Oddity Tech Ltd. (NASDAQ:ODD) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

Oddity Tech Ltd. (NASDAQ:ODD) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Transcript November 20, 2025

Operator: Good morning. Welcome to ODDITY’s Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. Today’s call is being recorded. We have allotted time for prepared remarks and Q&A. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Maria Lycouris, Investor Relations for ODDITY. Thank you. You may begin.

Maria Lycouris: Thank you, operator. I’m joined by Oran Holtzman, ODDITY’s Co-Founder and CEO; and Lindsay Drucker Mann, ODDITY’s Global CFO. Niv Price, ODDITY’s CTO, will also be available for the question-and-answer session. As a reminder, management’s remarks on this call that do not concern past events are forward-looking statements. These may include predictions, expectations or estimates, including statements about ODDITY’s business strategy, market opportunity, future financial performance and potential long-term success. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and actual results could differ materially due to a variety of factors. These factors are described under forward-looking statements in our earnings press release issued yesterday and in our most recent annual report on Form 20-F filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 25, 2025.

We do not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements, which speak only as of today. Finally, during this call, we will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe are useful supplemental measures for understanding our business. Additional information about these non-GAAP financial measures, including their definitions are included in our earnings press release, which we issued yesterday. I will now hand the call over to Oran.

Oran Holtzman: Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We delivered an outstanding third quarter with strong financial performance while achieving major milestones in our growth initiatives, including new brands, new markets, ODDITY LABS and tech innovation. Even in a challenging industry backdrop, ODDITY continues to deliver on its near-term financial commitments while building our future growth engines. Our financial performance once again exceeds our targets as we have done every quarter for the last 10 quarters as a public company across revenue, profit and earnings, including 24% revenue growth and 24% growth in adjusted diluted earnings per share year-over-year despite category challenges. We are also once again raising our full year guidance.

We achieved a huge milestone this week with the official launch of METHODIQ, the third brand in the ODDITY platform. METHODIQ is our most ambitious endeavor. Our long-term goal for METHODIQ is not just to launch another great brand and a telehealth platform, but to transform a broken medical care system using the best treatment and the highest standards of care available to everyone. Our objective is to address medical issues with customized high efficacy treatment without the need of going to a doctor’s office or getting lost in a drugstore. Achieving our planned time line for METHODIQ is a great accomplishment and speaks to what makes ODDITY and our culture so strong. This is 4 years of heavy R&D in the making, supported by 2 acquisitions, including Voyage81 and Revela developed with what we believe is an unprecedented scale of over 20,000 real user trials for our product line.

METHODIQ is starting in dermatology, but our long-term goal is to expand into new medical domains in the future, and these are in development as we speak. Our launch into dermatology takes on a massive problem. Industry data shows that nearly 50 million Americans suffer from acne, nearly 30 million from hyperpigmentation and more than 30 million from eczema, and many of them are unsatisfied with the current options on the market. Drugstore products lack efficacy and personalization, going to a dermatologist is a high friction and the standard of care for these conditions has declined. At the same time, dermatologists will tell you that issues like acne are curable. You only need to ensure that the person has the right products and that they stay compliant.

To tackle this big challenge, we built an ambitious and complex brand. METHODIQ is expected to feature a huge line of 28 prescription and nonprescription products, which combine for more than 100 unique treatment combinations or precision personalization. We have aimed to optimize these products to balance between maximizing efficacy and minimizing side effects at the same time to provide the best-in-class beauty experience using the same standards for things like texture and scent that we have at IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild, while beating top benchmark competitors in their category based on internal data. Our launch portfolio spans oral topical supplements and medical grade makeup that conceals whiteheads. Within the first 6 months of launch, we will be live in the market with 4 METHODIQ products formulated with ODDITY LABS molecules that are proprietary to us, addressing a range of skin conditions that include dark spots, papular scarring, eczema and skin filament.

