AppLovin Q4 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

There are 13 speakers on the call.

Operator

Welcome everyone to the AppLovin Earnings Call for the Q4 and Year Ended December 31, 2023. I'm David Shao, Head of Investor Relations. Joining me today to discuss our results are Adam Farrugi, our Co Founder, CEO and Chairperson and Matt Stump, our CFO. Please note, our SEC filings to date as well as our shareholder letter and press release discussing our Q4 and annual are available at investors. Applevin.com.

Operator

During today's call, we will be making forward looking statements regarding our products and services, market expectations, the future financial performance of the company and other future events. These statements are based on our current assumptions and beliefs and we assume no obligation to update them except as required by law. Our actual results may differ materially from the results predicted. We encourage you to review the risk factors in our most recently filed Form 10Q for the fiscal quarter ended September 30, 2023. We will also be discussing non GAAP financial measures.

Operator

These non GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for or superior to our GAAP results. Please be sure to review the reconciliations of GAAP and non GAAP financial measures in our earnings release and shareholder letter available on our Investor Relations site. This conference call is being recorded and a replay will be available at our our website. Now, I'll turn it over to Adam and Matt for some opening remarks, then we'll have the moderator take us through Q and A.

Speaker 1

Welcome everyone and thank you for joining. We're thrilled to report another outstanding quarter in Q4. We surpassed the high end of our guidance and established a consistent pattern of exceptional performance throughout 2023. Reflecting on the last year, it's remarkable to consider how much we have grown and evolved in just 1 year. After a challenging 2022 characterized by stagnant growth, we refocused on growing our existing business and investing in new initiatives.

Speaker 1

I am immensely proud of our team's dedication and hard work, which has resulted in our software platform revenue growing by 76% in 2023. Despite a challenged economic landscape and mobile gaming sector, We have continued to grow. This is a clear testament to the strength and potential of the updates we have made to our AI advertising engine, Axon. When we embarked on our public journey in 2021, software platform revenue was nearly $700,000,000 and now only 2 years later we have reached close to $2,000,000,000 We also forecast that we would have significant margins on incremental revenue for our software business. I'm proud to state that in Q4 2023, our incremental revenue had an approximate 80% flow through to adjusted EBITDA, culminating in record cash flows.

Speaker 1

This growth trajectory underscores a robust financial health and positions us favorably for diverse opportunities to enhance shareholder value like ongoing share repurchases. Now looking ahead to 2024 and beyond, we continue to remain bullish about the potential of our core AI technologies, which stand amongst the most advanced across all markets. Our focus on leveraging these technologies for world in the CTV space and array in the carrier OEM market is just the beginning. We are poised to explore and expand into new applications of our AI technologies in the coming quarters years, which has the potential to significantly broaden our TAM and opportunities. Now I'll turn it over to Matt, who will deliver his first financial summary as our CFO.

Speaker 1

We are incredibly fortunate to have him in this role. Thank you once again for your unwavering support on this journey.

Speaker 2

Thanks, Adam, and good afternoon. I'm pleased to step into my first earnings release as CFO with such amazing financial results. So first, I'd like to thank the team for having executed so well this quarter and making my job easy. In the Q4, we exceeded the high end of our guidance for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA, achieving $953,000,000 in revenue and $476,000,000 in adjusted EBITDA. That's an impressive 50% adjusted EBITDA margin.

Speaker 2

We also exceeded our analyst expectations this quarter by beating the consensus averages for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted EBITDA was nearly 10% higher than expectations. Our revenue grew by 36% from the same period last year and 10% from last quarter. Optimization efforts within our apps business in the first half of the year resulted in a slight decline in revenue, but it led to improved EBITDA margin. We still grew revenue every quarter this year due to the tremendous performance of our software platform and continued strength and growth in the advertising market.

Speaker 2

Our apps portfolio continues to perform well with 5% growth from last quarter while maintaining a consistent 15% adjusted EBITDA margin. Our software platform had another excellent quarter. We achieved revenue of $576,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA of $420,000,000 That's a 73% margin. This represents nearly an 80% flow through from revenue given our relatively fixed cost base and continued cost discipline. All of our businesses were able to grow their revenue this quarter, with App Discovery the primary driver of our success.

