Wayfair Q3 2023 Earnings Report $25.55 -0.74 (-2.81%) As of 10:14 AM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Wayfair EPS ResultsActual EPS-$1.38Consensus EPS -$1.84Beat/MissBeat by +$0.46One Year Ago EPSN/AWayfair Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$2.94 billionExpected Revenue$2.99 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$42.43 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AWayfair Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2023Date11/1/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateWednesday, November 1, 2023Conference Call Time8:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsWayfair's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 1, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 8:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryW ProfilePowered by Wayfair Q3 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 1, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to the Wayfair Q3 2023 Earnings Release and Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. James Lam, Head of Investor Relations and Treasury. Operator00:00:22Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:24Good morning and thank you for joining us. Today, we will review our Q3 2023 results. With me are Niraj Shah, Co Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Co Chairman Steve Conine, Co Founder and Co Chairman and Kate Gulliver, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Administrative Officer. We will all be available for Q and A following today's prepared remarks. I would like to remind you that our call today Will consist of forward looking statements, including, but not limited to, those regarding our future prospects, business strategies, industry trends and our financial performance, including guidance for the Q4 of 2023. Speaker 100:01:09All forward looking statements made on today's call are based on information available to us as of today's date. We cannot guarantee that any forward looking statements will be accurate, although we believe that we have been reasonable in our expectations and assumptions. Our 10 ks for 2022, our 10 Q for this quarter and our subsequent SEC filings identify certain factors that could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from those projected in any forward looking statements made today. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any of these statements, whether as a result of any new information, future events or otherwise. Also, Please note that during this call, we will discuss certain non GAAP financial measures as we review the company's performance, including adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin and free cash flow. Speaker 100:02:13These non GAAP financial measures should not be considered replacements for and should be read together with GAAP results. Please refer to the Investor Relations section of our website to obtain a copy of our earnings release and investor presentation, which contain descriptions of our non GAAP financial measures and reconciliations of non GAAP measures to the nearest comparable GAAP measures. This call is being recorded and a webcast will be available for replay on our IR website. I would now like to turn the call over to Niraj. Speaker 200:02:52Thanks, James, and good morning, everyone. Excited to reconnect with you today to cover our Q3 results. While we still have a couple of months left to go, I'm confident the overarching theme of 2023 We'll be execution. Our team came into this year with a plan, a plan to see our core recipe return to form, To return our business to profitability and to continue pushing our major growth initiatives forward. Wayfair is now in a place where we can both drive profitability while simultaneously investing for growth. Speaker 200:03:23Q3 is one more proof point of exactly that. Today, we're reporting positive adjusted EBITDA of $100,000,000 A second consecutive quarter of positive free cash flow and nearly 4% year over year revenue growth driven by strength in orders. We saw order momentum persist from the spring through the summer, up 14% in the Q3 versus 2022. You're seeing this lead to steady improvement in our active customer metric, which saw sequential growth strengthened to 2% and is well on its way to getting back to positive year over year growth. 2023 has been an eventful year for Wayfair as the plans we set in motion during 2022 have come to fruition. Speaker 200:04:05Our remarkable progress against the 3 core priorities we set back in the summer of last year, nailing the basics, driving customer and supplier loyalty and cost efficiency put us in a position to beat our own timetable to profitability. 1 of the analyst reports summing up our 2nd quarter results was titled They did what they said they would do and we can think of no better compliment. We executed further in the Q3 to produce consistent profitability while still driving demonstrable market share growth as evidenced by our gains on customers and orders. One of our long running focus areas is controlling the controllables And you're seeing that we have and will continue to keep a tight grip on the reins even with a volatile macro environment around us. Our improving order trend has led us to a place where net revenue returned to positive growth this quarter, Even as average order values continue to normalize versus last year. Speaker 200:05:00With the considerable inflationary pressures across ocean freight and raw materials coming out of the system, It has been no surprise to see pricing levels continue to come back down to a more normal range for the category. We've heard a lot of debate around AOV over the summer as investors try to piece together where levels will stabilize. Our conversations with suppliers suggest that prices should continue to rationalize in Q4, which we anticipate will represent the year over year trough. Lower AOVs in tandem with strength in the core recipe are contributing to our order growth and share capture. This is particularly encouraging when we think about the strong repeat behavior of our customers with nearly 80% of orders in 2023 so far coming from returning shoppers. Speaker 200:05:44Growing market share is a key focus area as our category demonstrates persistent weakness. We've seen the sector slow from the last time we spoke in August. A few weeks ago, I was in High Point and heard repeatedly from our suppliers that the market is getting tougher. In the U. S, the category is now tracking down in the mid to high teens on dollars with continued order pressure industry wide. Speaker 200:06:06In spite of the distressed home goods environment, our share position has held up well. 3rd party data shows that our share gains across 2023 Are persistent and have come from a large collection of peers rather than from any specific displaced retailer, just as it has for most of our existing. Every day, we see customers choosing Wayfair because of our unmatched combination of competitive pricing with the widest selection in the industry and speedy fulfillment on the items our customers love. The success has been broad based across our catalog, not focused on any specific classes within our assortment. In fact, we still frequently hear our customers and investors express surprise at the depth of our catalog. Speaker 200:06:50So I wanted to take a moment to highlight a couple of categories you might not immediately associate with Wayfair, but are great examples of our strong share gains. Many shoppers think of Wayfair as a great place to buy their next bed, but we don't stop there. Our customers can also pick out their next mattress, Sheet set and bed pillows at the same time. We've seen our share in the mattress class outperform meaningfully over the past couple of quarters, With positive unit growth in the low double digit range year over year, while market volumes have been down by a commensurate amount in the same timeframe. Mattresses are known for having a wide range of price points. Speaker 200:07:30And at Wayfair, you can find a broad assortment of the highest end national brands, All the way to our Wayfair Sleep Essentials line. Mattresses are the perfect example of the core recipe in action. This is a class where we win by having that wide assortment in tandem with competitive pricing. As we do with our entire catalog, We take a good better best approach to our selection, ensuring that customers are finding the highest value at any budget level. We wrap it all together with fast delivery. Speaker 200:08:01Mattresses have one of the highest levels of speed badging across any of the classes we sell. We also have the value added services customers expect in a great shopping experience, be it financing, white glove setup or taking an old mattress away. Our scale enables us to compete successfully in a class that pushes the boundary of online penetration across our category with nearly a third of mattress sales happening online. Just like mattresses, we frequently find our customers surprised and delighted at the breadth of furniture products they can find for their dogs, cats, birds, fish or reptiles on Wayfair. The pet furniture opportunity represents several $1,000,000,000 of our $800,000,000,000 TAM and We've seen strong double digit growth here over the past two quarters, well outpacing the peer set. Speaker 200:08:51Our place in the field is unique as we tap into the emotional investment of the home Multiplied by the emotional connection our shoppers have to their pets. We've built a promotional calendar around the major pet focused events to speak to customers in this space. For example, we ran an app focused event for National Dog Day this summer, which saw considerable double digit boosts to click through rates, conversion and sales as shoppers celebrated the opportunity to make their homes a better place for their 4 legged friends. Before I turn things over to Kate, I would like to spend a few minutes touching on 3 of the biggest questions we've heard from investors in recent weeks. And the first of these is around promotion. Speaker 200:09:33A few of you have asked how promotions have impacted our order momentum and ability to take share. So it's important to frame up how the environment has evolved in the past year. Last fall, we saw promotional intensity spike as suppliers use discounts as a tool to clear out inventory. While our cadence mirrors the peer group, our focus is leveraging promotion as a tool for engagement. Shoppers are staying on the sidelines until they spot a good deal. Speaker 200:10:01But once in the door, they're proving happy to shop around. As I noted last quarter, during promotional events, less than a third of our gross revenue is driven by featured items. Moreover, Our average supplier is marking down within a very reasonable range, where they can achieve positive order economics for themselves even with a discount. This is due in part to the massive base of 22,000,000 customers that our suppliers access by selling on Wayfair. Our customer file draws more selection on the platform, which in turn brings in more customers and ultimately spins the flywheel of share capture. Speaker 200:10:38As the inventory environment normalizes and promotional intensity evens out, We can continue to be a share winner as our core recipe has proven for many years. The second question is unsurprisingly one about the housing cycle And our ability to succeed in an environment where people are staying put in their homes for longer. The answer to that question is quite straightforward. While we do have customers that will come to Wayfair for purchases geared around a move, this is far from our most common customer use case. You can see this in our own data on orders and revenue per customer. Speaker 200:11:11The average Wayfair shopper places about 2 orders per year, totaling about $5.40 This isn't someone that is typically refitting an entire room or house. Instead of shopper that's going through their home item by item, project by project, making small updates on a much more frequent cadence. If our customers stay in their homes for longer, We're well positioned to be their retailer of choice the next time they decide that they'd like a new lamp for the living room or want a new set of chairs for their dining table. As I wrap up, the last question I want to address is one we heard following our Investor Day in August. For those that were able to tune into the event, you'll remember the slide on our growth algorithm, which detailed our pathway to returning to a double digit growth rate. Speaker 200:11:56We walked through our major focus areas, our specialty and luxury brands, International efforts, physical retail investments, Wayfair Professional Offering and our supplier advertising solutions. In the week since, one of the most frequent questions we've gotten is how to think about the timing across these initiatives. The way to think about these growth drivers is on a staggered basis of maturity. While even the most mature efforts on this list, Our higher end brands at Wayfair Professional are still in early days compared to our U. S. Speaker 200:12:29Business. We see a strong trajectory for each. As these businesses eventually ramp up to the middle of their S curves, we expect the next initiatives will be right in line to follow a similar pattern. In totality, we believe that this will give us the legs to drive considerable share outperformance in the years to come. Performance against our investment thesis. Speaker 200:13:01As we operate the business over a multiyear period, we will concentrate our focus on growth drivers delivering well over 10% top line growth with significant flow through to EBITDA, and we won't hesitate to shift course if a driver is not delivering as we expected. That goes back to where I began today, the concept of execution. We see this as the key theme of 2023, but not one that goes away as the calendar turns over. Even with a turbulent macro, we remain committed to being adjusted EBITDA profitable in good times and bad. We'll continue to drive Peerless focus and execution into 2024 and beyond as we push every day to be the number one shopping destination for the whole. Speaker 200:13:46Thank you. And now let me turn it over to Kate. Speaker 300:13:50Thanks, Niraj, and good morning, everyone. The Q3 was an exciting continuation