METHODIQ suites of vision tools was developed alongside our team of dermatologists to analyze visible skin features like breakouts and pigmentation to help our doctors’ networks understand its user conditions. These vision models were built drawing on more than 1 million image of real individual with no facial skin condition, which we believe is the largest image data set of its kind and was curated from over 13 million facial images in ODDITY’s database. Users are delivered continuous care through METHODIQ’s first-of-its-kind tracking app for weekly check-ins where our vision technology quantifies progress and gives update to the clinician, ensuring compliance and success. We soft launched METHODIQ in Q3 and went live with our formal launch earlier this week, exactly as planned.

This launch includes a major media campaign showcasing METHODIQ’s distinctive brand voice and inspires consumers to commit to the care. We are running a large-scale out-of-home takeover in New York City and a massive TikTok activation partnering with the biggest medical and skin influencers to create brand awareness and to build trust. This is the biggest TikTok activation in ODDITY’s history. And as we have said, dermatology is just the beginning. We are working on additional medical domains for expansion, and we expect to have more to announce for METHODIQ’s in the future. Turning to IL MAKIAGE. Q3 were once again strong. IL MAKIAGE revenue grew double digit online. The brand remains on track to achieve our target of $1 billion revenue by 2028.

We continue to show healthy expansion in international. At the ODDITY level, international revenue increased around 40% year-over-year in the first 9 months of 2025. We have successfully scaled in existing markets like U.K. and Australia, while conducting larger scale tests in new markets like France, Italy and Spain. We see huge opportunity in international markets and plan to further scale those across the board in 2026. Skin remains a standout growth area and is on track to be around 40% of IL MAKIAGE brand revenue this year. Successful product innovation has been a key driver of skin, and we expect this will continue in 2026 with our solid lineup of new product launches. Turning to SpoiledChild, which is having a strong year. We now expect the brand to cross $225 million of revenue in 2025.

We are excited about our innovation lineup for 2026, including new product tests. Moving to ODDITY LABS, where our very hard work over the last 2 years is starting to bear fruit. We have made significant improvement over the last year to our systems, infrastructure and teams, which we believe will translate into strong commercial discoveries. The near-term commercial impact for ODDITY LABS is increasing. We plan to have at least 8 products with labs molecule on the market in 2026 for our existing brands, including 4 products for METHODIQ and 4 for IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild. Beyond these 8, we have additional products planned for our brand launch, lastly on tech product innovation, which is the backbone of our business and an area of continuous investment.

Artificial intelligence has been a centerpiece of our tech platform since we first launched in 2018. Advances in large language models and generative AI, together with our large and growing proprietary data sets allow us to push the frontier of how we can use machine learning to drive direct-to-consumer. We have a range of initiatives in development on this front, including commerce agents that drive conversion and satisfaction, integrating these state-of-the-art models into our advertising creative and other customer-facing initiatives. With that, I will hand it over to Lindsay.

Lindsay Mann: Thanks, Oran. Turning to our third quarter financial results, which I’ll refer to on an adjusted basis. You can find the full reconciliation to GAAP in our press release. Q3 was another good quarter for us, setting us up for a record-breaking full year results in 2025. ODDITY’s strong financial results continue to stand out relative to our competitors. This outperformance has been driven by the strength of our direct-to-consumer model and exposure to what we see as the key durable growth vectors in the industry, which are the consumer shift online and the migration towards high-efficacy products. We grew revenue by 24% in the third quarter to $148 million, exceeding our guidance for revenue growth of between 21% and 23%.

The strength was driven by double-digit online growth at both IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild. Net revenue was driven by an increase in orders, while average order value declined around 1%. Average order value was impacted by mix, including faster growth in international markets, which carry lower AOV. Repeat increased as a percentage of sales year-over-year, and our 12-month net revenue repeat cohort trends remained strong at north of 100%. Gross margins of 71.6% expanded 170 basis points versus the prior year and exceeded our guidance of 68%. We did experience some gross margin impact from the flow-through of higher tariffs during the period, but this was offset in part by cost efficiencies and favorable mix relative to our plan. We continue to expect tariff headwinds will remain manageable for the balance of 2025 and into 2026.

