2Q22

CONFERENCE CALL (English) 08/12

10:00 a.m. (BRT) / 9:00 a.m. (NYC) Brazil: +55 (11) 3181-8565

+55 (11) 4090-1621 Toll Free: +1 (844) 204-8942Dial-In: +1 (412) 717-9627

Password: B3

Webcast:

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2.htm

CONFERENCE CALL (Portuguese) 08/12

11:00 a.m. (BRT)/10:00 a.m. (NYC) Brazil: +55 (11) 3181-8565

+55 (11) 4090-1621 Toll Free: +1 (844) 204-8942Dial-In: +1 (412) 717-9627

Password: B3

Webcast:

https://choruscall.com.br/b3/2t2

2.htm

B3 ANNOUNCES RESULTS FOR THE SECOND QUARTER OF 2022

São Paulo, August 11, 2022 - B3 S.A. - Brasil, Bolsa, Balcão ("B3" or "Company"; B3SA3) reports today its earnings for the second quarter of 2022 (2Q22). Total revenues reached R$2,486.8 million, down by 7.1% vs. 2Q21 and by 2.3% vs. 1Q22. Recurring EBITDA totaled R$1,668.3 million, down by 10.0% vs. 2Q21 and by 3.2% vs. 1Q22, while recurring net income1 amounted to R$1,221.2 million, in line with 2Q21 and slightly down by 1.5% vs. 1Q22.

MESSAGE FROM B3's MANAGEMENT

The second quarter was marked by the continuing concerns regarding the global macroeconomic scenario, with basic interest rate hikes in the world's major economies to contain increasing inflation. In Brazil, the Central Bank carried on with its hawkish policy and raised the basic interest rate to 13.25% in June.

In this challenging context, B3 reported lower volumes in the Listed segment. The average daily traded volume (ADTV) in the equities segment amounted to R$28.8 billion for 2Q22, down by 13.1% and 7.6% against 2Q21 and 1Q22, respectively, while the average daily volume (ADV) in the listed derivatives segment totaled 4.3 million contracts, in line with 2Q21 and 3.3% lower than in 1Q22. On the other hand, highlighting the efficiency of the mix among B3's revenue lines, the OTC segment had a 23.5% and 8.4% increase in the outstanding balance of fixed-income instruments vs. 2Q21 and 1Q22, respectively, amounting to R$4.6 trillion at the end of the quarter, and 23.1% and 11.8% increases (vs. 2Q21 and 1Q22, respectively) in the issuance of these securities, which amounted to R$4.0 trillion for the quarter.

Regarding the financial performance, revenues amounted to R$2.5 billion, down by 7.1% and 2.3% compared to 2Q21 and 1Q22, respectively, especially due to lower volumes and margins in the Listed segment. Recurring net income totaled R$1.2 billion, down by 0.8% and 1.5% against 2Q21 and 1Q22, respectively.

In August, B3 concluded its sixth issue of debentures in the domestic market, in the amount of R$3.0 billion, linked with the prepayment of the Company's third issue of debentures, in the amount of R$3.55 billion, to be completed afterwards. This liability management exercise aims to optimize B3's capital structure.

As for strategic advancements during the quarter, in line with the commitment to foster advancements in the Brazilian capital markets and to develop products and services in its core business, B3 launched in May the EDS and UDS (Exchange-Defined Strategy and User-Defined Strategy) structured transactions for the Interest rate derivatives market, which enable multiple instruments with different maturities to be traded in a single transaction, lowering costs and mitigating risks for participants.

Also, during May, B3 announced the signing of a strategic partnership agreement with Microsoft and Oracle to migrate systems to the cloud. Keeping up with technological advancements in the global capital markets, this initiative is intended to accelerate digital transformation, to boost the modernization of platforms, and to accelerate the development and launch of products.

Additionally, in line with the Company's strategy of growing beyond its core business, B3 announced the launch of L4 Venture Builder, a R$600 million fund for investments in the innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystem over the next 5 years, with focus on high potential growth businesses related to B3's activities, seeking to anticipate trends and offer the best solutions for the financial markets.

