Technology
Nelnet Reports First Quarter 2026 Results
Published
15 hours agoon
By
LINCOLN, Neb., May 7, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Nelnet (NYSE: NNI) today reported GAAP net income of $71.1 million, or $1.97 per share, for the first quarter of 2026, compared with GAAP net income of $82.6 million, or $2.26 per share, for the same period a year ago.
Net income, excluding derivative market value adjustments[1], was $69.9 million, or $1.94 per share, for the first quarter of 2026, compared with $87.4 million, or $2.39 per share, for the same period in 2025.
“We’re off to a strong start in 2026, with every business segment performing at a high level,” said Jeff Noordhoek, chief executive officer of Nelnet. “We completed our Canadian acquisition in February, and integration is proceeding well, expanding our loan servicing reach and supporting our long-term diversification strategy focused on core strengths. This year, our focus is simple: Go. Technology is accelerating, innovation cycles are compressing, and the pace of change continues to increase. Our job is to move with speed—to be decisive and to keep pushing forward for our customers.”
Nelnet operates through three divisions: Nelnet Financial Services (NFS), Loan Servicing and Systems [referred to as Nelnet Diversified Services (NDS)], and Education Technology Services and Payments [referred to as Nelnet Business Services (NBS)]. NFS includes the company’s Asset Generation and Management (AGM) and Nelnet Bank reportable operating segments, which earn interest income on loans and investments. NDS and NBS generate primarily fee-based revenue through loan servicing, education technology, and payment services. Business activities not included in these divisions are combined and reported within Corporate Activities.
Nelnet Financial Services
AGM
The AGM operating segment reported loan and investment net interest income of $67.5 million during the first quarter of 2026, compared with $52.9 million for the same period a year ago. The increase in 2026 was due to an increase in loan spread[2] and growth in the company’s consumer financing receivables. In the third quarter of 2025, the company began to purchase Pay Later receivables. As of March 31, 2026, the balance of Pay Later receivables was $766.2 million. The increase in net interest income was partially offset by the anticipated runoff of the legacy Federal Family Education Loan Program (the “FFEL Program” or FFELP) loan portfolio. The average balance of FFELP loans outstanding decreased from $8.6 billion for the first quarter of 2025 to $7.2 billion for the same period in 2026.
AGM recorded a provision for loan losses of $48.5 million ($36.9 million after tax) in the first quarter of 2026, compared with $13.0 million ($9.9 million after tax) for the same period in 2025. The increase was primarily driven by the establishment of an initial allowance for loans acquired during the quarter. During the first quarter of 2026, AGM acquired $3.34 billion of loans, of which $2.85 billion were Pay Later receivables. The higher provision reflects portfolio growth rather than changes in underlying credit performance. Credit quality metrics, including delinquency rates and charge-offs, remained generally consistent with management’s expectations.
AGM holds interests in certain joint ventures engaged in the acquisition and management of loan portfolios. During the three months ended March 31, 2026, AGM recognized $15.4 million ($11.7 million after tax) of income from these joint ventures.
AGM recognized net income after tax of $23.2 million for the three months ended March 31, 2026, compared with $22.7 million for the same period in 2025.
_________________________________________
1
Net income, excluding derivative market value adjustments, is a non-GAAP measure. See “Non-GAAP Performance Measures” at the end of this press release and the “Non-GAAP Disclosures” section below for explanatory information and reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial information.
2
Loan spread represents the spread between the yield earned on loan assets and the costs of the liabilities used to fund the assets.
Nelnet Bank
As of March 31, 2026, Nelnet Bank had a $1.26 billion and $1.18 billion loan and investment portfolio, respectively, and total deposits, including intercompany deposits, of $1.96 billion. Nelnet Bank reported loan and investment net interest income of $17.8 million during the first quarter of 2026, compared with $12.4 million for the same period a year ago. The increase in 2026 was due to an increase in the loan and investment portfolio, partially offset by a decrease in net interest margin.
Nelnet Bank recognized net income after tax for the quarter ended March 31, 2026 of $7.1 million, compared with $1.5 million for the same period in 2025.