And while we have the flexibility to take pricing as needed, we have no specific price increases planned to offset tariff-related inflation. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $29 million in the quarter, above our guidance of $26 million to $28 million. We continue to invest in our long-term growth engines, including our METHODIQ brand launch and other future brands, ODDITY LABS and our tech platform. We had higher-than-planned media costs in the quarter and have seen the media backdrop improve as we progressed into the fourth quarter. We delivered adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.40 compared to our guidance of $0.33 to $0.36. Adjusted diluted earnings per share exclude approximately $9 million of share-based compensation expense. We delivered strong free cash flow of $90 million for the first 9 months of the year.

This included around $16 million of outflows related to inventory as we built inventory from METHODIQ and modified our inventory shipment timing for tariff planning purposes. We ended the quarter with $793 million of cash, cash equivalents and investments on our balance sheet with an additional $200 million available on our undrawn credit facilities. Turning to our outlook for 2025. After a strong first 9 months, we’re on track for another record-breaking fiscal year and are once again raising full year guidance. We now expect full year 2025 net revenue will be between $806 million and $809 million, representing between 24% and 25% year-over-year growth. We expect gross margin will be approximately 72.5%. We expect adjusted EBITDA will be between $161 million and $163 million, and we expect adjusted diluted earnings per share will be between $2.10 and $2.12, assuming no share buybacks in 2025.

This full year outlook includes our expectation that revenue in the fourth quarter will increase between 21% and 23% year-over-year. You can find more details on our Q4 outlook in our press release. With that, I’ll turn the call back to the operator for questions.

Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Dara Mohsenian with Morgan Stanley.

Dara Mohsenian: So Oran, on the base business, can you just help us unpack the 40% year-to-date growth you mentioned in international markets? Obviously, that’s been a greater focus for you guys year-to-date. What have been the key geographic drivers of growth there from a country standpoint? And then just as you look out to 2026, you mentioned further scaling the international business. Is that around further country penetration? Is it SpoiledChild expansion? Just the key expansion or white space opportunities as you look going forward?

Oran Holtzman: Sure. So the first 9 months, just to put things in perspective, still 83% of revenue came from the U.S. So although international grew 40%, it is still tiny comparing to the U.S. while for others, as you know, international is approximately 2/3 of their business. For us, it’s still 17%. Our plan is to continue to responsibly grow across the board in international markets. But as we said in our remarks, it’s a huge revenue and profit opportunity for us, and we see that it’s strategically important for us. We scale international when we think it makes sense. We don’t run and spend in user acquisition just because we want to grow international or because we see softness in the U.S. The opposite. Where we see opportunity, this is where we push and we get more revenue.

This year, we grew 40%, but like the objective is not just to grow the international market. And in terms of countries today, existing countries, Canada, U.K., Germany, Australia, Israel and France. New geographies are Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Ireland and Sweden and Denmark. Markets that we are adding as testing are Japan, Mexico, Korea, Belgium and a few others. But this year, only 2% of revenue came from new countries and the 15% came from existing countries. So basically, the majority of the growth came from countries that we already were active in.

Dara Mohsenian: That’s very helpful. And then just one on METHODIQ. Just high level, any thoughts after you’ve done some testing there on how much ability the platform has to bring in new customers to the ODDITY franchise and perhaps over time, indirectly drive beauty sales and cross-sell? And just as you see initial interest in the platform, how much of that is coming from your existing consumer base versus a new consumer base?

Oran Holtzman: Every new country is completely new because we don’t have users there. So that’s why it’s — in terms of cost, it costs more because like we don’t have any existing users.

Lindsay Mann: Oran, his question is on METHODIQ. The question is on METHODIQ, right there.