of our profitability journey we laid out on this call last year. So let's dive into the details. Net revenue for the Q3 came in at $2,900,000,000 up 3.7% year over year With our U. S. Speaker 300:14:07Segment up by 5.4 percent in spite of the increased slowness in the category. Niraj spoke about the major moving pieces here as it pertains to our KPIs. Order momentum showed nice double digit strength, up 14% versus 2022, while AOV came down by about 9% against the same period. All in all, we see this as important progress as our business builds momentum. Orders today are the best indicator of orders in the future And we're encouraged by the improvement as we see shoppers increasingly returning to Wayfair for their needs across the home. Speaker 300:14:43I'll now move further down the P and L. As I do, please note that the remaining financials include depreciation and amortization, but exclude equity based compensation, related taxes and other adjustments. I will use the same basis when discussing our outlook as well. Gross margin had another quarter of standout strength, landing at 31.2% for the period. There are a few moving pieces to unpack Starting with our efforts at pulling costs out of the system. Speaker 300:15:12We've talked about our cost efficiency efforts at length, so I won't repeat all the details now, but the important piece to remember is that our operative with the goal of driving results that would show up not just in Q3, but also Q4 and even into next year. This was augmented by better than expected performance our merchandising efforts, including strong results from some higher margin classes in addition to benefits from the profit aware source that Nir spoke about in May. Moving further down the income statement, customer service and merchant fees came in at 4.4% of net revenue. Advertising came in at 11.4 percent of net revenue as we drove improved efficiency across our paid channels, in part supported by the learnings from the advertising holdback we performed in the Q2. Rounding out the cost line, our selling, operations, technology, general and administrative costs or SOTG and A totaled $459,000,000 for the Q3. Speaker 300:16:20As we discussed back in August, you are Seeing steady improvement on this line as we push for continued spending discipline each quarter and our goal to drive further leverage. In total, we delivered $100,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA for the Q3 for a 3.4% margin on net revenue. This was another strong quarter of profitability for Wayfair and a reflection of the work we've done to rebuild our cost structure across the business. To put the significant progress we've made here in perspective, this is over $220,000,000 more of adjusted EBITDA and nearly 800 basis points higher adjusted EBITDA margin than we reported in Q3 of 2022. Our U. Speaker 300:17:03S. Segment generated $123,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA for a 4.8% margin And our international segment adjusted EBITDA losses continue to show improvement at negative $23,000,000 for Q3. We ended the Q3 with $1,300,000,000 of cash and equivalents and $1,800,000,000 of total liquidity when adding in the capacity from our undrawn revolving credit Net cash from operations was $121,000,000 which was offset by $79,000,000 of capital expenditures. The net of these was $42,000,000 of free cash flow during the quarter. Now let's turn to guidance for the 4th quarter. Speaker 300:17:46Starting with the top line, quarter to date we are seeing gross revenue trending close to flat year over year and we would expect to end the quarter in the flat to positive low single digit range. We anticipate AOV to show further compression in the Q4 versus 2022. Though this should likely be the trough on a year over year percentage basis, we expect that AOV will continue to be offset by strong performance on orders as we expect to once again pace above the category on unit growth. Moving now to gross margins, we will guide you to a 30% to 31% range. We are continuing to move our range higher as a reflection of the structural improvements in our gross margin that we've achieved through our operational cost savings efforts. Speaker 300:18:35Our customer service and merchant fees line should once again be in the range of 4% to 5% of net revenue and advertising should be in the 11.5% 12.5% range again as well. We forecast SOT G and A excluding stock based compensation and related taxes to come in between $455,000,000 $465,000,000 as we continue to run the business through the lens of cost efficiency. If you follow this guidance, we would expect adjusted EBITDA margins for the Q4 to be somewhere in the low single digit range, Making clear and steady progress to our goal of sustainable mid single digits before turning to the subsequent goal of 10% plus margins that we detailed at our Investor Day. Now let me touch on a few housekeeping items. Equity based compensation and related taxes of roughly $140,000,000 to $160,000,000 Depreciation and amortization of approximately $103,000,000 to $108,000,000 net interest expense of approximately 4 to $5,000,000 weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 118,000,000 and CapEx in a $100,000,000 to $110,000,000 range based on the timing as we get closer to the launch of our flagship Wayfair store. Speaker 300:20:00Given our expectation for sequential revenue growth in the Q4, we would also anticipate that working capital is a source of cash in the period. As such, we would expect another quarter of positive free cash flow to round out the year. Before I wrap up, Earlier, Niraj walked through a few of the biggest strategic questions on investors' minds. And I want to do the same with a couple of the financial questions we've been hearing. Coming off our Investor Day in August, we heard many of you ask about the timing of our margin drivers, especially as it pertains to the pathway we as we journey from a mid single digits adjusted EBITDA level to 1 north of 10%. Speaker 300:20:40We broke this pathway down into 5 components on the slide in our presentation. And I'll start by talking about the first three, which are all contributors to gross margin. We largely think of these as independent of core revenue growth as the biggest driver here, supplier advertising, will be achieved through scaling penetration within our existing sales base. Logistics will be driven by further cost savings as we achieve new levels of efficiency in our supply chain in tandem with increased adoption of our The remaining 100 basis points to 200 basis points of gross margin potential Comes from a combination of merchandising and mix, achieved in large part by expanding the mix of our sales coming from more margin accretive businesses like our higher end retail brands and our professional platform. Beyond gross margin drivers, we talked to 2 more pieces on the path to 10% plus. Speaker 300:21:37We expect to drive 100 to 200 basis points of advertising leverage coming from a combination of our own efforts to push for higher efficiency in our paid channels as well as the normalization of the mix between free and paid traffic to our category. Some of you have asked if this is the floor on advertising as percentage of net revenue and to that I would say no. We have framed this journey around a discrete set of goalposts and expect advertising to come down by 100 basis points to 200 basis on the pathway to 10% adjusted EBITDA margins. However, our business certainly has the potential for margins well in excess of that And you can expect that we will give more clarity around what the pathway to a higher margin looks like as we get closer to the 10% mark. That leaves SOT G and A, which is the one step of the path that is primarily driven by revenue leverage. Speaker 300:22:27You've heard us say it many times, but I'll repeat it once again. Going forward, you should expect us to take a very deliberate approach to the size of this line item in reflection to the growth of revenue. While we haven't given any guidance for 2024, the one anchoring item I can offer is that whatever you are modeling for revenue growth, you should be modeling SOT G and A growth less than that. Finally, the one other big question we've gotten since the event has been around our capital structure. As I mentioned during the day, we're excited that our profitability Speaker 200:22:56milestones have opened a new set of doors for Wayfair from a Speaker 300:22:56financing perspective. Milestones have opened a new set of doors for Wayfair from a financing perspective. Our upcoming maturities include the remaining CAD117 1,000,000 on our 2024 convertible notes and the $754,000,000 that is left on our October 2025 notes. The 2024 notes have a strike price of $116 per share, but we've said that even if those notes don't end up converting, We intend to pay them down with cash from our balance sheet. The 2025 notes have a strike price of $4.17 per share. Speaker 300:23:31So while we remain optimistic about the potential for our stock, we are planning around how to handle them in the absence of conversion. This will involve some combination of paying down with cash from our balance sheet as well as refinancing. With a wider suite of options available to us, We intend to be thoughtful around exploring options in the debt markets and are quite cognizant of the trade offs between convertible and high yield debt. As I wrap up, I want to return to the discussion of execution that Niraj touched on earlier. Over the past 12 months, Our relentless focus on cost control has enabled us to deliver consistently improving adjusted EBITDA. Speaker 300:24:09As we look ahead to 2024, I want to be clear that our operating mindset remains the same and we expect to deliver substantial adjusted EBITDA growth even if the environment gets more complicated. We've demonstrated throughout 2023 that we know the right levers to pull to deliver profitability growth. As we shared at our Investor Day, ultimately, we are committed to delivering on mid Thank you. And now, your Steve and I will be happy to take your questions. Operator00:24:49Thank Your first question comes from the line of Chris Huppers with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 400:25:07Thanks and good morning. So one question, 2 parts. So first on the Q4, Is there a reason why we wouldn't see some sequential improvement in the adjusted EBITDA rate? I know you talked about low single digit, but You continue to gain traction in the initiatives that you're referring to and some of the cost savings still have yet to flow through I think in the P and L. And then as you think about next year, I think you made a comment earlier this year that at this current level of business, you should reach Adjusted mid single digit adjusted EBITDA. Speaker 400:25:46So you think about an environment that's maybe a little bit tougher. If we just held these revenues, do you get to perhaps the lower end of that range? Speaker 300:25:59Hey, Chris. Good morning. You have both Niraj and Kate here. Maybe I'll just start on speaking to the guidance And then as we think into, sort of how some of this flows through for next year. And then Niraj, I'll pass it off to you. Speaker 300:26:15On the Q4, you started, Chris was saying, you've continued to achieve those cost savings and certainly we feel very good about the progress And you can see some of that in the guidance. We obviously continue to up the gross margin guidance range. We've continued to bring down the soft GAAP guidance range and that's reflective of those initiatives panning out. If you look at Q4 specifically, What we're reflecting there is, as we've spoken about in the past on the gross margin, we're really trying to maximize growing profit gross profit dollars on a multi quarter basis. Q4 tends to be a great quarter for us to bring new customers in. Speaker 300:26:54It's a highly promotional quarter. It's a great time for us To get somebody on to the platform and then they come back and repeat and spend more dollars with us. And so we're just balancing those pieces as we think about in particular that gross margin for Q4. If you think about sort of 2024, obviously, we haven't guided to that, but perhaps I can Provide reflecting on that thought model that we spoke about before, I can maybe sort of reference and speak to how that might plan out in your sort of flat Revenue example there. You're absolutely right that you should expect to continue to see ongoing improvement in EBITDA, And that's really driven by a few factors. Speaker 300:27:36We started the year saying we were taking out about $1,000,000,000 in cost. If you start on that gross margin line, We said we'd achieve over $500,000,000 taken out of that line in 2023 and you will see that by the end of this Q4 where we reinvest some of that. But let's say for this example, you take the exit rate of the Q4 on gross margin and use that in 2024, that'd be a nice step up from where we were in 2023. If you look at the next line item on CS and M, we spoke about taking some of the costs out of that in that January restructuring that you did. You've seen that moderate nicely throughout this year. Speaker 300:28:12Again, you could take sort of where that's landing and assume some further improvement there in 2024 as those cost fully materialized and you get the appropriate leverage there. Then if you move down to ad spend, that's when where we said in that over $1,000,000,000 of cost takeouts, we were pulling out some of the Higher advertising spend as a percent of net revenue investments. And I think if you look at sort of the average of 2023, That's a place that's reflective of the efficiency that we've been driving in that line. So again, in your model of flat revenue in 2024, you could probably use that. And then if you go down to SOT G and A, you've seen some really big movement on that line throughout 2023, obviously starting with those January restructurings The full impact of that run rating through plus the combination of the incremental movements that we've made on that line quarter on quarter. Speaker 300:29:03Obviously, you saw that Again, this quarter with that $459,000,000 and the further efficiency was driven there. So again, if you look at full year 2024, You could take the exit rate of that in the Q3 of 2020 or Q4 of 2023 and apply that into full year 2024 And you