RumbleON, Inc. (NASDAQ:RMBL) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

RumbleON, Inc. (NASDAQ:RMBL) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript August 10, 2024

Operator: Greetings, and welcome to RumbleOn Incorporated Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Tom Zelewski, Vice President, Finance and Treasurer. Thank you. Please go ahead.

Thomas Zelewski: Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us on this conference call to discuss RumbleOn’s second quarter 2024 financial results. Joining me on the call today are Mike Kennedy, RumbleOn’s Chief Executive Officer; and Tiffany Kice, RumbleOn’s Chief Financial Officer. Our Q2 results are detailed in the press release we issued earlier this morning, and a supplemental information will be available in our second quarter Form 10-Q once filed. Before I start, I would like to remind you that the following discussion contains forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to RumbleOn’s market opportunities and future financial results and involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed here.

Additional information that could cause actual results to differ from forward-looking statements can be found in RumbleOn’s periodic and other SEC filings. The forward-looking statements and risks in this conference call, including responses to your questions, are based on current expectations as of today, and RumbleOn assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new developments or otherwise, except as required by law. Also, the following discussion contains non-GAAP financial measures. For a reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures, please see our earnings release issued earlier this morning. Now I’ll turn the call over to Mike Kennedy, our CEO. Mike?

Michael Kennedy: Thank you, Tom, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for your interest in RumbleOn and for joining us on the call this morning. Joining me on today’s call is Tiffany Kice, our new Chief Financial Officer, appointed in June. Tiffany brings over 25 years of experience in financial leadership roles for public and private companies. Her experience with growth-focused multi-location retail businesses makes her a perfect fit for RumbleOn as we continue to transform our business and drive our performance to our Vision 2026 goals. Tiffany is already finding ways to positively impact the business and to better align our reporting to industry standards, and you’ll hear about those elements shortly. And also on the call, you heard from Tom earlier and also joining us is Elliot Wagner, our Vice President of Finance.

Our second quarter performance reflects the strength of our Powersports dealership group as we continue to progress on our turnaround. It is a challenging time for the powersports industry as we navigate a high interest rate environment, a cautious consumer and inflated new major unit inventories. Despite these challenges, I’m proud of the way our team has responded and we continue to focus on our goal to run the best powersports dealerships in America. The team’s effort delivered positive free cash flow during the first six months of 2024, and we expect to continue to deliver positive free cash flow in the back half of 2024. We remain laser-focused on achieving our Vision 2026 goals, which we outlined in March of this year. When I joined the company in November, I was excited about the opportunity I saw in the business.

My excitement has grown as we gain traction on each of the three pillars of our Vision 2026 strategy and align our team. As an example, you’ve heard me mention our building of a composite culture and continuous improvement mindset to run the best-performing dealerships in America, supported by an aligned and efficient corporate office. Towards the end of second quarter, we continued to make improvements in optimizing our cost structure. We made the decision to streamline our workforce as we accelerate our actions to drive towards our Vision 2026 goals. These actions resulted in a reduction in force of approximately 10% as well as some corporate and marketing reductions. We expect to generate $15 million in savings in the back half of 2024 and $30 million annualized going forward as a result of driving our strategy and aligning our team to Vision 2026.

Continuing on with our focus on growth and value creation, I wanted to provide an update on our previously announced intention to open our first pre-owned center this year. I’m excited to announce that right now, Powersports of Houston is now open and fully operational after some early setbacks from Hurricane Beryl. Houston is a great new powersports market for us, and the team is excited about the momentum this new store opening builds. We are poised to continue growth via acquisitions and greenfield opportunities as they arise. As a reminder, this Houston project is a pilot, and we are focused on analyzing its operating results and our ability to scale this new model across more markets. We’re also very close on the previously mentioned first acquisition since my arrival at the company.

We remain focused on our acquisition pipeline, activity, and we are encouraged by the number of opportunities. We will be selective and only deploy capital where it makes financial sense and builds per share value. And with that, I’d like to turn the call over to Tiffany to walk us through this quarter’s financial performance and talk about some of the financial reporting changes we are implementing to better align the industry standards.

An individual test driving a Powersport vehicle, the power and agility evident to all.

