million is reflected in information systems and communications expenses.
(3) Repositioning charges of $89 million in the first quarter of 2026 represents a $79 million charge reflected in compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization and a $1 million charge reflected in occupancy costs associated with real estate footprint optimization. Additional repositioning charges include $9 million of operating model changes reflected in information systems and communications. Amounts in the fourth quarter of 2025 include a charge of $111 million, reflected in compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization, a $69 million charge reflected in occupancy costs associated with real estate footprint optimization and additional repositioning charges (net) include operating model changes of $24 million and $22 million reflected in information systems and communications and other expenses, respectively. The amount in the second quarter of 2025 includes a charge of $100 million, reflected in compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization.
(4) Amount in the fourth quarter of 2025 includes an FDIC special assessment release of $60 million and legal and related costs of $40 million reflected in other expenses and the amount in in the second quarter of 2025 includes a subsequent true-up reflected in other expenses.
(5) Calculated as the period-over-period change in total fee revenue less the period-over-period change in total expenses.
(6) Calculated as the period-over-period change in total fee revenue, excluding notable items less the period-over-period change in total expenses, excluding notable items.
(7) Calculated as the period-over-period change in total revenue less the period-over-period change in total expenses.
(8) Calculated as the period-over-period change in total revenue, excluding notable items less the period-over-period change in total expenses, excluding notable items.
(9) GAAP- basis pre-tax margin for the first quarter of 2026 of 25.5% included seasonal incentive compensation and benefits expenses of $169 million as shown on page 16. Excluding seasonal expenses, pre-tax margin for the first quarter of 2026 was 30.0%.
19    

                                
STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
RECONCILIATION OF PRE-TAX MARGIN EXCLUDING NOTABLE ITEMS
(Dollars in millions) 2022 2023 2024 2025
Total revenue:
Total revenue, GAAP-basis $ 12,148  $ 11,945  $ 13,000  $ 13,944 
Less: Fees revenue (23) —  (15) (3)
Less: Total other income —  —  (66) — 
Add: Client rescoping (revenue impact) —  —  —  24 
Add: (Gains) losses related to investment securities, net —  294  81  — 
Total revenue, excluding notable items 12,125  12,239  13,000  13,965 
Provision for credit losses 20  46  75  59 
Total expenses:
Total expenses, GAAP-basis 8,801  9,583  9,530  10,154 
Less: Notable expense items:
Acquisition and restructuring costs (65) 15  —  — 
Deferred compensation expense acceleration —  —  (79) — 
Repositioning (charges) / release (70) (203) (326)
Client rescoping (expense impact) —  —  —  (18)
Other notable items —  (432) (111) 21 
Total expenses, excluding notable items 8,666  8,963  9,342  9,831 
Income before income tax expense, excluding notable items $ 3,439  $ 3,230  $ 3,583  $ 4,075 
Income before income tax expense, GAAP-basis $ 3,327  $ 2,316  $ 3,395  $ 3,731 
Pre-tax margin, excluding notable items 28.4  % 26.4  % 27.6  % 29.2  %
Pre-tax margin, GAAP-basis 27.4  19.4  26.1  26.8 


20    

                                

STATE STREET CORPORATION
EARNINGS RELEASE ADDENDUM
RECONCILIATIONS OF CONSTANT CURRENCY FX IMPACTS
GAAP-Basis QTD Comparison Reported Currency Translation Impact Excluding Currency Impact % Change Constant Currency
(Dollars in millions) 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25
GAAP-Basis Results:
Fee revenue:
Servicing fees $ 1,275  $ 1,388  $ 1,409  $ 35  $ $ 1,374  $ 1,404  7.8  % 1.2  %
Management fees(1)
587  717  724  719  723  22.5  0.8 
Foreign exchange trading services(1)
337  350  435  —  —  435  435  29.1  24.3 
Securities finance 114  127  116  —  —  116  116  1.8  (8.7)
Software services(1)
158  163  169  —  168  169  6.3  3.7 
Other fee revenue(1)
99  117  107  —  —  107  107  8.1  (8.5)
Total fee revenue 2,570  2,862  2,960  41  2,919  2,954  13.6  3.2 
Net interest income 714  802  835  22  813  832  13.9  3.7 
Total other income —  —  —  nm (66.7)
Total revenue $ 3,284  $ 3,667  $ 3,796  $ 63  $ $ 3,733  $ 3,787  13.7  3.3 
Expenses:
Compensation and employee benefits $ 1,262  $ 1,331  $ 1,441  $ 33  $ $ 1,408  $ 1,438  11.6  8.0 
Information systems and communications 497  557  637  —  634  637  27.6  14.4 
Transaction processing services 258  256  283  —  279  283  8.1  10.5 
Occupancy 103  173  101  —  99  101  (3.9) (41.6)
Other 330  424  349  10  339  347  2.7  (18.2)
Total expenses $ 2,450  $ 2,741  $ 2,811  $ 52  $ $ 2,759  $ 2,806  12.6  2.4 
Total expenses, excluding notable items - Non-GAAP $ 2,450  $ 2,535  $ 2,681  $ 52  $ $ 2,629  $ 2,676  7.3  5.6 
Total non-compensation expenses, excluding notable items - Non-GAAP(2)
1,188  1,315  1,319  19  1,300  1,317  9.4  0.2 
(1) In the first quarter of 2026, revenue related to distribution and marketing activities was reclassified from foreign exchange trading services to management fees. Additionally, lending related and other fees, previously recognized within software and processing fees, was reclassified to other fee revenue, and the software and processing fees caption has been changed to software services. Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. These reclassifications had no impact on total fee revenue, total revenue or net income, on either a consolidated or line of business basis.
(2) Total non-compensation expenses, excluding notable items is comprised of total expenses, excluding notable items - Non-GAAP, less compensation and employee benefits, excluding notable items. Compensation and benefits, excluding notable items were $1,362 million in the first quarter of 2026, $1,220 million in the fourth quarter of 2025 and $1,262 million in the first quarter of 2025.
nm Denotes not meaningful
21    
EX-99.3 4 stt1q26earningspresentat.htm EX-99.3 stt1q26earningspresentat
1 1Q 2026 Financial Highlights Exhibit 99.3 April 17, 2026 NYSE: STT