see really nice flow through. And as I said in the prepared remarks, substantial EBITDA growth Just from those cost savings fully run rating through. So I think you're thinking about it in a very productive way. Obviously, you'll make your own assumptions around where revenue goes, but I believe we've demonstrated this year we're very committed to these levers and pulling the right levers to drive EBITDA growth. Speaker 200:29:43Yes. Maybe I'll just jump in a little bit. This is Niraj and just add a couple more thoughts. Because as Kate said, we're definitely committed to strong adjusted EBITDA Regardless of the macro, and I think we're well poised for that because if you think about we talked a lot about the cost savings, Kate kind of recapped a lot of what we've done. But just that operational cost savings wasn't a one time thing. Speaker 200:30:03There's a we just started working on our plan for next year and there's a lot more to come. So there's a lot of gains. Now That will drive EBITDA, which is sort of what your question was about. But on top of that, I will encourage you to kind of just think about what's happening in the business, As you pointed out, there's nice momentum. What is that momentum like? Speaker 200:30:22If you look sequentially, order You see orders are up year over year 14%. You see sequential active customers from quarter to quarter up 2%. That's poised to turn positive, Right. We just had a great way to A2. You see the share we're taking is for a broad range of market participants. Speaker 200:30:42And so when you start adding up, okay, well, you're seeing this momentum in customers, you're seeing it manifest in order growth. Order growth would be revenue growth if AOV were flat. AOV is at negative 9% this quarter, but that's almost through because basically as you finish going To fish the rest of the curve, you're basically down to all the inflation having been driven back out, which we're pretty far along on. So there's a lot of positive momentum and I know you're pausing and say, well, Ignore that. Let's say revenue is flat. Speaker 200:31:11But I would just point to that momentum as well when you think about it. But I think if you just say revenue is flat, then you can think about all the things we've been doing as well as all the savings that are yet to come. And then I think that's the answer. Speaker 400:31:23Thanks very much. Operator00:31:26Your next question comes from the line of Maria Ripps with Canaccord. Your line is open. Speaker 500:31:33Great. Good morning and thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to expand on your Q4 guide. I guess, are you seeing any deceleration in consumer spending so far in Q4 Or versus Q3 or I guess what's driving this sort of modest deceleration in year over year growth rates? Is that largely coming from lower prices or I guess are you seeing any maybe consumers trading down to lower price items or any weakness in large parcel purchases? Speaker 500:32:00If you can comment on that, that would be great. Speaker 200:32:04Hi, Maria. It's Niraj. Let me so I mean, I think your question is basically the Year over year revenue growth number Q3 to Q4. And what I would say like first of you take a step back and look at what we're guiding for Q4 compared to Q3. If you look at it sequentially, a A normal holiday ramp as you'd expect Q4 to be bigger than Q3 by 9%, 10%, something like that as a holiday step up. Speaker 200:32:27And what you'll see in our guide is we've stepped up revenue from Q3 to Q4 grown it by 7% or 8% I think in the guide. And so we're actually guiding the holiday ramp, But maybe you say a little muted and but it's in the normal band. And so why a little muted? Well, we're in a promotional environment and Most of the revenue in the Q4 is always ahead of us. But in this case, when you do it on a promotional adjusted basis, it's virtually all ahead of us. Speaker 200:32:50We've had one promotion so far, which is Way Day 2, which Performed very well, in fact beat our internal forecast and expectations. So we're seeing all the signs that say that that will work. But we have that ahead of us. So we're guiding it slightly muted, but still with an eye to say, we think we're going to do very well. There's a lot of growth there and we're going to take share. Speaker 200:33:11Now year over year your question is why does that compress then if you're guiding it positively? And the answer is if you remember when we got the recipe back intact And we started taking share and we were back to good form. That was at the end of summer, beginning of Q4 last year. So this Q4 will be the 1st year you're comping year over year On us being back to a strong position, the same way for 19 years, 17, 18 years before COVID, we grew the business from 0 share To the $9,000,000,000 we had in revenue pre COVID. Well, so we're back intact and we're growing. Speaker 200:33:43So the way to think about it is, of course, you'd have a slight Kind of a compression of the year over year rate before it would then expand again and what you'd really care about is, hey, are you taking market share? What's the sequential customer number look like? Hey, where am I in this AOV annualizing because then the order growth is basically the revenue comp. And I think if you look at it that way and kind of analyze kind of what's the momentum in the business, you actually see the momentum is gaining. If you look at it year over year, you then need to adjust for what happened in the Q3 last What happened in the Q4 last year? Speaker 200:34:13I think that's where the noise comes in. So I'd encourage you to look at it both ways. I think if you look at it sequentially, you'd say, oh, wow, these guys are really What's a tough market? These guys are really kind of moving along really well. They're well positioned for meaningful growth when the category recovers. Speaker 200:34:26And in the meantime, They're getting significant share gains. It's driven by the order strength. And on top of that, we talked about how we're committed to strong adjusted EBITDA regardless of the macro. So think you're seeing it all come together there. Speaker 500:34:40Got it. That's very helpful. Thanks so much. Operator00:34:43Your next question comes from the line of Yigal Arunyan with Citigroup. Your line is open. Speaker 600:34:51Hey, good morning guys. Maybe just digging on the customers and AOV and the macro environment a little bit. As AOV normalizes here, and you're seeing that kind of deflationary point, is Do you see that driving any of the incremental customer growth and order growth, meaning, is prices normalizing driving A better environment. If you could just parse that out a little bit. And then you did a good job kind of highlighting a lot of the Questions from investors and one of the main ones that keeps coming up on our end from investors that you didn't address is just on international and Continuing to see headwinds there and challenges, I mean, maybe that market is still not getting back to normal. Speaker 600:35:39Maybe if you could address your views there and if that's Change at all to maybe get into a softer environment here. Thanks. Speaker 200:35:49Sure. Let me start and then Kate, if you have anything, you can just jump in and Added. So let me do the first question first and then we'll do the international one second. So first, I think you have a question around AOV normalization and Does that drive order growth? I think the way to think about it is, the AOV normalization, what that is showing you is that things are getting back to normal. Speaker 200:36:14What does normal mean? It means that no retailer has an advantage over the other on relative price, relative availability, relative Delivery capability other than what they themselves are doing. Okay. During COVID, people had weird advantages depending on how they were set up. Were they Brick and mortar, were they online? Speaker 200:36:32Do they happen to buy inventory and carry 4 months of inventory, 3 months or 6 months normally versus those odd advantages Because of the scarcity of goods have really abated. So everyone's in a great position now. Everyone's in a great position on price. Everyone's in a great position on availability. Everyone's in a great Delivery, question is what can they do with it? Speaker 200:36:52So now what you're seeing is retailers are competing with each other the same way in our case they would have from 2,002 to 2019 On the strength of what they're offering customers. And so now what you're seeing are the results that basically show up based on everyone competing with each other. And so who can put forward the best offer for the customer? And it's not to say that online beats offline, because in our data, we track about 90 folks. We only see 3 if you look back to the 2019 period through now having taken share. Speaker 200:37:19You see us taking significant share, You see Amazon taking share and you see HomeGoods taking share. HomeGoods is really a brick and mortar retailer. In fact, they pulled out of online recently, but I think it was kind of de minimis piece of their business. But they're the ones they outcompeted Bed Bath. And as Bed Bath went out of business, they took that share. Speaker 200:37:36So there are different ways to get share. And that's what you see playing out. So the way I'd encourage you to think about it, we're in a tough recession environment. That's 2 out of every 10 years. The market's down mid to high teens in dollars. Speaker 200:37:49There's that deflation that everyone has. So orders are not done down by quite that much. But If you think there's 10 points of deflation, orders might be down 5% or something, maybe 7%, maybe deflation is 12 points. There's some mix in there, But you see our orders up 14%, so you see us kind of gaining ground in the market. You see sequentially customers up 2%, so you're seeing them increasingly picking us. Speaker 200:38:13You're seeing that in the market share data. So think of it as we're in a normal environment and we have been for approximately a year. And what you're now seeing is which retailers can take share in that environment. And if you track dozens and dozens of them and listen to their strategies, you can see then in the results how that's playing out. And I think that's going to continue to play out both in this recession environment, but also As the category recovers, you're going to say who's well positioned for meaningful growth. Speaker 200:38:37That's where you're going to see that we're very well poised for that. And so that's what you're going to see Happened, but in the meantime, we're going to keep taking share and that's why you say why are we committed to strong adjusted EBITDA regardless of the macro. The answer is, Well, we're gaining momentum and share in a tough market and we have more cost savings coming. So we can do well now, but all that does is position you better for when things turn around and Things really rip and it's all getting the share gains driven by order strength is really the thing to keep coming back to. Kate, anything on that before we Go to that second part. Speaker 300:39:06Yes. No, I would echo everything that you've said. I think you're absolutely right that AOV normalization certainly has Driven order growth and customers, you've seen that sequential improvement in customers in the LTM active customer number. And you've, of course, seen that order growth number continue I'd just point out on sort of the last point Niraj was making on market share and where the category is, we're obviously up 4% in the quarter with the category down mid to high teens, if you assume at some point when the category returns to growth and normalizes, That gives you very significant growth for us up in the high teens. And as we've spoken about before, that flows Very nicely through to EBITDA and we're poised for that momentum. Speaker 300:39:53I think you had another question on the international segment. Speaker 200:39:56Yes, exactly. So On that, let me again, I'll start, Kate and you jump in. That segment is like 10% to 15% of our revenue or thereabouts. Those are the that's kind of the businesses outside the United States. And we mentioned how getting back to form on our recipe is the predecessor activity for taking share, gaining ground. Speaker 200:40:14And again, you see the share of rates driven by order strength. You'd see all the positioning that you'd want to see in terms of how we're doing. Well, on that, What I would say is that each of the countries is a different state and the recipe fully being back intact. But as we've been getting it back intact, we're seeing the momentum we want. And so What I would point out is that the KPIs that we would use to measure the success of those businesses are not necessarily evident to you. Speaker 200:40:40And honestly, We're very focused on making sure that every dollar we spend goes really far. And so we're not interested in continuing to invest in something that we don't think is going to give us a gain and we've done a good job of out a lot of those costs and we'll continue to do that. But we are pretty excited about our smaller businesses, whether it be Paragold, which is in the luxury space, small that continues to take share at a nice pace, what we've done with specialty retail brands, which compete in the specialty segment. Wayfair Professional is one of the bigger of the smaller businesses that's clipping along nicely. And then the international countries. Speaker 200:41:12And so we believe that the same model works there. There's a bit of a lag in timing. But Again, you see losses compressing. And what I think is, I would say that folks are focused on that segment. It's a little bit of Missing the forest for the trees is kind of my view on it. Speaker 300:41:30Yes. I think that's right. I would just add that There's nothing that we structurally see about the international market that suggests it should operate over time in any way that's different than the nice EBITDA that you're seeing in the U. S. Market and We'll continue to invest for growth there, of course. Speaker 300:41:47But we also were mindful of the cost structure there. And as we spoke about in January, we took out these costs. Those impacted us globally, not just in the U. S. Speaker 600:41:58Great. Thanks. I appreciate the answers. Operator00:42:02Your next question comes