Q4 2022 Redfin Corp Earnings Call
Yes.
Okay.
[music].
Greetings and welcome to the Redfin Corporation fourth quarter 2022 earnings Conference call.
At this time all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation.
If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference. Please press star zero on your telephone keypad.
Please note that this conference is being recorded I will now turn the conference over to our host Meg Nunnally head of Investor Relations. Thank you you may begin.
Good afternoon, and welcome to Redfin financial results conference call for the fourth quarter and full year ended December 31, 2022, I'm Meg Nonetheless, redfin head of Investor Relations joining me on the call today is Glenn Kelman, our CEO and Chris Nielsen our CFO .
Before we start that some of our statements on today's call are forward looking we believe our assumptions and expectations related to these forward looking statements are reasonable, but our actual results may turn out to be materially different.
Please read and consider the risk factors in our SEC filings together, where the content of today's call.
Any forward looking statements are based on our assumptions today and we don't undertake to update these statements in light of new information or future events.
On this call we will present non-GAAP measures when discussing our financial results. We encourage you to review today's earnings release, which is available on our website at investors that redfin dot com for more information related to our non-GAAP measures, including the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure and related reconciliation welcomed.
All comparisons made in the course of this call are against the same period in the prior year unless otherwise stated.
Lastly, we will be providing a copy of our prepared remarks on our website by the conclusion of today's call and a full transcript and audio replay will also be available soon after the call.
With that I'll turn the turn the call over to Glenn.
Thanks, Meg and hi, everyone.
<unk> generated $480 million of fourth quarter revenue exceeding our projected range of $430 million to $459 million in revenue, mostly on the strength of redfin now sales.
Our net loss of $62 million includes a $57 million gain from repurchasing added discount $143 million of debt due in 2025.
The adjusted EBITDA loss of $63 million was near the favorable end of our 58 million to $71 million guidance.
Earnings, mostly exceeded expectations, but comparing the fourth quarters of 'twenty, one and 2020 to redfin lost two basis points of market share in part due to layoffs and the loss of redfin now driven demand.
As we compete better for online real estate traffic and improved sales execution, we expect share gains to accelerate in the second half, especially when we're no longer comparing our sales to a period of aggressive spending on agent hiring and home purchases.
It will be a major achievement to take share in a year. When we're also improving annual profits by nearly $200 million driven by higher gross margins lower spending and the closure of money losing businesses.
We couldnt be more excited about the year ahead two months into 2023, we're still on course to earn out adjusted EBITDA profit for the full year and on schedule to sell our last redfin now home in the second quarter.
So the property segment that includes redfin now the gross profit losses in the fourth quarter were the favorable end of our range.
Full year gross profit losses for this segment were $23 million in the 2023 gross profit losses should be a few million dollars more excuse me should be a few million dollars or less.
Only 19 homes originally purchased by Redfin now for $12 $2 million, neither been sold nor accepted an offer to be sold.
The closure of Redfin now as part of a larger shift to higher margin less cyclical revenues. The percentage of homebuyers served by our partner agents instead of our employees will increase from 37% in 2022 to a projected 42% in 2023.
We decided to tilt more demand partners after accounting for costs that aren't directly tied to a sale, but still grow with the number of agents, we employ like the cost of human resources support and training for agents.
This decision will not only increase 2023 profits, but also limit lay offs and losses in future downturns.
Real estate services will drive more digital revenues as will rent our online marketplace with promoting rental homes. Once a liability rent has accelerated its growth in each of the last four months and expects to earn an adjusted EBITDA profit in the fourth quarter of 2023.
Beyond rent, we launched two other digital businesses in the second quarter of 2022, our own mortgage marketplace and adds on redfin dot com, both of which are now growing faster than any other redfin business.
The mortgage marketplace offers our visitors a choice of lenders beyond the lender we acquired in April 2022, the equity home loans.
The equity has a retail sales force to work with homebuyers already engaged with an agent, but doesn't have the call center to handle online inquiries at all hours of the day and night.
Over the next two years, we expect to launch additional digital businesses with the goal of earning more money from an online visits than any other operator of a major real estate site.
Those are the structural changes, we're making to improve <unk> margins, even at a onetime cost store growth.
More of every dollar of revenue should fall to the bottom line, but now we need more dollars to this is why I will spend the rest of this call on growth.
The primary way, we've grown is by reaching more people through our sites and mobile applications comparing the fourth quarters of 2021 and 2022, the average monthly visitors to redfin website and mobile applications declined by 2%.
But over that same period searches on Google for homes for sale declined 33%.
The difference between these two numbers indicate why we likely increased redfin share of online real estate traffic.
Comscore, which lets us compare ourselves to other sites reported a 6% fourth quarter decline for redfin compared to 22% for realtor dot com and 2% for Zillow occur.
According to Comscore, we started keeping pace with Zillow in December despite a second half budget for TVN was the quarter the size of the sellers too.
To improve our long term competitive position, we know we have to draw visitors away from all our major rival's not just one and we believe that we can.
