Q4 2022 FiscalNote Holdings Inc Earnings Call

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Speaker 2: Good morning and welcome to Fiscal Notes Q4 2022 Earnings Conference call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. For the speaker's presentation, we will conduct a question-and-answer session.

Speaker 2: To ask a question, you'll need to press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad.

Speaker 2: As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded.

Speaker 2: I would now like to turn the call over to Sarah Buda, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. Please go ahead.

Speaker 3: Hi everybody, welcome to the Fiscal Note Q4 2022 earnings call. During this call, we may make statements related to our business that are forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. These statements are not guaranteed as a future performance but are rather subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties. Our actual results could differ materially from expectations reflected in any forward-looking election.

Speaker 3: Additionally, non-GAAP financial measures and other KPIs will be discussed on this conference call. Please refer to the tables in our earnings release and the investor relations portion of our website for a reconciliation of these measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Fiscal Notes Chairman, CEO , and Co-Founder, Tim Huang. You're welcome.

Speaker 4: Thanks, Sarah.

Speaker 4: Thank you for joining us this morning.

Speaker 4: On today's call, I will review our fourth quarter and fully results for 2022. Now ER some perspective on the fundamentals of our business as you build an enduring growth company with compounding subscription revenue growth, strong growross margin and, over time, an impressive free cash flow model.

Speaker 4: I'll then turn it over to our CFO John Slabaugh to talk about the details of our financials and our outlooks of the year as we swiftly move toward the inflection point of profitability.

Speaker 4: Before I begin, as many of you are new to the fiscal note story, let me start with an overview of who we are and what we do.

Speaker 4: At fiscal note, we're on a mission to help our customers make sense of the complicated and constantly changing world we live in. We do this by delivering a proprietary SaaS platform that uses artificial intelligence to collect, analyze, and synthesize massive amounts of regulatory, legal, and policy information.

Speaker 4: We then apply human intelligence and workflows to make the data usable and actionable for our customers.

Speaker 4: Changes in policies, regulations, and laws impact the decision-making of almost every organization around the world. From changes in regulation to mandatory reporting requirements that organizations must comply with, often on a global basis. As such, we're building an enduring company for the world's most important and influential decision-makers.

Speaker 4: These customers range from hundreds of government agencies and public sector customers in the Department of Defense, the White House, every member of the House and Senate in the United States Congress, the Confederate Reserve and public sector organizations in Europe and Asia, to major corporate customers including half the Fortune 100 that need to stay on top of an ever-shifting regulatory strategy.

Speaker 4: political and geopolitical landscape in countries around the world.

Speaker 4: These customers rely on FISMA every day to help interpret the impact of policies, legislation, and macroeconomic shifts on their institutions, and more importantly, to take actions which achieve their business objectives and minimize political and economic risk.

Speaker 4: This forms the basis of our durable and long-term growth.

Speaker 4: Since we founded the company, we have been building a category creator which constantly innovates to turn insights into action, convert challenges into opportunities, and mitigate risk to protect operations.

Speaker 4: In a sense, we have become an increasingly mission critical and ubiquitous Bloomberg terminal of political, legislative, and regulatory information at the local, state, federal, and global level. We have invested tens of millions of dollars in almost 10 years building a defensible combination of data, information, and artificial intelligence technology.

Speaker 4: to collect, synthesize, and make sense of an exploding pace and volume of dynamic, unstructured, regulatory, political, and legal information around the world, as well as the software workflow tools to help our customers respond. The same way that other information companies, such as S&P Global, IHS Market, Factset, Morningstar, CoStar, and Appalera.

Speaker 4: have innovated in their respective information fields. physical continues to deliver mission critical information that has a direct impact on our customer's operation.

Speaker 4: Now let me summarize the company's financial position that serves as a platform for our company, compounding profitable growth in 2023 and beyond.

Speaker 4: Our revenue continues to grow with a large customer base that renews contracts and subscriptions every year.

Speaker 4: For 2022, we grew our gap revenue 37% year on year to about $114 million.

Speaker 4: further evidence of our ability to deliver compounding growth even in a difficult macro environment.

Speaker 4: Looking at management KPIs, we grew our run rate revenue to $127 million, of which $125 million was organic. Our annual recurring revenue, which represents 90% of total revenue, was $113 million, marking growth at 14% year-over-year and 13% on an organic basis.

Speaker 4: And we increased our net revenue retention to over 100% on a trailing 12-month basis, a strong reflection of our successful cross-sell and upsell model and the must-have mission-critical solutions we deliver for our customers.

Speaker 4: Further, we also provided guidance for 2023 that indicates another strong year of growth in momentum for fiscal year with GAAP revenue of $136 million to $141 million, marking growth of 20 to 24% year over year.