Speaker 2

Our growth stemmed from a combination of market factors and our execution, including a strong holiday season, growth in the mobile app advertising market, a market shift to real time bidding, early contributions from our array business, enhancement of our technologies like Axon, expansion of our advertiser base and growth in advertiser budgets. The combination of these factors are contributing to improved efficiency, leading to compounding growth for our company and our partners in the industry. Turning briefly to our annual results. Revenue for the year was $3,300,000,000 That's an increase of 17% from last year. Adjusted EBITDA was $1,500,000,000 That's an incredible 41%.

Speaker 2

An increase from last year at an adjusted EBITDA margin of 46%. Over the last 5 years, we've been able to achieve remarkable growth in our software platform business. We grew from $136,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA in 2019 to nearly $1,300,000,000 this year. During that time, we had roughly 60% to 70% adjusted EBITDA margin. Free cash flow for the year was $1,000,000,000 representing an impressive 69% flow through from adjusted EBITDA of $1,500,000,000 Going forward, we hope to retain roughly 70% flow through on an annual basis with quarterly fluctuations due to working capital and tax payments.

Speaker 2

During the year, we extended the maturity of our term loan to 2,030, at the same time reducing our interest rate to continue to manage our ongoing costs. In addition to our debt management activities this year, we also repurchased and withheld a combined 54,300,000 shares in 2023. After considering share compensation, this represents a nearly 10% reduction in our total shares outstanding. Through the combination of free cash flow generation and share management, we hope to continue to generate significant long term value for our existing and our new shareholders. Our Board has also approved an increase in our share repurchase authorization by $1,250,000,000 We plan to use this to continue to manage our outstanding shares.

Speaker 2

Turning to our Q1 2024 guidance, We hope to deliver between $955,000,000 $975,000,000 in revenue in the Q1. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be within the range of $475,000,000 $495,000,000 That represents an adjusted EBITDA margin of between 50 51%. We believe these results are achievable given the various growth factors I highlighted earlier while taking into account the Q1 is a seasonally low period for the industry. In conclusion, We're very happy with our financial performance this quarter and for all of 2023 as a result of a strengthening market combined with our team's execution. We look forward to continued growth over the coming year as we continue to expand our business into new verticals and industries such as non gaming and CTV.

Speaker 2

Now with that, I'll hand it over to our moderator to take us through.

Speaker 3

Thank you so much, Matt. And now we will take your questions. When I call your name, please turn on your video and unmute and we will get through as many questions as possible in the time allotted. First question is going to come from Omar DeSouki with BofA. Omar, go ahead and come off video please.

Speaker 3

Great. Thank you.

Speaker 4

Thank you. Thank you for taking my question. So, let's see. On the one hand, you're not giving calendar year 'twenty four guidance. But on the other hand, you did talk about in your letter that you're working towards expanding your software platform reach in 2024.

Speaker 4

So I was wondering if you could unpack those two things for us, especially the software platform reach part. Thank you.

Speaker 5

Thanks Omar. I'll start with the business side and then Matt will jump into the financials. But ultimately We launched Axon 2, the upgrade of our AI platform in Q2 last year. From that point to Q4, the business, the software business grew almost 50%. And obviously, you know the impact on margins.

Speaker 5

We've talked about a huge flow through in dollars, the incremental dollars of growth there, coming in at 80% roughly in the quarter. This is an early stage technology. It's only been live for a little over half a year. It's growing exceptionally quickly, very high margin. We think the applications of this core technology are much broader than what we do today.

Speaker 5

And the team is continuously improving the technology too. So we're very excited about where it could go. Ultimately, when you've got a business that's growing that quickly on a technology is that new at the margins we operate at. It's very hard to understand going forward exactly where we're going to land, But we've never been more excited about the growth prospects we've got in front of us.

Speaker 2

And just to echo what Adam said, Omar, given the difficulty in kind of forecasting

Speaker 6

and understanding the impact of launching a new technology like

Speaker 2

we did with and understanding the impact of launching a new technology like we did with Axon 2.0, it's very difficult for us to forecast what the impact or the financial impact of that is. So for that reason, we don't provide longer term guidance.