Oran Holtzman: Sorry, I couldn’t hear you. Yes, sorry. In terms of METHODIQ, yes, of course, like SpoiledChild, when we started, the majority of revenue came from IL MAKIAGE, and we expect that a decent percentage will come from IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild for METHODIQ. Of course, we are also doing user acquisition because we want to expand our user base. So it will be mixed. Over time, of course, when the brand grows, then we will have more acquisition, but we are doing both.

Operator: Our next question is from Anna Lizzul with Bank of America.

Anna Lizzul: On METHODIQ, just wondering in terms of how we should be thinking about this brand for ’26. Just wondering if you can continue to elaborate on how you’re thinking about new customer acquisition for METHODIQ. Just how can we think about it incrementally versus SpoiledChild and IL MAKIAGE? And just in terms of the investments that you’re making, we previously expected, I guess, a larger headwind on the second half in SG&A and the guidance for Q4 implies that this might not be as bad as we previously expected. So was wondering if you can comment on this also for the beginning of ’26 in the context of the new brand launch.

Oran Holtzman: I will start with high level. Our expectation from METHODIQ Brand 3 is to scale faster than SpoiledChild, which was one of the best D2C launches of all time. And our expectation here is to see even bigger numbers. In terms of contribution due to the fact that it’s like relatively small, like SpoiledChild did $25 million in year 1. And even if we do a bit more, still comparing to our next year revenue goal is still tiny. So Lindsay, if you want to touch regarding contribution for both top line and bottom line and METHODIQ.

Lindsay Mann: Yes. No, that’s right. We haven’t given — we’re not ready to give any specific plans for 2026 for METHODIQ. But of course, as we look long term, we’re extremely bullish about the brand. This is a telehealth platform that is really reimagined what medical care would look like if it was built entirely around the customer. Oran talked about the world-class treatments we’ve put together, highest standards of care, truly personalized to the individual and broadly available to everyone available online. We’re starting in dermatology. That’s a focus for us right now, a market that we understand really well because we’ve got around half of our IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild users on the ODDITY platform that tell us they have issues like acne and dark spots and eczema.

And so it’s a nice place for us to begin, as we said with the earlier question. And there’s truly nothing like it on the market. So we’re very, very bullish, but we are in very early stages. We had our soft launch on time in the third quarter. We just launched formally this week. A lot of very strong early signals, but still lots of work for us to do before we figure out our plans in terms of timing of scaling, et cetera, but we’re really excited. As far as the SG&A implied guidance for Q4 versus prior, I guess what I would say is, historically, we like to guide to revenue and EBITDA. And then from a gross margin perspective, we always give the team a lot of flexibility. So we try to guide conservatively that allow them to kind of chase whatever products from a DC margin perspective, that’s gross margin after media spend.

That’s how we evaluate the business. We want them to have lots of flexibility to go after the right DC margin or other products that from a strategy perspective, we’re focused on. So gross margin is not an internal focus metric. And as a result for our guidance, we try to walk you guys to a place where we feel really comfortable we can deliver, and we’ve historically delivered a bit better, but we’re always managing towards that revenue and EBITDA figure. So I wouldn’t read too much into that. We still have some nice investment planned for all of our growth initiatives, including METHODIQ in the fourth quarter, and we talked about the growth investments in the first half of 2026 on our prior call.

Operator: Our next question is from Youssef Squali with Truist Securities.

Youssef Squali: I have 2, maybe just starting with one, Oran. We’ve seen a pretty mixed bag of earnings from various consumer-oriented companies this earnings season. I think you alluded to that a little bit in your prepared remarks. Can you maybe speak to your views about the health of the U.S. consumer right now and some of the things that you guys are doing in particular, just to help ODDITY buck that trend? And I have another question.