Speaker 4: We also expect run rate revenue of $148 million to $155 million for the year underpinned by our recurring revenue with thousands of Blue Chip customers and high retention rates. As we're proving, our durable business model creates a high degree of predictability. We take our customers from the previous year.

Speaker 4: renew them, and upsell those customers with new products and capabilities to grow our business, while simultaneously adding in customers each year.

Speaker 4: These customers continue to renew at high retention rates because of the strength of our products and the deep customer relationships that we have built.

Speaker 4: Trisco has always been differentiated given not only its recurring revenue base, but also its high adjusted gross margins, which are in the 80% range.

Speaker 4: These adjusted gross margins, a result of our SaaS business model, AI pedigree, and data-rich products provide the basis for strong free cash flow in the future.

Speaker 4: We remain on track to be adjusted to give it that positive in the fourth quarter of this year.

Speaker 4: Furthermore, our growth, high net retention, stable adjusted gross margins, and increasing efficiency in our operations mean that we are on track towards impressive free cash flow margins in the future beyond this near-term adjusted positive unit thought profitability milestone.

Speaker 4: We are well capitalized from a cash perspective due to the public listing process and the proceeds we have attained in the summer of last year. We are capitalized fully and do not require any additional capital raises to achieve our plan of positive adjusted EBITDA profitability and free cash deposit margins.

Speaker 4: And finally, to complement our recurring revenue organic model, we continue to find deeply additive M&A opportunities for growth, as evidenced by our most recent acquisitions, which extends those capabilities into new geographies and customers.

Speaker 4: such as Eastern Europe and Africa with DT Global, new technologies such as alternative and macroeconomic data, and APAC with ISO technologies.

Speaker 4: are JSON products and capabilities such as terrorism, cyber, and operational risk analysis for governments and companies with dragonfly.

Speaker 4: These acquisitions continue to fuel additional growth factors for the company in a number of new directions and provide a pathway for long-term compounding growth.

Speaker 4: our acquisition pipeline remains active.

Speaker 4: But we continue to be thoughtful and diligent as we pursue a creative acquisition at valuations that align with the fundamentals of the business and deal structures that minimize solutions.

Speaker 4: We are prudent and strategic capital allocators and will always be judicious to prioritize investments that drive the highest return for our shareholders and deliver results for our customers.

Speaker 4: John will get into the specifics of our financial results and the details for our outlook of 2023.

Speaker 4: Now let me touch on the strong fundamentals of business that serve as a platform for our growth in 2023 and position fiscal instruments to deliver outpaced returns over time as we continuously allocate our attention and capital to a struggling long-term profitable growth.

Speaker 4: First, our strategy begins with the large total stressful market with secular trends related to the ever-increasing and rapidly changing regulatory, geopolitical, and economic operating environment.

Speaker 4: Experts have sized their TAM at $37 billion, which is what companies and organizations spend every single year on products and services related to legal, regulatory, and policy information.

Speaker 4: Our market is driven by political events and a regulatory environment that we do not see slowing down. As always, the world continues to become more and more complex and volatile for our customers.

Speaker 4: military conflicts and civil unrest in regions across the globe, local market supply disruptions, the transition to a new energy economy.

Speaker 4: and emerging technologies for regulators and politicians around the world to respond with new regulations, which in turn creates uncertainty for all organizations. These trigger events create demand for our products as our insights and answers help customers make sense of this exploding volume of unstructured, dynamic regulatory policy Cathy O'Brien

Speaker 4: and macroeconomic information to address uncertainty, manage risk, and make decisions about operations and strategy.

Speaker 4: Historically, making sense of all this information has been a manual and opaque process. We believe it remains a massive underserved opportunity to use AI to structure, normalize, analyze, and digitize all this information.

Speaker 4: Fiscal Ed is now positioned better than ever and better than anyone to help the world understand what exactly is going on in policymaking around the world. From all-out war and military conflicts in Eastern Europe to the awakening of a new relationship with our public services after the deadliest pandemic in over a century, the world is an increasingly complex and uncertain place and we believe Fiscal Ed is well positioned to be the primary beneficiary.

Speaker 4: the ongoing policy and regulatory complexity and risk explosion. We are still just getting started. As an example, the European market stands as one of the most regulated markets in the planet and yet only 10% of the revenue comes from this market.

Speaker 4: We are at the beginning stages of our European expansion, and I believe that similar to other large-scale information services leaders, we can build a business that can rival the size of our North American business with just our current products today.

Speaker 4: Of course, we're simultaneously pushing the boundaries that we provide to our customers through constant innovation and by expanding to areas such as ESG and compliance that provide new avenues for growth into the future.

