These terms and conditions govern your use of the website alphaminr.com and its related services.
These Terms and Conditions (“Terms”) are a binding contract between you and Alphaminr, (“Alphaminr”, “we”, “us” and “service”). You must agree to and accept the Terms. These Terms include the provisions in this document as well as those in the Privacy Policy. These terms may be modified at any time.
Your subscription will be on a month to month basis and automatically renew every month. You may terminate your subscription at any time through your account.
We will provide you with advance notice of any change in fees.
You represent that you are of legal age to form a binding contract. You are responsible for any
activity associated with your account. The account can be logged in at only one computer at a
time.
The Services are intended for your own individual use. You shall only use the Services in a
manner that complies with all laws. You may not use any automated software, spider or system to
scrape data from Alphaminr.
Alphaminr is not a financial advisor and does not provide financial advice of any kind. The service is provided “As is”. The materials and information accessible through the Service are solely for informational purposes. While we strive to provide good information and data, we make no guarantee or warranty as to its accuracy.
TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES SHALL ALPHAMINR BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING DAMAGES FOR INVESTMENT LOSSES, LOSS OF DATA, OR ACCURACY OF DATA, OR FOR ANY AMOUNT, IN THE AGGREGATE, IN EXCESS OF THE GREATER OF (1) FIFTY DOLLARS OR (2) THE AMOUNTS PAID BY YOU TO ALPHAMINR IN THE SIX MONTH PERIOD PRECEDING THIS APPLICABLE CLAIM. SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL OR CERTAIN OTHER DAMAGES, SO THE ABOVE LIMITATION AND EXCLUSIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU.
If any provision of these Terms is found to be invalid under any applicable law, such provision shall not affect the validity or enforceability of the remaining provisions herein.
This privacy policy describes how we (“Alphaminr”) collect, use, share and protect your personal information when we provide our service (“Service”). This Privacy Policy explains how information is collected about you either directly or indirectly. By using our service, you acknowledge the terms of this Privacy Notice. If you do not agree to the terms of this Privacy Policy, please do not use our Service. You should contact us if you have questions about it. We may modify this Privacy Policy periodically.
When you register for our Service, we collect information from you such as your name, email address and credit card information.
Like many other websites we use “cookies”, which are small text files that are stored on your computer or other device that record your preferences and actions, including how you use the website. You can set your browser or device to refuse all cookies or to alert you when a cookie is being sent. If you delete your cookies, if you opt-out from cookies, some Services may not function properly. We collect information when you use our Service. This includes which pages you visit.
We use Google Analytics and we use Stripe for payment processing. We will not share the information we collect with third parties for promotional purposes. We may share personal information with law enforcement as required or permitted by law.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ¨ | Preliminary Proxy Statement | ||||
| ¨ | Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) | ||||
| ý | Definitive Proxy Statement | ||||
| ¨ | Definitive Additional Materials | ||||
| ¨ | Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12 | ||||
| ý |
No fee required.
|
||||
|
¨
|
Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
|
||||
| ¨ |
Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-–6(i)(1) and 0-11.
|
||||
Gregory Garrabrants
President and Chief Executive Officer |
Axos Financial, Inc.
9205 West Russell Road, Suite 400
Las Vegas, Nevada 89148
|
||||
|
Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders
|
||
|
Date and Time
Thursday, November 13, 2025 at 2:00 PM, Pacific Time
|
|
Location
9205 West Russell Road, Suite 400, Las Vegas, NV 89148
|
|
Who Can Vote
Stockholders as of September 16, 2025 are entitled to vote.
|
||||||||||||
| Items |
Board Vote
Recommendation |
For Further
Details |
Internet
www.proxyvote.com
Telephone
1-800-690-6903
Mail
If you received printed copies, by Completing, signing, dating and returning the the enclosed proxy card in the postage paid envelope provided or return to Vote Processing
c/o Broadridge
51 Mercedes Way,
Edgewood, NY 11717
|
||||||||||||||
| 1 |
To elect four Class III directors, each to hold office for a three-year term and until a successor is elected and qualified;
|
“FOR”
|
Page
5
|
||||||||||||||
|
2
|
To approve in a non-binding and advisory vote, the compensation of the Company’s Named Executive Officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement;
|
“FOR”
|
Page
27
|
||||||||||||||
|
3
|
To approve an Amendment to the Amended and Restated 2014 Stock Incentive Plan;
|
“FOR”
|
Page
64
|
||||||||||||||
| 4 |
To ratify the selection of BDO USA, P.C. as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2026.
|
“FOR”
|
Page
73
|
||||||||||||||
|
To transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment or postponement thereof.
We will mail a notice of internet availability of proxy materials – Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders – to our stockholders on or about September 25, 2025.
By order of the Board of Directors,
September 25, 2025
Gregory Garrabrants
President and Chief Executive Officer
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY OF PROXY MATERIALS FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
The Notice of Internet Availability of Proxy Materials, Notice of Meeting, Proxy Statement and Annual Report will be available free of charge at
www.proxyvote.com
.
|
||
| Table of Contents | ||
|
Introduction
|
||
|
|
||
|
YOUR VOTE IS IMPORTANT. TO VOTE, PLEASE FOLLOW THE INSTRUCTIONS IN THE NOTICE OF INTERNET AVAILABILITY OR THE PROXY MATERIALS IF YOU RECEIVED PRINTED COPIES. IF YOU VOTE BY TELEPHONE OR VIA THE INTERNET, YOU DO NOT NEED TO RETURN A PROXY CARD. IF YOU ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING, YOU MAY VOTE YOUR SHARES DURING THE MEETING. IF YOU HOLD YOUR SHARES THROUGH A BROKER OR OTHER CUSTODIAN, PLEASE CHECK THE VOTING INSTRUCTIONS PROVIDED TO YOU BY THAT BROKER OR CUSTODIAN.
|
||
|
1
|
||
|
Stockholder of Record:
Shares Registered in Your Name. |
If on the record date, your shares were registered directly in your name with the Company’s transfer agent, Computershare Trust Company, N.A., then you are a
stockholder of record
and you may vote in person at the Annual Meeting, or vote by proxy. Whether or not you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, we urge you to vote by completing your proxy card, by telephone, or through the internet, to ensure your vote is counted.
|
||||||||||
|
Beneficial Holder:
Owner of Shares Held in Street Name. |
If on the record date, your shares were held in an account at a broker, bank, or other financial institution (collectively referred herein as “broker”), then you are the
beneficial holder
of shares held in “street name” and these proxy materials are being forwarded to you by that broker. The broker holding your account, or more commonly, the nominee of the Depository Trust Company, a registered clearing agency with which most major broker-dealers and banks deposit their securities, is considered the stockholder of record for purposes of voting at the Annual Meeting. As the beneficial holder, you have the right to direct your broker on how to vote the shares in your account. As a beneficial holder, you are invited to attend the Annual Meeting. However, since you are not a stockholder of record, you may not vote your shares in person at the Annual Meeting unless you request and obtain a valid proxy from your broker (known as a “legal proxy”) giving you the legal right to vote the shares at the Annual Meeting, as well as satisfy the Annual Meeting admission criteria set out in the notice of internet availability.
|
||||||||||
|
By Internet
www.proxyvote.com
|
|
By Telephone
1- 800-690-6903
|
|
By Mail
If you received printed copies, by completing, signing, dating and returning the enclosed proxy card in the postage paid envelope provided or return to
Vote Processing
c/o Broadridge
51 Mercedes Way,
Edgewood, NY 11717
|
||||||||||||
|
2
|
||
|
•
Sending a written notice to revoke your proxy to Axos Financial, Inc., 9205 West Russell Road, Suite 400, Las Vegas, NV 89148, Attention: Corporate Secretary. To be effective, the Company must receive the notice of revocation before the Annual Meeting commences.
•
Transmitting a proxy by mail at a later date than your prior proxy. To be effective, the Company must receive the later dated proxy before the Annual Meeting commences. If you fail to date or to sign that later proxy, however, it will not be treated as a revocation of an earlier dated proxy.
•
Attending the Annual Meeting and voting in person or by proxy in a manner different than the instructions contained in your earlier proxy.
|
||
|
Items
|
Board Vote Recommendation | |||||||
| 1 |
Election of the directors nominated by the Board
|
“FOR”
|
||||||
| 2 |
Approval, in a non-binding and advisory vote, of the compensation of the Company’s Named Executive Officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement
|
“FOR”
|
||||||
| 3 | Approval of an Amendment to the Amended and Restated 2014 Stock Incentive Plan |
“FOR”
|
||||||
| 4 |
Ratification of the selection of BDO USA, P.C. as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm for fiscal year 2026
|
“FOR”
|
||||||
|
3
|
||
| Voting Items | Requirement | |||||||
|
Election of Directors.
|
Assuming a quorum of the stockholders is present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting, a plurality of the votes cast is required for the election of directors. As a result, the four nominees who receive the highest number of votes cast will be elected as Class III directors. Abstentions and broker non-votes will have no effect on the results of the election of directors. | |||||||
|
Non-Binding and Advisory Vote of the compensation of the Company’s Named Executive Officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement.
|
The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares represented in person or by proxy and entitled to vote on this item will be required for the non-binding and advisory approval of the compensation of the Company’s Named Executive Officers. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote against these proposals. We expect that broker non-votes will have no effect on the results of these proposals. | |||||||
| Vote for the Approval of an Amendment to the Amended and Restated 2014 Stock Incentive Plan. | The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares represented in person or by proxy and entitled to vote on this item will be required to approve an amendment to the Amended and Restated 2014 Stock Incentive Plan. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote against this proposal. We expect that broker non-votes will have no effect on the results of this proposal. | |||||||
|
Vote for the Ratification of Selection of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm.
|
The affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares represented in person or by proxy and entitled to vote on this item will be required for the ratification of the selection of BDO USA, P.C. Abstentions will have the same effect as a vote against this proposal. The ratification of the selection of our auditors is considered to be a “routine” proposal for the purposes of brokers exercising their voting discretion. | |||||||
| Other Items. | For each other item, the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares represented in person or by proxy and entitled to vote at the meeting will be required for approval. A properly executed proxy marked “ABSTAIN” with respect to any such matter will not be voted. Because abstentions represent shares entitled to vote, the effect of an abstention will be the same as a vote against a proposal. We expect that broker non-votes will have no effect on the results of such a proposal. | |||||||
|
4
|
||
|
Item 1. Election of Directors
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
The Board of Directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
the election of each of the four Class III nominees named below.
|
||||||||
|
5
|
||
|
James S. Argalas
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Argalas brings to the Board extensive experience in the financial and investment sectors.