For Google searches on our home address in our 10 longest established markets Redfin is now most likely to appear as the first result across the U S of these searches were now likely to appear first more than realtor dot com, which has nearly double our traffic and.
And we can still grow by expanding the parts of the U S. Our competitors already cover and by improving the machine learning software, we used to recommend listings.
Draw in more visitors to redfin is the first step in our growth, but we also want a higher proportion of those visitors to hire our agent <unk>.
Because we look like other real estate sites consumer.
Consumers often assume we're a marketplace for promoting the agents who paid us the highest speed.
In fact, the whole reason, we employed our own agents has been to deliver faster service at a lower fee from top producers almost no. One knows that in 2020 to redfin agents had the highest average sales volume with any major brokerage, beating our closest competitor by almost 20%.
Our agents experience is one reason why our service is better.
Neither side is telling that story a process that started yesterday, when we launched a redesign redfin dot coms promoter agents to luxury customers. We know route those customers to the redfin agents with the most luxury experience.
The week before we launched an AD campaign that explains why for seven year straight we sold homes for more money than traditional agents because of our top producers, but also due to the extra exposure each listing guests on redfin dot com.
In 2023, we expect to gain share not just due to more traffic and more customers from that traffic, but also by getting more sales from each customer through mortgage entitled sales and overtime repeat and referral transactions.
Our goal is to develop the brokerage into a second engine of <unk> growth above and beyond our online presence.
We have more room to grow as the brokerage that has a website.
Nearly 20 years since online real estate portals first launch.
About 95% of homebuyers search for listings online.
Just based on the sales claimed by zone, one redfin it seems likely that only about 5% of home sales originate with people asking the agents on major real estate sites for service.
These sites can always squeeze a bit more revenue from traffic gains or buy from traffic gain not gains or by claiming a higher share of the commission from each referred sale.
But if redfin gives customers a reason to choose our own agents building a brand for better service and value that 5% of sales that start online can one day become 50%.
Employing our own agents can increase consumer affinity for our service, but can also increase close rates.
Our data indicates that the customers who asked us for service in the third quarter were less likely to go through with the purchase whether with redfin or with a competing broker.
But of the redfin customers when we met in the third quarter of 2022, who ended up buying a home a projected 35%, while it's stuck with a redfin agent for the purchase compared to 26% in the third quarter of 2021.
This tells us that even though the market is down our sales execution is up.
Beyond better service for customers, who come to us via Redfin Dot com. Our agents are also generating their own sale.
34% of fourth quarter sales came from repeat and referral customers compared to 32% a year earlier.
Even here a redfin agent has a massive advantage over traditional agents, having about a 100 to 200 customers via redfin dot com each year with each customers contact information in online search activity tracked in our database.
Whereas many traditional agents are canvassing every Tom <expletive> and Sally for a sale or agents customer network typically starts with the hundreds of buyers and sellers, whom those agents met over the years through redfin.
More than ever the agents redfin employees today are capable of driving loyalty sales. One reason for our improved sales execution is an improvement in the quality of our sales force, which ended 2020% to 30% smaller than it was nine months earlier.
Back in March 37% of our agents had less than one year of redfin tenure, and only 29% had more than three years.
Today, only 13% have less than a year of tenure, whereas 42% have three or more years under their belt.
That sales team now includes not just agents, but also loan officers. After all one rationale for serving the customer ourselves as more follow on mortgage entitled sales with all of our services working together to make our customers move easier and less expensive.
As in the third quarter, 17% of our brokerage was fourth quarter home buying customers borrowed money from back with homeland. The pre acquisition high was 8%.
After our January company kickoff got each region's agents and lenders in the same room for the first time that number surged to a projected 21% for this February .
From the fourth quarters of 2021% to 2022, the percentage of eligible brokerage customers, who used our title service titled forward also increased from 12% to 44% lending entitled margins improved in the fourth quarter, a trend likely to continue through 2023.
As the lending industry completes its adjustment to lower volume price competition may ease.
And as the housing market recovers, our brokerage lending entitled businesses will be well positioned for growth.
Our rent business by contrast has already benefited from rising apartment vacancies in the second half of 2022 and its growing revenue now.
This is a dazzling turnaround for our business acquired out of bankruptcy in April 2021, whose new CEO didn't start until August of that year.
Net bookings a measure of the annualized revenue rent added through sales to new customers left the annualized revenue loss from departing customers nearly doubled quarter to quarter from $5 million in the third quarter to $10 million in the fourth quarter in every quarter of 2021 net bookings had been negative 4 million to $5 million.
And we're barely positive in the first half of 2022.
Rents fourth quarter revenue grew year over year for the first time since 2017 by 5%.
Compared to the third quarter of 2022 fourth quarter revenue grew 6%.
We expect we.
We expect rents revenue gains to accelerate on the strength of new products or January 2022 price increase.
And excuse me of January 2023 price increase and improved sales productivity, which has more than tripled since the summer of 2021 and.