Speaker 4: Ultimately, we see multiple growth factors for fiscal year to capture the large market of legal, regulatory, and policy information.

Speaker 4: The second component to our fundamentals is our scalable operating model that long-term will enable us to drive conversion of incremental revenue to operating profits. The model is quite simple. We have a proven mid-teens organic growth. Add to that our M&A program of tuck-in acquisition that broaden our reach and cross-sell.

Speaker 4: We renew our customers year after year and expand our relationships by adding new datasets and products.

Speaker 4: This is the compounding recurring revenue growth model we've proven. With this model, we're driving a just-of-growth margin for the 80% range.

Speaker 4: We've also built a strong operational foundation in R&D, sales and marketing, and G&A to support the operations of a large, growing, durable public company at the forefront of AI.

Speaker 4: We now have global operations from Washington, DC, New York, Austin, Texas, Madison, Wisconsin, London, Brussels, Gurgaon, Seoul, Singapore, Sydney, and Taipei that give us more reach than ever before and the operations to meet our global opportunities. Moving forward we can build on this foundation to drive growth.

Speaker 4: Further, as John will detail, we have made and will continue to drive efficiencies in the organization using technology and workflow improvements.

Speaker 4: and by finding areas of expense where you can drive efficiency. Finally, and perhaps most important, is our fundamental competitive advantage, a unique and defensible combination of data, AI, and human intelligence.

Speaker 4: We have an incredibly comprehensive amount of data that we have collected over the past decade of significant relevance to what governments and the private sector are interested in.

Speaker 4: We also have an incredibly comprehensive AI platform that we use to aggregate, synthesize, and structure this domain-specific data.

Speaker 4: And we have the human intelligence and the software workloads to make it usable and actionable for our customers.

Speaker 4: Further, our AI models incorporate the insights we gain from the thousands of customers that we have every single day to enrich our products.

Speaker 4: This combination of AI and data creates our sustainable technology mode.

Speaker 4: As we have seen in many industries, we're beginning to see significant advances in artificial intelligence, which is especially encouraging for fiscalists as advances in AI technologies, including ChatGPT and GPT-4, serve to enhance and accelerate our business through both increased demand and increased operational efficiency.

Speaker 4: We believe the combination of generalized foundational AI models with fiscal-mode domain-specific models will create defensible insights that will further enable us to efficiently optimize our data collection efforts while building novel applications and user experiences that enhance efficiency for fiscal-mode customers.

Speaker 4: The advantages of AI acceleration should manifest itself in multiple ways. One, in areas related to customer experiences, such as faster prototyping and data collection efforts, using our machine learning, and tremendous data advantage.

Speaker 4: Another is more efficient and effective operations, such as a larger level of personalization, content dissemination and review, or more efficient customer service and engineering automation.

Speaker 4: We have and will continue to incorporate elements of AI at all levels of the company to drive competitive advantages and differentiation as well as better operating margins for the company.

Speaker 4: Lastly, for instance, we announced our collaboration with OpenAI, which demonstrates our continued market leadership in AI, leveraging the most cutting-edge technologies in the space.

Speaker 4: This expanded user interaction through language models such as OpenAI will help create a flywheel to drive future product development for fiscal and domain-specific models, enhance accuracy and relevancy for our customers.

Speaker 4: and enable us to swiftly extend our leadership in the application of AI and large language models related to the specialized data sets.

Speaker 4: In sum, for those of you who know our team, we know that we are purists for building an efficient business with strong fundamentals and for deploying a resilient capital allocation model for long-term growth and cash flow.

Speaker 4: That's exactly what we've built here at Fiscal Note.

Speaker 4: Our capital management strategies support our foundational goal to be an enduring, profitable leader in our sector. All capital allocation strategies are aimed at allocating our time and capital on those actions that drive the greatest return and that minimize solutions for shareholders.

Speaker 4: Given the strong fundamentals of a recurring revenue business with high gross margins, we believe we have more flexibility than others to allocate capital to the areas of greatest concern.

Speaker 4: To that end, as a team, we are inherently cost-focused given this emphasis on efficient capital allocation. We have and will continue to drive efficiencies in our business, while ensuring we are innovating for the future. With our cash on the balance sheet and access to our accordion, we have sufficient capital to support our growth and fund our M&A. As we achieve our just-at-EBITDA profitability goals this year, we will continue to invest in our capital and our capital to help our business grow.

Speaker 4: We will be well positioned to drive margins in line with other leaders in information services.

Speaker 4: Before I turn it over to John , let me comment on the dynamics we're seeing in the public market.

Speaker 4: By all accounts, this company is in a great position on a fundamental basis. We continue to grow, continue to maintain strong relationships with customers through our retention and subscription model, continue to support a high gross margin and long term free cash regeneration, and continue to innovate for the future by expanding our product suite and geographic footprint.

