LendingTree, Inc. (NASDAQ:TREE) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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LendingTree, Inc. (NASDAQ:TREE) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript April 30, 2024

LendingTree, Inc. isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).

Operator: Good day and thank you for standing by. And welcome to the LendingTree, Inc. First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Andrew Wessel, VP of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Please go ahead.

Andrew Wessel: Thank you, Justin and good morning to everyone joining us on the call to discuss LendingTree’s first quarter 2024 financial results. On the call today are Doug Lebda, LendingTree’s Chairman and CEO; Scott Peyree, COO and President of Marketplace; and Trent Ziegler, CFO. As a reminder to everyone, we posted a detailed letter to shareholders on our Investor Relations website earlier today. And for the purposes of today’s call, we will assume that listeners have read that letter and will focus on Q&A. Before I hand the call over to Doug for his remarks, I remind everyone that during today’s call, we may discuss LendingTree’s expectations for future performance. Any forward-looking statements that we make are subject to risks and uncertainties, and LendingTree’s actual results could differ materially from the views expressed today.

Many, but not all of the risks we face, are described in our periodic reports filed with the SEC. We will also discuss a variety of non-GAAP measures on the call today, and I refer you to today’s press release and shareholder letter, both available on our website for the comparable GAAP definitions and full reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to GAAP. And with that, Doug please go ahead.

A happily married couple discussing the merits of different home equity loan options.

Doug Lebda: Thank you, Andrew, and thank you to all who are with us on the call today. We are very excited to report first quarter adjusted EBITDA increased 48% from last year, as our Insurance segment produced very strong results with both revenue and VMD up double digits from a year ago. Many products in our consumer business generated strong sequential growth, a trend we expect to continue into the second quarter. The revenue outlook continues to improve into the second quarter, providing us confidence we are finally through the worst part of the cycle for our company. We forecast stable underwriting conditions that our lender partners combined with sizable demand growth from our insurance partners will return our business to revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth for the full year.

Jumping into segment performance, our Insurance business generated 11% growth in both revenue and VMD over a difficult comp from last year. Carrier partners steadily increased spending with us to acquire new customers, while a record volume of consumers again came to us looking for auto insurance policies following significant premium increases over the past year. The momentum has continued in the second quarter, and we are now forecasting record revenue in this segment. Our Consumer segment performance was highlighted by 24% sequential growth in small business revenue. As we mentioned on last quarter’s call, we made a strategic decision in 2023 to optimize operating margins given the uncertain demand trends of many of our lenders. We have been encouraged that underwriting conditions of most lender partners have remained stable for some time.

And so we are leaning into this increased certainty with additional marketing investments aimed at driving higher revenue and VMD for the segment across multiple product categories. Our Home segment continues to perform at trough levels given the backdrop of higher mortgage rates and low supply of homes for sale. Our home equity offering continues to provide most of the opportunity for us and our partners at home and we expect that the trend will continue for the remainder of the year. Last but certainly not least, at the end of the quarter we secured a new $175 million loan commitment from Apollo Funds. The proceeds from this financing, in combination with existing cash on our balance sheet and future free cash flow, provide us with ample liquidity to meet our remaining convertible note maturity next year.

We would expect leverage of 4x or less once we’ve retired the 2025 convertible notes, and we look to continue optimizing our capital structure thereafter. We are happy to have addressed this financing, which enables us to focus solely on improving our business and our financial results going forward. And we could take any questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from Youssef Squali from Truist Securities.

Youssef Squali: Great, thank you very much and good morning, guys. I guess on the dot, I was just wondering if you can help us better understand your thinking in terms of the rates environment. So what kind of rates environment is baked into that mid-single digit revenue growth for the year? I guess moving from expecting six cuts to maybe one or two, perhaps even a potential hike by year end, or how much risk does that pose to that guide? I guess what I’m trying to get to is how much of the guide is really within your control versus just macro. And then in your efforts to lean into marketing again for insurance and consumer, what gives you confidence that this is the right time? I guess for insurance, I understand it. For a consumer, maybe you can help us better understand kind of the drivers there. Thank you.

Doug Lebda: Yes, let me, this is Doug, I’ll start at a high level and then Trent and Scott can chime in. We don’t have any plans in our guide for macro rate cuts and things like that and Trent can talk more about that, but I hope that gives you confidence and in terms of the leaning in on some of the consumer categories. If we see, which we’re seeing increasing demand, it pays for us to go spend more money and increase a simple level, increase your bids across search and display and other things, do that at a lower margin profile, VMD margin profile than you’ve run it in the past when we were really optimizing for a very short term VMD and that’s what we’re doing. So it’s profitable spend, it just comes at a lower margin.