Speaker 4

And then just a quick follow-up, if I could. So Facebook called out Chinese advertisers, both e commerce and video game publishers is one of the reasons, their advertising outperformed in Q4. I didn't see it in your letter. And I was wondering if that's something you guys had seen at all or perhaps expecting in the Q1?

Speaker 5

No, we don't have any specific concentration or change of mix. And we indexed lower in terms of the Chinese partners to rest of the world. And I think they do. But this is something we'd called out during COVID. China lockdown was a huge area of inefficiency in the market.

Speaker 5

So we've seen the market really hit a trough last year or 2 years ago and then start recovering late last year. A lot of that was because Chinese developers were back in office for a year coming back online, getting efficient again. And we'd signaled that we thought eventually that's going to help bring efficiency back to the market because while we don't index heavily on the revenue side, there is a lot of content that's created out of China that comes out west and does benefit advertising related businesses. And so that was a good trend that we've seen continue to

Speaker 4

Thank you very much. Appreciate it. Thanks, Omar.

Speaker 3

And our next question will come from Tim Nollen with Macquarie.

Speaker 7

Hi, guys. Can you hear me okay?

Speaker 5

Yeah, we are, Tim.

Speaker 7

Okay, great. Thanks. I had some trouble with the sound on the first part of that presentation. I'm glad you can hear me now. I wanted to ask about some of these big changes coming in the mobile ad landscape this year, namely the DMA, which comes into effect, I guess, in a couple of weeks' time, 3 weeks' time.

Speaker 7

And also the deprecation of the Google Android ID and then also, the iOS 17 point kind of a lot of things in there to wonder about how it might impact the mobile ad markets here. I wonder if you could comment on those, please.

Speaker 5

Yeah. Look, I think we've said this before when it comes to privacy, Tim, is you don't know dates on a lot of these releases. When you're talking about Google, like who knows when the actual rollout will be? Cookies were a lot later than expected and still in a very small percentage rollout. So we don't know when these changes will come.

Speaker 5

We don't know the exact impact of the changes. What we do know is that, 1, the way we've operated traditionally, We're very entrepreneurial. We're very nimble. And we've been able to adapt very well whenever there have been these changes. And number 2, we run a much more of a contextual behavioral model than a lot of properties on the open web.

Speaker 5

And so because we don't interface as much when it comes to really sensitive user data with the consumer. We're in a much better starting point than a lot of other businesses too. So those two things always give us confidence that no matter what the changes, we're going to be able to navigate

Speaker 7

it. Okay. Could I ask a follow-up on the DMA, which would be, do you think, you know, Allowing much lower app store fees, in Europe at least would be a positive for app development, which might then lead to more ad spending going down the road or do you have any input, any opinion on the Apple response to be adding this extra Yeah. 50¢ charge.

Speaker 5

But the way Apple responded makes it not really a great business decision to go off store. One thing people want to talk about is there is organic value to being on store. So if you take the 30% fee and figure 10 to 15 points of value from organic rank, then you're down to 15 points of cost savings and the expense to the developer that they all the different layers of expense amounted to roughly 20 points. So there's no economic reason to go off store today. We think over time though There's enough global pressure and there's going to be enough movement from the courts over time that are going to continue to scrutinize us in different jurisdictions where eventually we think there could be benefits economically to the content developers.

Speaker 5

And if that happens, we've always said That's going to greatly benefit the advertising solutions. If you just think about the dollars on our platform, the majority are transacted to drive IAP today and the dollar is taxed down to $0.70 If that one day went to 85.15, you could go take that and say every developer now makes 20% more. And how much of that are they going to be willing to put into marketing? A large part of it, which would be greatly beneficial to a platform

Speaker 3

Moving on to Jason Bazinet with Citi.

Speaker 8

Thanks. This is maybe a long winded question, but I can't help but look at your stock and the multiple seems so low to me given the attractiveness of your business and the growth and the free cash flow conversion. And I saw the $1,200,000,000 authorization on buybacks. But I don't think you bought back any stock in the quarter and yet your guidance is good, you knew it was going to be above the street. So my first question is can you just comment on sort of pause in the Q4 on buybacks?

Speaker 8

And then my second one related is, do you think your multiple is low because of the 2 divergent businesses that you have between the software platform and first party games? And does that Does that still make sense to hold these 2 businesses together given that one is phenomenally attractive and one is just good? Thanks.