Tiffany Kice: Thank you, Mike, and I’m thrilled to join the RumbleOn team and I’m fully aligned with the company’s goals and objectives. I’ve spent the last few weeks internally assessing the business and wanted to highlight a few key reporting changes we’ve made regarding adjusted SG&A and adjusted EBITDA. Going forward, we define adjusted SG&A as SG&A adjusted to deduct charges and expenses that are not considered a part of our core business operations and are not necessarily an indicator of our run rate SG&A. These adjustments are similar to those we make to adjusted EBITDA. We plan to use adjusted SG&A as one of our measures to evaluate our progress towards our Vision 2026 goal. We have also revised our non-vehicle net debt calculation to exclude restricted cash, which primarily relates to floor plan facilities.

Additionally, beginning with this quarter and to align with dealership industry practice, adjusted EBITDA is reduced by floor plan interest expense. Our industry typically treats interest expense on floor plan debt as an operating expense and excludes the floor plan debt from the balance sheet leverage calculation as floor plan debt is integral to our operations and is collateralized by our powersports vehicles. We have included a supplemental schedule in our earnings release to retroactively recalculate prior periods. Now that we’ve outlined our reporting changes, I would like to provide detail on our second quarter results. We generated revenue of $336.8 million and adjusted EBITDA of $16.2 million in the second quarter of 2024. Revenue was down 12% year-over-year and adjusted EBITDA was down 19.8% year-over-year.

Total company adjusted SG&A expenses totaled $70.8 million or 78.7% of gross profit compared to the same quarter last year of $87.8 million or 82.5% of gross profit. As a reminder, we are targeting adjusted SG&A to be 75% of gross profit within our Vision 2026 time frame. Adjusted SG&A expenses were 19.4% lower than the same quarter last year. Starting with the Powersports dealership group. The team retailed 16,800 total powersports major units during the quarter, which is down 12.8% from the same quarter last year. Total new Powersports major unit sales were approximately 12,000, down 8.5% to the same quarter last year, while pre-owned unit sales totaled approximately 4,800, down 21.9%. As previously shared on our last call, on a day supply basis, our new inventory levels are heavy and our pre-owned inventory continues to be light.

Our team is working closely with our OEM partners to align new inventory levels to current market realities. We have made progress over the last 90 days and expect to see a significant reduction in our new inventories in the back half of the year. Gross margins for major unit sales continue to be challenged on new and continue to improve on pre-owned in the second quarter, and we expect this trend to remain throughout 2024. New unit gross margins for the quarter were 12.2% compared to 15.4% in the same quarter last year, driven by overstocking in the industry, compounded by our decision to exit noncore product lines and over-assorted brands not aligned with Vision 2026. We are pleased to report pre-owned gross margins of 17% for the quarter compared to 14.5% in the same quarter last year.

We continue to leverage RideNow’s Cash Offer to improve the pre-owned business. Our parts, services and accessories or fixed operations business delivered $56.9 million of revenue and $26.2 million of gross profit or GPU of $1,560, down $19 or 1.2%. The decrease comes primarily from accessories and service. We believe this decrease is also attributable to a couple of developments, including the macro environment and our reduction in pre-owned unit volume, impacting the amount of service department labor used to prepare those units for sale. Our financing and insurance team delivered impressive results with $29.7 million in revenue or GPU of $1,768, up 2.7% year-over-year despite elevated consumer interest rates in a challenged macro environment.

We believe this trend will continue based on our team’s strength in this area, our internal processes and capabilities as well as a strong set of OEM-supported finance offerings. So all in, revenue from our Powersports dealership group was $321.6 million, down 12.7% for the same quarter last year. The decrease in revenue was attributed to lower major unit volume, a decrease in volume coming from our fixed operations and essentially a flat ASP. Total GPU for the group was $5,168 down $182 or 3.4% for the same quarter last year and in line with our expectations as we continue to manage the industry headwinds of inflated inventories and high interest rates. Turning now to our asset-light vehicle transportation services operating group. For the second quarter, Wholesale Express revenue was up 5.6%, while gross profit dropped nearly 8.8% to $3.1 million, driven by industry pricing pressures.