Loan Servicing and Systems
Revenue from the Loan Servicing and Systems segment was $127.8 million for the first quarter of 2026, compared with $120.7 million for the same period in 2025. The increase was primarily due to the company’s acquisition of NDS Canada during the first quarter of 2026. As of March 31, 2026, the company was servicing $525.7 billion in Department of Education, Canada Student Loan Program, FFELP, private education, and consumer loans for 15.5 million borrowers.
As previously disclosed, on February 2, 2026, the company acquired a Canadian student loan servicing business (“NDS Canada”) that delivers technology-enabled student loan servicing for governments and financial institutions, managing 2.7 million borrowers on proprietary platforms. Beginning on the acquisition date, the operating results of NDS Canada are included in the Loan Servicing and Systems operating segment.
The Loan Servicing and Systems segment reported net income after tax of $15.0 million for the three months ended March 31, 2026, compared with $14.1 million for the same period in 2025.
Education Technology Services and Payments
For the first quarter of 2026, revenue from the Education Technology Services and Payments operating segment was $154.4 million, an increase from $147.3 million for the same period in 2025. Revenue less direct costs to provide services for the first quarter of 2026 was $104.5 million, compared with $99.3 million for the same period in 2025.
Net income after tax for the Education Technology Services and Payments segment was $36.3 million for the three months ended March 31, 2026, compared with $36.1 million for the same period in 2025.
This segment is subject to seasonal fluctuations. Based on the timing of when revenue is recognized and when expenses are incurred, revenue and operating margin are higher in the first quarter compared with the remainder of the year.
Corporate and Other Activities
During the three months ended March 31, 2026, the company recognized $10.8 million ($8.2 million after tax or $0.23 per share) of losses related to marketable equity securities with readily determinable fair values. These losses resulted from changes in market values during the period.
Included in Corporate Activities are the company’s equity interests held in partnerships that invest in solar tax equity projects. The company recognized $22.5 million ($6.9 million after tax and noncontrolling interests or $0.19 per share) of losses related to its solar tax equity partnerships during the three months ended March 31, 2026. Despite short-term losses, our tax equity investments are structured to deliver long-term value and cash flow.
Board of Directors Declares Second Quarter Dividend
The Nelnet Board of Directors declared a second-quarter cash dividend on the company’s outstanding shares of Class A common stock and Class B common stock of $0.33 per share. The dividend will be paid on June 15, 2026, to shareholders of record at the close of business on June 1, 2026.
Forward-Looking and Cautionary Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities laws. The words “anticipate,” “assume,” “believe,” “continue,” “could,” “ensure,” “estimate,” “expect,” “focus,” “forecast,” “future,” “intend,” “may,” “objective,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “pursue,” “scheduled,” “should,” “strategy,” “will,” “would,” and similar expressions, as well as statements in future tense, are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These statements are based on management’s current expectations as of the date of this release and are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions, and other factors that may cause the actual results and performance to be materially different from any future results or performance expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to: risks related to the ability to successfully maintain and increase allocated volumes of student loans serviced by the company under existing and future servicing contracts with the Department of Education, risks related to unfavorable contract modifications or interpretations, risks related to consistently meeting service requirements to avoid the assessment of performance penalties, and risks related to the company’s ability to comply with agreements with third-party customers for the servicing of Federal Direct Loan Program, Canada Student Loan Program, FFEL Program, private education, and consumer loans; loan portfolio risks such as credit risk, prepayment risk, interest rate basis and repricing risk, risks related to the use of derivatives to manage exposure to interest rate fluctuations, uncertainties regarding the expected benefits from purchased securitized and unsecuritized FFELP, private education, consumer, and other loans, or residual interests therein, and initiatives to purchase additional FFELP, private education, consumer, and other loans; financing and liquidity risks, including risks of changes in