NASDAQ:UPBD Upbound Group Q3 2023 Earnings Report $23.05 +0.13 (+0.57%) Closing price 05/30/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$23.15 +0.10 (+0.43%) As of 05/30/2025 07:24 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Upbound Group EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.79Consensus EPS $0.75Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPSN/AUpbound Group Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$979.10 millionExpected Revenue$966.46 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$12.64 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AUpbound Group Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2023Date11/2/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateThursday, November 2, 2023Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsUpbound Group's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, August 7, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 31, 2025 at 9:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Upbound Group Q3 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 2, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Quarter 3 2023 UPbound Group Incorporated Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would like to now hand the conference over to your first Speaker 100:00:42Thank you all for joining us to discuss the company's results for the Q3 of 2023. We issued our earnings release before the market opened today And the release and all related materials, including a link to the live webcast, are available on our website at investor. Upbound.com. On the call today from UPBOUND GROUP, we have Mitch Fadel, our CEO and Fami Khadem, our CFO. As a reminder, Some of the statements provided on this call are forward looking and are subject to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. Speaker 100:01:23These factors are described in our earnings release as well as in the company's SEC filings. UPBOUND GROUP undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements, except as required by law. This call will also include references to non GAAP financial measures. And our discussion of comparable performance will generally refer to non GAAP results. Please refer to our Q3 earnings release, which can be found on our website for a description of the non GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:02:03With that, I will turn the call over to Mitch. Speaker 200:02:06Thank you, Brendan, and welcome everyone to the call this morning. We are pleased to report another strong quarter for the company, which generated financial results at the high end of our financial outlook. Non GAAP diluted earnings per share was $0.79 compared to guidance of $0.70 to $0.80 on revenues of $979,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA of $106,000,000 We are encouraged to see our businesses are on track to meet key operating objectives For the year despite the continuing challenging external conditions, we again delivered sequential improvement in top line trends, lower overall loss rates year over year and strong margins due to stable customer payment behavior in the 3rd quarter. Considering the Q3 strong financial results, the positive trends we're seeing in the business and the resilient underlying fundamentals of the lease to own model, Our outlook for 2023 has continued to improve. Accordingly, we increased the midpoint of our 2023 financial targets, So, which Fami will discuss in more detail in a few minutes. Speaker 200:03:13Before reviewing our Q3 results, given Ongoing headwinds across consumer credit, I think it's worthwhile to offer some perspective on the state of the non prime consumer, who we believe we know well based on Rent A Center's 50 years of operating history in this market. The fact that we've been successful for over 50 years speaks to the durability of the lease zone model and its relative stability within disruptive economic environments. We attribute this countercyclical aspect to a few factors. First, our lease solutions have a strong value proposition for consumers with credit and liquidity constraints who otherwise May not be able to access important durable goods like furniture and appliances and tires and big ticket electronics. So it's not surprising that they will often reprioritize budgets to stay on lease with us as long as possible, especially given the important role these products play in their lives and the flexibility of a lease, which allows them to return the products free of any obligation. Speaker 200:04:142nd, historically, some nontraditional LTO consumers will trade down from credit solutions when lending conditions tighten and they no longer qualify for traditional consumer financing. This trade down can help sustain our lease portfolio, drive incremental lease portfolio value and help manage credit risk With higher credit quality consumers entering the top of the funnel. We've seen signs of trade down in our applicants and portfolios over the past 3 quarters and We believe this dynamic could be a positive tailwind or results if a slowdown in the economy continues. Regarding the current state of our consumers, many households are experiencing financial pressures due to higher prices for non discretionary items, growing debt balances and High interest rates, limited wage growth and decreasing bank account balances. While these dynamics are causing certain Customers to remain on rent for longer, it's important to recognize that many of our customers that many of the customers we serve are accustomed to living on tight budgets and are adaptable to changes in financial position. Speaker 200:05:20In addition, the labor market Since mid-twenty 22 and although the environment has not improved, it has stabilized as consumers have adjusted their cash priorities and We've adjusted our operations to balance meeting their needs and generating appropriate risk adjusted returns. Our underwriting and account management have continued to evolve over the past year improving the quality of our lease portfolio. So while we've seen some recent softening in the financial profiles Customers and applicants, we do not expect it to translate to a significant increase in delinquency and loss rates in the foreseeable future. In fact, Given the better than expected yields in the Asema business, we've been able to tactically underwrite leases in certain channels at the The best credit bins to pick up GMV volume with just a modest uptick in delinquencies and loss rates. The more challenging aspect actually of consumer behavior for us today is the ongoing impact of demand pulled forward in key durable goods categories, especially for Siemens Furniture Oriented Merchant Partners. Speaker 200:06:33On a positive note, we have partially offset the soft demand by expanding our presence in less penetrated categories such as auto and jewelry. Today, we have a more diverse product portfolio that Should be even better positioned for growth when the effects of the demand pull forward dissipate. So looking at 20 3 years out from peak stimulus and we expect furniture demand should begin to normalize. Putting the pieces together, we believe the non prime consumer has been And we'll continue to be resilient and is in relatively good shape for this environment, which further increases our confidence that the company can return to growth in 2024. Now moving to 3rd quarter results. Speaker 200:07:17The Rent A Center segment performed in line with our expectations. Revenues and same store sales decreased approximately 4% year over year, improving from a 4.9% decrease in the 2nd quarter with both Rental and fee revenue and merchandise sales revenue down year over year. However, despite ongoing top line pressures, Numerous forward looking KPIs demonstrated promising sequential improvement relative to the first half of twenty twenty three. The portfolio value finished the quarter 2.7% lower year over year, the best performance year to date and 18 almost 18.5% above the Q3 of 2019 on a per store basis. Deliveries for the quarter were down a modest 2% year over year despite continued pressure on consumer durable goods spending we see more broadly, which reflects the team's strong execution and the resilient underlying demand for Rent A Center's leasing solutions. Speaker 200:08:16We continue to make progress on strategic initiatives in the Q3, including logistics enhancements to improve the omnichannel experience, Our 50th anniversary campaign that drove a 40% lift in web traffic and a 15% lift in web orders for the quarter. We've relaunched our presence in tires and reopened 4 new stores. Higher rent at center web traffic led to an increase in e commerce revenue, which accounted for approximately 25% of the 3rd quarter revenues compared to 23% in the prior year period. Extended aisle continued to generate strong growth with deliveries up 129% year over year as we continue to add to our product lineup, which by the way We now offer about 12,000 SKUs on reno center.com, which is over 50% more year over year as far as the SKUs online. The emphasis we've placed on risk management over the past year continued to pay off as well in the Q3 with loss rates and delinquency rates in line with our expectations. Speaker 200:09:17Skip's loan loss rate for the Q3 of 4.3 percent was down 20 basis points sequentially and down 150 basis year over year with a 30 day past due rate of 3.1%, decreased 40 basis points year over year and has stabilized during a seasonably tough quarter. Moving on to Aseema, top line trends continued to improve there as well in the Q3 as we expected. GMV decreased 1.4% year over year, improving 440 basis points relative to the 2nd quarter. We saw modest growth in key metrics like active merchant locations, applications, funded leases and open leases. The external backdrop remained challenging with traffic and volumes for many merchants in more established categories like furniture and home electronics and appliances still negatively impacted by that demand pull forward and the ongoing pressure on consumer budgets. Speaker 200:10:14The team has done a great job And the platform in less established product categories like I mentioned before, things like auto and jewelry and channels like e commerce and The Aseemah marketplace have really helped us to offset sluggish demand. In addition, we picked up some good regional account wins and enhanced commercial positions with a few key merchants that also contributed incremental lease volumes in the 3rd quarter. And based on conversations with current and prospective merchant partners, we believe that Ascema is gaining both mind share and market share in the industry. Our e com capabilities, our ability to staff high volume stores and our flexible lease terms are key differentiators for us. Positive trends in September have carried over in October, increasing our confidence that GMV should grow in the low single digits Year over year in the Q4, as we've been predicting all year, which positions us well to end the year with a strong portfolio And grow revenue and profits in 2024. Speaker 200:11:14In fact, September was the 1st month of positive year over year GMV growth since December of 2021, And October was positive as well. Margins were strong again in the 3rd quarter with adjusted EBITDA margins at ACIMA Up 15.3%, up 2 70 basis points year over year benefiting from stable loss rates and a lower mix of customers electing the earliest lease payout option, which increases our yields. After 3 quarters of consistent declines in earliest payouts, we feel confident that the mix has Stabilized back to pre pandemic levels that are several 100 basis points below 20212022. Although we have seen a very modest uptick in delinquencies and loss rates in the Q3, we do not believe it's directly attributable to customers shifting from early payouts to staying on lease. Rather, it is related to seasonality, a slight shift in mix to e comm and isolated certain pockets of risk in our legacy Acceptance NOW business, which we have addressed by taking further underwriting actions in the quarter. Speaker 200:12:22The effect of slightly higher loss rates has been more than offset by the higher yields and margins we are earning from more customers staying on lease longer. We continue to advance initiatives that should enhance the company's competitive position and growth opportunities. The product development team launched several improvements that Continues to reduce friction for merchant partners and makes Sysema's offerings relatively easier to integrate and transact with versus our competitors. This dynamic is especially true for e commerce retailers. Additionally, our partnership with Concur Credit, which was formerly known as Genesis Financial Solutions is progressing nicely and we've gained important insights through early testing. Speaker 200:13:03Looking forward to the final months of the year, we think that our business should be approaching a normalized base from which we can start to progress on our 3 year financial targets we outlined at our Investor Day earlier this year, which we believe can sum up to a high teens to low 20% annual total shareholder return. Now moving to Slide 5 and an overview of our key priorities for the year. For the Rent A Center segment, we are focused on enhancing our omni platform and performance by expanding our extended aisle offerings and continuing to improve and grow the e commerce customer experience. In addition, we have logistics initiatives to improve our last mile capabilities, which are a differentiating factor for us. Additionally, our For Aseemah, our top priority is to increase lease applications and manage risk to start 2024 with a strong portfolio. Speaker 200:14:04Key initiatives supporting those objectives include the Asema marketplace, a robust business development pipeline and further enhancing data analytics and underwriting. Next, we remain focused on enhancing Aseema's market position as the most effective LTO solution for merchants by making Aseema Even easier to integrate with continuing to reduce friction points for e commerce and partnering with financial solution providers to create more holistic offerings. Top priorities at the UPBOUND holding company level are implementing our partnership with Concur Credit, realizing synergies And investing in our technology organization to support our growth agenda as we head into 2024. Looking back over the last 10 months, I'm really impressed with the company's progress despite the external headwinds. We've made numerous changes and upgrades in processes, people and technology to create what I believe is the best in class platform for non prime financial solutions serving consumers and merchants. Speaker 200:15:05It's exciting to see the pieces coming together and the potential additional value we can create for our customers, our partners and our shareholders. And I want to thank the entire team for their tremendous efforts and dedication. