Priority Technology Holdings, Inc.

Priority Technology Holdings, Inc.

PRTH·NASDAQ

$5.90

-8.1%
TechnologySoftware - Infrastructure

Priority Technology Holdings, Inc. operates as a payment technology company in the United States. It operates through three segments: Small and Medium-Sized Businesses (SMB) Payments, Business-To-Business Payments, and Enterprise Payments. The company offers MX product line, including MX Connect and MX Merchant products, such as MX Insights, MX Storefront, MX Retail, MX Invoice, MX B2B and ACH.com, and others, which provides flexible and customizable set of business applications that helps to manage critical business work functions and revenue performance to resellers and merchant clients using core payment processing as our leverage point. It also offers CPX, a platform that offers accounts payable automation solutions, including virtual card, purchase card, ACH +, dynamic discounting, or check. In addition, the company provides curated managed services and a suite of integrated accounts payable automation solutions to various financial institutions and card networks; and payment-adjacent technologies to facilitate the acceptance of electronic payments from customers. Further, it offers embedded payment and banking solutions to enterprise customers to modernize legacy platforms and accelerate software partners' strategies to monetize payments; and managed services solutions that provide audience-specific programs for institutional partners and other third parties; and consulting and development solutions. The company serves SMB, and enterprises, as well as distribution partners, including retail and wholesale independent sales organizations, financial institutions, and independent software vendors. Priority Technology Holdings, Inc. was founded in 2005 and is headquartered in Alpharetta, Georgia.

