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SurgePays, Inc. (SURG)

Q3 2022 Earnings Call· Mon, Nov 14, 2022

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the SurgePays Incorporated Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions [Operator Instructions] Please note, this event is being recorded. I'd now like to turn the call over to Mr. Brian Prenoveau, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Brian Prenoveau

Analyst

Thank you, operator, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to the SurgePays third quarter 2022 earnings webcast and conference call. Today's date is November 14, 2022. And on the call today from SurgePays are Brian Cox, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Tony Evers, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that this call may contain forward-looking statements as they are defined under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. For a discussion of such risks and uncertainties, please see SurgePays' most recent filings with the SEC. All forward-looking statements made today reflect our current expectations only, and we undertake no obligation to update any statement to reflect the events that occur after this call. Also, during the course of today's call, the company will be discussing one or more non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in the press release we issued this afternoon. Copies of today's press release are accessible on SurgePays' Investor Relations website, ir.surgepays.com. In addition, SurgePays' Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2022, will also be available on the SurgePays' Investor Relations website. Now I'd like to turn the call over to President and Chief Executive Officer, Brian Cox.

Brian Cox

Analyst

Thanks, Brian. We were tremendously busy in the third quarter of this year, and the team's hard work is translating into not just growth but growth with a strategic direction. Revenue exceeded $36 million in the third quarter, a 2.5x increase compared to last year. In the first nine months of 2022, revenue increased by 131% compared to the first nine months of last year, and it's important to note, this was during a timeframe where sales were intentionally throttled by management in order to grow without dilution. We believe continuing along this disciplined growth plan that we've laid out earlier this year will be rewarded in shareholder value. We're thrilled with our progress and even more excited about where the company can go in the future. Last month, we announced that we had eclipsed 200,000 mobile broadband subscribers, our year-end target in our wireless business through the Affordable Connectivity Program, or ACP. We continue to grow our subscriber count in this huge long-term opportunity by providing subsidized broadband Internet access to low-income households. As we discussed previously, estimates vary, but it looks like there is 50 million households that qualify for ACP. And after almost a year and a half, only 14 million households have taken advantage of ACP, which puts the adoption of this benefit at around only 28%. We believe we've only scratched the surface of the program and there's significant room for growth, which is why we're so excited about being able to do enrollments and activations over our SurgePays' software platform inside convenience stores. We will be strategic and long-term in our decision-making and business operations, especially when it comes to leveraging existing synergies to accelerate sales using our competitive advantages. 150,000 mobile broadband subscribers was my benchmark for analyzing our efficiency and purchasing our…

Tony Evers

Analyst

Thank you, Brian. Good afternoon, everyone. I’ll begin my overview of the third quarter’s financial results. For the quarter, we reported revenues of $36.2 million compared to $14.5 million in the third quarter of 2021, representing an increase of 149%. This was primarily attributable to the subscriber growth in our mobile broadband business. Gross profit increased 1% in the third quarter to $1.92 million compared to $1.90 million in the year ago period. SG&A expenses increased less than 1% in the third quarter compared to the third quarter of last year. While we saw decreases in most categories, including compensation, the overall increase was due to additional insurance expense. Loss from operations remained essentially flat at a loss of $1 million for both 2021 and 2022 of the third quarter. Net loss for the third quarter was $1.5 million or a loss of $0.12 per share compared to a net loss of $1.7 million or a loss of $0.51 per share last year. Of the $1.5 million loss in the third quarter, approximately $1.4 million was due to accelerated expenses at LogicsIQ related to the [indiscernible] ad campaign. Additionally, the third quarter of 2022 included much lower interest rate, interest expense than the prior year quarter and certain non-recurring items, including a $52,000 loss on investment in Centrecom and a $58,000 loss from amortization of debt discount. Turning to the balance sheet, liquidity and cash flow. Our cash balance as of September 30 was $7.9 million compared to $6.3 million at the end of 2021. Accounts receivable has increased by over $6.2 million from year-end 2021 to $8.3 million. Receivables from the U.S. government for the mobile broadband subsidy. Payment usually occurs within 30 to 60 days after a new customer is verified and signed up. Given our strengthened financial position, higher cash balance and capital structure, our cash allocation priorities are focused on investing in the business and maintaining ample liquidity for future growth. I will pass the call back to Brian for some closing remarks. Brian?

Brian Cox

Analyst

Thanks, Tony, and thanks for soldering up there with the flu. I appreciate your powering to this as a company. As a company, our North Star is building a successful organization that provides access to mobile broadband and essential financial services to households and communities where they aren’t readily accessible. We believe we are developing an ecosystem to serve this market, both at home, around their local communities and then the local stores where they shop. If we do this successfully, we will tap into a huge market with tremendous growth potential. The first nine months of this year has proved that the opportunity is there. We’ve increased revenue 131% so far compared to the first nine months of 2021. And we think the path to accelerating revenue growth is right in front of us. We couldn’t be more excited about the opportunities ahead, and we look forward to sharing our progress with our shareholders, employees and partners. I want to thank all of the employees at SurgePays. I do consider them truly a team. Lastly, I greatly appreciate the support and interest of our shareholders as we continue this journey of growth. We will now open the call to questions. Operator?