In support of the price increase redfin Dot coms integration of rents listings has generated more demand for rents property management customers in June redfin Dot com added 12% of rental visits above and beyond the visits to rent site in the fourth quarter. This contribution grew to 18%.
Brent also launched a $3 million fourth quarter mass media campaign offsetting some of the money we save from the departure of rent employee.
We felt careful about investing in a second brand, but the appeal of a self explanatory four letter domain was so powerful that we had to give it a shot we will carefully evaluate the return on this advertising investment and run the business to generate adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter under a variety of market conditions. The.
The success, we've had so far is attribute to the leadership of rents CEO , John Ziegler and his whole team.
Now before turning the call over to Chris, let's discuss the housing market.
On March 15, 2022, we were one of the first to state publicly that the market was cresting in that quote it was crazy for demand to be so strong in the midst of war market volatility and inflation.
By May the market began its first sustained decline since the great financial crisis.
10 months later on January 25th of this year, we said that housing in January had been stronger than anyone could have hoped and that the market will quote fragile was quote recovery.
We caution that the recovery could be cut short by a rate hike.
By the end of that week, the National Association of Realtors reported that is seasonally adjusted index. The pending home sales had improved two 5% in December our results surprising to many after six straight months of declines.
But in February the market got another job.
First from last weeks record low unemployment data and then from this week's report a persistent inflation and strong retail sales.
Mortgage rates had fallen from seven 3% in November to 6% in early February then climbed about six 7% yesterday on the news.
Unsurprisingly read since February demand is still better than it was in November even after accounting for the season, but worse than it was in January .
We still believe that our 2023 budgeting assumption of $4 3 million existing U S. Home sales is reasonable rate volatility and buyers jitteriness about rates just makes the market unusually hard to predict where running red 10 out of the cash Register in 2023, so of existing home sales seem likely to fall below $4 3 million.
We'll reduce our spending.
Regardless of what happens to rates in 2023 and beyond inventory will likely stay low.
What's most remarkable about this housing downturn is that the number of homes for sale hasn't meaningfully increased from the calamitous loads of the pandemic sure. The number of homes on the market at the end of January 2023 was up 40% since January 2022.
But it was still at roughly half the pre pandemic level. It was from 2016 to 2019 during a strong seller's market.
Our agents report that would be sellers with 30 year mortgages at a rate below 3% are choosing to keep their homes instead of selling either live in or to rent out.
This is why for May 2020 to May 2022, pulp prices increased 40%, but have fallen only 3%.
The millennial generation that mostly came of home buying age just after home prices and mortgage rates shot up still faces an affordability crisis with no real relief in sight.
Because of low inventory, we continue to believe that sales volume will be more volatile than home prices.
Regardless of market conditions, Redfin will generate adjusted EBITDA in 2023, and net income in 2024.
Once we recover from restructuring our business to be more profitable or share gains will resume and accelerate.
And if we can make money in a housing downturn, we'll be in a good position to make a lot of money when the market recovers now, let's hear from Chris on our financial performance and guidance.
Thanks, Glenn 2022 was a challenging year, but we've taken the right actions to position <unk> for long term profitable growth.
We're entering 2023 with appropriately conservative plans and the knowledge that recovery may be touch and go and it's comforting to see the start of the year tracking in line to slightly better than our expectations.
Since announcing our decision to wind down Redfin now last November .
Moved quickly to reduce inventories, we applied the influx of cash to fully pay down the credit facility to support at home purchases and extinguished more than $140 million of convertible notes.
We've also taken action to reduce costs and expand margins, including the elimination of our buy side refund in December .
Which should set the business up for long term margin expansion as we move through the year.
Fourth quarter revenue was $480 million and decreased 25% from a year ago.
Allstate services revenue, which includes our brokerage and partner business generated $146 million in revenue down 35% year over year.
Brokerage revenue or revenue from home sales closed by our own agents decreased 34% on a 34% decrease in brokerage transactions.
Revenue from our partners decreased 45% on a 40% decrease in transactions and mix shift to lower value houses.
Real estate services revenue per transaction increased 1% year over year.
The property segment, which consists primarily of homes sold through redfin now generated $261 million in revenue down 31% year over year.
Revenue for this segment will be de Minimis once the wind down is complete.
Strong fourth quarter revenue for this segment is indicative of our quick action, we've taken to reduce inventory.
Our rentals business generated $41 million in revenue up 5% from a year ago.
As Glenn highlighted this is the first quarter of year over year revenue growth for the business since 2017.
Our mortgage segment generated $28 million in revenue compared to $4 million in revenue in the prior year. The decrease was due to the acquisition.
Increase sorry, it was due to the acquisition of Bay equities, which occurred last April . This result was slightly below our guidance range of $29 million to $32 million with lower than expected volume over the last few weeks of the year impacting locked loans.
Finally, our other segment, which includes title and other services contributed revenue of $6 million, an increase of 89% or $3 million year over year.
The increase primarily attributable to a $2 million increase from our title business and a $1 million increase from display AD revenue.