Trent Ziegler: Yes, just to add to that, Youssef, you’ll recall when we introduced the full year guide last quarter, we were pretty clear about the fact that we didn’t – we weren’t baking in any substantial macro improvement rate cuts or otherwise. W expected mortgage to kind of stay where it is for the remainder of the year, similar macro backdrop for consumer and we obviously did expect insurance to get better and it is, right. And so the increased revenue guide is largely a function of increasing confidence in the insurance business and we’re seeing that play out four months into the year. And then to a lesser degree kind of piggybacking on your second question, obviously, we are leaning in a bit more aggressively into the marketing side to drive top line and wallet share improvements, particularly in consumer rate.

Operator: Our next question comes from Jed Kelly from Oppenheimer and Company.

Jed Kelly: Hey, great. Just circling up, can you talk about your comments around the stable lending environment and what’s giving you the confidence to lean back in? And then in the Insurance segment, how should we view the outlook maybe over like the next 12 to 18 months? I know it’s been really volatile. And can you talk about how we should think about periods where you’re over hurting?

Doug Lebda: Scott, do you want to take that?

Scott Peyree: Yes, sure. I’ll take that, to start on the consumer and kind of answer your question, Jed, and follow up a little bit on Youssef’s his question there and on just leaning into consumer. And the consumer, the reality is the higher rates, a lot of consumers are just becoming more accepting of those rates. And you do still see from the consumer segment, strong demand in home equity has been increasing in demand. Personal loans have strong demands from consumers. Small business loans have strong demands for consumers. So when we see a level of stability with our clients, over the past 12, 18 months, they kept tightening their operating standards constantly as rates were going up. There are concerns about delinquency.

Well, really over the past three to four months, we’ve really seen a leveling off of that. So our client partners still have tight underwriting standards, but they’re not tightening anymore. So that has given us a level of stability where we do see overall lower RPLs in general, but we still see high consumer demand and we don’t have the chaos of RPLs continuing to lower over time. So that lets us be more consistent with our marketing, be more consistent with our projected, our learning projected revenue models to make our media campaigns more efficient. And as I’ve talked about over the past few earnings calls, real folks on the operational efficiency of more effective cross-selling of products, matching alternative products when consumers can’t get the primary product they’re seeking, better right pricing with our clients to open up further budgets to make sure they’re profitable and everything they’re buying with us.

And at the end of the day, better revenue attribution models that our machine learning, media algorithms can use more smartly by media. All of those things have added up to our ability to profitably lean in and gain market share in the important media marketplaces out there where consumers are shopping for these products. And to be bluntly honest, we’re pretty excited with what’s been happening in the past few months and what we expect to happen through the end of the year, even in this down environment and limit. And then to answer your big picture question on insurance over the next 18 months, I mean, I would just say insurance is, it’s back. It’s fully back and not, I shouldn’t say fully back because they’re still opening up. We even have a number of our clients are opening up a bunch of new states on May 1st, just a couple days.

But we are seeing broad-based, whether it’s local agents, whether it’s corporate direct buyers, whether it’s writing policies through our agency, everyone is opening up products and geography across the board. We believe that will continue in 12-18 months. I believe that carriers are ending a very profitable period of time. So I feel we’re on the front end of what I call super cycle and insurance in the next couple of years where carriers have returned to profitability. But due to the high rates of insurance policies right now, you’re going to have high consumer demand. Our consumer demand was up 19% year-over-year in Q1 of just shopping for insurance quotes. And that’s going to continue for a while. So I think we’re on a long runway in insurance right now.

Doug Lebda: And I know Scott was breaking up a little bit there. Did you get — do you have any follow-ups on that?

Jed Kelly: No. I have —

Doug Lebda: Is that all clear?

Jed Kelly: It was clear. Thanks.

Operator: And our next question comes from Ryan Tomasello from KBW.

Ryan Tomasello: Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. I just wanted to start with Trent just on unpacking some of the guideposts for the year for revenue growth and VMMs baked into the guide by segment, maybe for 2Q in the full year. Overall, how much of the revenue guide increases being driven by insurance versus consumer or driven by the increased marketing efforts. Sounds like you’re alluding to more of it being driven by insurance. But just curious if you can give us some hand holding for all the different moving pieces by segment here for the guide. Thanks.