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Fami. Thank you, Mitch, and good morning, everyone. I'll start today with a review of the 3rd quarter results and then discuss our updated fiscal year 2023 guidance, after which we will take questions. Speaker 200:15:31Beginning on Page 6 of the presentation, consolidated revenue for the 3rd quarter was down 4.4% year over year with Asema down 5.8 percent and Rent A Center down 4.2%. Rentals and fees revenues were down 2.7%, reflecting lower portfolio values for both businesses during the Q3 of this year. Merchandise sales revenues decreased 13.6% due to fewer customers electing earlier payout options. The dollar decrease in revenue was fairly evenly split between rentals and refees revenue and Merchandise Sales Revenue. Consolidated gross margin was 50.8%, an increase of 140 basis points year over year with improvement in the Aseemus segment, partially offset by lower margins in the Rent A Center segment. Speaker 200:16:20Consolidated operating expenses, Excluding Skip's stolen losses and depreciation and amortization were up low single digits, with a low single digit decrease in store labor and other store expenses more than offset by higher general and administrative costs as a result of certain corporate investments and incentive based compensation tied to company performance. Ongoing enhancements to underwriting and account management drove a 50 basis point year over year reduction and consolidated skip stolen loss rate to 7%. On a sequential basis, consolidated loss rate increased 10 basis points due to seasonality and a modest uptick in the CEMA segment, notably the legacy Acceptance NOW business. Putting the pieces together, Consolidated adjusted EBITDA of $106,000,000 decreased 7.8% year over year on lower Rent A Center segment EBITDA and higher corporate costs, partially offset by higher Asema segment EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 10.8% was down approximately 40 basis points compared to the prior year period, with approximately 2 70 basis points of margin expansion for Aseema, more than offset by Approximately 120 basis points of contraction for Rent A Center and 120 basis point increase in corporate costs as a percent of sales. Speaker 200:17:39I will provide more detail on the segment results in a moment. Looking below the line, the 3rd quarter net interest Expense was $27,000,000 compared to $23,000,000 in the prior year due to approximately 300 basis points of year over year increase in variable Benchmark rates that affected our variable rate debt, which was approximately $815,000,000 at quarter end. The effective tax rate on a non GAAP basis was 25.5% compared to 26% for the prior year period. The diluted average share count was 56,900,000 in the quarter. GAAP earnings per share was $8 in the 3rd quarter compared to a loss per share of $0.10 in the prior year period. Speaker 200:18:22After adjusting for special items that we believe do not reflect the underlying performance of our business, non GAAP diluted EPS was $0.79 in the Q3 of 2023 compared to $0.94 in the prior year period. During the Q3, we generated $63,000,000 of free cash flow We repurchased approximately 900,000 shares in the 3rd quarter and we finished the quarter with a net leverage ratio of approximately 2.5 times, unchanged from the Q2. Drilling down to the segment results starting on Page 7. Total segment revenues decreased 4.2% year over year, in line with our expectations and improved from a 4.9% decrease in the 2nd quarter. Same store sales decreased 4% year over year in the 3rd quarter compared to a 4.9% decrease in the 2nd quarter. Speaker 200:19:48Skip stolen losses continue to improve driven by ongoing underwriting efforts, decreasing 150 basis points year over year to 4.3% and 20 basis points sequentially. Past due rates also decreased year over year with 30 day past due rates averaging 3.1% for the 3rd quarter compared to 3.5% for the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA margin for the 3rd quarter decreased 120 basis points year over year to 15 year over year increase in the ratio of operating expenses excluding Skip's stolen losses as a percent of revenue, even though expense dollars decreased year over year. Adjusted EBITDA margin decreased 2.90 basis points from the 2nd quarter, primarily reflecting normal seasonality and higher marketing expenses. For Aseema, as we expected, GMV year over year trends continued to improve sequentially in the Q3, approaching positive territory. Speaker 200:20:53Moreover, we experienced year over year growth in some key underlying drivers with active merchant locations and applications up low single digits. Those tailwinds were offset by lower average ticket size and lower approval rates as e comm and direct to consumer become a bigger portion of the application mix. Looking at the portfolio, open lease count was up mid single digits both year over year and sequentially and was the highest level since the Q1 of 2022. Revenues decreased 5.8% year over year, including a 3.2% decrease for rentals and fees revenue. Merchandise sales revenues decreased 14.5% year over year due to fewer customers electing the earliest payout option, with the mix of those transactions for the Q3 dropping down to levels last experienced in 2019. Speaker 200:21:43Skip stolen losses were generally in line with our expectations for the Q3. The virtual business losses as a percent of sales were 7.8%, a 10 basis points higher sequentially and within our long term target range of 6% to 8%, while losses at the legacy Acceptance NOW business We're in the double digits. During the quarter, we observed softening of performance at ANOW and tightened underwriting. We have begun transitioning merchant partners from the ANOW underwriting decision engine to the Asema platform and will continue with the larger accounts through the Q4 and the 1st part of next year. This will improve our underwriting capabilities and we should reduce losses as the back book from the legacy system winds down. Speaker 200:22:28On a consolidated basis, the loss rate of 9.4%, which was consistent with our 3rd quarter outlook. Operating costs excluding SIP stolen losses were down mid single digits in the 3rd quarter with lower labor costs from reduced operational headcount, largely offset by increased marketing investments. Operating costs excluding SIP's stolen losses as a percent of sales increased 20 basis points year over year due to the deleveraging effect of lower revenues. Adjusted EBITDA of $72,800,000 was up 14.5% year over year, primarily due to a 10% decrease in cost of goods sold driven by fewer early payout transactions that was partially offset by lower revenues. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.3 percent increased approximately 2 70 basis points year over year, driven by 3.30 basis points of gross margin expansion. Speaker 200:23:24For the Mexico segment, adjusted EBITDA was higher year over year and the franchise segment adjusted EBITDA was lower. Corporate costs were approximately 25% higher compared to the prior year, primarily due to higher projected performance based compensation. Shifting to the 2023 financial outlook. Note that references to growth or decreases generally refer to year over year changes unless otherwise stated. Most of my commentary will be focused on the non GAAP results. Speaker 200:23:54Our forecast assumes a macroeconomic backdrop consistent with existing conditions, continued discipline and targeted underwriting and a slight increase in unemployment. We did not incorporate any material benefit from trade down or the credit card loan partnership. For the full year, we expect to generate revenue of $3,950,000,000 to $4,000,000,000 Adjusted EBITDA is now expected $450,000,000 to $460,000,000 excluding stock based compensation of approximately 25,000,000 We are raising the lower end and the midpoint of our target range for fully diluted non GAAP earnings per share to $3.45 to $3.55 which assumes a fully diluted average share count of 56,300,000 and no further share repurchases through the remainder of the year. We expect $215,000,000 to $235,000,000 of free cash flow, which is somewhat lower than the previous outlook due to higher projected GMV for Aseema and replenishing our inventory for the Rent A Center business. As you may recall, GMV growth and portfolio growth tend to reduce free cash flow conversion as the cash flow cash outflow per product is greater than the associated lease payments collected in the near We expect net interest expense of approximately $110,000,000 and a non GAAP effective tax rate of approximately 26%. Speaker 200:25:21My discussion on the outlook for operating segments will focus on the Q4. For the Rent A Center segment, we expect portfolio value will finish 4th quarter flat to down low single digits. We expect revenues will also be flat to down low single digits and adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the mid teens. Loss rate should be relatively similar to the 3rd quarter in the 4% to 4.5% range. For Asimo, we expect 4th quarter GMV will be up low single digits year over year with revenues up low to mid single digits. Speaker 200:25:56We expect gross margins will be similar to the Q3 and do not anticipate additional decreases in the mix of consumers electing the earliest payout option. We expect adjusted EBITDA margin will be in the low to mid teens with stable gross margins partially offset by higher loss rates due to a seasonal uptick in the 4th quarter and higher losses in the legacy ANOW business. For Mexico and We expect Mexico revenue will be up mid teens year over year and franchise revenue down low double digits. We expect both Mexico and franchise adjusted EBITDA to be up year over year and sequentially. Corporate costs are expected to increase mid single digits sequentially. Speaker 200:26:41Regarding capital allocation, We repurchased 900,000 shares during the Q3 and another 800,000 shares in October, totaling $50,000,000 3 percent of basic shares outstanding. We opportunistically elected to return capital to shareholders given what we believe is a favorable return offered by our shares at recent price levels. Our strong cash flow generation and liquidity allow us to take a balanced approach to capital allocation, which we have achieved year to date. The company has paid down approximately $135,000,000 of debt and returned $88,000,000 to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks through the end of the third quarter. Looking out over the next couple of quarters, our top priorities will likely be more aligned with our long term priorities of reinvesting in the business, Dividend payments and debt reduction. Speaker 200:27:30We ended the 3rd quarter with $1,300,000,000 of outstanding debt and net leverage of 2.5 times. We are still targeting leverage of 1.5 times over the long term, but we will continue to assess market conditions and reasonable alternative uses of capital Generate favorable risk adjusted returns for shareholders. To conclude, our business fundamentals remain strong. We are encouraged by the strong top line trend and our progress to returning growth in both of our major segments. While there is still a high level of external uncertainty and headwinds on consumer durable goods spending. Speaker 200:28:06We remain confident in our ability to balance GMV growth, supporting our consumers and merchants needs, while appropriately managing risk. We are focused on disciplined underwriting and expense management, while also investing in capabilities that will drive Thank you for your time this morning. We will now turn the call over to your questions. Operator00:28:32Thank you. At this time, we will conduct a question and answer session. Our first question today comes from the line of Bobby Griffin with Raymond James, your line is now open. Speaker 300:29:05Good morning, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions. I guess congrats on some of the inflection points here on GMV with the CEMA and some of the success that it's Starting to show up. I guess my first question is just a little bit more kind of multi year or just higher level. We've always been trained to kind of look at the trailing portfolio balances in Businesses to kind of help guide us to next year or the future revenue and things like that. Speaker 300:29:34And I know we don't want to give 2024 guidance, but With this earnings season, we've seen some more cautious commentary about 2024. So just when you guys sit here today and help us tune up our models, How do you think the portfolio balances in both of your key segments set 2024 up? And my second question, I'll just go ahead and ask now. Has the dynamic around 90 day buyouts been an over earning aspect this year? Or has it just been more of Things normalizing where we don't need to be overly concerned that we have to make a counter adjustment next year. Speaker 200:30:12Yes. Good questions, Bobby. I'll start and then Fami can add in. As far as the portfolio, Yes, we don't want to get into 2024 right now, but the comments we did make, like if you look at the 2 segments, we're going to starting with the CEMA, It'd be positive GMV for the first time. Well, as we said September October positive GMV for the first time in a couple of years. Speaker 200:30:36And as we think about the Q4 being positive, we roll into 2024 with momentum from a GMV standpoint Growth wise, we wouldn't expect that to start going the other way at the beginning of 2024. So and then Rent A Center, We said the portfolio, it's made progress all year. It's its best level in a couple of years now where it's only down 2.7% compared to last year, Which was a 200 basis point improvement. We'll be if we're not flat, we're going to be real close to flat at the end of the quarter. We said flat to down low single Digits in the for the portfolio. Speaker 200:31:12So you think about that momentum in the Rent A Center business and that being A flat portfolio or even if it's whatever low single digit, say, minus 1% or something very small going into next year with momentum. So I think both segments have the positive momentum that we've had all year in reducing the negative numbers It's turning positive in the seam in the 4th quarter. We believe it will turn positive in the seam in the 4th quarter as evidenced in September October. And then Rent A Center being real close to flatten the portfolio going into next year. So some positive momentum in both of them. Speaker 200:31:49And then the second part of your Question on the 90 day, the earliest payout options on the Aseema side or even the Rent A Center side, we're But I think you're particularly talking about the Asema side. We're back to pre pandemic levels. So we think this is Normal. It's not a new normal. It's actually just back to the normal from the elevated levels of the stimulus drove In 2020 2021. Speaker 200:32:16So I don't think you