Mark Jones Jr.
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Please go ahead
Thank you, Mark and hello to everybody on the call. Our strong results this quarter in a difficult personal lines marketplace and challenging macro environment demonstrate the inherent strength and consistency of our business and the uniqueness of our operating platform. Insurance is a necessary product for the vast majority of the population, regardless of the challenges of P&C, underwriters and overall economic uncertainty. As a scale independent agency with industry leading proprietary technology, we provide a seamless choice shopping experience and valued advice which cannot be matched by a single product platform. The advantages of our model for clients become even more evident in times of industry and macroeconomic stress. We are best positioned to optimize a client's outcomes as carriers raise pricing to address underwriting profitability, helping them maximize their buying power in an increasingly challenging home buying process, and manage the experience through loss events as a trusted advocate. We are in an incredibly favorable position in the personal lines insurance value chain. We benefit from our close proximity to the client relationship. As in most businesses, those with the closest relationship to the end client tend to control or significantly influence the profit pools. Our ability to provide the client with a choice platform they need and the highest level of service creates the opportunity for excess economics. As a broker, we do not carry the balance sheet risks that carriers do, and in fact, in a rising premium environment, we get a raise on our entire book of business. Our emphasis on expanding the franchise distribution significantly reduces the potential downside risk of fast expansion as we bear significantly less cost to ramp the producer talent. This allows us to optimize earnings while minimizing risk. These characteristics will allow us to drive consistent high levels of revenue and earnings growth with significant cash flow conversion and limited balance sheet risk for many years to come. For the third quarter of 2022, total written premiums, the key leading indicator of future core and ancillary revenue growth increased 42% to $616 million. This included franchise premium growth of 46% to $464 million, and corporate premium growth of 30% to $151 million. This growth is being driven by continued strong performance of our renewal book from high retention levels and increasing P&C pricing needed to improve underwriting profitability. Additionally, we continue to add and improve the quality of our franchise producer account. These benefits were partially offset by our deliberate near-term reduction in corporate agent headcount to drive productivity improvements, increased efficiency, and maximize long-term profit dollars. We are already seeing benefits from these efforts emerge. Total revenues and core revenues were up 38% and 39% for the quarter at $57.7 million and $51.9 million, respectively. Our cost recovery revenue of $3.4 million was up 73%. As accounting rules require us to defer the recognition of initial franchise fees over the term of the franchise agreement, terminating an underperforming agency results in the acceleration of the remaining deferred franchise fee revenue. Importantly, the cash flow of these initial franchise fees is unchanged as we collect these revenues at the launch of the franchise. Ancillary revenue, which includes contingent commissions, was $2.4 million in the quarter compared to $2.5 million a year ago. We continue to expect contingent commissions for the full year to range between $7 million and $10 million, given current underwriter profitability. However, we are seeing long overdue rate actions in the industry that over time should improve underwriting profitability and lead to a more normalized contingent level looking further out. Our franchises generated core revenue of $26.4 million during the quarter, an increase of 54% from the year ago period. Franchise core revenue growth is driven by new business production from a growing franchise count and increasing premium retention levels. At the end of the third quarter, operating franchise count was 1,403, up 23% from a year ago. Increased culling of underperforming franchises is masking the strength of the underlying KPIs in the franchise distribution. In the third quarter, we saw 57% launch growth year-over-year compared to 31% in the second quarter and roughly flat launch growth over the preceding three quarters. The 144 launches in the quarter was a record for us, as we begin to see the existing backlog launch or terminate. Our early fourth quarter franchise KPI data continues to trend well as we expect strong launch growth through the balance of the year. We remain encouraged by the increased contributions and revenue from our tenured franchisees as they continue to ramp up their production and hire new sales agents within their respective franchises driving positive same-store sales. This has been offset in the near-term by higher return of franchises, which ran at 25% annualized in the quarter compared to 21% in the second quarter at our roughly 15% historical average. We expect higher churn in the near-term as we make up for high single digit churn that we allow through most of the pandemic. Our most successful franchises continue to drive higher percentages of premium growth. It remains critical that we focus our investments towards these most successful franchises. Part