Speaker 4: Despite this, as you can see, there's a clear disconnect between those fundamentals of our business and our public market valuation.

Speaker 4: We believe this dislocation is temporary. As long as the fundamentals continue to deliver for the business, there will always be options to create value for shareholders in the long run.

Speaker 4: What we are doing and will continue to do as a management team is to build an enduring long-term growth company for the future, one that delivers great products and services for long-standing customers and maintains a high rate of gross profit for reinvestment to the future.

Speaker 4: So despite short-term technical gyrations in the public markets, our leadership remains steady and the long-term opportunity for fiscal note has never been more clear.

Speaker 4: As the Sames investor Benjamin Graham said, in the short term, the stock market is a voting machine. In the long term, it's a weighing machine.

Speaker 4: In 2023, we are in an environment where the tide is coming out and recurring revenues matter, high gross margins matter, long-standing customer relationships matter, deeply experienced and committed management teams matter, and differentiated technology and proprietary product investments matter. And the dot settles from the capital market.

Speaker 4: And after the markets have sorted through and identified the real businesses with strong fundamentals, I believe fiscal net will and has proven itself as a business that matters.

Speaker 4: In summary, as we look back on 2022 on a fundamental basis, I am delighted with the business and our progress.

Speaker 4: We believe fiscal is well positioned to be the primary beneficiary of global policy complexity, given the myriad of political, economic, and operational challenges that exist.

Speaker 4: We are proving our compounding growth model through a combination of organic growth and a creative M&A underpinned by our diverse and Bluetooth customer base.

Speaker 4: We are building an enduring and resilient business and a growing and increasingly important market.

Speaker 4: We are growing in new geographies, markets, product areas, and customer segments that create continuously vectors for top-line growth and innovation.

Speaker 4: Furthermore, advancements in AI benefit us in customer differentiation and targeting the top line in efficiency and automation on the bottom line, given the immense data advantage that we have.

Speaker 4: We are further delivering on the commitments we outlined in our last call by coming in at the high end of our revenue guidance with strong net retention and high gross margins.

Speaker 4: We are executing on our 2023 plan for ongoing revenue growth with a clear path to profitability. We are fully capitalized on our plan.

Speaker 4: Over time, this will translate into growing free cash flow margins, enabling us to lower our cost of capital and grow our business into the future.

Speaker 4: And finally, we are led by a disciplined, experienced, and exceptionally talented management team with a relentless focus on sustainable, profitable growth and smart capital allocation to build an enduring company for the future.

Speaker 4: Every single day we work to earn the trust of thousands of the biggest and most important companies, governments, and people in the world who rely on fiscal and solutions to discover and navigate the impact of government policymaking on their organizations and more importantly to take actions which achieve their business objectives.

Speaker 4: This was and remains the heart of our vision for fiscal year. I have never been more passionate about the mission and more optimistic about our future growth opportunity.

Speaker 4: With that, I'll turn it over to Josh to discuss our financial performance at Outlook.

Speaker 5: Thank you, Tim, and good morning. I'm going to spend some time providing further details on the fourth quarter in Fiscal Year 2022. I'll also discuss what to expect in terms of financial performance in the fiscal year 2022.

Speaker 5: for this year and walk through our path to positive adjusted EBITDA and over time positive free cash flow. Let me start with revenue.

Speaker 5: Fourth quarter revenue was $31.4 million, marking growth of 29% year-over-year in total and 18% growth on an organic basis.

Speaker 5: Full year 2022 revenue was $113.8 million, marking 37% growth year over year in total and 15% growth on an organic basis, which excludes the 2021 and 2022 acquisitions and sunset revenue.

Speaker 5: non-GAAP revenue was $115.7 million for the year. We are proving our strategy of delivering compounding growth driven by mid-teens organic growth and accretive strategic tuck-in acquisitions that we can immediately cross-sell and upsell to our customers.

Speaker 5: This has been our track record and we expect to continue this revenue performance moving forward. Fourth quarter subscription revenue, which makes up almost 90% of our total revenue, is $27.3 million. An increase of $6.4 million, or about 31% from a year ago.

Speaker 5: and 15% growth on an organic basis.

Speaker 5: Full year 2022 subscription revenue was over $100 million.

Speaker 5: an increase of approximately 36% year over year in total, and 13% growth on an organic basis.

Speaker 5: which again excludes the 2021 and 2022 acquisitions and sunset revenue.

Speaker 5: Our advisory advertising and other revenue was $4.1 million in the fourth quarter and $13.2 million for the year, growth of 49% year over year.