Trent Ziegler: Yes, happy to. Yes, I mean, on the full year revenue guide, the vast majority of that is driven by insurance and it’s based on what we’re already seeing a month into the second quarter. As it relates to margin profile, we assume home remains relatively stable compared to where it’s been for the last couple of quarters. Insurance, as one would expect, right, as the revenue opportunity continues to unlock as both the carriers and our competitors get more aggressive, we do expect margins to contract a little bit there, right. And so, it’s been running in the low 40s, high 30s in Q1, and we expect that to trend down a little bit. And then consumer will continue to remain very high and healthy, but based on some of the dynamics we’ve been talking about, we would argue that in the back half of last year, they were sort of unnaturally high, the margin profile in many of those businesses. And so we would expect those to take back down closer to 50%.

Ryan Tomasello: And then any color on just top line revenue growth by segment, Trent, that you can give us?

Trent Ziegler: Yes, I mean, stopping short of guiding by segment, the Insurance business, clearly, as we said, is driving most of that incremental increase, double digit growth in Q1, which is the toughest comp that we face relative to last year. So we’d expect that to accelerate pretty substantially as we continue throughout the year. The other businesses, I would say are, there’s not a ton of incremental revenue upside consumer modest contributor to that incremental increase on a full year basis.

Doug Lebda: Yes. And the only thing I’d add is for everybody just to keep remembering the core business flywheel, which is we get demand from clients, lenders, insurance companies, then we go fill that as efficiently as we can. And if demand exceeds supply customers, then we have we go out and go get more customers. It’s one of the great things about our business models, we can flex up that incremental spend comes at lower margin and we do market up to the last profitable dollar. So seeing a higher dollar of VMM and a lower percentage of that margin is generally for me a sign of health of the business because it shows that demand is higher than supply. And so I just wanted to make that point to just tell people like we literally wake up every day and say, from a business standpoint, how much of VMD can we generate?

The other thing I’d add is around the different trends coming around, not guiding at the segment — at the product level. The great thing about this diversification we’ve put on in the last few years is that at any given time, demand and supply of each of these marketplaces have their own dynamics. And I think we can say like overall, everything that Scott just said is absolutely right. Like we’re seeing net increased demand from clients. We’re also, and I’ll give a lot of credit to Scott and his team on this, have done a lot better at operational efficiencies and putting some stuff in that are short-term things that Scott just hit on. And so therefore we can lean in.

Ryan Tomasello: And just one last follow-up here to put a finer point on the reinvesting, some of the margin back into marketing. Just trying to understand why we’re not seeing VMD guide up here, despite the significant revenue guide up. I mean, when should we expect these marketing efforts to start to translate into more VMM dollars? It sounds like you do expect the spend to be profitable. So just trying to understand that the puts and takes there.

Doug Lebda: Well, I mean, I would say there’s some aspect of it that is certainly conservatism and not wanting to give us enough flexibility so that we can do the best we can. And we always try to do better, but we’re just beginning this over the last couple of months and we want to make sure that we have the margin for it, margin of safety

Ryan Tomasello: Got it.

Scott Peyree: I would just add, it’s Scott, it’s important also, we want to grow our revenue to have higher market share, higher, more significant relationships with our clients, more options for our clients to have, which gives us more opportunities to optimize in the future. At some level, you can only optimize the margin of percentage to a certain level. At the end of the day, you need to grow revenue, and that’s the key to expanding your VMD over the long run. So even though margins might squeeze a little bit in the next few quarters, we’re expecting our overall VMD to continue to increase. And the more revenue you do over time, the easier it is to expand your overall VMD. And that’s definitely the route we’re taking.

Operator: And our next question comes from John Campbell from Stephens Inc.

John Campbell: Hey, guys. Good morning. This is, I think, the first time. Hey, I think it’s the first time in 10 quarters we talked about a revenue beat. It’s also been a long time since you raised the revenue guidance. So that is great. It seems like you guys are making some pretty measured turnarounds. But I wanted to click on the – double-click on the insurance business. I mean, it feels like the early stages of the potential super cycle. I think, Scott, you just mentioned that. This time it does feel a little bit sturdier than past cycles. But as far as the recovery, Scott, I think you also mentioned kind of broad, it’s largely broad base and not so much driven by one or two customers. I think the last kind of pump fake we have been maybe one large customer. But if you could unpack the results, maybe this quarter across click versus lead. And then I don’t know if you want to go more broadly of maybe carrier versus the agent channel.

Doug Lebda: Yes, the one. Go ahead. I was just going to say real quick, the one thing that we’re very focused on insurance is everywhere, but definitely insurance because we believe we have a very leading position there in gaining share versus competition. And I think we’ve done a really good job of that. Take it away, Scott.