Oran Holtzman: Sure. Yes, like we see what you guys see regarding softness from like from the outside. But internally, as you can see based on our results, revenue is still like according to plan, even better. Margin was strong. This is despite the fact that we see like higher acquisition costs. And the main reason that we can offset it is just like the massive repeat that we have. And when I try to think about the way like to think or to answer regarding softness, the first thing that I look at is obviously acquisition, but the second part is repeat. So yes, acquisition is higher, but repeat is getting way higher every quarter. And therefore, we are not impacted.

Youssef Squali: Okay. Okay. That’s great to hear. And then Lindsay, I know you’re not guiding quite yet to 2026. But is the growth algo for 2026 any different from what we’ve expected or what we’ve heard from you guys up until this point, which is committing to basically 20% top line, about 20% adjusted EBITDA margins. And maybe within that, maybe just talk about the marketing efficiency in the business that you’re seeing.

Lindsay Mann: Yes, we’re not ready to give 2026 specific guidance. We’ll give that when we issue our Q4 earnings results, but there’s no change to our algorithm of 20% revenue growth and 20% adjusted EBITDA margin. And you heard Oran reiterate in his remarks earlier that the other sort of medium-term guidance that we’ve given for IL MAKIAGE to deliver $1 billion by 2028, there’s no change to that either. So business continues to be on a very healthy footing. As far as media efficiency goes, you heard Oran comment, we did have some higher acquisition costs. In my remarks, I mentioned the environment has actually improved for us as we’ve gotten into the fourth quarter. Overall, SG&A in the third quarter was up around 30%, and that’s including some of the increased spending initiatives that we have, for example, for METHODIQ, ODDITY LABS, et cetera. So it’s been very manageable for us, and we’re feeling really good as we head into Q4.

Operator: Our next question is from Andrew Boone with Citizens.

Andrew Boone: Lindsay, as we think about METHODIQ being added to the model, is there anything that we should keep in mind in terms of the different financial profile, whether that be different AOVs, whether that be different margin profiles? Is there anything we should be considering as we think about the next 3 years and layering in that brand? And then on ODDITY LABS, it’s great to see molecules start to contribute to the portfolio in 2026. Can you guys just help us understand what the expectation is of proprietary molecules? It feels like a step function change in terms of what you guys can bring to market. How do we think about that? And then what’s the path beyond those 8 initial products? How do we think beyond this first step?

Lindsay Mann: Oran, you want me to start?

Oran Holtzman: Yes, please.

Lindsay Mann: So in terms of financial profile for METHODIQ, over the long term, we see this brand in a very similar framework that we think about with both IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild, and those are brands that will support long-term compounding 20% revenue growth and 20% adjusted EBITDA margin. So very healthy unit economics that we see for the category in general and that we think METHODIQ will deliver, especially as it relates to repeat and other KPIs that build into LTV. I think for the prescription product, in particular, we will have lower gross margins, especially at first. We’ll be — we’re always quite inefficient on the gross margin side when we launch a business. But in the case of prescription for METHODIQ, because you have the third-party physician network and also the compounding pharmacies, those are extra costs for us.

The business we expect will be mostly not prescription, but you do have some of the prescription cost input that will impact on the gross margin side. However, we think you’re going to have a really nice repeat business there that drives healthy DC margin. Probably too early to say much else, but we look forward to sharing a bit more as we progress post launch in 2026. As it relates to ODDITY LABS, maybe I’ll start and Oran, if you want to add additionally. As you guys know, in 2024, we made a strategic pivot with Labs where we decided to extend our development time lines in order to focus on delivering molecules that had much higher efficacy and far superior performance characteristics than what was on the market today. And so we knew that would delay some of the timing of certain launches, but we thought it was a really smart trade-off to make because we believe that we could produce things that were way better.

And now you’re starting to see the fruits of that labor. So as we said, we expect in ’26 that just for our existing brands, we’ll have 8 products on the market, including 4 for METHODIQ. I would describe the METHODIQ brands products as some of them extremely innovative, addressing very important needs for the consumer. So we’re really, really excited about that. And we have even additional — we have a lot in the pipeline, including some molecules that we expect will be delivered with Brand 4 and more beyond. So I would just say super happy to see how the level of improvement that we got out of the work that we put into ODDITY LABS.