 
2 1Q26 highlights A Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Appendix for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures. See page 3 for a summary of our 1Q26 financial results, and the Addendum to these materials for a further summary of our 1Q26 financial results, presented on a GAAP-basis. B Represents average. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. All comparisons are to corresponding prior year period unless otherwise noted. • AUM of $5.6T at quarter-end with total net inflows of $49B1 • Record quarterly SPYM ETF inflows: #1 asset gathering ETF globally • Expanded capabilities with 57 new products and solutions launched • Earned 4 awards at the 2026 ETF.com Awards for ALLW and PRIV3 Investment Management Investment Services • Record AUC/A of $54.5T at quarter-end; AUC/A wins of $365B1,2 • New servicing fee revenue wins of $56M2 • 1 new State Street Alpha® mandate win1 State Street Markets • Integrated liquidity and financing solutions driving strong client volumes; Record FX trading volumes up 25%, securities on loan up 20%B Investment Servicing1Q26 Total revenue $3.8B ▲16% Fee revenue $3.0B ▲15% Total expenses $2.7B ▲9% Operating leverage 616bps Pre-tax margin 29.0% ROTCE 20.1% EPS $2.84 ▲39% Ex-notablesA $633M Total capital return Capital return4 90% Payout ratio Capital ratios5 5.4% Tier 1 leverage 10.6% CET1 $293B Interest-earning assetsB 1.16% Net interest margin6 Balance sheet


 
3 Summary of 1Q26 financial results • Total revenue of $3.8B, up 16% – Fee revenue of $3.0B, up 15% reflecting broad-based strength across the franchise – NII of $835M, up 17% reflecting a 16bps increase in NIM and average interest-earning assets growth of 1% • Total expenses of $2.8B, up 15%; $2.7B ex-notables, up 9% driven primarily by higher revenue-related costs, continued investments, and the negative impact of currency translation All comparisons are to corresponding prior year period unless otherwise noted. See note B below for a description of ex-notables presentation. Financial resultsA Performance highlights A In 1Q26, certain fee revenue items were reclassified as follows: 1) Distribution and marketing revenues were moved from FX trading services to Management fees; 2) Lending related and other fees were reclassified from Software and processing fees to Other fee revenue. Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. Please see page 14 for additional detail on these reclassifications. B Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Appendix for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. Notable items8 ($M, except EPS data) 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 Repositioning charges - $(226) $(89) Client rescoping - - (41) Other notable items (net) - 20 - Total notable items (pre-tax) - $(206) $(130) Income tax impact from notable items - (49) (32) EPS impact - $(0.55) $(0.35) QuartersB (GAAP; $M, except EPS data, or where otherwise noted) 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 4Q25 1Q25 Revenue: Servicing fees $1,275 $1,388 $1,409 2% 11% Management fees 587 717 724 1 23 Foreign exchange trading services 337 350 435 24 29 Securities finance 114 127 116 (9) 2 Software services 158 163 169 4 7 Other fee revenue7 99 117 107 (9) 8 Total fee revenue 2,570 2,862 2,960 3 15 Net interest income 714 802 835 4 17 Total revenue $3,284 $3,667 $3,796 4% 16% Provision for credit losses 12 8 16 nm 33% Total expenses $2,450 $2,741 $2,811 3% 15% Net income before income taxes $822 $918 $969 6% 18% Net income $644 $747 $764 2% 19% Diluted earnings per share $2.04 $2.42 $2.49 3% 22% Return on average common equity 10.6% 11.3% 11.6% 0.3%pts 1.0%pts Return on average tangible common equityB 16.4% 17.5% 17.6% 0.1%pts 1.2%pts Pre-tax margin 25.0% 25.0% 25.5% 0.5%pts 0.5%pts Tax rate 21.7% 18.6% 21.2% 2.6%pts (0.5)%pts Ex-notable items, non-GAAP B: Total fee revenue $2,570 $2,862 $2,960 3% 15% Total revenue $3,284 $3,667 $3,796 4% 16% Total expenses $2,450 $2,535 $2,681 6% 9% Diluted earnings per share $2.04 $2.97 $2.84 (4)% 39% Return on average common equity 10.6% 13.9% 13.3% (0.6)%pts 2.7%pts Return on average tangible common equity 16.4% 21.5% 20.1% (1.4)%pts 3.7%pts Pre-tax margin 25.0% 30.7% 29.0% (1.7)%pts 4.0%pts Quarters %∆


 
4 Servicing fees Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 $1,275 $1,304 $1,357 $1,409$1,388 +11% +2% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 AUC/A 1 AUC/A ($T) $46.7 $49.0 $51.7 $53.8 $54.5 AUC/A wins ($B) 182 1,093 361 484 365 AUC/A to be installed ($B) 3,056 3,975 3,634 2,500 2,748 Servicing fees ($M) 2 Servicing fee rev. wins $55 $145 $47 $87 $56 Servicing fee rev. to be installed 356 444 401 320 315 Servicing fees of $1,409M up 11% YoY and 2% QoQ • Up 11% YoY and 2% QoQ primarily driven by higher average market levels and the benefit of currency translation, plus organic growth • Record AUC/A of $54.5T at quarter-end • New 1Q26 servicing fee revenue wins of $56M, primarily driven by back office and Alternatives, which includes private markets and hedge funds2 • 1 new Alpha mandate win in 1Q261 Performance indicators 1Q26 business momentum 1Q26 performanceServicing fees ($M)


 
5 Management fees Management fees of $724M up 23% YoY and 1% QoQ • Up 23% YoY driven by higher average market levels and net inflows • Up 1% QoQ driven by net inflows and higher average market levels, partially offset by lower day count 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 $587 $600 $664 $717 $724 +1% +23% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 AUM ($T) $4.7 $5.1 $5.4 $5.7 $5.6 Net flows (QoQ) ($B) (13) 82 26 85 49 By strategy ($B): Index Strategies and Solutions $(12) $96 $31 $65 $38 ETFs – 15 38 51 25 Other Index (12) 81 (7) 14 13 Active, Alternatives and Other (2) (13) (15) (4) 3 Cash 1 (1) 10 24 8 • Product innovation: 57 new products and solutions launched – Launched State Street IG Public & Private ABS ETF (PRAB), expanding actively managed access to global credit markets – Launched State Street Prime Money Market ETF extending reach with retail investors – Introduced co-branded ETF with Comdirect: Comdirect S&P All World State Street UCITS ETF, expanding ETFs-as-a-Service in Europe • Index Strategies and Solutions – ETFs: – Net inflows of $25B driven by market share gains in U.S. Low-Cost ETF suite and positive momentum across U.S. Fixed Income, U.S. Sectors, and EMEA – Record quarterly SPYM inflows: #1 asset gathering ETF globally • Index Strategies and Solutions – Other Index: – Net inflows of $13B led by Fixed Income and Multi-Asset Solutions Management fees ($M)A 1Q26 performance Performance indicators1 1Q26 business momentum1 A Refer to page 14 in the Appendix for further details on the impact of reclassifications. Figures may not sum to total due to rounding. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23.