the interest rate environment; risks from changes in the terms of education loans and in the educational credit and services markets resulting from changes in applicable laws, regulations, and government programs and budgets; risks related to a breach of or failure in the company’s operational or information systems or infrastructure, or those of third-party vendors, including disclosure of confidential or personal information and/or damage to reputation resulting from cyber breaches; risks related to use of artificial intelligence; uncertainties inherent in forecasting future cash flows from student loan assets, including residual interests therein, and related asset-backed securitizations; risks related to the ability of Nelnet Bank to achieve its business objectives and effectively deploy loan and deposit strategies and achieve expected market penetration; risks related to the company’s solar tax equity partnerships, including risks of not being able to realize tax credits which remain subject to recapture by taxing authorities and risks from the impact of the enactment of the One Big Beautiful Bill that accelerates the expiration and phase out of solar energy credits; risks and uncertainties related to other initiatives (and anticipated income therefrom) including venture capital, real estate, reinsurance, acquisitions, and other activities, including activities that are intended to diversify the company both within and outside of its historical core education-related businesses; risks and uncertainties associated with climate change; risks from changes in economic conditions and consumer behavior; risks related to the company’s ability to adapt to technological change; risks related to the exclusive forum provisions in the company’s articles of incorporation; risks related to the company’s executive chairman’s ability to control matters related to the company through voting rights; risks related to related party transactions; risks related to natural disasters, terrorist activities, or international hostilities; and risks and uncertainties associated with litigation matters, maintaining compliance with the extensive regulatory requirements applicable to the company’s businesses, and uncertainties inherent in the estimates and assumptions about future events that management is required to make in the preparation of the company’s consolidated financial statements.
For more information, see the “Risk Factors” sections and other cautionary discussions of risks and uncertainties included in documents filed or furnished by the company with the Securities and Exchange Commission. All forward-looking statements in this release are as of the date of this release. Although the company may voluntarily update or revise its forward-looking statements from time to time to reflect actual results or changes in the company’s expectations, the company disclaims any commitment to do so except as required by law.
Non-GAAP Performance Measures
The company prepares its financial statements and presents its financial results in accordance with U.S. GAAP. However, it also provides additional non-GAAP financial information related to specific items management believes to be important in the evaluation of its operating results and performance. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial information, and a discussion of why the company believes providing this additional information is useful to investors, is provided in the “Non-GAAP Disclosures” section below.
Consolidated Statements of Income
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
(unaudited)
Three months ended
March 31,
2026
December 31,
2025
March 31,
2025
Interest income:
Loan interest
$ 171,024
184,825
166,439
Investment interest
40,202
40,559
41,389
Total interest income
211,226
225,384
207,828
Interest expense on bonds and notes payable and bank deposits
109,583
118,273
125,114
Net interest income
101,643
107,111
82,714
Less provision for loan losses
53,244
38,147
15,337
Less provision for beneficial interests
4,130
2,679
1,510
Net interest income after provision
44,269
66,285
65,867
Other income (expense):
Loan servicing and systems revenue
127,842
116,573
120,741
Education technology services and payments revenue
154,436
112,314
147,330
Reinsurance premiums earned
22,536
33,539
24,687
Solar construction revenue
—
3,379
3,995
Other, net
10,437
16,749
24,603
Derivative market value adjustments and derivative settlements, net
2,167
2,330
(5,578)
Total other income (expense), net
317,418
284,884
315,778
Cost of services and expenses:
Loan servicing contract fulfillment and acquisition costs
2,087
2,056
1,633
Cost to provide education technology services and payments
49,953
38,654
48,047
Cost to provide solar construction services
—
12,326
7,828
Total cost of services
52,040
53,036
57,508
Salaries and benefits
139,371
141,086
138,223
Depreciation and amortization
9,170
9,365
9,255
Reinsurance losses and underwriting expenses
23,605
25,715