Oran Holtzman: I would just add that like when we started labs, we built it — we started and we built it again. It was hard because the first time that we’ve done something like it. And the fact that you see so many products and so many molecules coming to market this year just shows like that what we’ve done was the right thing, and there is a real progress in labs. So we expect to see the same pace and even higher in the next few years. The fact that both METHODIQ and our IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild brands are going to get molecules this year is very encouraging. And again, just shows like the strength and the progress that we’ve done, which is significant in the past 1.5 years.

Operator: Our next question is from Cory Carpenter with JPMorgan.

Cory Carpenter: I have 2, Lindsay, probably both for you. Just hoping you could expand on the comments around the media environment and higher acquisition costs now going a little lower. And anything in particular to call out on the search channel? And then capital allocation, you have a healthy cash balance. You have not purchased shares since the convert earlier this year. So maybe if you could just refresh us on your capital allocation priorities.

Lindsay Mann: Sure. On the media side, media costs, as we’ve said before, they tend to get more expensive every year, but we are able to offset them really effectively with higher repeat and also other unlocks across our KPIs, including conversion and other things that we focus on. So this has allowed us to deliver a very healthy, sustained profitable business and repeat is running at around, call it, 2/3 of our overall business. And we were really — are really pleased to see that the — I discussed the net revenue repeat cohorts, like the 12-month cohorts and the cohorts that we examine are all continue to be really, really strong. So we think you’re still seeing a healthy consumer environment and a solid environment for us to continue to deliver.

As far as our cash position goes, we’re in a very strong position, almost $800 million of cash equivalents and investments on our balance sheet today. We post the convertible earlier this year, we view this as really efficient, patient capital for us that we have flexibility to do what we want with. So we, of course, have the opportunity to deploy it for buybacks. We have the opportunity to deploy it for M&A, and we feel like we’re in a really strong position where we can be patient and selective about what we use it for.

Operator: Our next question is from Ryan MacDonald with Needham & Company.

Ryan MacDonald: Congrats on a great quarter. As you look at the international success into the test market, can you talk about how replicable like the data model in terms of targeting subscribers and new users and then sort of identifying maybe more local or geographic differences in terms of what their needs product-wise might be just as you continue to scale that international efforts? And then is your intent to immediately go international with METHODIQ right away? Or are you going to take sort of a more measured sort of region-by-region approach like you’ve done with other brands in the past?

Oran Holtzman: Sure. So first of all, regarding METHODIQ, we thought only U.S. It’s complex enough without international. So by the way, SpoiledChild was the same for the past — for the first almost 3 years, we didn’t even test international. So we plan to do the same with METHODIQ. I’m not sure it’s going to be 3 years, but I don’t think it’s going to be way less than that. Regarding international and what we — exactly what you said, that’s the reason why we do tests. And when I said test, like we open market with a localized website and starting to put — to spend media against new users in those countries and to ship products based on that, we see satisfaction, we see repeat, we see unit economics, then we decide if this market is suitable for us or not. And that’s how we — that’s what we have done for the past 2.5 years.

Operator: Our next question is from Scott Schoenhaus with KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Scott Schoenhaus: METHODIQ here. Lindsay, you mentioned the majority of revenues were going to be — volumes are coming from the nonprescription side versus prescription. Are the molecules, those 4 molecules also going to be for nonprescription versus prescription? And then as a follow-up, on the prescription side, the physician network that you’ve built, there’s clearly a shortage of dermatologists. And so this is an asset. How are you thinking about deploying technology to leverage more dermatologists on your network for patients?