 
6 FX trading services and Securities finance 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 $337 $390 $364 $350 $435 FX trading services of $435M up 29% YoY and 24% QoQ • Up 29% YoY primarily due to higher volumes • Up 24% QoQ driven by higher volumes and higher spreads associated with an increase in currency volatility A Refer to page 14 in the Appendix for further details on the impact of reclassifications. B Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Appendix for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. +29% +24% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 $114 $126 $138 $127 $116 Securities finance of $116M up 2% YoY and down (9)% QoQ • Up 2% YoY largely driven by higher client lending balances • Down (9)% QoQ reflecting lower day count and a reduction in U.S. Equity specials FX trading services9, A (Ex-notable items, non-GAAP, $M)B Securities finance ($M) 1Q26 performance +2% -9% 1Q26 performance


 
7 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 ARR13 $373 $379 $402 $418 $418 New bookings14 9 6 9 31 1 Uninstalled revenue backlog15 137 143 145 155 151 Software services • 1Q26 ARR increased ~12% YoY driven by continued SaaS client conversions and implementations13 • Strong uninstalled revenue backlog, up 11% YoY15 Professional services Software and data (incl. SaaS)11 On-premises11 +7% 110 107 110 116 114 24 36 37 35 30 48 2120 1Q25 2Q25 16 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 $158 $193 $167 $163 $169 3% 24% YoY % 3% Software services of $169M up 7% YoY and 4% QoQ10,12 • Software and data revenue of $114M increased 3% YoY primarily driven by 30+ go-lives and conversions • Professional services of $30M increased 24% YoY largely driven by increased demand from SaaS client implementations and conversions 9 Software services10,12 (Ex-notable items, non-GAAP, $M)A 1Q26 performance Performance indicators ($M) 1Q26 business momentum A Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Appendix for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. +4%


 
8 Net interest income A Line items are rounded. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. NII of $835M up 17% YoY and 4% QoQ • Up 17% YoY primarily driven by a 16bps increase in NIM and a 1% increase in average interest-earning assets – NIM increased 16bps YoY largely due to an improved funding mix and investment portfolio repricing, partially offset by lower average market rates – Average interest-earning assets increased ~$4B YoY driven by an increase in client deposits, partially offset by lower wholesale funding • Up 4% QoQ primarily driven by a 6bps increase in NIM and a 1% increase in average interest-earning assets – NIM increased 6bps QoQ primarily from an improved funding mix and investment portfolio repricing – Average interest-earning assets increased ~$4B QoQ largely due to an increase in client deposits 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 Interest-earning assets $290 $305 $295 $289 $293 Interest-bearing deposits with banks (net)16 93 98 88 95 100 Investment portfolio 110 112 112 108 107 Loans17 44 45 47 48 49 Other interest-earning assets 34 39 40 30 28 Total deposits $243 $261 $255 $254 $258 Interest-bearing deposits 218 237 231 227 229 Non-interest-bearing deposits 25 24 24 26 29 NIM6 (FTE, %) 1.00% 0.96% 0.96% 1.10% 1.16% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 1Q26 $714 $729 $715 $835 4Q25 $802 +4% +17% NII ($M) 6 1Q26 performance Average balance sheet highlights ($B)A


 
9 Expenses of $2,681M up 9% YoY and 6% QoQ – Up 9% YoY driven primarily by higher revenue-related costs, continued investments, and the negative impact of currency translation – Up 6% QoQ driven by seasonal expenses (down 1% QoQ ex. seasonal expenses)B • Compensation and employee benefits of $1,362M18 – Up 8% YoY mainly due to performance-based incentive compensation, merit increases, and the impact of currency translation – Up 12% QoQ primarily driven by seasonal expenses and contractor spend • Information systems and communications of $587M18 – Up 18% YoY and 10% QoQ largely related to higher technology and infrastructure investments • Transaction processing services of $283M – Up 10% YoY and 11% QoQ reflecting higher revenue related sub- custody costs • Other of $349M18 – Up 6% YoY largely reflecting higher revenue-related expenses and marketing costs – Down (17)% QoQ mainly due to lower marketing cost and professional fee spend Expenses 330 422 349 258 256 283 497 533 587 1,262 1,220 1,362 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 $2,450 $2,535 $2,681 Comp. & benefits18 Info. sys.18 Tran. processing Other18 Occupancy18 +9% +6% 8% 18% 10% YoY % (3)% 6% $2,450 $2,741 $2,811 52,711 51,503 51,425 GAAP Expenses Headcount YoY +15% QoQ +3% YoY -2% QoQ flat A Ex-notables and some other metrics (e.g., ROTCE) are non-GAAP presentations; refer to the Appendix for a reconciliation, and further explanations, of non-GAAP measures. B 1Q25 and 1Q26 include $155M and $169M, respectively, of seasonal incentive compensation and benefits expenses. Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. Expenses (Ex-notable items, non-GAAP, $M)A 1Q26 performance (Ex-notable items, non-GAAP)A 103 104 100


