Timothy Regan
Analyst · Dropbox's website following this call. I will now turn the call over to Kern Kapoor, Dropbox's Head of Investor Relations. Mr. Kapoor, please go ahead
Thank you, Drew. As I've done before, I want to begin with a reminder of our financial strategy as this provides the context for how we operate the business and outlines where we are headed. We continue to focus on balancing growth and profitability in a thoughtful, disciplined way while concurrently returning capital to shareholders in the form of share repurchases. By operating in this manner, we aim to deliver operating margins ranging between 28% and 30%, to reduce our share count and ultimately to generate annual free cash flow of $1 billion by 2024. We believe that execution against these objectives will generate long-term value for our shareholders and we remain committed to making decisions in line with this financial trajectory. Today, I'll talk to our performance for the quarter and our updated guidance for the year that collectively demonstrated that we continue to make progress against these financials objectives. Let's first turn to our quarterly results. Total revenue for the second quarter increased 13.5% year-over-year to $531 million, beating our guidance range of $522 million to $525 million. Foreign exchange rates provided a two-point tailwind to growth. Total ARR for the quarter grew 12.2% year-over-year for a total of $2.166 billion. On a constant currency basis, ARR grew $54 million sequentially and 10.6% year-over-year. Our continued growth in ARR reflects our strategy to attract new paying users, drive users to premium plans, introduce acquired products to our customers and improve retention. We exited the quarter with 16.14 million paying users and added approximately 310,000 net new paying users in the second quarter, driven in part by the continued adoption of our Family plan. Average revenue per paying user was $133.15 in Q2. Before I turn to the P&L, I'd like to highlight some of our go-to-market momentum in the quarter. As a reminder, with over 90% of our revenue derived from our self-serve motion, any optimizations to our self-serve engine can lead to meaningful results. As Drew mentioned in his prepared remarks, we have been recently seeing positive trends in the adoption of our professional or what we call it pro SKU. Pro is our premium individual SKU designed for small businesses and freelancers who require additional functionality to work with external clients, including advanced sharing capabilities, additional storage and the ability to transfer files up to 100 gigabytes in order to fuel the momentum we are seeing with the SKU. This quarter, we began offering trials with professional as part of the plus checkout process. This upsell prompt drove a significant uplift in the number of users starting a pro trial. In addition, we extended the professional trial length from 14 days to 30 days to give potential users more time to understand the benefits of the product. Raising the trial period resulted in a 15% increase in the number of users who started a trial with a commensurate lift in the number of conversions. These types of optimizations help to drive year-over-year growth of our pro SKU by more than 30%. Through these enhancements, our engineering teams continue to find ways to improve our ability to match the right products with the right customers at the right times, leading to continued revenue growth in an efficient, scalable way. Before we continue with further discussion of our P&L, I would like to note that unless otherwise indicated, all income statement measures mentioned are non-GAAP and exclude stock-based compensation, amortization of purchased intangibles, certain acquisition-related expenses, impairments of our real estate assets and expenses related to our reduction in force. Our non-GAAP net income also excludes net gains and losses on equity investments and included the income tax effect of the aforementioned adjustments. Let me also provide a brief update on our real estate strategy. As we have previously mentioned, our transition to a Virtual-First model includes steps to decost our real estate portfolio by subleasing a significant portion of our existing facilities footprint. Last year, we signed two subleases related to our San Francisco headquarters and we recently signed additional subleases in Austin, Seattle and Australia. We are seeing progress on multiple fronts and we remained confident in our ability to execute on our strategy. As a result, we did not record any additional impairment charges in the second quarter and we continued to estimate total impairment charges of up to $450 million associated with this transition inclusive of the charges we've already taken, while expecting to ultimately generate an estimated $800 million in subleased cash flows over the course of the associated leases. With that, let's continue with the P&L. I note that all expense categories continue to benefit from strategic changes we've made to the business around personnel and facilities costs. Related to personnel, we restructured our workforce in order to operate more efficiently in the first quarter this year and our headcount totals remain at these reduced levels. That being said, we do plan to accelerate hiring this year as we invest in growth areas across the business to ensure that we are well positioned for continued success. Related to facilities and our shift to Virtual-First, we continue to benefit from our employees working from home as well as from a reduction in depreciation as a result of the write-down in our real estate assets stemming from the aforementioned impairment. In short, we are operating with greater discipline while still investing in our future and we are seeing substantial improvements across the P&L as a result of these concerted efforts. Gross margin was 81% for the quarter, representing an increase of 2 percentage points on a year-over-year basis. The improvement in our gross margin is primarily a result of the continued rollout of hardware efficiencies across our internally managed storage and data infrastructure as well as progress we are making in migrating our data centers to lower cost locations. Second quarter R&D expense was $130 million or 25% of revenue, which decreased compared to 29% of revenue in the second quarter of 2020. Sales and marketing expense was $91 million or 17% of revenue, which decreased compared to 20% of revenue in the second quarter of 2020. G&A expense was $40 million or 