Transcript
Hello, everyone. My name is Krista, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Coupang 2023 Fourth Quarter Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. Thank you. Now, I'd like to turn the call over to Mike Parker, Vice President of Investor Relations. You may begin your conference.
Thanks, operator. Welcome, everyone, to Coupang's fourth quarter 2023 earnings conference call. I'm pleased to be joined on the call today by our Founder and CEO, Bom Kim; and our CFO, Gaurav Anand. The following discussion, including responses to your questions, reflects management's views as of today's date only. We do not undertake any obligation to update or revise this information, except as required by law. Certain statements made on today's call include forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially. Additional information about factors that could potentially impact our financial results is included in today's press release and in our filings with the SEC, including our most recent annual report on Form 10-K and subsequent filings. During today's call, we may present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Additional disclosures regarding these non-GAAP measures, including reconciliations of these measures to the most comparable GAAP measures, are included in our earnings release, our slides accompanying this webcast, and our SEC filings, which are posted on the Company's Investor Relations website. And now, I'll turn the call over to Bom.
Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. The fourth quarter of 2023 caps a year of accelerating growth, record profits, and expanding free cash flows for our business. We believe that creating moments of WOW for customers across selection, price, and service forms the foundation for long-term growth, profitability, and ultimately free cash flow, which serves as the basis of long-term shareholder value. In 2023, our growth in both active customers and revenues accelerated every quarter. In Q1, we began the year with a 5% year-over-year growth in active customers. In Q4, our active customers grew 16% year-over-year. The spend of every annual customer cohort is growing over 15%, even among our oldest cohorts. In Q1, our revenues grew by 20% year-over-year on a constant currency basis. Apples to apples, without the FLC accounting change we made in Q2, our Q4 revenue growth rate would have been over 900 basis points higher than our Q1 growth rate of 20%. We also generated record net income and free cash flow for the year, thanks to the expanding profitability of product commerce, our largest and most established offering, which now exceeds 7% adjusted EBITDA in Q4. We achieved all of this while growing our share count by only 1.3%. Our share dilution has remained around 1% in each of the three years since we became a public company, including the year of our IPO. Our free cash flow generation for 2023 totaled $1.8 billion, even after an investment of over $450 million in our developing offerings. Our cash balance today stands at over $5.5 billion. Sizable and durable free cash flow streams are not created overnight, or even in a few quarters. Since the beginning of this company, we have made foundational bets on new competency initiatives. These are bold bets that required years of investment, persistence, and patience before they began producing meaningful free cash flows for our business. They were attractive to us because we saw opportunities to break trade-offs and deliver a WOW experience to customers. For example, Rocket delivery was an entirely new competency. We had never purchased and managed inventory, opened fulfillment centers, assembled a nationwide logistics fleet, or built bespoke technology to orchestrate one-day delivery on our unique, integrated network. With the success of this new competency, we were able to add incremental initiatives that have expanded our impact, like Dawn Delivery. Today, we benefit from the successes of the new competency initiatives we've scaled, and we now have the ability to seed and scale incremental initiatives, leveraging our vast technology, processes, scale, and knowledge. Our bar for investments remains incredibly high. We only invest when we have conviction that our opportunities can reach meaningful scale and deliver high returns on capital. We look for confirming evidence at each stage of investment. If they don't meet our high thresholds, we reduce or exit investments. When we see strong signals, we're not shy about investing more. A number of our investments are already showing remarkable progress and promise. One such incremental initiative is fulfillment and logistics by Coupang, or FLC, for which we continue to make significant investments in infrastructure and technology. Customers responded enthusiastically to expanding selection on Rocket. In Q4, our FLC volumes doubled year-over-year, and the number of participating merchants in FLC jumped by 80%. Small and medium enterprises, or SMEs, who do not have access to physical shelves in traditional retail and lack the capital to build their own technology and infrastructure, account for over 80% of our merchant base in FLC today. We're delighted to share with these enterprising small businesses access to billions of dollars of historical investment we've made in our Rocket network to help them delight customers and grow their businesses. Another incremental investment that is proving its potential for growth, scale, and impact is Taiwan. We're excited about the opportunity to challenge trade-offs and WOW customers in a geography with an attractive retail market. Since launching Rocket in October of 2022, Taiwan's customers