trivago N.V. (NASDAQ:TRVG) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

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trivago N.V. (NASDAQ:TRVG) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript February 8, 2023

Operator: Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by and welcome to the trivago Q4 Earnings Call 2022. At this time, all lines will be muted during the presentation portion of the call with an opportunity for questions-and-answers at the end. I must advise you the call is being recorded today, Wednesday, the 8th of February 2023. We are pleased to be joined on the call today by Axel Hefer, trivago’s CEO and Managing Director; and Matthias Tillmann, trivago’s CFO and Managing Director. The following discussion including responses to your questions reflects management’s views as of today Wednesday, February 8, 2023, only. trivago does not undertake any obligation to update or revise this information. As always, some of the statements made on today’s call are forward-looking, typically preceded by words such as we expect, we believe, we anticipate, or similar statements.

Please refer to the Q4 2022 operating and financial review and the company’s other filings with the SEC for information about factors which could cause trivago’s actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. You will find reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to the most comparable GAAP measures discussed today in trivago’s operating and financial review, which is posted on the company’s IR website at ir.trivago.com. You are encouraged to periodically visit trivago’s Investor Relations site for important content. Finally, unless otherwise stated, all comparisons on this call will be against results for the comparable period of 2021. With that, let me turn the call over to Axel.

Axel Hefer: Thank you, everyone, for joining us for our Q4 earnings call today. 2022 was a very strong year for trivago. We saw leisure travel bouncing back as COVID restrictions were lifted around the globe. The pent-up demand was fueled by consumer savings during the pandemic and a strong desire to travel. As prices for accommodation continue to rise, consumers need to compare prices more to maximize their savings. We are therefore confident that the role of metasearch will become even more relevant this year. Moving forward, we are further developing and strengthening our core product and unique brand positioning. We’re leveraging growth opportunities by offering travelers more direct access to hotels in addition to our traditional online travel agency offering.

In Q4, we’ve run a new product design in five test markets, allowing us to generate valuable learnings in how to expose travelers to more prices and qualify their intent further before passing them on to our advertisers. In addition, we have established the building blocks of our direct hotel strategy, and we will build up those in 2023. And now more than 50% of direct hotel rate coverage, we are getting close to the next phase of our strategy, launching consumer-facing features around direct hotel access.

Matthias Tillmann: Thank you, Axel and good morning everyone. As Axel said, we are very pleased with our Q4 and full year2022 financial results. Last year, our revenue increased by 48% year-over-year to €535 million, while our marketing efficiency, measured as return on advertising spend, improved eight percentage points to 164.4%. Due to the impairment charges recorded in the second and third quarters of 2022 totaling €184.6 million, we had a net loss of €127.2 million. The combination of greater marketing efficiency and continued cost discipline led to an increase in adjusted EBITDA, which excludes the effect of the impairment charge of 210% year-over-year, bringing a full year record for the company of €107.5 million.

This is an increase of more than 50% relative to our most profitable year before the pandemic in 2019. And for the first time, we achieved an adjusted EBITDA margin of over 20%. Now, looking at the fourth quarter, our referral revenue grew 21% year-on-year, driven by continued higher ADRs, which led to an increase in overall average booking value. Other revenue declined by €2 million year-on-year to €3.4 million as we stopped certain B2B products like white label solutions and display ads as we mentioned during the summer. Net income decreased year-on-year by €4.8 million to €10.4 million. The decrease was mainly driven by the non-recurrence of a €12 million COVID-19 subsidy that we had received from the German government in the fourth quarter of 2021 and recognized as other income.

Excluding this one-time subsidy payment, our net income increased by €7.2 million. Adjusted EBITDA also increased by 15% year-on-year to €22.6 million. In the following, I will give a bit more color on the drivers of our referral revenue development relative to 2019 levels for our three regional segments in the fourth quarter. Starting with developed Europe, qualified referrals were at 72% of 2019 levels, roughly at the same level as in the third quarter. Revenue per qualified referral recovered to 102% of 2019 levels as ADRs continue to be above 2019 levels and bidding levels of our partners reflected the increase in traffic quality. In Americas, qualified referrals relative to 2019 levels decreased slightly sequentially from 59% in the third quarter to 56% in the fourth quarter, primarily driven by qualified referral declines in Latin America, resulting mainly from a large-scale market test in Brazil that led to a significant decline in qualified referrals in that country.