As Glenn mentioned growing high margin digital revenues, an important priority and we're just getting started.
Total gross profit was $37 million down 65% year over year with total gross margin of seven 8%.
Total operating expenses were $156 million up $23 million year over year restructuring expenses contributed $22 million in day equity, which we acquired in April contributed $9 million. Excluding these increases operating expenses decreased by $8 million year over year.
Technology and development expenses increased by $3 million as compared with the same period in 2021.
The increase was primarily attributable to a $2 million increase in online services, removing more of our technology infrastructure to cloud services.
Marketing expenses increased by $2 million as compared with the same period in 2021.
The increase was primarily attributable to a $1 million increase from bay equity and higher marketing expenses for our rentals business.
General and administrative expenses decreased by $4 million as compared to the same period in 2021.
Pay equity added $8 million to these costs, excluding the equity general and administrative expenses declined by $12 million driven by $7 million decrease.
And personnel costs.
Turning to segment level profitability real estate services gross margin was 18.0% down 1550 basis points year over year. This was driven by a 1170 basis point increase in personnel costs and transaction bonuses.
Total net loss for real estate services was $28 million down from a net income of $19 million in the prior year. The decrease was primarily attributable to lower revenue and gross margins as the housing market slowed partially offset by a $3 million year over year decrease in operating expenses.
Properties gross margin was negative 7.0% down from a positive one 1% in the prior year.
Margin compression was driven by an 820 basis point increase in home purchase costs and related capitalized improvements as we sold through homes purchased earlier in the year.
Gross profit losses were $18 million towards the better end of our 21 million to $17 million last guidance range.
Total net loss for properties was $26 million.
Rental gross margin was 76, 4% down 620 basis points year over year margin compression was driven by a 460 basis point increase in marketing as well as product mix shifts.
Total net loss for rentals was $22 million down from a net loss of $14 million in the prior year.
The increased loss was primarily attributable to lower gross margins and higher marketing operating expense, including the mass media campaign Glen mentioned earlier.
Mortgage gross margin was negative eight 9% down from a positive 797% in the third quarter.
Margin compression was driven by pricing and competition across the mortgage industry as lenders grappled with rising interest rates and excess capacity.
Total net loss for mortgage was $12 3 million.
Other segment gross margin was seven 4% an improvement from the negative 17.
7% one year ago.
Total net loss was $1 million compared to a net loss of $2 $5 million in the prior year.
Net loss was $62 million compared to a loss of $27 million in the prior year.
While the year over year decrease in operational losses was wider the drop in net income was comparatively smaller due to a $57 million gain on extinguishment of notes as well as $4 $5 million higher interest income that benefited the quarter.
Diluted loss per share attributable to common stock was 57 compared with diluted loss per share attributable to common stock of <unk> 27 per share one year ago.
Now turning to our financial expectations for the full year in the first quarter of 2023.
We're not providing formal guidance for 2023, but as Glenn and I have both discussed on prior calls and reaffirmed today, we're running the business to generate positive adjusted EBITDA for the fiscal year of 2023, we've.
We've included a slide on our larger drivers behind this target in our earnings release presentation compared to 2022, we've already eliminated a refund of homebuyers.
This will add $1000 to the revenue and gross profit of each brokerage transaction.
We will get another 500 basis points of gross margin improvement from the staffing changes that we made in 2022.
Closing redfin, now say its $20 million and gross profit losses.
Even with adding the equity for a full year. The actions we've already taken will lower full year operating expenses by $25 million that work is all done and we expect more than $40 million and adjusted EBITDA improvements from momentum in our rentals and mortgage businesses.
Turning to our expectations for the first quarter of 2023, we expect consolidated revenue between $307 million from $324 million, representing a year over year decline between 49% and 46%.
We expect our real estate services segment to account for 122 million to $130 million of that revenue, representing a year over year decline between 31% and 27%.
Property revenue is expected to be between $108 million from $113 million as we sell through most of the remaining inventory.
Rentals revenue is expected to be between $41 million from $42 million, representing a year over year increase between 9% and 12%.
Mortgage revenue is expected to be between $29 million from $32 million.
Turning to segment gross profit.
We expect real estate services gross margins to be flat to slightly down year over year.
<unk> real estate services gross margins in the first quarter included about 100 basis points from in person company kickoff event that we did not have in the prior year due to Covid and will not repeat in 2020 for that event also added about $8 million to our first quarter G&A expenses.
Turning to properties, we expect gross profit to be slightly negative to near breakeven for the first quarter.
For mortgage we expect first quarter gross margins to return to positive territory.
Total net loss is expected to be between $116 million and $105 million. This net loss assumption includes a gain on extinguishment of its notes of $7 million.
The repurchase of $19 million in convertible notes already completed my first quarter.
These gains are excluded from adjusted EBITDA guidance.
Adjusted EBITDA loss is expected to be between $84 million from $73 million.
As a reminder, the first quarter of the year is typically our lowest volume quarter and even accounting for these losses. We still believe we are on track to generate positive adjusted EBITDA for the full year 2023.