•
In 2009, he founded Presidio Union, LLC, a company that specializes in providing financial analysis and corporate advisory services to early stage growth companies and their investors, taking an active role in developing ventures that have the potential to create significant stockholder value.
•
Prior to founding Presidio Union, Mr. Argalas was a Principal at Watershed Asset Management and NM Rothschild, where he was responsible for investments in distressed credit, liquidations, real estate, special situations, and debt and equity investments in Asia-Pacific.
•
Prior to joining Watershed, Mr. Argalas was an Associate Principal with McKinsey & Company and the FICC desk at Goldman Sachs.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Argalas’ qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his experience investing in complex debt securities, real estate and other special investment situations including investments in early stage financial technology ventures.
Education
Mr. Argalas has a MBA from the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University with majors in Finance, Entrepreneurship and International Business; in addition, Mr. Argalas holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Engineering from the University of Michigan, and a Bachelor of Science degree in Foreign Service from Georgetown University.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
August 2011
Age:
54
Axos Financial Committees:
•
None
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Asset/Liability (Chair)
•
Compliance and Independent Credit Review
|
|||||||||||
|
6
|
||
|
James J. Court
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Court currently is Chief Executive Officer of Navogen, Solutions, Inc. (“Navogen”), a business and technology consulting firm. Mr. Court started Navogen in December of 2018.
•
Previously, Mr. Court served as Chairman and President of First American’s Property & Casualty Insurance Group (“First American”). Mr. Court joined First American in 1999 and has previously served in senior management roles including Chief Operating Officer and Chief Information Officer; his responsibilities at First American included overseeing all three Property & Casualty operating units.
•
Prior to joining First American, Mr. Court held information technology and operations positions at MGE UPS Systems and Printronix, Inc.
•
Further, Mr. Court has led successful business and technology transformations in both the financial services and manufacturing sectors.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Court’s qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his experience as Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”), Chief Operating Officer (‘COO”) and Chief Information Officer for information technology firms as well his insurance industry knowledge, particularly real estate title insurance and property and casualty insurance.
Education
Mr. Court holds a MBA from the Graziadio School of Business and Management at Pepperdine University, a Bachelor of Science degree in Information Systems from the University of Redlands, and an Associate degree in Electronic Engineering Technology.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
April 2011
Age:
63
Axos Financial Committees:
•
Compensation (Chair)
•
Nominating/Corporate Governance
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Technology
|
|||||||||||
|
7
|
||
|
Stefani D. Carter
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Ms. Carter has been a practicing attorney since 2005, specializing in civil litigation, contractual disputes and providing general counsel and advice to small businesses and individuals.
•
Ms. Carter currently serves as an arbitrator and is the principal of three entities, Stefani Carter & Associates, LLC, a consulting and legal services firm, Stable Realty, LLC, a real estate investments firm, and Dallas HERO, a non-profit focusing on local ballot initiatives.
•
From 2020 to 2023, Ms. Carter served as a litigation shareholder at Ferguson Braswell Fraser Kubasta PC (“FBFK”), a full-service law firm.
•
Prior to FBFK, Ms. Carter served as senior counsel at the law firm of Estes Thorne & Carr PLLC for three years.
•
In addition, Ms. Carter served as an elected representative of House District 102 in the Texas House of Representatives between 2011 and 2015.
•
From 2008 to 2011, Ms. Carter was employed as an associate attorney at the law firm of Sayles Werbner, PC and from 2007 to 2008 was a prosecutor in the Collin County, Texas District Attorney’s Office.
•
Prior to serving as a prosecutor, Ms. Carter was an associate attorney at Vinson & Elkins LLP from 2005 to 2007.
•
Ms. Carter currently serves as the Lead Director, the Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, and as a Member of the Related Party Transactions Committee of Braemar Hotels & Resorts, Inc. (NYSE: BHR), a luxury lodging real estate investment trust.
•
In addition, Ms. Carter currently serves as the Chairman of the Board of Directors, as a Member of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, and as a Member of the Executive Committee of Wheeler Real Estate Investment Trust, Inc. (NASDAQ: WHLR), a retail real estate investment trust.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes that Ms. Carter's qualifications, in addition to those discussed above, include her extensive experience in advising and counseling clients in civil litigation and contractual disputes, her many experiences as an elected official, and her experience serving on other public company boards.
Education
Ms. Carter has a Juris Doctor from Harvard Law School, a Master's in Public Policy from Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government, and a Bachelor of Arts in Government as well as a Bachelor of Journalism in News/Public Affairs from the University of Texas at Austin.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
August 2021
Age:
47
Axos Financial Committees:
•
Nominating/Corporate Governance (Chair)
•
Compensation
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Asset/Liability
|
|||||||||||
|
8
|
||
|
Roque A. Santi
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Santi currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of ECC Capital Corporation and as a member of the Board of Directors of Operation Homefront, a non-profit organization.
•
Mr. Santi previously served as Enterprise Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”) with Roosevelt Management Company, LLC through October 2023, where he developed and implemented strategic plans and directed personnel responsible for the oversight of financial control function.
•
Prior to joining Roosevelt Management, he served from 2010 to 2019 as President, CEO, CFO and board member for Elderlife Financial Services, LLC, where he organized the recapitalization and buildout of a national direct lending unit and developed a unique "financial concierge" service for the senior living industry during the financial crisis.
•
From 2004 to 2019, Mr. Santi was President and CFO with ECC Capital Corporation.
•
Mr. Santi's experience includes being a Partner with Ernst & Young LLP and Arthur Andersen LLP, and a Manager with Deloitte & Touche.
•
Mr. Santi served as a member of the board of ElderLife Financial Services, LLC through 2021, and was a member of the board of Federal National Holdings, Inc.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes that Mr. Santi's qualifications, in addition to those discussed above, include his over 37 years of executive leadership and expertise in the lending and mortgage industry and experience in both large corporate and entrepreneurial C suites together with his experience serving on other boards.
Education
Mr. Santi has a bachelor's degree in Accounting from Pace University in New York, New York, and has been a Certified Public Accountant since 1988 – Certified in Maryland and Virginia (status - inactive).
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
August 2022
Age:
62
Axos Financial Committees:
•
Audit
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Audit
•
Asset/Liability (former)
•
Credit
|
|||||||||||
|
9
|
||
|
Tamara N. Bohlig
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Ms. Bohlig brings to the Board more than 30 years of experience, driving billions in aggregate revenue and accumulated assets under management for companies at the intersection of technology, financial services, and health care.
•
Over her 35 year career, Ms. Bohlig has led corporate and product marketing teams in developing, launching, and managing more than 30 enterprise and consumer products and services, including the marketing of 250+ investment products and 100+ platform services.
•
Today, Ms. Bohlig is the Chief Marketing Officer (“CMO”) for Vida Health, and a small business owner-operator.
•
Earlier, Ms. Bohlig served as CMO of AssetMark and SmartBiz Loans, helping the former take its asset management platform public on the New York Stock Exchange.
•
She also served as a senior executive across business development, client experience, and marketing for Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.’s investor retail and investment management divisions.
•
Her early career included vice president roles in marketing for JPMorgan Chase, N.A. (formerly WaMu and Providian), as well as product management, sales, and marketing roles for Hewlett-Packard, Procter & Gamble, and General Mills.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Ms. Bohlig’s qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include her directly relevant experience in the asset management and brokerage industries, specifically as it relates to business development, client experience, product management and marketing.
Education
Ms. Bohlig holds two degrees from Northwestern University, including an MBA from the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management, and a bachelor of arts in sociology.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
August 2019
Age:
56
Axos Financial Committees:
•
None
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Compliance and Independent Credit Review (Chair)
•
Technology
|
|||||||||||
|
10
|
||
|
Nicholas A. Mosich
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Mosich has extensive knowledge of the real estate development and investment banking industries acquired through his career as a Managing Member of Ion Capital Partners, LLC / Arroyo Vista Partners, LLC, both discretionary investment funds that acquire land for residential development projects in California.
•
Mr. Mosich serves as General Partner of Southwest Aviation Complex, LP, a fixed base operation at Van Nuys Airport and as General Partner of Vineyard Ventures, LP, a Washington real estate venture.
