NASDAQ:TFIN Triumph Financial Q2 2024 Earnings Report $48.62 -1.33 (-2.66%) Closing price 04/17/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$48.56 -0.05 (-0.11%) As of 04/17/2025 04:05 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Triumph Financial EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.08Consensus EPS $0.21Beat/MissMissed by -$0.13One Year Ago EPS$0.29Triumph Financial Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$124.18 millionExpected Revenue$103.43 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$20.75 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ATriumph Financial Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/17/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, July 18, 2024Conference Call Time10:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Triumph Financial Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 18, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning. It's 9:30 in Dallas, so let's get started. We'd like to open by thanking you for your interest in Triumph Financial and for joining us this morning to discuss our Q2 results. With that, let's get to business. Aaron's letter last evening discussed the quarter's results and the investments we are making in a few projects that we believe will create long term shareholder value. Operator00:00:20We are excited about the opportunities we see to lift an industry and create a network that delivers tangible benefits to all participants while improving transparency and creating value for America's Truckers. As you'll see this morning, Todd will not be joining us. Todd is never afraid to get in the trenches and lead during difficult market conditions. However, today he is recovering from Achilles tendon surgery after being reminded that pickleball is not a contact sport. We wish him well on a speedy recovery and expect to welcome him back to the earnings call in Q3. Operator00:00:49That quarterly shareholder letter published last evening and our quarterly results will form the basis of our call today. However, before we get started, I would like to remind you that this conversation may include forward looking statements. Those statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual and anticipated results to differ. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly revise any forward looking statement. For details, please refer to the Safe Harbor statement in our shareholder letter published last evening. Operator00:01:15All comments made during today's call are subject to that Safe Harbor statement. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Aaron for a welcome and to kick off our Q and A. Aaron? Speaker 100:01:25Thanks, Luke, and thank you all for joining us this morning. I have just a few comments before opening it up for questions. The big story this quarter is our progress in building density. Our network engagement stands at just under 47% as we sit here today. With the signing of C. Speaker 100:01:44H. Robinson and with ArcBest, a top 20 broker going live during the quarter, we have a sight line to achieving critical mass related to our network density and monetization is what follows density. This is the way it works in network economies. We have a tremendous amount of momentum right now. Now that's what we see on the horizon, and while our eyes are on the horizon, it is not lost on me that we live in the present, and for the present, our earnings are under pressure for the reasons I wrote about in the letter. Speaker 100:02:18There are some things we can control and some that we cannot control. In choosing our path forward, we have focused mainly on creating long term value at the expense of improving short term results. That is why we continue to invest at a time when I think most people might slow down or become defensive. Now, taken to an extreme, that view can be cavalier. We do not want to be cavalier. Speaker 100:02:46Instead, we want to be intentional and we think an appropriate guardrail to our aspirational growth is fixing our expenses at approximately $97,000,000 per quarter going forward. This allows us some room to make additional technology investments to deliver on our promises to our customers and our prospects and it forces us to be disciplined about our talent management. This is healthy for us and it will enhance our profitability both in the short term and the long term. In closing, the stakes are high. We are building a network that connects many to many to many in a very large market. Speaker 100:03:25Those opportunities are hard to find and even harder to execute on when you find them. The rewards for those who win make the effort absolutely worth it. Those are my opening thoughts. Now let's turn the call over for questions. Speaker 200:03:43We will now go to Q and A. If you have connected via Zoom and would like to ask a question, please use the raise hand feature at the bottom of your Zoom window. Or if you've dialed in press star 9. Once called upon, please feel free to unmute and ask your question. Our first question comes from Tim Switzer from KBW. Speaker 300:04:03Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Certainly wish Todd the best on recovering the Achilles there. The first question I have is the revenue growth in the TPASE segment has been kind of chunky historically and it was above 50% year over year the last three quarters, but it slowed down a bit this quarter. What needs to happen for us to see an acceleration in revenue there? Speaker 300:04:28And is it simply an end recession, more brokers or factories on the network, more revenue generating invoices? Can you guys kind of walk us through that? Speaker 400:04:41You just nailed it. It's those three things. And so certainly the transportation recession is creating an issue for short term earnings. But as you've seen, TriumphPay is growing through those headwinds. And so while we've had payment volume growth and network engagement growth, we've also had expense growth. Speaker 400:05:00And one thing I want to point out is that our expense growth quarter over quarter, while it was just under 6%, our quarter our growth year over year same quarter was 40%. And you're seeing a lot of that happen on the fee side. So the majority of that is in our fee growth, which is where we think is the most important part of the network that we can control, to be able to remove as much market volatility as we can. And so we're seeing that growth happen there, continue to reprice customers as we've talked about in the past. Certainly, as we bring on new customers, are using our new pricing models. Speaker 400:05:34And in that, you're seeing those changes happen in the mix of our revenue. Speaker 300:05:41Okay. And my follow-up there is the increases you've seen on generating more revenue from your invoices, it went from a little under 22% to a little over 22% this quarter and you made more progress year over year. What strategies are you guys implementing to I guess become more effective at being to charge? And what are some of the challenges you're seeing on doing that? Speaker 400:06:06Yes, that's a great question. So the difficulty in building this network is the connectivity, right? And that's where we feel like we are building an MO. And so it's taking network enabled transactions and connecting them to the factor on the other side so that they can see that value come from the network. And so you've seen us grow the network transactions pretty substantially quarter over quarter. Speaker 400:06:29This one slowed down a little bit at a 13% growth. But that's because it gets harder and harder the bigger you get, right, the bigger your denominator, the percentage changes. And so what has to happen though is when I have a transaction that is on a broker side that's network enabled and I'm connecting it to a factor, it's not just saying the factor is enabled and the broker is enabled. It's making sure those two relationships can connect because every factoring management system is different. And so when you start to build density and those connections is when the monetization can start. Speaker 400:07:06And we're building that now. We're building that foundation. When you think about where we're at from a factors perspective who's on the network, about 21% to 22% of their portfolio now is being connected through the network. We continue to work on that and ensure that whatever is available on the broker side is usable and consumable on the factor side. And that's where the real value of the network comes into play. Speaker 100:07:31Yeah. And you can't answer it any better than Melissa just did. But I think, Tim, I the only thing I wanna add here is because it's something I've thought about. Right? Like, it's it's a fair question. Speaker 100:07:44And I think it's more of it's a question of why do things go slow before they go fast? Right? Like, why why wouldn't it be if this if what we've built here is a better mousetrap, which we all absolutely believe and I think anyone who uses the product believes, then why doesn't it just take off? Well, I think what you're fighting is the bias against change. Right? Speaker 100:08:07Like, it's change is hard. Change is hard in your personal life. Change is hard in in in for a corporation. And so I think probably, I know this, when credit cards were introduced to retailers, there was they didn't go fast at first. Like, why are we using plastic? Speaker 100:08:23Where is the efficiency? Where am I gaining by taking this, just adding one more form of payment? How does that help me? And it's exactly what Melissa said is as we go and you create these connections, it starts to go faster and faster because people experience the value of the change. But what we have to overcome in the density building phase of the network is the bias to not change what's worked for the last 20 years. Speaker 100:08:51Adding C. H. Robinson, adding ArcBest, adding this volume, crossing over 50%, continuing on to our long term goals, that density will overcome the resistance to change because you can just see the economics. You can see in your business how things change. And that's why I think what Melissa and the team are doing is so great, but you just have to keep pushing the ball down the field 3 to 5 yards at a time, and then you're gonna turn around and look and see, oh, man, we we have made a lot of progress. Speaker 100:09:22But sometimes in a measured quarter to quarter, it doesn't always feel like Speaker 300:09:28that. Okay. Appreciate it. If I could squeeze in one more, I know this might be an impossible question to answer, but, you know, what's that threshold of density that you need to where you really start to see, you know, the exponential effect of, you know, I guess it's really network effects here that I'm talking about. You know, is there you guys have any idea of when that occurs? Speaker 100:09:48Yeah. I mean, that's a, you know, great question. What we've said is we expect to cross over 50% by the end of this year. We're at 47% now. That doesn't include any of the volume. Speaker 100:10:02It doesn't include a lot of the volume that, people who are already on. So long term, what we've said historically, I don't know if I've ever been precise about it, but we can be precise here. I think we'll get to 80% density. And I said 24 and 25 are our years to continue to build density. Does that mean exactly that on December 31, 2025, we're at 80%? Speaker 100:10:25No. I can't answer that. But I can see the pathway forward. If that's true, somewhere between 50 80%, the factoring companies who are the ones who I think benefit the most from the economies of scale on their side of the transaction start to see more than half of their transactions come through with the opportunity to connect to the network and they can start to adjust their staffing models to recognize the efficiencies. So I there's no magical number, but I think it's somewhere between half and ultimate penetration of 80% because it's impossible to ever say you're gonna get that long tail of the last 20%. Speaker 100:11:03And that's why I opened the letter saying 2425 are the the density building time. And monetization should still grow like we're growing revenue. I'm not asking for permission not to grow revenue. I'm asking investors to understand that being the 1st mover, that window is open and we need to get to that density threshold between 50 80% in order to be able to change this industry and deliver value to our constituents. So that's not a precise answer. Speaker 100:11:36That's a band and that's where we think it is. Speaker 300:11:42Got it. Yeah. I appreciate the details there. It's really helpful. I'll get back in the queue. Speaker 200:11:48Our next question comes from Gary Tenner from D. A. Davidson. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:11:53Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to ask about the conforming volume. It continues to increase as a percentage of total volume in the payments segment. It's kind of maybe slowed from the pace of growth. Speaker 500:12:07I think Melissa, as you pointed out, maybe 13% this quarter. As you think about C. H. Robinson coming live, let's say Q2 'twenty five is kind of a full quarter run rate, just for sake of argument. But what do you think the addition of C. Speaker 500:12:23H. Robinson and their volume does in terms of pulling up the conforming penetration rate, if you will, kind of out of the gate? Speaker 400:12:32Yes. I'll answer that a little bit differently, and I'll do it from the perspective of one factor. Because when you take their total volume and spread that across all the factors, factoring industry, your percentages are going to change because they have to be connected to the network. So CH volume to a network enabled and connected factoring company on average, for most factoring portfolios would represent 20% to 25%, sometimes more, of their entire purchase volume. So it's a substantial part of their everyday business. Speaker 400:13:04And today, they have to manually go do those validations. And so being able to validate and do cash application through the network on an additional 20% to 25% of their portfolio is quite substantial. Speaker 500:13:20Okay. Okay. Thank you. And then in terms of factoring as a service, yes, I don't know that you've talked about this a ton. Can you talk about, Aaron, what it means for what exactly looks like and then what it means economically in terms of benefits to TFIN as that gets built out? Speaker 100:13:44Yeah. Tim, let's let I'm gonna let Tim answer operationally because he's the operational expert, and then I'll I'll share some thoughts about what I think about financially. So go ahead, Tim. Speaker 600:13:54So, Gary, I think what's important to think about is that factoring as a service gives our potential customer the ability to utilize our technology, our platform, our expertise in order to create different products and ultimately upgrade their technology. So what we've observed several things, but one thing specifically we've observed is that the factoring industry as far as FMS providers has not kept up with the pace of technology. And so by doing what we have and invested in instant purchase and other things that we're doing within our focus area, we are raising the bar and creating an opportunity for other factors or anyone that originates factoring transactions to generate and utilize our operation side of it. So if you can imagine factoring as a service and being able to integrate that with Instant Purchase, on top of that with Loadpay, it gives us a lot of leverage and a lot of value for that factor to not only fund and make decisions very quickly, but to be able to open the doors and fund on a 20 fourseven basis. And so why is that important? Speaker 600:15:01That's important because you have the situation going into a holiday and we have a specific situation about this, because you have a carrier that goes into a holiday, he needs money for whatever repair and maintenance item and he has paper in his truck that has value to it that can get cash into his bank. And so when you think about factoring as a service, that is the tool that gets the carrier the money they need when they need it. And so there's several components that factoring as a service will add value to a factor. Speaker 100:15:33Yeah. And so on the financial side, I mean, Gary, because everything we do needs to ultimately pay off for our shareholders. Right? There are no science projects here. So how do we think about it? Speaker 100:15:48Well, if factoring in transportation is a $2,000,000,000 revenue industry, which I I think is directionally correct, And you look at the profitability or the operating efficiency of factors, and then you take out the sales function, because we don't want to sell all factoring. That is we've been very clear about that. Like, there are other people who need to be out there engaging with these customers, small carriers, midsize, large carriers, who can do that piece with excellence and don't need us. But there is still a once you engage as a factor, once you buy that invoice, whether you've been in the industry 10 years or 10 days, that begins a process. Right? Speaker 100:16:28Underwriting, cash collection, you know, cash application, all the validation, verification, all these things that have to happen that are highly repeatable. They're highly repeatable and they can be automated. We believe, and this is you can't go find this in a, you know, in some report, but we believe that in this $2,000,000,000 revenue factor spend between 500 to 600,000,000 in back office expenses. Right? That's that's what we think it takes them to do all the things you have to do to ingest the invoice all the way through applying the cash when it's paid. Speaker 100:17:06We want factors to be more efficient. We have said that there's $20 of friction on both sides of the transaction. That's not all on the factor side of the transaction. I would think in factoring that friction cost, that whole back office cost, it's a wide range, but it's between $5.10 It's gonna be $5 if you're servicing large customers because you're buying schedules of invoices, it'll be closer to $10 If you're servicing a small carrier because you do more of the work for them and you can't get the economies of scale. So connecting with TriumphPay and digitizing all of that is going in and of itself to add efficiency. Speaker 100:17:48But if the factoring company is operating on a legacy technology that is incapable of ingesting that data, the way we can give it to them that allows them to capture the efficiency, then that value is lost on them. And so why we're doing this is we're saying to the industry, we have the data feed. We have the pipe from the brokers and we're saying we're gonna have 80% of all truckload brokered transactions in our pipe. You should map to this data so you can make instant decisions, so you can reduce inefficiency, so you don't have to try to you know, struggle with reading illegible documents. Like, let's make the data pristine and the connection tight. Speaker 100:18:34Well, their current technology isn't able to do that. And so if they if their current technology providers won't do it, and there are some who've done it, but for the most they haven't, then we got to go fix that problem. And if we're going to fix that problem, we expect to be paid to fix that problem. And so we expect to achieve savings in this $5 to $600,000,000 of expense that is being spent doing factoring much the way it's been done the last 10 years. We're gonna change that. Speaker 100:19:01The window that's what I talk about. This window is open for us to create structured data throughout the life cycle of transaction because we are connected to the source of truth, which is inside the broker's transportation management software. Pulling that data and giving it to the people who are going to provide financing to the carrier in the format in which it lives, that changes things. And so, it's about making the network more resilient. That's one reason you do it, but it's also because if we can go cut 30% of the cost, 40%, I don't know what it'll be at scale. Speaker 100:19:38But of that $600,000,000 of spend, then we expect to share in those benefits. Right? Like, that's how SaaS businesses work. You share in the the the value you create. So it's a big market to go after, Gary. Speaker 100:19:50It's not a science project. It's not just being done to make sure TriumphPay wins. It's being done for that, but it's also being done because it dress addresses a real economic expense that the industry faces, and we can make it better. Speaker 500:20:09Thanks, Aaron. I appreciate that. One last question just related to that, if I could. From a segment perspective, I guess, since you're building this out to service other factors or provide it as a service to other factors, it almost seems like it like from a segment perspective, it could be factoring or in the payments business. So just the thoughts around that and as it relates to kind of the expense load associated with the build out there. Speaker 500:20:40Can you talk about that a bit? Speaker 100:20:42Yeah. That that, a great question. And such a good question because it's something we talked about. I mean, this is sort of why the corporate segment exists because we're starting to do things that touch all sides. Let let me I'm gonna answer your question, which I think it the answer is it ends up in payments because it's not us factoring as a service is providing a service to the people who use the network. Speaker 100:21:05So I think that's logically where it fits. But just understand, like, load pay, for example, the expense in developing load pay, some of that expense is showing up in the bank because underneath a load pay account is a checking account. And where do checking accounts live? They live in our banking segment. But the load pay structure and how we're going to market with it and how we're attaching it to the network, well, that happens inside of our payment segment. Speaker 100:21:36But if you want load pay to really work, you need to do instant purchasing, which gives the money, you know, which allows us to pay like they alluded to this earlier. If if a carrier gets a proof of delivery, you know, signed at 11 PM, being able to instantly purchase that doesn't really impress anyone unless you can have money in their account at 11:0:1 PM. Well, the technology for that and instant purchase and the artificial intelligence and all the back testing we've done on billions of transactions, that happened in our factoring segment. And so what we're finding is as we're transitioning community bank to financial technology platform is all three parts of our business add value to what we're creating. So the answer is FAS lives in payments, but I just need you to understand and we will try to call it out as best we can. Speaker 100:22:24We use the bank for a lot of this. We use factoring and what we do inside of factoring to serve the network. And, of course, we use payments to host the network. So, it's more symbiotic probably than it's ever been historically. Speaker 700:22:40Our disclosures around all of this will absolutely evolve as as this grows. And when we set up our segments the way that we did, we had 3 very distinct lines of business. And in a lot of cases, we were intentionally keeping them separate. And as we have evolved and as we see what is possible for us to build to serve the industry over the long term, it's all kind of coming back together. So I can't paint you a crystal clear picture of what that will look like because there's still a lot of things that we need to figure out, but you can expect that to evolve over time. Speaker 100:23:13Thanks, Gary. Speaker 500:23:14Great. Thanks for the questions. Speaker 200:23:18Thanks to all for your questions today. Please limit to 2 questions only. Our next question will come from Joe Yancunis from Raymond James. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:23:27Good morning. Speaker 100:23:29Good morning, Joe. Speaker 800:23:31So going back to the revenue component of TPAY, in the prior call you mentioned that due to the challenging environment you not to increase pricing for Teepay customers in 2024, while also adding that you're not currently charging for all the services offered. I guess given the increasing density of TPIG, how should we think about price increases in 2025 or the benefit from a customer migrating to your new pricing model? Or I guess said a different way, assuming a static market, how much incremental dollars should we expect TeePay to generate from a hypothetical customer after these price increases occur? Speaker 100:24:10I mean, it's not a static market. Right? But I mean, like, the density changes and enables monetization. I mean, we I I, you know, I can't give it to you in a formula, Joe. I get why you're asking the question. Speaker 100:24:29It's a totally appropriate question. How this will go is we will onboard C. H. Robinson. Right? Speaker 100:24:36And and that volume will come. And you know what? By the time we're done onboarding C. H. Robinson, whether it's 2nd or Q3 next year, there's gonna be other names. Speaker 100:24:44And so when these contracts come up for renewal, we're gonna be like, hey. When we negotiated this contract with you in the past, 15% of your transactions had the ability to be network transactions. Today, that number is 60%. You can change your staffing model. This is now, like, cash application looks entirely different for a factor when you do that. Speaker 100:25:08So, yes, did we are we holding pricing because we think that the we understand the freight recession? Sure. Of course. But it's this is what I wrote in the letter is businesses that can create economies of scale and then share those benefits back with their constituents, create fans. That is what we're after. Speaker 100:25:34We are going to create people who look at what we do and say, man, that is so much more efficient than we ever did it in the past. And I can see in my own bottom line that I'm making more money and so the piece of it that Triumph's taking, you know, I I get it. So the answer is revenue will continue to go up. I think if you annualize our fee revenue quarter to quarter, and this was a lousy quarter if but, again, it's a quarter. But still, if you annualize fee revenue growth in TriumphPay, it was 22% annualized. Speaker 100:26:04Again, a lousy quarter in a soft market before Robinson's even here. So what we ultimately have to do is we gotta take a $55,000,000 revenue business and we got to grow it to $100,000,000 And we've told the market that if you put all this together, that we see a $1,000,000,000 opportunity. That's going to take a number of years, but we just have to keep adding revenue. And so if the world were static with the number of brokers we have now, in other words, if you onboarded everything we knew about now, including Robinson and you're between 50 60%, probably closer to 60% whenever that's done, you would see revenue go up. Right? Speaker 100:26:43Because we're adding more value to the factors and the brokers as as as it were. But I promise you there's gonna be more volume coming. I, you know, I guess I shouldn't say promise, but I am I am committed to and staking, you know, we are betting very much that that we're not done at 6 you know, high 50 percentile. Like, we're going beyond that. And every incremental value, you know, of den every amount of density we add creates more value for the constituents for which we expect to be paid. Speaker 100:27:17And, ultimately, we think it's $5 a network transaction. And we think we can collect that and the brokers win and the factors win and the carriers win. Win, win, win. That's what we want. That's why we think we're building something that is unique and enduring and not a brittle business and not taking advantage of its of its participants, but instead enabling everyone to win. Speaker 100:27:43And that is what we're focused on. Speaker 500:27:50I appreciate it. Speaker 800:27:51And just kind of going back to Robinson, can you provide more color on the economics of the deal and how it relates to other customers? I mean like since you announced the deal, has your pipeline changed for both brokers and factors interested in joining the network? And can you give us a refreshed view on how much incremental payment volumes contracted to come online throughout the balance of the year? Speaker 100:28:15Yeah. I'll let Melissa do this, but let's just speak about we would never disclose pricing for any individual customer, whether it's Robinson or our smallest customer. That would not be that's just not how we would operate. What I would say is when Robinson is fully on board, when I tell you that we're gonna charge $5 per conforming transaction and part of that's gonna be borne by the factor and part of it's gonna be borne by the broker, Robinson is in my analysis and thinking about that. We're not going to price something with them that doesn't allow us to achieve what we promised the market we would go do. Speaker 100:28:52I can't tell you exactly when, and we got a ton of work to do for them, and we're excited to be partnered with them. And as far as that announcement and what it's done in the pipeline, Melissa, it's your phone that rings. So I'm gonna let you take that one. Speaker 400:29:07Yep. I I would say, you know, last quarter I told you that I had not been more excited about the status of our pipeline, in the history of TriumphPay and I was very excited about where we were going and headed. I would just reiterate that this quarter I am even more excited about our pipeline even after these big announcements with C. H. Robinson and ArcBest because it continues to strengthen and grow. Speaker 400:29:31We certainly don't usually announce deals ahead of their go live, but we did with C. H. Robinson because of just the material volume that it contributes to the network and felt like we had to disclose that. But for the rest of those that are in our current integration pipeline, not just in contract signing and late stage sales, we expect to near if all of the volume that we have integrating this year and if a 100 percent of CH was ramped, we would be close to the 60% market density point that Erin was talking about earlier. And so that's a substantial jump from the 47 where we are today to being close to 60% at the end of the year, assuming CH was ramped. Speaker 400:30:14So we're excited about it. That it's again, it's never been stronger. Yes, it does help make the phones ring when you're able to add this density in the market and bring additional value to the network to our constituents. Speaker 100:30:28Let let me just one thing. By the end of the year, even if Robinson goes live, we won't have all that volume probably until Q3 of next year. So think of a probably Q3 of next year. And do we know, and and I'm asking in real time, but like expressing that in terms of dollar volume, what's in the pipeline approximately? Speaker 400:30:47Do I wanna say it? Speaker 100:30:48I don't know. I don't know. Speaker 400:30:50It's more than $10,000,000 or $10,000,000,000 rather. Speaker 200:31:02Our next question comes from Jordan Ghent from Stephens. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:31:08Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to get a little more color on the network transaction fees. We've been getting teased about the percentage of improvement of network volumes. But I just want to appreciate just how much of TPAY revenue comes from the network fees. Speaker 900:31:25If you could disclose any of that, that would be great. Speaker 100:31:30We have that We Speaker 400:31:31haven't broken out that way. I don't think we did. No. Speaker 100:31:33I don't think we did. Let us come back to you on that. What what, you know, what you should be able to see right now in our disclosures is the volume of network fees for the quarter. Okay? We are not monetizing those at $5 a transaction right now. Speaker 100:31:50Hopefully, we've been clear about that, that it's it's well below that number because we're rolling contracts. But I don't know that we have a precise number, and I don't wanna just say it off the cuff right now and and and and tell you something wrong. But we can look at adding that disclosure going forward. What you should know is we give you the absolute number of network transaction fees and we would say that we are not pricing it at $5 right now because on both sides. Again, we're in the density building phase. Speaker 100:32:22Right? So we're not charging full freight at this time. So that's as much as I can say right now. Speaker 700:32:29Yeah, but what we do disclose is the amount of the fees that we're collecting from brokers and what we're collecting factors and there's network fees embedded in each of that. Speaker 100:32:39Yeah. Speaker 900:32:42Okay. Perfect. Thanks for answering that. And then maybe just one follow-up on the expense guidance. It was pretty clear in the letter, you talked about kind of the near term expense, but I just want to maybe dig in more on the long term. Speaker 900:32:54There's sales commissions that are going to be burning off over time that should provide some relief. So if you could have any or if you have any commentary on that, that would be great. Thank you. Speaker 700:33:07It's hard to look past the next several quarters that we've committed to. We are committing to keeping our expense levels within our current run rate for the foreseeable future. There are a lot that we need to do long term. What we wanna really get across, though, is that we we believe that for the foreseeable future, for what's in front of us right now, the roster has been assembled. We've added a lot of really high level talent over the last several months quarters in anticipation of building what we're doing right now. Speaker 700:33:41We've spent some consulting dollars, we've added some people, we've added technology, and we are confident that where we are today is where we can be for at least the next few quarters. We are going to have to be disciplined about what we take on and who we take on between, for the next few quarters in order to be able to meet that commitment that we're making, but it's something that we're confident that we that we will do. Speaker 100:34:11Yeah. And to fall, on top of that, just know there are puts and takes in every quarter. Right? This is a little bit the vagary of the system, and we had a material consulting expense in this quarter. We could have delayed that. Speaker 100:34:24We could have tried to go that way on our own, but we've watched enough, you know, banking as a service relationships blow up that we wanted to dot every I and cross every t, and it didn't matter that it it was going to create a drag. I think it's important. I'm not trying to to back away from the question, but I just wanna remind you of the North Stars here. Right? Like, I think about 3 things. Speaker 100:34:48Think about talking about the network and all that's attached to it, which includes load pay factoring as a service. All the things we wanna do is a $1,000,000,000 revenue opportunity. We're at 55,000,000 right now. Right? So we got a lot to go do to get that done. Speaker 100:35:04The second thing that gets us there, that's an output, is getting to 8 80 percent of truckload density, and we don't stop there. There's LTL, there's other things, there's a shipper market, there's a ton of things we wanna do, but that's a North Star, right, of getting to 80%. And then lastly, and it ties to this question is for our payments segment, which is currently operating at negative 10%. We've given an interim goal of we want to be at 25 percent EBITDA margin. We don't know exactly when that will hit, but obviously, to get to 25%, we got to improve 35%. Speaker 100:35:36And long term, the this business, this network business needs to deliver above a 50% EBITDA margin. So $1,000,000,000 in revenue, 80% density in truckload brokerage, and over a 50% margin, that's a home run. Like, that's what we're going after. You are right in that in the short term, sales commissions do burn off, but those get backfilled. I mean, we need to go do account validations, checking account validations for thousands of new carriers that are gonna come on when Robinson goes live. Speaker 100:36:09Why? Because we are the trusted party to stand between the criminals, the fraudsters, and the good actors. Right? Like, that's what we do. We handle people's money. Speaker 100:36:18And so there are puts and takes. Right? Like, yes, sales commissions fall off, but we also have to do certain things to to deliver on our network promises. But just I would again invite you to consider those north stars. That's what we think about. Speaker 100:36:35Right? And if you deliver those things and you're a bank investor here, if you can deliver that kind of margin and keeping everything else the same, like, you're talking about an ROA approaching 2%. Right? You've seen what our factoring business does in a normal cycle. Obviously, the scalability and efficiency in the payments business, and we run a very efficient bank with a low cost of funds. Speaker 100:36:55Right? I don't want that to be lost. As you put all that together and that that's a high ROE earning institution. But those three things that I talked to you about, the revenue, the density, and the EBITDA margin, like, that's what we're that's the goal we're pursuing and everything we do begins or begins with that end in mind. Speaker 500:37:22Perfect. Thanks for taking my question. Speaker 100:37:25You got it. Speaker 200:37:26Our next question comes from Hal Goetz from B. Riley. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:37:30Hey, good morning, everyone. My question is back to the factory and business. I know you don't have control over the freight industry. It's uncontrollable. I wanted to just get your perspective on the downturn in that if you look at a 2 year stack, it's high-30s down volume. Speaker 1000:37:47It's like even if I remove price effects of invoice pricing, it's down probably 20. That would be a depression in my playbook for volume. And I know a lot of stuff that goes over the road is food and beverage. So that's a big part of what's in my waste bin every week for what comes to my house that gets shipped out and that had to go to a store. So could you just give us a perspective of what is really down? Speaker 1000:38:15Like where are inventories that you can see across the country? Are they leaner than ever before? Are we about as low as wholesale or retail inventories can go? Just give us your thoughts on that because it seems like it's pretty it's been pretty difficult. I can't imagine having our 3rd year of this. Speaker 1000:38:33Thanks. Speaker 600:38:36Well, I'll take the first swing of that, Hal. The interesting thing about what we see in the marketplace is there's still a fairly large spread between contract rates and spot rates. We are seeing some stabilization of the spot rate market, which is a majority of the small carriers that I think Aaron referred to earlier. And we're starting to see that prop up. We've seen several quarters now, I mean, we look at the 2nd quarter, it was not great and probably hit our lowest watermark within that quarter. Speaker 600:39:08But one thing that we are seeing that we watch very closely is not only the duration of this cycle, but we also look at what are what's pulling on those margins. We know the carriers, a lot of the small carriers are operating well below their costs and so that's obviously not sustainable. We still see that small carrier segment taking most of the bullets. And so one bright spot to kind of 0 in on for us as we watch fuel very closely and the correlation with fuel and average invoice amount is specifically in that spot market. Why that's important is if average invoice amount is moving in lockstep with fuel, then there's a level of pricing power. Speaker 600:39:53We haven't seen that consistently for the last 2 years. We're starting to see that now, meaning that if fuel goes up, average invoice amount goes up in lockstep, there's about a week lag. Fuel goes down, we see fuel go down or we see average invoices go down and so fuel is having a really big impact on that. So, I look at the duration, it almost matches the duration of the up cycle. And if you look historically at previous cycles, 2013, 2014, 'eighteen, 'nineteen, those cycles lasted about as long as the up cycle and I think we're at the tail end of that, but I'm not, we've seen head fakes before, we saw 1 at the end of quarter, Q4 into Q1, we're not prepared to say that we're done, this is good, times are, all pastures are green ahead. Speaker 600:40:43We're just not quite there, but I think we're seeing enough that it is looking better and fingers are crossed, toes are crossed, but we're not there yet. Speaker 500:40:56Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:41:00Our next question comes from Frank Schiraldi from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:41:06Good morning. Just wondered, Aaron, you mentioned the, some of the sort of targets thresholds, the $100,000,000 in revenue that, we've talked about in the past on the payments network. I'm just wondering if you'd be able to sort of give some guardrails around Speaker 900:41:30the Speaker 1100:41:30timing of that at this point. Do you think what's a decent place to put that target? Is it sort of end of 2025 with that 25% EBITDA margin? Just curious if you can try to place that a bit for us. Speaker 100:41:46Brad Voss is over here ready to tackle me. Says Melissa. Yeah. So is Melissa. I don't think that December 31, 2025, everything would have to go absolutely perfect to be at 100,000,000 of revenue at that time. Speaker 100:42:04And so I don't think if I if I were underwriting us, I would not put it then. So is it midway through 2026? Is it end of 20 26? I'm not exactly sure. It's gonna be lumpy. Speaker 100:42:14Right? Like, I can't predict because this hadn't been done before or at least I certainly haven't done it before, but I don't think it I know it's never been done in transportation. I believe I have the absolute firm conviction that density overcomes every objection. It just does. And so what's gonna happen is you're gonna hit an inflection point, and we are coming to that inflection point on density where, I mean, Triumph Pay paid a, like, a 126,000 active carriers last quarter to have been paid. Speaker 100:42:53Like, the inflection point on density is coming. Once that happens, I think the monetization, if you look at any other network business, follows pretty rapidly. Okay. Well, is that 2025? I don't know. Speaker 100:43:06That's a lot of growth between now and the end of 20 25. That's why I said we're more focused on density. Is it 2026? I hope so. I mean, look, we know we got to double where our revenue right now because we got a whole lot more to go do after that. Speaker 100:43:20So if it were me, I'd put that into the 2026 numbers, you know, or beyond. But I don't have I can't our business is not linear enough, and I can't predict the state of freight well enough to give you specificity beyond that. Speaker 1100:43:40Okay. Alright. No. Fair enough. And then, just talking about, speaking on monetization, obviously monetizing the factors gets you a significant way to that $5 per network transaction you guys have talked about. Speaker 1100:43:57And I know, or I think that's kind of a yearly kind of on a yearly basis that decision is made. So how confident, you know, you got C. H. Robinson, which obviously is a huge win. We don't know when this freight recession is going to end. Speaker 1100:44:14How confident are you? What's your comfort level that 2025 is going to be the year, where you can really start fully monetizing the factors and get that, whatever it is, dollars 3.50 per. Is that still looking good? Is that maybe pushed back another year just given, where we are in the recession? What what are your updated thoughts there? Speaker 100:44:36Yeah. I I mean, so it's hard to predict. The benefit we have is we can look at our own factoring business, Right? And we can test volumes in our own business, which happens to be 15% of the market. So you got 4 of the top 58 of the top 10, 24 of the top 30, and 59 of the top 100 brokers who are using us, some for audit, some for payment, some for both. Speaker 100:45:05And those who use us for 1 or the other, I mean, that there's a lot of gain in that, by the way. If someone's just using us for audit and then we we bring on payments, there's there's super opportunities there. Like, I think in every discussion and negotiation with a factoring company who uses our system, we will show them the volume that was when the contract was signed, and we will show you the volume that is and the volume that is scheduled to come. And we will have a discussion about what's fair. Right? Speaker 100:45:33We want to treat them fairly. We need factoring companies to do well for this network to work. Frankly, the industry needs factoring companies to do well because they serve small truckers. And we can't do all of it. We aren't equipped. Speaker 100:45:45We don't want to. That's nobody can do all of it. Like, you need a robust industry. So I am can I am very certain that the pricing adjustments will be done to reflect the value delivered? Will it happen in the context of the broader market? Speaker 100:46:03Sure. Sure. Like, and, you know, like we said, we see green shoots. If Trump gets elected and tariffs come and there's now a bunch of freight coming in the West Coast and that helps the market. Like, these are all things we can't predict, but that will all go into the mix. Speaker 100:46:17But it ultimately comes down to how are we doing at taking a factoring company who's spending $10 to do all the back office on an invoice and lowering it to 7. Can we show them the way? And we can show them the way with density and we can help show them the way with factoring as a service. Right? For those who want to use it. Speaker 100:46:35We, I mean, it's not, we're not asking them to take it on faith. We can like literally show them the way that it is done. So again, we expect to be paid for that but we expect to be paid for that only to the effect that we are creating commensurate value for them. We want fans, not just customers. And and we take a very long view on those relationships. Speaker 1100:46:59Gotcha. And and if it looks like I might be the last question, I'm not sure. But if I could just sneak in one quick one. You you brought it up, Aaron, on terms of the potential Trump presidency and higher tariffs. Would that be the, do you think in the near term, the number one thing that could boost, the, boost us out of the freight recession and maybe, with less need to get, you know, reduced capacity by that 15% you guys have talked about? Speaker 1100:47:25Is that the number one, you know, kind of, mover and shaker of of of the freight industry that you see looking out to the election? Speaker 100:47:36So if it does, it's not a long term fix. Right? I I I don't think. It's at the end of the day, it's about tonnage and capacity. I don't know that President Trump or President Biden or whomever is going to be president is going to have quite as much effect on tonnage as they would like to claim in their stump speeches. Speaker 100:47:58Right? Like, the economy is a is a is a mini headed thing. Of course, the more manufacturing that happens in Mexico, that's that's great for trucking. But even if it's happening in China and showing up on the West Coast, if it shows up in bunches, which we think is happening right now, like, that's a short term spike. That's it's sort of like a hurricane, creates a near term spot, you know, opportunity. Speaker 100:48:24Long term, I still believe there's too much capacity. And so we are happy to participate in the upside. We're happy for our carriers to get paid $2 $3 a mile because these people have fixed obligations and they work hard and I want them to win. That doesn't change my long term thesis that we'd still have too much capacity for the freight that is to be moved in this country. And so whether it happens quickly or whether it happens slowly, we still need And there Speaker 200:48:57And there are no further questions at this time. Thank you. Speaker 100:49:01Thank you all for joining us. Hope you have a great rest of your summer, and be careful playing pickleball.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTriumph Financial Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Triumph Financial Earnings HeadlinesBank of America Securities Reaffirms Their Hold Rating on Vita Coco Company (COCO)April 17 at 8:02 AM | markets.businessinsider.comINVESTOR ALERT: Pomerantz Law Firm Investigates Claims On Behalf of Investors of The Vita Coco Company, Inc. - COCOApril 14, 2025 | prnewswire.comTrump Orders 'National Digital Asset Stockpile'‘Digital Asset Reserve’ for THIS Coin??? Get all the details before this story gains even more tractionApril 18, 2025 | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)Axelum Resources posts P688-million net income in 2024April 14, 2025 | msn.com2 Reasons to Like COCO (and 1 Not So Much)April 14, 2025 | msn.comAxelum swings to profitability in 2024 on strong salesApril 12, 2025 | msn.comSee More Vita Coco Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Triumph Financial? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Triumph Financial and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Triumph FinancialTriumph Financial (NASDAQ:TFIN), a financial holding company, provides various payments, factoring, and banking services in the United States. It operates through Banking, Factoring, and Payments segments. The company offers deposit products, including checking, savings, money market and certificates of deposit; and loan products, such as commercial real estate, land, commercial construction and land development, residential real estate, commercial agriculture, and consumer loans, as well as commercial and industrial loans, equipment loans, asset-based loans, business loans for working capital and operational purposes, and liquid credit loans. It also provides electronic banking services, debit cards, insurance brokerage services, mortgage warehouse facilities, and transportation factoring services, as well as payments services offered through TriumphPay platform, a payments network for the over-the-road trucking industry. The company was formerly known as Triumph Bancorp, Inc. and changed its name to Triumph Financial Inc. in December 2022. 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning. It's 9:30 in Dallas, so let's get started. We'd like to open by thanking you for your interest in Triumph Financial and for joining us this morning to discuss our Q2 results. With that, let's get to business. Aaron's letter last evening discussed the quarter's results and the investments we are making in a few projects that we believe will create long term shareholder value. Operator00:00:20We are excited about the opportunities we see to lift an industry and create a network that delivers tangible benefits to all participants while improving transparency and creating value for America's Truckers. As you'll see this morning, Todd will not be joining us. Todd is never afraid to get in the trenches and lead during difficult market conditions. However, today he is recovering from Achilles tendon surgery after being reminded that pickleball is not a contact sport. We wish him well on a speedy recovery and expect to welcome him back to the earnings call in Q3. Operator00:00:49That quarterly shareholder letter published last evening and our quarterly results will form the basis of our call today. However, before we get started, I would like to remind you that this conversation may include forward looking statements. Those statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual and anticipated results to differ. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly revise any forward looking statement. For details, please refer to the Safe Harbor statement in our shareholder letter published last evening. Operator00:01:15All comments made during today's call are subject to that Safe Harbor statement. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Aaron for a welcome and to kick off our Q and A. Aaron? Speaker 100:01:25Thanks, Luke, and thank you all for joining us this morning. I have just a few comments before opening it up for questions. The big story this quarter is our progress in building density. Our network engagement stands at just under 47% as we sit here today. With the signing of C. Speaker 100:01:44H. Robinson and with ArcBest, a top 20 broker going live during the quarter, we have a sight line to achieving critical mass related to our network density and monetization is what follows density. This is the way it works in network economies. We have a tremendous amount of momentum right now. Now that's what we see on the horizon, and while our eyes are on the horizon, it is not lost on me that we live in the present, and for the present, our earnings are under pressure for the reasons I wrote about in the letter. Speaker 100:02:18There are some things we can control and some that we cannot control. In choosing our path forward, we have focused mainly on creating long term value at the expense of improving short term results. That is why we continue to invest at a time when I think most people might slow down or become defensive. Now, taken to an extreme, that view can be cavalier. We do not want to be cavalier. Speaker 100:02:46Instead, we want to be intentional and we think an appropriate guardrail to our aspirational growth is fixing our expenses at approximately $97,000,000 per quarter going forward. This allows us some room to make additional technology investments to deliver on our promises to our customers and our prospects and it forces us to be disciplined about our talent management. This is healthy for us and it will enhance our profitability both in the short term and the long term. In closing, the stakes are high. We are building a network that connects many to many to many in a very large market. Speaker 100:03:25Those opportunities are hard to find and even harder to execute on when you find them. The rewards for those who win make the effort absolutely worth it. Those are my opening thoughts. Now let's turn the call over for questions. Speaker 200:03:43We will now go to Q and A. If you have connected via Zoom and would like to ask a question, please use the raise hand feature at the bottom of your Zoom window. Or if you've dialed in press star 9. Once called upon, please feel free to unmute and ask your question. Our first question comes from Tim Switzer from KBW. Speaker 300:04:03Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Certainly wish Todd the best on recovering the Achilles there. The first question I have is the revenue growth in the TPASE segment has been kind of chunky historically and it was above 50% year over year the last three quarters, but it slowed down a bit this quarter. What needs to happen for us to see an acceleration in revenue there? Speaker 300:04:28And is it simply an end recession, more brokers or factories on the network, more revenue generating invoices? Can you guys kind of walk us through that? Speaker 400:04:41You just nailed it. It's those three things. And so certainly the transportation recession is creating an issue for short term earnings. But as you've seen, TriumphPay is growing through those headwinds. And so while we've had payment volume growth and network engagement growth, we've also had expense growth. Speaker 400:05:00And one thing I want to point out is that our expense growth quarter over quarter, while it was just under 6%, our quarter our growth year over year same quarter was 40%. And you're seeing a lot of that happen on the fee side. So the majority of that is in our fee growth, which is where we think is the most important part of the network that we can control, to be able to remove as much market volatility as we can. And so we're seeing that growth happen there, continue to reprice customers as we've talked about in the past. Certainly, as we bring on new customers, are using our new pricing models. Speaker 400:05:34And in that, you're seeing those changes happen in the mix of our revenue. Speaker 300:05:41Okay. And my follow-up there is the increases you've seen on generating more revenue from your invoices, it went from a little under 22% to a little over 22% this quarter and you made more progress year over year. What strategies are you guys implementing to I guess become more effective at being to charge? And what are some of the challenges you're seeing on doing that? Speaker 400:06:06Yes, that's a great question. So the difficulty in building this network is the connectivity, right? And that's where we feel like we are building an MO. And so it's taking network enabled transactions and connecting them to the factor on the other side so that they can see that value come from the network. And so you've seen us grow the network transactions pretty substantially quarter over quarter. Speaker 400:06:29This one slowed down a little bit at a 13% growth. But that's because it gets harder and harder the bigger you get, right, the bigger your denominator, the percentage changes. And so what has to happen though is when I have a transaction that is on a broker side that's network enabled and I'm connecting it to a factor, it's not just saying the factor is enabled and the broker is enabled. It's making sure those two relationships can connect because every factoring management system is different. And so when you start to build density and those connections is when the monetization can start. Speaker 400:07:06And we're building that now. We're building that foundation. When you think about where we're at from a factors perspective who's on the network, about 21% to 22% of their portfolio now is being connected through the network. We continue to work on that and ensure that whatever is available on the broker side is usable and consumable on the factor side. And that's where the real value of the network comes into play. Speaker 100:07:31Yeah. And you can't answer it any better than Melissa just did. But I think, Tim, I the only thing I wanna add here is because it's something I've thought about. Right? Like, it's it's a fair question. Speaker 100:07:44And I think it's more of it's a question of why do things go slow before they go fast? Right? Like, why why wouldn't it be if this if what we've built here is a better mousetrap, which we all absolutely believe and I think anyone who uses the product believes, then why doesn't it just take off? Well, I think what you're fighting is the bias against change. Right? Speaker 100:08:07Like, it's change is hard. Change is hard in your personal life. Change is hard in in in for a corporation. And so I think probably, I know this, when credit cards were introduced to retailers, there was they didn't go fast at first. Like, why are we using plastic? Speaker 100:08:23Where is the efficiency? Where am I gaining by taking this, just adding one more form of payment? How does that help me? And it's exactly what Melissa said is as we go and you create these connections, it starts to go faster and faster because people experience the value of the change. But what we have to overcome in the density building phase of the network is the bias to not change what's worked for the last 20 years. Speaker 100:08:51Adding C. H. Robinson, adding ArcBest, adding this volume, crossing over 50%, continuing on to our long term goals, that density will overcome the resistance to change because you can just see the economics. You can see in your business how things change. And that's why I think what Melissa and the team are doing is so great, but you just have to keep pushing the ball down the field 3 to 5 yards at a time, and then you're gonna turn around and look and see, oh, man, we we have made a lot of progress. Speaker 100:09:22But sometimes in a measured quarter to quarter, it doesn't always feel like Speaker 300:09:28that. Okay. Appreciate it. If I could squeeze in one more, I know this might be an impossible question to answer, but, you know, what's that threshold of density that you need to where you really start to see, you know, the exponential effect of, you know, I guess it's really network effects here that I'm talking about. You know, is there you guys have any idea of when that occurs? Speaker 100:09:48Yeah. I mean, that's a, you know, great question. What we've said is we expect to cross over 50% by the end of this year. We're at 47% now. That doesn't include any of the volume. Speaker 100:10:02It doesn't include a lot of the volume that, people who are already on. So long term, what we've said historically, I don't know if I've ever been precise about it, but we can be precise here. I think we'll get to 80% density. And I said 24 and 25 are our years to continue to build density. Does that mean exactly that on December 31, 2025, we're at 80%? Speaker 100:10:25No. I can't answer that. But I can see the pathway forward. If that's true, somewhere between 50 80%, the factoring companies who are the ones who I think benefit the most from the economies of scale on their side of the transaction start to see more than half of their transactions come through with the opportunity to connect to the network and they can start to adjust their staffing models to recognize the efficiencies. So I there's no magical number, but I think it's somewhere between half and ultimate penetration of 80% because it's impossible to ever say you're gonna get that long tail of the last 20%. Speaker 100:11:03And that's why I opened the letter saying 2425 are the the density building time. And monetization should still grow like we're growing revenue. I'm not asking for permission not to grow revenue. I'm asking investors to understand that being the 1st mover, that window is open and we need to get to that density threshold between 50 80% in order to be able to change this industry and deliver value to our constituents. So that's not a precise answer. Speaker 100:11:36That's a band and that's where we think it is. Speaker 300:11:42Got it. Yeah. I appreciate the details there. It's really helpful. I'll get back in the queue. Speaker 200:11:48Our next question comes from Gary Tenner from D. A. Davidson. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:11:53Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to ask about the conforming volume. It continues to increase as a percentage of total volume in the payments segment. It's kind of maybe slowed from the pace of growth. Speaker 500:12:07I think Melissa, as you pointed out, maybe 13% this quarter. As you think about C. H. Robinson coming live, let's say Q2 'twenty five is kind of a full quarter run rate, just for sake of argument. But what do you think the addition of C. Speaker 500:12:23H. Robinson and their volume does in terms of pulling up the conforming penetration rate, if you will, kind of out of the gate? Speaker 400:12:32Yes. I'll answer that a little bit differently, and I'll do it from the perspective of one factor. Because when you take their total volume and spread that across all the factors, factoring industry, your percentages are going to change because they have to be connected to the network. So CH volume to a network enabled and connected factoring company on average, for most factoring portfolios would represent 20% to 25%, sometimes more, of their entire purchase volume. So it's a substantial part of their everyday business. Speaker 400:13:04And today, they have to manually go do those validations. And so being able to validate and do cash application through the network on an additional 20% to 25% of their portfolio is quite substantial. Speaker 500:13:20Okay. Okay. Thank you. And then in terms of factoring as a service, yes, I don't know that you've talked about this a ton. Can you talk about, Aaron, what it means for what exactly looks like and then what it means economically in terms of benefits to TFIN as that gets built out? Speaker 100:13:44Yeah. Tim, let's let I'm gonna let Tim answer operationally because he's the operational expert, and then I'll I'll share some thoughts about what I think about financially. So go ahead, Tim. Speaker 600:13:54So, Gary, I think what's important to think about is that factoring as a service gives our potential customer the ability to utilize our technology, our platform, our expertise in order to create different products and ultimately upgrade their technology. So what we've observed several things, but one thing specifically we've observed is that the factoring industry as far as FMS providers has not kept up with the pace of technology. And so by doing what we have and invested in instant purchase and other things that we're doing within our focus area, we are raising the bar and creating an opportunity for other factors or anyone that originates factoring transactions to generate and utilize our operation side of it. So if you can imagine factoring as a service and being able to integrate that with Instant Purchase, on top of that with Loadpay, it gives us a lot of leverage and a lot of value for that factor to not only fund and make decisions very quickly, but to be able to open the doors and fund on a 20 fourseven basis. And so why is that important? Speaker 600:15:01That's important because you have the situation going into a holiday and we have a specific situation about this, because you have a carrier that goes into a holiday, he needs money for whatever repair and maintenance item and he has paper in his truck that has value to it that can get cash into his bank. And so when you think about factoring as a service, that is the tool that gets the carrier the money they need when they need it. And so there's several components that factoring as a service will add value to a factor. Speaker 100:15:33Yeah. And so on the financial side, I mean, Gary, because everything we do needs to ultimately pay off for our shareholders. Right? There are no science projects here. So how do we think about it? Speaker 100:15:48Well, if factoring in transportation is a $2,000,000,000 revenue industry, which I I think is directionally correct, And you look at the profitability or the operating efficiency of factors, and then you take out the sales function, because we don't want to sell all factoring. That is we've been very clear about that. Like, there are other people who need to be out there engaging with these customers, small carriers, midsize, large carriers, who can do that piece with excellence and don't need us. But there is still a once you engage as a factor, once you buy that invoice, whether you've been in the industry 10 years or 10 days, that begins a process. Right? Speaker 100:16:28Underwriting, cash collection, you know, cash application, all the validation, verification, all these things that have to happen that are highly repeatable. They're highly repeatable and they can be automated. We believe, and this is you can't go find this in a, you know, in some report, but we believe that in this $2,000,000,000 revenue factor spend between 500 to 600,000,000 in back office expenses. Right? That's that's what we think it takes them to do all the things you have to do to ingest the invoice all the way through applying the cash when it's paid. Speaker 100:17:06We want factors to be more efficient. We have said that there's $20 of friction on both sides of the transaction. That's not all on the factor side of the transaction. I would think in factoring that friction cost, that whole back office cost, it's a wide range, but it's between $5.10 It's gonna be $5 if you're servicing large customers because you're buying schedules of invoices, it'll be closer to $10 If you're servicing a small carrier because you do more of the work for them and you can't get the economies of scale. So connecting with TriumphPay and digitizing all of that is going in and of itself to add efficiency. Speaker 100:17:48But if the factoring company is operating on a legacy technology that is incapable of ingesting that data, the way we can give it to them that allows them to capture the efficiency, then that value is lost on them. And so why we're doing this is we're saying to the industry, we have the data feed. We have the pipe from the brokers and we're saying we're gonna have 80% of all truckload brokered transactions in our pipe. You should map to this data so you can make instant decisions, so you can reduce inefficiency, so you don't have to try to you know, struggle with reading illegible documents. Like, let's make the data pristine and the connection tight. Speaker 100:18:34Well, their current technology isn't able to do that. And so if they if their current technology providers won't do it, and there are some who've done it, but for the most they haven't, then we got to go fix that problem. And if we're going to fix that problem, we expect to be paid to fix that problem. And so we expect to achieve savings in this $5 to $600,000,000 of expense that is being spent doing factoring much the way it's been done the last 10 years. We're gonna change that. Speaker 100:19:01The window that's what I talk about. This window is open for us to create structured data throughout the life cycle of transaction because we are connected to the source of truth, which is inside the broker's transportation management software. Pulling that data and giving it to the people who are going to provide financing to the carrier in the format in which it lives, that changes things. And so, it's about making the network more resilient. That's one reason you do it, but it's also because if we can go cut 30% of the cost, 40%, I don't know what it'll be at scale. Speaker 100:19:38But of that $600,000,000 of spend, then we expect to share in those benefits. Right? Like, that's how SaaS businesses work. You share in the the the value you create. So it's a big market to go after, Gary. Speaker 100:19:50It's not a science project. It's not just being done to make sure TriumphPay wins. It's being done for that, but it's also being done because it dress addresses a real economic expense that the industry faces, and we can make it better. Speaker 500:20:09Thanks, Aaron. I appreciate that. One last question just related to that, if I could. From a segment perspective, I guess, since you're building this out to service other factors or provide it as a service to other factors, it almost seems like it like from a segment perspective, it could be factoring or in the payments business. So just the thoughts around that and as it relates to kind of the expense load associated with the build out there. Speaker 500:20:40Can you talk about that a bit? Speaker 100:20:42Yeah. That that, a great question. And such a good question because it's something we talked about. I mean, this is sort of why the corporate segment exists because we're starting to do things that touch all sides. Let let me I'm gonna answer your question, which I think it the answer is it ends up in payments because it's not us factoring as a service is providing a service to the people who use the network. Speaker 100:21:05So I think that's logically where it fits. But just understand, like, load pay, for example, the expense in developing load pay, some of that expense is showing up in the bank because underneath a load pay account is a checking account. And where do checking accounts live? They live in our banking segment. But the load pay structure and how we're going to market with it and how we're attaching it to the network, well, that happens inside of our payment segment. Speaker 100:21:36But if you want load pay to really work, you need to do instant purchasing, which gives the money, you know, which allows us to pay like they alluded to this earlier. If if a carrier gets a proof of delivery, you know, signed at 11 PM, being able to instantly purchase that doesn't really impress anyone unless you can have money in their account at 11:0:1 PM. Well, the technology for that and instant purchase and the artificial intelligence and all the back testing we've done on billions of transactions, that happened in our factoring segment. And so what we're finding is as we're transitioning community bank to financial technology platform is all three parts of our business add value to what we're creating. So the answer is FAS lives in payments, but I just need you to understand and we will try to call it out as best we can. Speaker 100:22:24We use the bank for a lot of this. We use factoring and what we do inside of factoring to serve the network. And, of course, we use payments to host the network. So, it's more symbiotic probably than it's ever been historically. Speaker 700:22:40Our disclosures around all of this will absolutely evolve as as this grows. And when we set up our segments the way that we did, we had 3 very distinct lines of business. And in a lot of cases, we were intentionally keeping them separate. And as we have evolved and as we see what is possible for us to build to serve the industry over the long term, it's all kind of coming back together. So I can't paint you a crystal clear picture of what that will look like because there's still a lot of things that we need to figure out, but you can expect that to evolve over time. Speaker 100:23:13Thanks, Gary. Speaker 500:23:14Great. Thanks for the questions. Speaker 200:23:18Thanks to all for your questions today. Please limit to 2 questions only. Our next question will come from Joe Yancunis from Raymond James. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:23:27Good morning. Speaker 100:23:29Good morning, Joe. Speaker 800:23:31So going back to the revenue component of TPAY, in the prior call you mentioned that due to the challenging environment you not to increase pricing for Teepay customers in 2024, while also adding that you're not currently charging for all the services offered. I guess given the increasing density of TPIG, how should we think about price increases in 2025 or the benefit from a customer migrating to your new pricing model? Or I guess said a different way, assuming a static market, how much incremental dollars should we expect TeePay to generate from a hypothetical customer after these price increases occur? Speaker 100:24:10I mean, it's not a static market. Right? But I mean, like, the density changes and enables monetization. I mean, we I I, you know, I can't give it to you in a formula, Joe. I get why you're asking the question. Speaker 100:24:29It's a totally appropriate question. How this will go is we will onboard C. H. Robinson. Right? Speaker 100:24:36And and that volume will come. And you know what? By the time we're done onboarding C. H. Robinson, whether it's 2nd or Q3 next year, there's gonna be other names. Speaker 100:24:44And so when these contracts come up for renewal, we're gonna be like, hey. When we negotiated this contract with you in the past, 15% of your transactions had the ability to be network transactions. Today, that number is 60%. You can change your staffing model. This is now, like, cash application looks entirely different for a factor when you do that. Speaker 100:25:08So, yes, did we are we holding pricing because we think that the we understand the freight recession? Sure. Of course. But it's this is what I wrote in the letter is businesses that can create economies of scale and then share those benefits back with their constituents, create fans. That is what we're after. Speaker 100:25:34We are going to create people who look at what we do and say, man, that is so much more efficient than we ever did it in the past. And I can see in my own bottom line that I'm making more money and so the piece of it that Triumph's taking, you know, I I get it. So the answer is revenue will continue to go up. I think if you annualize our fee revenue quarter to quarter, and this was a lousy quarter if but, again, it's a quarter. But still, if you annualize fee revenue growth in TriumphPay, it was 22% annualized. Speaker 100:26:04Again, a lousy quarter in a soft market before Robinson's even here. So what we ultimately have to do is we gotta take a $55,000,000 revenue business and we got to grow it to $100,000,000 And we've told the market that if you put all this together, that we see a $1,000,000,000 opportunity. That's going to take a number of years, but we just have to keep adding revenue. And so if the world were static with the number of brokers we have now, in other words, if you onboarded everything we knew about now, including Robinson and you're between 50 60%, probably closer to 60% whenever that's done, you would see revenue go up. Right? Speaker 100:26:43Because we're adding more value to the factors and the brokers as as as it were. But I promise you there's gonna be more volume coming. I, you know, I guess I shouldn't say promise, but I am I am committed to and staking, you know, we are betting very much that that we're not done at 6 you know, high 50 percentile. Like, we're going beyond that. And every incremental value, you know, of den every amount of density we add creates more value for the constituents for which we expect to be paid. Speaker 100:27:17And, ultimately, we think it's $5 a network transaction. And we think we can collect that and the brokers win and the factors win and the carriers win. Win, win, win. That's what we want. That's why we think we're building something that is unique and enduring and not a brittle business and not taking advantage of its of its participants, but instead enabling everyone to win. Speaker 100:27:43And that is what we're focused on. Speaker 500:27:50I appreciate it. Speaker 800:27:51And just kind of going back to Robinson, can you provide more color on the economics of the deal and how it relates to other customers? I mean like since you announced the deal, has your pipeline changed for both brokers and factors interested in joining the network? And can you give us a refreshed view on how much incremental payment volumes contracted to come online throughout the balance of the year? Speaker 100:28:15Yeah. I'll let Melissa do this, but let's just speak about we would never disclose pricing for any individual customer, whether it's Robinson or our smallest customer. That would not be that's just not how we would operate. What I would say is when Robinson is fully on board, when I tell you that we're gonna charge $5 per conforming transaction and part of that's gonna be borne by the factor and part of it's gonna be borne by the broker, Robinson is in my analysis and thinking about that. We're not going to price something with them that doesn't allow us to achieve what we promised the market we would go do. Speaker 100:28:52I can't tell you exactly when, and we got a ton of work to do for them, and we're excited to be partnered with them. And as far as that announcement and what it's done in the pipeline, Melissa, it's your phone that rings. So I'm gonna let you take that one. Speaker 400:29:07Yep. I I would say, you know, last quarter I told you that I had not been more excited about the status of our pipeline, in the history of TriumphPay and I was very excited about where we were going and headed. I would just reiterate that this quarter I am even more excited about our pipeline even after these big announcements with C. H. Robinson and ArcBest because it continues to strengthen and grow. Speaker 400:29:31We certainly don't usually announce deals ahead of their go live, but we did with C. H. Robinson because of just the material volume that it contributes to the network and felt like we had to disclose that. But for the rest of those that are in our current integration pipeline, not just in contract signing and late stage sales, we expect to near if all of the volume that we have integrating this year and if a 100 percent of CH was ramped, we would be close to the 60% market density point that Erin was talking about earlier. And so that's a substantial jump from the 47 where we are today to being close to 60% at the end of the year, assuming CH was ramped. Speaker 400:30:14So we're excited about it. That it's again, it's never been stronger. Yes, it does help make the phones ring when you're able to add this density in the market and bring additional value to the network to our constituents. Speaker 100:30:28Let let me just one thing. By the end of the year, even if Robinson goes live, we won't have all that volume probably until Q3 of next year. So think of a probably Q3 of next year. And do we know, and and I'm asking in real time, but like expressing that in terms of dollar volume, what's in the pipeline approximately? Speaker 400:30:47Do I wanna say it? Speaker 100:30:48I don't know. I don't know. Speaker 400:30:50It's more than $10,000,000 or $10,000,000,000 rather. Speaker 200:31:02Our next question comes from Jordan Ghent from Stephens. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:31:08Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to get a little more color on the network transaction fees. We've been getting teased about the percentage of improvement of network volumes. But I just want to appreciate just how much of TPAY revenue comes from the network fees. Speaker 900:31:25If you could disclose any of that, that would be great. Speaker 100:31:30We have that We Speaker 400:31:31haven't broken out that way. I don't think we did. No. Speaker 100:31:33I don't think we did. Let us come back to you on that. What what, you know, what you should be able to see right now in our disclosures is the volume of network fees for the quarter. Okay? We are not monetizing those at $5 a transaction right now. Speaker 100:31:50Hopefully, we've been clear about that, that it's it's well below that number because we're rolling contracts. But I don't know that we have a precise number, and I don't wanna just say it off the cuff right now and and and and tell you something wrong. But we can look at adding that disclosure going forward. What you should know is we give you the absolute number of network transaction fees and we would say that we are not pricing it at $5 right now because on both sides. Again, we're in the density building phase. Speaker 100:32:22Right? So we're not charging full freight at this time. So that's as much as I can say right now. Speaker 700:32:29Yeah, but what we do disclose is the amount of the fees that we're collecting from brokers and what we're collecting factors and there's network fees embedded in each of that. Speaker 100:32:39Yeah. Speaker 900:32:42Okay. Perfect. Thanks for answering that. And then maybe just one follow-up on the expense guidance. It was pretty clear in the letter, you talked about kind of the near term expense, but I just want to maybe dig in more on the long term. Speaker 900:32:54There's sales commissions that are going to be burning off over time that should provide some relief. So if you could have any or if you have any commentary on that, that would be great. Thank you. Speaker 700:33:07It's hard to look past the next several quarters that we've committed to. We are committing to keeping our expense levels within our current run rate for the foreseeable future. There are a lot that we need to do long term. What we wanna really get across, though, is that we we believe that for the foreseeable future, for what's in front of us right now, the roster has been assembled. We've added a lot of really high level talent over the last several months quarters in anticipation of building what we're doing right now. Speaker 700:33:41We've spent some consulting dollars, we've added some people, we've added technology, and we are confident that where we are today is where we can be for at least the next few quarters. We are going to have to be disciplined about what we take on and who we take on between, for the next few quarters in order to be able to meet that commitment that we're making, but it's something that we're confident that we that we will do. Speaker 100:34:11Yeah. And to fall, on top of that, just know there are puts and takes in every quarter. Right? This is a little bit the vagary of the system, and we had a material consulting expense in this quarter. We could have delayed that. Speaker 100:34:24We could have tried to go that way on our own, but we've watched enough, you know, banking as a service relationships blow up that we wanted to dot every I and cross every t, and it didn't matter that it it was going to create a drag. I think it's important. I'm not trying to to back away from the question, but I just wanna remind you of the North Stars here. Right? Like, I think about 3 things. Speaker 100:34:48Think about talking about the network and all that's attached to it, which includes load pay factoring as a service. All the things we wanna do is a $1,000,000,000 revenue opportunity. We're at 55,000,000 right now. Right? So we got a lot to go do to get that done. Speaker 100:35:04The second thing that gets us there, that's an output, is getting to 8 80 percent of truckload density, and we don't stop there. There's LTL, there's other things, there's a shipper market, there's a ton of things we wanna do, but that's a North Star, right, of getting to 80%. And then lastly, and it ties to this question is for our payments segment, which is currently operating at negative 10%. We've given an interim goal of we want to be at 25 percent EBITDA margin. We don't know exactly when that will hit, but obviously, to get to 25%, we got to improve 35%. Speaker 100:35:36And long term, the this business, this network business needs to deliver above a 50% EBITDA margin. So $1,000,000,000 in revenue, 80% density in truckload brokerage, and over a 50% margin, that's a home run. Like, that's what we're going after. You are right in that in the short term, sales commissions do burn off, but those get backfilled. I mean, we need to go do account validations, checking account validations for thousands of new carriers that are gonna come on when Robinson goes live. Speaker 100:36:09Why? Because we are the trusted party to stand between the criminals, the fraudsters, and the good actors. Right? Like, that's what we do. We handle people's money. Speaker 100:36:18And so there are puts and takes. Right? Like, yes, sales commissions fall off, but we also have to do certain things to to deliver on our network promises. But just I would again invite you to consider those north stars. That's what we think about. Speaker 100:36:35Right? And if you deliver those things and you're a bank investor here, if you can deliver that kind of margin and keeping everything else the same, like, you're talking about an ROA approaching 2%. Right? You've seen what our factoring business does in a normal cycle. Obviously, the scalability and efficiency in the payments business, and we run a very efficient bank with a low cost of funds. Speaker 100:36:55Right? I don't want that to be lost. As you put all that together and that that's a high ROE earning institution. But those three things that I talked to you about, the revenue, the density, and the EBITDA margin, like, that's what we're that's the goal we're pursuing and everything we do begins or begins with that end in mind. Speaker 500:37:22Perfect. Thanks for taking my question. Speaker 100:37:25You got it. Speaker 200:37:26Our next question comes from Hal Goetz from B. Riley. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:37:30Hey, good morning, everyone. My question is back to the factory and business. I know you don't have control over the freight industry. It's uncontrollable. I wanted to just get your perspective on the downturn in that if you look at a 2 year stack, it's high-30s down volume. Speaker 1000:37:47It's like even if I remove price effects of invoice pricing, it's down probably 20. That would be a depression in my playbook for volume. And I know a lot of stuff that goes over the road is food and beverage. So that's a big part of what's in my waste bin every week for what comes to my house that gets shipped out and that had to go to a store. So could you just give us a perspective of what is really down? Speaker 1000:38:15Like where are inventories that you can see across the country? Are they leaner than ever before? Are we about as low as wholesale or retail inventories can go? Just give us your thoughts on that because it seems like it's pretty it's been pretty difficult. I can't imagine having our 3rd year of this. Speaker 1000:38:33Thanks. Speaker 600:38:36Well, I'll take the first swing of that, Hal. The interesting thing about what we see in the marketplace is there's still a fairly large spread between contract rates and spot rates. We are seeing some stabilization of the spot rate market, which is a majority of the small carriers that I think Aaron referred to earlier. And we're starting to see that prop up. We've seen several quarters now, I mean, we look at the 2nd quarter, it was not great and probably hit our lowest watermark within that quarter. Speaker 600:39:08But one thing that we are seeing that we watch very closely is not only the duration of this cycle, but we also look at what are what's pulling on those margins. We know the carriers, a lot of the small carriers are operating well below their costs and so that's obviously not sustainable. We still see that small carrier segment taking most of the bullets. And so one bright spot to kind of 0 in on for us as we watch fuel very closely and the correlation with fuel and average invoice amount is specifically in that spot market. Why that's important is if average invoice amount is moving in lockstep with fuel, then there's a level of pricing power. Speaker 600:39:53We haven't seen that consistently for the last 2 years. We're starting to see that now, meaning that if fuel goes up, average invoice amount goes up in lockstep, there's about a week lag. Fuel goes down, we see fuel go down or we see average invoices go down and so fuel is having a really big impact on that. So, I look at the duration, it almost matches the duration of the up cycle. And if you look historically at previous cycles, 2013, 2014, 'eighteen, 'nineteen, those cycles lasted about as long as the up cycle and I think we're at the tail end of that, but I'm not, we've seen head fakes before, we saw 1 at the end of quarter, Q4 into Q1, we're not prepared to say that we're done, this is good, times are, all pastures are green ahead. Speaker 600:40:43We're just not quite there, but I think we're seeing enough that it is looking better and fingers are crossed, toes are crossed, but we're not there yet. Speaker 500:40:56Okay. Thank you. Speaker 200:41:00Our next question comes from Frank Schiraldi from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:41:06Good morning. Just wondered, Aaron, you mentioned the, some of the sort of targets thresholds, the $100,000,000 in revenue that, we've talked about in the past on the payments network. I'm just wondering if you'd be able to sort of give some guardrails around Speaker 900:41:30the Speaker 1100:41:30timing of that at this point. Do you think what's a decent place to put that target? Is it sort of end of 2025 with that 25% EBITDA margin? Just curious if you can try to place that a bit for us. Speaker 100:41:46Brad Voss is over here ready to tackle me. Says Melissa. Yeah. So is Melissa. I don't think that December 31, 2025, everything would have to go absolutely perfect to be at 100,000,000 of revenue at that time. Speaker 100:42:04And so I don't think if I if I were underwriting us, I would not put it then. So is it midway through 2026? Is it end of 20 26? I'm not exactly sure. It's gonna be lumpy. Speaker 100:42:14Right? Like, I can't predict because this hadn't been done before or at least I certainly haven't done it before, but I don't think it I know it's never been done in transportation. I believe I have the absolute firm conviction that density overcomes every objection. It just does. And so what's gonna happen is you're gonna hit an inflection point, and we are coming to that inflection point on density where, I mean, Triumph Pay paid a, like, a 126,000 active carriers last quarter to have been paid. Speaker 100:42:53Like, the inflection point on density is coming. Once that happens, I think the monetization, if you look at any other network business, follows pretty rapidly. Okay. Well, is that 2025? I don't know. Speaker 100:43:06That's a lot of growth between now and the end of 20 25. That's why I said we're more focused on density. Is it 2026? I hope so. I mean, look, we know we got to double where our revenue right now because we got a whole lot more to go do after that. Speaker 100:43:20So if it were me, I'd put that into the 2026 numbers, you know, or beyond. But I don't have I can't our business is not linear enough, and I can't predict the state of freight well enough to give you specificity beyond that. Speaker 1100:43:40Okay. Alright. No. Fair enough. And then, just talking about, speaking on monetization, obviously monetizing the factors gets you a significant way to that $5 per network transaction you guys have talked about. Speaker 1100:43:57And I know, or I think that's kind of a yearly kind of on a yearly basis that decision is made. So how confident, you know, you got C. H. Robinson, which obviously is a huge win. We don't know when this freight recession is going to end. Speaker 1100:44:14How confident are you? What's your comfort level that 2025 is going to be the year, where you can really start fully monetizing the factors and get that, whatever it is, dollars 3.50 per. Is that still looking good? Is that maybe pushed back another year just given, where we are in the recession? What what are your updated thoughts there? Speaker 100:44:36Yeah. I I mean, so it's hard to predict. The benefit we have is we can look at our own factoring business, Right? And we can test volumes in our own business, which happens to be 15% of the market. So you got 4 of the top 58 of the top 10, 24 of the top 30, and 59 of the top 100 brokers who are using us, some for audit, some for payment, some for both. Speaker 100:45:05And those who use us for 1 or the other, I mean, that there's a lot of gain in that, by the way. If someone's just using us for audit and then we we bring on payments, there's there's super opportunities there. Like, I think in every discussion and negotiation with a factoring company who uses our system, we will show them the volume that was when the contract was signed, and we will show you the volume that is and the volume that is scheduled to come. And we will have a discussion about what's fair. Right? Speaker 100:45:33We want to treat them fairly. We need factoring companies to do well for this network to work. Frankly, the industry needs factoring companies to do well because they serve small truckers. And we can't do all of it. We aren't equipped. Speaker 100:45:45We don't want to. That's nobody can do all of it. Like, you need a robust industry. So I am can I am very certain that the pricing adjustments will be done to reflect the value delivered? Will it happen in the context of the broader market? Speaker 100:46:03Sure. Sure. Like, and, you know, like we said, we see green shoots. If Trump gets elected and tariffs come and there's now a bunch of freight coming in the West Coast and that helps the market. Like, these are all things we can't predict, but that will all go into the mix. Speaker 100:46:17But it ultimately comes down to how are we doing at taking a factoring company who's spending $10 to do all the back office on an invoice and lowering it to 7. Can we show them the way? And we can show them the way with density and we can help show them the way with factoring as a service. Right? For those who want to use it. Speaker 100:46:35We, I mean, it's not, we're not asking them to take it on faith. We can like literally show them the way that it is done. So again, we expect to be paid for that but we expect to be paid for that only to the effect that we are creating commensurate value for them. We want fans, not just customers. And and we take a very long view on those relationships. Speaker 1100:46:59Gotcha. And and if it looks like I might be the last question, I'm not sure. But if I could just sneak in one quick one. You you brought it up, Aaron, on terms of the potential Trump presidency and higher tariffs. Would that be the, do you think in the near term, the number one thing that could boost, the, boost us out of the freight recession and maybe, with less need to get, you know, reduced capacity by that 15% you guys have talked about? Speaker 1100:47:25Is that the number one, you know, kind of, mover and shaker of of of the freight industry that you see looking out to the election? Speaker 100:47:36So if it does, it's not a long term fix. Right? I I I don't think. It's at the end of the day, it's about tonnage and capacity. I don't know that President Trump or President Biden or whomever is going to be president is going to have quite as much effect on tonnage as they would like to claim in their stump speeches. Speaker 100:47:58Right? Like, the economy is a is a is a mini headed thing. Of course, the more manufacturing that happens in Mexico, that's that's great for trucking. But even if it's happening in China and showing up on the West Coast, if it shows up in bunches, which we think is happening right now, like, that's a short term spike. That's it's sort of like a hurricane, creates a near term spot, you know, opportunity. Speaker 100:48:24Long term, I still believe there's too much capacity. And so we are happy to participate in the upside. We're happy for our carriers to get paid $2 $3 a mile because these people have fixed obligations and they work hard and I want them to win. That doesn't change my long term thesis that we'd still have too much capacity for the freight that is to be moved in this country. And so whether it happens quickly or whether it happens slowly, we still need And there Speaker 200:48:57And there are no further questions at this time. Thank you. Speaker 100:49:01Thank you all for joining us. Hope you have a great rest of your summer, and be careful playing pickleball.Read morePowered by