The Real Brokerage Inc. (NASDAQ:REAX) Q2 2023 Earnings Call Transcript August 12, 2023
Operator: Good day, everyone, and welcome to The Real Brokerage Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Call. At this time all participants have been placed on a listen-only mode and we will open the floor for your questions and comments after the presentation. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to your host, Jason Lee. Sir, the floor is yours.
Jason Lee : Morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for Real’s Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Call. With me on the call today are Tamir Poleg, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Michelle Ressler, our Chief Financial Officer. Morning, we’ll file this financial statements and management discussion and analysis for the second quarter ended June 30, 2023, on SEDAR and EDGAR. These documents along with the accompanying earnings press release to be found on both SEDAR and EDGAR. Before I turn the call over to Tamir, I’d like to remind everyone that the company will be making statements about its future results and other forward-looking statements during this call. Actual results may differ materially from these forward-looking statements and the risk factors that could cause these differences are detailed in our Canadian continuous disclosure documents and SEC reports.
It disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements, except as expressly required by law. Now with that, I’d like to turn the call over to Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Tamir Poleg. Tamir, please proceed.
Tamir Poleg : Good morning, and thank you, Jason. During the second quarter, Real once again delivered best-in-class growth with our agents closing a record number of transactions, translating through record revenue and adjusted EBITDA profitability. This comes despite the challenging market backdrop that has resulted in many other brokerages posting year-over-year declines. Meanwhile, we see our agent productivity stabilizing and believe there is further upside as the market volume rebounds. We are pleased to have achieved the important adjusted EBITDA profitability milestone as communicated last quarter. This is the direct result of the impressive agent growth we’ve experienced, our hard focus on maximizing our already-efficient cost structure over the past year and the revenue-generating changes we made to our model earlier this year.
Due to the strong results this quarter and the strength of our platform, we anticipate remaining adjusted EBITDA positive in the back half of the year. To provide context to our operating performance during the quarter, let’s review the state of the market. Elevated mortgage rates continued to depress residential housing activity due — post to affordability concerns on the buy side and the reluctance to give up low-rate mortgages on the supply side. U.S. existing home sales were down 21% year-over-year and 2% quarter-over-quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis. However, our strong agent growth in conjunction with the seasonal upswing in home sale volume resulted in another record-beating quarter for Real. Revenue for the quarter topped $185 million, which represents a 65% year-over-year increase and a 72% sequential increase from the prior quarter.
Against this backdrop, we’re proud to be the premier destination for productive agents. During the quarter, we grew our agent base by nearly 1,500 agents, bringing the total number on our platform to just under 11,500 agents. This represents a 105% increase from the second quarter of 2022. Although per-agent productivity still lags where we were in the first half of 2022, we saw a meaningful rebound that drove volume for the quarter to a record 17,537 close transaction, which is 72% higher compared to the same quarter of 2022 and 60% higher sequentially. We also continue to expand our geographic footprint. During the quarter, we opened in Delaware and in South Dakota, in the U.S. as well as Manitoba in Canada. We now have agents operating in 47 states, Washington D.C. and 4 Canadian provinces.
We expect to be in all 50 states by the end of the year. While most of our brokerage close ahead lies in expanding in our existing markets, we are excited to be nearing this important operational milestone. Agent churn was 6.5% for the quarter, an improvement from 8.3% during the prior consecutive quarter and 7.2% in Q2 2022. Our revenue churn, which we define as the revenue generated by churn agents over the prior 2 quarters improved to 3.8% from 4.3% in Q1 2023, but remains above 2.1% in Q2 2022. To put this into context, the impact from churn is incredibly low compared to the impact of the impressive inflow of agents joining our platform. Nonetheless, we have also been actively reviewing our onboarding and training procedures to make sure that every agent that joins our platform is empowered from day 1 to be successful at Real.
The bottom line is that we are focused on developing programs and resources to help our agents run their businesses effectively. In just the past few months, we’ve launched a quarterly agent recognition program to celebrate success and foster community. We have overhauled our marketing center to make it easier for agents to discover and distribute content, and we launched a new agent onboarding program with weekly training. I would also like to provide an update on several of our important initiatives. Yesterday, we announced the full public rollout of Leo, our new AI-powered virtual concierge that is fully integrated into our recent transaction management platform. Leo can answer agent questions in real-time 24/7, leveraging Leo’s extensive proprietary knowledge base to create a completely customized experience.
This release has been gone through an alpha testing phase with a select group of agents, and we are excited to now offer this to all agents. This will save them time and make our already lean support team even more efficient which fundamentally aligns with our core philosophy of becoming the premier technology-driven brokerage by building scalable solutions for our agents. We’ll continue to improve and add features to Leo, ensuring that our agents and employees realize the full potential that AI has to offer. We are also working hard to lay the foundation for our industry-changing mature experience we’ve spoken about in prior calls. Last year, we acquired Expetitle and LemonBrew Lending, which we have rebranded as Real Title and One Real Mortgage, respectively.