and revenues have continued to compound at an incredible rate, more than doubling over the last two quarters alone. It's a pace of adoption and growth that exceeds what we experienced in Korea during the same period of time after the launch of Rocket. In Taiwan, we're able to leverage the advanced technology, learnings, and processes, among other assets that we've developed over many years. We expect that will enable us to reach profitability in Taiwan faster than we did in Korea. Many of our incremental investments benefit from our already strong customer cohort behavior. Our cohorts continuously expand their levels of spend across Coupang. With our new categories and offerings, we have the ability to further expand the spending and engagement potential of all of our customers. Eats is a great example. Since we launched the WOW membership savings program in early Q2, we've seen our order volumes double. Every month, we've seen new adoption and strong retention of those new customers. As we see one-time investments such as new merchant acquisition promotions expire, we expect Eats's positive underlying unit economics, along with scale, to drive cash generation in the future. What is equally exciting is the positive externalities we've seen in customer engagement across our products and offerings. Just as purchasing in one category helps engagement in other categories, we've seen higher engagement on Eats lead to higher engagement in product commerce. We also see this engagement pattern with Play, our video streaming service. Play was the most downloaded app in Korea in all categories on both iOS and Android in 2022 and 2023. It's also delighted customers by not just broadcasting but creating from scratch unprecedented live sporting events in Korea. Some of the most streamed live sporting events over the past two years in Korea have been unique sports matches created and exclusively streamed by Play. For the first time ever, millions were able to see Neymar, Holland, and Son play in Korea with international franchises like Manchester City, PSG, and Tottenham Spurs. This spring, the Dodgers and Padres will open the regular season with two games in Seoul, for which tickets and live broadcasts in Korea will be available exclusively to our members. This will mark the first time the regular season MLB games have ever been played in Korea. Lastly, a note about Farfetch. While we weren't seeking an acquisition, we came across a rare opportunity to buy a sector-leading service with $4 billion in GMV for a $500 million investment. We hope in a few years we'll be having the conversation about how Coupang turned Farfetch into a business that transformed the customer experience around luxury fashion while also providing strategic value for Coupang. It's too early for that conversation today. Even if that full potential is not fully realized, we're highly confident that this will prove to be a prudent financial decision. We're already executing on a plan to make Farfetch self-funding with no additional investment beyond the announced capital commitment. We see many paths to making this a worthwhile investment for shareholders. And while we're excited about the long-term potential of such investments, we remain focused on our biggest priority. We have a very small share of the retail markets in Korea and Taiwan. Each of those opportunities is massive, and capturing them remains by far our greatest prospect and priority. As always, we remain committed to the relentless focus on wowing our customers to create a world where they wonder, how did I ever live without Coupang. Now, I'll turn the call over to Gaurav, to review the financials in more detail.
Thanks, Bom. In the third quarter, we saw an even greater acceleration in customer engagement with a record 21 million active customers. The rate of active customer growth accelerated every quarter in 2023, culminating in a 16% year-over-year growth in Q4. That's the highest growth rate we have seen in the past two years. We also now have 14 million WOW members, up 27% since last year reflecting the broadening recognition of the tremendous value that WOW membership provides for our members. Our total net revenues of $6.6 billion grew by 23% year-over-year or 20% in constant currency. Adjusted for the FLC impact, our growth would have been 940 basis points higher than the 20% constant currency revenue growth rate reported. Adjusting for this accounting change, constant currency revenues grew at an increasingly faster rate each successive quarter of 2023. The accounting adjustment is from the change in FLC accounting that we have highlighted earlier. It will continue to adversely affect our reported revenue growth rate for the next couple of quarters as they will compete against quarters with the previous accounting treatment. It is important to highlight that the spend of every annual cohort grew by over 15% year-over-year. Even our oldest cohorts continue to grow above that rate, demonstrating that there is still massive opportunity for us to continue to WOW even our oldest customers with new selection at the best prices and a best-in-class delivery experience. In addition, each successive annual cohort is starting with higher levels of spend and growing even faster. We saw a 3% increase in constant currency net revenues per active customer. While all of our annual cohorts are growing over 15% year-over-year, our new active customers are naturally at much lower levels of spend than the mature cohorts. The large number of new active customers we've added over the last few quarters has a short-term dilutive impact on the average spend per active customer. We believe a large amount