SmartRent, Inc. (NYSE:SMRT) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

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SmartRent, Inc. (NYSE:SMRT) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript March 8, 2023

Operator: Hello, and thank you for standing by. My name is Regina and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the SmartRent Fourth Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference over to Annalise Lasater, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Annalise Lasater: Thank you, operator. Hello everyone, and thank you for joining us today. My name is Annalise Lasater, Vice President of Investor Relations for SmartRent. I’m joined today by Lucas Haldeman, Chairman and CEO; and Hiroshi Okamoto, Chief Financial Officer. They will be taking you through our results for the fourth quarter and full year 2022, as well as guidance for the first quarter and full year 2023. After today’s market close, we issued an earnings release and filed our 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, both of which are available on the Investor Relations section of our website smartrent.com. Before I turn the call over to Lucas, I would like to remind everyone that the discussion today may contain forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties.

Various factors could cause our actual results to be materially different from any future results expressed or implied by such statements. These factors are discussed in our SEC filings, including our Annual Report on Form 10-K. We undertake no obligation to provide updates with regard to forward-looking statements made during this call and we recommend that all investors review these reports thoroughly before taking a financial position in SmartRent. Also during today’s call, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. A discussion of these non-GAAP financial measures along with the reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP measure is included in today’s earnings release. We would also like to highlight that a fourth quarter and full year earnings deck is available on the Investor Relations section of our website.

And with that, let me turn the call over to Lucas to review our results.

Lucas Haldeman: Thank you, Annalise. Good afternoon and thank you for joining our call. I’ll begin today discussing our 2022 fourth quarter results and full year financial highlights. Then, before turning the call to Hiroshi for more detailed financials, I’ll provide a supply chain update and touch on some of the positive trends from 2022 that we expect to continue in 2023. In the fourth quarter, we saw improvement in adjusted EBITDA by 20% compared to the third quarter. This marks our third consecutive quarter of improved adjusted EBITDA, achieved through a combination of increased gross margins and tight controls on operating expenses. Gross margins in Q4 were 9.7% more than three times higher than Q3, driven by increases in all three revenue streams: hardware, professional services and SaaS software.

Total revenue for the quarter grew 17% over Q4 2021 to $41 million. And we delivered a sizable increase in ARR, which totaled $32 million, more than a 200% increase compared to Q4 of 2021. For full year revenue grew 52% over the prior year to a record level of $168 million. We ended the year with more than 547,000 total units deployed, an increase of 208,000 units in 2022. SaaS revenue was $28 million, an increase of 251% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA for the fiscal year was a loss of $75 million, which was in line with our previous guidance as we drove quarter-over-quarter improvement throughout the entire year. I am pleased to report that for the fourth quarter and into Q1 of this year we are seeing further easing in supply chain constraints.

We built inventory levels across nearly all SKUs as reflected on our year-end balance sheet. Our ability to install is normalizing and we are working through our committed unit backlog. In 2022 we continued to expand our product suite, giving us the ability to achieve deeper market penetration and drive revenue growth through upselling and cross selling to our current customers. These efforts yielded strong results as year-over-year ARPU increased for each of our revenue streams in 2022: Hardware by 21%, professional services by 15% and hosted services by 45%. In addition to our ongoing focus on revenue growth we have made meaningful strides to optimize our processes and boost operational efficiency. Results from these efforts contributed to improved profitability in the fourth quarter and we believe they will be even more impactful in 2023.

We are reiterating our guidance of achieving positive adjusted EBITDA on an intra-quarter basis. I will now turn the call over to Hiroshi to review the financials in more detail.

Image by Bianca van Dijk from Pixabay

Hiroshi Okamoto: Thank you, Lucas. I will review our full year and Q4 financial highlights in more detail before discussing unit metrics and providing Q1 and full year 2023 guidance. We made significant progress on each of our key financial metrics and 2022 was another record setting year. Total revenue for the year was $168 million, up 52% from $111 million in 2021 as we grew the topline despite supply chain constraints and other challenges faced during 2022. Of particular note among our three revenue streams is the growth of hosted services, which now contributes 29% to total revenue compared to 17% in 2021. Specifically for hosted services, SaaS revenue increased from $8 million in 2021 to $28 million in 2020, a 251% increase.