•
Mr. Mosich also brings 40 years of capital markets and business management experience, most recently as an Executive Vice President and Board Member of The Seidler Companies Incorporated, a NYSE member firm (“Seidler”).
•
While at Seidler, Mr. Mosich was responsible for overseeing its Private Client Service operations and Investment Banking Operations.
•
He was a Managing Director of Seidler’s Community Bank Group, active in mergers and acquisitions, raising public and private capital for emerging growth banks including an active role as a co-manager of the Axos initial public offering.
•
Previously, Mr. Mosich was a partner at McGoodwin James & Company, a venture capital firm headquartered in Costa Mesa. At McGoodwin, he was active in funding later stage venture companies and making private investments in public companies.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Mosich’s qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his experience developing residential real estate in California and providing capital market services to small banks and other businesses.
Education
Mr. Mosich completed his undergraduate degree (cum laude) at the University of Michigan and received a MBA from Stanford University.
|
||||||||||
|
Vice Chairman of the Board (since October 2010)
Director Since:
May 2009
Age:
70
Axos Financial Committees:
•
Audit
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Audit
•
Credit
|
|||||||||||
|
11
|
||
|
Edward J. Ratinoff
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Ratinoff currently holds the position of Founder and Managing Principal of James Investment Partners, a privately-held real estate investment platform based in Los Angeles.
•
Mr. Ratinoff previously served as Managing Director and Head of Acquisitions for Phoenix Realty Group, an institutional real estate investment firm focused on opportunistic multifamily investments.
•
Mr. Ratinoff also held the position of Managing Director and west coast head for the J.E. Robert Companies. In this role, Mr. Ratinoff was responsible for all equity and debt transactions throughout the western United States for the real estate investment funds sponsored by the firm and was a member of the investment committees for both JER Partners and JER Investors Trust (NYSE: JRT).
•
Mr. Ratinoff has also served as Principal with FowlerFlanagan Partners and held senior positions focusing on real estate investment banking with McDonald Investments, Chase Securities and BT Alex Brown, executing public and private capital markets transactions for west coast-based real estate companies.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Ratinoff’s qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his experience investing and managing multifamily real estate projects and providing capital markets financing for real estate assets.
Education
Mr. Ratinoff received a Bachelor of Arts in Architecture and City Planning from the University of California, Berkeley, and a MBA from the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
April 2010
Age:
60
Axos Financial Committees:
•
None
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Compliance and Independent Credit Review
•
Credit (Chair)
|
|||||||||||
|
12
|
||
|
Gregory Garrabrants
|
Background
•
Mr. Garrabrants brings to the Board more than twenty-five years of experience in financial services.
•
Mr. Garrabrants also possesses particular strengths with respect to leadership and management skills.
•
Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Garrabrants was a senior vice president and the head of corporate business development at the nation’s seventh largest thrift focusing on entry into new business segments, mergers and acquisitions, joint ventures and strategic alliances.
•
Before his senior executive roles at banking institutions, Mr. Garrabrants served the financial services industry as an investment banker, management consultant and attorney for over 15 years.
•
He was an investment banker at Goldman Sachs specializing in advising management and directors on issues such as strategic planning, capital and liquidity management, balance sheet management, asset/liability management, and enhancement of stockholder value.
•
Prior to Goldman Sachs, Mr. Garrabrants served as a management consultant at McKinsey & Company (“McKinsey”).
•
At McKinsey, Mr. Garrabrants led teams that worked with senior management of money center banks, non-bank financial services companies, insurance companies and asset managers on strategy development, sales force effectiveness, risk management, organizational design and corporate restructuring.
•
Prior to McKinsey, Mr. Garrabrants worked as a summer associate at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, Munger, Tolles & Olson, and Morrison & Foerster focusing on corporate and securities law and clerked for the Honorable Steven V. Wilson of the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
•
Prior to graduate school, he began his career at Deloitte Consulting in the financial advisory services and litigation support practices.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Garrabrants’ qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his extensive experience in banking, investment banking, strategic planning and team leadership. The Company believes that his 18 years of service to the Company reflect his skills to attract high quality new customers, build new banking and securities products and services and to develop management teams responsive to current and future business changes.
Education
Mr. Garrabrants earned his Juris Doctorate, magna cum laude, from the Northwestern University School of Law and his MBA, with the highest distinctions, from the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering and a minor in Economics from the University of Southern California where he graduated with high honors.
|
||||||||||
|
President and Chief Executive Officer (since October 2007)
Director Since:
March 2008
Age:
53
Axos Financial Committees:
•
None
Axos Bank Committees:
•
None
|
|||||||||||
|
13
|
||
|
Paul J. Grinberg
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Grinberg brings to the Board extensive executive management, operational, M&A, capital raising, accounting and financial reporting expertise.
•
Mr. Grinberg currently serves as the President of PG Mountain Capital, a company which provides consulting and advisory services to private equity and venture capital firms and their related businesses.
•
Mr. Grinberg also serves as the CEO and Chairman of Mountain Lake Acquisition Corp. (NASDAQ: MLAC) a special purpose acquisition company formed to effect a business combination with one or more businesses. Mr. Grinberg previously served as Chairman of Social Leverage Acquisition Corp I (NYSE: SLAC), a special purpose acquisition company formed to effect a business combination with one or more businesses.
•
Mr. Grinberg also previously served as an executive with Encore Capital Group (NASDAQ: ECPG), an international specialty finance company with operations in fifteen countries, from September 2004 through December 2018.
•
His most recent position was President, International, overseeing Encore’s International operations.
•
Before that, he served as Group Executive, International and Corporate Development and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
•
Prior to joining Encore, Mr. Grinberg served as President of Brio Consulting Group, a company he founded that provided financial strategy and consulting services to private equity and venture-backed companies.
•
Before that, Mr. Grinberg served as Chief Financial Officer of Stellcom, Inc., a systems integration firm focused on providing mobile and wireless engineering solutions to Fortune 1000 companies, and as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of TeleSpectrum Worldwide, Inc., a publicly traded company that provided outsourced call center solutions to Fortune 500 companies.
•
Mr. Grinberg began his career at Deloitte & Touche LLP, ultimately becoming a partner in the firm’s Merger and Acquisition Services Group.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Grinberg’s qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his 21 years of experience in banking as a director of the Company, his nearly 27 years of experience as a public company executive and CFO in the financial services industry, his public accounting experience including public and private company auditing, his M&A advisory experience and his experience analyzing financial strategies for growing businesses.
Education
Mr. Grinberg earned a MBA (graduating Beta Gamma Sigma) from Columbia University and a bachelor’s degree in accounting (graduating magna cum laude) from Yeshiva University.
|
||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Board of Directors (since February 2017)
Director Since:
April 2004
Age:
64
Axos Financial Committees:
•
Audit (Chair)
•
Compensation
•
Nominating/Corporate Governance
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Audit (Chair)
•
Compliance and Independent Credit Review
|
|||||||||||
|
14
|
||
|
Uzair Dada
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Mr. Dada has a strong business and financial background focused on technology and marketing.
•
He is the Founder and CEO (since 2001) of Iron Horse (“IH”), an award-winning growth marketing technology and services company serving an array of Fortune 500 and high tech companies.
•
Under Mr. Dada's leadership, IH has introduced a suite of proprietary demand generation solutions and technologies that are widely recognized for their innovation.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Mr. Dada’s qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include his valuable digital marketing technology and systems integration experience, his IT compliance and auditing experience and his strong business and financial background.
Education
Mr. Dada is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley and the J.L. Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
January 2015
Age:
58
Axos Financial Committees:
•
None
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Technology (Chair)
•
Credit
|
|||||||||||
|
15
|
||
|
Sara Wardell-Smith
Independent Director
|
Background
•
Ms. Wardell-Smith brings extensive experience to the Board in the areas of wholesale banking, financial institutions, global payments and fintech partnerships.
•
Ms. Wardell-Smith is the former head of Visa's commercial business across North America and was responsible for product, partnerships, sales and platforms. While at Visa, she led financial institution initiatives related to card issuance, real-time payments, cross-border payments, and new payment flows.
•
Prior to Visa, Ms. Wardell-Smith was an executive vice president at Wells Fargo and served on the management committee. During her long tenure at Wells Fargo, Ms. Wardell-Smith held senior leadership positions in a number of banking divisions that served consumers, commercial businesses and institutional clients. These divisions included the financial institutions group, the global treasury management group, the foreign exchange group and the corporate and investment banking division.
•
Ms. Wardell-Smith is an experienced board member and advisor. She currently serves as an independent board member at R&T Deposit Solutions, a private marketplace provider of enhanced FDIC insured deposit and funding solutions to the financial services industry. She is also an independent board member at the C1 Fund, a closed-end secondaries 40 Act fund investing in private digital asset companies. Additionally, she serves as an independent director at Figure Certificate Company, a 40 Act fund offering an SEC-registered yield-bearing stablecoin that is a public debt security native to blockchain.
•
For the past few years, Ms. Wardell-Smith has also served as an advisor at NYCA, a venture capital firm focused on connecting fintech companies to the global financial system.
•
Previously, Ms. Wardell-Smith served on the U.S. board of Revolut, a fintech company offering certain banking services. She also served on the boards of the CLS Group and CLS Bank International which operate a large multi-currency cash settlement system designed for financial institutions.