 
10 eSLR buffer23 • Capital return of $633M to common shareholders; total payout ratio of 90%4 • Standardized CET1 ratio of 10.6% decreased (1.0)%pts QoQ, primarily due to a normalization in RWA from episodically low levels in the prior quarter, the impact of markets, and continued capital return, partially offset by capital generated from earnings • Tier 1 leverage ratio of 5.4% decreased (0.1)%pts QoQ mainly driven by continued capital return and higher average balance sheet levels, partially offset by capital generated from earnings • SLR of 6.3% decreased by (0.2)%pts QoQ largely due to continued capital return and higher leverage exposure, partially offset by capital generated from earnings 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 Capital Return ($M) Declared common dividends $220 $235 $233 Common share repurchases 100 400 400 Total capital return 320 635 633 Capital ($B) CET1 capital $14.4 $14.8 $14.8 Tier 1 capital 17.9 18.4 18.4 RWA / Leverage ($B) Risk weighted assets (Standardized) $130 $127 $140 Adjusted average assets (Tier 1) 20 329 333 342 Leverage exposure (SLR) 21 277 285 290 Liquidity (%) State Street Bank and Trust LCR 22 139% 143% 139% Capital and liquidity Tier 1 leverage ratio 5.5% 5.3% 5.6% 5.5% 5.4% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 Minimum ratio4.0% STT Target Range5.25-5.75% Refer to the Appendix included with this presentation for endnotes 1 to 23. CET1 ratio (Standardized) 11.0% 10.7% 11.3% 11.6% 10.6% 4.5% 2.5% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 SCB19 Minimum ratio8 .0 % 10-11% G-SIB surcharge1.0% Supplementary leverage ratio Requirement Requirement Requirement 6.5% 6.3% 6.4% 6.5% 6.3% 3.0% 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 0.5% STT Target Range Minimum ratio 3.5% Capital (%, as of period-end) 5 Capital and liquidity metrics 1Q26 performance


 
11


 
12 Appendix State Street NDFI Overview 13 Impact of reclassifications 14 Reconciliation of notable items 15 Reconciliation of constant currency impacts 16 Endnotes & other information 17 Forward-looking statements 19 Non-GAAP measures 20 Definitions 21


 
13 End of period, as of 4Q25 End of period, as of 4Q25 State Street NDFI Overview Source: 4Q25 Call Report, 2025 Form 10-K. A Figures may not sum to total due to rounding. B End of period, as of 1Q26; other figures reflect latest available data. C Primarily includes investment-grade secured lending vehicles and lending to insurance companies and investment advisors. 9.1 13.1 12.8 21.2 1.1 NDFI lending (4Q25) Subscription finance AAA-rated CLOs 2.7 Real Money Funds 1.0 Other BDC loans (4Q25) BDC loans (1Q26) $31.4 $1.8 $1.6 C Business credit intermediaries Private equity Other NDFI All figures in $ billions Call Report reconciliationA Total loans are 13% of total assets BDC loans represent <4% of total loans Total assets: $366.0BA Total loans: $46.8B 8% 87% NDFI ex BDC loans <1% BDC loans 4% Non-NDFI loans Total assets ex loans 63% 33% 4% Non-NDFI loans NDFI ex BDC loans BDC loans NDFI: ~2/3 of Total Loans ($31.4B) State Street’s NDFI portfolio is strategically aligned with Investment Services clients and is highly collateralized, diversified and has demonstrated resilient performance across multiple credit cycles • Senior positioning: Exposures are senior secured with substantial subordination (~80%, on average) • Diversified collateral: Predominantly first-lien secured exposure across >3,500 underlying companies • Broad industry exposure: Diversified, with technology representing ~20% • Structural protections: Credit agreements dynamically reduce borrowing capacity and deleverage if collateral underperforms • Top-tier managers: Support key client relationships and long-term strategic alignment BDC loans: $1.6BB


 
14 Impact of reclassifications 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 FY2025 FY2026 YTD Fee revenue: Servicing fees - - - - - - - Management feesA $25 $38 $52 $55 $47 $170 $47 FX trading servicesA (25) (38) (52) (55) (47) (170) (47) Securities finance - - - - - - - Software servicesB (67) (61) (60) (58) (57) (246) (57) Other fee revenueB 67 61 60 58 57 246 57 Total fee revenue - - - - - - - Note: Prior-period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the current presentation. These reclassifications had no impact on Total fee revenue, Total revenue, or Net income, on either a consolidated or Line of Business basis. A In 1Q26, revenue related to distribution and marketing activities was reclassified from FX trading services to Management fees. B In 1Q26, Lending related and other fees, previously recognized within Software and processing fees, was reclassified to Other fee revenue, and the Software and processing fees caption has been changed to Software services.


 
15 Reconciliation of notable items A Calculated as the period-over-period change in total fee revenue less the period-over-period change in total expenses. B Calculated as the period-over-period change in total fee revenue, excluding notable items less the period-over-period change in total expenses, excluding notable items. C Calculated as the period-over-period change in total revenue less the period-over-period change in total expenses. D Calculated as the period-over- period change in total revenue, excluding notable items less the period-over-period change in total expenses, excluding notable items. Quarterly reconciliation (Dollars in millions, unless noted otherwise) 1Q25 2Q25 3Q25 4Q25 1Q26 Total fee revenue, GAAP-basis 2,570$ 2,719$ 2,829$ 2,862$ 2,960$ 15.2% 3.4% Less: Notable items: Foreign exchange trading services (3) Client rescoping (revenue impact) 24 Total fee revenue, excluding notable items 2,570$ 2,740$ 2,829$ 2,862$ 2,960$ 15.2% 3.4% Total revenue, GAAP-basis 3,284$ 3,448$ 3,545$ 3,667$ 3,796$ 15.6% 3.5% Less: Notable items: Foreign exchange trading services (3) Client rescoping (revenue impact) 24 Total revenue, excluding notable items 3,284$ 3,469$ 3,545$ 3,667$ 3,796$ 15.6% 3.5% Total expenses, GAAP basis 2,450$ 2,529$ 2,434$ 2,741$ 2,811$ 14.7% 2.6% Less: Notable items: Repositioning charges (100) (226) (89) Client rescoping (expense impact) (18) (41) Other notable items 1 20 Total expenses, excluding notable items 2,450$ 2,412$ 2,434$ 2,535$ 2,681$ 9.4% 5.8% Seasonal expenses (155) (169) Total expenses, excluding notable items and seasonal expense items 2,295$ 2,412$ 2,434$ 2,535$ 2,512$ 9.5% (0.9)% Fee operating leverage, GAAP-basis (bps)A 45 bps 87 bps Fee operating leverage, excluding notable items (bps)B 575 bps (234) bps Operating leverage, GAAP-basis (bps)C 86 bps 97 bps Operating leverage, excluding notable items (bps)D 616 bps (224) bps Pre-tax margin, GAAP-basis (%) 25.0% 25.8% 31.1% 25.0% 25.5% 0.5% pts 0.5% pts Notable items as reconciled above (%) 3.8% 5.7% 3.5% Pre-tax margin, excluding notable items (%) 25.0% 29.6% 31.1% 30.7% 29.0% 4.0% pts (1.7)% pts Net income available to common shareholders, GAAP-basis 597$ 630$ 802$ 688$ 705$ 18.1% 2.5% Notable items as reconciled above: pre-tax 138 206 130 Tax impact on notable items as reconciled above (35) (49) (32) Net income available to common shareholders, excluding notable items 597$ 733$ 802$ 845$ 803$ 34.5% (5.0)% Diluted EPS, GAAP-basis 2.04$ 2.17$ 2.78$ 2.42$ 2.49$ 22.1% 2.9% Notable items as reconciled above 0.36 0.55 0.35 Diluted EPS, excluding notable items 2.04$ 2.53$ 2.78$ 2.97$ 2.84$ 39.2% (4.4)% 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25 % Change