Speaker 5: We exited 2022 with run rate revenue of $127 million in total, marking 14% year-over-year growth. Run rate revenue is defined as ARR.

Speaker 5: plus non-subscription revenue earned during the past 12 months. It is a key management metric and serves as a baseline for the upcoming year. On an organic basis, run rate revenue is a key metric.

Speaker 5: was $125 million, also reflecting a 14% growth on a pro forma basis. We grew our total annual recurring revenue, or ARR, to $113 million as of December 31st, an increase of 14% to the same period in 2021.

Speaker 5: Organic ARR was $112 million as of year end. This represents a 15% growth rate when compared to our ARR at December 31, 2021 on a pro forma basis.

Speaker 5: We ended the year with NRR or net revenue retention of approximately 100% on a trailing 12-month basis. While NRR rates can fluctuate slightly from quarter to quarter, we are delighted to reach the 100% mark, which affirms Crip fiscal notes.

Speaker 5: build and buy strategy, leveraging our customer relationships with strong cross-sell and up-sell efforts.

Speaker 5: Q4 gross profit was $23.1 million, representing a 73% margin.

Speaker 5: Our fourth quarter non-GAAP gross margin was $25.6 million, representing an 81% gross margin, after adjusting for deferred revenue and amortization.

Speaker 5: Performal year 2022, our gross profit was $81.8 million.

Speaker 5: year 2022 our gross profit was 81.8 million dollars or 72 percent margin.

Speaker 5: and our non-GAAP gross profit was $92.8 million, reflecting an 80% gross margin. Sales and marketing costs were $42 million for the year, a notable increase from a year ago largely due to acquisitions.

R&D expenses were $20.7 million for the year. A reduction of about $4 million from a year ago due in part to increased software capitalization.

editorial content costs in 22 were approximately $16 million, a million dollar increase over last year.

G&A expenses for 2022 were $77 million.

This includes approximately $37 million of non-cash items, primarily related to the accounting treatment of non-cash stock-based compensation expenses that were triggered as a result of our DSPAC public listing transaction.

Excluding these non-cash charges, G&A was approximately $39.5 million, an increase of $11 million from a year ago, largely driven by increased public company expenses. I will provide some 2023 OpEx details in a minute.

Our total interest expense for the full year was $95.7 million.

which includes significant one-time non-cash charges related to the conversion of our legacy convertible notes as part of a business combination and public listing process.

Our fourth quarter interest expense of approximately $6 million reflects our cash and non-cash interest expense.

interest expense of approximately $6 million reflects our cash and non-cash interest expense, reflective of our current debt profile.

Going forward, we expect to pay approximately $4.5 to $5 million of cash interest each quarter.

Also contributing to our net loss in 2022 was a non-cash charge for $11.7 million related to a loss contingency recognized as the result of the previously announced proposed lender settlement agreement.

to our net loss in 2022 was a non-cash charge for $11.7 million related to a loss contingency recognized as the result of the previously announced proposed lender settlement agreement. While setting some of our one-time charges.

We had a non-cash gain of approximately $16.1 million related to the mark-to-market of the public and private warrant liabilities and a $7.7 million non-cash gain from the forgiveness of the company's PPP loan.

The GAB net loss for fiscal year 2022 was $218 million.

which is reconciled to our adjusted EBITDA loss of $24.4 million in our press release.

Our balance sheet remains solid with $61.2 million of cash and cash equivalence as of December 31st.

We conduct extensive cash forecasting and scenario planning on a regular basis. We have sufficient capital to support our growth initiatives and fund our paths to positive adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter of this year and beyond. Further, we are taking steps to reduce our cash expenditures. This brings me to our guidance for...

For the full year, we forecast a run rate revenue of $148 to $155 million, inclusive of recent acquisition of Dragonfly and excluding any future acquisitions we may make.

We've set gap revenue of 136 to 141 million dollars. Market growth is 20 to 24% year over year including the acquisition of Dragonfly on an organic basis.

In 2023, we expect to deliver another year of mid-teens organic growth. In terms of cadence during the year, for those who have followed fiscal note, you already know that a significant portion of our revenue growth occurs in the third and fourth quarters.

Our sales team is staffed and optimized for growth, an effort that will lead to higher recognized revenue throughout the course of the year and into 2024.

We expect adjusted gross margins to be approximately 80%, and adjusted EBITDA loss between $8 and $6 million for the full year, achieving adjusted EBITDA profitability in Q4.

And now looking at the first quarter, we expect revenue between $31 and $32 million with an adjusted EBITDA loss of $7 to $6 million.