These acquisitions serve as the bedrock to the one-stop shop home buying experience we are developing. While the revenue contribution from these divisions is still relatively small, they are essential building blocks and now growing fast. We are pleased to announce that we expect to be releasing the initial version of our consumer-facing app with an integrated mortgage application process and our annual RISE Conference taking place from October 22 through the 24th. As I’ve said before, our one-stop shop vision truly represents a revolution in the way people will buy and sell homes. We view this initial app release as the first step in a multiyear journey and the time line we follow reflects our commitment to making sure that we build this correctly from the onset.
We are excited to share the app, and we’ll have more to share on several other important initiatives at the conference in October. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Michelle for the financial update. Michelle?
Michelle Ressler : Thank you, Tamir, and thank you, everyone, for joining us. I’ll start by reviewing some of our key financial results for the second quarter. The total value of homes transacted over our platform surged nearly $7 billion in the second quarter, which represents a 66% year-over-year increase. The total number of transactions on our platform during the quarter increased to 17,537, a 72% year-over-year increase. The median sales price of properties sold by our agents was $369,000, which represents a modest 1.6% decline compared to the same quarter in 2022, in line with the broader market trend. Revenue increased to $185 million, a 65% increase compared to a year ago. Meanwhile, gross profit increased 91% year-over-year to $17.8 million.
Our gross margin expanded year-over-year to 9.6% from 8.3% in Q2 2022. The improvement from a year ago reflects a combination of greater fee income associated with the model changes we outlined on last quarter’s call as well as the still small but growing revenue from our higher gross margin Title and Mortgage businesses. As of June 30, 2023, 10.2% of our agents had exceeded their commission cap, a notable increase from 8.2% as of March 31, but still short of the 10.5% level for the same period in 2022. The capped cohort represented 52% of commission revenue in Q2 2023 compared to 53% in Q2 2022 and 43% in Q1 2023. The fee income is particularly worth highlighting this quarter. While still relatively small as a percentage of total revenue, the income generated by agent fees totaled $1.4 million during the quarter, which represents 121% year-over-year increase and a 49% increase from Q1 2023.
Importantly, this is revenue that essentially flows down directly to our bottom line and is reflective of the fee adjustments announced earlier this year. Meanwhile, the revenue generated by our Title and Mortgage businesses continues to ramp up. We view these businesses as building blocks for a one-stop shop consumer experience and are taking care to execute thoughtfully in how we integrate and expand these operations into our existing platform. We continue to explore other initiatives to enhance our margin that we look forward to sharing more details on in upcoming quarters. Meanwhile, we saw agent productivity rebound seasonally even as it remains depressed compared with last year. Commission revenue per productive agent, a core measure of agent productivity, rebounded to $34,700 compared to $26,000 in Q1 of 2023, but still behind $41,400 in Q2 of 2022.
The number of transactions closed by this cohort improved to 3.4 compared to 2.7 in the prior quarter period and 3.8 in the prior year period. To strip out the effect of new agents joining, we also track the commission revenue per productive agent already on our platform at the beginning of the quarter. This is similar to a same-store sales figure reported by the retail industry. This cohort closed 4.4 transactions and generated $45,500 on average compared to 4.3 transactions, generating $46,700 in Q2 of 2022. We noted productivity was stabilizing on last quarter’s call, and we see considerable product to the upside as market conditions improve. Looking at the geographies we operate in, 9.9% of our U.S. agents ended the quarter with cap status, a slight increase from 9.7% in Q2 of 2022 and up from 8.2% in Q1 of 2023.
Our Canadian cap agents experienced a more meaningful increase with 12.9% ending the quarter with cap status versus 7.9% at the end of Q1 although this is still well below the 20% level in Q2 of 2022. Canada now represents 10% of our agent base, up from 8% 1 year ago, accounting for 15% of commission revenue in Q2 2023, compared to 18% in Q2 of 2022 and 11% in Q1 of 2023. Our highest-earning elite agents were steady quarter-over-quarter at 0.5% of our agent base, down from 1.6% in Q2 2022. These agents generated 10% of total commission revenue, up from 8.5% in the prior quarter, but down from 19.4% in Q2 of 2022. The requirement to achieve and maintain this status are reserved for our most productive agents and a sustained period of market weakness is evident in this decline.
In Q2 2023, 56% of commission revenue was generated by our agents representing the buy side, 40% was on the sell side and 4% was from dual agency representation. This has remained relatively unchanged each quarter over the past year and does not include revenue that was book related to agent referrals, which accounts for approximately 2% of the overall total. Shifting over to OpEx. Our total operating costs for the quarter, including revenue share were $21.5 million. This represents 11.6% of revenue compared with 12% in Q2 2022. Our operating expense per transaction, excluding revenue share, which is a core component of our agent incentives declined 12% year-over-year to $788. We are excited about the significant progress we’ve made optimizing our cost structure over the past year as the housing market turned negative.
While transaction volumes on our platform continue to grow, we look forward to realizing further operating leverage that our lean model provides. Our revenue share expense, which is our largest operating cost was $7.7 million compared to $4.4 million in the prior year period. Revenue share expense per average agent was $715, down 17% year-over-year from $861. Note that compared to prior earnings calls, this metric is based on the number of average agents during the quarter rather than the total at the end of the quarter as we believe this is more indicative of the underlying trend given the high growth of our agent base. As a reminder, we treat revenue share as a marketing expense since the benefit of our sponsorship structure not only helps attract new agents, but also drives retention and higher productivity across our platform.