On a consolidated basis. This guidance includes approximately $45 million in total company marketing expense $20 million in stock based compensation $17 million in depreciation and amortization and flat net interest expense associated with our convertible senior notes in the other credit obligations.
In addition, we expect to pay a quarterly dividend of 30640 shares of common stock to our preferred stockholders.
This guidance assumes among other things that no additional business acquisitions convertible note for stock repurchases investments restructurings or legal settlements are concluded and that there are no further revisions to stock based compensation estimates.
And now let's take your questions.
Thank you and.
And ladies and gentlemen at this time, we will conduct a question and answer session.
You would like to ask a question. Please press star one on your telephone keypad, a confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue.
You May press Star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue for participants using speaker equipment and may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys.
Our first question comes from <unk>.
Brian Kevin <unk> with Zelman and associates. Please state your question.
Hey, Thank you very much.
Chris I think you might have hit on this a bit within within the guidance commentary.
But I just wanted to touch base on it the brokerage revenue per transaction.
And kind of squaring that with the gross margin. So I guess as we think about the moving pieces to the revenue per transaction I guess its home prices mix, but then on the other side you have the.
The buy side refund coming out, which I guess all else equal would benefit that so can you maybe just give a little more detail on.
How those various factors are flowing into the revenue per transaction.
As we look forward, maybe how you would expect that to trend into 2023.
Sure. So that note that we provided here is that we're expecting about $1000 revenue per brokerage transaction increase as compared with 2022 that takes into account. The factors that you just mentioned, where we will be and have eliminated the homebuyer refi.
It also takes into account the relative mix of homebuyer and home solar transactions.
Plus various other market mixed things in creating the geographies across the U S. So.
That's a round figure obviously, but that's the right perspective on how to think about that combination of things as it relates to revenue per brokerage transactions.
Okay, perfect, that's very helpful and Glenn.
I guess just from a data and kind of market trends perspective, obviously, you always have have really good insights and I guess, if we think about the west Coast, California, Seattle, some of the markets where market share wise.
Our guys are fairly large.
Any any updates.
Understand the general commentary you provided on January and February , but I guess specific to the West coast anything you would call out about what youre seeing within those markets and I ask because I assume.
Data wise for the industry.
Excuse me.
Would certainly seem that the declines in transaction activity was much.
Deeper and especially in the back half of 'twenty, two which.
Given your footprint I think there's probably an incremental headwind that you guys faced so yeah any.
Any thoughts you can share on kind of current thinking within the west coast markets and.
Would you expect some of the industry headwind from the mix to eventually potentially become a tailwind as those markets start to improve.
Well, it's a tale of two markets. So Seattle is actually doing significantly better.
Related to the fact that Seattle doesn't have an income tax. So people are still migrating to Washington State, California continues to be a place where people are leaving and so we are facilitating their moves to other states. It seems true Oregon.
Our geographic concentration it's been an issue that we've worked on both through the two layoffs that we had last year and on a go forward basis. When we do hire someone that's going to be in states like Texas, Georgia and Florida.
Got it very helpful. Thank you.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Tom White with D. A Davidson. Please state your question.
Oh, great. Thanks for taking my question, Glenn your commentary about sort of leaning more into your.
Partner network of Brokerages would you would you characterize that as sort of like a temporary shift as you guys kind of trend button down the hatches and.
Move towards profitability or is it more of a kind of permanent change.
And you're thinking and if it is temporary just curious whether you guys are kind of taking any added steps to make sure that these partners are.
Providing the service levels that you want or not I don't know, maybe just anything you could do to get them.
Offer redfin like like pricing and how you think about the.
The trade off between this partner experience for the customers and kind of the redfin brand.
Great question. So it is a durable but modest shifts.
So going through this near death experience of trading at three or $4 a share made us examine every cost associated with employee agents and comparing that to the gross profits we get from partner agents and we do think that over time.
Modestly shifting demand to partner agents will lead to more gross profit and overall profit.
But having said that Brian Sue deck is a new executive at redfin. He's been at the company a long time previously in business development. He is running our partner network and we are different than most of the lead generation sites. We don't sell leads to real estate agents and are indifferent financially to the outcome we do.
Pinned on those agents to close sales so.
Calling the herd, making sure the partner agents to deliver fantastic service is not only important to the mission of the company, but it's very financially important to us one headwind on taking share in 2023 is just that partners have lower close rates that our own employees and that is so significant that it's hard sometimes for us to give it.
Customer to a partner, even though the partner will generate more gross profit so.
Even though we are responding to that financial reality really it's a customer service challenge to make sure. The partner is delivering service that we're proud of.
So we're going to be spending more demand to the best partners.
Asking the worst partners to leave our site.
And also building technology to make the handoff between the customer and the partner more seamless it'll never be as good as it is with our employees because the employees are augmented by a network of contractors to offer on demand service 24, 7%, but it can get better with technology and through better curation of the agents.