While this level of adjusted EBITDA loss may seem high in light of a four-year guidance,

Q1 includes a million and a half dollars of seasonal public company costs, including our first year audit after listing.

and seasonally low revenue recognition from our non-recurring revenue. With already operating expenses, we have taken steps to reduce costs in order to increase efficiency and productivity. These measures will drive significant benefits that will translate into meaningful bottom-line improvements starting in Q2 and Q3, paving the way to adjusted EBITDA profitability in Q4 this year.

This includes many efforts across the board, such as adjusting our talent allocation models and locations.

aligning our revenue generating teams to the highest potential clients in market segments, improving our internal processes and workflows.

in consolidating, reducing, and eliminating spend with external contractors and vendors.

For example, we have already relocated a majority of our customer support teams to lower cost offshore locations, improved business development productivity by modifying our service model and coverage ratios.

consolidated product development and related R&D teams, and eliminated many external vendors and contractors, significantly reducing the spend for some of our larger technology vendors. We continue to actively evaluate and restructure our business processes and operations across the company. We will realize additional savings in 2023 from these ongoing cost initiatives.

gross margins. This will drive approximately $20 million of incremental gross profit.

During this time, we will add only $3 to $4 million in marginal OPEX, inclusive of acquisitions. This converts to year-on-year EBITDA improvement of $17 million.

We are achieving this by realizing $6 to $7 million of in-year expense reductions from the efficiencies I just highlighted. Beyond 2023, we will continue to drive strong EBITDA conversions as we maintain high adjusted gross margins and leverage the relatively fixed operational foundation. As Tim mentioned, we are actually pursuing M&A, which is

been and will continue to be a building block of fiscal notes long-term growth strategy. We are being selective to ensure we find the right targets at the right valuations and focusing on opportunities that uniquely address our customers most pressing needs and will drive predictable and sustainable compounding growth in a creative EBITDA.

block of fiscal notes long-term growth strategy. We are being selected to ensure we find the right targets at the right valuations and focusing on opportunities that uniquely address our customers most pressing needs and will drive predictable and sustainable compounding growth in a creative EBITDA. We have always been resourceful.

structuring our acquisitions and at our current stock price we will continue to use structure to minimize dilution to existing shareholders. We have been successful with this approach in the past and we have a robust pipeline of actionable opportunities that reflect the realities of today's M&A environment. Further, you can see from our updated credit agreement we recently filed a new agreement

Our lenders remain flexible and continue to be supportive of the company's focused strategic acquisition program. Thank you.

Finally, I'd like to comment on our cash position and future liquidity. As I mentioned previously, fiscal night finished 2022 with $61.2 million of cash on the balance notification.

This cash balance fully supports our planned growth and path to adjusted EBITDA profitability later this year and free cash flow. For context, under our current operating model, we expect our cash balance to exceed $30 million a year from now without additional equity infusions. Capital nodes fully capitalized and currently has no plans to raise additional equity capital.

Cisco operates on a bottoms up budget and a multi-year plan tied to our strategy. We track performance, respond to variances, and update monthly forecasts to make sure we are on track to meet financial expectations. As discussed, we have taken actions to reduce our operating expenses and we are continuing to optimize our operations across the board.

We are prepared to take additional actions if needed in the future. In addition, we are working aggressively to accelerate free cash flow and will comment further on a subsequent call. In closing, we are delivering on top-line growth as we execute our strategy to build a compounding growth profitable business that provides mission-critical solutions to the world's most important decision makers.

There are secular trends propelling our business and creating sustainable demand. From increasing regulation to geopolitical complexity to macroeconomic uncertainty, only FiscalNote has the breadth of AI-enhanced data and human intelligence to help customers navigate this increasing operational complexity.

Demand for our products is strong today. It will only grow as we add data, workflows, and new adjacent solutions. With highly predictable recurring revenue, strong roast margins, and high demand for our products

and ongoing cost management, our path to profitability is clear and accelerating, and we have the operational structure and capital we need to scale this business and drive long-term value. We look forward to working with you, our shareholders, as we continue to build an enduring market leader for the future. With that, I open it up to the operator for questions.

Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star one again. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster.

Our first question comes from Matt Van Vliet from BTIG. Please go ahead, your line is open.

Yeah good morning thanks for taking the questions. I guess first Tim you mentioned that Europe could be as large potentially as the US market but only 10% of the company today is coming from that region. Maybe walk through kind of what what the recent hiring plans have been to expand in that market what are their additional investments are you expecting over the next couple years?

And then ultimately kind of what kind of revenue growth or other growth metrics you can share are you expecting in both 23 and maybe 24 from Europe specifically. Thank you.