Lastly, turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $71.1 million in total cash and restricted cash and non-vehicle debt was $209.1 million. Availability under our short-term revolving floor plan credit facilities totaled approximately $143.1 million as of June 30. Total available liquidity, defined as unrestricted cash plus availability under floor plan credit facilities on June 30 totaled $201.2 million. Cash flow provided by operating activities was $29.2 million for the six months ended June 30. I’m also happy to report that we signed a credit agreement amendment with our existing term loan lenders, which relaxes certain covenants for this quarter through the remainder of the year, providing further flexibility within our capital structure.

This agreement with our lenders provides relief for certain financial leverage covenants from June 30 until December 31. As part of the agreement, our minimum unrestricted cash covenants has increased from $25 million to $30 million. As of June 30, we had unrestricted cash payable of approximately $58.1 million. With that, we’d like to begin the question-and-answer session. I’ll turn the call back over to the operator now to open the line.

Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions]. And your first question comes from the line of Mike Baker of D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.

Michael Baker: Your line is open. Excuse me. Okay, thank you. Two questions. One, just in terms of the overall environment, sales down and decelerated. It just feels like macro-wise, things are getting a little bit worse and even worse through the quarter. I guess, could you comment on that? And how would these top line results relative to your internal expectations? And then my second question, on the inventory, as you said, still heavy in new as you talked about last quarter, but just wondering how much progress are you making on that? How much — how heavy are you versus last quarter? And I guess you said you expect to have that resolved by year-end. But if you could just sort of give us some order of magnitude of where you are in that process?

Michael Kennedy: You bet. Thanks, Mike. This is Mike Kennedy. You’ve asked a couple of different questions there. First, I think on the volume and the macro issues, I think from a volume perspective, we’re experiencing pretty much what we expected. Our new volume is down. When we started the year, we said, hey, it’s a tough macro environment. We weren’t expecting much help from interest rates. We haven’t seen that. We know customers are coming off of COVID times. And industry inventories are inflated and I think OEMs have been a little bit delayed in reacting to that, which probably leads me to the second part of the question, which is the gross margin performance, and that’s probably a bit of a surprise for us that our new gross margins are more challenged throughout the year than we had expected.

And so we’re dealing with that within our operations. The second piece of your question was around inventory, I think, and how we’re doing in terms of that. I would say that we’re probably a little bit behind my expectations of where I’d like to be at this point. However, we are making — at the same time, we’re making really, really good headway in terms of keeping our inventory in line with day supply. You heard me mention in previous calls that, that’s our goal is to get our inventory healthy relative to a day supply perspective. And as you might imagine, some stores and some OEMs are making great progress, and we’re really in great shape. Other stores and other OEMs, not so much, and we’re working through that. Maybe one piece of color around that, the PWC market has been more challenged this year than we expected.

Relative to the other categories we performed in like UTVs, on-road motorcycles, off-road motorcycles and whatnot. And so we’re dealing with that. But we feel good and confident still in terms of delivering our target for this year to reduce new inventories by $60 million by the end of the year.

Michael Baker: Okay. Two follow-ups, if I could. PWC, that’s a pretty small part of your business, right? If you could remind us what percent that is and then one other just a clarification. The cost savings program, it’s an annualized number of $30 million. Is that right? It’s not $15 million this year and then another $30 million next year is annualized at $30 million. Is that the right interpretation?

Michael Kennedy: That’s correct.

Michael Baker: Okay. Great. PWC as a percent of sales?

Michael Kennedy: I don’t think we’ve shared in the past, category-specific stuff in terms of volume, but you’re directionally correct. PWC is not one of our top categories that we sell. But it’s still some meaningful piece of our business.

Operator: Your next question comes from Eric Wold of B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Eric Wold: Thank you. Good morning. A couple of questions and really kind of follow-ups to the prior questions. I guess, one, on the expense reduction plan, correct me, if I am wrong, the $15 million, $30 million that you talked today, that’s incremental to what you would — incremental to anything else that you talked about before? And if that’s the case, can you kind of give the total amount that you’ve taken out or, I guess, plan to take out this year on a kind of an open rate basis starting next year?

Michael Kennedy: Okay. Eric, this is Mike again. Let me first address the first piece of your question, which is easy to address. So we made a number of moves aligned with our strategy around running the best stores in America. And what I’m most proud of is the way the team is embracing the strategy and aligning around it. And I think the strategy is giving the team clarity around what we really need to focus on and what we can let go of. I think the other piece of that in optimizing our cost structure is we’re starting to really learn how to leverage our scale, whether that’s in marketing tools or leading contact management platforms, aligning better with our OEMs in terms of driving demand, whatever you want to talk about, also developing standards within our stores and just creating efficiencies in terms of managing those standards as opposed to doing things 50 different ways.

