Priority Technology Holdings Inc (PRTH) 2022 Q1 法說會逐字稿

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  • Operator

  • Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by, and welcome to Priority Technology First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. (Operator Instructions)

  • I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker host, Chris Kettmann. Please go ahead, sir.

  • Chris Kettmann;Lincoln Churchill Advisors;Co-Founder and Partner

  • Good morning, and thank you for joining us. With me today are Tom Priore, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Priority Technology Holdings; and Mike Vollkommer, Chief Financial Officer.

  • Before we provide our prepared remarks, I would like to remind all participants that our comments today will include forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from our forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. We provide a detailed discussion of the various risk factors in our SEC filings, and we encourage you to review these filings.

  • Additionally, we may refer to non-GAAP measures, including but not limited to, EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA during the call. Reconciliations of our non-GAAP performance and liquidity measures to the appropriate GAAP measures can be found in our press release and SEC filings available in the Investors section of our website.

  • With that, I would like to turn the call over to our Chairman and CEO, Tom Priore.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • Thank you, Chris, and thanks to everyone for joining us for our first quarter 2022 earnings call. As you saw in our earnings release, we once again reported exceptional results for the quarter, rapidly growing both our top and bottom line during the period. For the second quarter in a row, we saw a total quarterly revenue increased by more than 35% from the prior year to a record $153 million in Q1. Our strong top line results drove a roughly 65% increase in gross profit to $51.8 million and a 68% improvement in adjusted EBITDA to $30.3 million.

  • These results were underpinned by a 610 basis point expansion in gross margin to 33.8% despite the drag from the reduction in our specialized merchant acquiring segment noted in previous earnings calls. Importantly, when adjusted for the acquisition of Finxera and the risk pairing of our specialized acquiring segment, our revenue grew organically by 30.9% and adjusted EBITDA grew by 63.5% for the quarter. Our strong growth in profitable trends have continued through the second quarter as well. Mike will go into the segment level detail on our first quarter results shortly.

  • Before he does that, let's look at Slide 5 and some of the company's performance statistics. As we previously highlighted, our native platform efficiently serves the SMB, B2B and Enterprise Payment markets at scale, supporting over 245,000 active merchant accounts, more than 360,000 active bank deposit accounts and processing total annual payment volume of over $90 billion with roughly 88% derived by integrated software products. With our strong foundation and robust pipeline of business, we remain confident in our ability to generate revenue between $650 million to $665 million and EBITDA of $145 million to $150 million that we projected for 2022.

  • As Slide 6 summarizes, our native technology core has been purpose-built to collect store and send money by combining robust payment functionality with banking as a service capability in a single offering to monetize the merchant networks we serve. Leveraging our Priority Passport platform, we're poised to deliver a full suite of proprietary payment and banking solutions into the SMB and B2B markets and provide enterprise partners the ability to embed payments and banking features into their core offering to monetize their payment networks. Ongoing market adoption of each of these 3 business segments has contributed to our increasingly strong overall results, as well as our continued confidence in our 2022 outlook.

  • Our largest segment, SMB payments continues to outperform its peers reporting year-over-year bankcard volume growth of 18.5% and revenue growth of 19.2% in Q1. To help demonstrate SMB's outperformance in the industry on the slide, we've included the growth rates of the top 5 nonbank merchant acquirers in the U.S. As you can see, Priority is growing at multiples of its closest peers. As our results illustrate, our acquiring product and service offering resonates with SMBs and consistently wins in the marketplace.

  • Our fast-growing B2B payment segment once again reported an exceptional quarter as it continue to add new partner channels on the strength of our CPX product. We expect that recently announced partnerships with SYSPRO, a leading ERP manufacturing and distribution industries with over 15,000 licensed companies globally and representing over $60 billion of addressable AP spend; Premier Healthcare, a $70 billion health care GPO marketplace serving over 4,000 hospitals and 225,000 providers; Tri-County Bank with $10 billion in assets serving customers in Central and Southern California; and Century Bank serving the New Mexico and Texas markets with $4.6 billion in assets will add valuable transaction volume in the coming months to complement our growing middle market customer base.

  • CPX will provide these customers with a seamless suite of automated payable solutions, delivering the benefits of automation, revenue creation and enhanced product experience. For the quarter, our B2B segment delivered year-over-year revenue growth of 68.6% in Q1 and operating income increased $800,000. In addition to the partnerships I've mentioned, our currently contracted pipeline sits at $610 million, positioning the business to deliver consistent winning results.

