Darryl Rawlings
Analyst · Lake Street Capital. Please proceed with your question
Thanks, Laura. Good afternoon, everyone. I hope this call finds you safe and healthy. Just a few days ago, we published our annual shareholder letter. I'll review a few highlights today, but would encourage you to read it in its entirety. Sorry, in advance for the length. We intend to hold a more fulsome discussion at our annual shareholder meeting on June 11. Similar to past years, we will have members of the management team available in a Q&A focused forum. It had been our hope to host at our headquarters in Seattle, but we will be moving to an online format this year. We hope you will join us. At Trupanion, we've been working remotely since early March. The move was initiated proactively to support pet owners, employees and community members amid COVID-19 concerns around the world. In just a handful of days, we were able to transition an estimated 90% of our workforce to a remote work environment. We were well positioned to do so. At Trupanion, we know that pets get sick on weekends, holidays and after hours. And that's why we designed our workflow to provide 24/7 365 support. Prior to the transition approximately 50% of our workforce, including our team of territory partners worked remotely. Throughout this period of change, the team has done a tremendous job stepping up and reinforcing our commitment to the pet owners, who have placed their trust in Trupanion. In fact, since the move customer experience metrics such as length of time to answer phone calls, and the time to pay veterinary invoices have been better than ever. I've never been more proud of the team. Trupanion was designed to help pet owners budget and care for their pets when they become sick or injured. In times of uncertainty, our assurance is even more important. I can think of several other crises in our 20-year history, but not one that so clearly embodies the challenges of an unexpected health crisis. This will be an opportunity to reinforce our positioning to let every veterinary hospital and every Trupanion pet existing or new know we are here and ready to stand behind them. I'll talk a bit more about our plans to do so momentarily, but first I'll recap a few highlights from the first quarter. Total revenue grew 28% year-over-year, and we ended the quarter with over 687,000 total enrolled pets. Adjusted operating income grew 26% to $12 million $11.4 million of which was from our subscription business. In total, we deployed $9.7 million of our adjusted operating income in pet acquisition spend related to our subscription business where our estimated internal rate of return was 38%. Our first quarter results highlight the reoccurring nature of our business model supported by high retention rates and an underpenetrated market. In our 20-year history we've experienced multiple system shocks including 9/11, the dot.com crash, the 2008/2009 great recession, and regional recessions including the oil induced crisis in Alberta in 2015 and 2016. Trupanion has persisted and grown through these periods of change and disruption. In our history, there has not been one quarter where we have not had more revenue than the previous quarter. When the economy struggles, the need to help loving responsible pet owners, budget and care for their pets only becomes more important. With each system shock, we saw a temporary slowdown of new enrollments as people digested changed or uncertainty. The shock period varied between weeks and months, following which veterinarians became busier again and the world began to normalize. When the shock was followed by a recession, messaging at the veterinary level strengthened. Pet ownership during the 2008 recession grew. I've likened the behavior during the quarantine period of this pandemic to that which we see during a snowstorm. For pets in need pet owners, particularly those with Trupanion will seek out hospitals to ensure they get the veterinary care their pets require regardless how deep the snow is. Remember Trupanion is not wellness. We are accident and illness. We cover that which cannot be foreseen. But for those pets, who are not in immediate need, owners will sit tight, postpone their routine or wellness exams or leverage phone or email for non-urgent veterinary advice. In short, they'll wait for the storm to pass. As the pandemic took hold in the quarter, veterinary visits dropped on average by about 20% a trend that continued into April. As a reminder, wellness visits act as a primary lead source for Trupanion, and we saw a corresponding decline in leads through the veterinary channel during the same time period. Interestingly, over the past several weeks, we've seen other channels increase in both lead volume and efficiencies. Lead quality is high, and in early Q2, we recorded several consecutive days of record conversion rates. I'll say it again. In times of uncertainty, the need for our product and the ability to budget for unexpected veterinary care is even greater. This is evident in our monthly retention, which remains in line with recent historical levels even though we saw a small increase in churn for a two-week period. Net, we exited the quarter at a slightly reduced revenue growth run rate within our subscription business. But as Tricia will discuss, we continue to expect respectable revenue growth in Q2. We are well positioned to navigate the evolving landscape including by adjusting our PAC spend in relation to market and channel opportunities. This is not a new skill to Trupanion. We continuously evaluate how much we can spend on a per pet basis while operating within our guardrails of a 30% to 40% internal rate of return. This discipline is critical in the allocation of our capital. It is important to highlight that revenue growth and cash flow are strategically linked. In periods of slower revenue growth and reduced PAC spend cash flow and profitability improves. After the quarantine stage, we will likely enter a recessionary period that may last months or years. But unlike prior recessions, this one is the result of an unexpected medical problem. This is at the center of our wheelhouse. The challenges of an unexpected health crisis will be at the top of mind for pet owners and veterinarians. At Trupanion, we understand the power of the pet, and the love, joy, and healing that they bring to the family every day, especially in times like these. We expect the need for our product among pet owners to grow the messaging at the veterinary level to strengthen and the value of our patented software to be even greater. Our team of territory partners is at the core of these efforts and of the veterinary communities they serve. Today's pandemic requires our field team to be creative in finding opportunities to interact with and support veterinarians and their staff. Unsurprisingly, they have risen to this challenge. We ended the year with 130 territory partners in the field visiting nearly 22,000 veterinary hospitals across North America. In 2019 the number of active hospitals those that had at least one pet enrolled with Trupanion in the past three months averaged 10,315 during the year. We ended the year with over 4,850 hospitals with our software a number that has since surpassed 5,000 and about three dozen inside account managers. The combination of our software and account managers continues to deliver encouraging same-store sales results with a sustained uplift in the number of pets added per hospital per month of 48%. The ability to pay veterinary invoices directly on behalf of our pet owners cannot be replicated nor understated, especially in times of economic and financial uncertainty. In the coming months we expect to lean into this messaging. In 2019 we paid over $65 million in veterinary invoices through our software of which an estimated 32% were automated. Like conversion rates automating claims provides benefits across your organization and pushing the team to get above 50% in 2020. Paying the invoice instantaneously at checkout will remain a competitive advantage and key differentiator when communicating our value proposition to pet owners. We continue to test and iterate our messaging to prospective members with the goal of improving our overall conversion rates. As we discussed in more detail in the shareholder letter, our efforts to do so during 2019 did not move the needle, despite significant investment year-over-year. Though as I noted earlier in my remarks we have reason to be optimistic. Customer education does not stop at the time of enrollment. We need to become proficient at reinforcing this content to new members to help increase first-year retention which along with building our refer-a-friend and add-a-pet channels is key to our goal of nirvana. In 2019 pet owners adding pets or referring friends represented an average of 0.74% of our overall monthly book. Churn for the year averaged 1.42% per month the difference between the two the gap to nirvana was a 0.04% improvement over 2018. In summary our financial position is solid our positioning strong and our capital deployment disciplined. We are operating with high retention rates in an underpenetrated market. Execution is difficult yet rewarding. And with that I'll hand the call over to Tricia.