However, on the flip side, the click-to-book conversion increased significantly in Brazil, which had a positive impact on our revenue per qualified referral. Similar to Europe, revenue per qualified referral in Americas also benefited from continued high ADRs relative to 2019 levels. In addition, positive ForEx exchange and country mix effect were similar to what we already observed in the third quarter, leading to an overall increase of revenue per qualified referrals in America of 33% relative to 2019. Lastly, our segment Rest of World continues to be impacted by the war in Ukraine and the fact that China was still mostly closed during the quarter. Consequently, our qualified referrals remain significantly below2019 levels at 47%. While we do not operate a Chinese platform, we believe that the opening of China will have a positive impact on many agent platforms for us as it will be possible again to travel to China and Chinese travelers will increase the demand for hotel rooms in the region which we expect will be positive for ADRs. We already observed a positive impact from increasing ADRs in the fourth quarter and revenue per qualified referral improved sequentially from 91% of 2019 levels in Q3 to 94% in Q4.

Moving on to advertising expenses. As we entered our low season quarter, we pulled back on advertising expenses in the fourth quarter relative to the third quarter as we have always done historically. Advertising expenses were 55.4% of referral revenue in the fourth quarter compared to 63.1% in the same period in 2019 as we continue to be disciplined with our marketing ROI targets and improved our marketing efficiency. Consequently, our return on advertising spend improved 22 percentage points in the fourth quarter relative to 2019 levels. However, contrary to last year, we started to run some brand TV campaigns in selected markets at the end of the quarter in anticipation of higher travel demand going into the new year and we continue to expect to increase our brand marketing investments in 2023 relative to 2022.

I will now discuss our operational expenses, excluding advertising expenses relative to last year. In the fourth quarter, our operational expenses, including share-based compensation, decreased by €2.9 million by 8.6% compared to the same period in 2021. The main drivers for the decrease were lower other marketing expenses, lower share-based compensation expenses, and a decrease in depreciation. Other marketing expenses decreased as a result of lower TV production costs and lower commission fees for acquiring traffic as we started to sunset our white label product. The decrease in expenses was partly offset by an increase in IT-related costs, mainly due to setup fees for the onboarding of independent hotels and an increase in cloud costs as we made progress with our migration from data center to the cloud.

As we have mentioned before, we expect to reduce our operating expenses in 2023 relative to 2022 despite the inflationary pressure, mainly through the headcount reduction we have done in the second half of 2022. We expect our quarterly operational expenses, excluding advertising expenses and excluding share-based compensation going forward to be roughly in line with what we have reported for this quarter. The strong operational performance in 2022 led to a significant increase in our cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investment position to €293.9 million as of December 31st, 2022 compared to €256.4 million at the beginning of the year. The increase of €37.5 million was mainly driven by strong operational results, which more than offset financing activities resulting from the repurchase of shares and penalty payments from the litigation Australia.

Our liquidity position is stronger than ever, and we continue to be debt-free. As we expect to continue to generate positive free cash flows, we will continue to look at different ways to return capital to our shareholders in the future. Now, moving on to trends in January. As expected, year-on-year referral revenue growth was strong in January at over 30% as a result of continued robust travel demand trends and favorable comps due to corporate-related travel restrictions in January 2021. As in prior years, monetization levels decreased sequentially in January relative to December. And overall, we were at similar monetization levels as last year in January. However, as ADRs continue to be strong and booking conversions improved, our revenue per qualified referral increased year-over-year in January, more than qualified referrals.

Developed Europe, in particular, benefiting from easier comps in Q1. And consequently, we saw a healthy increase in both qualified referrals and revenue per qualified referrals in January. We started to invest opportunistically in brand marketing also beyond TV advertisement. For example, we were the main partner of the Handball World Cup in Sweden and Poland, which we believe had a positive impact on our branded traffic in the Nordic region as well as core European markets like Germany, France, or Spain. We will continue to invest in brand activities and expect to be able to increase our brand marketing expenses in the coming months. In Americas, qualified referrals continue to be negatively impacted by the large-scale market test in Brazil.