Speaker 2

Yes, I'll take the buyback piece first. Yep. So Jason, just from a strategic view, our approach to doing buybacks is to do directed larger repurchases rather than buyback in the open market. That's how we feel like we can have the most impact and the opportunity didn't present itself in Q4 to do a large buyback from an existing shareholder. So to the extent that that does present itself in the future, that's the approach that we're going to take.

Speaker 5

Yeah. And we just did authorize the big buyback. We're going to be committed to it going forward. We do think as a company like ours where we're generating this much cash flow, we should be able to continue to facilitate buybacks and return value to shareholders in that manner. When it comes to the question of where we trade, why we trade at the certain multiple we trade at.

Speaker 5

But we can't answer that. We're not traders and it's very hard to unpack. Does mobile gaming discount the overall company valuation. We don't frankly believe so because the core software business is growing so quickly and we break out financials. So it's pretty easy to just say, Let's just look at the software segment.

Speaker 5

There's we think the harder part when it comes to our business is that we were in a no growth period in 2022. We've had to come off of that and really focus on execution, which is what we asked of our teams. And now we've put together 4 subsequent quarters of stellar performance. And as you look at that software segment, there's not a lot of software businesses with 70% plus EBITDA margin growing at the rate that is. I mean, rule of 140, 150 or whatever.

Speaker 5

And so it's just an astounding number. And then we convert a very high percentage of that EBITDA to cash flow as well. So We think because the technologies are new, it'll take a while for investors to understand what we already see, which is not only is this very powerful technology in our core we've been able to grow much greater than the market is growing because this technology is efficient. And in conjunction with that, our partners are growing much faster, too. And you see some of these games that are in the market today at the top of the top grossing.

Speaker 5

They depend on our marketing channel and they're

Speaker 6

growing because our solutions become more efficient.

Speaker 5

That's in our core market. And now we see become more efficient. That's in our core market. And now we see applications of that technology in multiple adjacent markets. And we think we're going to be able to go apply it not only to what we've talked about some other applications too that we'll talk about in the upcoming quarters.

Speaker 5

And that's what gets us really excited. So we're for sure committed to buybacks because we see value and we're able to unpack the value much more easily today than investors are and we hope to be able to articulate that narrative in the coming quarters to investors.

Speaker 9

Thank you.

Speaker 3

We will now hear from Ralph Schackart, I apologize, with William Blair.

Speaker 10

Hey, good afternoon, Adam, Matt. Thanks for taking the question. First one, I know you've talked historically about Axon to extend beyond just sort of the gaming vertical, but maybe just sort of give us an update on progress. Are you starting to get contributions outside of the gaming vertical? And then I have a follow-up.

Speaker 5

Yeah, thanks ralph. Non gaming is growing faster in gaming. It's smaller. So obviously there's more room to grow. It's going to be a commitment of ours to broaden out the platform.

Speaker 5

We've talked about broadening out to non gaming. That's a component. We've talked about connected TV. That was an application that's in progress right now, expanding our reach to the television device. We talked about delivering marketing solutions to carriers and OEMs powered by Axon 2.

Speaker 5

That's in progress as well. We're starting to see, as Matt touched on in his script, some benefit from both those initiatives. And we think there are not only those

Speaker 6

applications, but more beyond that, that we'll talk about

Speaker 5

in the coming quarters as well. Locations, but more beyond that, that we'll talk about in the coming quarters as well. And so we're very excited about not only what our solution can do within our core category, but the expansion opportunities that presents us.

Speaker 10

Great. Maybe you could sort of provide some context of, you know, what's really outperforming versus expectations. I'm sure there's an element of, you know, conservatism on wanting to guide, but just sort of frame for investors, you know, why is Axon 2 doing better perhaps than you expected?

Speaker 5

Look, I mean, what people don't understand about our platform, and I guess we don't tend to articulate too, is the Max business sits on top of over a 1000000000 daily active users, a 1000000000 users playing games. So if you think about in the US, roughly 170,000,000 daily active users. So you're talking about the majority of American adults are playing games daily in mobile apps and we're able to service them. Historically in this channel, the modernization has been very low per 1,000 impressions compared to what the social networks and the search engines and the video apps have gotten to. And those companies had very sophisticated technology and a lot of data.