from the line of Anna Andreeva with Needham. Your line is open. Speaker 300:42:09Great. Thanks so much and good morning. Thank you for all the color guys. Two questions from us. You mentioned some of the category callouts with mattresses and also pets. Speaker 300:42:22Just curious in aggregate, how did big ticket versus smaller, More decor type of items performed during the quarter. And is the decel you're seeing quarter to date driven by Slower big ticket purchasing just given the macro. And then secondly, as a follow-up to Chris' earlier question. So should we think if revenues are flat in 2024 year over year, you could be at the low end of that mid single digit margin goal that you guys talk about. Thank you. Speaker 200:42:55Yes. Let me start with some of your questions on big ticket versus small ticket and then maybe Kate can answer the guidance That question, Yale. When I say a big ticket or small ticket, you can see this well, I guess, maybe you can't see this in AOV because again you see the overall effect of the deceleration Not deceleration, the normalization of AOV with the inflation turning into deflation and coming back out. Basically, no. There's no real mix effect there. Speaker 200:43:22So we're seeing strength across the board. Part of that is the price elasticity. When that big item Pacific is bulkier and has high ocean freight factor gets hit with those costs. It really drives up the price of that item a lot. When that comes back out, That item becomes more price attractive that basically helps that item take share. Speaker 200:43:41So we've basically done well across the board. There's no real mix there. And then You mentioned a deceleration in Q4. I just want to comment again. If you look at it sequentially, you see a strong holiday ramp into Q4. Speaker 200:43:53So I think the deceleration is based on assuming the year over year comps in Q3 and Q4 were both normal flat comps They're quite different from each other because again Q4 last year is when we started taking share as a much stronger comp. So as you would expect, even if we have Strong comps continuing that compresses before it expands again. That's where the 2% sequential customer count, Strong order growth, but all these other numbers kind of point to what I think is really happening. So just keep that in mind, I would model it sequentially. Can also model it top down. Speaker 200:44:26But if you model it sequentially and then impute year over year, I think you better see a better trend of what's happening and it sort of explains what I think otherwise may not. And then so I'll let Kate comment on that and then Kate can also comment because you had a question about in 2024 what level could EBITDA be Given revenue at the low end, I think that's probably because as we mentioned, there's a lot of cost savings still to come. And so I don't know if we want to Speaker 300:44:51get that or not. And as you know, we don't guide to 2024. I would point you to following Chris' question, I think we talked through some of the puts and takes on model and really seeing in 2024, obviously, the full impact of that over $1,000,000,000 of cost savings up and down the P and L, And work with that sort of from gross margin on down and the benefit of that should certainly drive substantial EBITDA growth. Beyond that, we have Operator00:45:28Your next question comes from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Speaker 700:45:36Kate, thanks. Good morning, everyone. I want to ask a question about a little bit about the Q4 and then second about your posture Around, I guess, promotion and ad spend versus sales. So first, the Q4, the chances of it getting more promotional, Curious how you think about that. And then given your posture around margins, I guess preserving margin over sales here, It sounds like you wouldn't dip your toe into that, but can you give us a sense how vendors are approaching it? Speaker 700:46:06Would you share some promotion versus them? And then in terms of advertising, are you inclined to ramp that up if you saw that market share was getting worse some reason because of the promotional backdrop. Speaker 200:46:19Yes. Thanks, Simeon. So what I would say is that we are expecting Q4 to be promotional. That's part of why our guide on the sequential ramp of that 7%, 8% instead of 10% is a little more conservative is obviously It's hard with the promotional season really ahead of us other than Wait A2. Wait A2 beat forecasted very well. Speaker 200:46:38So that was a positive sign. That said, you have the whole kind of holiday season more or less ahead of you. And there's the macro, it's hard to read the headlines and say, oh, this is a boisterous time where everyone's jubilant, right? So I would say we are expecting to be promotional. Our merchandising calendar, everything we've worked out with suppliers, our merchandising plans Reflect what we expect to be a very promotional season. Speaker 200:47:00If you pull up the homepage of any of our sites, you can get that feeling right now, pull up any of the apps. So you can see that we're leaning in on that. We're set up For that, all the guidance already accounts for that. Now could it be more promotional than we're expecting? It's possible, although we feel like we have a good feel of what's happening in the markets. Speaker 200:47:17If it is more promotional, do we think that would hurt us? Well, who knows? I think we've got a very good posture and this is why we've taken share over the last year So gain back anything we lost and then a lot more than that, right? We're at all time highs. So I think we're set up really well. Speaker 200:47:33Ad spend, we do not think of as something you just use The dial to make yourself feel good on revenue. So we've really scrubbed ad spend to make sure every dollar works really hard for us. So we would spend dollars if we would I think that the return we would get would be at that higher threshold that we've now established. But we're not going to it's not the outcome is not measured in market share. Market share It's something you then end up getting if you did it well. Speaker 200:47:56And so ad spend is yet another cost line that we expect to work really hard for us. And As you can tell, we've reduced it. So obviously, revenue growth would be even far higher than it is now if we didn't reduce it. But we think it was the right move to make expect every dollar to work harder. We're going to keep that expectation. Speaker 200:48:14We're seeing good results from that expectation. That's the way we think about that. Speaker 300:48:17I just I'll add one thought on the promotion piece, because I do want to point out that Even if the market does get more promotional, our gross margin is resilient. So unlike other retailers where Taking inventory and you're discounting that that you've already acquired. In our case, typically our suppliers are reducing wholesales and we're passing on that Benefit to the customers, but you've seen throughout the year that our gross margin has actually grown even in the face of that because it's not coming from us dropping that price. And so I just that is a bit of a nuance to our model and I think one of our benefits frankly in our structure. Speaker 600:48:55Thanks, guys. Good luck. Speaker 200:48:56Thanks. And the other obvious point too is that obviously inventory in the supply chain, the inventory we're selling is owned by our suppliers as well, Which is a slightly different dynamic than most retailers, but I think that partnership with our suppliers is part of why we win as well. Operator00:49:11Your next question comes from the line of Oliver Wintermantel with Evercore ISI. Your line is open. Speaker 600:49:20Yes, thanks. You guys did a great job in the repeat customer or orders from repeat customers growing again. But that Would imply that the orders from new customers continues to decline year over year. Could you address that? And when do you think that improves? Speaker 600:49:37And what can you actually do improve that. Speaker 300:49:41Thank you. Yes. So I guess The overall point and Niraj feel free to jump in is that, sort of we are very excited to see repeat customers growing. I think that Speaks to the strength in the model, and the benefits that we're getting as or the percentage of repeat growth. I think that to the strength of the model and the benefits that we get if people experience the improved offering and come back and shop with us again. Speaker 300:50:09I don't as far as What does that foretell for new customers? Certainly, we're not seeing any weakness there. And in fact, LTM Active customers is actually growing sequentially. Our overall customer base is improving. Yes. Speaker 300:50:23Let me Speaker 200:50:23just sorry, Kate. Let me just chime in a couple of things and then keep going. But So that repeat percentage, right, so 80% of orders are repeat orders. That is of all customers who bought ever. Okay. Speaker 200:50:36And so obviously we've been around for 20 years. We have a lot of customers. If you bought ever, you're in that number as a repeat order. The active customer number means you have to have bought within the 12 months. So you could have people who bought in 2015 and if they buy again after being unengaged for 8 years, It would still be a repeat order, but they would come into the active customer number after not being there. Speaker 200:51:00Same thing if they weren't if they didn't buy in 13 months, They would also come back into the active customer number. So you need to look at those two numbers in different ways. There's still a lot of new customers for us to get and we're going to We expect to get them over time, but there's a lot of people we've encountered over time. And so that active customer number is kind of this engaged base. They've actually bought within the last 12 months. Speaker 200:51:21Are they buying and then obviously if they buy again and they buy again, that's the flywheel that drives the business. That's where I mentioned there's a 2% sequential growth in the active customer number. That number is poised to turn positive and we are still at this point only getting $5.50 I think $5.40 per customer per year. So we still have a very low share of wallet. So There's a that's where there's a lot of juice. Speaker 300:51:42I agree with all that. And Ali, just one thing I want to point out. I think you implied that new customers were weakening, but We don't we give you the KPIs and then you have to do a little bit of math. And so recognizing that we've been on the call for 55 minutes, you probably haven't been able to do the math. But if you take the percentage of repeat And then back into what that implies for new orders, you'd actually see new orders growing quarter on quarter. Speaker 300:52:04So you would see or sorry, growing year over year. So you see that nice Improvement actually in new orders and new customers and we continue to be excited about what that implies for the strength of the offering. Speaker 200:52:16Right. So new orders is over to it's like 2 ish 1000000. And so basically, Yes, that's why I was trying to explain the definition of the active customer numbers separate from the repeat orders that because you could actually figure out a lot if you use them, but have to understand how they're defined separately from each other. So we're gaining a lot of new customers, but what I think is even more exciting than that is frankly that the customers we have are being engaged coming back, an active customer number. Speaker 600:52:44Got it. Thank you very much and good luck. Speaker 300:52:47Thank you. Operator00:52:49Sorry, your next question comes from the line of Jonathan Matuszewski with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 100:52:57Hey, good morning and thanks Speaker 200:52:58for taking my question. It's on gross margin. So for 3 consecutive quarters, you've exceeded the High end of your guide on this line item by an average of around 90 bps. So just kind of what are your assumptions underpinning 30% versus 31% and why should the 4Q result not Top the high end of your guide considering the recent trend. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:53:25Sure, John. Obviously, one thing you keep in mind is a different mix of Goods that are sold each quarter, which creates some gross margin changes as well. But let me turn it over to Kate for the specific information on the guide. Speaker 300:53:38Yes. I think what you're seeing there is, again, nice flow through of the cost savings that we laid out at the beginning of the year. We said in the Q2 that actually flowed through a bit faster than we had anticipated. And so we reinvested some of that in the Q3. And we intend to be mindful of how we make that investment. Speaker 300:53:57We want to be maximizing gross profit dollars over a multi quarter basis. In the Q4, as Niraj mentioned, seasonally, there's some impacts there. It's also a great quarter to bring people onto the platform. We just had that discussion about new It's a great quarter to bring new customers in, and get the benefit of those customers over time. I will point out you also, Of course, saw us bring up the guidance range. Speaker 300:54:19So we remain confident in the direction that gross margin is going, and we're really excited about what we've been seeing there. Speaker 200:54:29Thank you. Operator00:54:32This does conclude the question and answer session. I will turn the call back to the Wayfair team. Speaker 200:54:39I just want to say sort of thank you to all of you. We're obviously very excited for the holiday season. We're excited about The share gains we've had, the order strike, the momentum, the profitability growth, kind of the positioning we have for increased And everything, we thank you for your interest. And with that, we'll see you next quarter. Speaker 300:55:00Thank you. Operator00:55:02This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallWayfair Q3 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Wayfair Earnings HeadlinesWayfair Promo Codes: Save Up To 85% On Patio Furniture And MoreApril 10 at 11:49 PM | forbes.comWayfair’s Big Outdoor Sale: Save up to 80% on patio furniture, hot tubs, and moreApril 10 at 6:47 PM | msn.comWarning: “DOGE Collapse” imminentElon Strikes Back You may already sense that the tide is turning against Elon Musk and DOGE. Just this week, President Trump promised to buy a Tesla to help support Musk in the face of a boycott against his company. But according to one research group, with connections to the Pentagon and the U.S. government, Elon's preparing to strike back in a much bigger way in the days ahead.April 11, 2025 | Altimetry (Ad)Amazon, Wayfair, Pinterest Win Analyst Backing Due To Tariff Pause, Supply Chain Relief, Discretionary Spend RecoveryApril 10 at 3:10 PM | benzinga.comWayfair's Big Outdoor Sale: Save up to 50% on patio sets, decor and moreApril 10 at 1:46 PM | yahoo.comWayfair’s Big Outdoor Sale Has Savings Up to 87% on Comfy Patio Furniture and Stylish Yet Practical DecorApril 10 at 1:46 PM | msn.comSee More Wayfair Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Wayfair? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Wayfair and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About WayfairWayfair (NYSE:W) provides e-commerce business in the United States and internationally. The company offers approximately thirty million products for the home sector. It offers online selections of furniture, décor, housewares, and home improvement products through its sites consisting of Wayfair, Joss & Main, AllModern, Birch Lane, Perigold, and Wayfair Professional. The company offers its products under the Three Posts and Mercury Row brand name. 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Hello, and welcome to the Wayfair Q3 2023 Earnings Release and Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. James Lam, Head of Investor Relations and Treasury. Operator00:00:22Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:24Good morning and thank you for joining us. Today, we will review our Q3 2023 results. With me are Niraj Shah, Co Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Co Chairman Steve Conine, Co Founder and Co Chairman and Kate Gulliver, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Administrative Officer. We will all be available for Q and A following today's prepared remarks. I would like to remind you that our call today Will consist of forward looking statements, including, but not limited to, those regarding our future prospects, business strategies, industry trends and our financial performance, including guidance for the Q4 of 2023. Speaker 100:01:09All forward looking statements made on today's call are based on information available to us as of today's date. We cannot guarantee that any forward looking statements will be accurate, although we believe that we have been reasonable in our expectations and assumptions. Our 10 ks for 2022, our 10 Q for this quarter and our subsequent SEC filings identify certain factors that could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from those projected in any forward looking statements made today. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any of these statements, whether as a result of any new information, future events or otherwise. Also, Please note that during this call, we will discuss certain non GAAP financial measures as we review the company's performance, including adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin and free cash flow. Speaker 100:02:13These non GAAP financial measures should not be considered replacements for and should be read together with GAAP results. Please refer to the Investor Relations section of our website to obtain a copy of our earnings release and investor presentation, which contain descriptions of our non GAAP financial measures and reconciliations of non GAAP measures to the nearest comparable GAAP measures. This call is being recorded and a webcast will be available for replay on our IR website. I would now like to turn the call over to Niraj. Speaker 200:02:52Thanks, James, and good morning, everyone. Excited to reconnect with you today to cover our Q3 results. While we still have a couple of months left to go, I'm confident the overarching theme of 2023 We'll be execution. Our team came into this year with a plan, a plan to see our core recipe return to form, To return our business to profitability and to continue pushing our major growth initiatives forward. Wayfair is now in a place where we can both drive profitability while simultaneously investing for growth. Speaker 200:03:23Q3 is one more proof point of exactly that. Today, we're reporting positive adjusted EBITDA of $100,000,000 A second consecutive quarter of positive free cash flow and nearly 4% year over year revenue growth driven by strength in orders. We saw order momentum persist from the spring through the summer, up 14% in the Q3 versus 2022. You're seeing this lead to steady improvement in our active customer metric, which saw sequential growth strengthened to 2% and is well on its way to getting back to positive year over year growth. 2023 has been an eventful year for Wayfair as the plans we set in motion during 2022 have come to fruition. Speaker 200:04:05Our remarkable progress against the 3 core priorities we set back in the summer of last year, nailing the basics, driving customer and supplier loyalty and cost efficiency put us in a position to beat our own timetable to profitability. 1 of the analyst reports summing up our 2nd quarter results was titled They did what they said they would do and we can think of no better compliment. We executed further in the Q3 to produce consistent profitability while still driving demonstrable market share growth as evidenced by our gains on customers and orders. One of our long running focus areas is controlling the controllables And you're seeing that we have and will continue to keep a tight grip on the reins even with a volatile macro environment around us. Our improving order trend has led us to a place where net revenue returned to positive growth this quarter, Even as average order values continue to normalize versus last year. Speaker 200:05:00With the considerable inflationary pressures across ocean freight and raw materials coming out of the system, It has been no surprise to see pricing levels continue to come back down to a more normal range for the category. We've heard a lot of debate around AOV over the summer as investors try to piece together where levels will stabilize. Our conversations with suppliers suggest that prices should continue to rationalize in Q4, which we anticipate will represent the year over year trough. Lower AOVs in tandem with strength in the core recipe are contributing to our order growth and share capture. This is particularly encouraging when we think about the strong repeat behavior of our customers with nearly 80% of orders in 2023 so far coming from returning shoppers. Speaker 200:05:44Growing market share is a key focus area as our category demonstrates persistent weakness. We've seen the sector slow from the last time we spoke in August. A few weeks ago, I was in High Point and heard repeatedly from our suppliers that the market is getting tougher. In the U. S, the category is now tracking down in the mid to high teens on dollars with continued order pressure industry wide. Speaker 200:06:06In spite of the distressed home goods environment, our share position has held up well. 3rd party data shows that our share gains across 2023 Are persistent and have come from a large collection of peers rather than from any specific displaced retailer, just as it has for most of our existing. Every day, we see customers choosing Wayfair because of our unmatched combination of competitive pricing with the widest selection in the industry and speedy fulfillment on the items our customers love. The success has been broad based across our catalog, not focused on any specific classes within our assortment. In fact, we still frequently hear our customers and investors express surprise at the depth of our catalog. Speaker 200:06:50So I wanted to take a moment to highlight a couple of categories you might not immediately associate with Wayfair, but are great examples of our strong share gains. Many shoppers think of Wayfair as a great place to buy their next bed, but we don't stop there. Our customers can also pick out their next mattress, Sheet set and bed pillows at the same time. We've seen our share in the mattress class outperform meaningfully over the past couple of quarters, With positive unit growth in the low double digit range year over year, while market volumes have been down by a commensurate amount in the same timeframe. Mattresses are known for having a wide range of price points. Speaker 200:07:30And at Wayfair, you can find a broad assortment of the highest end national brands, All the way to our Wayfair Sleep Essentials line. Mattresses are the perfect example of the core recipe in action. This is a class where we win by having that wide assortment in tandem with competitive pricing. As we do with our entire catalog, We take a good better best approach to our selection, ensuring that customers are finding the highest value at any budget level. We wrap it all together with fast delivery. Speaker 200:08:01Mattresses have one of the highest levels of speed badging across any of the classes we sell. We also have the value added services customers expect in a great shopping experience, be it financing, white glove setup or taking an old mattress away. Our scale enables us to compete successfully in a class that pushes the boundary of online penetration across our category with nearly a third of mattress sales happening online. Just like mattresses, we frequently find our customers surprised and delighted at the breadth of furniture products they can find for their dogs, cats, birds, fish or reptiles on Wayfair. The pet furniture opportunity represents several $1,000,000,000 of our $800,000,000,000 TAM and We've seen strong double digit growth here over the past two quarters, well outpacing the peer set. Speaker 200:08:51Our place in the field is unique as we tap into the emotional investment of the home Multiplied by the emotional connection our shoppers have to their pets. We've built a promotional calendar around the major pet focused events to speak to customers in this space. For example, we ran an app focused event for National Dog Day this summer, which saw considerable double digit boosts to click through rates, conversion and sales as shoppers celebrated the opportunity to make their homes a better place for their 4 legged friends. Before I turn things over to Kate, I would like to spend a few minutes touching on 3 of the biggest questions we've heard from investors in recent weeks. And the first of these is around promotion. Speaker 200:09:33A few of you have asked how promotions have impacted our order momentum and ability to take share. So it's important to frame up how the environment has evolved in the past year. Last fall, we saw promotional intensity spike as suppliers use discounts as a tool to clear out inventory. While our cadence mirrors the peer group, our focus is leveraging promotion as a tool for engagement. Shoppers are staying on the sidelines until they spot a good deal. Speaker 200:10:01But once in the door, they're proving happy to shop around. As I noted last quarter, during promotional events, less than a third of our gross revenue is driven by featured items. Moreover, Our average supplier is marking down within a very reasonable range, where they can achieve positive order economics for themselves even with a discount. This is due in part to the massive base of 22,000,000 customers that our suppliers access by selling on Wayfair. Our customer file draws more selection on the platform, which in turn brings in more customers and ultimately spins the flywheel of share capture. Speaker 200:10:38As the inventory environment normalizes and promotional intensity evens out, We can continue to be a share winner as our core recipe has proven for many years. The second question is unsurprisingly one about the housing cycle And our ability to succeed in an environment where people are staying put in their homes for longer. The answer to that question is quite straightforward. While we do have customers that will come to Wayfair for purchases geared around a move, this is far from our most common customer use case. You can see this in our own data on orders and revenue per customer. Speaker 200:11:11The average Wayfair shopper places about 2 orders per year, totaling about $5.40 This isn't someone that is typically refitting an entire room or house. Instead of shopper that's going through their home item by item, project by project, making small updates on a much more frequent cadence. If our customers stay in their homes for longer, We're well positioned to be their retailer of choice the next time they decide that they'd like a new lamp for the living room or want a new set of chairs for their dining table. As I wrap up, the last question I want to address is one we heard following our Investor Day in August. For those that were able to tune into the event, you'll remember the slide on our growth algorithm, which detailed our pathway to returning to a double digit growth rate. Speaker 200:11:56We walked through our major focus areas, our specialty and luxury brands, International efforts, physical retail investments, Wayfair Professional Offering and our supplier advertising solutions. In the week since, one of the most frequent questions we've gotten is how to think about the timing across these initiatives. The way to think about these growth drivers is on a staggered basis of maturity. While even the most mature efforts on this list, Our higher end brands at Wayfair Professional are still in early days compared to our U. S. Speaker 200:12:29Business. We see a strong trajectory for each. As these businesses eventually ramp up to the middle of their S curves, we expect the next initiatives will be right in line to follow a similar pattern. In totality, we believe that this will give us the legs to drive considerable share outperformance in the years to come. Performance against our investment thesis. Speaker 200:13:01As we operate the business over a multiyear period, we will concentrate our focus on growth drivers delivering well over 10% top line growth with significant flow through to EBITDA, and we won't hesitate to shift course if a driver is not delivering as we expected. That goes back to where I began today, the concept of execution. We see this as the key theme of 2023, but not one that goes