Our headcount ratio, which we define as full-time employees, excluding Real Title and One Real Mortgage employees divided by the number of agents that are currently on our platform improved to 1:113 compared to 1:62 in Q2 of 2022, but remains relatively flat compared to 1:114 in Q1 of 2023. While we have continued to experience strong agent growth, we also expanded our hiring going into the quarter, particularly on our technology team as we invest in the next growth phase for Real. We continue to experience increasing returns to scale for our Brokerage business. The size of our transaction processing team remained at 9 employees, unchanged on both a quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year basis. These employees process all 17,537 transactions that closed during the quarter or 1,949 transactions per employee.
We don’t anticipate needing to make any significant additions as we continue to grow our transaction base. We believe that these metrics best highlight the efficiency and scalability of our platform that is made possible by the strength of our tech stack. We view this as one of the biggest competitive advantages for our business, and this should become even more apparent as we continue to scale. Real’s net loss for the quarter was $4.1 million compared to a $4.2 million net loss in Q2 2022. This translates to a loss per share of $0.02 in both periods. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was positive $2.6 million compared to $583,000 in Q2 of 2022. This represents an inflection point for our company that we have been talking about for several quarters.
Having achieved this milestone, we expect to be adjusted EBITDA profitable for the full year 2023. Turning to our financial position. Our unrestricted cash and investments balance increased $8.6 million to $28.1 million as of June 30, up from $19.5 million as of March 31. This consists of $17.2 million of unrestricted cash and $10.9 million in short-term investments. Before I close out my comments, I would also like to note that on July 28, we announced that we intend to voluntary delist from the Toronto Stock Exchange following a review of the costs and benefits of maintaining a dual listing. Our Canadian business is growing rapidly, and we will continue to invest in this region. This consolidation of share trading onto a single exchange simply reflects our dedication to being as cost-conscious and efficient as possible.
Shares will be delisted effective as of close of market on August 11, and we’ll continue to trade on NASDAQ Capital Market under the same ticker. This concludes my financial remarks. I will now ask the operator to open up the line for Q&A. Operator, can you please poll for questions?
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Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question is coming from Darren Aftahi from ROTH MKM.
Darren Aftahi : A couple, if I may. Just kind of big picture. I think you’ve added in the last 4 quarters, like well over 1,500 agents. And I appreciate that your economic model is probably more attractive than some other legacy players in the space. But there are peers that have kind of similar offerings. I guess maybe, Tamir, strategically, one, why do you think you’re just seeing so much traction in terms of agent growth when other brokers and brokerages aren’t? And then two, could you maybe talk about the pipeline of some of these bigger agencies that might be coming on in the next 6 to 12 months and kind of how that compares to the prior 12 months?
Tamir Poleg : Sure. Thank you, Darren. So yes, I think that as we communicated before, we believe that our model is extremely attractive, especially in times like these when transaction volume in the market decreases and agents are just looking for more cost-effective solutions that just give them more value at a lower cost. And I think that this is what has been driving more agents to our way. I can tell you that what we’ve been sensing in the past month or 2, is that a lot of those larger teams are now really hurting just because its production and what we’re hearing from them is, yes, we are intending to join Real, but first, we want to stabilize our businesses. So what they’re telling us is that they’re going to join in September or October, so we do feel that most of the large teams are kind of feeling the pain in the market at the moment.
And at the same time, we also see churn of nonproductive agents are rising. So for example, last quarter, about 10% of our churn, maybe a little bit more than that were agents that just declared that they are leaving the industry compared to about 4% in the prior quarters. So we do see more agents leaving the industry overall. But in terms of pipeline, we have a very strong pipeline of both individual agents and high-performing teams. As you know, we added the biggest performing team so far a couple of weeks ago in California doing over $1 billion in annual sales. So we do see larger teams joining in terms of production, and we have a solid pipeline.
Darren Aftahi : That’s helpful. And then maybe just one last one for me, a financial one for Michelle. Maybe my math is correct, thinking group share was roughly $72 million year-on-year. in that yield is like a 6.4% EBITDA yield on that revenue growth. I guess, my question is, is that the type of leverage we can expect from the company going forward, i.e., that 6% yield is a good bogey to kind of use and model? Or are there areas of reinvestment that may lower that number going forward?
Michelle Ressler : Yes, I mean, we’ve been laying the ground work but just for profitability for a while. I think that, that is a good indicator of where we can expect it to be for the remaining quarters, but there is also a seasonality component to it. So we should take that into account. If you think about OpEx going forward, I think last year, it’s down a little bit compared to last year. So it was 11.6% this quarter of revenue compared to 12% in the same quarter last year. So we’re tracking a little bit ahead of last year, but you can test that’s a good model for OpEx as a percentage of revenue.
Operator: Your next question is coming from Stephen Sheldon from William Blair.