On the regulatory front, the Brazilian Securities Commission (CVM) published the new Resolutions 134 and 135, as a result of a public hearing conducted during 2019 and 2020, that replace the old CVM Instruction 461. The new resolutions detail the regulations on financial market infrastructures, securities markets and organized over-the-counter markets, among other matters. The main topics impacted by these resolutions were self- regulation, best execution rules, and trading of large blocks outside of an exchange environment.

B3 sees the regulator's initiative to encourage evolution and modernization in the financial markets as positive, while meeting key demands from market participants.

Lastly, reflecting the impacts of the complex economic scenario on the Company's results, B3 revised its financial leverage guidance for the end of the year from up to 1.6x to up to 1.9x gross debt/recurring EBITDA for the past 12 months.

(in R$ millions)

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21 (%)

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22 (%)

Total revenues

2,486.8

2,675.8

-7.1%

2,544.6

-2.3%

Net revenues

2,241.6

2,417.7

-7.3%

2,284.7

-1.9%

Net revenues (ex-Neoway)

2,198.6

2,417.7

-9.1%

2,245.3

-2.1%

Expenses

(842.5)

(749.3)

12.4%

(856.4)

-1.6%

Financial result

(15.3)

132.1

-

229.0

-

Net income

1,092.3

1,193.3

-8.5%

1,100.9

-0.8%

Adjusted expenses2

(453.9)

(324.4)

39.9%

(431.9)

5.1%

Adjusted expenses (ex-Neoway)

(414.7)

(324.4)

27.8%

(390.6)

6.2%

Recurring EBITDA

1,668.3

1,853.3

-10.0%

1,722.7

-3.2%

EBITDA margin (recurring)

74.4%

80.9%

-652 bps

75.4%

-98 bps

Recurring EBITDA (ex-Neoway)

1,684.4

1,853.3

-9.1%

1,741.1

-3.3%

Recurring EBITDA margin (ex-Neoway)

76.6%

80.9%

-434 bps

77.5%

-93 bps

Recurring net income

1,221.2

1,231.0

-0.8%

1,240.0

-1.5%

Recuring net income (ex-Neoway)

1,240.9

1,231.0

0.8%

1,258.3

-1.4%

1 See reconciliation on page 7.

2 Expenses adjusted for: (i) depreciation and amortization; (ii) long-termshare-based incentive program - principal and charges; (iii) provisions;

https://ri.b3.com.br

(iv) revenue-linked expenses; (v) expenses with write-off of projects; and (vi) extraordinary M&A expenses.

INFORMAÇÃO PÚBLICA - PUBLIC INFORMATION

Guidance for 2022

REAFFIRMED:

  1. CAPEX - Core Business (R$200 million to R$250 million);
  2. Earnings Distributions to Shareholders (110-140% of corporate net income);
  3. Adjusted Expenses-CoreBusiness (R$1,280 million - R$1,380 million);
  4. Expenses + CAPEX - New initiatives and business (R$585 million to R$665 million);
  5. Depreciation and amortization (R$1,050 million to R$1,130 million); and
  6. Revenue-linkedexpenses (R$265 million to R$325 million).

REVISED as per Material Fact of August 11, 2022:

(i) Leverage (from up to 1.6x to up to 1.9x gross debt/recurring EBITDA for the past 12 months).

Operational Performance

All comparisons in this document are in relation to the second quarter of 2021 (2Q21), unless otherwise stated.

Listed

Equities

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Cash market

ADTV (R$ million)

28,800.0

33,146.4

-13.1%

31,177.5

-7.6%

Margin (bps)

3.360

3.799

-0.439 bps

3.493

-0.133 bps

Average market capitalization

(R$ billion)

4,511.3

5,485.8

-17.8%

4,701.9

-4.1%

Turnover velocity

Annualized (%)

159.6%

149.2%

1,036 bps

165.8%

-617 bps

Options market (stock/indices)

ADTV (R$ million)

745.1

730.6

2.0%

801.5

-7.0%

Margin (bps)

12.604

13.131

-0.528 bps

13.364

-0.760 bps

Forward market

ADTV (R$ million)

308.4

427.9

-27.9%

251.4

22.7%

Margin (bps)

8.445

9.356

-0.911 bps

9.291

-0.846 bps

Stock indices futures

ADV (thousands of contracts)

