Lauren St. Waugh
Thanks, Tim. We ended the quarter above the high end of our guidance range, delivering Q1 revenue of $162 million, down 5% year-over-year. We remain in a cyclically depressed lending environment affecting interest rate sensitive areas such as loans and balance transfer credit cards. Our first quarter results showcase early signs of growth recovery being in sight, led by both insurance and SMB verticals. Let's take a deeper look at the revenue performance during the quarter within each category. Credit cards delivered Q1 revenue of $50 million, declining 19% year-over-year. As we've spoken about previously, last year's regional banking crisis drove increased balance sheet constraints and issuer and services them. We believe these dynamics are temporal rather than structural, but they continue to weigh on our Q1 year-over-year results. We still saw our seasonal cadence of a quarter-over-quarter increase from Q4 to Q1. While issuers remain conservative in balance sheet-intensive areas such as balance transfer cards, consumer demand for products remains high. This gives us confidence that we will see an eventual recovery as issuer appetite returns. Loans generated Q1 revenue of $21 million, declining 3% year-over-year. Our personal loans vertical grew 12% year-over-year during Q1, a deceleration versus Q4 as we have not yet fully recovered from the pullback that began last quarter while we worked through some of the growing teams and scaling with new audiences and partners. We still believe that there is a backlog of consumer demand in personal loans as high loan rates have reduced the incentive for consumers to refinance credit card debt. While we do not expect to return to revenue levels from last year in the near term, we will continue to invest in this vertical in anticipation of an improving lending environment. We expect that macro changes, combined with leveraging our improving ability to align consumer demand more effectively with financial services providers will put us in a prime position to take advantage of demand as it surfaces. We are also optimistic that structural improvements we've made to our mortgage marketplaces will help us capture meaningful share and the housing market recovers. As a reminder from last quarter, we recently changed our revenue product category presentation and are now providing SMB products revenue as a separate disclosure. SMB products consisting of loans, credit cards and other financial products and services intended for small and midsized businesses, delivered Q1 revenue of $30 million, growing 21% year-over-year. SMB loans remained pressured by elevated rates and tighter underwriting, but we continue to drive growth with our diversified product offerings for small and midsized businesses in areas such as credit cards, banking and software. We believe this serves as a further proof point that we have a substantial runway of additional subcategories outside of SMB loans that can provide tailwinds over the long run. Finally, our emerging verticals formerly named our other verticals revenue product category finished Q1 with revenue of $60 million, declining 2% year-over-year. As a reminder, after the regrouping of SMB products revenue, emerging verticals consist of areas such as banking, insurance, investing and international. Banking declined 9% year-over-year as we wrap our toughest comparison period in 2023, but grew versus Q4, which we primarily attribute to our seasonal cadence. Despite the recent moderation of consumer demand, we expect to eventually reach a new normal in our banking vertical as demand remains higher than it was in a 0 interest rate environment. The decline in banking was partially offset by growth in investing due to recent stock market strength, combined with the resurgence in our insurance vertical. Despite tough comps in the prior year, insurance revenue grew 5% year-over-year in Q1. We remain optimistic that the end market will continue to improve, assuming inflation remains stable. Moving on to investments and profitability. During Q1, we earned nearly $11 million of non-GAAP operating income at a 7% margin, a 4 point increase versus the prior year, primarily driven by leverage and brand marketing as we continue to optimize our investment levels, which began during the latter 3 quarters of 2023. We also earned over $25 million of adjusted EBITDA at a 16% margin. In the first quarter, we had GAAP operating income of $3.7 million and net income of $1.1 million, which includes a $3.7 million income tax provision. Similar to what we've mentioned in previous quarters, we expect to be a cash taxpayer for the foreseeable future. Please refer to today's earnings press release for a full reconciliation of our GAAP to non-GAAP measures. Consumers continue to turn to the nurse for their money questions. We provided trust for the guidance to 29 million average monthly unique users in Q1, up 25% year-over-year. Growth was a result of strength in many areas across NerdWallet such as investing, travel, taxes and insurance. We are seeing consistently strong consumer demand for both our learn and shop content, though our learn content has been a larger portion of where consumer demand has more recently concentrated, causing higher MUU growth with some pressure on revenue per MUU. Growth in areas such as investing was bolstered by interest in the stock market as well as Bitcoin stream, and insurance saw rising premiums drive more consumers to look for the best options for them. Despite these near-term monetization pressures, more MUUs engaging with our learn content and coming to us during specific macro events, build our brand recognition and trust and compounds the value of our franchise over term. On to our financial outlook. Similar to what we discussed last quarter, we believe that we have line of sight to returning growth in Q2. We will continue providing quarterly guidance along with a mix of quantitative and qualitative commentary for full year expectations. We expect to deliver second quarter revenue in the range of $147 million to $152 million, which, at the midpoint, would increase 4% versus prior year, but decreased sequentially roughly 8%, somewhat larger than our normal seasonal cadence. To give you more color on our Q2 expectations, the primary driver of the larger than normal seasonal decline from Q1 to Q2 is that banking demand continues to moderate. In addition, we are still facing tight lending conditions across both credit cards and loans. Given the material increase we've recently experienced in insurance revenue, we expect to see a return to much higher year-over-year growth in Q2 as comps get easier. We are also seeing continued momentum in SMB products. As we look to the rest of the year, we remain confident in our ability to return to double-digit revenue growth at some point in the second half given recent recovery in SMB products and insurance. But the timing of the recovery in areas such as balance transfer cards, combined with how potential interest rate movements will impact inversely correlated demand in banking and loans remains uncertain and will ultimately influence how high those double-digit growth rates will be. Moving to profitability. We expect Q2 non-GAAP operating income in the range of negative $1.5 million to $1.5 million. We began to pull back on our brand investment during Q2 of 2023 and are not expecting to see the same level of year-over-year margin accretion during Q2 this year as previous quarters. We are still facing headwinds in monetizing portions of our organic traffic, including areas such as balance transfer credit cards. And as we start to see tailwinds in areas such as insurance and SMB, normalizing demand from financial services providers should result in more paid traffic acquisition. As we've mentioned in the past, we view paid marketing as a means to an end, and we'll continue to spend in a disciplined manner with the aim to be paid back within the quarter in which we spent. Compared to Q1, non-GAAP OI will be lower sequentially due to a larger than seasonal decline in revenue, partially offset by lower brand spend. We will also have planned increases in employee engagement costs, including a biannual employee event, which will have roughly a 2-point margin impact in the quarter. We are reiterating our full year guidance for 2024 margin expectations. Given recent economic data, which indicates continued inflationary pressures, we believe where we fall in these ranges will depend on the pace of improvement in the lending environment. Aligned with our previous full year guidance, we expect non-GAAP OI margin of approximately 6.5% to 8% of revenue and adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 18% to 19.5% of revenue. We're proud of the results we've delivered so far this year and remain optimistic about the future. Our growing consumer mind share, which solved strong traffic and brand signals give us confidence that as macroeconomic conditions recover, our ability to meet consumer needs will strengthen our long-term positioning. With that, we're ready for questions. Operator?