OFX Group Limited (ASX:OFX)
Australia flag Australia · Delayed Price · Currency is AUD
0.5650
0.00 (0.00%)
May 11, 2026, 4:10 PM AEST
← View all transcripts

Earnings Call: H1 2022

Nov 8, 2021

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the OFX Group Limited 1H22 results webcast, hosted by Skander Malcolm, Managing Director and CEO, and Selena Verth, CFO. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow at the end of the presentation. If you wish to ask a question, please enter your question at any time during the presentation in the Q&A tab at the bottom of your Zoom screen, along with your name and company.

When the question and answer session begins, your question will be read out for Skander and Selena to answer. Alternatively, when the Q&A session begins, please use the Raise Your Hand function. We will then unmute you, and you may ask a question. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to Mr. Malcolm. Please go ahead.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Thank you, Maddie. Thank you everyone for joining the call. As Maddie mentioned, I'm joined by Selena Verth, our CFO, and Matt Gregorowski, who leads our investor relations program with Citadel-MAGNUS. Selena and I will take you through the pages, then there'll be time for Q&A. This year we'll cover three things, the half year result, what it is and what drove it, our financials in more detail, and the full year twenty-two outlook, including why and how we will be more valuable in the future. Let's move to slide 4 in the pack. The first half FY 2022 was a very strong half, with turnover at AUD 15 billion, up 34% versus prior year. Net operating income, or NOI, at AUD 68.6 million, up 27.3%. EBITDA at AUD 20.3 million, up 88%.

We are particularly pleased to show strong growth rates across all our major metrics versus the prior period, and they all grew half on half. It was especially good to see our net operating income grow 7.2% against second half 2021. Further, our NOI in the first half of 2022 exceeded the second half 2020 result, even though that included the record volume driven by the onset of COVID in March 2020. The last two halves have produced record turnover, with the first half 2022 growing 9% over the second half 2021, which in turn grew 23% over the first half 2021. This is a sign of a very engaged client base. Moving to slide five.

In addition to being a very strong result, it's great to see the strength across the portfolio, with all segments delivering double-digit revenue growth except online sellers in Asia, where we continue to pivot to higher quality clients. Excluding that pivot, online sellers is also delivering double-digit revenue growth. Firstly, our corporate segment delivered revenue growth of 16.2% versus 1H21. It declined 6.1% versus 2H21, but that was entirely due to the unusual growth in offshore share purchases in FY 2021, not repeating in FY 2022. Excluding that, we saw growth of 26.3% versus 1H21, and 8.9% versus 2H21.

Further, as I touched on earlier, the decline in revenue in Corporate between 2H21 and 1H22 did not affect our group NOI, which grew 1H22 vs. 2H21 by 7.2%. Our Online Seller segment was flat vs. 1H21 and slightly down on 2H21, driven by the market correction in e-commerce globally. I'll describe that in more detail in a moment. As I mentioned, sorry, excluding the pivot in Asia, we grew revenue by 13.5% vs. 1H21, and 5.7% vs. 2H21. Both good results in a tight market. Our Enterprise segment is returning to growth nicely, with revenue up 40.5% vs. 1H21, and 17.5% vs. 2H21.

While the overall contribution of enterprise is still relatively small at just under 4%, it is back to generating double-digit growth for consecutive halves for the first time since fiscal year 2015, which is very encouraging indeed. More on this later. Our consumer segment has also rebounded exceptionally well, growing 28.1% versus first half 2021, and 13% versus second half 2021. We have worked very hard to ensure we continue to deliver a best-in-class product and service for our high value consumer clients everywhere. Moving to slide 6. We've shared previously that our corporate segment is valuable for its strong growth, strong returns, and client loyalty to OFX. We have grown our investment in this segment considerably in the last 2-3 years, so it's wonderful to see the progress during this half.