3,414.7

3,531.7

-3.3%

3,763.5

-9.3%

Average RPC (R$)

0.916

0.914

0.2%

0.891

2.9%

Number of individual investors (CPFs)

Average (thousand)

4,358.6

3,163.8

37.8%

4,252.7

2.5%

Number of accounts in depository

Average (thousand)

5,169.9

3,774.0

37.0%

5,062.6

2.1%

Securities lending

Average open positions (R$ billion)

105.2

109.4

-3.9%

112.2

-6.2%

Note: "ADTV" stands for Average Daily Traded Volume; "ADV" stands for Average Daily Volume; "RPC" stands for Revenue per Contract; "bps" stands for basis points; "turnover velocity" results from dividing the volume traded on the spot market in the period by the average market capitalization for the period.

In the equities segment, there was a 13.1% decrease in ADTV in the cash equities market, reflecting a higher interest rate scenario in Brazil, with the basic interest rate rising from 4.25% at the end of 2Q21 to 13.75%, combined with greater concern with the global macroeconomic scenario, which reduces the risk appetite of investors. Additionally, there was a 17.8% decrease in the market cap of companies, contributing to a lower traded financial volume. Concerning stock indices futures, the 3.3% decrease in number of contracts traded is due to the decrease in the trading of its "mini" version.

The trading/post-trading margin in the cash equities market was 3.360 bps. The 0.439 bps decrease was mainly due to the incentive program for large non-day traders3 which went into effect in June 2021 (as part of the Company's new pricing policy that started its implementation in February 2021). The average revenue per contract (RPC) of stock indices future contracts was R$0.916, in line with 2Q21.

Note: Margin in bps includes fees at both ends of trades (buy + sell). 3.35 bps was the average margin for the last month of the period (June 2022).

The average number of accounts in the equities' depository increased by 37.0%, reflecting the continuous search by individual investors for diversification of their portfolios. Finally, the volume of outstanding positions for securities lending fell 3.9%.

3 Further information in Circular Notice No. 040/2021-PREINFORMAÇÃO PÚBLICA - PUBLIC INFORMATION

2

FICC

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Interest rates in BRL

ADV (thousands of contracts)

2,849.2

2,951.5

-3.5%

3,082.3

-7.6%

Average RPC (R$)

1.069

0.958

11.6%

0.958

11.6%

Interest rates in USD

ADV (thousands of contracts)

339.5

275.3

23.3%

343.0

-1.0%

Average RPC (R$)

2.056

2.808

-26.8%

2.479

-17.1%

FX rate

ADV (thousands of contracts)

1,090.1

1,040.7

4.7%

996.5

9.4%

Average RPC (R$)

4.668

5.662

-17.6%

5.401

-13.6%

Commodities

ADV (thousands of contracts)

24.9

23.0

8.3%

27.4

-9.1%

Average RPC (R$)

1.585

2.166

-26.8%

1.797

-11.8%

Total

ADV total (thousands of contracts)

4,303.7

4,290.5

0.3%

4,449.2

-3.3%

Average RPC (R$)

2.061

2.224

-7.3%

2.076

-0.7%

The average daily volume for 2Q22 was 4.3 million contracts, in line with the same period of the previous year, with emphasis on the 23.3% increase in ADV of Interest rate contracts in USD and 4.7% of FX rate, offset by the 3.5% reduction in ADV of interest rate contracts in BRL. The average RPC decreased by 7.3% in the period, primarily influenced by an 11.9% appreciation of the BRL against the USD, which had a negative impact on RPC for Interest rate contracts in USD and FX rate contracts, as revenues from these contracts are linked to the USD.

OTC

Fixed-Income Instruments

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

New Issues

Bank funding (total in R$ billions)

3,759.0

3,137.4

19.8%

3,367.1

11.6%

Other (total in billions)

288.0

149.8

92.3%

253.0

13.8%

Outstanding

Bank funding (average in R$ billions)

2,493.8

2,161.4

15.4%

2,340.4

6.6%

Corporate debt (average in R$ billions)

896.3

706.2

26.9%

839.5

6.8%

balance

Other (average in R$ billions)

1,195.7

846.7

41.2%

1,049.8

13.9%

Treasury Direct

Number of investors (average in thousands)

1,973.1

1,529.0

29.0%

1,863.7

5.9%

Stock (average in R$ billions)

86.9

67.6

28.5%

79.8

8.9%

Note: "Bank funding" includes DI, CDB, Letras Financeiras and other instruments such as RDB, LC, and DPGE.