 
16 Reconciliation of constant currency impacts Reconciliation of Constant Currency FX Impacts (Dollars in millions) 1Q25 4Q25 1Q26 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25 1Q26 vs. 1Q25 1Q26 vs. 4Q25 Non-GAAP basis Servicing fees, excluding notable items $ 1,275 $ 1,388 $ 1,409 $ 35 $ 5 $ 1,374 $ 1,404 7.8% 1.2% Management fees, excluding notable items 587 717 724 5 1 719 723 22.5% 0.8% Foreign exchange trading services, excluding notable items 337 350 435 - - 435 435 29.1% 24.3% Securities finance, excluding notable items 114 127 116 - - 116 116 1.8% (8.7)% Software services, excluding notable items 158 163 169 1 - 168 169 6.3% 3.7% Other fee revenue, excluding notable items 99 117 107 - - 107 107 8.1% (8.5)% Total fee revenue, excluding notable items 2,570 2,862 2,960 41 6 2,919 2,954 13.6% 3.2% Net interest income, excluding notable items 714 802 835 22 3 813 832 13.9% 3.7% Total other income, excluding notable items - 3 1 - - 1 1 nm (66.7)% Total revenue, excluding notable items $ 3,284 $ 3,667 $ 3,796 $ 63 $ 9 $ 3,733 $ 3,787 13.7% 3.3% Compensation and employee benefits, excluding notable items $ 1,262 $ 1,220 $ 1,362 $ 33 $ 3 $ 1,329 $ 1,359 5.3% 11.4% Information systems and communications, excluding notable items 497 533 587 3 - 584 587 17.5% 10.1% Transaction processing services, excluding notable items 258 256 283 4 - 279 283 8.1% 10.5% Occupancy, excluding notable items 103 104 100 2 - 98 100 (4.9)% (3.8)% Other expenses, excluding notable items 330 422 349 10 2 339 347 2.7% (17.8)% Total expenses, excluding notable items $ 2,450 $ 2,535 $ 2,681 $ 52 $ 5 $ 2,629 $ 2,676 7.3% 5.6% nm Not meaningful Reported Currency Translation Impact Excluding Currency Impact % Change Constant Currency


 
17 Endnotes & other information This presentation (and the conference call accompanying it) includes certain highlights of, and also material supplemental to, State Street Corporation’s news release announcing its first quarter 2026 financial results. That news release contains a more detailed discussion of many of the matters described in this presentation and is accompanied by an Addendum with detailed financial tables. This presentation (and the conference call accompanying it) is designed to be reviewed together with that news release and that Addendum, which are available on State Street’s website, at http://investors.statestreet.com, and are incorporated herein by reference. No other information on our website is incorporated herein by reference. 1. New investment servicing mandates, including announced Alpha front-to-back investment servicing clients, may be subject to completion of definitive agreements, consents or assignments, approval of applicable boards and shareholders, customary regulatory approvals or other conditions, the failure to complete any of which will prevent the relevant mandate from being installed and serviced. New investment servicing mandates and servicing assets/fees remaining to be installed in future periods exclude new business which has been contracted, but for which the client has not yet provided permission to publicly disclose or anonymously disclose and is not yet installed. These excluded assets, which from time to time may be significant, will be included in new investment servicing mandates and reflected in servicing assets/fees remaining to be installed in the period in which the client provides its permission. Servicing mandates, servicing assets remaining to be installed in future periods and servicing fee revenues remaining to be installed in future periods are presented on a gross basis based on factors present on or about the time we determine the business to be won by us and are not updated based on subsequent developments, including changes in assets, market valuations, scope and, potentially termination. Such assets therefore also do not include the impact of clients who have notified us during the period of their intent to terminate or reduce their relationship with State Street, which from time to time may be significant. New business in assets to be serviced is reflected in our AUC/A after we begin servicing the assets, and new business in assets to be managed is reflected in our AUM after we begin managing the assets. As such, only a portion of any new investment servicing and investment management mandates may be reflected in our AUC/A and AUM as of any particular date specified. AUC/A values for certain asset classes are based on a lag, typically one- month. Generally, our servicing fee revenues are affected by several factors, and we provide varied services from our full suite of offerings to different clients. The basis for fees will also differ across regions and clients and can reflect pricing pressures traditionally experienced in our industry. Consequently, no assumption should be drawn as to future revenue run rate from announced servicing wins or new servicing business yet to be installed, as the amount of revenue associated with AUC/A can vary materially. Management fees also are generally affected by various factors, including investment product type and strategy and relationship pricing for clients, and are more sensitive to market valuations than are servicing fees. Therefore, no assumption should be drawn from management fees associated with changes in AUM levels. Levels of AUC/A, AUC/A to be installed, Servicing fee wins to be installed and AUM are always presented as of the end of the relevant period, unless otherwise specifically noted. 2. Servicing fee revenue wins (i.e., “sales”) and backlog (i.e., "to be installed") represents estimates of future annual revenue associated with new servicing engagements State Street determines to be won during the current reporting period, which may include anticipated servicing-related revenues associated with acquisitions or structured transactions, based upon factors assessed at the time the engagement is determined by State Street to be won, including asset volumes, number of transactions, accounts and holdings, terms and expected strategy. These and other relevant factors influencing projected servicing fees upon asset implementation/onboarding will change from time to time prior to, upon and following asset implementation/onboarding, among other reasons, due to varying market levels and factors and client and investor activity and preferences. Servicing fee/backlog estimates are not updated to reflect those changes, regardless of the magnitude or direction of, or reason for, any change. Servicing fee revenue wins in any period are highly variable and include estimated fees attributable to both (1) services to be provided for new estimated AUC/A reflected in new investment servicing wins for the period (with AUC/A to be onboarded in the future) and (2) additional services to be provided for AUC/A already included in our end-of period AUC/A (i.e., for which other services are currently provided); and the magnitude of one source of servicing fee revenue wins relative to the other (i.e., (1) relative to (2)) will vary from period to period. Therefore, for these and other reasons, comparisons of estimated servicing fee revenue wins to estimated new investment servicing AUC/A wins for any period will not produce reliable fee per AUC/A estimates. No servicing fees are recognized until the point in the future when we begin performing the associated services with respect to the relevant AUC/A. See also endnote 1 above in reference to considerations applicable to pending servicing engagements, which similarly apply to engagements for which reported servicing fee revenue wins/backlog are attributable. Both AUC/A and servicing fee revenue, when presented on a "backlog" or "to be installed" basis, are presented as of period-end. Separately, quarterly servicing fee revenue wins and AUC/A wins may not sum to full-year totals due to rounding. 3. State Street was recognized at the ETF.com 2026 ETF Awards for Best New Multi-Asset ETF, Best New ETF, and Best New Active ETF for the State Street® Bridgewater® All Weather® ETF (ALLW), and Best New U.S. Fixed Income ETF for the State Street® IG Public & Private Credit ETF (PRIV). 4. Capital returned represents $233M of common stock dividends declared during 1Q26 and $400M of common share repurchases made in 1Q26. Total payout represents capital returned divided by net income available to common shareholders over the period of 1Q26. The total payout ratio was 90% in 1Q26. 5. Unless otherwise noted, all capital ratios referenced on this page and elsewhere in this presentation refer to State Street Corporation, or State Street, and not State Street Bank and Trust Company. All capital ratios are as of quarter-end. The lower of capital ratios calculated under the Basel III advanced approaches and under the Basel III standardized approach are applied in the assessment of our capital adequacy for regulatory purposes. Standardized approach ratios were binding for 1Q25 through 1Q26. Refer to the Addendum for descriptions of these ratios. 1Q26 capital ratios are presented as of quarter-end and are preliminary estimates. 6. NII is presented on a GAAP-basis. NIM is presented on a fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) basis, and is calculated by dividing FTE NII by average total interest-earning assets. Refer to the Addendum for reconciliations of NII FTE- basis to NII GAAP-basis on the Average Statement of Condition. 7. Other fee revenue primarily consists of income from lending-related activities, certain tax-advantaged investments, equity investments, and market-related adjustments. Other fee revenue increased 8% compared to 1Q25, primarily due to FX-related adjustments and market-related adjustments, partially offset by lower lending-related and other fees. Other fee revenue decreased (9)% compared to 4Q25, primarily due to lending-related and other fees.