All of that has given us a confident view that we took. We’re going to take $15 million of cost out of the back half of this year to confirm what you asked for, and then that annualizes to $30 million. How that relates to the other cost cuts we’ve done, this is incremental. So I want to — I think that was a piece of your question, and this is definitely incremental and new optimization work that we’ve delivered. So does that answer your question?

Eric Wold: It does. I guess combining that the new $30 million run rate, I guess, starting next year, since you’ve come on board, as you kind of started this cost actions, what is the total annualized run rate cost you’ve taken out, including the new $30 million?

Michael Kennedy: Great question, and I don’t have the answer for you. That’s something we’d have to follow up with you. I guess, Yes, we’d have to do some math on that. I walked in. I think it’s a difficult question to answer with great clarity because I walked in, in November, and there were already some discontinued operations that were moving. There were some cost cutting that was going on. I know there were some numbers that — there were some targets that I walked into midstream then and then we kind of went to work through my eyes. So listen, I feel really good about our ability to optimize the cost structure, and I feel really good about how the team is embracing the strategy. And again, I think the strategy has given us clarity around what we need to focus on and what we can let go of and look good returns going forward.

Eric Wold: Okay. That’s fair. I appreciate that. And then on — kind of going back to the comments around the new vehicle inventory remaining too heavy. OEMs kind of reacting late, but you expect kind of to get more success on that or progress on that in the back half of the year. Has the higher new vehicle inventory, has that pressured or impacted your ability to bring in more used vehicles right now just because of you don’t want to have overall inventory too high, cash flow, et cetera. Is that pressured your ability to bring in to used vehicles that might be more attractive to the customer base? And then as you think you want to reduce that new vehicle inventory in the back half of the year, how much of that is going to be incremental help from the OEMs versus more on your margins in the back half to get that done?

Michael Kennedy: Okay. So a couple of different questions in there. So first off, we are making some good headway. And again, we’re a little bit behind my expectations around our initiative to reduce our new inventory. We are getting great help from all the OEMs. And when we talk to the OEMs, I think I mentioned this previously, we sit down with them, we’ve talked with them multiple times on this issue. And principally, we’re entirely aligned, right? The OEMs don’t want us to have, on a healthy balance of inventory at retail. And certainly, we don’t and we can’t afford to carry it. I just think some manufacturers can respond at different speeds than others. And so we’re working through that. You can see in our gross margin, we’re paying the price, right?

OEMs are paying the price. They’ve all talked about all the domestics. They talked about their increase in promotional activity. that’s costing them dollars. You can see our gross margins are compressed on new. Tiffany mentioned that. That’s obviously costing our business a lot. I think if there’s a silver line in this whole thing in the customer wins, I think the rider wins in this environment because there’s really attractive finance rates, there’s attractive pricing in the marketplace. I do think that, that impacts the pre-owned business in a couple of different ways, not so much on our buy side. But I think in the showroom, when a customer walks in and they can see what they can get a new vehicle for and maybe that customer was previously thinking they would buy a pre-owned unit.

And now they have an incredibly attractive finance rate or the pricing is really aggressive and that might influence them into a new unit versus pre-owned. And I think we’re experiencing some of that in our stores but not so much on the acquisition piece. So I think overall, I feel confident that we’re going to get our new inventory in line by the end of the year, probably during that same time frame. If we’re successful, bring our pre-owned inventory up in anticipation for the ’25 season.

Eric Wold: Got it. And then just last question for me, you talked about you’re still confident in kind of reaching the 2026 strategic plan announced earlier this year. It seems that the starting baseline of this year is weaker on a number of fronts, whether it’s units or margin. I know you’ve taken more cost out on an annualized basis, so that helps. But kind of just flexing the confidence is still reaching that 200 and explained that given probably going to be a lower baseline this year? Does that assume kind of snap back to meaning to more normalized trends next year? Or kind of help understand kind of that the confidence kind of we’ll get it there?

