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This Month's Featured Article
CPI Card Group’s Quiet Cash Machine Faces a Digital Reality CheckAuthored by Peter Frank. Published: 5/4/2026. 
Key Points
- CPI Card Group benefits from steady demand for physical payment cards despite digital payment growth.
- The Arroweye expansion boosted revenue but reduced net income due to acquisition and integration costs.
- Strong cash flow supports the business, though leverage and tariffs remain ongoing risks.
- Special Report: Elon Musk’s $1 Quadrillion AI IPO
Remember paying with plastic? In today’s world of mobile payments and online shopping, CPI Card Group (NASDAQ: PMTS) certainly does—and its business is delivering record results. CPI is hardly a flashy fintech. It makes the physical debit and credit cards that banks hand to customers every day. And, believe it or not, that business was booming last year as the company generated a record $543.5 million in revenue and $60 million in operating cash flow, up 37% from the year before.
How long this increasingly old-fashioned payment method can last is the question investors may be asking. For now, the business looks not exciting, but predictably solid. Record Revenue Highlights Durable Card DemandIn fact, CPI posted the best revenue year in its history in 2025. This is a business that benefits every time a bank opens a new checking account, redesigns its card portfolio, or replaces a lost card. Someone has to make that piece of plastic, and CPI is one of the companies that does it. Even as digital wallets dominate headlines, underlying demand for physical cards has remained surprisingly durable. That’s good news for CPI. Last year, revenue at the company climbed 13% to $543.5 million, driven by an acquisition, contactless options, and instant issuance solutions. The company’s core debit and credit segment, in particular, grew 20% to $451.5 million. The fourth quarter was especially strong. Revenue of $153.1 million represented a 22% year-over-year increase and marked a new quarterly record. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter surged 34% to $29.4 million, a sign the company is becoming more efficient. The market has taken notice. The company’s stock jumped more than 40% the day it reported earnings despite what some considered mixed results. Earnings per share for the fourth quarter came in at 77 cents, more than 50% higher than expected. Its shares are up more than 15% from the start of the year. Acquisition Brings Expansion, But Pressures EarningsA significant part of CPI’s growth story in 2025 was its $46 million all-cash purchase of Arroweye Solutions, a specialist in on-demand digital card personalization. Arroweye helps banks and fintechs produce customized cards in smaller batches, faster than traditional manufacturing cycles allow. That’s particularly valuable for the wave of challenger banks and small-business card programs that need low volumes of cards quickly. The acquisition is already paying off. Within just eight months of ownership, Arroweye contributed $43 million in revenue to the debit and credit segment and added $6 million in adjusted EBITDA. Management has also suggested additional integration synergies are ahead as the company expands from a commodity card printer into a more diversified, software-enabled payments supplier. While the acquisition contributed significantly to revenue, it did weigh on the bottom line. Full-year net income at CPI fell 23%, from $19.5 million to $15 million. Both $6 million in acquisition and integration costs and a higher effective tax rate dragged down results. Strong Cash Flow Offsets Rising CostsImportantly, cash kept coming in. Operating cash flow reached $60 million, up 37% from 2024. That came in handy, as cash flow mostly offset the funding for Arroweye, the company said. For the year, free cash flow came in at $41 million, a 21% increase. It’s worth noting, though, that the company’s net leverage ratio did rise slightly during the year to about 3.1 times adjusted EBITDA. For a company this size, that’s an important number to watch. Unexpected drops in orders, further cost increases from tariffs, or additional strategic investments could make leverage more of a risk. Market shifts also showed up in some of CPI’s numbers as the company confronted several pressure points. The prepaid debit segment came in at $93.6 million, a decline of 12% in 2025 after an unusually strong prior year. Serving the government benefits and reloadable card markets, the segment shows no clear reason for a meaningful recovery. Tariffs are another concern. CPI gets some card materials from overseas, and tariff costs reduced adjusted EBITDA by $4.4 million in 2025, the company said. The outlook for this year is no better, as it expects about $6 million in additional tariff-related expenses. Despite these pressures, the company’s guidance suggests steady, if not overwhelming, growth for 2026. Revenue is expected to increase in the high single digits, adjusted EBITDA to rise in the low-to-mid single digits, and free cash flow to remain stable. Its net leverage ratio should fall back to between 2.5 and 3 times EBITDA, the company said. Outlook Is For Steady But Modest GrowthAt a company this size, analyst coverage remains unsurprisingly thin. Of the five analysts covering CPI, the overall rating is a Hold. Three analysts recommend a Buy, while one suggests Hold and one rates the stock a Sell. The average price target is $28.25, more than 60% higher than its current trading level. Clearly, CPI is not a stock for everyone. It does not pay a dividend, so income investors will need to look elsewhere. The company carries leverage, operates in a niche of the financial sector that most of Wall Street ignores, and faces real questions about long-term demand. But it did just deliver record revenue and a 37% jump in operating cash flow, all while successfully integrating a strategic acquisition, and it has promised to reduce leverage. Assuming the world is not going fully digital anytime soon, card issuance remains a reality and a need. Physical cards for new accounts, cycle refreshes, and replacements for lost or stolen cards have to come from somewhere. |
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