Oh, great. Thanks, that's helpful. A quick follow up is there a way for you guys to participate in ancillary kind of the revenue streams on this partner transactions I mean can you guys attach some sort of condition to the to the lead.
Partner agent that they've got a promote maybe your mortgage title product.
But we have to be careful about that because we don't want to break the law, but we can certainly encourage our partners to recommend bay equity because it offers the best service at an incredible rate. We can also take some of the real estate agents, who have been served by bay equity traditional agents at Remax Keller Williams or some other brokerage and bring them in.
Our partner programs, so that their partners not only with our mortgage business, but with our website and that will naturally drive attach rate, we certainly seen that.
Other websites don't employ agents are really trying to drive attach rate even when those agents.
Don't work for them.
We're obviously limited by the margin we want to make on the mortgage.
But we think we can do better there our first priority is going to be doing really well with the employees, but our second is driving it through the partners, it's a great strategic fronts.
Great. Thanks, very much very helpful.
Our next question comes from Yigal <unk> with Citigroup. Please state your question.
Hey, good afternoon guys.
I want to expand on that last point for a little bit more because it feels like a pretty big shift in in your view and philosophy.
And.
Glenn I think in the past what you've said is that even if it's at a lower gross margin percentage.
Do it yourself within your brokerage the overall gross profit dollars are are better and ironed. It sounds like you are.
At least changing your view on that so maybe if you could kind of dug into.
At $3 when your stocks for $3 when you dug into all this what what changed in your view here and what did you cover.
Cover that made you kind of pushing this direction a little bit more.
Well first of all I don't want to be defensive at all the call, but we haven't shifted sorry, there's an echo on the phone, but we haven't shifted our view that we're trying to maximize gross profit dollars. If we were trying to maximize gross margin. We would be just a pure website, but we're running the business to generate as many dollars of profit as we can.
Possibly can.
And what changed was just the accounting of every possible expense so.
Last year, we just asked ourselves is it more expensive to employ agents than we realize are there costs that even though theyre not cost of revenue are still cost of employing agents and when we added this cost it modestly shifted the balance between partners and employees, sometimes we put our thumb on the scale in <unk>.
The employees because when we build a customer relationship with someone we get follow on sales through repeat and referral transactions, but also higher mortgage entitled attach rates.
And at this point, because we are running for the Roes as in 2023 to make sure we generate adjusted EBITDA profit. We just had to have the discipline to say.
The transaction that will generate the most gross profit whether it's through the partner or the employee that will rule the day and so it's only a five point shift we still believe in this hybrid model. If we tried to serve everybody from employees, we'd go crazy hiring up and laying people off we could never keep people busy.
Through the winter and we could never serve customers well through the summer and Conversely, if we referred all the demand on our website too.
Partners, we could never build a brand for service and so the only way we could grow was really by driving more online traffic and conversion and there's just a limit to that too. So we believe in the combo more than ever but.
But we're going to adjust the balance between these two businesses every time, we see close rates go up with partners. So we see costs go up with employees or vice versa.
Got it yeah, and it certainly wasn't trying to imply that you werent trying to maximize gross profit dollars.
Understood that but.
It feels like some of the dynamics.
Yes.
You explained here so and then so my follow up question is on <unk>.
This.
The digital did.
Hi, I'm a high margin digital revenue.
Steel is pretty new also and maybe you could just expand on.
I don't know how much it's contributing what the long term opportunities are where else you can go with it.
Whatever else you could share understanding that it's early days.
<unk>.
Sure well I just think our website has been under monetized and the contribution may seem small when you look at the revenue, especially compared to a near zero margin business or a negative margin business like our properties business, but the contribution direct profit that has high octane fuel for our business.
<unk>.
Just because it's such an insane margin so display ads and the mortgage marketplace for what we launched in the second quarter.
That's under Great leadership at Redfin, but we also believe that there's all sorts of other constituents, who want access to consumers. So for example, the builders want to create a better consumer experience on redfin Dot com right now we show all the homes that are currently for sale, but we don't show homes that haven't been finished.
We don't show floor plans and other things that the builders want to market to those consumers. So given the builders and opportunity to reach that audience is something that will make money for us, but it will also improve the consumer experience and there's just so much money in motion when people move in such a small fraction of people who decide to use redfin agents that we really think.
It's a big opportunity.
So it'll take us time to build that but in some ways redfin has been getting smaller and it may feel like we are diminished by that but in some ways, we're getting bigger and where we are getting smaller and really capital insensitive low margin businesses, and where we're getting bigger isn't really high margin businesses that can monetize in the already very large audience.
Chris do you have anything you want to add to that.
Just from a financial reporting standpoint, youll see that reflected in our other segment that primarily includes these kinds of businesses plus our title business.
We're talking about a few million dollars here for the fourth quarter, but.
As we both indicated super encouraged with what we've seen so far here.
Yeah.
Alright, really interesting really helpful. Thanks, guys.
Thank you. Our next question comes from John Campbell with Stephens. Please state your question.
Hey, guys. Good afternoon, thanks for taking my questions on.