of ensuring that focus requires evaluation of our lowest performing franchises. We view the resulting near-term increase in churn as healthy and necessary to properly run a high performing sales organization, and consistent with previous churn it accounts for less than 1% of new business generation, but consume substantial management resources. Our overall recruiting pool also remains strong and robust and the quality of our signed, but not yet launched franchises continues to improve as we actively engage or signed pipeline to drive faster overall launch activity and identify signed franchises that no longer intend to launch. Our signed, but not launched franchise count at quarter end was 884, down from 997 in the second quarter and 1,030 in Q1, with strong signing activity offset by our efforts to cull the pipeline of franchises that will not launch. We expect higher launch rates to continue to emerge as the signed pool is increasingly comprised of more recent recruiting quarters, which took place in a more normal operating and labor environment compared to COVID years. Corporate sales headcount at the end of the third quarter was 411, a decrease of 18% from the year ago quarter. Corporate core revenues were $25.4 million in the third quarter, an increase of 27% compared to the year ago period. Looking forward, we expect to manage corporate headcount to optimize the balance between growth and profitability, with focus on maintaining adequate resources for the franchise effort, while also improving overall corporate productivity and management efficiency. Given these efforts, we expect corporate headcount to be slightly down from the third quarter by year-end. Longer term, we expect to grow the corporate distribution, however, it will not grow as fast as the franchise network, but will at the level needed to support franchise growth. Given that revenues produced through the franchise network are accounted for on a net basis, these changes may moderately impact our revenue growth near-term, but they will significantly improve our margin profile and earnings growth trajectory. Total operating expenses for the third quarter of 2022, excluding equity based compensation, were $46.7 million, up 33% from a year ago. Compensation and benefits, excluding equity based compensation, was $30.9 million for the quarter, up 28% from the year ago period. The increasing compensation and benefits is being driven by increased headcount across the organization, particularly the hiring of service agents to manage our largest revenue stream renewals, recruiting and onboarding functions to continue our growth trajectory and system developers to ensure our technology is on the cutting edge for our clients and internal users. G&A expenses for the quarter were $13.5 million, an increase of 33% from a year ago. Growth in G&A expense was due to an expanding real estate footprint, higher travel and entertainment expense, marketing expenses, and other various expenses resulting from increased headcount of 19%. Our bad debt expense was $2.3 million compared to $0.7 million a year ago, with the increase largely driven by our increased culling of signed franchises that have yet to launch. Total adjusted EBITDA for the quarter grew 67% to $11 million compared to $6.6 million in the year ago period. EBITDA margin was 19% versus 16% a year ago. Excluding contingent commissions, EBITDA margin expanded six points in the quarter. Adjusted EPS was $0.24 versus $0.26 in the year ago period. We continue to expect our full year margins will be up compared to a year ago. Looking beyond 2022, we expect to drive annual margin expansion, excluding contingence for the next several years as we manage core revenue growth moderately higher than expense growth on an annual basis. As of September 30th, 2022, the company had cash and cash equivalence of $46.1 million. We had an unused line of credit of $24.8 million at quarter end. Total outstanding term note payable balance was $95.6 million at the end of the quarter. During October, we paid down the $25 million drawn on the revolving credit facility with existing cash on the balance sheet. For the full year 2022, our guidance as follows: Total written premiums placed for 2022 are expected to be between $2.176 billion and $2.215 billion, representing growth of 40% on the low end of the range, and 42% on the high end of the range. Total revenues for 2022 are expected to be between $194 million and $205 million, representing organic growth of 28% at the low end of the range to 35% on the high end of the range, driven by continued high levels of core revenue growth offset by weaker than historical average contingent commissions as a result of carriers profitability challenges, they are just recently addressing. As a reminder, the contingency plans restart each calendar year and a below average contingency year does not equate to weaker bonuses in the future years. We continue to expect growth in EBITDA and EBITDA margin for the full year. However, lower than expected contingent commissions could result in more moderate EBITDA and margin than planned. We do expect more significant growth in EBITDA and EBITDA margin when excluding the effects of contingent commissions. Our business is demonstrating strong revenue and earnings growth in the challenging environment. We look forward to continuing to deliver on the business through the remainder of the year and many years beyond. I want to thank everybody for their time. And with that, let's open the line up for questions. Operator?