22,212
Other expenses
61,840
75,589
48,307
Total operating expenses
233,986
251,755
217,997
Income before income taxes
75,661
46,378
106,140
Income tax expense
(20,061)
(7,691)
(25,010)
Net income
55,600
38,687
81,130
Net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
15,526
19,084
1,430
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$ 71,126
57,771
82,560
Earnings per common share:
Net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc. shareholders – basic and diluted
$ 1.97
1.60
2.26
Weighted-average common shares outstanding – basic and diluted
36,076,912
36,088,994
36,478,426
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
(Dollars in thousands)
(unaudited)
As of
As of
As of
March 31, 2026
December 31, 2025
March 31, 2025
Assets:
Loans and accrued interest receivable, net
$ 10,009,471
10,006,695
10,422,704
Cash, cash equivalents, and investments
2,717,368
2,643,954
2,523,067
Restricted cash
590,518
677,563
611,610
Goodwill and intangible assets, net
301,506
187,312
192,832
Other assets
559,054
548,259
441,745
Total assets
$ 14,177,917
14,063,783
14,191,958
Liabilities:
Bonds and notes payable
$ 7,699,400
7,780,927
8,656,157
Bank deposits
1,744,527
1,669,173
1,313,407
Other liabilities
1,127,978
1,036,454
859,385
Total liabilities
10,571,905
10,486,554
10,828,949
Equity:
Total Nelnet, Inc. shareholders’ equity
3,731,291
3,685,792
3,419,523
Noncontrolling interests
(125,279)
(108,563)
(56,514)
Total equity
3,606,012
3,577,229
3,363,009
Total liabilities and equity
$ 14,177,917
14,063,783
14,191,958
Non-GAAP Disclosures
(Dollars in thousands, except share data)
(unaudited)
Non-GAAP financial measures disclosed by management are meant to provide additional information and insight relative to business trends to investors and, in certain cases, to present financial information as measured by rating agencies and other users of financial information. These measures are not in accordance with, or a substitute for, GAAP and may be different from, or inconsistent with, non-GAAP financial measures used by other companies. The company reports this non-GAAP information because the company believes that it provides additional information regarding operational and performance indicators that are closely assessed by management. There is no comprehensive, authoritative guidance for the presentation of such non-GAAP information, which is only meant to supplement GAAP results by providing additional information that management utilizes to assess performance.
Net income, excluding derivative market value adjustments
Three months ended March 31,
2026
2025
GAAP net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$ 71,126
82,560
Realized and unrealized derivative market value adjustments (a)
(1,587)
6,324
Tax effect (b)
381
(1,519)
Non-GAAP net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc., excluding derivative market
value adjustments
$ 69,920
87,365
Earnings per share:
GAAP net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc.
$ 1.97
2.26
Realized and unrealized derivative market value adjustments (a)
(0.04)
0.17
Tax effect (b)
0.01
(0.04)
Non-GAAP net income attributable to Nelnet, Inc., excluding derivative market
value adjustments
$ 1.94
2.39
(a)
“Derivative market value adjustments” includes both the realized portion of gains and losses (corresponding to variation margin received or paid on derivative instruments that are settled daily at a central clearinghouse) and the unrealized portion of gains and losses that are caused by changes in fair values of derivatives which do not qualify for “hedge treatment” under GAAP. “Derivative market value adjustments” does not include “derivative settlements” that represent the cash paid or received during the respective period to settle with derivative instrument counterparties the economic effect of the company’s derivative instruments based on their contractual terms.
The accounting for derivatives requires that changes in the fair value of derivative instruments be recognized currently in earnings, with no fair value adjustment of the hedged item, unless specific hedge accounting criteria are met. Management has structured all of the company’s derivative transactions with the intent that each is economically effective; however, the majority of the company’s derivative instruments do not qualify for hedge accounting in the consolidated financial statements. As a result, the change in fair value for the derivative instruments that do not qualify for hedge accounting is reported in current period earnings with no consideration for the corresponding change in fair value of the hedged item. Under GAAP, the cumulative net realized and unrealized gain or loss caused by changes in fair values of derivatives in which the company plans to hold to maturity will generally equal zero over the life of the contract. However, the net realized and unrealized gain or loss during any given reporting period fluctuates significantly from period to period.