Yeah, thank you, appreciate the question. I think the first thing is that we have been in the European market for a couple of years now. We started off in the Brussels market by really looking at European commission information, European data information, in addition to information coming from different member states. And that's really just...

a reflection of the continued expansion of the data and opportunities that we see overall in the market. Additionally, over the course of the last couple of years, we have made a number of acquisitions in the European market that have expanded the scope of our footprint, as well as the customer base that we have in the marketplace. So, I'll point you to a couple companies like Oxford Analytica, Dragonfly, our most recent acquisition.

DT Global and others that have expanded our footprint throughout the United Kingdom as well as Western and Eastern Europe . Those acquisitions by themselves actually constitute the beginning foundations of what we see as a larger European opportunity. And so a couple different things. The first thing is

just the continued application of our technology in the European market enable us to have add more data for our customers. The second thing is just the reality that there's a large number of multinational companies in European governments that we continue to be able to sort of bring into our overall customer roster. We're not really giving guidance right now particular to the European market, but it is a very big focus of ours.

as a management team. And it's something that we're continuing to keep an eye on here. Okay, very helpful. And then when you look at the recent partnership announcement with OpenAI, I know you expanded on a little bit on the call, I'm curious in terms of how you're thinking about that being sort of a product.

or monetizing that partnership, is it something that eventually you'll turn into or build out specific use cases or products around, or is this really geared towards enhancing the current platform and just sort of pushing ahead on your competitive advantage there in which you can either cross-sell a little bit more of that or raise prices over time to include that functionality? Yeah, so I think the first thing

about the partnership that we have with OpenAI is just really that's a reflection of the decade log investment that we've made in artificial intelligence and data collection we've been making in the legal regulatory space. As you mentioned in our press release, we are the only legal regulatory partner for OpenAI and we have another kind of ChatGPT plug-in program here overall.

to enhance customer experiences quite rapidly. And the inclusion of these new technologies is just another reflection of fiscal and continuing ability to innovate for the future and actually bring in some of these capabilities. So we talked about a couple of these things earlier in the call.

things like personalization, better search relevancy, better efficiency in terms of data collection. Those are all areas where customers are going to see improvements as a result of the data collection efforts that we have, as well as broader partnerships that we have inclusive of OpenAI.

I think the last thing I do want to touch on is something that I briefly touched on in my earlier remarks, which is that we do expect to see some efficiencies from automation as well. And so those come in the form of things like faster time to market, reduced R&D expenses, faster product cycle innovations. Those things all have direct impacts on our income statement and of course, the combination of better customer experiences and more efficient R&D operations.

we do expect to see a real impact for the business overall here.

Great, and then if I could squeeze one last one in around the SBB, I guess, issues going on there. Any impact that you're seeing on the M&A pipeline directly from that or valuations sort of resetting lower on some of the fallout there?

Any update on the pipeline around sort of recent events would be very helpful. Thank you.

I don't think that the SVP situation has had a material impact on M&A, but I will comment that from a macroeconomic perspective, we are seeing a large number of deals come across our inboxes. And so as we evaluate those deals, we have seen a material shift in terms of expectations of folks.

as well as the expectations around structure or price or whatever the case may be. We are constantly evaluating deals every single week and we are trying to make good decisions around the types of markets we want to be in, the types of products we want to be in. And of course, the way that we structure those deals to minimize the wish for shareholders.

and ultimately drive the most equity value for the business. So in short, no impact from SVP, but obviously there are broader macroeconomic impacts here. Great, thank you. Our next question comes from Mike Lattimore from Northland Capital Markets. Please go ahead, your line is open. Thank you, yeah. Prepped on the strong finish to the year there.

Hi, Mike. It's John Slabaugh. We have seen expectations rationalizing and not only in terms of headline value but also the willingness to work around structure inclusive.

of structural consideration and earn-outs. So I think that it's fair to say that the types of transactions that we've been looking at are actionable at lower multiples than maybe previous years.

Okay, great. Great to see the NRR over 100%. I guess, do you view that as sustainable or could that improve this year and maybe touch on one or two points that really kind of moved it over 100% during the year?

Sure. We've asked Josh Resnick, our President and Chief Operating Officer, to join us here on the call. I'll let him comment on that. Hey, Mike. Yeah, I can address that on NRR. You can expect to see NRR continue to remain relatively consistent. Should fluctuate quarter to quarter, but remain relatively consistent. We're very focused on hitting the two key levers that drive it, gross retention and upsell cross-sell.