Scott Peyree: Yes, starting at the channel level, which I think is even better than clicks versus leads versus calls just because different carriers buy different things. But the corporate, the direct corporate carrier buyers have had huge growth. And those are largely a lot of the quick buyers. But to talk about being broad based, our top seven corporate property casualty buyers all grew over 100% year-over-year compared to Q1 last year. So to your point of last year maybe being one or two, not maybe, it was just a couple really that were driving the growth is from the corporate carrier standpoint is broad based across the board and they’re all expanding, we’re expecting significant expansion from all of them in Q2 sequentially compared to Q1, we’re going to do an all-time revenue record.

It will probably be the first time we ever do over $100 million in the insurance division. On the local agents, that was an all-time record in Q1. It’s more of a big shift to move slowly, but it was up over in double digit percentage-wise. Our agency, where we write our business ourselves, our carriers have opened up enough geos and products that as we look at our KPI agency management models, it’s telling us our staff should be three times the size that it is today and we should be very profitably running staff three times the size of this, so we’re diligently in the process of expanding our agency. So the carriers, the write-through independent agencies are also expanding dramatically. So it is really just completely across the board and as I said and answered an earlier question, the expansion continues.

It’s not like all of these carriers are fully open at this point. They’re continuing to open up states each month.

John Campbell: Great to hear. I appreciate all that color. And on the Home segment, that ended up being a key driver of the beat, at least relative to our model, but if I unpack it just relative to what we had, I’m thinking mortgage was maybe down 80% or so year-over-year just given the strength in HELOC. Is that right?

Scott Peyree: Yes, trend mortgage is down 80%, no, but it’s, I mean, home equity was more steady and mortgage was down very significantly year-over-year. And that is, and I think as Doug said the top of the meeting home equity is probably going to be the big driver through the end of this year. But we have been, I would say pleasantly surprised, your point. Revenue did grow pretty decently, sequentially from Q1 from Q4 overall in mortgage. And we are expecting it to grow decently from Q1 to Q2 as well. And a lot of that’s just been driven by, I think consumers are just a little bit more accepting of the high rates. And so you’re seeing increased shopping behavior for home equity products mainly. But honestly, we’ve seen a little bit at a very low level, but an uptick in purchase and refinance as well. But it’s still a very low level.

Doug Lebda: And the only thing I’d add on to the –

John Campbell: Yes, go ahead. Sorry, Doug.

Doug Lebda: So, one, just highlight on mortgage on that is mortgage and home equity are basically fungible. So looking at them separately doesn’t necessarily is not, I don’t think, the best way to look at it. The mortgage companies will sell home loan that has the consumer’s best fit for them. And so, if it doesn’t make sense to refinance and you’re not purchasing a house, then there are consumers who can get benefit from a second mortgage loan and they make a lot of sense for people, certainly better than credit card debt, et cetera, and home prices and home values are up. So home equity in this market is a natural product that both consumers are seeking and lenders are doing, but it’s basically just a substitution for when purchase comes back more aggressively and conversion rates are there, they’ll be in purchase, which Scott just said we’re starting to see, and certainly when rates fall even a little bit, these high rates for so long have really just made a treasure trove of future refinances in the home sector.

Operator: Our next question comes from Melissa Wedel from JPMorgan.

Melissa Wedel: Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions today. I was hoping to follow up on a couple of the comments from earlier about sequential strength into the second quarter, just based on piecing together comments across the different segments, certainly hearing the strength in insurance coming through also sounds like increased sequential revenue growth in 2Q for both home and consumer. Within consumer, should we think about that as being driven by small business? And noticeably absent from your comments for any sort of card trends that we did note the reference to Bank of America onboarding to TreeQual in the shareholder letter. I was hoping you could just elaborate on that a little bit and then maybe seek any seasonality in sort of home equity trends that you’ve seen historically. Thanks.

Doug Lebda: And Trent, why don’t you start that and then Scott, add on.

Trent Ziegler: Yes, just as it relates to the sequential improvement, Melissa, obviously a lot of that is driven by insurance for the reasons Scott just detailed. We continue to see partners opening up budgets, opening up geographies, et cetera which is encouraging. We do expect some sequential growth in home, again, mostly driven by home equity, which is where the opportunity is right now. And then consumer, I would probably point to mostly personal loans and small business. There’s a seasonal component to those businesses, a seasonal trend where we tend to expect things to pick up Q1 to Q2 and then to Q3. The card business, while we’re excited about some of the product work that’s going on there, particularly around TreeQual, we’re not expecting a ton of growth in that business or certainly not making it into our guidance for the rest of the year, but we’re going to continue to chip away at kind of the blocking and tackling around TreeQual and onboarding new partners there.

And we think that’s ultimately the future of that business for us. Scott, you want to add to that?

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