The EBITA inflection goal for this year I. Appreciate you guys, providing that bridge in the Investor deck. That's Super helpful. Thanks for the question I had kind of queued up for you guys who'd be beat me to the punch, but it seems like a bulk of those kind of profit drivers you've outlined are basically a given it sounds like you've already action most of that obviously.
Could you maybe talk to what's you are foreseeing as the variable or kind of macro influenced components I'm thinking the the $40 million of business momentum and then maybe to an extent 500 bps of real estate gross margin expansion.
Sure so.
Youre right in most of these programs most of these changes are already underway.
Just using the example, the 500 basis point improvement in real estate services gross margin. That's because we believe we have stopped the business to be consistent with the kind of demand that we'll see during the course of the year, if we see more demand than that or less and that demand and that we may need to adjust our staffing levels, but we believe that we're set up to be.
A good match with the kinds of volumes that we're going to expect through the course of the year. It's really the same thing on the additional adjusted EBITDA.
From the rentals business in the mortgage business, but I think just the one extra comment that I'd provide here.
Is that.
While many of these actions have already been taken and we also will continue to pay attention to the demand side of things. If it turns out that demand is different from what we had expected.
We know that we can make changes elsewhere in the business to get back to that call.
Okay. That's helpful.
And then on the loyalty or the repeat sales I feel like that's a metric that often gets overlooked.
The average home owner duration I think has grown to 13 years and then you guys. Obviously you wind back the clock that far you guys were doing a fraction of the transactions back then versus what Youre doing now so to get I think Glenn you said, the 38% mix of transactions being royalty cells I've got to think that the vast majority of past customers are using you guys again.
And so I mean, the back of a napkin math tells me that's a pretty big deals am I thinking about that right.
Well first of all it's 34, not 38, but we'll aspire to 38 John .
And.
Some of this is repeat business, where we are capturing a really high percentage for a long time, we made the claim I don't think we comfort anymore. Then if you look at.
I'll likely customers to stick with our brokerage we were number one and some of that is because of the brokerage just stands for something it's not just that we happen to have the same agent there with a personal relationship it's a 1% fee and on demand service and great technology through the whole transaction.
But some of this is just referral at some level. The goal of the website is the light the log but not to be the lock itself. We wanted to put map based search online. So that we could tell the world Theres, a better way to buy and sell houses, but if we only grow in line with traffic that means the rest of the world doesn't believe.
Read that and if you look at where Zillow redfin and infer where realtor is you are at about 5% of all sales originating from <unk>.
<unk> and yet 95% of people are using those websites. So clearly we've done well to put listings online, but technology hasn't made the rest of the experience.
Obviously better for consumers and that's where we want a breakthrough. So that's why long term, we want to see half of our sales come from repeat and referral sales.
So that our growth is untethered from the website are compounded by the websites growth.
That's a great answer I appreciate that thanks, so much.
Thanks, John .
By the way has John asked questions before.
I Love.
I Love the housing stuff, John it's really good.
I appreciate it.
<unk>.
Thank you and our next question comes from Michael <unk> with Goldman Sachs. Please state your question Hey.
Hey, good afternoon, and thank you very much for the question. My first one is just on the.
The trajectory of Opex for the rest of the year.
And also if you could just give a little bit more color around your marketing plans.
A little bit surprised to see the $45 million outlook, because I thought.
In the year ago period, there was some.
Timing as it relates to unrelated to like mass marketing campaigns that made <unk> kind of unusually high but would just love to hear a little bit more about those plans for this year. Thank you.
Sure. So on the operating expense front, maybe just let me start with marketing there. We do expect to continue to run our mass media campaign that will go mostly in the first quarter and second quarters of the year and so there'll be extra weight on operating expenses in the first half related to that we've just.
But those campaigns are much more successful as we're speaking with customers leading into the main part of the home buying and selling season than they are in the second half of the year and so that's why we've put the weight in that direction.
I also mentioned in terms of our G&A expenses, we had a little bit of extra G&A expense in the first quarter of this year about $8 million associated with our in person company kick off of that but that's an example of something that will fall off as the year goes on but it's probably those two dynamics that are most important in terms of the.
Trajectory of operating expenses during the course of the year that once we get into the second half things should be pretty much level quarter to quarter.
Because.
We will have gotten past those big marketing expenses and some of the unusual first quarter. Thanks.
Excellent. Thank you speak Michael.
Yes leak to the higher level thinking around our allocation of capital, we sucked it up and cut costs on software for our real estate agents because that work is principally done, but the goose that lays the golden egg.
Investing in the listing search capability to drive more traffic and then in media to build our brand. That's the one place where we really suffered because we want to keep the top line moving.
And so we definitely have heard that other companies are leaning in and spending more.
We're trying to have the best of both worlds, where we spend more on the areas that will really drive growth and we spend less everywhere else.
Excellent. Thank you very much Glenn and Chris I appreciate the thoughts.
Thank you Michael.
Thank you and a reminder to the audience to ask a question press Star one on your phone press star two on your phone to remove yourself from the queue.