Michael Kennedy: Yes. No, I appreciate that question. It’s a great question. And listen, I’m not an economic forecast guru at all. I just — I spent 30-plus years in the powersports industry. And I know that we go through cycles and we get great OEM partners who are working hard at bringing innovation and new product plans and evolution to product categories that BRP and Polaris and Harley and so on and so forth. So we know we’re going to get some help in that regard. We know we’re going to get through the economic challenges that we’re in today. It’s an election year. So we knew this year was going to be a challenge and dynamic, and we’re seeing that — we saw that in Q1, month-to-month. We saw that in Q2, month-to-month. And so it’s probably going to play like that through the rest of the year.

But when I think about this business and I think about the opportunities we have to continue to optimize the cost structure, continue to get the team excited about running the best dealerships in the country. The pre-owned opportunity is really exciting. Happy to announce that we opened up Houston here just recently, and we got to get through some start-up issues, mostly relative to the storm down there, but that’s really exciting, we’re going to watch that. That’s a scalable opportunity on the horizon for us. And I still think acquisitions are going to — certainly going to play a big piece of the future for this company. So all in all, I’m very excited about it. The team’s excitement is building. We’re building a team out here with Tiffany on board and so my optimism just grows.

Operator: Your next question comes from Craig Kennison of Baird. Please go ahead.

Craig Kennison: Your line is open. Hey, good morning and thank you for taking my questions. Mike, you were talking about Houston just a moment ago. I’m curious what the start-up costs are for a project like that and how you finance the inventory, whether that’s something you can use floor plan financing for as well?

Michael Kennedy: Yes. So thanks, Craig. I appreciate the question. So the cost for the Houston project is pretty minimal in terms of the capital outlay. It really is. We were lucky to find a facility that met our needs. Keep in mind, this is a pilot, right? So we want to try and be smart about the investment, be smart about the commitments that we’re signing up for in terms of property, but we were able to find something that we like and fit all the criteria we’re looking for. In terms of the inventory, we’re bringing that inventory through normal channels, and we can floor plan that inventory and whether we’re acquiring that through cash offer or transferring in from other stores, we could floor plan that inventory, and that’s what we’re doing right now. We also have a nice accessory lineup in that store with a partner. And so we’re excited about all that brings.

Craig Kennison: How quickly can it generate cash flow to be used to pay off debt, for example?

Michael Kennedy: That particular story, your question is around?

Craig Kennison: Yes or any use of cash like this. Look, I think there are investors who find the vision you have promising, but the level of debt this organization has just to be almost un-investable. And you’ve got a capital investment, some kind in Houston, but if it generates cash quickly, it’s great. If it’s a use of cash, deviates from debt reduction, I just feel like it makes it hard on those investors who are just unwilling to look at this kind of leverage.

Michael Kennedy: Yes. No, Craig, I absolutely appreciate that question, and I appreciate the added aspect of it. So the cash return on that particular project is pretty good. And we’re not going to share specifics around it, but it’s pretty good. And I want to make sure I also address the other piece of your question, which is our debt level and give investors confidence on it. So our expectation is that we pay off our converts in early ’25 with the cash on our balance sheet that we’re going to generate throughout this year. As you saw in the release, where you’ll see in the release, we were cash positive in the front part of the year, and we expect to be cash positive in the back part of the year. And we fully expect to grow into a leverage that makes everybody more comfortable.

We’re comfortable where we are today. We’re comfortable with the debt we have today. And we think there’s huge opportunity to grow the top line, but more importantly, grow the bottom line and generate more free cash flow as we go forward. This pilot could be a scalable item for us going forward in the future, and we’ll determine that as we go forward, right? But it isn’t — if it doesn’t do a great job in terms of generating cash, then we’ll walk away from it. And we won’t get burned with cash down in Houston. And by the way, my team is extremely optimistic about the opportunities of growing the pre-owned business and doing that through a dedicated pre-owned store.

Craig Kennison: And I guess the other side of that is we could be in front of a reduction in interest rates. We all know. Just curious, either you or Tiffany, how you see meaningful cut in rates flowing through your business model?

