J.D. Moriarty - LendingTree, Inc.
Analyst · Mark Mahaney of RBC. Your line is open
Why don't I take the first one, Mark? On the Consumer business, I guess, we could refer to a couple of things. There are, anecdotally, we are seeing – if I go back to the March-April timeframe, let me take credit card as an example, our credit card business, we basically watched the capacity in that business. The demand from our issuers diminish pretty significantly and we had certain of our card issuers who just got off the affiliate channel completely. So we would look at where they were on our competitors and we would see that their cards were not available. And they refer to – we're just getting off the affiliate channel. Well, the good news is, as we sit here in November, those credit card issuers are back on the network, okay? So, even those who've fully pulled off of the network are now back on the network. I would characterize them as cherry-picking, okay? So they are issuing cards, watching the consumer spending and that is influencing how they'll spend go forward. But to be clear, as we look at Q4, we do expect revenue in our credit card business to grow substantially off of a very low base, okay? So, as I said, we're watching all of these businesses relative to unemployment and consumer spending and we're monitoring the month-on-month revenue opportunity. But for a business like card, we expect revenue growth that will be substantial on a percentage basis in Q4, but we don't expect it to contribute. There will be a lag before it starts to contribute because we are spending marketing dollars there, but as an indicator of the interest of card issuers to grow portfolios, it's encouraging to have been back on the network. Personal loans is interesting in the sense that the largest use case for a personal loan is the consolidation of credit card debt, right? So, we have not had consumer interest in personal loans because consumers generally used the stimulus dollars to pay down their credit card balances and there's been a lot of press about the fact that the consumer actually in terms of credit card debt is in a pretty good position. So there has not been as much consumer demand for personal loans, but on the supply side, okay, with regard to all of our personal loan lenders, at the low point in personal loans, we were at about half of the lender base. We were pre-COVID. We are now in a position where all of the personal loan lenders are back on the network and looking to grow. So that's the encouraging sign in personal loans. Now, that business always has a seasonality to it, right. So you always go from a strong Q3 to diminished Q4. That's really on the consumer side and then it recovers in Q1. So recognize we probably do not, on a revenue basis, expect the same growth in personal in Q3 to Q4. If we get it, it's a function of this particular COVID-related cycle not the consumer, but we have to be conscious of the consumer demand for personal loans. Small business is the other business that was profoundly affected, and again, we're seeing really good month-on-month trends there with regard to both small business demand for loans and the lender access to capital. So, that business is, I would say, ahead of schedule relative to where I might have guessed it, at the midpoint of the year. So all three businesses are showing signs of lenders coming back. I think the big thing to recognize is in cards specifically, that's a business where we will see revenue growth before we see contribution growth and that will weigh very significantly on us in Q4, but actually, as it does, that's a sign that's it's recovering we think in 2021. Now getting back to where we were, $211 million of revenue in fiscal 2019 is going to be a challenge and that's going to take time throughout 2021 and we're going to need to macro recovery there. So we're looking at all the signs of macro recovery. The card issuers being back on the network is one of them.