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Quinstreet, Inc Q1 FY2026 Earnings Call

Quinstreet, Inc (QNST)

Earnings Call FY2026 Q1 Call date: 2025-11-06 Concluded

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8-K earnings release

Item 2.02 release filed around the call (2025-11-06).

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10-Q filing

The quarterly report covering this quarter (filed 2025-11-07).

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Audio 28:45

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Operator

Good day and welcome to Queen Street's Fiscal First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference Call. Today's conference is being recorded. Following prepared remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Should you wish to ask a question during this time, you may press star 1. Should you require any operator assistance, please press star 0. At this time, I would like to turn the conference call over to Vice President of Investor Relations and Finance, Robert Amparo. Mr. Amparo, you may begin. Thank you, Operator, and thank you everyone

Robert Amparo Head of Investor Relations

for joining us as we report Quinn Street's Fiscal First Quarter 2026 financial results. Joining me on the call today are Chief Executive Officer Doug Valenti and Chief Financial Officer Greg Wong. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that the following discussion will contain forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those projected by such statements and are not guarantees of future performance. Factors that may cause results to differ from our forward-looking statements are discussed in our recent SEC filings, including our most recent 8K filing made today, our most recent 10K filing. Forward-looking statements are based on assumptions as of today, and the company undertakes no obligation to update these statements. Today, we will be discussing both GAAP and non-GAAP measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures is included in today's earnings press release, which is available on our Investor Relations website at investor.quinstreet.com. With that, I will turn the call over to Doug Valenti. Please go ahead, sir.

Thank you, Rob. Welcome, everyone. Fiscal Q1 was another good quarter of performance and progress for the company. We delivered record revenue and exceeded our outlook for both revenue and adjusted EBITDA. Auto insurance demand remained strong. Home services continued to grow at double digit rates. And adjusted EBITDA remains strong, inclusive of heavy investments in new media and product. We expect further significant growth in auto insurance revenue and margin in coming quarters and years due to strong product and market fundamentals and to our rapidly expanding product, market, and media footprint. Auto insurance carrier results are good. Consumers are shopping. And marketing budgets continue their relentless, but still early, shift to digital and performance marketing. While carrier spending is expected to remain strong, uncertainty about tariffs and their eventual impact on claims costs appears to be delaying what we expect to be another significant inflection up from here in carrier marketing spend. In the meantime, we are preparing for the next leg up in auto insurance by investing in new media capacity and in dramatically expanding our product and market footprint to drive growth and expand margins now and into the future. We also expect continued strong growth in our non-insurance, non-auto insurance verticals, and we are investing aggressively there as well. Overall, our total addressable market opportunity is already enormous and growing, and we continue to deliberately, contiguously, and successfully expand our footprint. We estimate that we are less than 10% penetrated in our current footprint of addressable market. We expect to grow total company revenue at double-digit rates on average for many years to come. We also continue to focus on margin expansion, with a near-term, next-milestone goal of reaching 10% quarterly adjusted EBITDA margin in this fiscal year, which, as you know, ends in June. Our leverage to grow EBITDA margin are threefold. One, growing and optimizing media to catch up to auto insurance demand. Two, growing higher margin products and businesses. and three, capturing operating leverage from top-line growth and from efficiency and productivity initiatives. Some examples. Auto insurance margins are expected to expand five points this fiscal year and are already up over two points just since July, with margins in new, faster-growing product market areas of auto insurance running at more than twice those of our core click marketplace. Also, margins in big new media areas in auto insurance and across the company are now past breakeven and expanding further as they scale. And our exciting QRP and 360 finance products are expected to grow well over 100% this fiscal year and to nicely contribute to expanded profitability. Another area of current and future investment and excitement is artificial intelligence, or AI. We are confident that we are going to be an AI winner. We expect AI to accelerate our already fast-growing markets by improving consumer access, interface, and engagement in digital media. We also believe that we will disproportionately benefit from AI due to our structured proprietary data and our over 17-year history of successfully applying AI as a competitive advantage. We have dozens of new AI projects underway across the company and business, and they are already improving consumer satisfaction, client results, media efficiency, and productivity. and they are already adding revenue and expanding margins. Finally, before I share our outlook for Fiscal Q2 in the full fiscal year, I am pleased to announce that the Board of Directors has authorized a new $40 million share repurchase program. The authorization reflects the strength of our underlying business model and financial position and confidence in our long-term outlook for the business. Turning to our outlook, we expect revenue in fiscal Q2 to be between $270 and $280 million and adjusted EBITDA to be between $19 and $20 million. We expect full fiscal year 2026 revenue to grow at least 10% year-over-year and full fiscal year adjusted EBITDA to grow at least 20% year-over-year.