And, you know, with a lot of the changes that we've been making on the revenue side in particular, we've been thinking a lot about how we structure our account management customer success function to help drive that on the retention side in particular. And with our new Chief Revenue Officer in place, have been adjusting our go-to-market focus to help drive new logo sales as well. Great. And then just on the –

broader demand environment, can you talk a little bit about what you've seen in the fourth quarter, first quarter, say relative to third quarter in terms of just, you know, deal sizes, sales cycles, maybe distinguish a little bit between government and commercial sectors? Sure. So, you know, we talked back in Q3 about

we still believe our solutions are critical, which is what's still driving this, the mid-teens organic growth that we're forecasting. We're helping enterprises with existential issues that they have around risk and opportunity. It could be cybersecurity, data privacy regulations, expansion and contraction of lines of business. So we're still seeing

a tremendous amount of value and we're seeing our ACBs grow. So we feel like there's a lot of health there, although still from the macro environment, still driving a bit of that budget hesitancy, especially on the enterprise side. So continuing to see a balance of growth in private and public sector, although public tends to be that kind of steadier.

more reliable backbone and we expect to drive more growth through private sector going forward.

But in terms of that private sector dynamic, any change since the third quarter or is the environment similar to what you saw in the third quarter?

I think the environment is still generally similar, you know, still trying to work through, you know, a lot of the malaise in the macro environment that you see and, you know, hoping to see some improvement as the year goes along. But it, you know, again, we factored that into our guidance for the year. Yep. Great. And just last on the few acquisitions we made over the past year, can you talk about, you know, have you seen improved growth rates or...

business grew at a rate of 11% year over year, while the acquisition cohort from 20 2022 were in the 20, I think 21% growth for those groups, 23% for the acquisition group.

And that just represents putting you on the platform, giving them access to our customer base, and really letting our business development team do their work to.

Drive revenue growth. Great. Sounds good. Thanks a lot.

Our next question comes from Rudy Kessinger from DA Davidson. Please go ahead. Your line is open. Hey, thanks for taking my questions. John , you said, I think you said a year from now you expect to go up $30 million plus in cash. And so I guess you're effectively saying $30 million or less of cash burn over the next 12 months. Is that inclusive?

of your expectations of future acquisitions over the next 12 months, or is that just based on the core business as is today with no acquisitions taken? Sure, that's excluding any acquisition you might do between now and then. It's the operating model that we've built for.

the business as it stands today and taking into consideration, growth, operating expense, extra tap x, and seasonality of the business as well. And just as a point of clarification that when I say a year from now, I'm referring to a year from today as well.

Okay, so effectively, end of Q1, not, end of Q1, 24, not Q4, 23. Okay. And then what is the, what's the go forward interest expense? I don't know if you can break it out explicitly for Q1 or for the full year, but it was six point, roughly 6.1 million in Q4. So you made another.

Okay, I think you might've broke up at the end here. And then maybe just one last for me. In Q4, I know we'll get this into 10K, but how much revenue came from DT Global and ASIL in Q4? And then when you look at your revenue, guys, for 23, how much revenue do you have baked in there from Dragonfly, DT Global, and ASIL?

I guess in the previous filing gave a range of Dragonfly's revenue, which was six and a half million pounds or about seven million dollars. So you can back that out of the guidance range as well. So when you do that, I think you wind up with a organic growth rate at Dragonfly of approximately 13 to 17 percent.

Okay, got it. That's it for me. Thank you. We may do some work to back out ASIL and Data Hunts specifically if that's something you want to follow up on.

Okay, got it. That's it for me. Thank you. We may do some work to back out ASIL and Data Hunts specifically if that's something you want to follow up on. They're kind of getting really close to me.

Yeah, DT and ASIL. Yeah, okay. Good. That's it. Thanks for taking my questions. As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad.

Our next question comes from Mike Albanese from EF Hutton. Please go

Hey everybody, thanks for taking my question here. Congrats on the nice Q4 and I saw it's finished the year. I just have one clarifying question for you guys when I think about 2023 guidance. Thank you

I mentioned an additional, you know, at the midpoint, an additional 25 mil revenue, 80% margin, so, you know, 20 mil incremental gross margin, and then an incremental three to four in Opex, kind of on top of, you know, your current, I guess, cost basis plus some savings that you had talked about. Can you just kind of walk me through that one last time? Right, so.

And those are adjustments that we're working with Josh and his team to make, we have made and will continue to make over the course of the year.

Got it. Okay, great. Thank you. That's it for me. We have no further questions. I'd like to turn the call back over to Tim Huang for closing remarks. Great. Well, I want to thank everybody for joining us on this call here. We obviously had a great full year in 2022.

We've given guidance on a positive and really exciting 2023 year. And so, really look forward to our next call and appreciate everybody jumping on the call here. Thank you very much. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect. We begin at 10?bird gr computing, ladies and gentlemen.ris

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Q4 2022 FiscalNote Holdings Inc Earnings Call

Demo

FiscalNote

Earnings

Q4 2022 FiscalNote Holdings Inc Earnings Call

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Tuesday, March 28th, 2023 at 2:00 PM

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