In Latin America, qualified referrals were down low double-digits, which was partly offset by a single-digit qualified referral increase in North America. Revenue per qualified referrals increased around 20% year-on-year in the segment, decelerating from the 44% year-on-year increase in the fourth quarter as positive foreign exchange and country mix effect and/or monetization were lower compared to Q4. In Rest of World, we have a single-digit increase in qualified referrals in January year-over-year, while revenue per qualified referrals increased significantly, driven by strong increases in booking conversion, average booking values and positive country mix effect. Consequently, referral revenue increased around 60% year-on-year. While the near-term macro outlook is still uncertain, the underlying trends remain unchanged.

Travel demand continues to be robust, while ADRs continue to be at elevated levels. While we continue to see some changes in consumer behavior like shorter length of stay, more interest in cheaper destinations, or more clicks on lower hotel offers, we do not believe these trends change the overall picture. We believe that metasearch is well-positioned in this environment as consumers shift their focus to cost savings, and we will focus on improving the user experience and make it even easier for travelers to find great deals on our platforms. In summary, we are very pleased with our financial results in 2022 and the progress we have made with key strategic initiatives. We believe that we are well positioned to increase our investments into brand marketing, thereby driving further branded traffic growth and to execute on key strategic projects like increasing the coverage of independent hotels, while still expecting our full year 2023 adjusted EBITDA to exceed our pre-COVID adjusted EBITDA in 2019.

With that, let’s open the line for questions. Operator, we are now ready to take the first question, please.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. The first question today comes from the line of Tom White from D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Wyatt Swanson: Hey, this is Wyatt Swanson on for Tom. Thanks for taking our questions. My first one is you mentioned the opportunity you see in operating travelers direct access to the hotel in addition to the traditional online travel agency offering. Can you talk a bit about what level of incremental investment might be required to roll this out globally in all your markets? Or is it more about just leveraging and deepening the existing relationships that trivago already has with the properties listed on your platform?

Axel Hefer: Sure. So, there are basically two ways to connect an additional hotels. One is where we do have an existing connectivity, where we pay basically for the infrastructure already and where we need to onboard the hotels to the platform. So, that does not come at additional technology costs. The other one is what Matthias was talking about, our partnership with UBIO, where we do have ramp-up costs, and we do expect the cost to stay in line with what we have spent in Q4. And that investment will allow us to get to 80% coverage by end of the year.

Wyatt Swanson: Great. Thank you. And then my second one. In terms of the significant decreases in qualified referrals in Americas, can you provide a bit more detail on the full market test in Brazil? What exactly were the changes you tested? Is the test going into full production? And will this drag on Americas QRs going forward?

Axel Hefer: Yes. So, basically, we have done something that we have not done that often in the past. We’ve taken five markets and one of those markets being Brazil and rolled out a very different flow — user flow in those markets to get learnings from more long-term user behavior. And what you see there is basically we are exposing users to a lot more different rate options. And by doing that, we qualify the users further, which basically means that they are not clicking out as quickly. But when they click out that they are more ready to book. And that’s what we’re saying so that has a negative impact on QRs and a positive impact on RPQRs, which is what you see on the overall Americas numbers.

Matthias Tillmann: And just to add to that, in terms of impact on qualified referrals, I mean, I gave a bit color on January, where we did have a similar impact. But going forward, we might change the design of the test, et cetera. So, there might be a few changes, and that could lead to a change in clicker distribution again. So, it’s not clear at this point how this will impact qualified referrals going forward in those test markets.

Wyatt Swanson: Okay, great. Thank you guys.

Operator: Thank you. The next question today comes from the line of Jeremy from UBS. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Unidentified Analyst: Hey, good morning guys. I have two questions. The first is what impact might we see from the European DMA gatekeeper rules coming into effect this year? Do you have any early indications of how this will impact Google Travel or how it might impact trivago? And the second is, is the consumer trade-down behavior widening out, I believe you called out Europe specifically at our conference in December and in the 3Q call? Thank you.