Greg Wong CFO

with that i'll turn the call over to greg thank you doug hello and thanks to everyone for joining us today fiscal q1 was another record revenue quarter for quinn street for the september quarter total revenue was 285.9 million dollars adjusted net income was 13.1 million dollars or $0.22 per share. An adjusted EBITDA was $20.5 million. Looking at revenue by client vertical, our financial services client vertical represented 73% of Q1 revenue and declined 2% year-over-year to $207.5 million. Auto insurance momentum accelerated in the quarter, growing 16% sequentially versus the June quarter, and 4% year-over-year, against a very tough comparison. Non-insurance financial services, which included personal loans, credit cards, and banking, declined 10% year-over-year, as the year-ago period included a very large limited-time promotional offer that benefited our credit cards vertical. Our home services client vertical represented 27% of Q1 revenue and grew 15% year-over-year to a record $78.4 million. Other revenue has been consolidated into our home services client vertical to more accurately depict the operational structure of that business. Turning to the balance sheet, we closed the quarter with $101 million in cash and equivalents and no bank debt, and we remain in a strong financial position. In the September quarter, we repurchased $7 million worth of company shares, and subsequent to quarter end, another $10 million worth of company shares, exhausting our previously authorized share repurchase program. In our October 30th board meeting, our board of directors authorized a new share repurchase program of up to another $40 million. We continue to have a rigorously disciplined approach to capital allocation and continue to prioritize, one, investing in new products and initiatives for future growth and margin expansion, two, accretive acquisitions, and three, shareholder purchases at attractive levels. We will continue to be measured in our approach and remain focused on maximizing shareholder value. As we look ahead into Q2, I'd like to remind everyone of the seasonality characteristics of our business, as they do every year at this time. The December quarter, our fiscal second quarter, typically declines sequentially. This is due to reduced client staffing and budgets during the holidays and end of year period, a tighter media market, and changes in consumer shopping behavior. This trend generally reverses in January. Moving to our outlook, for fiscal Q2, our December quarter, we expect revenue to be between $270 and $280 million, and adjusted EBITDA to be between $19 and $20 million. We expect full fiscal year 2026 revenue to grow at least 10% year-over-year, and full fiscal year adjusted

Operator

EBITDA to grow at least 20% year-over-year. With that, I'll turn it over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by the one on your touchdown phone. Should you wish to cancel your request, please press the star followed by the two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. Once again, that is third one, should you wish to ask a question. Your first question is from Jason Crayer from Craig Holland. Your line is now open.

Jason Crayer Analyst — Craig-Hallum

Wonderful. Thank you, guys. Doug, just wondering if you can give some more details on the media investments that you made in the quarter, how those are performing. Specifically, you kind of teased out some of the faster growth areas, you know, where you're seeing better margin performance. Just curious more details on that. Thanks.

Sure, Jason. We have been focused on growing our proprietary media campaigns and scaling those pretty dramatically in response to the market demand in auto insurance and in response to the competitive pressures we've seen against scarce media and auto insurance because of the spike in auto insurance demand. And those campaigns have both scaled nicely over the past few months and have now gotten well beyond break-even, and our margins there are expanding and are expanding nicely. But we expect there's a lot more to come. And as I indicated, we've already seen about a two-point improvement in our auto insurance margins overall since July and expect at least five points by the end of the fiscal year. And those campaigns will be a big contributor to that. Other contributors include new products and services in auto insurance beyond our historic and click marketplace that are also getting to good scale and also have significantly better margins.

Jason Crayer Analyst — Craig-Hallum

I don't want to talk a lot about the details of those, so I don't want to give our competitors a roadmap to everything we're doing.

But suffice to say, they're very contiguous. They're getting a good scale. They're highly effective and proprietary as well, and we expect those to continue to scale and to, again, continue to contribute. By the way, those numbers for auto insurance do not include QRP. QRP margins are treated separately from auto insurance. QRP, as I indicated, also continues to scale very nicely, and we expect to be quite profitable this year, to reach profitability and be nicely profitable this fiscal year as well as it gets to quite good scale. It grew last year. Last year, it grew like 294 percent. This year, we expect to grow at least 70 percent plus NQRP, while the 360 product on the home services side is going to grow at even faster rates. So we're seeing a lot of good scale and expansion from new media, incremental products and services and auto insurance, our new breakthrough products, QRP and 360, and other businesses across the company, including home services, that have better and higher margins than auto insurance. So a lot of good things going on on the March expansion clock.