  • Lastly, our Enterprise Payment segment, which provides embedded payments and banking solutions to monetize legacy platforms and accelerate software partners' strategies to monetize payments, reported year-over-year revenue growth of $16.7 million in Q1 and $5.2 million increase in operating income. Enterprise Payments is currently supporting over 20 active integrations, managing over 360,000 deposit accounts and over $0.5 billion in deposits. Our Enterprise Segment is consistently piling up integration wins in sectors like real estate and construction technology, treasury software systems and legacy payment operating platforms.

  • At this point, I'd like to hand over to Mike, who will provide further insight into our performance during the quarter, along with trends in each business segment.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Thank you, Tom, and good morning. As I review the segment level contribution to our consolidated results, please refer to the supplemental slides for further details on the numbers. SMB Payments revenue of $130 million increased 19.2%, driven by bankcard dollar volume growth of 18.5%, 14.4% growth in transactions and 3.6% growth in average ticket. Average merchant count of 243,383 in the first quarter 2022 grew 7.3% over first quarter 2021. Merchant boarding trends were strong. New monthly merchant boards averaged 4,675 in the quarter. Our historical monthly averages range from 4,300 to 5,000.

  • B2B payments revenue of $5.9 million increased 68.6% driven by the revenue momentum that began to build in the second half of last year. In Managed Services, increased program activity drove a 44.4% growth rate. And in CPX, new customer additions, strong volume increases within existing customers and a minimum revenue recovery from a 2020 contract termination drove a 94.1% growth rate. The growth rate was 41.2%, excluding that recovery. Enterprise Payments revenue of $17.4 million increased $16.7 million from $0.7 million. CFTPay acquired in September 2021 drove this growth.

  • Gross profit of $51.8 million increased 65%. SMB gross profit of $32.9 million increased 12.7% despite headwind from the expected decline of $5.5 million in specialized merchant acquiring. As we've mentioned in the past 2 earnings calls, the clients in specialized merchant acquiring are due to the temporary pullback from midyear 2021 risk pairing actions. This is rebounding according to our plan and is expected to return to year-over-year growth in the third and fourth quarters, leading to a more than 15% growth in full year 2022 over 2021.

  • B2B gross profit of $3.2 million increased 60% with 63.3% growth in CPX and 48.6% growth in Managed Services. Enterprise gross profit of $15.7 million increased $15.5 million from $0.2 million. Gross profit margin of 33.8% increased 610 basis points from 27.7%. The results of Enterprise drove the overall margin expansion, overcoming the decline in SMB that resulted from comparative Q1 results and specialized merchant acquiring.

  • Other operating expenses of $40.9 million increased 52%. Salaries and benefits of $16.1 million increased 67.8% driven by the CFTPay acquisition, other head count growth and higher non-cash stock-based compensation. The growth in salaries and benefits included $1 million increase in stock-based compensation. SG&A of $7.5 million decreased from $8.3 million. There were $4.1 million of non-recurring expenses in Q1 2021 compared with $0.5 million in Q1 2022. The growth in recurring SG&A is largely the result of a significant increase in the size of the company. Depreciation and amortization of $17.4 million increased $8.3 million from $9.1 million driven by the 2021 acquisitions.

  • Operating income of $10.8 million increased 140%. SMB operating income of $11.8 million decreased $0.8 million due primarily to the temporary gross profit decline of $5.5 million in specialized merchant acquiring. Excluding this decline, SMB operating income increased $4.7 million. B2B operating income of $0.4 million improved by $0.8 million from a loss of $0.4 million in Q1 2021, reflecting the higher gross profit. Enterprise operating income of $4.5 million increased $4.3 million from $0.2 million in Q1 2021, driven by the September 2021 acquisition. Corporate expense of $6.6 million decreased $1.9 million. The decline is driven by $3.6 million lower non-recurring expenses, partially offset by growth in head count, non-cash stock-based compensation and other administrative expenses.