Full year SaaS ARPU nearly doubled from $2.76 in 2021 to $5.32 in 2022. Q4 revenue was $41 million, lower than Q3 and reflecting an expected pattern of seasonality consistent with previous years. Total revenue growth from Q4 of 2021 was 17% and SaaS revenue growth was over 200%. SaaS revenue grew sequentially to more than $8 million in Q4 and SaaS ARR was more than $32 million. Full year and Q4 revenue and profitability are within the guidance ranges we provided last quarter and we highlight our quarter-over-quarter improvements in gross margins and operating expenses. The principal drivers for profitability. Gross margin for all three revenue streams improved significantly during the quarter. Hardware margin increased from 5% to 15%, a 10 percentage point increase.

Professional services improved by 11 percentage points from negative 92% to negative 81%. While hosted services gained 8 percentage points from 51% to 59%. The combination of the three revenue streams resulted in total gross profit of $3.9 million, a $2.7 million improvement over Q3 and the third consecutive quarter of improvement. Total gross margin increased from 2.5% to 9.7%, a 7 percentage point increase. An item to note related to hardware gross margin is the change in the accounting treatment of the latest version of our hubs, which we began shipping late in the fourth quarter. Hub revenue is now recognized upfront instead of over a four year period and as part of hardware instead of hosted services. Hub revenue that has already been recorded in hosted services will continue to be recognized over the estimated in service life until the deferred revenue is fully recognized.

While the accounting treatment change has no impact on our cash flow, it has led to improved hardware margins and will positively impact hosted services margins as well. Operating expenses, which include R&D, sales and marketing and general and administrative decreased individually and in aggregate for the quarter. Total operating expenses for the year were $106 million and Q4 operating expenses were $26 million, a $1.7 million decrease from Q3. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $75 million for the full year and negative $14 million for Q4, a $4 million improvement from Q3.We believe that we are on track toward profitability and adjusted EBITDA will trend positively as we grow revenue, while improving gross margins and managing operating expenses.

Total units deployed as of the end of the year were 547,000. New units deployed in 2022 were 208,000, a 24% increase over 2021. New Units deployed in Q4 were 43,000 down sequentially due to expected seasonality. Booked units during the quarter were 64,000, and total bookings were $52 million. We ended the year with a cash balance of $218 million, nearly unchanged from the balance at the end of Q3. We believe we have ample liquidity to fund our working capital requirements. Looking forward to 2023, our focus is on growing topline revenue and improving bottom line adjusted EBITDA. We will provide guidance for both the first quarter and full year. Importantly, as our product suite has expanded and diversified, there is less correlation between new unit deployment and revenue growth.

We will continue to disclose deployed units after each quarter, Q1 guidance for revenue is $55 million to $58 million and adjusted EBITDA is negative $12 million to negative $8 million. Guidance for full year 2023 is revenue of $225 million to $250 million and adjusted EBITDA of negative $25 million to negative $15 million. I will now pass the call back to Lucas for closing remarks before we open the call for questions. Lucas?

Lucas Haldeman: Thank you, Hiroshi. As we take a moment to reflect on the previous year, we are enthusiastic about our current and future opportunities. The flexibility of our open architecture platform allows us to address the entire available market of more than 40 million US rental units, including both retrofit and new construction. Our diverse product offerings provide us multiple points of entry from which we can upsell and cross-sell. Our solutions provide customers with undeniable value, including increased revenue, asset protection, improved operational efficiency and expense reduction. In 2022, we further solidified our position as the market leader in smart home and property operations solutions for the rental industry.

We expanded our market share, enhanced our product offerings and grew revenue 52%, significantly increasing our SaaS revenue and improving our profitability quarter-to-quarter in the process. We are off to a strong start in 2023 and demand is robust for our products in every market and channel in which we operate. We are focused on achieving profitability through revenue growth, margin improvement and expense management. I’d like to thank you all again for joining the call. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, we are ready for questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Our first question comes from the line of Sidney Ho with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Sidney Ho: Thanks for taking my questions and congrats on shifting to new hub. My first question is on the demand side. It appears demand is holding up okay. Did you get a sense what did the strength is coming more of a budget flush towards the end of the year? And are you seeing any noticeable change in budgets for property technology when you talk to customers since the beginning of this year?