At a Glance

Live Snapshot
Market Cap$485.90M
EPS0.7000
P/E Ratio8.43
Earnings Date08/06/2026

Earnings Call Transcript

PRTH • 2025 • Q3

Operator
Good day, and welcome to the Priority Technology Holdings Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Meghna Mehra, Managing Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Meghna Mehra
Good morning, and thank you for joining us. With me today are Tom Priore, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Priority Technology Holdings; and Tim O'Leary, Chief Financial Officer. Before giving our prepared remarks, I would like to remind all participants that our comments today will include forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from our forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. We provide a detailed discussion of the various risk factors in our SEC filings, and we encourage you to review these filings. Additionally, we may refer to non-GAAP measures, including, but not limited to, EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA during the call. Reconciliations of our non-GAAP performance and liquidity measures to the appropriate GAAP measures can be found in our press release and SEC filings available in the Investors section of our website. With that, I would like to turn the call over to our Chairman and CEO, Tom Priore.
Thomas Priore
Thank you, Tim. Before concluding, I want to offer perspective on what it means to grow. In aggregate, Q3 was not among our best-performing quarters purely as a measure of economic growth despite the strong performance in our Payables and Treasury Solutions segments. But make no mistake, our third quarter was one of intense internal growth that has set critical foundations for developing and increasing enterprise value. During the quarter, we activated card acquiring in Canada, added real-time payment capabilities and implemented a unique financing source to fuel our partners' growth. Additionally, we reduced our borrowing cost by 100 basis points, executed 2 accretive acquisitions without impacting net leverage and generated free cash flow to pay down $15 million of debt, all while continuing to refine our operational muscle by integrating a host of ISV and enterprise customers on our commerce platform with addressable annual transaction volume of over $10 billion to capture in the coming months and adding more incremental deposits under administration, nearly $200 million than in any other quarter in our history. While the scoreboard may not reflect it yet, we were busy grinding out wins each day that underscore how we are built with intention for the long-term and built to last. It's why since becoming publicly listed in 2018 through challenging periods, we have produced compound annual adjusted EBITDA growth of 18%. We will continue to curate Priority's commerce offering by connecting payments and treasury solutions on a single platform that centralizes all money movement at scale for our partners, allowing us to expand our portfolio of core business applications and addressable market segments to continue to deliver stable free cash flow and long-term shareholder value. As always, I want to thank all my colleagues at Priority who continue to work incredibly hard to deliver results. Your commitment and dedication to improving everything we do is clear, providing our partners and customers with a constant reminder that they made the right choice to partner with Priority. Last, we continue to appreciate the ongoing support of our investors and analysts. And for those in attendance who are new to Priority, for taking the time to participate in today's call. Operator, we'd now like to open the call for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And our first question will come from Harold Goetsch of B. Riley Securities.
Thomas Priore
Hal, just one other point, which I think is important to reference on the residual base question you have, one of the major drivers of putting together the financing facility that we have, it's nonrecourse. Is that -- I mean, really, that positions us in our space. There's no one else who has something like this that will enable us to -- instead of having that financing be at the holdco level, we now have it at the facility level that's nonrecourse, but gives us -- that's a place where we'll buy those residuals. We will make other lending facilities to our ISV and ISO partners to put gas in their tank to supercharge their marketing, to do development that will help them accelerate adoption on their products. So it's a very, very valuable facility that you will see reflected in that way going forward. And it will help us really not have that drag that Tim just alluded to.
Operator
The next question comes from Jacob Stephan of Lake Street Capital Markets.
Thomas Priore
Maybe one other point on that. Look, and I'll point to the acquisition. We have a thesis around the future of automotive commerce. And the acquisition of DMS is a -- I wouldn't call it a first step. I'll just call it an evolution of sort of what we built in preparation of really leaning into that segment. So where that kind of reflects the risk side is, say, we're looking at industries I would consider more defensive. In the auto segment, sales are slowing. They're moderating for sure. And what that typically means, and you're seeing this in the stat is people own their cars longer, even if it's a pre-owned environment, it's just the cars are around longer, which means more service. So leaning into that narrative and when sales go down, service goes up. So we really like the defensive nature of that. We're going to lean into that. We have some really good partners in addition to what we acquired with DMS. So those are sort of the type of strategies we're going to lean into because we think they make tremendous sense just from an addressable market and the nature of the cash flow, they're very stable. And they actually, when the economy maybe isn't as great, they tend to go up. So we're looking for other segments. We're examining other strategies and segments like that. Tim alluded to this as well. Our benefit costs are going up. There's a lot of controversy around affordable care and how that's all changing. Well, we're leaning into payroll and benefits, right? That's just a place to be because the money -- we are fundamentally a commerce engine designed to move money through systems of commerce. Certainly, card acquiring is one of them, but I can't underscore this enough. 2/3 of our gross profit is coming from segments outside of requiring. That's not accidental. So as we lean into these segments that just are defensive in nature, getting into the benefits segment, getting into things like auto, like that's how you create stable cash flows to really reward our investors for thinking over the long term. So I just invite everyone to examine those conditions and where we're positioned because we have very good cost basis entering these markets and a lot of upside optionality to win.
Jacob Stephan
Yes. Understood. And obviously, we see that reflected in the guidance with both profit metrics actually moving up. Let me ask this question. So there's a $15 million kind of delta on the revenue line with -- we're essentially almost halfway through Q4 here. What are really the puts and takes that kind of get you to the high end versus where we might be at $950 million for the full year?
Thomas Priore
If I can add one last point. And look, this is just -- let's be candid about it. We've outperformed certainly our segment peers for a considerable number of quarters. And that's not -- I would say we're not rewarded for it. So having a measured expectation to ensure we just -- we stay on track and on target, we think probably is a more thoughtful approach. So as we start to see this enterprise pipeline convert, I'll call it enterprise customer pipeline convert, I think we'll feel a lot better about just how we model that throughput.
Operator
The next question comes from Bryan Bergin of TD Cowen.
Thomas Priore
And Bryan, I apologize, I'm actually -- I'm remote, so I'm on my mobile and you broke up a little bit on your question. Would you mind repeating it?
Bryan Bergin
Yes. Just with all the changes going on with Fiserv and Clover, repricing and things like that, is there any downstream impact to the activity that you may be seeing?
Thomas Priore
We haven't seen changes in trend on POS, specific to Clover. We're one of their larger resellers, you certainly reflect that. There's -- we actually -- because of our positioning, we've been able to really have a constructive relationship on material costs. So making some bulk purchases has been helpful. So I don't know that, that will necessarily continue with Fiserv based on some of the conversations that we've had and just because there -- the impact of tariffs are actually starting to flow through. With that said, our other segment of POS, MX POS, we've [Technical Difficulty] within in the app. But again, it's starting from a small base. So that's really a '26 directive for us.
Operator
The next question comes from Vasu Govil of KBW.
Thomas Priore
If I may just remark on that, what will influence that as we guide through the year is enterprise clients, they operate a little bit differently in that you'll start to absorb their portfolio, particularly in the ISV space, right? You'll start to absorb their portfolio as they extend the solutions throughout their client base. So to the extent those are -- those accelerate, then things pick up. So that's really what we're balancing out. And just prudence seems to be the best path. And we have a high degree of confidence in what has been reflected. Yes. And thank you, by the way, for joining us. It's great to have you.
Operator
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Tom Priore for any closing remarks.
Thomas Priore
All right. Well, I want to thank everyone once again for all of your focus on priority and for really helping us deliver our value story to investors. And for those investors on the call, thank you for your ongoing support. We will get back to work.
Transcript from November 6, 2025

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