8% of revenue, which decreased compared to 10% of revenue in the second quarter of 2020. G&A expenses benefited from the one-time release of certain non-income tax reserves in the quarter. In total, we earned a record operating profit of $169 million in the second quarter, which represents an operating margin of 32% or an 11 percentage point improvement compared to the second quarter of 2020. Net income for the second quarter was $160 million, which is a 72% improvement over the second quarter of 2020. Diluted EPS was a record $0.40 per share based on 397 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding, up from $0.22 per share for the second quarter of 2020. Moving on to our cash balance and cash flow. We ended the quarter with cash and short-term investments of $1.944 billion. Cash flow from operations was $220 million in the second quarter. Capital expenditures were $4 million during the quarter. This resulted in a record quarterly free cash flow of $216 million compared to $120 million in Q2 of 2020. In the second quarter, we also added $43 million to our finance leases lines for data center equipment. I'd also like to provide an update on our share repurchase activity. As I previously mentioned, we intend to leverage our share repurchase program to not only return capital to shareholders, but to also reduce our share count. In Q2, we repurchased 5.5 million shares, spending approximately $151 million. Since the start of last year, we have now spent nearly $1 billion under our program, repurchasing 44 million shares. In addition, we still have approximately $820 million remaining under our current share repurchase authorization as we continue to aim to reduce our weighted average diluted share count. We continue to believe that utilizing our capital for share repurchases is efficient and we will leverage the strength of our balance sheet to deliver returns back to our shareholders. With that, let's turn to guidance for Q3 and for the full-year. For the third quarter of 2021, we expect revenue to be in the range of $543 million to $546 million. Currency exchange rates assumed in this guidance account for approximately 2 points of growth at the midpoint of guidance and are based on a combination of recent and historical average rates. We expect non-GAAP operating margin to be in the range of 28% to 28.5%. Finally, we expect diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be in the range of 397 to 402 million shares based on our trailing 30-day average share price. For the full-year 2021, we are raising our revenue guidance range, which was previously $2.118 billion to $2.130 billion to $2.136 billion to $2.142 billion. Currency exchange rates assumed in this guidance account for approximately 2 points of growth at the midpoint of guidance and are based on a combination of recent and historical average rates. We are maintaining our gross margin guide of approximately 80% for the full-year. We are raising our non-GAAP operating margin guidance range, which was previously 27% to 28% to be in the range of 28.5% to 29%. We are raising our free cash flow guidance range, which was previously $670 million to $690 million to be in the range of $710 million to $730 million. This includes $29 million in cash outflows comprised of $16 million with a 2021 installments of our deal consideration holdback related to our acquisition of HelloSign and one-time severance payments of approximately $14 million related to our reduction in force. We continue to expect capital expenditures for 2021 to be in the range of $25 million to $35 million net of tenant improvement allowances. We continue to expect additions to our finance lease lines to be approximately 6% of revenue in 2021. Finally, we are maintaining our expectation for 2021 diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be in the range of 397 million to 402 million shares. To share some additional context on this guidance, we are raising our full-year revenue guidance from 11% to approximately 12% year-over-year growth as we account for the momentum we are seeing across the business. We are raising our operating margin guidance, given the raise in revenue expectations while concurrently operating under an increasingly efficient and disciplined cost structure. I'd note that we continue to plan to hire and to invest in marketing initiatives to drive future growth in the back half of the year. We are raising our free cash flow guidance through the aforementioned business outperformance, cost savings and continued confidence in the favorable impact of FX rates. With regard to paying users and ARPU and consistent with what I mentioned at the start of the year, we continue to expect some level of variability in these metrics as we simultaneously made the decision to shift away from the pursuit of large paying user deals with low ASPs, while concurrently driving the adoption of our Family plan and other SKUs, therefore, we continue to focus on ARR growth as the best indicator of the long-term health of our business. Lastly, I want to share some thoughts on our long-term targets. We are on track to take a sizeable step forward this year on profitability, outperforming our expectations with operating margins now expected to grow approximately 7 points and free cash flow expected to improve by more than $200 million year-over-year. It's important to consider that we don't expect progress of this magnitude every year and while our profitability growth this year is outstanding, we are equally focused on driving sustainable revenue growth. Therefore, while we are now within our long-term operating margin target range, 28% to 30%, we plan to hire to support new product development, to invest in high ROI growth initiatives and to explore inorganic ways to add capabilities to our offerings. In addition, certain tailwinds this year could turn into headwinds in future years as we start traveling again or as FX rates fluctuate. Given these considerations at this time, we are maintaining our long-term operating margin targets of 28% to 30% and our 2024 free cash flow goal of $1 billion. In conclusion, we have made great progress against our goals over the first half of this year. We continue to execute against our financial objectives and we remain on course to achieve our long-term targets. Looking ahead, we will continue to operate in a disciplined and measured way to ensure that we are positioning the business with continued long-term success. With that, I'll now turn it back to Drew for his closing remarks.