We grew revenue over 16% in the first half versus prior period, and every region delivered strong double-digit growth, with our North American region being the standout at 38.3% growth versus prior period. It's also terrific to see our Australian/New Zealand sub-region driving growth of over 16%, excluding the impact of offshore share purchases, despite being the largest sub-region and operating in a fiercely competitive market. Similarly, it's a sign of great health when both transactions and ATVs are growing well. That revenue growth everywhere is encouraging, especially given the high lifetime value of this segment. On the right-hand side, we are highlighting for the first time how this recurring revenue continues to grow, with the chart showing the turnover contributions from the cohorts remaining strong and sticky over time.

Underneath the chart, we've highlighted some of the deliberate actions we have taken to grow this valuable segment. Our marketing, which traditionally was largely consumer-focused, is now focused a lot more on corporate, which is bringing in more corporate opportunities. To make the most of those opportunities, we've invested heavily in our sales team's productivity, implementing better pipeline management, stronger measurement criteria, better feedback loops, and better training for our front line. Alongside that, we have worked hard to make it easier for our clients and prospects to do business with us, improving our onboarding and service channels, and giving them better product, faster and cheaper payments, and better risk management. This is especially true in North America, where the journey to create a more localized approach started 3+ years ago, and it's delivering exceptional growth now.

We intend to continue building capabilities that make sense for local clients in Europe and the U.K. also. Moving to slide seven. This is the third year since we announced a deliberate and targeted focus on the online seller segment, and it's encouraging to note the progress we've made. Revenue is up and so are active clients. COVID has seen a significant growth in e-commerce globally, although there has been a correction recently, with our Q1 showing a decline in some regions versus prior periods. Nonetheless, we're well-positioned to capture this opportunity with the advantage of being a specialist who understands and is well-equipped to support the specific needs of the marketplaces, the PSPs, the merchants, and the risks that are inherent in this model. We have been growing our global team dedicated to this segment so that it gets the right attention and focus.

Our sales and marketing efforts are increasing, too. At our Q1 update, we announced incremental promotional expense targeted at this segment in North America. This has been in market since early September, and initial results are encouraging, with registrations up 77% in September and good momentum since then. There is a lot more work to do, better product, more promotional and sales investments, more and stronger partnerships, more global expansion, and better risk management tools for our clients. Overall, we're very encouraged by the opportunity in this segment. Turning to slide 8. We're very excited by the progress we've made in our enterprise segment in the last three years. Back in fiscal year 2017, enterprise contributed 8.6% of revenue and was a healthy and EBITDA-accretive part of the portfolio.

While the focus was on other segments, as we've previously outlined, we turned our attention to growing this segment around three years ago and are now starting to see the results. After reaching a low point of just under AUD 1 million in revenue in first quarter 2021, we have grown revenue from the enterprise segment each half, and we delivered just under AUD 1.5 million in the second quarter fiscal year 2022. As well as being strong year-on-year, that is up over 14% versus first quarter 2022. What is even more encouraging is the pipeline and the activation of recent wins. In the last six months, we've announced several new programs, including the ATO, Pearler, and Douugh, all alive and contributing. We also went live with WiseTech on the sixth of October, which is already generating registrations.

Our pipeline is healthier than ever, with 20% more prospects across existing and new verticals, and every region is contributing. Our program with Link is gaining traction. However, as we shared in August, it is growing slower than we both expected. We're very happy with the relationship, and we're working with the Link team to explore ways to accelerate that growth. We think this segment will be a very strong part of OFX over the next several years as we continue to provide clients with a strong global platform, superior risk management, exceptional service, and strong account management. Moving to slide 9. We're delighted to see such a healthy consumer segment winning that rebound we were targeting.

With revenue up 28% and every region seeing good double-digit growth, we are more convinced than ever that our sweet spot is consumers who value that combination of a great digital platform, great prices, and great service, including human interaction when it's required. We saw ATVs growing 33% as consumers managed their assets with our help. Property and wealth transactions have been popular in the last 12 months in particular. What is interesting about our high-value consumer segment is that it is at its best when clients need us the most, such as during crises. When the combination I spoke of earlier, along with strong regulatory and banking support means, unlike some of our competitors, we remain open for business and able to support them. Moving to slide 10.