Speaker 5

We've been able to get to a point now where our technology has become much more efficient. So we're just monetizing this audience more effectively. What gets us really excited is we're a couple of quarters in. We're really starting from a low monetization point. The whole market is monetizing these users playing games at a low point.

Speaker 5

When you have that much reach, 170,000,000 daily actives in the States, these aren't people that are just playing mobile games. There's just no way. It's a very, very widespread audience, predominantly adult, that are doing other things. And as these technologies get to a point of get to a point of predicting more broader application of advertising to this audience, not only will it get more efficient, it'll expand out the reach for a company like ours to other verticals and it'll create more efficiency for the publisher. We should grow everything.

Speaker 5

And so that's what gets us really excited is it all comes down to

Speaker 6

efficiently monetizing a huge audience that we have access to. Right.

Speaker 5

Maybe if I could stick a huge audience that we have access to

Speaker 10

them. Great. Maybe I can sneak more and more in. You know, we get the question all the time in simple terms, if you could explain, What's the main difference from Axon 2 versus Axon 1? Maybe just for simplicity sake for investors sort of frame, what's the biggest change or observation you see on your end?

Speaker 10

Thanks.

Speaker 5

Yeah, it's just better. I mean it's just the technology is built to scale better. It's more efficient, more effective. These are predictive technologies in the day and I've drawn the analogy to chat GPT. And the only reason I do that is because we can all type in a box and get a result.

Speaker 5

And we all know that chat GPT 3 to 3, 5 to 4. 4 was better than 3, 5 was better than 3. Right? But we could have seen that. Well, what we can't see in a black box algorithm is a type in and a result.

Speaker 5

But what we can see is that what we're trying to predict is Show an advertisement to a consumer for some advertiser and drive value to the advertiser. And there's a whole bunch of predictions along the way. And Axon 2 makes them better than the prior version. And that creates a lot of efficiency gain both for our business and that of our partners.

Speaker 10

Okay. Thanks, Al.

Speaker 3

Yep. Cannonball's Vasily Karasyov has the next question.

Speaker 9

Thank you. I have 2. First one, Can you talk in a little more detail about different trends for domestic and international markets that you see and revenue or maybe metrics. Is there any difference? Do you see different penetration and customers' response?

Speaker 9

And then the second one is, given what you said about extending software platform, how sustainable are the EBITDA margins in this segment that we saw in Q4? Thank you.

Speaker 5

So on the first, we don't see a whole lot of difference domestic to international. There's consumption that drives our value and there's efficiency of the algorithms and partners that are advertising on us that drive the value. And so other than like one off holidays in international locations that would alter the revenue percentages, if you assume the period of engagement is consistent, then the revenue mix would also be consistent. And the other core thing to always remember about our business is all of our advertising is 100% performance based. So an advertiser that wants a specific performance, a yield in the U.

Speaker 5

S. Is willing to get the same yield in Turkey or in the UK or in Germany or in Japan. And so when they advertise with us, they are predominantly global advertisers. So we don't tend to see much variance there.

Speaker 2

And on your second question, Vasily, in terms of just margin, we haven't seen any significant difference. I mean, As Adam mentioned previously, it's relatively small at this point, the non gaming component of the business. But as we push into these other new verticals and industries, we don't see any material difference between the margin profiles of the existing mobile gaming business and the non gaming?

Speaker 5

Yeah. We've let you all know that when you see roughly 80% flow through, We don't really expect that to be different as that software business continues to grow. The flow through should be a really high conversion to EBITDA.

Speaker 9

So Q4 is indicative of what we should expect next year, every quarter?

Speaker 5

On the incremental revenue growth, yes.

Speaker 6

Yeah. I

Speaker 2

mean, if you look at just our guidance facility, we're guiding to a similar position, right, in the 50% to 51% overall EBITDA margin.

Speaker 9

Thank you so much. Congratulations.

Speaker 5

You're welcome. Thank you.

Speaker 3

And Matt Koss with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead with your question.

Speaker 11

Hi, everybody. Thanks for taking the questions. 2, if I could. So from a real time bidding perspective, it looks like I might have frozen. Can you still hear me?

Speaker 6

Yes.

Speaker 5

Yes.