have to factor in anything different because they're just back to pre pandemic levels. Yes, Mitch, I definitely agree with the commentary around 2024. I do think we will end the year on a really Strong note from a portfolio standpoint on both of the businesses. We will have some tough comps on the CEMA side going into next year from a margin standpoint, reaching 16%, 17% EBITDA margins in the second quarter was something we've said is probably not sustainable at those levels, But very happy with where we are from a GMV standpoint as it trended up really throughout the quarter and as we commented showing growth in October as well. So from a 2024 standpoint, still feel like we'll be able to grow both revenue and EBITDA at both segments. Speaker 300:33:07Thank you. And I guess I'll follow Sami for that. Is that partly a function, usually flattish to maybe even slightly up portfolio, you'd have some OpEx Expense that could hurt or kind of hinder a little of the growth. Is the confidence in the growth just partly a function that you've been able to scale the organization's cost structure to be able to flow through EBITDA growth on a more flattish portfolio to start the year? Speaker 200:33:34Yes. I think we'll definitely be more efficient as we find synergies between the two segments. I do think though We are prioritizing putting investment back into the business to make it more consumer and merchant friendly. So we will spend money where it's appropriate to kind of support the growth. But generally speaking, we're very focused on Making the operations more efficient and you'll see that with the CEMA as we continue to grow revenues, you'll see some of that operating leverage really play out Just given the virtual nature of the business. Speaker 200:34:08And I think the other one to add to that when you think about margins is the losses on the Rent A Center side have come down all year. So early in the year, we'll be we'll have some positive loss comparisons on the Rent A Center side from where they were earlier in the year As they inch their way down. And then on the Aseema side, even though they've been in line all year on the virtual business, as we convert the legacy Acceptance Now business as Sam was talking about in his prepared comments, as we convert that, then those then we have some tailwind from a comp standpoint on losses on the Aseema business relative to the legacy business. Speaker 300:34:48Thank you. I appreciate the details. Best of luck here this holiday season. Speaker 200:34:53Great. Thanks, Bobby. Operator00:34:57One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Brad Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:35:16Hi, good morning Mitch, Shafam and Brendan. Congrats on the sequential improvement you all are driving here. A couple of questions if I could. First, I wanted to start just with the GMV outlook on the Asema side. Operator00:35:30And I was wondering if you Speaker 400:35:30could just give us a little Color on some of the growth drivers here and the composition just as we think about the trend in the number of doors and partners you have, What's going on with the average customer balance for new leases, number of items that are being rented and any color on kind of the product segments or channels? Just to get a little more color on how things are evolving there, Maybe to start. Speaker 200:35:58Sure, Brad, and good morning. Primarily the growth the improvement in GMV On the Asema side, it's been there's 3 or 4 reasons for it. Growing merchants, That's certainly that's probably number 1. More coming out of our marketplace atasima.com is another one. Sometimes it's not just growing merchants, but it's as we mentioned, enhancing our position with merchants. Speaker 200:36:32There may be They may have a couple of different leased zones in their store, but if you prove to be their best option and get in the number one position versus the number 2 position, That helps. The and then the diversity of categories as furniture continues to struggle Year over year, per door, we're getting we're making nice inroads in the wheel and tire business And the auto space, that's been a lot of the merchant growth as well. And those aren't down year over year. Those are actually up Year over year from when you think about door productivity, same with jewelry, we're adding merchants plus the door productivity per store is It's not down like it is in furniture. So all those things are making up for retail furniture on a per door basis being down for us. Speaker 200:37:26But Growing merchants, diversifying the categories, enhance positions with some merchants and then the marketplace, the direct to the Consumer stuff is working really well too. Yes. And maybe, Barrett, just to add on to that a little bit as far as the GMGP Trajectory really saw inside the quarter growth from July August into September. And I think we've mentioned it on our prepared remarks around September being the 1st month of growth, year over year growth since December of 2021 on the Aseema side. So really strong Performance for everything that Mitch said. Speaker 200:38:08Applications were up. Our conversion rates were up slightly year over year. Average ticket size has come down, which was a little bit of a headwind to GMV. But Q1 our Q2 was better than Q1. Q3 was better than Q2 and Q4 should be better than Q3. Speaker 200:38:25So a lot of momentum around GMV and its growth prospects. Which I think just adding on one more thing to that, Brad, If you think about the Furniture pull forward being probably the biggest headwind that we have in Household Durable Goods, Little bit in appliances and electronics, but it's primarily furniture with all that pull forward from the stimulus money in 2020 2021 that As things normalize and I don't think they're going to normalize any in the next 90 days or anything like that when it comes to that furniture pull forward. But if you think about Adding the merchants that we're adding, doing more in our marketplace, we mentioned in our prepared comments Some good regional wins. We don't have a national one to talk about just yet, but we've some good regional wins take which basically means taking share from our competition. And when you add all that together and then furniture, And when you add all that together and then furniture does improve, presuming 2024, maybe it's not normal, The 2024 is better than 2023. Speaker 200:39:29And when we talk to our furniture partners, 2025 will be better than 2024 and probably 2026 will be better than And maybe you level off then, it's going to take another couple of years. But if we're already positive For other reasons from a growth standpoint, we're in a really great position for when the furniture per door productivity comes back. Speaker 400:39:52We would agree, certainly all the data we have is that furniture is trending at below normal trends in the United States right now. So reason for optimism longer term. On the Rentasimpta side, Mitch, just as we look at some of your competitors, I mean, it does look like your results have been while lower year over year, significantly better than competitors. Can you maybe talk about what you're doing to maybe take share and maybe how the weekly value proposition may be more compelling, if it is, in this current environment than what some of your competitors offer? Speaker 200:40:30Yes. I think Rent A Center It has performed pretty well, improved the negative same store sales each quarter. And as we mentioned, Deliveries year over year being only 2% off, if you compare them to traditional retail and half the rent center business is furniture too. So Only being 2% off, we feel pretty good about, especially and that improved as the quarter went on as well as July, August, September. So Yes, I think we're just sticking with focusing on execution. Speaker 200:41:05The e commerce, as I mentioned, It's been really strong. We continue to grow it. When you think about e commerce, 25% this year roughly versus 23% last year growing And then 2022 was better than 2021 and so forth. So even post pandemic, continuing to grow the e commerce with the extended aisle Stuff that's on there as I mentioned and just really focusing on execution. We haven't changed our model. Speaker 200:41:32We're still In the communities with all of our stores, a steady store count, not moving them all over the place and doing things like that. We're just Steadily focusing on the customer being there for them in a traditional way, expanding the offerings for them certainly, We're really focused on execution and sticking with our core model. Speaker 400:41:57Great. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:42:00Thanks, Brad. Operator00:42:07One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Jason Haas with Bank of America. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:42:20Hey, good morning and thanks for taking my questions. I'm curious if you think you're seeing more trade down now than you were earlier in the year. And I know it's hard to guess, but do you expect to see more trade down going forward? Speaker 200:42:37It is hard to say. We can look at Vantage scores and stuff like that and See a little bit of it, but that's not the only indicator, right, when you think about trade down. We definitely think It's part of what's happening. Don't know that it's yes, I think I'd say it's been pretty modest. Every all the data we're looking at, We think it could we could get more in 2024 as credit tightens and Yes, it's possible that it goes up from here. Speaker 200:43:12We don't have that forecasted or anything. It would be a positive tailwind in upside. But It's been pretty modest, but I think it's definitely there. I can't say, Jason, that there's more today than it was 30 days ago, 60 days ago, 90 days ago or even earlier in the year. It's just really hard to say. Speaker 200:43:30But when you on the other hand, when you think about what I was just mentioning to Brad, Deliveries at Rent A Center are down 2% year over year and half their business is furniture. And when you look at We talked to our big furniture partners that we have on the Asema side and even suppliers, big names like Ashley Furniture and so forth. I mean, it's down a lot more than that, right, furniture. So is that because of trade down? It's got to be part of it. Speaker 200:43:59The team is executing really well, but they probably need a little help besides execution. And I think there's probably some trade down in there. Maybe it's more than we think. It's just really, really hard to say. There's Definitely some there and it could accelerate as we go forward. Speaker 200:44:14I don't know if anybody wants to hear it, but If unemployment goes up a little bit, probably even accelerates. If unemployment gets worse in the country in 2024, It may even accelerate as there's even more tightening above us. Speaker 500:44:31And then how about the impact from student loans? I know we're pretty early into that, but I'm curious if you started to see any discernible impact from those on loss rates or anything in the business that seems to be related to those repayments starting? Speaker 200:44:48No, we haven't. We've been watching it and looking at it, Trying to see if there's any difference, the same thing. We get asked the question sometimes about the SNAP program and so forth, but Nothing discernible that we can tell at this point. Yes. One of the things that we have started to notice a little bit, again very early on, But on the front end, folks that have student loans have started to convert a little bit less now than where they were kind of For the it turned back on. Speaker 200:45:21So nothing in our losses, nothing in our delinquencies, but we have seen some of it come in from the front end on the underwriting side. Speaker 600:45:29Got it. That's interesting. Thank you. Speaker 200:45:33Thanks, Jason. Operator00:45:39One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Vincent Caintic Stephens, your line is now open. Speaker 600:45:54Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. First one on the components of GMV. So nice to see the sequential improvement in that. And I'm just wondering if you could talk about the components in terms of Underlying demand sounds like maybe that stabilized is starting to improve, but then you talked about tighter underwriting. Speaker 600:46:18Maybe that dynamic slows Speaker 200:46:21it down a bit, but if Speaker 600:46:21you could talk about that. And then on a CEMA specifically, nice to hear the guide for Positive GMV in the 4th quarter. Just wondering when I compare that to Rent A Center, if that growth in Aseema Is from same store sales differences or if because you're adding more merchants that you're able to offset maybe what might be similar same store sales performance between Asema and Rentacenter? Thank you. Speaker 200:46:54Sure. Vincent, let me start and Sami can weigh in. I'll take the last part of that first. Yes, I think that is the difference where CEMA has growth in merchants, growth in the marketplace, Rent A Center does too on Rent A Center.com, but more growth in the marketplace and just growing the merchants. And Growth, when you think about it from a same store sales standpoint, it's Probably positive and we don't really look at that way, but just knowing the numbers I do look at, the verticals like auto, The wheel and tire verticals probably on a same store basis are flat to positive. Speaker 200:47:33Of course, furniture is down like we're talking about. Appliance is probably down a little bit as well. But I think from a same store sales standpoint, from an Aseema, It would depend on the vertical. Some would be positive and some would be wouldn't be like furniture as I mentioned. But The growth is really the difference between Asema and Rent A Center is we're adding merchants every day really on the Asema front. Speaker 200:47:58I mentioned a few good regional wins Where it's adding some GMV and taking market share. I think Rent A Center is probably taking a little market share too When you compare the numbers, but I think, as CEMA adding merchants every day is probably why they'll have positive they're hitting positive first, even though you see the improvement in both segments, Still hit a positive inflection point first, even with the tighter underwriting. And as we mentioned, Vincent, and as you know, When it comes to underwriting, when you say tighter overall, I'd agree with that. I would say we're tighter today than we were yesterday overall. On the other hand, we do look for pockets for performing partners and performing risk bins that you can dig deeper And take more risk in. Speaker 200:48:49So it's not like a carte blanche just tighten everything. Certain people, certain scores, Certain people what they look like when they come into the decision engine depending on their scores and other attributes, we dig deeper when we can. So that helps too. Yes, Vincent. I think the Mitch's answer for the second part of your question is really applies to the first part as well just from a standpoint of Demand per location is probably down, but given we're adding more locations. Speaker 200:49:20That's why I mentioned the applications We're up year over year. And then as far as the tightening that we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we really isolated it to our legacy Acceptance Now business, you've heard us talk a lot about synergies between the 2 major segments. And I think one of the Biggest components of that is on the underwriting side and making sure that our underwriting capabilities at Asema we apply on different parts of the business. And the legacy Acceptance NOW business rolls into the Aseema segment, but they are on 2 different underwriting systems today. We started converting them Earlier this quarter, we'll continue to do that throughout this year and the 1st part of next year to get the underwriting platforms kind of on the Aseemah consolidated business segment. Speaker 200:50:09And so we are we did have to tighten there. And so you've seen that impact in our loss rates this quarter a little bit, 40 basis points up Year over year, you'll see that again in the Q4 as you cut revenue before you start seeing the impact on the lost dollars. As soon as that gets converted over, I think you'll start seeing a trend much more in line with the Aseema segment, Aseema Virtual Business. Speaker 600:50:33Okay, great. That's super helpful. Thanks very much. Speaker 200:50:36Thanks, Vincent. Yes, and that's a real tailwind in the next year when you think about the virtual business Being between 6% and 8%, and we've been more like 9% if you look over the last four quarters, Yes, 9% to 9.5% because the legacy business adding into that. So once that legacy business runs through there, certainly the latter half of next year at least, And then you're at 6 to 8. That's a nice tailwind for next year. Great. Speaker 200:51:05Thank you. Thanks, Vincent. Operator00:51:12One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Kyle Joseph with Jefferies. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:51:26Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Most of them have been answered, but on Genasys or sorry, Concora. Just remind us timing in terms of when you anticipate that kind of Well, needing to flow through our models and how exactly that's going to flow through the P and L and which segment it flows through and how it Impacts and when it should start impacting the consolidated P and L? Speaker 200:51:55Hey, Kyle, good morning. Thanks for the question. Yes, we're really excited about The prospects of the partnership, we're still in test mode and rolling it out in a few stores, but Really positive discussions with our both our small and medium sized businesses as well as our bigger regional players. So The ones that don't have a second look provider are excited about having a second look provider at their locations for their customers. And the ones that do today really like the benefit of having one vendor that has 2 products. Speaker 200:52:30And so really excited about the prospects of it. We'll look to roll out really in scale beginning of the year in 2024 on both the general purpose credit card as well as the 2nd look on retail private label credit card. We'll give you more guidance into 2024 probably next order, but it will take some time to really ramp up for it to be a material number in the P and L. So I would look forward in the second half Up next year, but we'll give you more of that specific guidance in the numbers as we get into looking into 2024. As far as where it will hit, the majority of it will come through the Aseema segment. Speaker 200:53:12The Rent A Center segment will benefit From some of the general purpose credit card, but all of the private label credit card on the retail side will come through the Aseema segment. Operator00:53:33One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from John Rowan with Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:53:48Good morning, guys. Just one quick question for me and I apologize if you covered this earlier, I had to hop off for a second. But I believe that you guys said that there was a slight reduction in credit quality of applicants for the quarter. And I'm just trying to remember if that Foots are a dozen foot with prior comments about the quality of applicants coming in at the top of the funnel indicating whether or not there is a trade down. If I'm not if I'm remembering correctly, that was part of the call there that We were seeing better applicants at the top of the funnel and so we do believe we're seeing trade down. Speaker 800:54:25Can you just help me understand the comments today versus Prior comments? Thank you. Speaker 200:54:32Sure, John. Good morning. So the comment around weaker profiles was really related to the Acceptance NOW business and seeing some of that softness that we mentioned. Now business and seeing some of that softness that we mentioned previously and kind of isolated to Those retailers and those merchants really are on the furniture side. But generally speaking, if you look at our 3rd party scores, they're still elevated Year over year, Mitch mentioned it earlier in the call, but we did see a run up in those 3rd party scores at the beginning of the year. Speaker 200:55:04It's probably, I would Stabilized over the last few months, but the consumer is very resilient. They're still under pressure. Inflation is still very high. The discretionary spending is still very limited and tough out there. But generally speaking at the top of the funnel, we're seeing better scores. Speaker 200:55:25And hopefully that continues as people above us continue to tighten, it could be a nice Tailwind for us in 2024. It's not in any of our guidance that we've given to date, but could be out there for us If it continues to come in at the top end of our apps. And just a little more color on what Fami was just explaining where that's the We're referring to the legacy Acceptance NOW business, a little weaker coming in. And it's mostly because more of the With those retailers is coming from e com and they're doing a lot more furniture. A couple of them are doing a lot more furniture online, getting the order Generated online, and we're seeing some weakness in the customer coming through there. Speaker 200:56:09And one of the reasons we're Hurrying and by early next year, we'll have everybody converted over to the Aseema platform is because it does a better job From an e com standpoint, you haven't heard us talking over the years about the legacy business that we want to get it to a different underwriting level Quite as much as you've heard it today, but it's really because that e comm business is growing over there and we're excited about the Benefit by getting it over to the CEMA side because it can do a better job identifying The risk in those people. So that's really what it's all about. Just seeing outside and really one level down from the ANAL legacy business is e commerce Where the weaker stuff is coming through and we'll have that over on the Aseema side and some of our partners by the end of this year, but all of them By early next year. Okay, great. Thank you. Speaker 200:57:07Thanks, John. Operator00:57:14One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Alex Fuhrman with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:57:30Hey guys, just quickly for Speaker 300:57:31me, there's been a lot of talk about trade down in terms of credit. Curious if you're seeing your customers Trading down just in terms of what they're buying in your stores and with your partners on the Assema side as well. Are you starting to see People making smaller purchases or gravitating away from name brands at all? Speaker 200:57:55No, we really aren't. Alex, good morning. We're not really seeing that. You're going to hear a little more about that probably at retail than when you think about small weekly payments that the lease offers Or monthly payments for that matter. But when you think about a 55 inches TV at Rent A Center being $20 a week in the 75 inches TV being $26 a week And those are close, so those aren't exact numbers. Speaker 200:58:32But $6 difference a week, you won't see much trade down. Now maybe a retailer that one of the TVs is $1,000 and the other one's $500, you'll see trade down. But when you have the low weekly payments, you can return it any time. So if you get in over In fact, not just returning, you could switch to the smaller one if you need the $20 TV. Instead of the $26 one, You could exchange it for the smaller one. Speaker 200:58:54So there's not much reason for trade down with our lower weekly payments as compared to traditional retail. Operator00:59:13One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Carla Casella with JPMorgan. Your line is now Speaker 900:59:28Hi, thanks for taking the question. You gave some guidance on free cash flow. Can you just talk about Some of the components of the working capital or specifically more the merchandise purchases that you have, how much of that, is that Driving the full difference in your free cash flow and how should we think about that as we roll into 2024? Speaker 200:59:51Good morning. Parla, it was a little bit hard to hear you, but I think it was a free cash flow question. And yes, we did end up lowering our guidance for the year Slightly this quarter compared to last quarter, but very much in line with where we were earlier in the year. And I think it's a positive story from standpoint of GMV has come in higher than what we had initially thought and ramping up nicely in the 4th quarter. And same with the Rent A Center side of the business of replenishing that inventory for the holiday push. Speaker 201:00:26And so we expect that to continue to be a draw on free cash flow next year as well as we look into continuing to grow on both of the segments. So coming off of 2022 with a heavy free cash flow year, coming in with that year with A really big portfolio with comps down at a sema20%. We were able to generate a lot of free cash flow in 2022. Still very strong in 2023, but we're starting to see that growth in the second half of the year that we kind of predicted. And that should continue into 2024. Speaker 201:01:01So we'll get to more of a normalized level this year and then into growth mode into next year. So Expectation is that it will continue to be very strong, but probably a little bit less than 2024 than we had in 2023. Speaker 501:01:15Okay, great. And then the active merchant locations, you mentioned you continue to add additional locations. Can you just Have you seen the percentage growth, overall you see in those in Q4 or next year? Speaker 201:01:33We're up low single digits on the quarter and that's been pretty consistent over the last Couple. And so I would say outside of us winning a big national account or enterprise account, I would expect that Percentage to continue quarter over quarter? Yes, lowtomidsingledigitgrowth in merchants. And again, I mentioned it earlier, Carla, not just Growth is what we're all about and that's important, but also you got merchants that you're in now that you can enhance your position By having the best alternative for the customer, I mean best alternative price wise, but the easiest transaction to make on the website, things like that. So If you have the less friction than maybe one of the other ones they're using in that store, you can enhance your position and so forth. Speaker 201:02:19So we're focused on Continue to grow that low to mid single digits with the small midsized players, but also enhance our position within each one we're in as well as Obviously, we've got a whole team working on larger national accounts that have such a long sales cycle to them. Speaker 901:02:36Okay, great. And have you said how many Are you exclusive in? Speaker 201:02:43No, We don't the big ones we're in most of the big ones we're in we are exclusive. But no, we don't disclose that number. It's not the easiest number to get when you think about having over 30,000 Small and midsized stores out there where you see the products in there. But we look at it and we know We're improving it because we're seeing our position enhanced in a lot of cases, but we don't disclose the exact It is a focus of ours. We do push the sales team to ask for exclusivity and if we can't get exclusivity, how do we get first look Yes. Speaker 201:03:27Inside of our existing merchants. So it is a focus of ours. And that's the enhanced position has gone that focus has helped a lot. Exactly. Operator01:03:47I'm showing no further questions at this time. So I would like to now turn it back to Mitch Videl, CEO for closing remarks. Speaker 201:03:55Well, thank you and thank you everyone for joining us today. We appreciate your time As you look at the quarter and in our guidance going forward, another good quarter. I want to Thank you for your support, but also thank all of our employees, all the way from our executives and the People like Anthony and Tyler that are running these segments very successfully right now all the way to every employee in the company. We're executing, Of course not 100%, because we never do, but we're executing at a high level and we'll just keep that going. Thank you everyone. Operator01:04:35Thank you for participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program and you may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Strong Q3 delivery: Non-GAAP diluted EPS of $0.79 topped guidance ($0.70–$0.80) on $979 M revenue and $106 M adjusted EBITDA, driving an upward revision to 2023 targets. Sequential segment improvement: Rent-A-Center same-store sales decline narrowed to 4% (vs. 4.9%) with portfolio down 2.7% and e-commerce at 25% of revenues, while Acima GMV fell just 1.4% (improving 440 bps) as active merchant locations and open leases rose. Enhanced margins and lower losses: RAC skip losses dropped to 4.3% (down 150 bps) and 30-day delinquencies to 3.1%, while Acima adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 15.3% as early lease payouts normalized and underwriting actions stabilized loss rates. Raised full-year outlook: 2023 revenue is now expected at $3.95–4.00 B, adjusted EBITDA $450–460 M, non-GAAP EPS $3.45–3.55 and free cash flow $215–235 M, reflecting resilient lease-to-own fundamentals. Positive Q4 and 2024 setup: Rent-A-Center portfolio is forecast flat to down low single digits and Acima GMV up low single digits in Q4, positioning both segments for a return to growth in 2024 supported by omni-channel enhancements, product diversification and platform integration initiatives. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallUpbound Group Q3 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Upbound Group Earnings HeadlinesUpbound Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:UPBD) Receives $36.60 Consensus Price Target from BrokeragesMay 30 at 1:45 AM | americanbankingnews.comRent-A-Center Opens New Store in Harlan, Kentucky; Grand Opening Celebration Scheduled on May 30May 23, 2025 | businesswire.comThe Social Security Changes No One’s Talking AboutWhile most Americans worry about their next Social Security check... something far bigger is happening behind the scenes. An AI plan — authorized by Executive Order — is about to rewrite how the SSA operates.June 1, 2025 | Altimetry (Ad)Insider Confidence On Display: JEFFREY BROWN Acquires $516K In Upbound Group StockMay 7, 2025 | benzinga.comAnalysts Offer Insights on Technology Companies: Upbound Group (UPBD) and Monolithic Power (MPWR)May 3, 2025 | theglobeandmail.comUpbound Group, Inc. (UPBD) Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 2, 2025 | seekingalpha.comSee More Upbound Group Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Upbound Group? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Upbound Group and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Upbound GroupUpbound Group (NASDAQ:UPBD) leases household durable goods to customers on a lease-to-own basis in the United States, Puerto Rico, and Mexico. It operates through four segments: Rent-A-Center, Acima, Mexico, and Franchising. The company's brands, such as Rent-A-Center and Acima that facilitate consumer transactions across a range of store-based and virtual channels. It offers furniture comprising mattresses, tires, consumer electronics, appliances, tools, handbags, computers, smartphones, and accessories. It also provides merchandise on an installment sales basis; and the lease-to-own transaction to consumers who do not qualify for traditional financing, the lease to-own transaction through staffed or unstaffed kiosks located in third-party retailer's locations, and other virtual options. It operates retail installment sales stores under the Get It Now and Home Choice names; lease-to-own and franchised lease-to-own stores under the Rent-A-Centre, ColorTyme, and RimTyme names; and company-owned stores and e-commerce platform through rentacenter.com. The company was formerly known as Rent-A-Center, Inc. and changed its name to Upbound Group, Inc. in February 2023. Upbound Group, Inc. was founded in 1960 and is based in Plano, Texas.View Upbound Group ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles e.l.f. 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There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Quarter 3 2023 UPbound Group Incorporated Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would like to now hand the conference over to your first Speaker 100:00:42Thank you all for joining us to discuss the company's results for the Q3 of 2023. We issued our earnings release before the market opened today And the release and all related materials, including a link to the live webcast, are available on our website at investor. Upbound.com. On the call today from UPBOUND GROUP, we have Mitch Fadel, our CEO and Fami Khadem, our CFO. As a reminder, Some of the statements provided on this call are forward looking and are subject to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. Speaker 100:01:23These factors are described in our earnings release as well as in the company's SEC filings. UPBOUND GROUP undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements, except as required by law. This call will also include references to non GAAP financial measures. And our discussion of comparable performance will generally refer to non GAAP results. Please refer to our Q3 earnings release, which can be found on our website for a description of the non GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures. Speaker 100:02:03With that, I will turn the call over to Mitch. Speaker 200:02:06Thank you, Brendan, and welcome everyone to the call this morning. We are pleased to report another strong quarter for the company, which generated financial results at the high end of our financial outlook. Non GAAP diluted earnings per share was $0.79 compared to guidance of $0.70 to $0.80 on revenues of $979,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA of $106,000,000 We are encouraged to see our businesses are on track to meet key operating objectives For the year despite the continuing challenging external conditions, we again delivered sequential improvement in top line trends, lower overall loss rates year over year and strong margins due to stable customer payment behavior in the 3rd quarter. Considering the Q3 strong financial results, the positive trends we're seeing in the business and the resilient underlying fundamentals of the lease to own model, Our outlook for 2023 has continued to improve. Accordingly, we increased the midpoint of our 2023 financial targets, So, which Fami will discuss in more detail in a few minutes. Speaker 200:03:13Before reviewing our Q3 results, given Ongoing headwinds across consumer credit, I think it's worthwhile to offer some perspective on the state of the non prime consumer, who we believe we know well based on Rent A Center's 50 years of operating history in this market. The fact that we've been successful for over 50 years speaks to the durability of the lease zone model and its relative stability within disruptive economic environments. We attribute this countercyclical aspect to a few factors. First, our lease solutions have a strong value proposition for consumers with credit and liquidity constraints who otherwise May not be able to access important durable goods like furniture and appliances and tires and big ticket electronics. So it's not surprising that they will often reprioritize budgets to stay on lease with us as long as possible, especially given the important role these products play in their lives and the flexibility of a lease, which allows them to return the products free of any obligation. Speaker 200:04:142nd, historically, some nontraditional LTO consumers will trade down from credit solutions when lending conditions tighten and they no longer qualify for traditional consumer financing. This trade down can help sustain our lease portfolio, drive incremental lease portfolio value and help manage credit risk With higher credit quality consumers entering the top of the funnel. We've seen signs of trade down in our applicants and portfolios over the past 3 quarters and We believe this dynamic could be a positive tailwind or results if a slowdown in the economy continues. Regarding the current state of our consumers, many households are experiencing financial pressures due to higher prices for non discretionary items, growing debt balances and High interest rates, limited wage growth and decreasing bank account balances. While these dynamics are causing certain Customers to remain on rent for longer, it's important to recognize that many of our customers that many of the customers we serve are accustomed to living on tight budgets and are adaptable to changes in financial position. Speaker 200:05:20In addition, the labor market Since mid-twenty 22 and although the environment has not improved, it has stabilized as consumers have adjusted their cash priorities and We've adjusted our operations to balance meeting their needs and generating appropriate risk adjusted returns. Our underwriting and account management have continued to evolve over the past year improving the quality of our lease portfolio. So while we've seen some recent softening in the financial profiles Customers and applicants, we do not expect it to translate to a significant increase in delinquency and loss rates in the foreseeable future. In fact, Given the better than expected yields in the Asema business, we've been able to tactically underwrite leases in certain channels at the The best credit bins to pick up GMV volume with just a modest uptick in delinquencies and loss rates. The more challenging aspect actually of consumer behavior for us today is the ongoing impact of demand pulled forward in key durable goods categories, especially for Siemens Furniture Oriented Merchant Partners. Speaker 200:06:33On a positive note, we have partially offset the soft demand by expanding our presence in less penetrated categories such as auto and jewelry. Today, we have a more diverse product portfolio that Should be even better positioned for growth when the effects of the demand pull forward dissipate. So looking at 20 3 years out from peak stimulus and we expect furniture demand should begin to normalize. Putting the pieces together, we believe the non prime consumer has been And we'll continue to be resilient and is in relatively good shape for this environment, which further increases our confidence that the company can return to growth in 2024. Now moving to 3rd quarter results. Speaker 200:07:17The Rent A Center segment performed in line with our expectations. Revenues and same store sales decreased approximately 4% year over year, improving from a 4.9% decrease in the 2nd quarter with both Rental and fee revenue and merchandise sales revenue down year over year. However, despite ongoing top line pressures, Numerous forward looking KPIs demonstrated promising sequential improvement relative to the first half of twenty twenty three. The portfolio value finished the quarter 2.7% lower year over year, the best performance year to date and 18 almost 18.5% above the Q3 of 2019 on a per store basis. Deliveries for the quarter were down a modest 2% year over year despite continued pressure on consumer durable goods spending we see more broadly, which reflects the team's strong execution and the resilient underlying demand for Rent A Center's leasing solutions. Speaker 200:08:16We continue to make progress on strategic initiatives in the Q3, including logistics enhancements to improve the omnichannel experience, Our 50th anniversary campaign that drove a 40% lift in web traffic and a 15% lift in web orders for the quarter. We've relaunched our presence in tires and reopened 4 new stores. Higher rent at center web traffic led to an increase in e commerce revenue, which accounted for approximately 25% of the 3rd quarter revenues compared to 23% in the prior year period. Extended aisle continued to generate strong growth with deliveries up 129% year over year as we continue to add to our product lineup, which by the way We now offer about 12,000 SKUs on reno center.com, which is over 50% more year over year as far as the SKUs online. The emphasis we've placed on risk management over the past year continued to pay off as well in the Q3 with loss rates and delinquency rates in line with our expectations. Speaker 200:09:17Skip's loan loss rate for the Q3 of 4.3 percent was down 20 basis points sequentially and down 150 basis year over year with a 30 day past due rate of 3.1%, decreased 40 basis points year over year and has stabilized during a seasonably tough quarter. Moving on to Aseema, top line trends continued to improve there as well in the Q3 as we expected. GMV decreased 1.4% year over year, improving 440 basis points relative to the 2nd quarter. We saw modest growth in key metrics like active merchant locations, applications, funded leases and open leases. The external backdrop remained challenging with traffic and volumes for many merchants in more established categories like furniture and home electronics and appliances still negatively impacted by that demand pull forward and the ongoing pressure on consumer budgets. Speaker 200:10:14The team has done a great job And the platform in less established product categories like I mentioned before, things like auto and jewelry and channels like e commerce and The Aseemah marketplace have really helped us to offset sluggish demand. In addition, we picked up some good regional account wins and enhanced commercial positions with a few key merchants that also contributed incremental lease volumes in the 3rd quarter. And based on conversations with current and prospective merchant partners, we believe that Ascema is gaining both mind share and market share in the industry. Our e com capabilities, our ability to staff high volume stores and our flexible lease terms are key differentiators for us. Positive trends in September have carried over in October, increasing our confidence that GMV should grow in the low single digits Year over year in the Q4, as we've been predicting all year, which positions us well to end the year with a strong portfolio And grow revenue and profits in 2024. Speaker 200:11:14In fact, September was the 1st month of positive year over year GMV growth since December of 2021, And October was positive as well. Margins were strong again in the 3rd quarter with adjusted EBITDA margins at ACIMA Up 15.3%, up 2 70 basis points year over year benefiting from stable loss rates and a lower mix of customers electing the earliest lease payout option, which increases our yields. After 3 quarters of consistent declines in earliest payouts, we feel confident that the mix has Stabilized back to pre pandemic levels that are several 100 basis points below 20212022. Although we have seen a very modest uptick in delinquencies and loss rates in the Q3, we do not believe it's directly attributable to customers shifting from early payouts to staying on lease. Rather, it is related to seasonality, a slight shift in mix to e comm and isolated certain pockets of risk in our legacy Acceptance NOW business, which we have addressed by taking further underwriting actions in the quarter. Speaker 200:12:22The effect of slightly higher loss rates has been more than offset by the higher yields and margins we are earning from more customers staying on lease longer. We continue to advance initiatives that should enhance the company's competitive position and growth opportunities. The product development team launched several improvements that Continues to reduce friction for merchant partners and makes Sysema's offerings relatively easier to integrate and transact with versus our competitors. This dynamic is especially true for e commerce retailers. Additionally, our partnership with Concur Credit, which was formerly known as Genesis Financial Solutions is progressing nicely and we've gained important insights through early testing. Speaker 200:13:03Looking forward to the final months of the year, we think that our business should be approaching a normalized base from which we can start to progress on our 3 year financial targets we outlined at our Investor Day earlier this year, which we believe can sum up to a high teens to low 20% annual total shareholder return. Now moving to Slide 5 and an overview of our key priorities for the year. For the Rent A Center segment, we are focused on enhancing our omni platform and performance by expanding our extended aisle offerings and continuing to improve and grow the e commerce customer experience. In addition, we have logistics initiatives to improve our last mile capabilities, which are a differentiating factor for us. Additionally, our For Aseemah, our top priority is to increase lease applications and manage risk to start 2024 with a strong portfolio. Speaker 200:14:04Key initiatives supporting those objectives include the Asema marketplace, a robust business development pipeline and further enhancing data analytics and underwriting. Next, we remain focused on enhancing Aseema's market position as the most effective LTO solution for merchants by making Aseema Even easier to integrate with continuing to reduce friction points for e commerce and partnering with financial solution providers to create more holistic offerings. Top priorities at the UPBOUND holding company level are implementing our partnership with Concur Credit, realizing synergies And investing in our technology organization to support our growth agenda as we head into 2024. Looking back over the last 10 months, I'm really impressed with the company's progress despite the external headwinds. We've made numerous changes and upgrades in processes, people and technology to create what I believe is the best in class platform for non prime financial solutions serving consumers and merchants. Speaker 200:15:05It's exciting to see the pieces coming together and the potential additional value we can create for our customers, our partners and our shareholders. And I want to thank the entire team for their tremendous efforts and dedication. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Fami. Thank you, Mitch, and good morning, everyone. I'll start today with a review of the 3rd quarter results and then discuss our updated fiscal year 2023 guidance, after which we will take questions. Speaker 200:15:31Beginning on Page 6 of the presentation, consolidated revenue for the 3rd quarter was down 4.4% year over year with Asema down 5.8 percent and Rent A Center down 4.2%. Rentals and fees revenues were down 2.7%, reflecting lower portfolio values for both businesses during the Q3 of this year. Merchandise sales revenues decreased 13.6% due to fewer customers electing earlier payout options. The dollar decrease in revenue was fairly evenly split between rentals and refees revenue and Merchandise Sales Revenue. Consolidated gross margin was 50.8%, an increase of 140 basis points year over year with improvement in the Aseemus segment, partially offset by lower margins in the Rent A Center segment. Speaker 200:16:20Consolidated operating expenses, Excluding Skip's stolen losses and depreciation and amortization were up low single digits, with a low single digit decrease in store labor and other store expenses more than offset by higher general and administrative costs as a result of certain corporate investments and incentive based compensation tied to company performance. Ongoing enhancements to underwriting and account management drove a 50 basis point year over year reduction and consolidated skip stolen loss rate to 7%. On a sequential basis, consolidated loss rate increased 10 basis points due to seasonality and a modest uptick in the CEMA segment, notably the legacy Acceptance NOW business. Putting the pieces together, Consolidated adjusted EBITDA of $106,000,000 decreased 7.8% year over year on lower Rent A Center segment EBITDA and higher corporate costs, partially offset by higher Asema segment EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 10.8% was down approximately 40 basis points compared to the prior year period, with approximately 2 70 basis points of margin expansion for Aseema, more than offset by Approximately 120 basis points of contraction for Rent A Center and 120 basis point increase in corporate costs as a percent of sales. Speaker 200:17:39I will provide more detail on the segment results in a moment. Looking below the line, the 3rd quarter net interest Expense was $27,000,000 compared to $23,000,000 in the prior year due to approximately 300 basis points of year over year increase in variable Benchmark rates that affected our variable rate debt, which was approximately $815,000,000 at quarter end. The effective tax rate on a non GAAP basis was 25.5% compared to 26% for the prior year period. The diluted average share count was 56,900,000 in the quarter. GAAP earnings per share was $8 in the 3rd quarter compared to a loss per share of $0.10 in the prior year period. Speaker 200:18:22After adjusting for special items that we believe do not reflect the underlying performance of our business, non GAAP diluted EPS was $0.79 in the Q3 of 2023 compared to $0.94 in the prior year period. During the Q3, we generated $63,000,000 of free cash flow We repurchased approximately 900,000 shares in the 3rd quarter and we finished the quarter with a net leverage ratio of approximately 2.5 times, unchanged from the Q2. Drilling down to the segment results starting on Page 7. Total segment revenues decreased 4.2% year over year, in line with our expectations and improved from a 4.9% decrease in the 2nd quarter. Same store sales decreased 4% year over year in the 3rd quarter compared to a 4.9% decrease in the 2nd quarter. Speaker 200:19:48Skip stolen losses continue to improve driven by ongoing underwriting efforts, decreasing 150 basis points year over year to 4.3% and 20 basis points sequentially. Past due rates also decreased year over year with 30 day past due rates averaging 3.1% for the 3rd quarter compared to 3.5% for the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA margin for the 3rd quarter decreased 120 basis points year over year to 15 year over year increase in the ratio of operating expenses excluding Skip's stolen losses as a percent of revenue, even though expense dollars decreased year over year. Adjusted EBITDA margin decreased 2.90 basis points from the 2nd quarter, primarily reflecting normal seasonality and higher marketing expenses. For Aseema, as we expected, GMV year over year trends continued to improve sequentially in the Q3, approaching positive territory. Speaker 200:20:53Moreover, we experienced year over year growth in some key underlying drivers with active merchant locations and applications up low single digits. Those tailwinds were offset by lower average ticket size and lower approval rates as e comm and direct to consumer become a bigger portion of the application mix. Looking at the portfolio, open lease count was up mid single digits both year over year and sequentially and was the highest level since the Q1 of 2022. Revenues decreased 5.8% year over year, including a 3.2% decrease for rentals and fees revenue. Merchandise sales revenues decreased 14.5% year over year due to fewer customers electing the earliest payout option, with the mix of those transactions for the Q3 dropping down to levels last experienced in 2019. Speaker 200:21:43Skip stolen losses were generally in line with our expectations for the Q3. The virtual business losses as a percent of sales were 7.8%, a 10 basis points higher sequentially and within our long term target range of 6% to 8%, while losses at the legacy Acceptance NOW business We're in the double digits. During the quarter, we observed softening of performance at ANOW and tightened underwriting. We have begun transitioning merchant partners from the ANOW underwriting decision engine to the Asema platform and will continue with the larger accounts through the Q4 and the 1st part of next year. This will improve our underwriting capabilities and we should reduce losses as the back book from the legacy system winds down. Speaker 200:22:28On a consolidated basis, the loss rate of 9.4%, which was consistent with our 3rd quarter outlook. Operating costs excluding SIP stolen losses were down mid single digits in the 3rd quarter with lower labor costs from reduced operational headcount, largely offset by increased marketing investments. Operating costs excluding SIP's stolen losses as a percent of sales increased 20 basis points year over year due to the deleveraging effect of lower revenues. Adjusted EBITDA of $72,800,000 was up 14.5% year over year, primarily due to a 10% decrease in cost of goods sold driven by fewer early payout transactions that was partially offset by lower revenues. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.3 percent increased approximately 2 70 basis points year over year, driven by 3.30 basis points of gross margin expansion. Speaker 200:23:24For the Mexico segment, adjusted EBITDA was higher year over year and the franchise segment adjusted EBITDA was lower. Corporate costs were approximately 25% higher compared to the prior year, primarily due to higher projected performance based compensation. Shifting to the 2023 financial outlook. Note that references to growth or decreases generally refer to year over year changes unless otherwise stated. Most of my commentary will be focused on the non GAAP results. Speaker 200:23:54Our forecast assumes a macroeconomic backdrop consistent with existing conditions, continued discipline and targeted underwriting and a slight increase in unemployment. We did not incorporate any material benefit from trade down or the credit card loan partnership. For the full year, we expect to generate revenue of $3,950,000,000 to $4,000,000,000 Adjusted EBITDA is now expected $450,000,000 to $460,000,000 excluding stock based compensation of approximately 25,000,000 We are raising the lower end and the midpoint of our target range for fully diluted non GAAP earnings per share to $3.45 to $3.55 which assumes a fully diluted average share count of 56,300,000 and no further share repurchases through the remainder of the year. We expect $215,000,000 to $235,000,000 of free cash flow, which is somewhat lower than the previous outlook due to higher projected GMV for Aseema and replenishing our inventory for the Rent A Center business. As you may recall, GMV growth and portfolio growth tend to reduce free cash flow conversion as the cash flow cash outflow per product is greater than the associated lease payments collected in the near We expect net interest expense of approximately $110,000,000 and a non GAAP effective tax rate of approximately 26%. Speaker 200:25:21My discussion on the outlook for operating segments will focus on the Q4. For the Rent A Center segment, we expect portfolio value will finish 4th quarter flat to down low single digits. We expect revenues will also be flat to down low single digits and adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the mid teens. Loss rate should be relatively similar to the 3rd quarter in the 4% to 4.5% range. For Asimo, we expect 4th quarter GMV will be up low single digits year over year with revenues up low to mid single digits. Speaker 200:25:56We expect gross margins will be similar to the Q3 and do not anticipate additional decreases in the mix of consumers electing the earliest payout option. We expect adjusted EBITDA margin will be in the low to mid teens with stable gross margins partially offset by higher loss rates due to a seasonal uptick in the 4th quarter and higher losses in the legacy ANOW business. For Mexico and We expect Mexico revenue will be up mid teens year over year and franchise revenue down low double digits. We expect both Mexico and franchise adjusted EBITDA to be up year over year and sequentially. Corporate costs are expected to increase mid single digits sequentially. Speaker 200:26:41Regarding capital allocation, We repurchased 900,000 shares during the Q3 and another 800,000 shares in October, totaling $50,000,000 3 percent of basic shares outstanding. We opportunistically elected to return capital to shareholders given what we believe is a favorable return offered by our shares at recent price levels. Our strong cash flow generation and liquidity allow us to take a balanced approach to capital allocation, which we have achieved year to date. The company has paid down approximately $135,000,000 of debt and returned $88,000,000 to shareholders through dividends and share buybacks through the end of the third quarter. Looking out over the next couple of quarters, our top priorities will likely be more aligned with our long term priorities of reinvesting in the business, Dividend payments and debt reduction. Speaker 200:27:30We ended the 3rd quarter with $1,300,000,000 of outstanding debt and net leverage of 2.5 times. We are still targeting leverage of 1.5 times over the long term, but we will continue to assess market conditions and reasonable alternative uses of capital Generate favorable risk adjusted returns for shareholders. To conclude, our business fundamentals remain strong. We are encouraged by the strong top line trend and our progress to returning growth in both of our major segments. While there is still a high level of external uncertainty and headwinds on consumer durable goods spending. Speaker 200:28:06We remain confident in our ability to balance GMV growth, supporting our consumers and merchants needs, while appropriately managing risk. We are focused on disciplined underwriting and expense management, while also investing in capabilities that will drive Thank you for your time this morning. We will now turn the call over to your questions. Operator00:28:32Thank you. At this time, we will conduct a question and answer session. Our first question today comes from the line of Bobby Griffin with Raymond James, your line is now open. Speaker 300:29:05Good morning, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions. I guess congrats on some of the inflection points here on GMV with the CEMA and some of the success that it's Starting to show up. I guess my first question is just a little bit more kind of multi year or just higher level. We've always been trained to kind of look at the trailing portfolio balances in Businesses to kind of help guide us to next year or the future revenue and things like that. Speaker 300:29:34And I know we don't want to give 2024 guidance, but With this earnings season, we've seen some more cautious commentary about 2024. So just when you guys sit here today and help us tune up our models, How do you think the portfolio balances in both of your key segments set 2024 up? And my second question, I'll just go ahead and ask now. Has the dynamic around 90 day buyouts been an over earning aspect this year? Or has it just been more of Things normalizing where we don't need to be overly concerned that we have to make a counter adjustment next year. Speaker 200:30:12Yes. Good questions, Bobby. I'll start and then Fami can add in. As far as the portfolio, Yes, we don't want to get into 2024 right now, but the comments we did make, like if you look at the 2 segments, we're going to starting with the CEMA, It'd be positive GMV for the first time. Well, as we said September October positive GMV for the first time in a couple of years. Speaker 200:30:36And as we think about the Q4 being positive, we roll into 2024 with momentum from a GMV standpoint Growth wise, we wouldn't expect that to start going the other way at the beginning of 2024. So and then Rent A Center, We said the portfolio, it's