away as the calendar turns over. Even with a turbulent macro, we remain committed to being adjusted EBITDA profitable in good times and bad. We'll continue to drive Peerless focus and execution into 2024 and beyond as we push every day to be the number one shopping destination for the whole. Speaker 200:13:46Thank you. And now let me turn it over to Kate. Speaker 300:13:50Thanks, Niraj, and good morning, everyone. The Q3 was an exciting continuation of our profitability journey we laid out on this call last year. So let's dive into the details. Net revenue for the Q3 came in at $2,900,000,000 up 3.7% year over year With our U. S. Speaker 300:14:07Segment up by 5.4 percent in spite of the increased slowness in the category. Niraj spoke about the major moving pieces here as it pertains to our KPIs. Order momentum showed nice double digit strength, up 14% versus 2022, while AOV came down by about 9% against the same period. All in all, we see this as important progress as our business builds momentum. Orders today are the best indicator of orders in the future And we're encouraged by the improvement as we see shoppers increasingly returning to Wayfair for their needs across the home. Speaker 300:14:43I'll now move further down the P and L. As I do, please note that the remaining financials include depreciation and amortization, but exclude equity based compensation, related taxes and other adjustments. I will use the same basis when discussing our outlook as well. Gross margin had another quarter of standout strength, landing at 31.2% for the period. There are a few moving pieces to unpack Starting with our efforts at pulling costs out of the system. Speaker 300:15:12We've talked about our cost efficiency efforts at length, so I won't repeat all the details now, but the important piece to remember is that our operative with the goal of driving results that would show up not just in Q3, but also Q4 and even into next year. This was augmented by better than expected performance our merchandising efforts, including strong results from some higher margin classes in addition to benefits from the profit aware source that Nir spoke about in May. Moving further down the income statement, customer service and merchant fees came in at 4.4% of net revenue. Advertising came in at 11.4 percent of net revenue as we drove improved efficiency across our paid channels, in part supported by the learnings from the advertising holdback we performed in the Q2. Rounding out the cost line, our selling, operations, technology, general and administrative costs or SOTG and A totaled $459,000,000 for the Q3. Speaker 300:16:20As we discussed back in August, you are Seeing steady improvement on this line as we push for continued spending discipline each quarter and our goal to drive further leverage. In total, we delivered $100,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA for the Q3 for a 3.4% margin on net revenue. This was another strong quarter of profitability for Wayfair and a reflection of the work we've done to rebuild our cost structure across the business. To put the significant progress we've made here in perspective, this is over $220,000,000 more of adjusted EBITDA and nearly 800 basis points higher adjusted EBITDA margin than we reported in Q3 of 2022. Our U. Speaker 300:17:03S. Segment generated $123,000,000 of adjusted EBITDA for a 4.8% margin And our international segment adjusted EBITDA losses continue to show improvement at negative $23,000,000 for Q3. We ended the Q3 with $1,300,000,000 of cash and equivalents and $1,800,000,000 of total liquidity when adding in the capacity from our undrawn revolving credit Net cash from operations was $121,000,000 which was offset by $79,000,000 of capital expenditures. The net of these was $42,000,000 of free cash flow during the quarter. Now let's turn to guidance for the 4th quarter. Speaker 300:17:46Starting with the top line, quarter to date we are seeing gross revenue trending close to flat year over year and we would expect to end the quarter in the flat to positive low single digit range. We anticipate AOV to show further compression in the Q4 versus 2022. Though this should likely be the trough on a year over year percentage basis, we expect that AOV will continue to be offset by strong performance on orders as we expect to once again pace above the category on unit growth. Moving now to gross margins, we will guide you to a 30% to 31% range. We are continuing to move our range higher as a reflection of the structural improvements in our gross margin that we've achieved through our operational cost savings efforts. Speaker 300:18:35Our customer service and merchant fees line should once again be in the range of 4% to 5% of net revenue and advertising should be in the 11.5% 12.5% range again as well. We forecast SOT G and A excluding stock based compensation and related taxes to come in between $455,000,000 $465,000,000 as we continue to run the business through the lens of cost efficiency. If you follow this guidance, we would expect adjusted EBITDA margins for the Q4 to be somewhere in the low single digit range, Making clear and steady progress to our goal of sustainable mid single digits before turning to the subsequent goal of 10% plus margins that we detailed at our Investor Day. Now let me touch on a few housekeeping items. Equity based compensation and related taxes of roughly $140,000,000 to $160,000,000 Depreciation and amortization of approximately $103,000,000 to $108,000,000 net interest expense of approximately 4 to $5,000,000 weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 118,000,000 and CapEx in a $100,000,000 to $110,000,000 range based on the timing as we get closer to the launch of our flagship Wayfair store. Speaker 300:20:00Given our expectation for sequential revenue growth in the Q4, we would also anticipate that working capital is a source of cash in the period. As such, we would expect another quarter of positive free cash flow to round out the year. Before I wrap up, Earlier, Niraj walked through a few of the biggest strategic questions on investors' minds. And I want to do the same with a couple of the financial questions we've been hearing. Coming off our Investor Day in August, we heard many of you ask about the timing of our margin drivers, especially as it pertains to the pathway we as we journey from a mid single digits adjusted EBITDA level to 1 north of 10%. Speaker 300:20:40We broke this pathway down into 5 components on the slide in our presentation. And I'll start by talking about the first three, which are all contributors to gross margin. We largely think of these as independent of core revenue growth as the biggest driver here, supplier advertising, will be achieved through scaling penetration within our existing sales base. Logistics will be driven by further cost savings as we achieve new levels of efficiency in our supply chain in tandem with increased adoption of our The remaining 100 basis points to 200 basis points of gross margin potential Comes from a combination of merchandising and mix, achieved in large part by expanding the mix of our sales coming from more margin accretive businesses like our higher end retail brands and our professional platform. Beyond gross margin drivers, we talked to 2 more pieces on the path to 10% plus. Speaker 300:21:37We expect to drive 100 to 200 basis points of advertising leverage coming from a combination of our own efforts to push for higher efficiency in our paid channels as well as the normalization of the mix between free and paid traffic to our category. Some of you have asked if this is the floor on advertising as percentage of net revenue and to that I would say no. We have framed this journey around a discrete set of goalposts and expect advertising to come down by 100 basis points to 200 basis on the pathway to 10% adjusted EBITDA margins. However, our business certainly has the potential for margins well in excess of that And you can expect that we will give more clarity around what the pathway to a higher margin looks like as we get closer to the 10% mark. That leaves SOT G and A, which is the one step of the path that is primarily driven by revenue leverage. Speaker 300:22:27You've heard us say it many times, but I'll repeat it once again. Going forward, you should expect us to take a very deliberate approach to the size of this line item in reflection to the growth of revenue. While we haven't given any guidance for 2024, the one anchoring item I can offer is that whatever you are modeling for revenue growth, you should be modeling SOT G and A growth less than that. Finally, the one other big question we've gotten since the event has been around our capital structure. As I mentioned during the day, we're excited that our profitability Speaker 200:22:56milestones have opened a new set of doors for Wayfair from a Speaker 300:22:56financing perspective. Milestones have opened a new set of doors for Wayfair from a financing perspective. Our upcoming maturities include the remaining CAD117 1,000,000 on our 2024 convertible notes and the $754,000,000 that is left on our October 2025 notes. The 2024 notes have a strike price of $116 per share, but we've said that even if those notes don't end up converting, We intend to pay them down with cash from our balance sheet. The 2025 notes have a strike price of $4.17 per share. Speaker 300:23:31So while we remain optimistic about the potential for our stock, we are planning around how to handle them in the absence of conversion. This will involve some combination of paying down with cash from our balance sheet as well as refinancing. With a wider suite of options available to us, We intend to be thoughtful around exploring options in the debt markets and are quite cognizant of the trade offs between convertible and high yield debt. As I wrap up, I want to return to the discussion of execution that Niraj touched on earlier. Over the past 12 months, Our relentless focus on cost control has enabled us to deliver consistently improving adjusted EBITDA. Speaker 300:24:09As we look ahead to 2024, I want to be clear that our operating mindset remains the same and we expect to deliver substantial adjusted EBITDA growth even if the environment gets more complicated. We've demonstrated throughout 2023 that we know the right levers to pull to deliver profitability growth. As we shared at our Investor Day, ultimately, we are committed to delivering on mid Thank you. And now, your Steve and I will be happy to take your questions. Operator00:24:49Thank Your first question comes from the line of Chris Huppers with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 400:25:07Thanks and good morning. So one question, 2 parts. So first on the Q4, Is there a reason why we wouldn't see some sequential improvement in the adjusted EBITDA rate? I know you talked about low single digit, but You continue to gain traction in the initiatives that you're referring to and some of the cost savings still have yet to flow through I think in the P and L. And then as you think about next year, I think you made a comment earlier this year that at this current level of business, you should reach Adjusted mid single digit adjusted EBITDA. Speaker 400:25:46So you think about an environment that's maybe a little bit tougher. If we just held these revenues, do you get to perhaps the lower end of that range? Speaker 300:25:59Hey, Chris. Good morning. You have both Niraj and Kate here. Maybe I'll just start on speaking to the guidance And then as we think into, sort of how some of this flows through for next year. And then Niraj, I'll pass it off to you. Speaker 300:26:15On the Q4, you started, Chris was saying, you've continued to achieve those cost savings and certainly we feel very good about the progress And you can see some of that in the guidance. We obviously continue to up the gross margin guidance range. We've continued to bring down the soft GAAP guidance range and that's reflective of those initiatives panning out. If you look at Q4 specifically, What we're reflecting there is, as we've spoken about in the past on the gross margin, we're really trying to maximize growing profit gross profit dollars on a multi quarter basis. Q4 tends to be a great quarter for us to bring new customers in. Speaker 300:26:54It's a highly promotional quarter. It's a great time for us To get somebody on to the platform and then they come back and repeat and spend more dollars with us. And so we're just balancing those pieces as we think about in particular that gross margin for Q4. If you think about sort of 2024, obviously, we haven't guided to that, but perhaps I can Provide reflecting on that thought model that we spoke about before, I can maybe sort of reference and speak to how that might plan out in your sort of flat Revenue example there. You're absolutely right that you should expect to continue to see ongoing improvement in EBITDA, And that's really driven by a few factors. Speaker 300:27:36We started the year saying we were taking out about $1,000,000,000 in cost. If you start on that gross margin line, We said we'd achieve over $500,000,000 taken out of that line in 2023 and you will see that by the end of this Q4 where we reinvest some of that. But let's say for this example, you take the exit rate of the Q4 on gross margin and use that in 2024, that'd be a nice step up from where we were in 2023. If you look at the next line item on CS and M, we spoke about taking some of the costs out of that in that January restructuring that you did. You've seen that moderate nicely throughout this year. Speaker 300:28:12Again, you could take sort of where that's landing and assume some further improvement there in 2024 as those cost fully materialized and you get the appropriate leverage there. Then if you move down to ad spend, that's when where we said in that over $1,000,000,000 of cost takeouts, we were pulling out some of the Higher advertising spend as a percent of net revenue investments. And I think if you look at sort of the average of 2023, That's a place that's reflective of the efficiency that we've been driving in that line. So again, in your model of flat revenue in 2024, you could probably use that. And then if you go down to SOT G and A, you've seen some really big movement on that line throughout 2023, obviously starting with those January restructurings The