  • Adjusted EBITDA of $30.3 million increased 68.3%, meeting our plan for the quarter. Interest expense of $11.5 million increased $2.3 million. Higher debt levels driven by our 2021 acquisition financing were only partially offset by lower borrowing rates. Total debt of $625.4 million at March 31, 2022, decreased by $6.5 million from $631.9 million at December 31, 2021. The decline is a result of a $1.5 million scheduled amortization payment and a $5 million revolver repayment.

  • In April, we continued to reduce the revolver with an additional $4 million repayment. And since the end of Q3 2021, we have reduced debt by $27.1 million with a total of $3.1 million scheduled amortization payments and $24 million repaid on the revolver. Our $30 million revolving credit facility currently has $6 million outstanding. We are well below our total net leverage ratio covenant of 6.5x with a total net leverage ratio of 4.55x at March 31. We will continue to apply free cash flow to reduce debt and reduce leverage.

  • Senior preferred stock on our balance sheet of $215.1 million at March 31, 2022, is net of $22.7 million of unaccreted discounts and issuance costs. The first quarter preferred dividend of $7.6 million is comprised of $3.5 million of cash and $4.1 million of PIK and is supplemented on our income statement with the accretion of discounts and issuance costs of $0.8 million.

  • I'll now turn the call back over to Tom.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • Thank you, Mike. On Slide 20, we've laid out several of the metrics we use to measure the business, which we hope you appreciate. Priority has been built with intention and is managed with precision. The numbers, particularly our results to the economic turbulence of the past few years, bear out the success of our model and the grit of our organization. Now recently, I've been reading a book by Angela Duckworth, that was given to me by a friend in the business that seeks to define grit. At its most basic, grit is the ability to sustain unyielding effort for a long period of time. But I think we can all appreciate grit, it's tough to predict. It's challenging to develop, but we all know it when we see it.

  • At the book's foundation, Duckworth presents a very elegant formula that skill is a result of talent multiplied by effort and achievement is a result of that skill multiplied by effort. And this is the core of grid. Well, noticeably at every step of the formula to develop grid is effort. And I would submit that the core of Priority is consistently strong financial results regardless of the economic environment. Our strengthening operating efficiency reflected in our profit margin and free cash flow and the steady sales results of our market-leading product offering is our company's grit.

  • Uses the results of a highly talented group never resting on past success, persistently honing their skills and focusing those skills with intense effort to drive achievement. So be assured that grit is been ingrained into the DNA of Priority, [speaking,] embraced by our teams, and we're confident will translate into long-term shareholder value. We appreciate your time to participate in today's call and the ongoing support of our investors and look forward to continuing to deliver outstanding results.

  • Operator, we'd like to now open the call for questions.

  • Operator

  • (Operator Instructions) And our first question coming from the line of Steve Moss from B. Riley Securities.

  • Stephen M. Moss - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst

  • Nice quarter here. Maybe just starting with the outlook here. You guys continue to add partners and made another announcement in the past month here. I realize these contracts are large, but kind of curious time line for any update on time line for additions. And if we could see some upward bias to the guidance here as the year progresses.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • Yes. Thanks, Steve. The -- so we're already working those channels. Leads are being delivered from our partners to our sale teams, and we're actively working those customers for adoption of CPX. And we feel confident that we'll see upside in this segment as those partnerships start to monetize. And as they begin to convert, we'll start to reflect that as we get a better handle on the pace of conversion of those merchants and the take rate that we'll be able to derive from those contracts.

  • Stephen M. Moss - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst

  • Okay. That's helpful. And then just in terms of just thinking about the drivers of average ticket size for going forward. And definitely, we continue to see an increase there. Just kind of wondering how much is that just customer mix versus maybe the inflationary environment we're seeing these days.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • From our vantage point, it's more the inflation rate. It is driving the increase. Or the mix within our book has not really shifted. I would submit this, though, as we start to -- we've got a lot of rent payment that's starting to migrate over to our platform. As I mentioned, we're hitting our stride in the real estate space, particularly with the Passport product. And those will be -- you're talking a large ticket there. That's -- the average rent is -- it's ranging from $1,200 to $1,500. So there'll be some upward pressure there. But again, we'll get a better gauge of that as we start to see conversion.

  • Stephen M. Moss - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst

  • Okay. And then just maybe one on expenses here. I hear you guys on the comments in terms of the company has grown. So that's a large step up -- that accounts for a large step up in operating expenses. Maybe just any incremental color -- just on compensation here. Is that kind of a good run rate going forward?