"Other" includes real estate notes (LCI, CCI, CRI and LH), agribusiness certificates (CRA, LCA and CDCA) and funding instruments (CCB, CCCB, NCE, CCE, Export Notes, and NC).

In a scenario of increasing interest rates, volumes of new issues and outstanding positions of bank funding instruments in the 2Q22 increased by 19.8% and 15.4%, respectively, primarily due to an increase in issues of Bank Deposit Certificates (CDBs), which represented 73.1% of all new issues in the quarter. For issues of other fixed-income instruments, the 92.3% growth was influenced by a 95.9% increase in issues of instruments for the agribusiness, which represented 76.0% of all issues in this group (vs. 74.6% for 2Q21). The average outstanding balance of corporate debt instruments increased by 26.9%, with leasing debentures accounting for 17.8% of the balance of corporate debt for 2Q22 (vs. 22.7% for 2Q21).

Another highlight in the fixed-income market was the continuous growth in Treasury Direct (TD), in which number of investors and outstanding balance were up by 29.0% and 28.5%, respectively. B3 offers an incentive program for brokerage firms to increase the number of investors in this product, which is revised on a yearly basis. In 2022, the incentive program was revised, and two models of incentive were announced, which are defined based on the broker's outstanding balance4 in TD.

OTC Derivatives and Structured Notes

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Issues

(Total in R$ billion)

3,299.0

2,618.5

26.0%

3,044.1

8.4%

Stock

(Average in R$ billion)

5,483.9

4,919.9

11.5%

5,450.3

0.6%

New issues on the OTC derivatives and structured notes market increased by 26.0%, with issues of virtually all instruments rising. In the same comparison, the average outstanding balance was up by 11.5%.

Infrastructure for Financing

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Number of vehicles sold (thousands)

4,188.6

4,699.7

-10.9%

3,489.9

20.0%

SNG

Number of vehicles financed (thousands)

1,350.1

1,487.8

-9.3%

1,273.5

6.0%

% Vehicles financed / vehicles sold

32.2%

31.7%

0.6 pp

36.5%

-4.3 pp

  • Brokers holding outstanding balances of Treasury Direct (TDs) that are worth less than R$4 billion are covered by Model I, in which case the incentive is a variable amount depending on investor base (R$200 per customer added); Brokerage firms holding an outstanding balance of R$4 billion or more in TDs are covered by Model II, in which incentive is calculated as a percentage of the

average balance, depending on growing the investor base and may reach up to 0.20% for the highest range.

INFORMAÇÃO PÚBLICA - PUBLIC INFORMATION

3

The number of vehicles sold decreased 10.9% in Brazil due to shortage of components and increased prices for both new and used vehicles. The number of additions to the National Liens System (SNG) decreased 9.3%, following the industry trend. By comparison to the previous quarter, there was an increase of 20.0% in number of vehicles sold and 6.0% in number of financed vehicles, especially due to the low comparative basis during the first few months of 2022.

Technology, data and services

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Monthly Utilization Average number of customers

18,206

15,937

14.2%

17,660

3.1%

The average number of customers that pay for the monthly use of OTC systems increased by 14.2%, mainly due to the fund industry's growth in Brazil.

INCOME STATEMENT

Revenues

Total revenues: R$2,486.8 million, down by 7.1%. The decrease in total revenues is mainly explained by a decrease in revenues from the Listed and Infrastructure for Financing segments, despite the growth in other segments, which was not enough to offset those decreases. It is worth noting that revenues for 2Q21 were favorably impacted by the reversal of provisions and recovery of expenses in the amount of R$128.4 million, and for 2Q22 by the consolidation of Neoway.

Listed: R$1,618.7 million (65.1% of the total), down by 10,4%.