Operator

Operator

At this time, we will begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from Michael Diana of Maxim Group. Please go ahead.

Michael Diana

Analyst

So Brian, it sounds like you really ramped up the sales potential here in the quarter. Could you give us some more background on Jeremy Gies and also talk a little more about EPO Plus?

Brian Cox

Analyst

Yes, sure. Thanks for the question, and thanks, Michael. Jeremy, we’ve been waiting for about a year. As you know, I’m very open about the 100% focus on the ACP program. Number one, it wasn’t just the land grab of profitability and revenue growth for us. It was also learning the customer base, the habits and being able to analyze how to maximize and scale this growth without ever plateauing. So we do feel like we’ve got a great trajectory right now, a great understanding of the program, compliance. We bought ShockWave as a software platform and several other things that we’ve done to make sure we can put guardrails up to our growth. I guess about four, five months ago, when I saw this coming, okay, we want to be able to do this through our stores. That’s the big picture, long-term play is being able to provide products and financial services to folks where they shop in the corner, getting as many stores as we can on our network transacting and ultimately, that’s the way we’ll never get our technology, if you will. We’ll just be able to add new products. The problem is there’s only one me, and running two channels was just not going to work time wise. So I called in all the favors with folks I’ve worked with now for 20 years in the financial services prepaid under bank market, I’ll be able to godfathers if you will. And came across a great candidate, a highly, highly recommended, hit it off. The guy has got some of the same DNA that I do. And he’s a 2.0 version of me that wakes up every day and thinks about adding stores and sales. So it’s going to be a huge boost for us being able…

Michael Diana

Analyst

All right. That sounds great. Also, you mentioned you were "at the finish line" on your financing agreement. Can you tell us a little more about that? Or is it premature?

Brian Cox

Analyst

I don't want to say it's premature, I'm lapping because I've given a deadline of this call, and I just watched that deadline slip up a little bit. I think keep an eye, I think it's all the last-minute acronyms and the components where the attorneys are finalizing things. But one of the things I do want – I don't know that if I've explained, people have asked me, well, why did it take this long? And what – why did you hold out? Why did you intentionally throw all sales to get to this point? I want to make sure people know this is not a factoring deal. Factoring does – it allows you to grow at a 3% to 4% rate. It does not allow you to grow at the rate for us to accomplish the land grab that we want to go after. And so it's just I want to be very clear, the borrowing base is using a factor of the receivable, but also using a factor of the inventory. And it's more of an installment sale financing, where we pay back the money we pulled down over nine months, it's not debt. So those of you out there who live in the balance sheet world can quickly ascertain that there's a great chance for us to leverage this to some point next year, hopefully by the middle of next year, be not only profitable but debt free. So it's a really unique tool that we've put a tremendous amount of time and energy into that we're really, really excited about. And we're not on the one yard line anymore. I mean, Michael, the nose of the football is right at the line. I mean we just need to sneak this thing across. And I do expect it to happen here shortly.

Michael Diana

Analyst

All right, thanks, Brian.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Ed Woo of Ascendiant Capital. Please go ahead.

Ed Woo

Analyst

Yes. Congratulations on crossing that 200,000 mobile broadband subscribers. My question is, obviously, you guys have done very well and there's a lot of big opportunity. Have you noticed any new entrants or any change in competition up in the field?

Brian Cox

Analyst

Not really. I think, the strong get stronger because we're all learning. All of us – and we do talk amongst ourselves and we share vendors and consultants. That's the unique thing about there being such a low penetration this market. We're not fighting each other right now. There's plenty of yields for all of us. So – and also keep in mind too, we bought the shockwave software platform. So we're able to kind of see market trends as well, and pretty interesting data there. But there's not necessarily new folks getting into the game at all. It's folks trying to figure out better ways to add more customers, trying to work on their margins and equipment costs. So it's very similar to what we're doing. And that's why I think that to maybe add a layer of why the in-store enrollment or in-store sales are so unique. All of the ACP companies out there are prepaid wireless companies. That's what they are. They're wireless carriers. We have a completely different perspective on servicing this base – this underserved, underbanked market. It was never my goal just to be a wireless carrier, a wireless MVNO, that's just one of the products that we use to attack the market, to penetrate the market, and then we bring in our entire suite of products. So with that said, we own the CRM ShockWave, which again, for those of you that may not know, we're integrated into the National Verifier and the National Accountability Database of the FCC. And it also integrates us into the AT&T and T-Mobile backbones, which is what we use to provide the wireless service and mobile broadband. So we're one of the – to my knowledge, the only company that offers ACP that owns their own CRM, now stack onto that, Ed, that we own the SurgePays platform, which does payments at the store level. And I know for a fact that none of the other transaction companies out there, there's not too many of them that do the convenience store payments. None of those are actual carriers. They all only do third-party transactions. So we've got a significant competitive advantage here, and I plan on maximizing it to really grow that base. So I do think that there's – this is going to open up a huge opportunity for us. And to your point about competition, I get asked that on every call, one-on-one shareholder call. We just don't see it. And – but that's no reason to stand around and keep looking. I want to sprint and do things that not only these other folks may not be thinking of, but they can't do.