•
Prior to that, Ms. Wardell-Smith was a member of the Working Group on U.S. Renminbi Trading and Clearing, and on the board of the Global Foreign Exchange Division.
Director Qualifications
The Company believes Ms. Wardell-Smith's qualifications to serve on the Board, in addition to those discussed above, include her strong leadership and extensive financial institutions expertise from her operating experience at global Fortune 500 companies, in addition to her service on several boards of major fintech companies and financial institutions.
Education
Ms. Wardell-Smith has a Bachelor of Science degree in International Finance from the University of San Francisco.
|
||||||||||
|
Director Since:
December 2023
Age:
54
Axos Financial Committees:
•
None
Axos Bank Committees:
•
Asset/Liability
•
Compliance and Independent Credit Review
|
|||||||||||
|
16
|
||
|
Corporate Governance
|
||
|
|
||
| Class I | Class II | Class III | ||||||||||||
|
•
Tamara N. Bohlig
•
Nicholas A. Mosich
•
Edward J. Ratinoff
|
•
Gregory Garrabrants
•
Paul J. Grinberg
•
Uzair Dada
•
Sara Wardell-Smith
|
•
James S. Argalas
•
James J. Court
•
Stefani D. Carter
•
Roque A. Santi
|
||||||||||||
|
Terms will expire at the 2026 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
|
Terms will expire at the 2027 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. | Terms will expire at the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders unless re-elected for additional terms that will expire at the 2028 Annual Meeting of the Stockholders. | ||||||||||||
|
17
|
||
|
Chairman of the Board of Directors
|
President and Chief Executive Officer
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Paul J. Grinberg
|
Gregory Garrabrants
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
•
provides independent leadership for the Board of Directors;
•
sets the agenda for meetings, presides over executive sessions of the non-management directors; and
•
enables other directors to raise issues and concerns for consideration by the Board of Directors without immediately involving the President and Chief Executive Officer or other management.
|
||
|
Board Committees of the Company
|
Bank Board of Directors’ Risk Committees
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
•
Audit Committee
•
Compensation Committee
•
Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee
|
•
Asset/Liability Committee
•
Audit Committee
•
Credit Committee
•
Compliance and Independent Credit Review Committee
•
Technology Committee
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
18
|
||
|
The Committees provide the Board of Directors with insight about our management of key risks, including:
|
||||||||||||||
|
•
strategic risks
•
credit risks
•
interest rate risks
•
financial reporting risks
|
•
technology risks
•
liquidity risks
•
compliance risks
•
operational risks
|
•
reputational risks
•
cybersecurity
•
data privacy
•
compensation
|
||||||||||||
| Board | ||||||||
|
•
Our Board of Directors is actively involved in oversight and review of the Company’s risk management efforts either directly or through its standing committees.
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
| Management | ||||||||
|
•
The Company’s management is responsible for assessing and managing risk and communicating risks to the Board of Directors.
|
||||||||
|
•
Director Qualifications
, addressing a Board candidate’s independence, experience, knowledge, skills, expertise, integrity, and ability to make independent analytical inquiries; his or her understanding of our business and the business environment in which we operate; and the candidate’s ability and willingness to devote adequate time and effort to Board responsibilities, taking into account his or her employment and other board commitments.
•
Responsibilities of Directors
, including acting in the best interests of our stockholders; maintaining independence; developing and maintaining a sound understanding of our business and the industry in which we operate; preparing for and attending Board and Board committee meetings; providing active, objective and constructive participation at those meetings; and attending regularly scheduled executive sessions of the Board, without management.
•
Director Access to Management and, as necessary and appropriate, Independent Advisors
, including encouraging presentations to the Board from the officers responsible for functional areas of our business.
|
||
|
19
|
||
|
20
|
||
|
Committees of the Board of Directors
|
||
|
|
||
|
Audit
Committee |
The Audit Committee has a written charter that specifies its responsibilities, which include oversight of the financial reporting process and system of internal accounting controls of the Company, and appointment and oversight of the independent public accountants engaged to audit the Company’s financial statements. Our Board of Directors, upon the recommendation of the Audit Committee, approved that charter.
All of the members of the Audit Committee are independent directors within the meaning of the NYSE listed company rules and meet the enhanced independence requirements for audit committee members contained in Rule 10A-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”).
Our Board of Directors has determined that Mr. Grinberg, Mr. Mosich and Mr. Santi meet the definitions of “audit committee financial expert” adopted by the SEC and included in NYSE’s rules for listed companies.
|
||||||||||
|
Members
Paul J. Grinberg
(Chair)
Nicholas A. Mosich
Roque A. Santi
Meetings in 2025
: 11
|
|||||||||||
|
Compensation
Committee |
The Compensation Committee assists the Board in discharging its responsibilities relating to compensation of the Company’s directors and executive officers. The Compensation Committee reviews and approves the salaries and establishes incentive compensation and other benefit plans and recommends compensation of our non-employee directors. Our Board of Directors has approved a charter setting forth the role and responsibilities of the Compensation Committee.
|
||||||||||
|
Members
James J. Court
(Chair)
Paul J. Grinberg
Stefani D. Carter
Meetings in 2025
: 6
|
|||||||||||
|
Nominating/
Corporate Governance Committee |
The Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee assists the Board in selecting nominees for election to the Board, in assessing the performance of the Board and in monitoring the composition of the Board. Each member of the Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee meets the “independent director” requirements within the meaning of the NYSE listed company rules. The Board has adopted a charter setting forth the responsibilities of the Nominating/Corporate Governance Committee.
|
||||||||||
|
Members
Stefani D. Carter
(Chair)
James J. Court
Paul J. Grinberg
Meetings in 2025
: 2
|
|||||||||||
|
21
|
||
| Relevant Industry Experience |
Includes banking, financial services, technology services, real estate, insurance and trust services. The Committee considers his or her understanding of our business and the business environment in which we operate; and the candidate’s ability and willingness to devote adequate time and effort to Board responsibilities, taking into account his or her employment and other board commitments.
|
|||||||
|
Public Company Experience
|
Includes experience serving on other public company boards, experience with investor relations and familiarity with regulations.
|
|||||||
|
Expertise in Technology
|
Includes backgrounds in information systems, financial systems, IT controls and software integrations.
|
|||||||
|
Financial Acumen
|
Includes ability to make independent analytical inquiries about financial matters related to our business and the business environment in which we operate.
|
|||||||
|
Leadership Experience
|
Includes experience as a CEO, CFO, COO or other senior level position engaging employees, customers, and stockholders, etc.
|
|||||||
|
Legal and Compliance Experience
|
Includes experience with bank regulations, compliance, litigation and contract provisions.
|
|||||||
|
22
|
||
| Compensation of Non-Employee Directors | ||
|
Key Principles
|
Significant Time Commitment
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|
The Board and the Compensation Committee are guided by the following principles:
•
Compensation should consist of a combination of cash and equity compensation awards that are designed to fairly pay the non-employee directors for work required for a company of our size and scope;
•
Compensation should align the non-employee directors’ interests with the long-term interests of our stockholders; and
•
Compensation should assist with attracting and retaining qualified non-employee directors.
|
|
|
In addition to preparation for and attendance of Board and Committee meetings (107 total in fiscal year 2025), our non-employee directors are engaged in a variety of other ways, including:
•
Receiving updates on significant developments; and
•
Communicating and meeting with each other, senior management and regulators from time to time.
|
|
|||||||||||||||
|
What We Do
|
|
What We Do Not Do
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Emphasis on Equity Compensation:
The majority of non-employee director compensation is in the form of equity-based awards (restricted stock units).
Equity Ownership Requirements:
All non-employee directors are required to own at least five times his or her annual cash retainer in Company common stock, with a five-year transition period.
|
|
Fees for attending meetings - attendance is expected and compensation is not dependent on Board meeting schedule.