Lucas Haldeman: Sidney, thanks for the question. Demand continues to be really, really strong. I think we’re seeing that in Q1. I don’t think it’s just a byproduct of budgets from last year coming into fruition. We’re actually seeing that as there’s pressure on occupancy, owners are looking to better control their expenses, better optimizing their staff levels and they are really turning to technology solutions, including SmartRent to accomplish that. So I think it’s a combination of both. We had strong sales in Q4, but we’re also seeing a positive trend this year going forward.

Sidney Ho: Okay. That’s helpful. Thanks. Maybe a follow-up question is, you guys can’t talk about deploy units target for the year anymore, but in the past you’ve talked about slowing down hiring in this environment. If demand remains healthy and supply constraints are, it seems like it’s less of an issue. How quickly can you ramp up your installation crew just to increase the installation — the deployment that is?

Lucas Haldeman: Yes, I think it’s a good note that we’re not providing forward-looking guidance on deployed. As Hiroshi mentioned, we are going to continue to report that metric on a quarterly basis in the rear view, but that’s really — with the robustness of the product set and the platform, we have a lot of different options of how we increase revenue. I touched on it in my remarks, but just the ability to cross-sell and up-sell is becoming a really important focus. So that’s sort of the first part. The second part of the question is, yes, we feel like we’re staffed appropriately for where we’re trying to go and certainly as we see that continue to grow, we can add staff. And we feel confident that as needed we have ways to increase our staff as we are seeing the demand come in.

Sidney Ho: Okay, great. Maybe just a follow-up to the last part. If I look at the full-year guidance of $225 million to $250 million, maybe we cannot talk about deploy units, but what kind of supply constraints are you expecting in that number? And if things ease up will there be upside to that number? Thank you.

Lucas Haldeman: Yeah, I think it’s important that I really want to sort of reiterate that, with the robustness of the platform we’re not worried about supply this year at least right now where we sit, there is a lot of different ways that we can get to the revenue and targeted EBITDA. And so, I think that’s the important kind of take away as — even a year ago or a year and a half ago, really new units was really a proxy to revenue, that’s no longer the case. And so, I think that’s why we have confidence in putting out these numbers that we feel like, there’s a lot of pathways to get there. And certainly if we get hit with supply chain issues that we don’t know about, we will let you know, but today that’s not a concern.

Sidney Ho: Okay. Thank you.

Lucas Haldeman: Thanks, Sidney.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Tomasello with KBW. Please go ahead.

Ryan Tomasello: Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. Just dovetailing on the guidance. I was hoping if you can provide a finer point around the different drivers of the breakdown of revenues between the SaaS component, hardware and the remaining hosted services and professional services. Specifically drilling down into SaaS revenues, how much of a line of sight do you have into that growth trend line through the year. And looking at more recent trends, it seems like the rate of SaaS revenue growth has slowed pretty meaningfully in last few quarters and was actually flattish in 4Q. So maybe you can just unpack that a bit In terms of what’s driving that slowdown and the longer site you have for 2023? Thanks.

Hiroshi Okamoto: Hi, Ryan. This is Hiroshi. Let me take that one. SaaS continues to show positive trends upward. I think Q4 was a bit of an aberration in terms of kind of the seasonality that we had mentioned. And it really just comes down to kind of product mix as well as customer mix as the quarter turns out. But I think the trajectory is that, we will continue to improve on all three. Really in the hardware, the professional services and hosted services. In terms of gross margins.

Lucas Haldeman: answer your question?

Ryan Tomasello: Yeah. Thanks, Hiroshi. And I guess one follow on that and I’ll try to sneak in one more. On the different KPIs you disclose, it looks like unless I’m missing it that you aren’t providing a committed unit count anymore — any longer. Just curious what’s driving that and if there’s any read across into any extension of the typical two year deployment timelines you talked about for that committed unit pipeline?

Hiroshi Okamoto: Yeah. Ryan, this is — we provide all the metrics that we have in the past in the 10-K, but just to let you know, committed units are about 850,000 units and it has trended up. I mean, for this — we just wanted to make it a little streamlined, a little more streamlined in terms of what we’re focusing on. So we left it off the script, but it is all in 10-K.

Ryan Tomasello: Got it.

Lucas Haldeman: Sorry. Let me just give you a little bit more color. I mean on the other reason it is kind of moving away from just totally focusing on units is. If you look at the numbers, revenue grew 52% in a year where unit growth was 24%. So you can kind of see that those lines are diverging.

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