full impact of that run rating through plus the combination of the incremental movements that we've made on that line quarter on quarter. Speaker 300:29:03Obviously, you saw that Again, this quarter with that $459,000,000 and the further efficiency was driven there. So again, if you look at full year 2024, You could take the exit rate of that in the Q3 of 2020 or Q4 of 2023 and apply that into full year 2024 And you see really nice flow through. And as I said in the prepared remarks, substantial EBITDA growth Just from those cost savings fully run rating through. So I think you're thinking about it in a very productive way. Obviously, you'll make your own assumptions around where revenue goes, but I believe we've demonstrated this year we're very committed to these levers and pulling the right levers to drive EBITDA growth. Speaker 200:29:43Yes. Maybe I'll just jump in a little bit. This is Niraj and just add a couple more thoughts. Because as Kate said, we're definitely committed to strong adjusted EBITDA Regardless of the macro, and I think we're well poised for that because if you think about we talked a lot about the cost savings, Kate kind of recapped a lot of what we've done. But just that operational cost savings wasn't a one time thing. Speaker 200:30:03There's a we just started working on our plan for next year and there's a lot more to come. So there's a lot of gains. Now That will drive EBITDA, which is sort of what your question was about. But on top of that, I will encourage you to kind of just think about what's happening in the business, As you pointed out, there's nice momentum. What is that momentum like? Speaker 200:30:22If you look sequentially, order You see orders are up year over year 14%. You see sequential active customers from quarter to quarter up 2%. That's poised to turn positive, Right. We just had a great way to A2. You see the share we're taking is for a broad range of market participants. Speaker 200:30:42And so when you start adding up, okay, well, you're seeing this momentum in customers, you're seeing it manifest in order growth. Order growth would be revenue growth if AOV were flat. AOV is at negative 9% this quarter, but that's almost through because basically as you finish going To fish the rest of the curve, you're basically down to all the inflation having been driven back out, which we're pretty far along on. So there's a lot of positive momentum and I know you're pausing and say, well, Ignore that. Let's say revenue is flat. Speaker 200:31:11But I would just point to that momentum as well when you think about it. But I think if you just say revenue is flat, then you can think about all the things we've been doing as well as all the savings that are yet to come. And then I think that's the answer. Speaker 400:31:23Thanks very much. Operator00:31:26Your next question comes from the line of Maria Ripps with Canaccord. Your line is open. Speaker 500:31:33Great. Good morning and thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to expand on your Q4 guide. I guess, are you seeing any deceleration in consumer spending so far in Q4 Or versus Q3 or I guess what's driving this sort of modest deceleration in year over year growth rates? Is that largely coming from lower prices or I guess are you seeing any maybe consumers trading down to lower price items or any weakness in large parcel purchases? Speaker 500:32:00If you can comment on that, that would be great. Speaker 200:32:04Hi, Maria. It's Niraj. Let me so I mean, I think your question is basically the Year over year revenue growth number Q3 to Q4. And what I would say like first of you take a step back and look at what we're guiding for Q4 compared to Q3. If you look at it sequentially, a A normal holiday ramp as you'd expect Q4 to be bigger than Q3 by 9%, 10%, something like that as a holiday step up. Speaker 200:32:27And what you'll see in our guide is we've stepped up revenue from Q3 to Q4 grown it by 7% or 8% I think in the guide. And so we're actually guiding the holiday ramp, But maybe you say a little muted and but it's in the normal band. And so why a little muted? Well, we're in a promotional environment and Most of the revenue in the Q4 is always ahead of us. But in this case, when you do it on a promotional adjusted basis, it's virtually all ahead of us. Speaker 200:32:50We've had one promotion so far, which is Way Day 2, which Performed very well, in fact beat our internal forecast and expectations. So we're seeing all the signs that say that that will work. But we have that ahead of us. So we're guiding it slightly muted, but still with an eye to say, we think we're going to do very well. There's a lot of growth there and we're going to take share. Speaker 200:33:11Now year over year your question is why does that compress then if you're guiding it positively? And the answer is if you remember when we got the recipe back intact And we started taking share and we were back to good form. That was at the end of summer, beginning of Q4 last year. So this Q4 will be the 1st year you're comping year over year On us being back to a strong position, the same way for 19 years, 17, 18 years before COVID, we grew the business from 0 share To the $9,000,000,000 we had in revenue pre COVID. Well, so we're back intact and we're growing. Speaker 200:33:43So the way to think about it is, of course, you'd have a slight Kind of a compression of the year over year rate before it would then expand again and what you'd really care about is, hey, are you taking market share? What's the sequential customer number look like? Hey, where am I in this AOV annualizing because then the order growth is basically the revenue comp. And I think if you look at it that way and kind of analyze kind of what's the momentum in the business, you actually see the momentum is gaining. If you look at it year over year, you then need to adjust for what happened in the Q3 last What happened in the Q4 last year? Speaker 200:34:13I think that's where the noise comes in. So I'd encourage you to look at it both ways. I think if you look at it sequentially, you'd say, oh, wow, these guys are really What's a tough market? These guys are really kind of moving along really well. They're well positioned for meaningful growth when the category recovers. Speaker 200:34:26And in the meantime, They're getting significant share gains. It's driven by the order strength. And on top of that, we talked about how we're committed to strong adjusted EBITDA regardless of the macro. So think you're seeing it all come together there. Speaker 500:34:40Got it. That's very helpful. Thanks so much. Operator00:34:43Your next question comes from the line of Yigal Arunyan with Citigroup. Your line is open. Speaker 600:34:51Hey, good morning guys. Maybe just digging on the customers and AOV and the macro environment a little bit. As AOV normalizes here, and you're seeing that kind of deflationary point, is Do you see that driving any of the incremental customer growth and order growth, meaning, is prices normalizing driving A better environment. If you could just parse that out a little bit. And then you did a good job kind of highlighting a lot of the Questions from investors and one of the main ones that keeps coming up on our end from investors that you didn't address is just on international and Continuing to see headwinds there and challenges, I mean, maybe that market is still not getting back to normal. Speaker 600:35:39Maybe if you could address your views there and if that's Change at all to maybe get into a softer environment here. Thanks. Speaker 200:35:49Sure. Let me start and then Kate, if you have anything, you can just jump in and Added. So let me do the first question first and then we'll do the international one second. So first, I think you have a question around AOV normalization and Does that drive order growth? I think the way to think about it is, the AOV normalization, what that is showing you is that things are getting back to normal. Speaker 200:36:14What does normal mean? It means that no retailer has an advantage over the other on relative price, relative availability, relative Delivery capability other than what they themselves are doing. Okay. During COVID, people had weird advantages depending on how they were set up. Were they Brick and mortar, were they online? Speaker 200:36:32Do they happen to buy inventory and carry 4 months of inventory, 3 months or 6 months normally versus those odd advantages Because of the scarcity of goods have really abated. So everyone's in a great position now. Everyone's in a great position on price. Everyone's in a great position on availability. Everyone's in a great Delivery, question is what can they do with it? Speaker 200:36:52So now what you're seeing is retailers are competing with each other the same way in our case they would have from 2,002 to 2019 On the strength of what they're offering customers. And so now what you're seeing are the results that basically show up based on everyone competing with each other. And so who can put forward the best offer for the customer? And it's not to say that online beats offline, because in our data, we track about 90 folks. We only see 3 if you look back to the 2019 period through now having taken share. Speaker 200:37:19You see us taking significant share, You see Amazon taking share and you see HomeGoods taking share. HomeGoods is really a brick and mortar retailer. In fact, they pulled out of online recently, but I think it was kind of de minimis piece of their business. But they're the ones they outcompeted Bed Bath. And as Bed Bath went out of business, they took that share. Speaker 200:37:36So there are different ways to get share. And that's what you see playing out. So the way I'd encourage you to think about it, we're in a tough recession environment. That's 2 out of every 10 years. The market's down mid to high teens in dollars. Speaker 200:37:49There's that deflation that everyone has. So orders are not done down by quite that much. But If you think there's 10 points of deflation, orders might be down 5% or something, maybe 7%, maybe deflation is 12 points. There's some mix in there, But you see our orders up 14%, so you see us kind of gaining ground in the market. You see sequentially customers up 2%, so you're seeing them increasingly picking us. Speaker 200:38:13You're seeing that in the market share data. So think of it as we're in a normal environment and we have been for approximately a year. And what you're now seeing is which retailers can take share in that environment. And if you track dozens and dozens of them and listen to their strategies, you can see then in the results how that's playing out. And I think that's going to continue to play out both in this recession environment, but also As the category recovers, you're going to say who's well positioned for meaningful growth. Speaker 200:38:37That's where you're going to see that we're very well poised for that. And so that's what you're going to see Happened, but in the meantime, we're going to keep taking share and that's why you say why are we committed to strong adjusted EBITDA regardless of the macro. The answer is, Well, we're gaining momentum and share in a tough market and we have more cost savings coming. So we can do well now, but all that does is position you better for when things turn around and Things really rip and it's all getting the share gains driven by order strength is really the thing to keep coming back to. Kate, anything on that before we Go to that second part. Speaker 300:39:06Yes. No, I would echo everything that you've said. I think you're absolutely right that AOV normalization certainly has Driven order growth and customers, you've seen that sequential improvement in customers in the LTM active customer number. And you've, of course, seen that order growth number continue I'd just point out on sort of the last point Niraj was making on market share and where the category is, we're obviously up 4% in the quarter with the category down mid to high teens, if you assume at some point when the category returns to growth and normalizes, That gives you very significant growth for us up in the high teens. And as we've spoken about before, that flows Very nicely through to EBITDA and we're poised for that momentum. Speaker 300:39:53I think you had another question on the international segment. Speaker 200:39:56Yes, exactly. So On that, let me again, I'll start, Kate and you jump in. That segment is like 10% to 15% of our revenue or thereabouts. Those are the that's kind of the businesses outside the United States. And we mentioned how getting back to form on our recipe is the predecessor activity for taking share, gaining ground. Speaker 200:40:14And again, you see the share of rates driven by order strength. You'd see all the positioning that you'd want to see in terms of how we're doing. Well, on that, What I would say is that each of the countries is a different state and the recipe fully being back intact. But as we've been getting it back intact, we're seeing the momentum we want. And so What I would point out is that the KPIs that we would use to measure the success of those businesses are not necessarily evident to you. Speaker 200:40:40And honestly, We're very focused on making sure that every dollar we spend goes really far. And so we're not interested in continuing to invest in something that we don't think is going to give us a gain and we've done a good job of out a lot of those costs and we'll continue to do that. But we are pretty excited about our smaller businesses, whether it be Paragold, which is in the luxury space, small that continues to take share at a nice pace, what we've done with specialty retail brands, which compete in the specialty segment. Wayfair Professional is one of the bigger of the smaller businesses that's clipping along nicely. And then the international countries. Speaker 200:41:12And so we believe that the same model works there. There's a bit of a lag in timing. But Again, you see losses compressing. And what I think is, I would say that folks are focused on that segment. It's a little bit of Missing the forest for the trees is kind of my view on it. Speaker 300:41:30Yes. I think that's right. I would just add that There's nothing that we structurally see about the international market that suggests it should operate over time in