Undue focus on short-term stock performance - pay aligns with compensation philosophy, not short-term fluctuations in stock price.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
23
|
||
|
Role
|
Non-Employee Director | Premium | Total | |||||||||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Board
(1)
|
$ | 44,000 | $ | 73,000 | $ | 117,000 | ||||||||||||||
|
Vice-chairman of the Board
(2)
|
44,000 | 29,000 | 73,000 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Audit Committee
(3)
|
44,000 | 29,000 | 73,000 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Compensation Committee
(4)
|
44,000 | 15,000 | 59,000 | |||||||||||||||||
| Other non-employee directors | 44,000 | — | 44,000 | |||||||||||||||||
|
24
|
||
| Dollar-Denominated Grants of RSUs | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Role
|
Non-Employee Director | Premium | Amount | |||||||||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Board
(1)
|
$ | 345,550 | $ | 598,068 | $ | 943,618 | ||||||||||||||
|
Vice-chairman of the Board
(2)
|
345,550 | 93,032 | 438,582 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Audit Committee
(3)
|
345,550 | 93,032 | 438,582 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Chairman of the Compensation Committee
(4)
|
345,550 | 35,038 | 380,588 | |||||||||||||||||
| Other non-employee directors | 345,550 | — | 345,550 | |||||||||||||||||
|
25
|
||
| Name |
Fees Earned or
Paid in Cash
(1)
|
Stock Awards
(2)
|
Total Compensation
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| James S. Argalas | $ | 42,333 | $ | 345,608 | $ | 387,941 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tamara N. Bohlig | 42,333 | 345,608 | 387,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Stefani D. Carter | 42,333 | 345,608 | 387,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| James J. Court | 56,500 | 380,660 | 437,160 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Uzair Dada | 42,333 | 345,608 | 387,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Paul J. Grinberg | 140,167 | 1,036,662 | 1,176,829 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nicholas A. Mosich | 70,083 | 438,597 | 508,680 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Edward J. Ratinoff | 42,333 | 345,608 | 387,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Roque A. Santi
|
42,333 | 345,608 | 387,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sara Wardell-Smith | 42,333 | 345,608 | 387,941 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name |
Grant
Date |
RSUs
|
Base Price
of RSUs (per Unit) |
Grant Date
Fair Value of RSUs |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| James S. Argalas | 11/14/2024 | 4,289 | $ | 80.58 | $ | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tamara N. Bohlig | 11/14/2024 | 4,289 | 80.58 | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Stefani D. Carter | 11/14/2024 | 4,289 | 80.58 | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| James J. Court | 11/14/2024 | 4,724 | 80.58 | 380,660 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Uzair Dada | 11/14/2024 | 4,289 | 80.58 | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Paul J. Grinberg | 11/14/2024 | 12,865 | 80.58 | 1,036,662 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nicholas A. Mosich | 11/14/2024 | 5,443 | 80.58 | 438,597 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Edward J. Ratinoff | 11/14/2024 | 4,289 | 80.58 | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Roque A. Santi
|
11/14/2024 | 4,289 | 80.58 | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sara Wardell-Smith | 11/14/2024 | 4,289 | 80.58 | 345,608 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
26
|
||
|
Item 2. Advisory Vote on Executive Compensation
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
The Board of Directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
the approval, in a non-binding and advisory stockholder vote, of the compensation of the Company’s named executive officers as disclosed in this Proxy Statement.
|
||||||||
|
27
|
||
|
Executive Officers
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gregory Garrabrants
President and Chief Executive Officer
|
•
Mr. Garrabrants’ background and experience prior to joining the Company are discussed under
Item 1. Election of Directors, Continuing Class II Director with Terms Ending at the 2027 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2007 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 53
|
|||||||||||
|
Eshel Bar-Adon
Executive Vice President, Strategic Partnerships and Chief Legal Officer
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2011, Mr. Bar-Adon served as Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of a leading specialty finance firm, Seneca One Finance, Inc.
•
During his tenure, he served as Acting President and was a member of the Company’s Executive Committee.
|
||||||||||
|
Executive Officer since: 2019
|
|||||||||||
|
Age: 70
|
|||||||||||
|
Thomas Constantine
Executive Vice President, Chief Credit Officer
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2010, Mr. Constantine served as a senior examiner with the former Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS).
•
Mr. Constantine has more than 35 years of experience in the banking and financial services industries previously working in various roles, including as a portfolio manager, commercial real estate loan officer, chief lending officer and chief credit officer.
|
||||||||||
|
Executive Officer since: 2019
|
|||||||||||
|
Age: 63
|
|||||||||||
|
28
|
||
|
David Crow
Executive Vice President, Head of Axos Clearing
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2023, Mr. Crow served as the Co-Head of Wealth Solutions Relationship Management at Pershing, LLC, where he served in various capacities for over 24 years.
•
Mr. Crow maintains his Series 7, 24 and 63 licenses.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2023 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 55
|
|||||||||||
|
Raymond Matsumoto
Executive Vice President, Chief Operating Officer
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2017, Mr. Matsumoto served as the Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer at CIT Group.
•
He has also held executive positions at OneWest Bank and Indymac Bank.
•
Mr. Matsumoto started his career having spent 18 years as a Senior Manager and Certified Public Accountant with KPMG, and as the Chief Financial and Operations Officer for a consumer food products company.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2019 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 70
|
|||||||||||
|
Andrew Micheletti
Executive Vice President, Finance
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2001, Mr. Micheletti served as the Vice President – Finance for TeleSpectrum Worldwide Inc., an international provider of outsourced telephone and Internet services and as Managing Director, Chief Financial Officer of LPL Financial, an independent securities broker-dealer.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2001 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 68
|
|||||||||||
|
David Park
President, Head of Commercial Bank
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2018, Mr. Park served as the Executive Vice President and Head of Commercial Banking at Banc of California.
•
From 2006 to 2016, Mr. Park held various roles during his 10 years at City National Bank, including Senior Vice President and Head of Business Banking and SBA Lending.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2020 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 42
|
|||||||||||
|
29
|
||
|
Brian Swanson
President, Head of Consumer Bank
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2010, Mr. Swanson was a Vice President and Sales Leader within the Consumer Mortgage Division of Bank of America.
•
Mr. Swanson has over 20 years in the banking industry in a variety of sales and operations leadership roles.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2019 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 45
|
|||||||||||
|
Candace Thiele
Executive Vice President, Chief Administration Officer
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2022, Candace was a Senior Vice President and Sales Performance Manager of Global Commercial Banking at Bank of America.
•
Candace has spent more than 20 years in the banking industry with distinction in a variety of roles and departments including marketing, operations, commercial banking, and merchant services.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2025 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 54
|
|||||||||||
|
John Tolla
Executive Vice President, Chief Risk Officer
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2013, Mr. Tolla served in leadership roles at BearingPoint and Booz Allen where his primary focus was on regulatory compliance, strategy, process improvement, and risk management with special attention to clients operating in heavily regulated industries.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2019 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 48
|
|||||||||||
|
Derrick K. Walsh
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
|
•
He previously served as Senior Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer of the Company since 2015 and joined the Company in 2013.
•
Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Walsh led the SEC & Regulatory Reporting functions at LPL Financial from 2011 to 2013 where he gained his Series 7, 27 and 66 licenses (7 & 66 currently inactive) and was also responsible for various aspects of management reporting and investor relations.
•
Mr. Walsh began his career in public accounting auditing financial institutions and public companies, where he earned his CPA license.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2021 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 43
|
|||||||||||
|
30
|
||
|
Michael Watson
Executive Vice President, Head of Axos Securities
|
•
Prior to joining the Company in 2021, Mr. Watson served as Managing Director, National Strategic Accounts for TD Ameritrade Institutional.
•
Mr. Watson has more than 25 years of experience in the financial services industry, scaling custody, clearing and wealth management platform businesses.
•
Mr. Watson holds the Series 7, 8, and 63 FINRA securities licenses.
|
||||||||||
| Executive Officer since: 2025 | |||||||||||
|
Age: 49
|
|||||||||||
|
31
|
||
| Compensation Discussion & Analysis | ||
| Name | Position | |||||||||||||
| Gregory Garrabrants |
|
|
President and Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”)
|
|||||||||||
| David Park | President, Head of Commercial Bank | |||||||||||||
| Brian Swanson | President, Head of Consumer Bank | |||||||||||||
| John Tolla | Executive Vice President, Chief Risk Officer | |||||||||||||
| Derrick K. Walsh |
|
|
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”)
|
|||||||||||
|
32
|
||
|
Net Income of Over
$430 million
|
Diluted Earnings per Share (“EPS”) of
$7.43
|
YoY Deposit Growth of
7.6%
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Return on Equity
17.30%
|
YoY Total Net Loans
9.5%
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Improved Net Interest Margin by
28 basis points
to
4.90%
in fiscal year 2025 compared to 4.62% in fiscal 2024.
|
Continued Strong Credit Performance with net charge-offs to average loans of only
13 basis points
in fiscal year 2025.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Return on average assets of
1.82%
for fiscal year 2025
|
Increased assets
by
8.4%
to
$24.8 billion
for fiscal year 2025
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Increased deposits
by
$1.4 billion
to
$20.8 billion
for fiscal year 2025
|
Named to the
2025 Forbes America’s Best Banks
list
|
||||||||||||||||
|
2025 KBW Bank Honor Roll Awardee
for the fourth consecutive year
|
Strategically
and
opportunistically
repurchased
$58 million
of Company common stock at an average price of
$61.40
, compared to a price of $88.24 as of the record date
|
||||||||||||||||
|
33
|
||
|
34
|
||
|
5-Year CAGR of Net Income:
18.8%
|
5-Year CAGR of Revenue:
16.7%
|
5-Year CAGR of Earnings Per Diluted Common Share:
20.0%
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
5-Year CAGR of Book Value Per Common Share:
18.2%
|
5-Year CAGR of Deposits:
13.0%
|
5-Year CAGR of Loans:
14.7%
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
35
|
||
|
|
|
||||||
| Axos |
NYSE
|
XABQ | ||||||
| Measurement Period | Axos |
NYSE
|
XABQ
(1)
|
||||||||||||||
|
7/1/2020 – 6/30/2025 (5-year)
|
344 | % | 193 | % | 180 | % | |||||||||||
|
Fiscal Year 2025
|
33 | % | 16 | % | 21 | % | |||||||||||
|
36
|
||
|
37
|
||
| Element | How Compensation Objectives Are Met | |||||||
| SHORT-TERM | ||||||||
| Base Salary |
Commensurate with the role, scope and complexity of each executive’s position relative to other executives and employees.
|
|||||||
| Annual Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation (Cash Bonus) | Varies based on the Company attaining annual performance measures that are aligned with the business strategy and stockholders’ interests. | |||||||
|
Benefits and Perquisites
|
Establishes limited perquisites in line with market practice that include health and welfare insurance coverage and 401(k) plan benefits on the same basis as our general employee population.
|
|||||||
| LONG-TERM | ||||||||
|
Long-Term Incentive Compensation (RSUs)
|
Varies based on long-term total stockholder return (“TSR”) and promotes stockholders’ interests.
|
|||||||
|
38
|
||
|
What We Do
|
|
What We Don’t Do
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
Pay For Performance – A significant percentage of direct compensation is based upon measurable performance goals.