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • At the beginning of April, we did adjust folks salaries, and that was average across the board is probably about 3.5%. So that will bleed in, in coming quarters. But other than that, it's just the head count growth from the acquisitions that's driving the increase.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • Yes. And I would just offer this to you, Steve. We've budgeted for greater head count growth than we're experiencing.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Right.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • So we're seeing greater efficiency with our teams in accomplishing the build that we want. So we would expect that our head count growth budget will be below our budgeted levels.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Yes. Yes, the head count plan is conservative for that reason. And the pay increase I just cited was factored into our plan and our guidance.

  • Operator

  • And our next question coming from the line of Brian Kinstlinger with Alliance Global.

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Nice results. First, obviously, there's many who predict a recession. So what's the impact you guys see generally of a recession in each of your 3 segments? And is this scenario in any way contemplated in your guidance?

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • It is actually. We'll refer you back to comments we made more than a year ago about our expectations of a changing economic environment and how we were building countercyclical businesses in preparation of what we saw as a just a turn in the business cycle. So you see B2B is one segment that it benefits from that. It's a means by which businesses gain financing for payment to their supply chain. They're using tools that enable use of card and digital strategies for a funding mechanism, number one. Also, everyone is tightening the belt. So automation that enables them to redeploy staff or even eliminate head count is important. And B2B is a segment where those benefits are clear. So we expect to see continued growth as these tools get adopted by businesses globally.

  • In addition to that, we have a market-leading product that supports folks in the debt resolution arena. And we're seeing excellent growth in that segment as consumers do start to exhibit stress and are enrolling in programs where we are the administrator of their funds to help them resolve debt. So we expect in a more challenging economy that we'll continue to see strong growth in that segment. The other benefit, of course, because we have money transmission licenses, we're able to maintain those deposits and direct them to banks of our choosing. So we benefit from increase in rates. And I would just offer to you that our assumptions in our budget and our guidance, we're very conservative in the inflation environment that would lead to a increase in rates and what additional money we would earn from the float that -- on those deposits that we maintain and the growth in the trajectory of consumers adopting our escrow and administrative services to help them resolve outstanding debts. So those are 2 sectors in particular.

  • The other where we're winning very consistently is the rent and real estate space. You're seeing a lot more folks put rents on card because it's a means of temporarily financing their rent while their paycheck is coming in every 2 weeks. So we're seeing growth there. And look, we built those businesses recognizing that. Our core acquiring just has natural exposure to the general economy. So our goal has been win market share to offset potential drops in consumer spend. We're doing that. You can see that from the growing merchant base and drive additional volume on that platform, which we're achieving. And then we've got our countercyclical segments that really performed very consistently in more challenging economic environments. And it's still early days in that conversion, B2B in particular. Over 50% of all payments in that arena, which is $18 trillion in the U.S. are still resolved on check. So we just need to get people to convert from an old method of payment to a more modern one. And we're doing that pretty consistently these days.

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Great. Follow-up on the expense side. First, I wanted to touch on the gross margin. You highlighted in the consumer SMB side. Was there a further step down in SMA revenue during the first quarter compared to the fourth quarter in 2021 because the gross margin really dropped sequentially? So I guess my question is, when do you get back to the 26% to 27% range for that business? Is that the third quarter? Is that what I heard?

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Yes. First of all, we had revenue growth in Q1 was over 44% higher than Q4 of last year. So that's just the rebound that we are talking about, the reboarding of merchants. And we will switch over to year-over-year growth in the third quarter and the fourth quarter and full year -- and that will lead to full year growth conservatively speaking, of over 15% this year versus 2021.

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • So the lower gross margin was the fact that SMA this quarter was much lower than the fourth quarter, while the rest of the business grew just sequentially. Is that right?

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • No, there was -- SMA grew in Q1 over Q4. So just so we can make sure we're answering the right question, Brian, is what you're saying that…

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Why is the gross margin down so much sequentially is the question.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Between Q4 and Q1?

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Yes.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • In the SMB segment, is that what you're asking?

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Exactly. Yes. Thank you. Sorry for being so bad at articulating today.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Not at all. Not at all. In Q4, we have -- there's some annual billings that happen each fourth quarter, which leads to a little bit of a pop in the fourth quarter versus the first quarter. But specifically, I can reconcile that and be more specific for you, but that is what jumps in mind.