 
18 Endnotes & other information (cont.) 8. 4Q25 Repositioning charges of $(226)M represents $111M reflected in Compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization, $69M reflected in Occupancy costs associated with real estate footprint optimization, and Operating model changes of $24M and $22M reflected in Information Systems and Communications and Other expenses, respectively. 1Q26 Repositioning charges of $(89)M represents $79M reflected in Compensation and employee benefits primarily from workforce rationalization, Operating model changes of $9M reflected in Information systems and communications, and a $1M charge reflected in Occupancy costs associated with real estate footprint optimization. 1Q26 Client rescoping of $(41)M reflected in Information systems and communications. 9. GAAP FX trading services of $393M in 2Q25 included a notable item related to a revenue-related recovery of $3M associated with the proceeds from a 2018 FX benchmark litigation resolution. Excluding this notable item, 2Q25 adjusted FX trading services was $390M. 10. GAAP Software services of $169M in 2Q25 included a notable item related to an Alpha-related client rescoping of $24M. Excluding this notable item, 2Q25 adjusted Software services was $193M. 11. On-premises revenue is revenue derived from locally installed software. Software and data revenue includes SaaS, maintenance and support revenue, FIX, brokerage, and value-add services. The revenue recognition pattern for On-premises installations differs from Software and data revenue. 12. Software services revenue primarily includes revenue from CRD, Alpha Data Platform and Alpha Data Services. Includes Other revenue of $3-4M in each of 1Q25 through 1Q26. Revenue line items may not sum to total due to rounding. 13. Software services annual recurring revenue (ARR), an operating metric, is calculated by annualizing current quarter revenue for CRD and CRD for Private Markets and includes the annualized amount of most Software and data revenue, including revenue generated from SaaS, maintenance and support revenue, FIX, and value-added services, which are all expected to be recognized ratably over the term of client contracts. Software services ARR does not include Software and data brokerage revenue, revenue from affiliates and licensing fees (excluding the portion allocated to maintenance and support) from On-premises software. 14. Software services bookings represent signed ARR contract values for CRD, CRD for Private Markets, Alpha Data Platform, and Alpha Data Services excluding bookings with affiliates, including State Street Investment Management. Software services revenue derived from affiliate agreements is eliminated in consolidation for financial reporting purposes. 15. Represents expected ARR from signed client contracts that are scheduled to be largely installed over the next 24 months for CRD, CRD for Private Markets and Alpha Data Services. It includes SaaS revenue, as well as maintenance and support revenue, and excludes the one-time impact of On-premises license revenue, revenue generated from FIX, brokerage, value-add services, and professional services as well as revenue from affiliates. 16. These deposits primarily reflect our maintenance of cash balances at the Federal Reserve, the ECB and other non-U.S. central banks. 17. Average loans are presented on a gross basis. Refer to the Addendum for average loans net of expected credit losses. 18. GAAP Compensation and employee benefits expenses of $1,441M in 1Q26 included a notable item related to a repositioning charge of $79M. GAAP Compensation and employee benefits expenses of $1,331M in 4Q25 included a notable item related to a repositioning charge of $111M. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,362M increased 12% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Compensation and employee benefits of $1,220M. GAAP Information systems and communications expenses of $637M in 1Q26 included notable items related to a client rescoping of $41M and operating model changes of $9M. GAAP Information systems and communications expenses of $557M in 4Q25 included a notable item related to operating model changes of $24M. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Information systems and communications expenses of $587M increased 10% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Information systems and communications expenses of $533M. GAAP Occupancy expenses of $101M in 1Q26 included a notable item related to a repositioning charge of $1M. GAAP Occupancy expenses of $173M in 4Q25 included a notable item related to a repositioning charge of $69M. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Occupancy expenses of $100M decreased 4% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Occupancy expenses of $104M. GAAP Other expenses of $424M in 4Q25 included notable items related to an FDIC special assessment release of $60M, legal and related costs of $40M, and a charge related to operating model changes of $22M. Excluding these notable items, adjusted 1Q26 Other expenses of $349M decreased 17% compared to adjusted 4Q25 Other expenses of $422M. 19. The SCB of 2.5% effective on October 1, 2025 is calculated based upon the results of the 2025 Federal Reserve supervisory stress test. 20. Adjusted average assets (Tier 1) is equal to average consolidated assets less applicable Tier 1 leverage capital reductions under regulatory standards. 21. The Tier 1 leverage ratio differs from the SLR primarily in that the denominator of the Tier 1 leverage ratio is a quarterly average of on-balance sheet assets, while the SLR additionally includes off-balance sheet exposures. In addition, STT’s SLR includes regulatory deductions. Refer to the Addendum for additional information on regulatory capital. 22. State Street Corporation LCR in 1Q26 was flat QoQ at ~106%; State Street Bank and Trust's (SSBT) LCR is significantly higher than State Street Corporation's (SSC) LCR, primarily due to application of the transferability restriction in the U.S. LCR Final Rule to the calculation of SSC’s LCR. This restriction limits the amount of HQLA held at SSC’s principal banking subsidiary, SSBT, and available for the calculation of SSC’s LCR to the amount of net cash outflows of SSBT. This transferability restriction does not apply in the calculation of SSBT’s LCR, and therefore SSBT’s LCR reflects the full benefit of all of its HQLA holdings. 23. Effective January 1, 2026, State Street early adopted the new eSLR rule, reducing SSC’s and SSBT’s SLR requirements from 5.0% and 6.0%, respectively, to 3.5%.