Speaker 11

Okay, good. Well, then we'll keep going. From a real time bidding perspective, how much of the market has shifted towards real time bidding at this point? And then can you talk about the financial impact that that will have when that process is complete and how investors should think that through? And then I have a second.

Speaker 11

[SPEAKER J.

Speaker 5

PATRICK GALLAGHER, JR.:] Yeah. So the first one, The Google announcements on their move to go predominantly real time bidding in mobile mediated auctions, came out, I think it was some point in October and made a commitment to do it by January. But throughout Q4, the vast majority of the market was traded in a programmatic real time manner. And the impact of that is twofold for a business like ours. One is we've operated the MAX platform, not charging anything to advertising companies when they're not real time bidding, but charging a take rate of 5% when they are real time bidding.

Speaker 5

We've disclosed that number before. That's just a consistent fee that we charge to bid on our platform. Now with the majority of the market moving that way, that's a good economic development for the MAX platform and that obviously benefits our software segment. On the second point of the impact there, what real time bidding does is clear an auction faster. There's less consumption, so there's just less infrastructural load in order to process a real time auction versus a waterfall auction.

Speaker 5

And there's a quicker ad delivery. And by delivering an advertisement more quickly, the publisher benefits because they can show more advertisements to their consumer whenever they want to, instead of waiting for an advertisement to actually clear, it clears faster and more show. By doing that, it creates a world where the publisher starts yielding more in an efficient manner, which can then drive up their ad revenue per user. And, and the whole formula that we operate on is the publisher makes more, they reinvest more into user their business grows and we enable that growth and our business grows with it. So we're only seeing positive from this transition.

Speaker 11

Great. Thank you. And then the second question was just on the competitive environment. Obviously, one of your competitors is going through a major restructuring. I guess, are you seeing any shifts, positive or negative in the competitive landscape year to date?

Speaker 5

Look, since we went public, we've been a very strong independent leader in the sector. I don't think anything has changed there. We've been focused on executing ourselves. And as our technology has gotten more efficient, obviously, we're driving more value to advertisers. But we've said this, for, I think, multiple quarters now.

Speaker 5

None of us operate in a zero sum game. So when we're able to drive more value to these advertisers who are buying on a performance basis, they don't go, we have a fixed budget and we're going to pull from here. They go, okay, we have a budget over here, we have budget over here, AppLovin is now 5 times better than they were. So let's expand the budget with them too. And they're able to reinvest more dollars into the user acquisition, which helps their businesses grow.

Speaker 5

And that's what makes the space quite appealing is that none of it's 0 sum, whether on the publisher or the advertiser side. And so we've been able to focus heads down on our own execution. Our team has built really cutting edge technology that works better than any other, I think any of the advertisers or our peers have seen in the sector, but that benefits everyone in the sector. And so we're excited that that that is just a reality of the industry we're in.

Speaker 11

Great. Thank you.

Speaker 3

David Karnovsky with JPMorgan has the next question.

Speaker 6

Hi, thanks for taking the question. Adam, maybe relative to your prior shareholder letters, you seem to be describing a mobile market, which is broadly inflecting for the better. So I wanted to see if you could walk through some of the drivers of that, what you're seeing. And then for Matt, wanted to confirm, you said 70% free cash flow conversion expected from here. I think the prior range was 50% to 60%.

Speaker 6

So maybe what's driving the better flow through? Just housekeeping on the Q1 guide, any color in terms of expected apps growth there or even on a directional basis, Should you gain sequentially or would we see sort of a seasonal decrease? Thanks.

Speaker 5

I'll let Matt cover 23. On the first one on the mobile market, put out a blog, I think it was around Thanksgiving. So that it was a good one highlighting just CPM growth in the industry compared, comparing 2023 to 2022 holiday period. And what we saw in Q4 was that just coming off of weak comps in 'twenty two when every part of the economy was fearful and this sector was particularly fearful. We saw brands and performance advertisers more willing to invest in marketing dollars.

Speaker 5

Now what we don't know about that is, Are the AI driven advancements in the marketing technologies that you've seen implied by our numbers and our performance in technology and what Facebook has done and what Google have done over the last year driven that acceleration? Or is it just the economy recovering? And we think it's a function of both. And we actually think because we're not brand advertising at all, ours is entirely due to the technology efficiency. You're seeing this market start recovering.