made progress all year. It's its best level in a couple of years now where it's only down 2.7% compared to last year, Which was a 200 basis point improvement. We'll be if we're not flat, we're going to be real close to flat at the end of the quarter. We said flat to down low single Digits in the for the portfolio. Speaker 200:31:12So you think about that momentum in the Rent A Center business and that being A flat portfolio or even if it's whatever low single digit, say, minus 1% or something very small going into next year with momentum. So I think both segments have the positive momentum that we've had all year in reducing the negative numbers It's turning positive in the seam in the 4th quarter. We believe it will turn positive in the seam in the 4th quarter as evidenced in September October. And then Rent A Center being real close to flatten the portfolio going into next year. So some positive momentum in both of them. Speaker 200:31:49And then the second part of your Question on the 90 day, the earliest payout options on the Aseema side or even the Rent A Center side, we're But I think you're particularly talking about the Asema side. We're back to pre pandemic levels. So we think this is Normal. It's not a new normal. It's actually just back to the normal from the elevated levels of the stimulus drove In 2020 2021. Speaker 200:32:16So I don't think you have to factor in anything different because they're just back to pre pandemic levels. Yes, Mitch, I definitely agree with the commentary around 2024. I do think we will end the year on a really Strong note from a portfolio standpoint on both of the businesses. We will have some tough comps on the CEMA side going into next year from a margin standpoint, reaching 16%, 17% EBITDA margins in the second quarter was something we've said is probably not sustainable at those levels, But very happy with where we are from a GMV standpoint as it trended up really throughout the quarter and as we commented showing growth in October as well. So from a 2024 standpoint, still feel like we'll be able to grow both revenue and EBITDA at both segments. Speaker 300:33:07Thank you. And I guess I'll follow Sami for that. Is that partly a function, usually flattish to maybe even slightly up portfolio, you'd have some OpEx Expense that could hurt or kind of hinder a little of the growth. Is the confidence in the growth just partly a function that you've been able to scale the organization's cost structure to be able to flow through EBITDA growth on a more flattish portfolio to start the year? Speaker 200:33:34Yes. I think we'll definitely be more efficient as we find synergies between the two segments. I do think though We are prioritizing putting investment back into the business to make it more consumer and merchant friendly. So we will spend money where it's appropriate to kind of support the growth. But generally speaking, we're very focused on Making the operations more efficient and you'll see that with the CEMA as we continue to grow revenues, you'll see some of that operating leverage really play out Just given the virtual nature of the business. Speaker 200:34:08And I think the other one to add to that when you think about margins is the losses on the Rent A Center side have come down all year. So early in the year, we'll be we'll have some positive loss comparisons on the Rent A Center side from where they were earlier in the year As they inch their way down. And then on the Aseema side, even though they've been in line all year on the virtual business, as we convert the legacy Acceptance Now business as Sam was talking about in his prepared comments, as we convert that, then those then we have some tailwind from a comp standpoint on losses on the Aseema business relative to the legacy business. Speaker 300:34:48Thank you. I appreciate the details. Best of luck here this holiday season. Speaker 200:34:53Great. Thanks, Bobby. Operator00:34:57One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Brad Thomas with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:35:16Hi, good morning Mitch, Shafam and Brendan. Congrats on the sequential improvement you all are driving here. A couple of questions if I could. First, I wanted to start just with the GMV outlook on the Asema side. Operator00:35:30And I was wondering if you Speaker 400:35:30could just give us a little Color on some of the growth drivers here and the composition just as we think about the trend in the number of doors and partners you have, What's going on with the average customer balance for new leases, number of items that are being rented and any color on kind of the product segments or channels? Just to get a little more color on how things are evolving there, Maybe to start. Speaker 200:35:58Sure, Brad, and good morning. Primarily the growth the improvement in GMV On the Asema side, it's been there's 3 or 4 reasons for it. Growing merchants, That's certainly that's probably number 1. More coming out of our marketplace atasima.com is another one. Sometimes it's not just growing merchants, but it's as we mentioned, enhancing our position with merchants. Speaker 200:36:32There may be They may have a couple of different leased zones in their store, but if you prove to be their best option and get in the number one position versus the number 2 position, That helps. The and then the diversity of categories as furniture continues to struggle Year over year, per door, we're getting we're making nice inroads in the wheel and tire business And the auto space, that's been a lot of the merchant growth as well. And those aren't down year over year. Those are actually up Year over year from when you think about door productivity, same with jewelry, we're adding merchants plus the door productivity per store is It's not down like it is in furniture. So all those things are making up for retail furniture on a per door basis being down for us. Speaker 200:37:26But Growing merchants, diversifying the categories, enhance positions with some merchants and then the marketplace, the direct to the Consumer stuff is working really well too. Yes. And maybe, Barrett, just to add on to that a little bit as far as the GMGP Trajectory really saw inside the quarter growth from July August into September. And I think we've mentioned it on our prepared remarks around September being the 1st month of growth, year over year growth since December of 2021 on the Aseema side. So really strong Performance for everything that Mitch said. Speaker 200:38:08Applications were up. Our conversion rates were up slightly year over year. Average ticket size has come down, which was a little bit of a headwind to GMV. But Q1 our Q2 was better than Q1. Q3 was better than Q2 and Q4 should be better than Q3. Speaker 200:38:25So a lot of momentum around GMV and its growth prospects. Which I think just adding on one more thing to that, Brad, If you think about the Furniture pull forward being probably the biggest headwind that we have in Household Durable Goods, Little bit in appliances and electronics, but it's primarily furniture with all that pull forward from the stimulus money in 2020 2021 that As things normalize and I don't think they're going to normalize any in the next 90 days or anything like that when it comes to that furniture pull forward. But if you think about Adding the merchants that we're adding, doing more in our marketplace, we mentioned in our prepared comments Some good regional wins. We don't have a national one to talk about just yet, but we've some good regional wins take which basically means taking share from our competition. And when you add all that together and then furniture, And when you add all that together and then furniture does improve, presuming 2024, maybe it's not normal, The 2024 is better than 2023. Speaker 200:39:29And when we talk to our furniture partners, 2025 will be better than 2024 and probably 2026 will be better than And maybe you level off then, it's going to take another couple of years. But if we're already positive For other reasons from a growth standpoint, we're in a really great position for when the furniture per door productivity comes back. Speaker 400:39:52We would agree, certainly all the data we have is that furniture is trending at below normal trends in the United States right now. So reason for optimism longer term. On the Rentasimpta side, Mitch, just as we look at some of your competitors, I mean, it does look like your results have been while lower year over year, significantly better than competitors. Can you maybe talk about what you're doing to maybe take share and maybe how the weekly value proposition may be more compelling, if it is, in this current environment than what some of your competitors offer? Speaker 200:40:30Yes. I think Rent A Center It has performed pretty well, improved the negative same store sales each quarter. And as we mentioned, Deliveries year over year being only 2% off, if you compare them to traditional retail and half the rent center business is furniture too. So Only being 2% off, we feel pretty good about, especially and that improved as the quarter went on as well as July, August, September. So Yes, I think we're just sticking with focusing on execution. Speaker 200:41:05The e commerce, as I mentioned, It's been really strong. We continue to grow it. When you think about e commerce, 25% this year roughly versus 23% last year growing And then 2022 was better than 2021 and so forth. So even post pandemic, continuing to grow the e commerce with the extended aisle Stuff that's on there as I mentioned and just really focusing on execution. We haven't changed our model. Speaker 200:41:32We're still In the communities with all of our stores, a steady store count, not moving them all over the place and doing things like that. We're just Steadily focusing on the customer being there for them in a traditional way, expanding the offerings for them certainly, We're really focused on execution and sticking with our core model. Speaker 400:41:57Great. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:42:00Thanks, Brad. Operator00:42:07One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Jason Haas with Bank of America. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:42:20Hey, good morning and thanks for taking my questions. I'm curious if you think you're seeing more trade down now than you were earlier in the year. And I know it's hard to guess, but do you expect to see more trade down going forward? Speaker 200:42:37It is hard to say. We can look at Vantage scores and stuff like that and See a little bit of it, but that's not the only indicator, right, when you think about trade down. We definitely think It's part of what's happening. Don't know that it's yes, I think I'd say it's been pretty modest. Every all the data we're looking at, We think it could we could get more in 2024 as credit tightens and Yes, it's possible that it goes up from here. Speaker 200:43:12We don't have that forecasted or anything. It would be a positive tailwind in upside. But It's been pretty modest, but I think it's definitely there. I can't say, Jason, that there's more today than it was 30 days ago, 60 days ago, 90 days ago or even earlier in the year. It's just really hard to say. Speaker 200:43:30But when you on the other hand, when you think about what I was just mentioning to Brad, Deliveries at Rent A Center are down 2% year over year and half their business is furniture. And when you look at We talked to our big furniture partners that we have on the Asema side and even suppliers, big names like Ashley Furniture and so forth. I mean, it's down a lot more than that, right, furniture. So is that because of trade down? It's got to be part of it. Speaker 200:43:59The team is executing really well, but they probably need a little help besides execution. And I think there's probably some trade down in there. Maybe it's more than we think. It's just really, really hard to say. There's Definitely some there and it could accelerate as we go forward. Speaker 200:44:14I don't know if anybody wants to hear it, but If unemployment goes up a little bit, probably even accelerates. If unemployment gets worse in the country in 2024, It may even accelerate as there's even more tightening above us. Speaker 500:44:31And then how about the impact from student loans? I know we're pretty early into that, but I'm curious if you started to see any discernible impact from those on loss rates or anything in the business that seems to be related to those repayments starting? Speaker 200:44:48No, we haven't. We've been watching it and looking at it, Trying to see if there's any difference, the same thing. We get asked the question sometimes about the SNAP program and so forth, but Nothing discernible that we can tell at this point. Yes. One of the things that we have started to notice a little bit, again very early on, But on the front end, folks that have student loans have started to convert a little bit less now than where they were kind of For the it turned back on. Speaker 200:45:21So nothing in our losses, nothing in our delinquencies, but we have seen some of it come in from the front end on the underwriting side. Speaker 600:45:29Got it. That's interesting. Thank you. Speaker 200:45:33Thanks, Jason. Operator00:45:39One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Vincent Caintic Stephens, your line is now open. Speaker 600:45:54Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. First one on the components of GMV. So nice to see the sequential improvement in that. And I'm just wondering if you could talk about the components in terms of Underlying demand sounds like maybe that stabilized is starting to improve, but then you talked about tighter underwriting. Speaker 600:46:18Maybe that dynamic slows Speaker 200:46:21it down a bit, but if Speaker 600:46:21you could talk about that. And then on a CEMA specifically, nice to hear the guide for Positive GMV in the 4th quarter. Just wondering when I compare that to Rent A Center, if that growth in Aseema Is from same store sales differences or if because you're adding more merchants that you're able to offset maybe what might be similar same store sales performance between Asema and Rentacenter? Thank you. Speaker 200:46:54Sure. Vincent, let me start and Sami can weigh in. I'll take the last part of that first. Yes, I think that is the difference where CEMA has growth in merchants, growth in the marketplace, Rent A Center does too on Rent A Center.com, but more growth in the marketplace and just growing the merchants. And Growth, when you think about it from a same store sales standpoint, it's Probably positive and we don't really look at that way, but just knowing the numbers I do look at, the verticals like auto, The wheel and tire verticals probably on a same store basis are flat to positive. Speaker 200:47:33Of course, furniture is down like we're talking about. Appliance is probably down a little bit