 
19 Forward-looking statements This Presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of United States securities laws, including statements about our goals and expectations regarding our strategy, growth and sales prospects, capital management, business, financial and capital condition, results of operations, the financial and market outlook and the business environment. Forward-looking statements are often, but not always, identified by such forward-looking terminology as "estimate," "will," "opportunity," "strategy," "future," "driver," “outlook,” “priority,” “expect,” “intend,” “aim,” “outcome,” “future,” “pipeline,” “trajectory,” “target," “guidance,” “objective,” “plan,” “forecast,” “believe,” “anticipate,” “seek,” “may,” “trend,” and “goal,” or similar statements or variations of such terms. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, are inherently uncertain, are based on current assumptions that are difficult to predict and involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Therefore, actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed in those statements, and those statements should not be relied upon as representing our expectations or beliefs as of any time subsequent to the time this Presentation is first issued. We are subject to intense competition, which could negatively affect our profitability; We are subject to significant pricing pressure and variability in our financial results and our AUC/A and AUM; We could be adversely affected by political, geopolitical, economic and market conditions including, for example, as a result of liquidity or capital deficiencies (actual or perceived) by other financial institutions and related market and government actions, changes in U.S. trade or other policies or those policies of other nations, the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and in the Middle East, major political shifts domestically or internationally, (including the potential for retaliatory actions by governments, market participants or clients based on diverging perspectives or otherwise, and, separately, the recent shutdown of the U.S. federal government), actions taken by central banks in an attempt to address prevailing economic conditions, changes in monetary policy or periods of significant volatility in the markets for equity, fixed income and other asset classes globally or within specific markets; Our development and completion of new products and services, including State Street Alpha® and those related to wealth servicing, alternative investment management or digital assets or incorporating artificial intelligence, may impose costs on us, involve dependencies on third parties and may expose us to increased risks; Our business may be negatively affected by risks associated with strategic initiatives we are undertaking to enhance the effectiveness, including the adoption or integration of new technologies such as artificial intelligence, and efficiency of our operations and of our cybersecurity and technology infrastructure or by our failure to meet the related, resiliency or other expectations of our clients and regulators, or as a result of a cyber-attack or similar vulnerability in our or business partners' infrastructure; Our risk management framework, models and processes may not be effective in identifying or mitigating risk and reducing the potential for related losses, and a failure or circumvention of our controls and procedures, or errors or delays in our operational and transaction processing, or those of third parties, could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, operating results and reputation; Acquisitions, strategic alliances, joint ventures and divestitures, and the integration, retention and development of the benefits of these transactions, pose risks for our business; Competition for qualified members of our workforce is intense, and we may not be able to attract and retain the highly skilled people we need to support our business; Our investment securities portfolio, consolidated financial condition and consolidated results of operations could be adversely affected by changes in the financial markets, governmental action or monetary policy. For example, among other risks, changes in prevailing interest rates or market conditions have led, and were they to persist or occur in the future could further lead, to decreases in our NII or to portfolio management decisions resulting in reductions in our capital or liquidity ratios; Our business activities expose us to interest rate risk; We assume significant credit risk of counterparties, who may also have substantial financial dependencies on other financial institutions, and these credit exposures and concentrations could expose us to financial loss; Our fee revenue represents a significant portion of our revenue and is subject to and may decline based on, among other factors, market and currency declines, investment activities and preferences of our clients and their business mix, as well as the timing of new business onboarding; If we are unable to effectively manage our capital and liquidity, our financial condition, capital ratios, results of operations and business prospects could be adversely affected; Our return of capital to shareholders through common share repurchases and common stock dividends may be variable and is subject to various business and financial factors and regulatory requirements and approvals of our Board of Directors; We may need to raise additional capital or debt in the future, which may not be available to us or may only be available on unfavorable terms; If we experience a downgrade in our credit ratings, or an actual or perceived reduction in our financial strength, our borrowing and capital costs, liquidity and reputation could be adversely affected; Our business and capital-related activities, including common share repurchases, may be adversely affected by regulatory requirements and considerations, including capital, credit and liquidity; We face extensive and changing government regulation and supervision in the U.S. and non-U.S. jurisdictions in which we operate, which may increase our costs and compliance risks and may affect our business activities and strategies; Our businesses may be adversely affected by government enforcement and litigation; Our businesses may be adversely affected by increased and conflicting political, regulatory and client scrutiny of investment management, stewardship and sustainable investment strategies and services offered; Any misappropriation of the confidential information we possess could have an adverse impact on our business and could subject us to regulatory actions, litigation and other adverse effects; Our calculations of risk exposures, total RWA and capital ratios depend on data inputs, formulae, models, correlations and assumptions that are subject to change, which could materially impact our risk exposures, our total RWA and our capital ratios from period to period; Changes in accounting standards may adversely affect our consolidated results of operations and financial condition; Changes in tax laws, rules or regulations, challenges to our tax positions and changes in the composition of our pre-tax earnings may increase our effective tax rate; We could face liabilities for withholding and other non-income taxes, including in connection with our services to clients, as a result of tax authority examinations; Our businesses may be negatively affected by adverse publicity or other reputational harm; Shifting and maintaining operational activities to non-U.S. jurisdictions, changing our operating model, and outsourcing to, or insourcing from, third parties expose us to increased operational risk, geopolitical risk and reputational harm and may not result in expected cost savings or operational improvements; Attacks or unauthorized access to our or our business partners’ or clients’ information technology systems or facilities, such as cyber-attacks or other disruptions to our or their operations, could result in significant costs, reputational damage and impacts on our business activities; Long-term contracts and customizing service delivery for clients expose us to increased operational risk, pricing and performance risk; We may not be able to protect our intellectual property or may infringe upon the rights of third parties; The quantitative models we use to manage our business may contain errors that could adversely impact our business, financial condition, operating results and regulatory compliance, and lapses in disclosure controls and procedures or internal control over financial reporting could occur, any of which could result in material harm; Our reputation and business prospects may be damaged if investors in the collective investment pools we sponsor or manage incur substantial losses in these investment pools or are restricted in redeeming their interests in these investment pools; The impacts of global regulatory requirements and expectations, shifting client preferences, and disclosure requirements related to climate risks and sustainability standards could adversely affect us; and We may incur losses or face negative impacts on our business as a result of unforeseen events, including terrorist attacks, geopolitical events, acute or chronic physical risk events, including natural disasters, pandemics, global conflicts, or a banking crisis, which may have a negative impact on our business and operations. Other important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by any forward-looking statements are set forth in our 2025 Annual Report on Form 10-K and our subsequent SEC filings. We encourage investors to read these filings, particularly the sections on risk factors, for additional information with respect to any forward-looking statements and prior to making any investment decision. The forward-looking statements contained in this Presentation should not be relied on as representing our expectations or beliefs as of any time subsequent to the time this Presentation is first issued, and we do not undertake efforts to revise those forward-looking statements to reflect events after that time.