Lindsay Mann: Thanks, Scott. So the 4 products are not prescription. They’re a combination of OTC and cosmetic. And again, we’re really excited to have them out there, but those are not prescription products. And in fact, for ODDITY LABS, we’re not — for the most part, and certainly, in the near to medium term, you won’t see anything that’s prescription coming from ODDITY LABS that will all be either OTC or cosmetic. In terms of our physician network, we are currently plugged into third parties to help us with that. We have not brought that in-house, but we have the opportunity to do so for cost efficiency reasons down the road if we decide to do it. We — the networks we’re using now, we’re using all physicians at the moment, not all dermatologists, but all board-certified physicians.

And we can, of course, scale that to NPs and other medical care practitioners down the road. There’s the opportunity for that, but we’re starting with all physicians as we build that and learn. And I think from a technology standpoint, it’s really us building capabilities that allow the network of clinicians to get the strongest signals possible to help inform treatment decisions based on the inputs that we take, basically, when you’re going through the METHODIQ intake and onboarding funnel, we’re picking up on the contextual real pathways and real signals that — the same thing that you would look for if you were in an office, right? So you’re looking at questions about demographics, hormonality, history and that kind of stuff. Meanwhile, the vision tools are picking up signals like number of lesions, intensity and those kinds of signals that are really helpful for a clinician when making a decision about treatment outcomes.

So that’s a really important part of our technology and then also just integrating our records directly with the provider systems that help the — operate the clinician interface and help them to integrate with our tools. And then I think finally, like within the METHODIQ app, the ability to get feedback, progress tracking and to chat directly with your clinician to help drive things like confidence and most importantly, compliance and success, those are enormous ways we’re using technology to drive the outcomes that we want.

Operator: Our next question is from Bonnie Herzog with Goldman Sachs.

Bonnie Herzog: I just have a question on IL MAKIAGE and SpoiledChild. Growth in the U.S. remains strong double digits for these brands, but it has moderated year-to-date versus last year. So could you talk about what’s driving this? And if the low 20% growth in the U.S. for these 2 brands is doable over the next few years? Or should we expect a continued slowdown? I guess I’m asking especially for IL MAKIAGE. Also, could you touch on repeat rates for the brands and if these rates are also moderating?

Oran Holtzman: I will start by saying…

Lindsay Mann: Go ahead.

Oran Holtzman: Yes, I would just start by saying that as I mentioned before, we manage growth across brands and geographies. So like I don’t wake up tomorrow and say, today, I need to see 25% IL MAKIAGE in the U.S. We see we look more broader and we maximize the potential based on what we see in real time. So if Germany is working better at a specific day, this is where we push more and vice versa with SpoiledChild. Lindsay, do you want to touch repeat?

Lindsay Mann: Yes. I mean just to add on that, like we are driving growth at the ODDITY level and our growth targets we’re managing growth towards 20%. We don’t want to grow faster than that. And so ever since our IPO, we have been very clear and explicit about our plans to sustain 20% compounded durable growth. And that’s exactly what we’ve been delivering on, and we’re managing it at the ODDITY level, and we’ll pull different levers within the different brands. Specific to IL MAKIAGE, our target is to get to $1 billion by 2028, and we’ve always talked about international being an important piece of that. And so you’re seeing us flex on the international part now. At the same time, we want to make sure we’re feeding SpoiledChild and now we have a third baby to give oxygen to. So we’re managing it as a portfolio in order to deliver an overall ODDITY level growth. I think in terms of repeat, no, repeats continue to be very, very strong.

Operator: Our next question is from Georgia Anderson with Evercore ISI.

Georgia Anderson: I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about the TAM for METHODIQ. Are you guys kind of defining this as all chronic skin sufferers in the U.S. or globally? Or is it a narrow cohort, acne or eczema patients are willing to pay out of pocket? And then just kind of in terms of measuring success of the brand, do you have any milestones or KPIs that would give you confidence that METHODIQ is scaling towards its full TAM?

Oran Holtzman: Lindsay, I’ll start with the KPIs and you’ll talk about TAM.

Lindsay Mann: Yes.