of growth will continue to come from the spend of newer cohorts converging to the much higher spends of the oldest cohorts whose spend levels also continue to climb. In our product commerce segment, revenues grew by 21% on a reported basis and 18% in constant currency. This growth is being driven by deeper spend penetration across many categories and offerings, higher spend levels per customer, and increasing adoption of a new product and offering. Our product commerce growth rate continues to compound at high multiples of the growth rate of total retail spend in Korea, which grew by 2% this quarter. We believe we are in the very early stages of our growth journey in Korea, as Coupang currently represents a very small fraction of the projected $560 billion of total commerce spend in Korea by 2027. As Bom noted, we are also excited about the increasing momentum we are generating in developing offerings. Its segment revenue grew by 105% year-over-year on a reported basis and 102% in constant currency. Along with other signals, this growth demonstrates the vast potential we are seeing from this portfolio of nascent initiatives, especially in East and Taiwan. We delivered a record $1.7 billion in gross profit, an increase of 32% year-over-year. This represents a gross profit margin of 25.6%, improving by 160 basis points year-over-year and 30 basis points quarter-over-quarter. We are driving higher efficiencies across our operations through improvements in our logistics network and greater utilization of automation and technology, including AI. We also continue to benefit from further optimization in our supply chain and the scaling of margin-accretive offerings, including ads. While these tailwinds were partially offset by the continued investment in selection expansion and increased investment in developing offerings this quarter, we see significant runway ahead of us to continue delivering margin expansion through each of these initiatives. OG&A expense as a percentage of revenue increased by 120 basis points this quarter versus last year. This change was due to an estimated 170 basis points negative impact from the FLC accounting change. This quarter, we recorded a non-recurring adjustment of $895 million from changes in tax-related reserves, including the release of valuation allowances related to certain deferred tax assets from historical net operating losses. This resulted in an income tax net benefit of $861 million for the quarter. We generated net income of $1 billion and diluted earnings per share of $0.57, largely impacted by the $895 million in tax reserve adjustments. This adjustment had a $0.49 impact on diluted EPS. Removing the impact of one-time tax reserve adjustments, our diluted EPS for the quarter would have been $0.08. For our consolidated operations, we reported $294 million of adjusted EBITDA this quarter and $1.1 billion for the full year. The Q4 adjusted EBITDA margin was 4.5%, representing a 50 basis point improvement year-over-year, which includes a 40 basis point benefit from the FLC accounting change. Our product commerce segment delivered $444 million of adjusted EBITDA, an improvement of nearly 70% over the previous year. This resulted in a 7.1% margin, which expanded by 190 basis points over the last year and includes a 60 basis point benefit from the FLC accounting change. The growth in margin was also driven by the expansion in gross profit margin this quarter, as well as improvements in efficiencies across our operations that we are harvesting from our many years of investments in infrastructure, technology, and operational excellence. We believe we are still in the early stages of realizing the full margin potential of the business. In our developing offerings segment, the adjusted EBITDA loss was $150 million, increasing by $95 million year-over-year but decreasing by $10 million quarter-over-quarter. We ended the year with roughly $5.6 billion in cash, an improvement of more than 50% compared to last year. This was a result of producing $2.7 billion in operating cash flow and $1.8 billion of free cash flow for the full year. This is significantly higher than the $1.1 billion of adjusted EBITDA this year due to some one-time and seasonal working capital benefits, among other factors. As we have previously communicated, we expect that over time, free cash flow on a TPM basis will be closer to the levels of adjusted EBITDA generated. Now a few comments on our outlook for 2024. While we are exiting 2023 with strong growth, we expect our growth rate going forward to be more consistent with the average growth rate we have seen over the past year. We anticipate incurring adjusted EBITDA losses in developing offerings of approximately $650 million in 2024, excluding losses related to Farfetch. As Bom noted, we do not anticipate incremental investment in Farfetch beyond our already communicated investment to get it to profitability. We continue to expect growing adjusted EBITDA margins on an annual basis, excluding Farfetch. Due to the $895 million tax reserve adjustment we recorded this quarter, we anticipate we will experience a temporarily high effective tax rate between 45% to 50% in 2024. This is just an accounting effective tax rate as we expect our cash tax obligation to be closer to 20% to 25%. Over the mid to long term, we expect to normalize to an effective tax rate closer to 25%. Bom and I are extremely proud of our team whose work over many years is responsible for the results we have enjoyed this past year. We are confident our teams will remain committed to execute with a passion for customer experience and operational excellence to deliver on the vast potential ahead.