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Okay. So we have one more quarter of a low SMB gross margin before it seems to fully recover. Is that right?

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Yes. I guess what we're -- and we can take this offline, probably. That's not what we're actually seeing. So there may be some anomaly you're looking at?

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • No. I was just looking at this first 3 quarters of last year, SMB was 26% to 27% gross margin, then it was 25%. Now it's 22%. So I'm curious when you get back to that 26% to 27% range.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Yes. I think what you're seeing, Brian, and where you will see it normalize is that specialized margin is high margin. And then when you couple that with annual billings for things like PCI or annual fees that hit in December, the quarter-over-quarter trend would be impacted. Yes, we'll take a deeper dive on that. But I will say that the margin was as we planned. So there's nothing unusual that drove that. But we'll take a look. We'll do a deeper dive on your question and respond to you.

  • Brian David Kinstlinger - Head of TMT Research, MD & Senior Technology Analyst

  • Okay. Possible I got it fixed my number, maybe you're wrong. Just one more question, just to follow up on the salary and benefits question. I understand going forward, the raises and how to think about it going forward. But I think, again, correct me if I'm wrong, in the fourth quarter, you had a full quarter of Finxera. So why -- or what's seasonal? What changed that it's up 33%, again sequentially compared to the only other quarter we have with Finxera?

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Okay. Yes. There was -- in the fourth quarter, there was some incentive compensation adjustments. And so we have a higher incentive comp accrual in Q1 based upon our forecast and our performance than we had in Q4. So that was a one-off, I guess, reduction to total salaries and benefits that occurred in the fourth quarter of last year.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • Yes. And just, Brian, just a little bit of further clarification around that. So we had no bonus accrual for the Finxera team in 2021, right? That was budgeted into the transaction. So now when we take on the full employee base, what wasn't in the fourth quarter for all of those folks was a bonus accrual that is now in the numbers at Priority. Does that make sense?

  • Operator

  • (Operator Instructions) Our next question coming from the line of George Mihalos with Cowen.

  • Georgios Mihalos - MD & Senior Research Analyst

  • Just wanted to kick things off. Just looking at Finxera, any seasonality we should be thinking about there? Or are you guys still thinking about that contributing around about $75 million for the year?

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • Yes, George, nothing seasonal. It's really more driven by economic factors. If there's one aspect of seasonality, you'd see a dip towards the holidays in terms of enrollment. And then normally, January is probably a less strong month relative to trend. But then those holiday bills come in and we start to see things pick up in February and beyond. So -- but that segment is actually presently boarding above our budget expectations. And consumers are graduating less quickly from their resolution than we've modeled as well. So we expect over the course of the year to see the benefit of better boarding trends and lower graduation rates from debt resolution. Or I should say slower is more accurate description.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • And your quoted expectation for top line is good expectation.

  • Georgios Mihalos - MD & Senior Research Analyst

  • Okay. Okay. Just one last thing. Just given the rate hike cycle that we're in right now, how are you guys thinking about interest expense? Or maybe another way to ask it, how are you thinking -- what are you baking in for sort of rate increases? And maybe remind us the portion of the debt that would be susceptible to short-term rate changes.

  • Michael T. Vollkommer - CFO

  • Well, we have a base LIBOR rate of 1%, 30-day LIBOR, which is still under 1%. But the -- so it's entirely flexible to that -- to rate hikes above that. But we have a natural hedge within the business because of all the cash that we have on balance sheet with respect to CFT pay. So net-net, we won't be impacted.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • I would say it this way, George. Net-net, we should have a -- our debt costs because we have a 1% LIBOR floor, don't increase until 3-month LIBOR gets above 1%, right? And we're not there yet. But we get the benefit of the increased earnings on our deposit float, which has already begun. So on a net basis, we should see a net gain, and then that net gain would flatten as rates go above 1%.

  • Operator

  • I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Priore for any closing remarks.

  • Thomas Charles Priore - Executive Chairman, President & CEO

  • All right. Well, thank you very much. Just want to thank everyone for your participation in the call today. We will make ourselves available for any follow-up questions. I appreciate the support of our investors and all of the tremendous effort by the Priority team to deliver another excellent quarter. Hope everyone has a great day and a terrific remainder of the week. Thanks so much.

  • Operator

  • Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.