The company believes these point-in-time estimates of asset and liability values related to its derivative instruments that are subject to interest rate fluctuations are subject to volatility mostly due to timing and market factors beyond the control of management, and affect the period-to-period comparability of the results of operations. Accordingly, the company’s management utilizes operating results excluding these items for comparability purposes when making decisions regarding the company’s performance and in presentations with credit rating agencies, lenders, and investors. Consequently, the company reports this non-GAAP information because the company believes that it provides additional information regarding operational and performance indicators that are closely assessed by management and represents what earnings would have been had these derivatives qualified for hedge accounting. There is no comprehensive, authoritative guidance for the presentation of such non-GAAP information, which is only meant to supplement GAAP results by providing additional information that management utilizes to assess performance.
(b)
The tax effects are calculated by multiplying the realized and unrealized derivative market value adjustments by the applicable statutory income tax rate.
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nelnet-reports-first-quarter-2026-results-302766164.html
SOURCE Nelnet, Inc.
You may like
Technology
eSign.AI Named Sole Electronic Signature Technology Provider for Hong Kong Government’s CorpID Project, Building the Foundation for Digital Signing Infrastructure in Hong Kong
Published
2 hours agoon
May 8, 2026By
HONG KONG, May 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — As Hong Kong’s Digital Corporate Identity Platform (CorpID) counts down to its phased launch, eSign.AI has been appointed as the sole electronic signature vendor in the project, responsible for delivering core digital signing capabilities including digital signatures, certificate management, and signature verification services. CorpID is led by Nexify, a seasoned government systems integrator, as the prime contractor. The platform is expected to launch in phases starting late 2026, with multiple CorpID-based e-government services going live in mid-2027.
CorpID: Government-Grade Digital Identity Infrastructure for Hong Kong Enterprises
The Digital Corporate Identity Platform (CorpID) is an enterprise-level digital services platform launched by the Hong Kong SAR Government, developed under the oversight of the Digital Policy Office (DPO). It is designed to serve as the business equivalent of “iAM Smart,” providing a unified digital identity foundation for Hong Kong enterprises. CorpID’s core mission is to build an integrated digital government infrastructure — offering unified identity authentication, digital signing, form pre-filling, and e-licence storage — replacing paper-heavy, cumbersome traditional processes and enabling smart city development through seamless data connectivity.
The platform is open to companies incorporated under the Companies Ordinance (Cap. 622) and businesses registered under the Business Registration Ordinance (Cap. 310), including sole proprietorships and partnerships. The DPO requires all enterprise-related e-government services to support CorpID within 18 months of launch, and will continue expanding ecosystem coverage through sandbox initiatives, cross-industry identity standard interoperability, and fully online registration processes.
eSign.AI: The Digital Signing Engine Behind CorpID
eSign.AI is an AI-native electronic signature and contract automation platform built for enterprises worldwide, offering a complete signing framework from simple electronic signatures to the highest-level compliant digital signatures — meeting diverse regulatory requirements across industries and jurisdictions.
On the identity verification front, eSign.AI has completed integration with iAM Smart, enabling individual identity verification through Hong Kong’s citizen digital identity system, and providing legally valid digital certificate services for both enterprises and individuals.
Looking ahead, the eSign.AI SaaS platform will be deeply integrated with CorpID, providing enterprise and individual identity verification for Hong Kong businesses, and supporting both electronic and digital signing that complies with Hong Kong’s Electronic Transactions Ordinance — connecting the full digital contracting lifecycle for government and enterprise alike.
Getting Ahead of the AI Era: From eSignGlobal to eSign.AI
The electronic signature industry is undergoing a structural shift from “tooling” to “intelligence.” Market data underscores this acceleration: the AI-powered contract analysis tools market has grown from USD 3.32 billion in 2025 to USD 4.3 billion in 2026, at a CAGR of 29.6%. Signing is just one node in the contract lifecycle — document generation, workflow orchestration, compliance tracking, and post-execution management are all being transformed by AI, and the industry window is closing fast.