  • Equities and equity instruments: R$1,046.9 million (42.1% of total), down by 13.8% for the period.
    • Trading and post-trading: R$867.2 million (34.9% of total), down by 18.5%, reflecting lower traded volumes and the implementation of the incentive program for large non-day traders, as explained above.
    • Depository: R$35.6 million (1.4% of the total), down by 6.2% in the period, mainly due to the decrease in the market value of the listed companies during the quarter.
    • Securities lending: R$100.6 million (4.0% of the total), up by 45.3%, due to the current level of fees negotiated between participants in this type of transaction.
    • Listing and solutions for issuers: R$43.5 million (1.7% of the total), up by 0.9%, especially due to the annual adjustment for inflation (by the IPCA) of fees charged to listed companies. The offerings for the period (6 follow-ons) added up to R$40.9bn, down by 12.0% vs. R$46.4bn for 2Q21 (13 IPOs and 10 follow-ons).
  • FICC: R$571.8 million (23.0% of the total), down by 3.5%, reflecting the decrease in RPC from Interest rate in USD and FX contracts. It is worth pointing out that this item is impacted by the cash flow hedge accounting from the September 2021 bond issue, where the bond is a hedging instrument, and highly probable future revenues in USD (especially related to listed FX rate derivative contracts in USD and interest rate contracts in USD) are being hedged, with the effects of exchange rate fluctuations on that debt stated in shareholders' equity and recognized in the income statement to the extent that revenues are realized. For 2Q22, the net impact of that structure was positive by R$18.8 million based on the exchange rate fluctuation for the period.

OTC: R$319.0 million (12.8% of the total), up by 13.7%.

  • Fixed-incomeinstruments: R$206.2 million (8.3% of total), a 24.7% increase mainly due to (i) 19.8% growth in issues of bank funding instruments and 15.4% growth in their outstanding balance, (ii) higher average corporate debt outstanding, which grew by 26.9% in the period, and (iii) increased revenues from Treasury Direct, which amounted to R$40.7 million for 2Q22 vs. R$39.1 million for 2Q21. It is worth noting that the market incentives related to this product added up to R$17.0 million for the quarter (R$12.6 million for 2Q21) and are accounted for as revenue-linked expenses.
  • Derivatives and structured transactions: R$64.6 million (2.6% of the total), down by 9.2%, mainly due to new pricing models for swap and forward contracts implemented in September 2021 and January 2022, respectively, which aim to offset price distortions between contracts for these products.
  • Other: R$48.2 million (1.9% of the total), up by 9.5% reflecting increased registration and outstanding balance of fund quotas.

Infrastructure for financing: R$110.6 million (4.4% of total), a 5.3% decrease, due to a decrease in vehicle financing because of the worsening scenario in the industry, as previously explained, partially offset by the annual inflation adjustment of prices (IPCA).

Technology, data and services: R$438.3 million (17.6% of the total), up by 28.0%.

  • Technology and access: R$246.5 million (9.9% of the total), up by 15.4%, with emphasis on the growth of the monthly utilization line driven by (i) the increased number of customers in the highest ranges, and (ii) the annual inflation adjustment of prices (IPCA).
  • Data and analytics: R$128.2 million (5.2% of the total), up by 86.1%, mainly due to the consolidation of revenues from Neoway. Excluding Neoway, there would have been a 20.1% increase.
  • Bank: R$31.9 million (1.3% of the total), up by 56.3%, mainly due to the higher volume of BDRs in the period.

INFORMAÇÃO PÚBLICA - PUBLIC INFORMATION

4

  • Other: R$31.8 million, (1.3% of the total), down by 19.8%.

Net revenues: Down by 7.3%, amounting to R$2,241.6 million.

Expenses

Expenses totaled R$842.5 million, up by 12.4%.