any way that's different than the nice EBITDA that you're seeing in the U. S. Market and We'll continue to invest for growth there, of course. Speaker 300:41:47But we also were mindful of the cost structure there. And as we spoke about in January, we took out these costs. Those impacted us globally, not just in the U. S. Speaker 600:41:58Great. Thanks. I appreciate the answers. Operator00:42:02Your next question comes from the line of Anna Andreeva with Needham. Your line is open. Speaker 300:42:09Great. Thanks so much and good morning. Thank you for all the color guys. Two questions from us. You mentioned some of the category callouts with mattresses and also pets. Speaker 300:42:22Just curious in aggregate, how did big ticket versus smaller, More decor type of items performed during the quarter. And is the decel you're seeing quarter to date driven by Slower big ticket purchasing just given the macro. And then secondly, as a follow-up to Chris' earlier question. So should we think if revenues are flat in 2024 year over year, you could be at the low end of that mid single digit margin goal that you guys talk about. Thank you. Speaker 200:42:55Yes. Let me start with some of your questions on big ticket versus small ticket and then maybe Kate can answer the guidance That question, Yale. When I say a big ticket or small ticket, you can see this well, I guess, maybe you can't see this in AOV because again you see the overall effect of the deceleration Not deceleration, the normalization of AOV with the inflation turning into deflation and coming back out. Basically, no. There's no real mix effect there. Speaker 200:43:22So we're seeing strength across the board. Part of that is the price elasticity. When that big item Pacific is bulkier and has high ocean freight factor gets hit with those costs. It really drives up the price of that item a lot. When that comes back out, That item becomes more price attractive that basically helps that item take share. Speaker 200:43:41So we've basically done well across the board. There's no real mix there. And then You mentioned a deceleration in Q4. I just want to comment again. If you look at it sequentially, you see a strong holiday ramp into Q4. Speaker 200:43:53So I think the deceleration is based on assuming the year over year comps in Q3 and Q4 were both normal flat comps They're quite different from each other because again Q4 last year is when we started taking share as a much stronger comp. So as you would expect, even if we have Strong comps continuing that compresses before it expands again. That's where the 2% sequential customer count, Strong order growth, but all these other numbers kind of point to what I think is really happening. So just keep that in mind, I would model it sequentially. Can also model it top down. Speaker 200:44:26But if you model it sequentially and then impute year over year, I think you better see a better trend of what's happening and it sort of explains what I think otherwise may not. And then so I'll let Kate comment on that and then Kate can also comment because you had a question about in 2024 what level could EBITDA be Given revenue at the low end, I think that's probably because as we mentioned, there's a lot of cost savings still to come. And so I don't know if we want to Speaker 300:44:51get that or not. And as you know, we don't guide to 2024. I would point you to following Chris' question, I think we talked through some of the puts and takes on model and really seeing in 2024, obviously, the full impact of that over $1,000,000,000 of cost savings up and down the P and L, And work with that sort of from gross margin on down and the benefit of that should certainly drive substantial EBITDA growth. Beyond that, we have Operator00:45:28Your next question comes from the line of Simeon Gutman with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Speaker 700:45:36Kate, thanks. Good morning, everyone. I want to ask a question about a little bit about the Q4 and then second about your posture Around, I guess, promotion and ad spend versus sales. So first, the Q4, the chances of it getting more promotional, Curious how you think about that. And then given your posture around margins, I guess preserving margin over sales here, It sounds like you wouldn't dip your toe into that, but can you give us a sense how vendors are approaching it? Speaker 700:46:06Would you share some promotion versus them? And then in terms of advertising, are you inclined to ramp that up if you saw that market share was getting worse some reason because of the promotional backdrop. Speaker 200:46:19Yes. Thanks, Simeon. So what I would say is that we are expecting Q4 to be promotional. That's part of why our guide on the sequential ramp of that 7%, 8% instead of 10% is a little more conservative is obviously It's hard with the promotional season really ahead of us other than Wait A2. Wait A2 beat forecasted very well. Speaker 200:46:38So that was a positive sign. That said, you have the whole kind of holiday season more or less ahead of you. And there's the macro, it's hard to read the headlines and say, oh, this is a boisterous time where everyone's jubilant, right? So I would say we are expecting to be promotional. Our merchandising calendar, everything we've worked out with suppliers, our merchandising plans Reflect what we expect to be a very promotional season. Speaker 200:47:00If you pull up the homepage of any of our sites, you can get that feeling right now, pull up any of the apps. So you can see that we're leaning in on that. We're set up For that, all the guidance already accounts for that. Now could it be more promotional than we're expecting? It's possible, although we feel like we have a good feel of what's happening in the markets. Speaker 200:47:17If it is more promotional, do we think that would hurt us? Well, who knows? I think we've got a very good posture and this is why we've taken share over the last year So gain back anything we lost and then a lot more than that, right? We're at all time highs. So I think we're set up really well. Speaker 200:47:33Ad spend, we do not think of as something you just use The dial to make yourself feel good on revenue. So we've really scrubbed ad spend to make sure every dollar works really hard for us. So we would spend dollars if we would I think that the return we would get would be at that higher threshold that we've now established. But we're not going to it's not the outcome is not measured in market share. Market share It's something you then end up getting if you did it well. Speaker 200:47:56And so ad spend is yet another cost line that we expect to work really hard for us. And As you can tell, we've reduced it. So obviously, revenue growth would be even far higher than it is now if we didn't reduce it. But we think it was the right move to make expect every dollar to work harder. We're going to keep that expectation. Speaker 200:48:14We're seeing good results from that expectation. That's the way we think about that. Speaker 300:48:17I just I'll add one thought on the promotion piece, because I do want to point out that Even if the market does get more promotional, our gross margin is resilient. So unlike other retailers where Taking inventory and you're discounting that that you've already acquired. In our case, typically our suppliers are reducing wholesales and we're passing on that Benefit to the customers, but you've seen throughout the year that our gross margin has actually grown even in the face of that because it's not coming from us dropping that price. And so I just that is a bit of a nuance to our model and I think one of our benefits frankly in our structure. Speaker 600:48:55Thanks, guys. Good luck. Speaker 200:48:56Thanks. And the other obvious point too is that obviously inventory in the supply chain, the inventory we're selling is owned by our suppliers as well, Which is a slightly different dynamic than most retailers, but I think that partnership with our suppliers is part of why we win as well. Operator00:49:11Your next question comes from the line of Oliver Wintermantel with Evercore ISI. Your line is open. Speaker 600:49:20Yes, thanks. You guys did a great job in the repeat customer or orders from repeat customers growing again. But that Would imply that the orders from new customers continues to decline year over year. Could you address that? And when do you think that improves? Speaker 600:49:37And what can you actually do improve that. Speaker 300:49:41Thank you. Yes. So I guess The overall point and Niraj feel free to jump in is that, sort of we are very excited to see repeat customers growing. I think that Speaks to the strength in the model, and the benefits that we're getting as or the percentage of repeat growth. I think that to the strength of the model and the benefits that we get if people experience the improved offering and come back and shop with us again. Speaker 300:50:09I don't as far as What does that foretell for new customers? Certainly, we're not seeing any weakness there. And in fact, LTM Active customers is actually growing sequentially. Our overall customer base is improving. Yes. Speaker 300:50:23Let me Speaker 200:50:23just sorry, Kate. Let me just chime in a couple of things and then keep going. But So that repeat percentage, right, so 80% of orders are repeat orders. That is of all customers who bought ever. Okay. Speaker 200:50:36And so obviously we've been around for 20 years. We have a lot of customers. If you bought ever, you're in that number as a repeat order. The active customer number means you have to have bought within the 12 months. So you could have people who bought in 2015 and if they buy again after being unengaged for 8 years, It would still be a repeat order, but they would come into the active customer number after not being there. Speaker 200:51:00Same thing if they weren't if they didn't buy in 13 months, They would also come back into the active customer number. So you need to look at those two numbers in different ways. There's still a lot of new customers for us to get and we're going to We expect to get them over time, but there's a lot of people we've encountered over time. And so that active customer number is kind of this engaged base. They've actually bought within the last 12 months. Speaker 200:51:21Are they buying and then obviously if they buy again and they buy again, that's the flywheel that drives the business. That's where I mentioned there's a 2% sequential growth in the active customer number. That number is poised to turn positive and we are still at this point only getting $5.50 I think $5.40 per customer per year. So we still have a very low share of wallet. So There's a that's where there's a lot of juice. Speaker 300:51:42I agree with all that. And Ali, just one thing I want to point out. I think you implied that new customers were weakening, but We don't we give you the KPIs and then you have to do a little bit of math. And so recognizing that we've been on the call for 55 minutes, you probably haven't been able to do the math. But if you take the percentage of repeat And then back into what that implies for new orders, you'd actually see new orders growing quarter on quarter. Speaker 300:52:04So you would see or sorry, growing year over year. So you see that nice Improvement actually in new orders and new customers and we continue to be excited about what that implies for the strength of the offering. Speaker 200:52:16Right. So new orders is over to it's like 2 ish 1000000. And so basically, Yes, that's why I was trying to explain the definition of the active customer numbers separate from the repeat orders that because you could actually figure out a lot if you use them, but have to understand how they're defined separately from each other. So we're gaining a lot of new customers, but what I think is even more exciting than that is frankly that the customers we have are being engaged coming back, an active customer number. Speaker 600:52:44Got it. Thank you very much and good luck. Speaker 300:52:47Thank you. Operator00:52:49Sorry, your next question comes from the line of Jonathan Matuszewski with Jefferies. Your line is open. Speaker 100:52:57Hey, good morning and thanks Speaker 200:52:58for taking my question. It's on gross margin. So for 3 consecutive quarters, you've exceeded the High end of your guide on this line item by an average of around 90 bps. So just kind of what are your assumptions underpinning 30% versus 31% and why should the 4Q result not Top the high end of your guide considering the recent trend. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:53:25Sure, John. Obviously, one thing you keep in mind is a different mix of Goods that are sold each quarter, which creates some gross margin changes as well. But let me turn it over to Kate for the specific information on the guide. Speaker 300:53:38Yes. I think what you're seeing there is, again, nice flow through of the cost savings that we laid out at the beginning of the year. We said in the Q2 that actually flowed through a bit faster than we had anticipated. And so we reinvested some of that in the Q3. And we intend to be mindful of how we make that investment. Speaker 300:53:57We want to be maximizing gross profit dollars over a multi quarter basis. In the Q4, as Niraj mentioned, seasonally, there's some impacts there. It's also a great quarter to bring people onto the platform. We just had that discussion about new It's a great quarter to bring new customers in, and get the benefit of those customers over time. I will point out you also, Of course, saw us bring up the guidance range. Speaker 300:54:19So we remain confident in the direction that gross margin is going, and we're really excited about what we've been seeing there. Speaker 200:54:29Thank you. Operator00:54:32This does conclude the question and answer session. I will turn the call back to the Wayfair team. Speaker 200:54:39I just want to say sort of thank you to all of you. We're obviously very excited for the holiday season. We're excited about The share gains we've had, the order strike, the momentum, the profitability growth, kind of the positioning we have for increased And everything, we thank you for your interest. And with that, we'll see you next quarter. Speaker 300:55:00Thank you. Operator00:55:02This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by