Thank you for the opportunity to ask the questions. Congratulations on good results for the fourth quarter. I have two questions, with regard to 2024 guidance. First question is about your product commerce strategy and the margin outlook. You have focused on selection increase and the new merchant onboarding in 2023, which I think paid off in light of strong user and top line and the market share gains, but at the expense of the margin to a degree. Moving on to 2024, do you plan to maintain such a selection-increasing strategy? If so, do you expect the product commerce margin growth to sequentially soften in 2024? My second question is about your developing offerings guidance of $650 million U.S. Is this inclusive of the Farfetch deal? And I would appreciate it if you could provide a bit more color on the breakdown of each segment in terms of the Taiwan, Eats, and Video. And when do you expect this developing offering loss to kick out and start stabilizing or declining?
Hi, Stanley. Thank you for your questions. On our strategy to increase selection and merchant acquisition, the levers that we've been focusing on for growth remain the same. We do see some impact from our selection expansion, but we are expanding margins through improvements in our logistics network and greater utilization of automation, including technology and AI. During 2023, we generated $1.1 billion in adjusted EBITDA while increasing margins by 250 basis points. Product commerce adjusted EBITDA margin improved nearly 200 basis points to 7.1%. As we stated in the past, margins may be uneven quarter-to-quarter, but you should see our profit margins continue their march upwards over time, expanding on an annual basis, excluding Farfetch. The improvements that we're driving come from years and years of investment in infrastructure, technology, and operational excellence. We're seeing these efficiency improvements across our operations. The underlying drivers of margin are strong, and there's still a lot of room for expansion. On Developing Offerings, the $650 million does not include Farfetch. We anticipate that the majority of the increase in these investments will be in Taiwan. Even with these investments, we expect to continue expanding our EBITDA margin on a consolidated basis, excluding Farfetch in 2024. We continue to operate in line with the tenants we've shared in the past. We'll focus on opportunities where we can break trade-offs and provide the best customer experience at the lowest cost. At each stage, we're evaluating with rigor and deciding which efforts demonstrate potential to achieve both meaningfully differentiated customer experience and significant future cash flows, and only these initiatives are earning their way to more significant investments. We have in the past and will continue to discontinue investments that don't demonstrate that potential to achieve these objectives. We are seeing positive signs in Taiwan, and where we see positive signals, we also won't be shy about investing more. As always, we'll continue to be disciplined and opportunistic to maximize long-term shareholder value.
Thank you for the opportunity to ask questions. I have two. First is on Farfetch and capital allocation. I know you said it's a bit too early, but can you share what was the biggest factor that appeared attractive to you to acquire Farfetch? And also, what would be your general principle regarding capital allocation, including share buybacks? Second is on competition. There's a heightened interest in competition in the market, it seems related to the rise in Chinese cross-border e-commerce platforms. And when you look at your core behavior, do you see any impact on user attrition? More importantly, do you see any impact on basket size among your cohorts related to this competition? Thank you.
Eric, thanks for the question. Luxury is a very large market segment, and it's one that hasn't been captured in any meaningful way by e-commerce players yet. We know marketplace. We know operations. We know how to focus on and drive innovation around customer experience. We saw a business that we thought if we were better at those things could become much more valuable and, if run differently, could create possibly billions of dollars of equity value. We also saw a potential for strategic value for our existing Coupang business. But it's just too early to have a more in-depth conversation beyond that today. M&A is not our strategy. I remind you that we weren't looking to do a deal. This was a very opportunistic situation that quickly afforded us the opportunity to buy Farfetch at a very attractive price. Our strategy remains growing organically, capturing our very small share in our existing markets into much larger shares over time. We have so much opportunity in our existing markets for Coupang bets. Our core strategy remains organic growth. On your second question regarding competition, we continue to believe our success is determined primarily by our execution in improving customer experience and operational excellence. It's important to point out that we still have just single-digit share of over $560 billion projected retail market, which presents a massive opportunity in front of us. The market is large enough to support many winners. Retail has been and continues to be dynamic and highly competitive with many players ranging from traditional offline retailers to large Chinese competitors and a constant stream of new entrants, both domestic and international. Customers are always going to seek the best selection, the best price, and the best service. They have many alternatives, whether down the street or across the border from China, easily accessible. So we have to constantly find new moments of WOW for our customers to fight for and earn their loyalty every day. That's what we spend all of our energy obsessing about. We see the result of our efforts in our cohort behavior. As I mentioned earlier, every one of our cohorts is growing by over 15%, even our oldest cohorts. Again, we still have just single-digit share of a massive retail market opportunity. We'll remain laser-focused on customer experience and operational excellence to capture our share of that opportunity. I'll point out again that our newer cohorts are also joining at higher levels of spend and are increasing spend faster than new customers in the past. We've also added a large number of new active customers over the last few quarters. That large mix of new customers portends a significant amount of future growth as the spend of newer cohorts converts to much higher levels of spend and the spend levels of the older cohorts also continue to climb. However, that will be over a longer timeframe.
Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. I wanted to follow up on a previous question. Over the past two years, there's no doubt about the execution. Bom, you and the company have done an excellent job. From an equity standpoint, we do have some concern with the selling pressure coming from Softbank and others. Now that the company is in a stronger position concerning free cash flow, could you share your thoughts on how you plan to address the ongoing supply of shares in the market? Specifically, I'm interested in whether you are considering a share buyback or a tender offer to manage this supply in the longer term. Thank you.
Yes, Seyon, I'll take that. Over the last few years and before even the IPO, we have been working with our investors closely to find an optimal solution for everyone, for all shareholders, and we'll continue to do so. At this point, that's all we have to say on this. That said, with the company's growth looking good and our profitability improving, we are excited about all the investment opportunities we believe will take care of itself.
Great. Thanks for taking my questions. I have two on Taiwan here. I was wondering if you could give more color on signals you saw in that market that give you confidence to continue to lean in. Just curious about any learnings here that can help you adjust your execution tactically. Secondly, on your guidance for EBITDA losses of $650 million, relating to Taiwan investment, can you provide a sense of what kind of investment on the ground we should visualize, including selection, fulfillment centers, or even local delivery?
James, thanks for your question. It's still early in Taiwan. We are seeing strong momentum there. As I mentioned, we launched Rocket in October of 2022, and growth there has been faster so far than it was in Korea. In just the last two quarters alone, we've seen active customers and revenues double. It's also worth noting that we are learning with every iteration, but we're also leveraging so much from what we've built over many years in Korea. Everything from our selection, processes and learnings, and knowledge from building and optimizing fulfillment logistics, supply chain optimization, the technology that we've built over a decade is all contributing to our scaling faster in Taiwan. We also expect that they will help us reach profitability there faster. It's still too early to have a lot of conversations, but we're very excited by the progress we're making and the promise we're seeing on the ground there. At the right time, we'll have a deeper conversation, but it will be rigorous in our analysis, continue to assess at every stage, and invest only in the opportunities we believe will generate a meaningful differentiation of customer experience and meaningful returns for our shareholders.
Thank you for answering my questions. Congratulations on the strong results. I have two questions. First, I need to ask about Farfetch again. You mentioned you are prepared to share more details about it, but I would like to know how you will account for the revenues and expenses associated with Farfetch. How significant is Korea to the current Farfetch business? And what is the situation in other countries, considering Coupang operates only in Korea and Taiwan? Generally, what are your plans for those regions? Secondly, regarding Farfetch, I believe you stated in your prepared remarks that the goal is for it to be self-funding, meaning you won't use your capital to prop up the business.
Let me address the FLC question first. First, our growth this quarter wasn't a reflection of any levers we pulled in this past quarter or specifically in recent quarters. It truly represents customer adoption of our investment over many years into providing the best experience at the lowest price across the broadest assortment. We are investing in growing our selection, and one of our initiatives is Farfetch. We believe our growth is a reflection of both the investments we've made and the stage we're at in the market. We're still in the single-digit share of a $560 billion retail market, and we are just in the early stages of our development, excited about the potential that we see ahead.
On Farfetch, let me take that one. We just finalized the deal a few weeks ago, and we are getting into the details. But on broad strokes, we will be consolidating it into our financials for a couple of months. Regarding segment classification, we'll come back with more information. We will probably take a one-time restructuring charge in Q1, and we'll split it out. More to come on that in the next call.
There are no further questions. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you, and you may now disconnect.