Michael Kennedy: Well, let me start by kind of talking on the retail end of interest rate cuts. And I’ll let Tiffany kind of talk about the impact to our debt, interest cash expense and stuff like that. I think an interest rate cut will help our showrooms, I think, pretty immediately. While an interest rate, if you do the math on our ASP and what a normal term is and what the rate is today, when interest rate will bring to a change on a payment, some people might say that’s not overly significant. But I just think the atmosphere, our customers are changed in other areas. And so I think any kind of interest rate relief will have a fairly soon impact on our riders mindset in terms of maybe trading or buying a new unit or whatnot. So I think interest rates will do good for us in terms of what customers are thinking about in our showroom. I’ll let Tiffany kind of talk about how the other side of the business will get impacted.

Tiffany Kice: Craig, this is Tiffany. Yes, our converts are fixed rates, so they won’t be impacted, plus they’re coming due very shortly. It’s our term debt and our floor plan debt that does have a variable rate to it. If you had about a 25 bp change, it’d be about $1 million on an annualized basis of savings. But keep in mind that those impacts don’t change immediately that there would be a little bit of a time lag as far as that affecting the P&L and the cash outflow.

Operator: And your next question comes from Fred Wightman of Wolfe Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Frederick Wightman: Hey, guys. Good morning. I just wanted to come back to the inventory levels. Didn’t really move a ton sequentially from 1Q into 2Q. But if we look back last quarter, Mike, you talked about some positive signs of improvement to start 2Q. So I’m wondering what changed if it was that retail softened, if it was that you saw an increase in shipments from OEMs? What sort of drove the disconnect versus the prior commentary?

Michael Kennedy: Yes, thanks. I don’t know if it’s a disconnect from what I said earlier. I think the Q2 typically absorbs a pretty heavy inflow of seasonal product, in particular, with watercraft. And so that’s probably — when I look at the inventory kind of puts and takes and that’s why I feel comfortable with where we are today, although I’d like to be lower, but I feel comfortable in terms of our ability to hit the target, which improved as you mentioned for the year. And so that’s probably what you’re seeing in the overall numbers. And also remember that in the inventory numbers, we don’t dissect pre-owned and new and PNA. And so it’s just all one number. So yes, but you’re right, listen, lower would be better at this point in time, less cost and less clutter in the showrooms, and that’s the goal going forward.

Frederick Wightman: And if you think about just the elevated new inventories that you’ve talked about, I mean, it seems like that’s pretty emblematic of what other dealers are experiencing. And so I’m wondering if you think that’s a fair characterization if you guys feel like you’re better positioned in terms of either total inventory levels or current versus noncurrent when you look at across the market at your peers and maybe what that means for front-end GPUs on the new side going forward?

Michael Kennedy: Yes. No, I think the entire industry is dealing with inflated major unit inventories. I don’t know how other dealers are taking that on, and we’re focused on our game and our strategy and we want to do it right. Clearly, the gross margin compression on new that you’re seeing in our numbers is real and that — that is a cause of, as Tiffany said in her remarks, that’s a cause of the industry being overinflated and everybody is trying to get their inventories down. I think maybe our numbers are a little bit influenced negatively because of the decisions we made to exit some brands. And so when you make a decision to exit a brand, we exit a bunch of marine products, a bunch of niche products, even some major brands in stores where we just didn’t think it was a good fit.

And that also puts pressure on those gross margins because we’re anxious to get that product out and move on. So, but that’s clearly an industry issue, and that’s why you’re seeing that compression on the gross margin.

Frederick Wightman: Great. And then just lastly, was there any impact from the CDK outage in the quarter in your reported results either from a CRM perspective or ability to close deals?

Michael Kennedy: Yes, great question. We did have some impact throughout the quarter because of the CDK. To be clear, our DMS — dealer management system is not connected to CDK, so it was not impacted. So our impacts were minimal compared to the auto industry. Our CRM platform as well as a titling administrative platform and the State of Florida was impacted. There were manual workarounds around both of those. There certainly was some impact, but we concluded it wasn’t a meaningful impact on the quarter.

Operator: And your next question comes from Seth Basham of Wedbush Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open

Seth Basham: Thanks a lot and good morning. My first question is just on the top line outlook. Given the weakened demand environment and the results you posted this quarter, how should we be thinking about top line trends for the balance of the year?