In April 2026, the company officially rebranded from eSignGlobal to eSign.AI, completing its strategic transformation from an e-signature tool provider to an AI-native contract automation platform. As the company’s spokesperson noted, this rebrand is not cosmetic — it is an acknowledgment of where the product actually is. Customers were already using eSign.AI to automate workflows that go far beyond the signature itself.
eSign Automation Skill was launched alongside the rebrand — an AI-powered signing automation framework for enterprise workflows that enables complete contract signing through natural language interaction, with no manual intervention required. Whether it is single-party approval, multi-party sequential signing, or large-scale parallel execution, an AI Agent can orchestrate the entire workflow in a single call. All signature initiations and status queries return structured JSON outputs, directly parseable by leading large language models and intelligent workflow systems.
eSign Automation is now available in the OpenClaw ecosystem and supports integration via Claude MCP, ChatGPT, and other leading AI platforms.
By combining AI automation capabilities with CorpID’s government-grade digital identity infrastructure, eSign.AI delivers a complete solution for Hong Kong enterprises — from identity verification to intelligent signing to full workflow automation.
About eSign.AI
eSign.AI (formerly eSignGlobal) is an AI-native electronic signature and contract automation platform built for enterprises worldwide. The platform serves over 100 countries and regions, covering core industries including financial services, manufacturing, real estate, human resources, and healthcare — with 1,500+ scenario applications and 3,000+ ecosystem partners. eSign.AI holds ISO 27001, ISO 27701, and ISO 27018 certifications and supports major regulatory frameworks including the U.S. ESIGN Act / UETA, EU eIDAS, HIPAA, GDPR, and 21 CFR Part 11. Infrastructure is anchored by independent data centers in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Frankfurt, Germany.
SOURCE eSignGlobal
Technology
The 9th AskGamblers Awards Finalists Announced as Voting Starts
Published
2 hours agoon
May 8, 2026By
The highly anticipated 9th AskGamblers Awards has officially moved into the voting phase. Following a rigorous selection process, the finalists across 5 premier categories have been revealed: Best Casino, Best New Casino, Best New Slot, Best Sportsbook, Best Provider. Players are invited to cast their votes until 11 June.
BELGRADE, Serbia, May 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The voting stage of the 9th annual AskGamblers Awards has officially begun. The list of finalists is announced, and the first votes are already coming in.
Players will have a chance to vote for their favourites until 11 June, when the winners will be announced at the gala ceremony in Belgrade. There’s a total of 5 categories where popular votes are taken into consideration:
Best CasinoBest New CasinoBest SportsbookBest New SlotBest Game Provider
There aren’t any big changes to the voting process compared to last year. The votes from the prominent members of AskGamblers Forum will be counted in as well, while some award winners will be announced directly by the AskGamblers teams.
These include: Best Crypto Casino, Best Partner, and Best Manager categories, while the AskGamblers Superstar Award is expected to be handed to the operator that illustrates the brand values best.
Dijana Radunović, General Manager at AskGamblers, is excited for voting to start: “We’re seeing some familiar contestants, but there are a lot of new names, so it will be exciting to see who comes up on top.”
“We invite players to vote for their favourites! This is a chance for you to speak your mind and support operators and games that shape this industry,” Radunović added.
Before the AskGamblers Awards Ceremony that takes place on 11 June, Charity Night is scheduled for 10 June.
About AskGamblers
AskGamblers.com strives to provide current, objective, and accurate information and guide its users towards a safe gaming experience. The way we deliver our services, from the online casino, sportsbook, slot, and bonus reviews to our trusted Complaint Service, is best described by our motto: ‘Get the truth. Then play.’
For more information about AskGamblers and AskGamblers Awards, please contact dijana.radunovic@g2m.com.
This information was brought to you by Cision http://news.cision.com
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/the-9th-askgamblers-awards-finalists-announced-as-voting-starts-302766772.html
Technology
SUNMI Wins 2026 Red Dot Design Awards with Five Products, Leading Global Commercial Industrial Design
Published
2 hours agoon
May 8, 2026By
SINGAPORE, May 8, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The winners of the 2026 German Red Dot Design Award were officially announced. Five of SUNMI Technology’s flagship products won awards: the CPad Business Tablet, CPad PAY, FLEX 3 Interactive Display, the V3 handheld POS Terminal and L3 Industrial PDA. These products stood out with three core design concepts: integration, versatility and human-centricity.