 
20 Non-GAAP measures In addition to presenting State Street's financial results in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, management also presents certain financial information on a basis that excludes or adjusts one or more items from GAAP. This latter basis is a non-GAAP presentation. In general, our non-GAAP financial results adjust selected GAAP-basis financial results to exclude the impact of revenue and expenses outside of State Street’s normal course of business or other notable items, such as acquisition and restructuring charges, repositioning charges, gains/losses on sales, as well as, for selected comparisons, seasonal items. For example, we sometimes present expenses on a basis we may refer to as “expenses ex-notable items", which exclude notable items and, to provide additional perspective on both prior year quarter and sequential quarter comparisons, may also exclude seasonal items. Management believes that this presentation of financial information facilitates an investor's further understanding and analysis of State Street's financial performance and trends with respect to State Street’s business operations from period-to-period, including providing additional insight into our underlying margin and profitability. In addition, Management may also provide additional non-GAAP measures. For example, we may sometimes present ratios, such as return on tangible common equity, based on an adjusted common shareholder equity metric, "tangible common equity", which reflects a reduction (net of deferred taxes) for goodwill and other intangible assets, as we believe this presentation provides additional context about our use of equity. As an additional example, we may present revenue and expense measures on a constant currency basis to identify the significance of changes in foreign currency exchange rates (which often are variable) in period-to-period comparisons. This presentation represents the effects of applying prior period weighted average foreign currency exchange rates to current period results. Non-GAAP financial measures should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or superior to, financial measures determined in conformity with GAAP. Refer to the “Reconciliation of notable items” in this Appendix and to the Addendum for reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial information. To access the Addendum go to http://investors.statestreet.com and click on “Filings & Reports – Quarterly Results”.


 
21 Definitions ARR Annual recurring revenue AUC/A Assets under custody and/or administration AUM Assets under management BDC Business Development Company CET1 ratio Common equity tier 1 ratio CLO Collateralized Loan Obligation CRD Charles River Development Diluted earnings per share (EPS) Net income available to common shareholders divided by diluted average common shares outstanding for the noted period EMEA Europe, Middle East and Africa EPS Earnings per share ETF Exchange-traded fund Fee operating leverage Rate of growth of total fee revenue less the rate of growth of total expenses, relative to the successive prior year period, as applicable FIX The Charles River Network's FIX Network Service (CRN) is an end-to-end trade execution and support service facilitating electronic trading between Charles River's asset management and broker clients FTE Fully taxable-equivalent FX Foreign exchange FY Full-year GAAP Generally accepted accounting principles in the United States G-SIB Global systemically important bank HQLA High Quality Liquid Assets LCR Liquidity Coverage Ratio NDFI Nondepository Financial Institutions Net interest income (NII) Income earned on interest bearing assets less interest paid on interest bearing liabilities Net interest margin (NIM) (FTE) Fully taxable-equivalent (FTE) Net interest income divided by average total interest-earning assets nm Not meaningful NYSE New York Stock Exchange On-premises On-premises revenue as recognized in Software services Operating leverage Rate of growth of total revenue less the rate of growth of total expenses, relative to the corresponding prior year period, as applicable %Pts Percentage points is the difference from one percentage value subtracted from another Payout ratio Total payout ratio is equal to common stock dividends and common stock purchases as a percentage of net income available to common shareholders Pre-tax margin Income before income tax expense divided by total revenue Quarter-over-Quarter (QoQ) Sequential quarter comparison Return on average equity (ROE) Net income available to common shareholders divided by average common equity Return on average tangible common equity (ROTCE) Net income available to common shareholders divided by average tangible common equity RWA Risk weighted assets SaaS Software as a service SCB Stress capital buffer SEC Securities Exchange Commission SSC State Street Corporation Year-over-Year (YoY) Current period compared to the same period a year ago