as well. But I think from a same store sales standpoint, from an Aseema, It would depend on the vertical. Some would be positive and some would be wouldn't be like furniture as I mentioned. But The growth is really the difference between Asema and Rent A Center is we're adding merchants every day really on the Asema front. Speaker 200:47:58I mentioned a few good regional wins Where it's adding some GMV and taking market share. I think Rent A Center is probably taking a little market share too When you compare the numbers, but I think, as CEMA adding merchants every day is probably why they'll have positive they're hitting positive first, even though you see the improvement in both segments, Still hit a positive inflection point first, even with the tighter underwriting. And as we mentioned, Vincent, and as you know, When it comes to underwriting, when you say tighter overall, I'd agree with that. I would say we're tighter today than we were yesterday overall. On the other hand, we do look for pockets for performing partners and performing risk bins that you can dig deeper And take more risk in. Speaker 200:48:49So it's not like a carte blanche just tighten everything. Certain people, certain scores, Certain people what they look like when they come into the decision engine depending on their scores and other attributes, we dig deeper when we can. So that helps too. Yes, Vincent. I think the Mitch's answer for the second part of your question is really applies to the first part as well just from a standpoint of Demand per location is probably down, but given we're adding more locations. Speaker 200:49:20That's why I mentioned the applications We're up year over year. And then as far as the tightening that we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we really isolated it to our legacy Acceptance Now business, you've heard us talk a lot about synergies between the 2 major segments. And I think one of the Biggest components of that is on the underwriting side and making sure that our underwriting capabilities at Asema we apply on different parts of the business. And the legacy Acceptance NOW business rolls into the Aseema segment, but they are on 2 different underwriting systems today. We started converting them Earlier this quarter, we'll continue to do that throughout this year and the 1st part of next year to get the underwriting platforms kind of on the Aseemah consolidated business segment. Speaker 200:50:09And so we are we did have to tighten there. And so you've seen that impact in our loss rates this quarter a little bit, 40 basis points up Year over year, you'll see that again in the Q4 as you cut revenue before you start seeing the impact on the lost dollars. As soon as that gets converted over, I think you'll start seeing a trend much more in line with the Aseema segment, Aseema Virtual Business. Speaker 600:50:33Okay, great. That's super helpful. Thanks very much. Speaker 200:50:36Thanks, Vincent. Yes, and that's a real tailwind in the next year when you think about the virtual business Being between 6% and 8%, and we've been more like 9% if you look over the last four quarters, Yes, 9% to 9.5% because the legacy business adding into that. So once that legacy business runs through there, certainly the latter half of next year at least, And then you're at 6 to 8. That's a nice tailwind for next year. Great. Speaker 200:51:05Thank you. Thanks, Vincent. Operator00:51:12One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Kyle Joseph with Jefferies. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:51:26Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Most of them have been answered, but on Genasys or sorry, Concora. Just remind us timing in terms of when you anticipate that kind of Well, needing to flow through our models and how exactly that's going to flow through the P and L and which segment it flows through and how it Impacts and when it should start impacting the consolidated P and L? Speaker 200:51:55Hey, Kyle, good morning. Thanks for the question. Yes, we're really excited about The prospects of the partnership, we're still in test mode and rolling it out in a few stores, but Really positive discussions with our both our small and medium sized businesses as well as our bigger regional players. So The ones that don't have a second look provider are excited about having a second look provider at their locations for their customers. And the ones that do today really like the benefit of having one vendor that has 2 products. Speaker 200:52:30And so really excited about the prospects of it. We'll look to roll out really in scale beginning of the year in 2024 on both the general purpose credit card as well as the 2nd look on retail private label credit card. We'll give you more guidance into 2024 probably next order, but it will take some time to really ramp up for it to be a material number in the P and L. So I would look forward in the second half Up next year, but we'll give you more of that specific guidance in the numbers as we get into looking into 2024. As far as where it will hit, the majority of it will come through the Aseema segment. Speaker 200:53:12The Rent A Center segment will benefit From some of the general purpose credit card, but all of the private label credit card on the retail side will come through the Aseema segment. Operator00:53:33One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from John Rowan with Janney Montgomery Scott. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:53:48Good morning, guys. Just one quick question for me and I apologize if you covered this earlier, I had to hop off for a second. But I believe that you guys said that there was a slight reduction in credit quality of applicants for the quarter. And I'm just trying to remember if that Foots are a dozen foot with prior comments about the quality of applicants coming in at the top of the funnel indicating whether or not there is a trade down. If I'm not if I'm remembering correctly, that was part of the call there that We were seeing better applicants at the top of the funnel and so we do believe we're seeing trade down. Speaker 800:54:25Can you just help me understand the comments today versus Prior comments? Thank you. Speaker 200:54:32Sure, John. Good morning. So the comment around weaker profiles was really related to the Acceptance NOW business and seeing some of that softness that we mentioned. Now business and seeing some of that softness that we mentioned previously and kind of isolated to Those retailers and those merchants really are on the furniture side. But generally speaking, if you look at our 3rd party scores, they're still elevated Year over year, Mitch mentioned it earlier in the call, but we did see a run up in those 3rd party scores at the beginning of the year. Speaker 200:55:04It's probably, I would Stabilized over the last few months, but the consumer is very resilient. They're still under pressure. Inflation is still very high. The discretionary spending is still very limited and tough out there. But generally speaking at the top of the funnel, we're seeing better scores. Speaker 200:55:25And hopefully that continues as people above us continue to tighten, it could be a nice Tailwind for us in 2024. It's not in any of our guidance that we've given to date, but could be out there for us If it continues to come in at the top end of our apps. And just a little more color on what Fami was just explaining where that's the We're referring to the legacy Acceptance NOW business, a little weaker coming in. And it's mostly because more of the With those retailers is coming from e com and they're doing a lot more furniture. A couple of them are doing a lot more furniture online, getting the order Generated online, and we're seeing some weakness in the customer coming through there. Speaker 200:56:09And one of the reasons we're Hurrying and by early next year, we'll have everybody converted over to the Aseema platform is because it does a better job From an e com standpoint, you haven't heard us talking over the years about the legacy business that we want to get it to a different underwriting level Quite as much as you've heard it today, but it's really because that e comm business is growing over there and we're excited about the Benefit by getting it over to the CEMA side because it can do a better job identifying The risk in those people. So that's really what it's all about. Just seeing outside and really one level down from the ANAL legacy business is e commerce Where the weaker stuff is coming through and we'll have that over on the Aseema side and some of our partners by the end of this year, but all of them By early next year. Okay, great. Thank you. Speaker 200:57:07Thanks, John. Operator00:57:14One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Alex Fuhrman with Craig Hallum Capital Group. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:57:30Hey guys, just quickly for Speaker 300:57:31me, there's been a lot of talk about trade down in terms of credit. Curious if you're seeing your customers Trading down just in terms of what they're buying in your stores and with your partners on the Assema side as well. Are you starting to see People making smaller purchases or gravitating away from name brands at all? Speaker 200:57:55No, we really aren't. Alex, good morning. We're not really seeing that. You're going to hear a little more about that probably at retail than when you think about small weekly payments that the lease offers Or monthly payments for that matter. But when you think about a 55 inches TV at Rent A Center being $20 a week in the 75 inches TV being $26 a week And those are close, so those aren't exact numbers. Speaker 200:58:32But $6 difference a week, you won't see much trade down. Now maybe a retailer that one of the TVs is $1,000 and the other one's $500, you'll see trade down. But when you have the low weekly payments, you can return it any time. So if you get in over In fact, not just returning, you could switch to the smaller one if you need the $20 TV. Instead of the $26 one, You could exchange it for the smaller one. Speaker 200:58:54So there's not much reason for trade down with our lower weekly payments as compared to traditional retail. Operator00:59:13One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Carla Casella with JPMorgan. Your line is now Speaker 900:59:28Hi, thanks for taking the question. You gave some guidance on free cash flow. Can you just talk about Some of the components of the working capital or specifically more the merchandise purchases that you have, how much of that, is that Driving the full difference in your free cash flow and how should we think about that as we roll into 2024? Speaker 200:59:51Good morning. Parla, it was a little bit hard to hear you, but I think it was a free cash flow question. And yes, we did end up lowering our guidance for the year Slightly this quarter compared to last quarter, but very much in line with where we were earlier in the year. And I think it's a positive story from standpoint of GMV has come in higher than what we had initially thought and ramping up nicely in the 4th quarter. And same with the Rent A Center side of the business of replenishing that inventory for the holiday push. Speaker 201:00:26And so we expect that to continue to be a draw on free cash flow next year as well as we look into continuing to grow on both of the segments. So coming off of 2022 with a heavy free cash flow year, coming in with that year with A really big portfolio with comps down at a sema20%. We were able to generate a lot of free cash flow in 2022. Still very strong in 2023, but we're starting to see that growth in the second half of the year that we kind of predicted. And that should continue into 2024. Speaker 201:01:01So we'll get to more of a normalized level this year and then into growth mode into next year. So Expectation is that it will continue to be very strong, but probably a little bit less than 2024 than we had in 2023. Speaker 501:01:15Okay, great. And then the active merchant locations, you mentioned you continue to add additional locations. Can you just Have you seen the percentage growth, overall you see in those in Q4 or next year? Speaker 201:01:33We're up low single digits on the quarter and that's been pretty consistent over the last Couple. And so I would say outside of us winning a big national account or enterprise account, I would expect that Percentage to continue quarter over quarter? Yes, lowtomidsingledigitgrowth in merchants. And again, I mentioned it earlier, Carla, not just Growth is what we're all about and that's important, but also you got merchants that you're in now that you can enhance your position By having the best alternative for the customer, I mean best alternative price wise, but the easiest transaction to make on the website, things like that. So If you have the less friction than maybe one of the other ones they're using in that store, you can enhance your position and so forth. Speaker 201:02:19So we're focused on Continue to grow that low to mid single digits with the small midsized players, but also enhance our position within each one we're in as well as Obviously, we've got a whole team working on larger national accounts that have such a long sales cycle to them. Speaker 901:02:36Okay, great. And have you said how many Are you exclusive in? Speaker 201:02:43No, We don't the big ones we're in most of the big ones we're in we are exclusive. But no, we don't disclose that number. It's not the easiest number to get when you think about having over 30,000 Small and midsized stores out there where you see the products in there. But we look at it and we know We're improving it because we're seeing our position enhanced in a lot of cases, but we don't disclose the exact It is a focus of ours. We do push the sales team to ask for exclusivity and if we can't get exclusivity, how do we get first look Yes. Speaker 201:03:27Inside of our existing merchants. So it is a focus of ours. And that's the enhanced position has gone that focus has helped a lot. Exactly. Operator01:03:47I'm showing no further questions at this time. So I would like to now turn it back to Mitch Videl, CEO for closing remarks. Speaker 201:03:55Well, thank you and thank you everyone for joining us today. We appreciate your time As you look at the quarter and in our guidance going forward, another good quarter. I want to Thank you for your support, but also thank all of our employees, all the way from our executives and the People like Anthony and Tyler that are running these segments very successfully right now all the way to every employee in the company. We're executing, Of course not 100%, because we never do, but we're executing at a high level and we'll just keep that going. Thank you everyone. Operator01:04:35Thank you for participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program and you may now disconnect.Read morePowered by