Risk Management – We prohibit short sales, transactions in derivatives of the Company’s securities, including various hedging type transactions, without prior approval.
Performance-Based, Long-Term Equity – We emphasize long-term equity awards in our pay mix.
At-Will Employment – We employ our executive officers at will.
Responsible Use of Equity – We manage our equity award program responsibly, awarding only approximately 1.74% of weighted average shares outstanding (on a fully diluted basis) in fiscal year 2025.
|
|
Tax Gross Ups – We do not offer gross-ups of related excise taxes.
Special Perquisites – We do not provide executive perquisites that are not available to other employees generally.
Re-Pricing or Repurchase of Underwater Equity Awards – Unless our stockholders approve, we do not permit the repricing or repurchase of underwater stock options or stock appreciation rights.
Pension or Other Special Benefits – We do not provide pensions or supplemental executive retirement, deferred compensation, health, or insurance benefits.
“Single Trigger” Severance Payments or equity vesting on Change In Control – Our employment agreements do not have “single-trigger” cash severance payments resulting solely from the occurrence of a change of control.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
39
|
||
|
Banc of California (BANC)
Bank of Hawaii Corporation (BOH)
Bank OZK (OZK)
Community Financial System (CBU)
CVB Financial Corp (CVBF)
Eagle Bancorp (EGBN)
First Financial Bankshares (FFIN)
First Hawaiian (FHB)
Green Dot (GDOT)
|
Hilltop Holdings (HTH)
Independent Bank (INDB)
New York Community (NYCB)
Pacific Premier Bank (PPBI)
PacWest (
acquired by Banc of California
)
TFS Financial (TFSL)
Trustmark (TRMK)
United Community Banks (UCBI)
Western Alliance Bancorporation (WAL)
|
||||
|
40
|
||
|
Salary and 401(k)
|
|
Non-equity incentive plan compensation
|
|
Stock Awards
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Performance-Based Compensation
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Element of CEO Compensation | Compensation Objectives and Rationale | ||||||||||
| Salary and 401(k) |
•
Commensurate with the role, scope and complexity of each executive’s position relative to other executives and employees.
|
||||||||||
|
Total Performance-Based Compensation
|
|||||||||||
| Individual Factor |
•
Incentivizes specific non-financial management objectives that are not reflected in realized net income
|
||||||||||
| Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation | |||||||||||
| 15% Target Return on Equity |
•
Annual Target Cash Bonus only paid for exceptional performance
•
15% Target Return on Equity set to the 97
th
percentile of all exchange traded banks
•
Negative carryforward promotes long-run performance without favoring a specific year
|
||||||||||
| Stock Awards | |||||||||||
| Total Return to Stockholders Relative to XABQ |
•
Link long-term compensation to total return to stockholders and encourage long-term investments that will result in market recognizing long-term value creation
•
Reward performance relative to XABQ index
•
Discourage excessive risk-taking due to long term formulaic negative carryforward and four year vesting period
|
||||||||||
|
41
|
||
| Compensation Formula Variable | Fiscal Year 2025 Results | ||||
|
Annual Target Cash Bonus
Salary × 150%
|
$700,000 × 150% = $1,050,000
|
||||
|
Individual Factor
|
0.95
|
||||
| Fiscal Year 2025 Net Income | $432,908,469 | ||||
|
Target Net Income
15% of Average Common Equity
(1)
|
15% x $2,522,332,442 = $378,349,866
|
||||
|
Fiscal Year 2025 Annual Cash Bonus
(2)
$1,050,000 x 0.95 + 2% ($432,908,469 - $378,349,866)
$2,088,672
|
|||||
|
42
|
||
| Compensation Objective & Rationale | |||||
|
Annual Target Bonus only paid for exceptional performance
|
•
Annual Target Cash Bonus, consisting of the 150% of salary, is set at the 56th percentile of the Peer Group at the time of the initial agreement
•
Full Annual Target Cash Bonus is only achieved by reaching a 15% target return on equity
|
||||
|
Requires return on equity equal to or in excess of 15%
|
•
Rigorous metric initially set to approximate the 97th percentile of all exchange-traded banks
•
The fixed return mitigates incentives to take strategic actions to influence subsequent targets
•
The amount of net income required to reach the 15% return on common equity target grows with the book value of the Company’s equity, providing assurances to stockholders that above-target incentive compensation amounts are only realized after achieving superior returns on the equity invested in the Company
|
||||
|
Negative carryforward promotes long-run performance without favoring a specific fiscal year
|
•
Failure to achieve the 15% target return on equity reduces the cash bonus in accordance with the Annual Cash Bonus Formula
•
Annual Cash Bonus Formula can create a negative carryforward that will reduce current and future Annual Cash Bonus payments
•
Provides no incentive to shift earnings unproductively across fiscal years or quarters
•
The cumulative negative incentive compensation is limited to $2.1 million and is not subject to recoupment in the event the CEO is no longer employed by the Company at the time the next annual bonus would otherwise be payable
|
||||
|
Return on Average Common Equity
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10.00% | 15.00% | 17.30% | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
0.80 | $ | (1,682,332) | $ | 840,000 | $ | 1,931,172 | ||||||||||||||||
|
0.95
|
$ | (1,524,832) | $ | 997,500 | $ | 2,088,672 | |||||||||||||||||
| 1.20 | $ | (1,262,332) | $ | 1,260,000 | $ | 2,351,172 | |||||||||||||||||
|
43
|
||
| Beginning Market Capitalization | Target Equity Award | ||||
| <$2.0 Billion Market Cap | $2,500,000 | ||||
| $2.0 Billion - $2.5 Billion Market Cap | $3,000,000 | ||||
| $2.5 Billion - $3.5 Billion Market Cap | $3,500,000 | ||||
| $3.5 Billion or More Market Cap | $4,000,000 | ||||
| Compensation Formula Variable | Fiscal Year 2025 Results | ||||
| Beginning Market Capitalization | $3,035,893,988 | ||||
| Target Award based on Beginning Market Capitalization | $3,500,000 | ||||
| Individual Factor |
0.95
|
||||
|
Fiscal Year 2025 Company’s Total Return to Stockholders
|
33% | ||||
|
Fiscal Year 2025 XABQ Index Return
|
21% | ||||
|
Beginning Stock Price
(1)
|
$53.36 | ||||
|
Fiscal Year 2025 Equity Award (Shares)
$3,500,000 × 0.95 + 2% (33% - 21%) × $3,035,893,988 = $10,341,723
$10,341,723 ÷ $53.36
193,811
Shares (to vest over 4 years)
|
|||||
|
44
|
||
|
FY 2026
|
FY 2027
|
FY 2028
|
FY 2029
|
FY 2030
|
||||||||||
| $6,882,764 | $4,976,873 | $2,723,817 | $1,327,028 | $404,202 | ||||||||||
| Compensation Objective and Rationale | |||||
|
Link long-term compensation more closely to total return to stockholders and encourage long-term investments that result in market recognizing long-term value creation
|
•
Adjusted current share awards in the event of the Company’s share price underperformance and link directly to total return to stockholder
•
Symmetric upside rewards and downside penalties associated with the Equity Award Formula, coupled with the reliance on relative performance versus the Peer Group, provides stronger incentives to create stockholder value than more typical plans that provide awards during unprofitable years and fail to carry forward negative performance over a multiyear period
|
||||
|
Reward performance relative to XABQ index
|
•
Compensation is driven by performance relative to the Company’s competition
•
Index most closely resembles the Company’s competition
•
No rewards or penalties for market factors increasing or decreasing, respectively, sector-wide returns
|
||||
|
Discourage excessive risk taking due to long-term formulaic negative carryforward and four year vesting period
|
•
Failure to perform relative to XABQ index reduces the Equity Awards in accordance to the Equity Award Formula
•
In the event of severe underperformance, the Equity Award Formula can create a negative carryforward that will reduce current and future Equity Awards
•
After granted, award vests one fourth over four years
|
||||
|
Total Return to Stockholders
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10% | 15% | 33% | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
0.80 | $ | (4,110,175) | $ | 1,960,000 | $ | 9,816,723 | ||||||||||||||||
|
0.95
|
$ | (3,585,175) | $ | 2,490,000 | $ | 10,341,723 | |||||||||||||||||
| 1.20 | $ | (2,710,175) | $ | 3,360,000 | $ | 11,216,723 | |||||||||||||||||
|
45
|
||
|
46
|
||
|
47
|
||
|
Performance-Based Compensation Factor
(1)
|
Compensation Objectives and Rationale |
Fiscal Year 2025 Accomplishments
|
||||||||||||
| Individual Factor |
•
Incentivizes specific non-financial management objectives that are not reflected in realized net income
|
•
Improved net interest margin by 28 basis points to 4.90%
•
Grew net loans by nearly 10% from the prior year
•
Increased deposits by $1.4 billion to $20.8 billion
|
||||||||||||
|
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation
|
||||||||||||||
|
15% Target Return on Equity
|
•
Annual Target Bonus only paid for exceptional performance
•
15% Target Return on Equity set to the 97
th
percentile of all exchange traded banks
•
Negative carryforward promotes long-run performance without favoring a specific year
|
•
Achieved a 17.30% return on average common equity, outperforming the target return on equity
|
||||||||||||
|
Stock Awards
|
||||||||||||||
| Total Return to Stockholders Relative to XABQ |
•
Link long-term compensation to total return to stockholders and encourage long-term investments that will result in market recognizing long-term value creation
•
Reward performance relative to XABQ index
•
Discourage excessive risk-taking due to long term formulaic negative carryforward and four year vesting period
|
•
Achieved a 33% total return to stockholders, outperforming the XABQ index return of 21%
|
||||||||||||
|
5-Year CAGR of Net Income:
18.8%
|
5-Year CAGR of Revenue:
16.7%
|
5-Year CAGR of Book Value Per Common Share:
18.2%
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
48
|
||
|
Name and Title
|
Year
(1)
|
Salary
(2)
|
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
(3)
|
Bonus
(4)
|
Stock
Awards
(5)
|
All Other
Compensation
(6)
|
Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Gregory Garrabrants | 2025 | $ | 700,000 | $ | 2,088,672 | $ | — | $ | 8,892,443 | $ | 13,800 | $ | 11,694,915 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
President and
Chief Executive Officer
|