Ed Woo

Analyst

That sounds great. I really appreciate the color. My last question is, obviously there's been a lot of headlines about weakening macro, high inflation, and it just completely pounding the people at the bottom of the social ladder. How does that help or hurt your business?

Brian Cox

Analyst

Yes, that's a good question. And it always puts me in a unique spot because – and I always want to be very, very clear. I never hope for affliction or demise or folks to be in situations that would benefit me or us as a company. But the fact of the matter is we are a safety net for those who have had those curve balls of life thrown out. And right now, there's a lot of collateral damage for what's going on in the world or our country. And it's – the majority of it falls on our market. I think most of the people on this call, whether gas is $3 or $5, it's not going to affect where we drive today. And most of us probably throw things at the store on our credit card without thinking too much about it. Well, that's not our base. So what it does, it actually motivates me. It motivates our team to figure out not just, hey, how can we sell a wireless product and maximize margins? Do we want to make margins and profit? Absolutely. But can we do it in a way where we could cut their cost from who they're getting the service from now, whether it's Track on Boost, MetroPCS. We'll think about this. If our software is in that convenience store where they shop, they're getting the Internet from us through the ACP program. The store owners incentivized to talk to that customer and go ahead and bring them over to our prepaid wireless, too. Our – we look to really roll out aggressively in Q1 of next year. That's other financial products and other prepaid products that we can offer where we can grow our revenue, yes, absolutely, but we can do so by helping folks as much as we can. I've mentioned several times about having an add-on of Telehealth. Again, I do not want to offer Telehealth, but partnering with companies who do, putting those apps on our tablets, their devices or phones. And all of those folks who cannot use Telehealth because you need a credit card, but we could package it with top text data and now face time your doctor is a plan that could go pay cash at the convenience store. That's something I definitely want to do and roll out. And as another service that we could provide these people who have been hit pretty hard, like I said at the – with inflation and food costs and gas prices.

Ed Woo

Analyst

Well, congratulations. I'm sure everybody appreciates all that you've done, especially all the people on your mobile broadband program? So thank you and I thank you for answering my questions. I wish you guys good luck.

Brian Cox

Analyst

Thanks Ed.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Jeff Kone of The Wall Street Resource. Please go ahead.

Jeff Kone

Analyst

Hello, you guys delivered some very nice top line growth. But from a headline standpoint, on the bottom line, it reads that it missed considerably. Did you guys have higher expenses in something or miss internal projections? Or was it just due to rogue analyst [ph] numbers where the numbers differ so far?

Brian Cox

Analyst

Yes. I don't think I would say rogue analyst numbers. I mean, I appreciate the guys that follow us. And obviously, that's going to be a part of the ecosystem for me to accomplish the goals for this company. When a lot of this was laid out, two factors there that I think that is contributable to keeping in mind there's an upfront cost to every mobile broadband subscriber we had. There's the commission or the payment that's made to the salesperson. And then there's also the device cost. That's being entirely expensed upfront in month one. So the way I look at this is kind of a rule of numbers. If you accelerate growth faster than what you had anticipated, then you're going to have more upfront expense considering that we're expensing more than we're making in the first two months. So if we had a more steady, slow growth pattern, I think you would see the expenses balanced out and a little bit more in line with what the analysts had put out there. But the fact that our sales, let's say, our sales acceleration has been so successful from a business perspective, we're high-fiving from a reporting perspective, and this is where it gets into actual real business versus reporting or what you guys look at it quarterly. There's not a single person on my team that looks at quarterly or reporting and factor that into their decision-making. It's getting us to 0.5 million subscribers as fast as possible, which is what I beat in their head on a weekly basis religiously. So I think that there's things that we don't really take into account in growing the business. And I definitely don't – I don't. Again, I'm focused – laser-focused on a couple of things. And obviously, controlling costs I mean, we're not burning money – to do this, we're using our own cash flows to grow it. So from a reporting perspective and how that falls, I think those things will take care of themselves in the next couple of months. Once our customer base has grown to a level where it's – the profit from our existing reoccurring customers absorbs that upfront cost of our growth.

Jeff Kone

Analyst

Okay, thank you. That was very helpful.

Brian Cox

Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

At this time, this concludes our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the call back over to Brian Prenoveau for any closing remarks.

Brian Prenoveau

Analyst

Thank you everyone. That concludes today's call. You may now disconnect.