Jason Crayer Analyst — Craig-Hallum

Yeah, certainly seems promising. We wanted to follow up on your tariff comments. It seemed like last quarter that a lot of the tariff concerns had pretty well abated. Now it sounds like maybe those are back on. I'm curious if there's a new round of tariffs causing concern or if the carriers are kind of reacting more to tariffs in recent months more than they were this summer?

No new tariffs, but not much by way of resolution of existing tariffs. In fact, some of them went up for some countries affected. We can only go by spending behavior of our clients and by any public statements or public information. Spending behavior-wise, the clients are spending strongly, and we expect them to continue to do so, but they're not yet spending at the rate that we would expect, given their very strong financial performance. One of the things that we note is mentioned in the public filings is the risk and difficulty in quantifying the exact impact of tariffs. and so we would say that and that's one of the few things that's mentioned when it comes to why they might not be spending more than they are relative to their performance so we would just point out that that remains a risk factor that they identify and one that they identify is one that's difficult to quantify the exact impact of which probably implies that they're being a little bit more conservative than it would be otherwise. And I think as things get more clarified, we would expect, given, again, the engagement we have with them, the performance that they are reporting, and the performance that we know that they have with our products, we expect a lot of room for another big leg up from here. And I think those of you that follow anybody else in our space has heard the same thing, I think, from all the others in our space as well.

Patrick Sholl Analyst — Barrington Research

We're getting kind of very similar reads on the market.

Greg Wong CFO

I appreciate the thoughts, Doug. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, Jason.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question is from Zach Cummins from B Riley Securities. Your line is now open.

Zach Cummins Analyst — B. Riley Securities

Hi. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Doug, I was curious if you could just talk a little bit more about the spending trends you're seeing broadly among your auto insurance carriers. I know for a good part of the past 12 to 18 months, a lot of the recovery has really been driven by just a couple of major carriers. But just curious if you've seen any sort of evolution in spending trends here in recent months among your carrier partners.

We've seen a broadening of spending, Zach. I mean, I'd say that some of the non-biggest players have grown their spend at a significantly higher rate over the past year or so than have the larger players. Larger players are still spending strongly and plan, as they've indicated, plan to continue to do so. So I didn't mean to imply for a minute that the tariffs were a risk factor to current spending levels. I think they're just a factor in how fast we get to what we believe is going to be a pretty significant next leg up in spending for carriers. But we've seen a broadening trend, a lot of very healthy spending from a lot of different clients. And I think record numbers of clients spending it, you know, if you want to pick a metric of a million dollars a month, yeah, we've got a record number of clients doing that now. And so, you know, that would be a data point for the broadening trend. But deepening, broadening of spend, a lot of deep engagement of clients with the various products, and very, very healthy activity.

Zach Cummins Analyst — B. Riley Securities

Understood. And a follow-up question. Greg, I really appreciate the additional segment detail regarding Q1. Just as we look at the full year guidance and the implied ramp in the second half of the year, anything we should keep in mind in terms of like credit card offers or anything to that extent in the credit driven verticals that we should be building into our model no what i you know how

Greg Wong CFO

i think about the the guidance overall zach is um what we expect to see is continued strong spend within auto insurance um although we expect a leg up once we uh uh you know you get more clarity around tariffs, et cetera, et cetera, that Doug was talking about. We do expect to see a leg up. That is not baked into our outlook because we just don't know the timing of that. So I'd tell you, you know, continued strong spend of the carriers. And then what you would typically see is technical seasonality in the back half. And then continued progress against our other initiatives as well as, you know, the non-insurance businesses is how I'd characterize the outlook

Zach Cummins Analyst — B. Riley Securities

for the year. Got it. That's helpful. Well, thanks for taking my questions and best of luck with the

rest of the quarter. Thank you, Zach.

Operator

Thanks, Zach. Thank you. Your next question is from Patrick Scholl from Barrington Research. Your line is now open.

Patrick Sholl Analyst — Barrington Research

Hi. Thank you. Following up on the credit-driven verticals, have there been any indications in the current macro environment of any changes in the monetization of those categories in terms of the customer profile that's coming through those media channels?