Known as “The Oscars” of global industrial design, the Red Dot Award has strict evaluation criteria covering aesthetics, ergonomics, scenario adaptability and sustainability. SUNMI adheres to original commercial scenario customization, rejecting crudely modified consumer devices. All winning products are originally developed for real commercial scenarios such as cash register, food delivery, industrial inspection and store operations, covering the entire commercial track with high scenario adaptability. Meanwhile, it practices ESG concepts, adopting eco-friendly materials and modular structures to extend equipment service life, reduce consumable consumption, and implement low-carbon and long-term design, which perfectly meets the Red Dot’s sustainability evaluation criteria.
Simplify Complexity: With highly integrated design, SUNMI eliminates the “patchwork feeling” of cluttered devices and tangled cables in traditional commercial scenarios, streamlining store operations and saving space.All-in-One Versatility: Beyond a single tool function, SUNMI’s products achieve flexible transformation through modular and multi-form designs to proactively adapt to changing business needs. The CPad series with modular accessories and FLEX 3’s Lego-style modular design enable multi-scenario application and long-term reuse.Human-Centric Design: Every detail is human-oriented, focusing on real pain points to enhance scenario experience. The L3 Industrial PDA reduces high-frequency work fatigue through scientific weight distribution; the V3 Smart POS Terminal balances large-screen visibility and grip comfort; CPad PAY integrates full-link functions to simplify workflows.
These honors stem from SUNMI’s long-term commitment to a sustainable society, original commercial R&D and ESG. In the future, SUNMI will uphold its core concepts, expand the boundaries of commercial industrial design, and empower global businesses with user-oriented, eco-friendly and high-value products.
Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2081156/sunmi_Logo.jpg
View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/sunmi-wins-2026-red-dot-design-awards-with-five-products-leading-global-commercial-industrial-design-302766777.html
eSign.AI Named Sole Electronic Signature Technology Provider for Hong Kong Government’s CorpID Project, Building the Foundation for Digital Signing Infrastructure in Hong Kong
The 9th AskGamblers Awards Finalists Announced as Voting Starts
SUNMI Wins 2026 Red Dot Design Awards with Five Products, Leading Global Commercial Industrial Design
Send Rakhi to UK swiftly with UK Gifts Portal
Whiteboard Series with NEAR | Ep: 45 Joel Thorstensson from ceramic.network
New Gooseneck Omni Antennas Offer Enhanced Signals in a Durable Package
Why You Should Build on #NEAR – Co-founder Illia Polosukhin at CV Labs
Whiteboard Series with NEAR | Ep: 45 Joel Thorstensson from ceramic.network
NEAR End of Year Town Hall 2021: The Open Web World, MetaBUILD 2 Hackathon and 2021 recap
Trending
-
Coin Market4 days ago
US law firm attempts to block transfer of frozen ETH from Kelp exploit
-
Coin Market5 days agoAmericans distrust crypto, AI as industry super PACs flood midterms, poll finds
-
Coin Market4 days ago
Bitcoin short-term cost basis approaches profitability, but $80K must flip to support first
-
Technology4 days agoHisense Partners with Phantom Blade Zero to Showcase Next-Gen RGB Gaming Experience
-
Coin Market5 days agoIran’s largest crypto exchange founded by sons of family tied to supreme leaders: Reuters
-
Technology5 days agoDanish Publisher Automates Digital Textbook Delivery with Integrated WooCommerce-Webdoxx Solution
-
Technology4 days agoEddid Financial Honored with “Professional Services Award in RWA” by HKCT Highlighting its Leading Edge in Web3 and Digital Assets
-
Technology4 days agoModine to Participate in Upcoming Oppenheimer Virtual Conference on May 5, 2026