Speaker 5

It's coming off of weak comps. So getting back to growth is easier than it was in the past. But the marketing technology is evolving from here and continuing to improve. Is going to be a really good catalyst for a return to growth for the small world market.

Speaker 2

In terms of free cash flow, Dune, so we did guide to 70% going forward on a long term basis. On a quarterly basis, we will have fluctuations depending upon just working capital and then also the timing of tax payments. But we are sitting seeing better free cash flow conversion from EBITDA than we were expecting, which is a positive, you know, impact that we're seeing from all of the technology improvements that we've done. And then in terms of the Q1 guide, your last question, Obviously, we don't provide segment guidance, so I won't comment on apps versus software, but we are happy to be able to guide into Q1 with slight growth, considering the fact that it is a seasonally low period for the advertising market.

Speaker 3

Anything else, David? All right. Well, Adam and Matt, we will take our last question from Chris Kuntarecz with UBS.

Speaker 12

Great. Thanks for taking the question.

Speaker 7

I think we're a

Speaker 12

bit further on into the CTV testing at this point. Can you just give us some feedback from advertisers on how that adoption is going?

Speaker 5

Look, the CTV testing and the rollout is early stage, and we've got a really large software platform business now with net revenue near $2,000,000,000 So for it to become very substantial for these advertisers as a ways out, They're all intrigued by it because traditionally, and I don't know if you do channel checks, you won't find another place where

Speaker 6

these advertisers can buy on a performance basis the way we can

Speaker 5

enable it on can buy on a performance basis the way we can enable it on connected TV today. So I'd say it's 1st inning. Everyone's excited by the prospect being able to go recruit a consumer on a new device that they just had never had the access to before, in the way that we can enable it. But it's early and in our business as big as we are and as fast growing as that business is for any new initiative to make a material impact, We're talking multiple years.

Speaker 12

Understood. And maybe just going back to the non gaming business, I think it had been positioned in the So there was a bit of a lag between the adoption of Axon 2, from gaming and non gaming and just the scaling of budgets here within the non gaming business once those advertisers adopt Axon 2. Can you just talk about, kind of if that slowness to scale budgets within that non gaming business, if you guys are starting to see that normalize and start to kind of revert to what you're seeing in your gaming business? Thanks.

Speaker 5

Yeah, it's a good question. Non gaming will probably never get to as quick as mobile gaming. The mobile gaming marketer sees an opportunity and jumps on it. It's just, It tends to be a more commoditized space and it's a tougher space for content providers to play in, whereas non gaming enterprises tend to have a brand and they have fixed budgets and they normally plan their budgets every quarters and years out. And so because of that, it won't ever be a quick to move market.

Speaker 5

That said, we talked about it growing faster than the gaming segment. We do know the technology application works across any category that we've so far. So as we get a fintech advertiser live or a rentals company or an e commerce company, we're seeing success across the board. So It's an area we're investing in. We're increasing our headcount there.

Speaker 5

Now we always operate efficiently and lean. So that doesn't mean a lot of costs, but we are investing in bringing in the right people to really expand these non gaming verticals because we see a ton of opportunity there.

Speaker 12

Okay. And maybe just one housekeeping, if I can squeeze it in. I think you had called out the software segment outperformance in 4Q. You've listed off a handful of factors. I think it started with A strong market and wrapped up with growth in advertiser budgets.

Speaker 12

Should we be directionally or kind of if we were to stack stack rank these, various impacts. Is that kind of from most impactful to least impactful or anything to read into there? Thanks.

Speaker 2

No, they're not rank ordered, my list of factors. Yes, it's just a combination.

Speaker 5

And I'd say just given the growth rate we're on, and you've seen for multiple quarters now, The bigger part of our growth is driving more efficient value to advertisers, unlocking more budget and expanding the advertiser total than it is the market. The market isn't growing anywhere near as fast as what we are.

Speaker 12

Understood. Thanks.

Speaker 4

Thanks, Chris.

Speaker 3

Well, this does conclude our question and answer session for the quarter. We thank you all for joining us today. Have a good afternoon. We'll see you next time.

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Earnings Conference Call
AppLovin Q4 2023
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