I would say not significant changes, but the trends. And the trends are that the lower-end consumer is under more and more pressure. And so we're seeing very healthy demand for credit and debt-related relief products. and also, in some cases, personal loan products, which serve more that demographic than the upper end of the income spectrum. The middle and upper end of the income spectrum continue to be very healthy. The banks reported it yet again. We're seeing it yet again. The demand for credit cards, credit card debt is at record levels, but delinquencies are not. They're at quite low levels. And so there continues to be trend-wise a bifurcation. Now, our credit card business is primarily aimed at upper-income consumers, so that works for us. And our Am1 financial products business tends to be aimed at helping lower-end consumers, so that works for us there. The only other business that we have in that area is the banking business, which is a source of funds business, and that market is still growing very rapidly. it was kind of dormant during the zero interest period. And once your interest rates came back up, that market really has taken off. And we have very, very strong demand from a very broad range of clients. And we continue to do very well there. And again, the only trend there is that interest rates are more normalized now. Even if they come down a little bit, they're still, you know, source of funds accounts are open again. And so banks are utilizing that to raise capital. So those would be the general trends, but nothing significant, no significant changes or inflections that we've seen.

Patrick Sholl Analyst — Barrington Research

And then within the home services segment, I guess, have you seen any sort of like change in like activity there driven by, lowering interest rates, or is that more going to flow through the financial services sector?

We have not. We continue to see robust demand for home services, and we have all the business opportunity and market opportunity we can stand and will have, I think, for decades to come there. It's a massive market. It's healthy. Performance marketing works very well. They're done well, and we do it better than anybody and our clients tell us that by the way and they're you know it's a matter of continuing to execute and implement and execute and implement we're doing that every day and as you've seen we're growing at very consistent very good rates and probably limited only by our capacity to to execute not by market demand so we're very early in our penetration there the market is quite healthy. Consumers have a lot of equity. They have a lot of capacity to fund projects. And they haven't been relocating as much, which means that there aren't as many new projects associated with moving in, but there are a lot of new projects associated with nesting and fixing up where they are. So on balance, just a super healthy market. Homeowners are in very good financial shape in general, and we're very early in our penetration of that very large market.

Operator

Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Once again, please press door one if you wish to ask a question. And your next question is from Elle Niebuhr from Lake Street Capital Markets. Your

Elle Niebuhr Analyst — Lake Street Capital Markets

line is now open. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. So, first, wondering how we should think about mixed shift impacts on gross margin into 2026, especially as the carrier budgets

remain healthy? That's a great question. The carrier budgets are healthy, but we haven't really modeled the next leg up in growth for this fiscal year. So if, in fact, we stay at steady state and then just grow with seasonality as we enter this insurance shopping season in the in the march quarter um we're likely to see that mix where the mix has shifted pretty dramatically to auto insurance over the past year and a half or so uh to start normalizing more and that that mix shift trend will will soften and in fact we may actually see a growth of other products and services and businesses um faster go faster than auto insurance if that's the case that's But generally speaking, until and as we get these new media campaigns built for auto insurance, generally speaking, that will expand gross margin. And we indicated, as I indicated in my prepared remarks, we are targeting getting to a 10% adjusted EBITDA in the back half of the fiscal year, which would be, of course, the March or June quarters. And that would be a component of that, a factor again.

Elle Niebuhr Analyst — Lake Street Capital Markets

gotcha thanks and then with that margin expansion do you see that coming from auto mix or operating efficiency or where do you see that expansion coming from yeah three three main areas one is

the mix and initiatives particularly the new media initiatives and auto insurance continuing to scale and continuing to expand and continuing to help grow our margins there. The growth of our higher margin businesses, as I indicated just now when we talked about that, either the new products with 360 QRP or home services, some of our other businesses that are structurally higher margin, growing faster or at least not falling back in the mix. And then certainly efficiency and productivity initiatives, which we have a ton of going on. And just to give you a data point on that, just to make sure that's real, it's real to you. You know, in the past two years, we've gone from like $600 million a year in revenue to $1.2 billion a year in revenue. In that period, we have gone from 902 employees to 928 employees. So we've doubled revenue by adding 26 employees. So, when I talk about efficiency and productivity initiatives, we really have efficiency and productivity initiatives, and they're working very well.

Operator

Gotcha. Thanks for taking my questions. I'll hop back in queue.

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions at this time, and that concludes our question and answer session for today. Thank you, everyone, for taking the time to join Queen Street's Learnings Call. Replay information is available on the earnings press release issued this afternoon. This concludes today's call. Thank you for joining. You may all disconnect your lines.