Michael Kennedy: Yes, Seth, this is Mike Kennedy. We made the prior decision not to guide going forward. And so probably going to refrain from forecasting what we think the top line is going to be. But I think, generally speaking, in my same remarks from past, it’s a challenging environment, we’ve got inflated inventories. We’re getting closer to an election and obviously, the macro issues. So I think until any of those things pass or change, probably going to experience the same what we experienced in the previous two quarters.

Seth Basham: Okay. And then remind us, seasonally, usually, the back half is weaker from a top line perspective than the first half, and that’s the appropriate way to think about it this year as well?

Michael Kennedy: Yes, I don’t have the seasonality numbers in front of me, but I recall, Q3 top line is still pretty strong. And then Q4 obviously drops off, especially towards the back half of that. But it — I mean, it’s a traditional kind of bell curve as you go through the year. So Q3 is an important quarter for us.

Seth Basham: Got it. Okay. And my next question is around the change in gross margin year-over-year this quarter. You attributed the decline to a few different factors over-stocking, I presume being the predominant one. But if you could help us understand the degree of magnitude from that relative to the exiting noncore product lines and brands, that would be helpful.

Michael Kennedy: Yes. For sure, the vast majority of the gross margin compression is from the inflated inventories in the industry as well as us. No question about it. I think just an adder to that is the fact it doesn’t help when you exit a bunch of brands in a bunch of stores and the teams trying to clean up that inventory. But the vast majority of the new gross margin pressure is coming from inflated inventories. And we can see that when we study the brands, the gross margin at the brand level, gross margin at the category level. Again, when I say category, I mean on-road motorcycles off-road, PWC, ATV, UTV. So we can definitely see that. And we see some relief in some of those areas as well, which gives us the confidence once we get through this inflated inventory levels, better days ahead in terms of that new gross margin.

Seth Basham: Relative to your expectations entering the quarter, did you get less support to clear that inventory from the OEMs or the competitive environment get more aggressive, you need to take additional price cuts to try to clear the inventory and win on your margins?

Michael Kennedy: I think what we probably saw in this past quarter, especially towards the ends, and we’ve seen it in all the domestic public manufacturer announcements in terms of their production levels and volumes planned for the back half of the year. And I think that’s probably the biggest lever that they’re doing. Some exciting news out of the Polaris meeting in terms of their off-road vehicle and some of the redesign and new pricing — aggressive pricing on those products. So more features at less price. So I mean that’s a good sign for days and again, I think the rider in this whole environment really wins because when the rider walks in the showroom, there’s great product and pricing is very aggressive.

Seth Basham: Got it. And last one for me for now. Just can you remind us what product lines you’re exiting and what brands you’re exiting?

Michael Kennedy: Yes, I don’t think we shared the actual brands that we exited. But we — I think we shared earlier that during COVID, we — the company picked up pretty much anything they could in powersports, in any kind of wheel product. Also, they expanded quite a bit in the marine sector. And so we have almost entirely exited the Marine business other than PWC and some Yamaha jet boat product. So we were in the pontoon products. We were in the big saltwater boats and we’ve — we exited pretty much all of that. And then we’ve exited a number of brands that were kind of niche products. And then on top of that, we’ve also exited — Seth, we’ve exited some brands in stores, I call them micro decisions, where it just didn’t make sense in terms of the brand assortment in that store.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] There are no further questions at this time. I’d now like to turn the call back over to Michael Kennedy, CEO, for closing comments.

Michael Kennedy: Thank you, everyone. I’d like to close out and just mention just two important things. First, I want to take a moment to express my appreciation and gratitude to the entire team throughout the company who continue to impress me by keeping our riders as our top priority and take on the current environment with conviction and determination. So thank you very much, team. Lastly, I’d like to close by emphasizing that we are committed to Vision 2026 and maximizing on our long-term per share value while confidence builds on delivering our key targets of annual revenue in excess of $1.7 billion, annual adjusted EBITDA of greater than $150 million and annual adjusted free cash flows of $90 million or more. And as I mentioned earlier, and I said from the moment we talked about Vision 2026, we are operating in a dynamic environment that might get us to our targets sooner or alternatively, it may take us a bit longer.

Regardless of the timing, we as a management team and company are laser-focused on achieving Vision 2026, and we’ll make decisions in the best interest of long-term per share value creation at every turn. Thank you very much for your time today and your continued interest in RumbleOn. That concludes our call.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines.

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