Oran Holtzman: So like we soft launched in September, official launch this week. So of course, very early. But based on what we see early, the demand is there. The KPIs that we look at now are user acquisition, repeat, up downloads, open rates, weekly check-ins. And like when we see that those KPIs as we envision they are, then we will start scaling.

Lindsay Mann: In terms of the TAM, the right way we think to look at this is number of people rather than dollar size. And the reason for that is because it’s such a high friction market and one that hasn’t been run well that we think if you actually can unleash some technology that leads to better outcomes and easier outcomes for people to access, you’re going to see the overall market grow. And for these chronic skin conditions like acne and hyperpigmentation and eczema, I mean, your solutions are, number one, go to a dermatologist. Oran talked about 2/3 of U.S. counties don’t even have a dermatologist. Your average wait times are over a month. People spend hours commuting to from plus sitting in the waiting room and waiting for a doctor’s office.

So it’s a real pain in the neck, and it’s not a great experience. So it’s something people avoid. And then your alternative of going to the drugstore, bouncing around with low efficacy products that don’t really work, it’s overall stifled the total potential size of the market. We think that by really opening up this much better user experience, highest standards of care, world-class treatments made available easily to everybody online, you’re actually going to see the overall market size grow. And that’s why we’re unleashing we think it’s like probably the biggest wave of innovation to dermatology in decades and maybe ever. So we’re really excited about it. And then if you look at just the number of the people, which is what we think is the right way to look at it in America, you’ve got 50 million Americans, around 50 million with acne, around 30 million with dark spots/hyperpigmentation, around 30 million with eczema.

And just on our platform alone, we see the deep prevalence of these issues. A lot of people are buying foundation from IL MAKIAGE already to cover them up. So it’s a natural place now that we have new tools and an effective way to address it for us to expand into.

Operator: Our next question is from Lauren Lieberman with Barclays.

Lauren Lieberman: I was just curious to talk a little bit about launch plans for METHODIQ and sort of learnings maybe from spoils because you did — I recall that you did billboards for spoils. I see that you’re doing it from METHODIQ. You talked about it being sort of the biggest — I think you said biggest TikTok activation. So just curious about how you made decisions around the non-online portions of the launch and for how long you expect to have these kind of big TikTok activations going on because it’s something right, you get lots of attention if days, but how should we think about that ongoing TikTok activation to get the brand’s awareness up?

Oran Holtzman: Sure. So it’s the third brand that we are launching, and we’ve done the same more or less with all 3 offline activation out of the gate for IL MAKIAGE, SpoiledChild and now in New York, we have the same with METHODIQ. Regarding TikTok, it’s the biggest campaign that we’ve done so far. And we started now, and we plan to continue until end of Q1.

Operator: Our next question is from Brian Tanquilut with Jefferies.

Brian Tanquilut: Congrats on the quarter. Maybe I’ll follow up on Bonnie’s question from earlier. As I think through the makeup of the growth rate for the quarter, very strong growth, obviously. How should we be thinking about volume versus pricing versus mix in that growth rate for the different product lines?

Lindsay Mann: The biggest driver of the vast majority of our revenue is driven just purely by orders. AOV was down around 1%, so essentially flat and order growth historically and in the future will be the dominant driver of our revenue growth.

Brian Tanquilut: Understand. And if I may ask a follow-up, my follow-up question would just be, as we think about METHODIQ, is this going to be primarily a compounded drug product offering? Or is there a noncompounded version here? And how should we be thinking about like margin differentials between the 2, if that was the case?

Lindsay Mann: So the business today is a combination of nonprescription and prescription. Like we said, we think the prescription will be the smaller part of the business. And within the prescription, we’re contemplating compounded products today with potential in the future, of course, to evolve, but that’s the business model now.

Operator: We have reached the end of our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Oran for closing remarks.

Oran Holtzman: Thank you very much for joining us today. See you next quarter, guys. Bye-bye.

Operator: Thank you. This will conclude today’s conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and thank you for your participation.

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