  • Personnel and charges: R$307.3 million, up by 11.7%, mainly explained by (i) the addition of Neoway to this expense line, (ii) new hires and annual salary adjustment by inflation. Excluding Neoway, the comparison shows a 2.0% decrease. It is worth noting that the Company´s results were impacted in 2Q21 by the recognition of extraordinary and non-recurring expenses due to contract termination and bonuses arising from changes in its management structure.
  • Data processing: R$127.7 million, a 41.1% increase, mainly due to (i) the development of new initiatives that, given the nature and way in which they are being developed (agile model, etc.), are accounted for as expenses rather than investments (CAPEX), and (ii) the addition of Neoway's expenses. Excluding Neoway, there would have been a 34.6% increase.
  • Depreciation and amortization: R$266.0 million, up by 0.5%. Excluding Neoway, there would have been a 1.9% decrease.
  • Revenue-linkedexpenses: R$65.1 million, up by 3.2%, especially due to the addition of Neoway to this expense line. Excluding Neoway, there would have been a 10.6% decrease due to reduced spending with services for the real estate market and decrease in number of public offerings.
  • Third-partyservices: totaled R$27.4 million, up by 107.6%, due to (i) increase in outside personnel for projects that, due to their nature, are not capitalized, as previously explained, (ii) higher spending on advisory services and (iii) the addition of Neoway. Excluding Neoway, there would have been a 78.4% increase.
  • Others: totaled R$28.7 million, up by 7.6%, mainly due to higher spending relating to the return of business travels.

The following tables show the breakdown and evolution of adjusted expenses, ex-Neoway and consolidated.

Reconciliation of adjusted expenses (ex-Neoway)

(In R$ millions)

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Expenses (ex-Neoway)

(777.0)

(749.3)

3.7%

(792.1)

-1.9%

(+) Depreciation and amortization

259.6

264.8

-1.9%

269.5

-3.7%

(+) Long term stock-based compensation

30.9

34.8

-11.2%

38.4

-19.5%

(+) Provisions (recurring and non-recurring)

12.3

13.9

-11.8%

13.7

-10.8%

(+) Revenue-linked expenses

56.4

63.1

-10.6%

61.4

-8.2%

(+) Extraordinary expenses contract termination

-

48.4

-

-

-

(+) Extraordinary M&A expenses

3.2

-

-

18.5

-82.6%

Adjusted expenses

(414.7)

(324.4)

27.8%

(390.6)

6.2%

Reconciliation of adjusted expenses

(In R$ millions)

2Q22

2Q21

2Q22/2Q21

1Q22

2Q22/1Q22

(%)

(%)

Expenses

(842.5)

(749.3)

12.4%

(856.4)

-1.6%

(+) Depreciation and amortization

266.0

264.8

0.5%

275.9

-3.6%

(+) Long term stock-based compensation

42.0

34.8

20.7%

47.5

-11.7%

(+) Provisions (recurring and non-recurring)

12.3

13.9

-11.5%

14.7

-16.3%

(+) Revenue-linked expenses

65.1

63.1

3.2%

67.9

-4.1%

(+) Extraordinary expenses contract termination

-

48.4

-

-

-

(+) Extraordinary M&A expenses

3.2

-

-

18.5

-82.6%

Adjusted expenses

(453.9)

(324.4)

39.9%

(431.9)

5.1%

Core business expenses

(318.9)

(287.1)

11.0%

(324.6)

-1.8%

Non-Core expenses - New initiatives and business

(135.0)

(37.3)

262.0%

(107.3)

25.9%

New initiatives - B3

(70.9)

(22.0)

222.3%

(46.8)

51.4%

Adjusted expenses (total) - Subsidiaries

(64.1)

(15.3)

319.0%

(60.4)

6.1%

Due to the Company's new initiatives, the consolidated table also shows the segmentation between adjusted core business expenses and adjusted non-core business expenses.

Core business expenses: totaled R$318.9 million, up by 11.1%, as a result of higher spending on personnel and charges, especially due to the annual inflation adjustment of salaries (collective wage agreement) and new hires. By comparison to the previous quarter, adjusted core business expenses decreased by 1.8%.

Non-corebusiness expenses: totaled R$135.0 million, up by 262.0%, especially due to the new stage of the Company, as the implementation of its business diversification strategy is intensified by new initiatives that will be accounted for as expenses rather than investments, as explained above. At B3, these initiatives include receivables, insurance, energy, KYC, the new platform for retail investors and capital market data projects. Subsidiaries include Neoway, PDtec, BLK and CED, which generated gross revenues of R$71.0 million, up by 136.9% against 2Q21.

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B3 SA Brasil Bolsa Balcao published this content on 11 August 2022 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 12 August 2022 04:48:02 UTC.