Our next question comes from Jay Mccanless with Wedbush. Please state your question.
Hey, good afternoon, thanks for taking my questions.
The first one I had.
And what you are talking about with building out the call center for the mortgage operation. That's typically higher cost ongoing cost type of operation I guess could you talk about the development of that with the goal also of being EBITDA positive by year end.
Sure well I think I misspoke because in the call.
Prepared remarks, I was trying to say that.
We don't have a call center and instead, we're going to refer people who come straight from our website typically looking to refinance alone to a lender that does have a call center, so rather than building out our own call Center for Bay equity home loans, we're going to build a digital mortgage marketplace. In fact, we've already built that too.
You refer.
Consumers to other lenders I was just explaining the rationale there are some customers who want to serve directly most of the flows mostly those are people working with our real estate agents, who are well qualified who want a local lender employed by pay equity and then there's these other folks on our website, who at one in the morning say I want it.
And it's better to send them to a lender like rocket.
Okay, good, but we're not going to build a call center in 2023 for Linda.
Okay.
Good thank you for clarifying that.
Sure.
The second question I had.
The EBITDA loss that you guys are projecting was about double what what I think consensus and we were looking for.
Is that going to be more gross margin or cost of goods sold waited this quarter because of selling through the remainder of the homes in properties or just a little heavier opex. What you were talking about earlier with the in person event and the higher marketing spend how should we balance that out.
Yes.
Do you expect to have some gross profit losses associated with selling through the remaining inventory, but I think mostly what you're seeing in the information. We were trying to provide was just to give you a little bit of the shape of the year in terms of operating expenses and where we expect to see gross margin improvement during the course of the year and so I think.
That's the best way to think through it maybe.
Maybe just one other comment which is from.
From our standpoint this is pretty typical in terms of the way the year plays out which is we incur the highest expenses as we're advertising to bring customers into the market for the year and have the lowest closes in the first quarter and then that pays off as we get into the heart of the buying and selling season.
And just one other if I could sneak it in maybe any quantification of business trends.
You said it was down in February versus January .
Pontification or additional color you could give on what type of declines you're seeing.
Yeah.
Well.
I think it's fair to say that we were down 30 plus percent year on year in November .
In terms of people asking to tour homes coming forward to write offers.
And then in January that year over year drop no.
Crowed to high teens low <unk>.
And in February it's solidly in the twenties.
So it's not calamitous.
And actually if you look at booked offers.
There you are.
Just focusing on how many people wrote an offer and God is accepted that year over year drop has just narrowed steadily from November to now.
But that's usually a byproduct of rate increases so the people who made an offer in the last couple of weeks had locked alone three or four weeks ago. There's no way they are not going to go through with it because they got access to a 6% loan when rates pop back up to 675, I think towards as a better leading indicator.
So going from.
30, <unk> down to the high teens into the low twenty's.
Year over year drop as what we're seeing and.
I wouldn't be worried that it's a drop just generally.
Those pandemic highs were unsustainable, what we're really looking to do is get better than we were in November .
That sounds great. Thanks for taking my question.
Thank you. Our next question comes from John <unk> with Jefferies. Please state your question.
Hi, This is Chris <unk> on for John . Thank you for taking my question can you just walk us through some incremental detail on how did the equity integrations kind of progressed throughout the quarter and then another one on kind of mortgage attach rates.
Kind of curious what drove the acceleration between the end of the quarter and what you were seeing in February and kind of any levers you think you have to drive that higher and 23. Thank you.
Why don't I start and Chris if you have anything to add you should finish.
I think part of it is that it just takes time to build relationships between loan officers and real estate agents and one of the signal events for doing that was the sales kickoff, which added 8 million bucks to our coupon expense.
But getting the lenders and the agents in one room, and just making sure everybody understands that when we work together, we can deliver more value to the customer and a better customer experience.
It was probably what drove this uptick in attach rate. There has also been some online marketing where when we sign someone up for a home tour of our web site.
The website says do you need to figure out what you can afford we can connect you with a lender we've been surprised at how many people said sure.
We thought that there wouldn't be much uptake on that by equity really wanted it and I said fine.
We'll give it to them.
It's not going to do much. It has only been a few days since it went nationwide, but in the pilot at the end of Q4 in the first weeks of January it was really good.
So we've been really encouraged about it I think also they just really are delivering great service.
We've gotten our agents to use title forward at a point when it wasn't delivering great service and that just comes back in your face.
But in this case, it's compounding in a positive direction because.
An agent sends one customer over there the customer has a great experience and then we do more what we're really proud of is that 21% for February that's not in a pilot market that's not in one place.
It's everywhere.
The equity operates and so we think that's a sustainable durable result.
Chris do you have anything to add.
I don't you hit the main points.
Great. Thank you both.
Thank you and there are no further questions at this time, so I'll now turn the call back over to Meg None Lee for closing remarks.
Thanks, everyone for joining the call today, we can go ahead and wrap up now.
Thank you. This concludes today's conference.
All parties may disconnect have a great day.