2024 | 700,000 | 3,714,577 | — | 9,433,632 | 13,200 | 13,861,409 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 700,000 | 4,667,806 | — | 5,225,526 | 12,200 | 10,605,532 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| David Park | 2025 | 450,000 | — | 559,941 | 1,251,412 | 11,500 | 2,272,853 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| President, Head of Commercial Bank | 2024 | 420,000 | — | 553,945 | 502,018 | 11,250 | 1,487,213 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 380,000 | — | 433,000 | 391,764 | 10,250 | 1,215,014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Brian Swanson
(7)
|
2025 | 355,000 | — | 518,750 | 1,145,077 | 11,500 | 2,030,327 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| President, Head of Consumer Bank | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
John Tolla
(7)
|
2025 | 350,000 | — | 457,500 | 1,185,083 | 11,500 | 2,004,083 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Executive Vice President,
Chief Risk Officer |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Derrick K. Walsh | 2025 | 350,000 | — | 525,000 | 510,038 | 11,500 | 1,396,538 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Executive Vice President,
Chief Financial Officer
|
2024 | 330,000 | — | 490,000 | 475,055 | 11,250 | 1,306,305 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 315,000 | — | 460,000 | 445,033 | 10,250 | 1,230,283 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
49
|
||
| Name |
Grant
Date |
All Other Stock Awards:
Number of Shares of
Stock or Units
(1)
|
Closing Price of Stock on
Date of Grant |
Grant Date Fair Value of Stock and Option Awards
(2)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Gregory Garrabrants
(3)
|
01/01/25 | 93,844 | $ | 94.76 | $ | 8,892,443 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| David Park | 09/15/24 | 4,431 | 63.20 | 280,039 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
03/20/2025
(4)
|
15,242 | 63.73 | 971,373 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Brian Swanson | 09/15/24 | 2,690 | 63.20 | 170,008 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
03/20/2025
(4)
|
15,300 | 63.73 | 975,069 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| John Tolla | 09/15/24 | 3,323 | 63.20 | 210,014 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
03/20/2025
(4)
|
15,300 | 63.73 | 975,069 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Derrick K. Walsh | 09/15/24 | 3,956 | 63.20 | 250,019 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 03/20/25 | 4,080 | 63.73 | 260,018 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
50
|
||
|
Stock Awards
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name |
Number of Shares or
Units of Stock
That Have Not Vested
|
Date of Grant
(1)
|
Market Value of Shares or
Units of Stock
That Have Not Vested
(2)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Gregory Garrabrants | 119,538 | 09/14/23 | $ | 9,089,670 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 281,430 | 09/15/24 | 21,399,937 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| David Park | 1,692 | 09/23/22 | 128,660 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1,811 | 03/15/23 | 137,708 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,586 | 09/15/23 | 272,679 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,696 | 03/15/24 | 281,044 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4,431 | 09/15/24 | 336,933 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 15,242 | 03/20/25 | 1,159,002 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Brian Swanson | 1,703 | 09/23/22 | 129,496 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1,387 | 03/15/23 | 105,467 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2,800 | 09/15/23 | 212,912 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2,428 | 03/15/24 | 184,625 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2,690 | 09/15/24 | 204,548 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 15,300 | 03/20/25 | 1,163,412 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| John Tolla | 1,359 | 09/23/22 | 103,338 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1,458 | 03/15/23 | 110,866 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,145 | 09/15/23 | 239,146 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2,833 | 03/15/24 | 215,421 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,323 | 09/15/24 | 252,681 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 15,300 | 03/20/25 | 1,163,412 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Derrick K. Walsh | 1,993 | 09/23/22 | 151,548 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1,988 | 03/15/23 | 151,168 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,696 | 09/15/23 | 281,044 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,238 | 03/15/24 | 246,218 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3,956 | 09/15/24 | 300,814 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4,080 | 03/20/25 | 310,243 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
51
|
||
| Stock Awards | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name |
Number of Shares
Acquired on Vesting
|
Value Realized on
Vesting |
|||||||||||||||||||||
| Gregory Garrabrants | 273,169 | $ | 20,771,771 | ||||||||||||||||||||
| David Park | 9,070 | 586,719 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Brian Swanson | 8,290 | 539,396 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| John Tolla | 7,659 | 496,129 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Derrick K. Walsh | 13,642 | 882,061 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Year |
Summary
Compensation
Table Total for
PEO
(1)
|
Compensation
Actually Paid to
PEO
(1)(2)
|
Average
Summary
Compensation
Table Total for
Non-PEO NEO
(1)
|
Average
Compensation
Actually Paid to
Non-PEO
NEOs
(1),(3)
|
Value of Initial Fixed $100
Investment Based on:
|
Net Income
(In Thousands)
|
Return on
Average
Common
Equity
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Axos Total
Shareholder
Return
(4)
|
Peer Group
Total
Shareholder
Return
(4)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2025 | $ |
|
$ |
|
$ |
|
$ |
|
|
|
$ |
|
|
% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fiscal Year | PEO | Non-PEO NEOs | ||||||
|
2025
|
|
David Park, Brian Swanson, John Tolla, Derrick K. Walsh | ||||||
|
2024
|
|
Thomas Constantine, Raymond Matsumoto, David Park, Derrick K. Walsh | ||||||
|
2023
|
|
Thomas Constantine, Raymond Matsumoto, David Park, Derrick K. Walsh | ||||||
| 2022 |
|
Thomas Constantine, Raymond Matsumoto, Andrew J. Micheletti, Brian Swanson, Derrick K. Walsh | ||||||
| 2021 |
|
Eshel Bar-Adon, Raymond Matsumoto, Andrew J. Micheletti, Brian Swanson | ||||||
|
52
|
||
|
Fiscal Year
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Amounts reported in the Summary Compensation Table as Stock Awards granted during the fiscal year which are based on grant date fair values | $ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Fair value as of the end of the fiscal year of equity awards granted during the fiscal year which remain outstanding and unvested as of the end of the fiscal year |
|
(a)
|
|
(b)
|
|
(c)
|
|
(d)
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Change in fair value during the fiscal year of awards granted in prior years that remain outstanding and unvested as of the end of the fiscal year
|
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fair value as of the vesting date for awards that were granted and vested during the fiscal year |
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Change in fair value from the end of the prior fiscal year to the vesting date for awards granted in prior years that vested during the fiscal year |
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Fair value as of the end of the prior fiscal year of awards granted in prior years that did not meet the applicable vesting conditions during the fiscal year
|
|
|
(
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Net difference between Summary Compensation Table Total for PEO and CAP to PEO
|
$ |
|
$ |
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Fiscal Year
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2025 | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Amounts reported in the Summary Compensation Table as Stock Awards granted during the fiscal year which are based on grant date fair values | $ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
(
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Fair value as of the end of the fiscal year of equity awards granted during the fiscal year which remain outstanding and unvested as of the end of the fiscal year |
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Change in fair value during the fiscal year of awards granted in prior years that remain outstanding and unvested as of the end of the fiscal year |
|
|
|
(
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Change in fair value from the end of the prior fiscal year to the vesting date for awards granted in prior years that vested during the fiscal year |
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Net difference between Average Summary Compensation Table Total for Non-PEO NEOs and Average CAP to Non-PEO NEOs | $ |
|
$ |
|
$ |
|
$ |
(
|
$ |
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
53
|
||
|
PEO CAP
|
|
Average CAP for Non-PEO NEO
|
|||||||||||
|
Company Shareholder Returns
|
|
Peer Group Shareholder Returns
|
|||||||||||
|
54
|
||
|
PEO CAP
|
|
Average CAP for Non-PEO NEO
|
|
Net Income
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
55
|
||
|
PEO CAP |
|
Average CAP for Non-PEO NEO
|
|
Average Common Equity
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|
||||
|
|
|||||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
56
|
||
|
57
|
||
|
58
|
||
|
59
|
||
|
Termination After
Change-in-Control
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| A | B | C | D | E | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Type of Benefit
(1)
|
Death
(5)
or Disability
|
Termination
before a
Change-
in-Control
by Company
without
Cause
|
Upon a
Change-in-
Control
|
Termination by Company
for Any Reason or
by Executive with
Good Reason
|
Termination
by Executive
without Good
Reason
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Cash Severance
(2)
|
$ | 2,088,672 | $ | 3,513,973 | $ | 2,088,672 | $ | 2,100,000 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RSU Vesting
(3)
|
45,226,995 | 45,226,995 | 45,226,995 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
280G Tax Gross Up
(4)
|
— | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Value Upon Event | $ | 47,315,667 | $ | 48,740,968 | $ | 47,315,667 | $ | 2,100,000 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Events in Column D (Column C+D) | $ | 49,415,667 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Event in Column E (Column C+E)
|
$ | 47,315,667 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
60
|
||
|
Termination After
Change-in-Control
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| A | B | C | D | E | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Type of Benefit |
Death
(1)
or
Disability
|
Termination
before a
Change-
in-Control
by Company
without
Cause
|
Upon a
Change-in-
Control
|
Termination by Company
for Any Reason or
by Executive with
Good Reason
|
Termination
by Executive
without Good
Reason
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Cash Severance | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RSU Vesting
|
2,316,026 | 2,316,026 | 2,316,026 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Value Upon Event | $ | 2,316,026 | $ | 2,316,026 | $ | 2,316,026 | $ | — | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Events in Column D (
Column C+D
)
|
$ | 2,316,026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Event in Column E (
Column C+E
)
|
$ | 2,316,026 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Termination After
Change-in-Control
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| A | B | C | D | E | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Type of Benefit |
Death
(2)
or
Disability
|
Termination
before a
Change-
in-Control
by Company
without
Cause
|
Upon a
Change-in-
Control
|
Termination by Company
for Any Reason or
by Executive with
Good Reason
|
Termination
by Executive
without Good
Reason
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Cash Severance
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 710,000 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RSU Vesting
|
2,000,460 | 2,000,460 | 2,000,460 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Value Upon Event | $ | 2,000,460 | $ | 2,000,460 | $ | 2,000,460 | $ | 710,000 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Events in Column D (
Column C+D
)
|
$ | 2,710,460 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Event in Column E (
Column C+E
)
|
$ | 2,000,460 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
61
|
||
|
Termination After
Change-in-Control
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| A | B | C | D | E | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Type of Benefit |
Death
(2)
or
Disability
|
Termination
before a
Change-
in-Control
by Company
without
Cause
|
Upon a
Change-in-
Control
|
Termination by Company
for Any Reason or
by Executive with
Good Reason
|
Termination
by Executive
without Good
Reason
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Cash Severance
(1)
|
$ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 1,239,854 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RSU Vesting
|
2,084,864 | 2,084,864 | 2,084,864 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Value Upon Event | $ | 2,084,864 | $ | 2,084,864 | $ | 2,084,864 | $ | 1,239,854 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Events in Column D (
Column C+D
)
|
$ | 3,324,718 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Event in Column E (
Column C+E
)
|
$ | 2,084,864 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Termination After
Change-in-Control
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| A | B | C | D | E | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Type of Benefit |
Death
(2)
or
Disability
|
Termination
before a
Change-
in-Control
by Company
without
Cause
|
Upon a
Change-in-
Control
|
Termination by Company
for Any Reason or
by Executive with
Good Reason
|
Termination
by Executive
without Good
Reason
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Cash Severance
(1)
|
$ | 1,225,000 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 2,475,301 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
RSU Vesting
|
1,441,035 | 1,441,035 | 1,441,035 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Value Upon Event | $ | 2,666,035 | $ | 1,441,035 | $ | 1,441,035 | $ | 2,475,301 | $ | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Events in Column D (
Column C+D
)
|
$ | 3,916,336 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Total Value Upon CIC and Termination Event in Column E (
Column C+E
)
|
$ | 1,441,035 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
62
|
||
|
Compensation Committee Report
|
||
|
|
||
|
63
|
||
| Item 3. Approval of an Amendment to the Amended and Restated 2014 Stock Incentive Plan | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
The Board of Directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
the approval of the Amendment to the Amended and Restated 2014 Stock Incentive Plan.
|
||||||||
|
64
|
||
|
65
|
||
| 2014 Plan | Amended Plan | ||||||||||
| Termination of the Plan | September 5, 2026 | September 1, 2031 | |||||||||
| 2014 Plan Share and ISO Grant Limits | 6,680,000 shares | 7,780,000 shares | |||||||||
|
66
|
||
| Dilutive effect of requested new reserve shares under the Amended Plan | 1.15 | % | |||
| Dilutive effect of requested new reserve shares plus unissued shares available for grant | 2.51 | % | |||
|
Total potential dilution (including currently outstanding awards under Plan)
|
4.19 | % | |||
|
67
|
||
|
68
|
||
|
69
|
||
|
70
|
||
|
71
|
||
|
72
|
||
|
Item 4. Ratification of Selection of
Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
The board of directors recommends a vote
“FOR”
the ratification of the selection of BDO USA, P.C. as the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm.
|
||||||||
|
Nature of Services
|
Fees Charged 2025 | Fees Charged 2024 | |||||||||||||||
|
Audit fees
(1)
|
$ | 2,283,377 | $ | 2,348,203 | |||||||||||||
|
Audit-related fees
(2)
|
— | — | |||||||||||||||
|
Tax fees
(3)
|
— | — | |||||||||||||||
| All other fees | — | — | |||||||||||||||
| $ | 2,283,377 | $ | 2,348,203 | ||||||||||||||
|
73
|
||
|
Report of the Audit Committee
|
||
|
74
|
||
|
Other Items
|
||
|
|
||
|
75
|
||
|
(in thousands)
Name
|
Largest Aggregate
Principal Outstanding for 2025
|
Principal
Outstanding at
June 30, 2025
|
Principal Paid During 2025
|
Interest Paid
During 2025
|
Loans Paid off during 2025
|
Interest Rate
Payable (%)
(1)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Greg Garrabrants
Chief Executive Officer
|
$ | 8,458.3 | $ | 8,089.5 | $ | 368.8 | $ | 35.4 | $ | — | 0.43 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
James S. Argalas
Director
|
6,985.9 | 6,734.6 | 224.2 | 69.9 | — | 1.02 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Paul J. Grinberg
(2)
Director
|
5,072.1 | 5,072.1 | — | 26.5 | — | 0.56 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Andrew J. Micheletti
EVP, Finance
|
2,748.0 | 2,684.4 | 63.6 | 78.6 | — | 2.89 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
David Park
President, Head of Commercial Bank
|
1,305.8 | 1,258.1 | 47.8 | 5.5 | — | 0.43 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Thomas Constantine
EVP, Chief Credit Officer
|
1,202.6 | 1,162.6 | 40.0 | 4.2 | — | 0.39 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Brian Swanson
EVP, Head of Consumer Bank
|
1,195.7 | 1,152.3 | 43.4 | 5.1 | — | 0.43 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Derrick K. Walsh
EVP, Chief Financial Officer
|
881.6 | 849.7 | 31.9 | 3.6 | — | 0.41 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Nicholas Mosich
Director
|
688.6 | 665.5 | 23.1 | 3.6 | — | 0.43 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Eshel Bar-Adon
EVP, Strategic Partnerships and Chief Legal Officer
|
631.6 | 608.6 | 23.0 | 2.7 | — | 0.43 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Raymond Matsumoto
EVP, Chief Operating Officer
|
470.3 | 453.1 | 17.2 | 2.0 | — | 0.43 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
John Tolla
Chief Risk Officer
|
431.3 | 415.4 | 15.8 | 1.8 | — | 0.43 | % | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Non-director or executive officer employee loans | 65,701.5 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
76
|
||
| Name and Address of Beneficial Owner |
Shares of
Common Stock
Beneficially Owned
|
Percent of Shares
Outstanding
(1)
|
|||||||||
|
BlackRock, Inc.
(2)
|
8,329,879 | 14.72 | % | ||||||||
|
The Vanguard Group, Inc.
(3)
|
5,985,476 | 10.58 | % | ||||||||
|
77
|
||
| Beneficial Ownership of Common Stock | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name |
Number of
Shares
(1)
|
Percent of
Outstanding Shares |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
Gregory Garrabrants
(2)
|
1,829,426 | 3.23 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Paul J. Grinberg | 126,160 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Nicholas A. Mosich | 84,938 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| James S. Argalas | 75,484 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Brian Swanson
(3)
|
60,097 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Edward J. Ratinoff | 50,498 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Derrick K. Walsh
(4)
|
48,160 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
James J. Court
(5)
|
46,894 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
John Tolla
(6)
|
35,132 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Uzair Dada | 33,699 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
David Park
(7)
|
20,714 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Tamara N. Bohlig | 17,208 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Sara Wardell-Smith | 14,539 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Stefani D. Carter | 13,292 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Roque A. Santi | 10,290 | * | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
All current directors and executive officers as a group (20 persons)
(8)
|
2,746,375 | 4.85 | % | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
78
|
||
| By Order of the Board of Directors, | ||
|
||
| Gregory Garrabrants | ||
| President and Chief Executive Officer | ||
| September 25, 2025 | ||
|
79
|
||
|
Appendix A
|
||
|
A-1
|
|||||
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
| FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
|---|
| DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
|---|
No information found
No Customers Found
No Suppliers Found
Price
Yield
| Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
|---|