Axel Hefer: Yes, on the DMA, it’s a bit too early to tell, to be honest. We do expect first effects in 2024, and it will depend very, very much on the approach of the commission and also then the reaction by Google. And — yes, so, we don’t really have a good prediction of what exactly the solution will be. What is clear is that it will lead to a more favorable competitive environment for us. How much better, again, is impossible to predict.

Matthias Tillmann: And then on your second question, I mean, first of all, ADRs remain strong with click prices on our platform in all segments being roughly 20% higher than in 2019 in the fourth quarter. But as we mentioned last quarter, we are seeing consumer trading down by reducing the length of stay. We have seen that in all segments. In the fourth quarter, length of stay was roughly 5% below 2019 levels, which is an improvement in Europe compared to the third quarter, where that drop was higher, while length of stay was roughly flat relative to2019 levels in Americas in Q3. So, they are we now saw in Q4 that the number also dropped slightly. We also see that the typical seasonal increase in click prices towards the end of the year was less pronounced in Europe last year compared to 2019.

And in all regions, the click out share on our platform for four and five-star hotels decreased slightly year-over-year. So, I guess, while we expect ADRs to remain strong, we are seeing some offsetting effect presumably as consumers are becoming more price conscious.

Unidentified Analyst: Great. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. The next question today comes from the line of Doug Anmuth from JPMorgan. Please go ahead, your line is now open.

Unidentified Analyst: Great. Thanks for taking my question. This is on for Doug. I have two. So, the first one, I mean, you’re able to drive strong improvement in margins over the years. And it seems further expansion in margins is possible to in your comments around OpEx. But with that said, could you share your thoughts on where margins could go from here in the near-term? And then is the 25% the right long-term target? And I have a follow-up.

Matthias Tillmann: Yes, sure. Hi . So, we mentioned in the past that our long-term EBITDA margin goal is to reach at least 20%, and we did reach that in 2022. And our goal is to grow the business sustainably from our post-pandemic revenue baseline, focusing on high-quality and repeat traffic. And that is more important to us than hitting 2019 revenue levels. And consequently, we will be — but we will continue to be disciplined with our marketing investments. However, if we do see opportunities to invest to accelerate our growth profitably at the expense of short-term contribution, we will do that even if it means that our margin would temporarily go down. For 2023, we do expect to increase our brand marketing investments. As with the benefit of hindsight, we believe we could have invested more last year, in particular during the peak summer period and also because our own auction was strong.

Having said that, while we do plan to ramp up our investments, we do not expect to go back to 2019 margins level, which were below 10% EBITDA margin.

Unidentified Analyst: Got it. Okay. And then, I guess, as a follow-up. In terms of ADR, you talked about growth there still being strong. So, are you seeing any signs of that slowing down? And then — and I guess with that, how do you think about ADRs going from here? Do you think this level of ADR is ?

Matthias Tillmann: You were breaking a little bit, but I think I got most of your questions. So, the question is if ADRs can be sustained at these levels. Obviously, it’s difficult to say, and I’m speculating. But at least looking at the underlying dynamics, why ADRs are up, I think that there are good reasons why they will stay at current or similar levels. In particular, last year, in summer and the peak season, we have seen that supply was tight in certain destinations, in particular, popular holiday destinations. And the reason for the increase in ADRs were driven by a cost increase, and we still continue to see that there’s labor shortage, energy prices are still higher than they were a year ago. And these cost drivers, I mean, if you can or if hotels can they pass it on to the consumer.

And I would expect that to be the case going forward as well. So, — the then related question is, will that drive a change in consumer behavior? And again, I cannot predict the future. But given what we have seen last year and also what we are seeing now in January, we do not see that overall demand is coming down. We do see some signs that people try to mitigate the effect, as we called out, but it’s not that overall demand levels are lower because of that, at least from what we can see in our numbers. Does that answer your question?

Unidentified Analyst: Yes. Great. Thank you.

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