We always share the drivers of our turnover so that investors can see what is happening in more detail. In the first half 2022, we saw turnover grow 34% on the first half 2021, but beneath that, we saw a pickup in active clients during the half, an improvement in transactions per active client from last year, and a big step up in ATVs driving that turnover growth. Actual transactions were slightly down, again, due to the non-recurring offshore share purchases. If we exclude those, transactions were up 14.1% on the first half 2021. Again, a very healthy sign of an engaged client base. It was especially good to see the reactivation of consumer clients. Moving to slide 11. It's wonderful to see that as a global company, all our regions are performing so well, each growing revenue double-digit versus the first half 2021.

North America was the standout, delivering 32.9% revenue growth. This was especially good as their first half 2021 was actually slightly up on first half 2020. The only region to do that. We remain incredibly encouraged and committed to the region. Recently increasing our investment in the online seller segment there and announcing a 3-year partnership with the NHL to help us raise our profile and win both corporate and consumer clients. U.K. Europe was also very good. Growing revenue 26.2% in what was an especially difficult operating environment with COVID lockdowns, Brexit and political uncertainty all affecting consumer and corporate confidence. They're in good shape to grow further in the second half 2022, and our European license creates opportunities for further expansion. Here in APAC was also a great first half. With revenue up 11.2%.

In Australia and New Zealand, we grew 10.5%, but that was over 18% excluding offshore share purchases, which is outstanding given they are the largest sub region. It was also great to see Asia growing again with revenue up 20.1%. Our Asian corporate segment was particularly impressive, growing 152%. Now let me hand it over to Selena to walk you through our financials in more detail.

Selena Verth
CFO, OFX Group

Thank you, Skander. Moving to slide 13. We have delivered a strong financial result and had every region and segment growing. This highlights the value of our global operating model and targeted investments by segment. 1H22, fee and trading income or revenue was up 20.1%. The regional results were excellent, as Skander was just taking us through. All up double digits in all regions. It is also pleasing to see consumer up 28.1%, corporate up 16.2%, online sellers up 0.7% and enterprise up 40.5%, highlighting the broad sustainable growth across the portfolio. Net operating income was up 27.3%, which is a higher growth rate than revenue, as we worked hard on previous halves to improve efficiencies and have seen these come through in the first half of 2022.

Our bank fees were down 12.7% and partner commissions down 46.4%. AUD 2.3 million saving. NOI margins of 46 basis points were down 2 basis points on first half 2021, but stable on second half 2021. This is largely driven by the consumer segment. Higher ATVs reduced margins by 4 basis points, but with the increase in the consumer revenue in the second half 2022 versus first half 2021, this was offset by 2 basis points. We continue to work hard to keep margins stable. Our underlying EBITDA is AUD 20.3 million, up 88% on the first half 2021, and exceeds our pre-COVID levels, up 22.7% on the first half of 2020. This signals a strength in the underlying portfolio, our loyal customer base and a solid growth trajectory.

We delivered operating leverage for the half with underlying operating expenses up 12.1% and net operating income up 27.3%, generating EBITDA growth. This is also seen through the underlying EBITDA margin of 29.5%. As we have signaled, we intend to invest more in our North American online sellers business, so we expect this to drop in the second half of 2022. We reviewed some of our lease obligations, resulting in a reduction in depreciation and interest expense for the half of AUD 0.8 million. You'll also see a reduction for both right of use assets and lease liabilities on our balance sheet as a result. Our amortization policy for intangible assets remains unchanged, which is between three and five years.

Our tax rate is 23%, slightly below guidance of 25%, and our statutory net profit after tax is AUD 10.9 million up on both the first half of 2021 and the second half of 2021. Our cash position remains strong, with net cash held of AUD 63.1 million and net available cash of AUD 37.6 million, both up AUD 10.3 million. We also successfully closed the TreasurUp investment. Moving to slide 14. Our underlying operating expenses are AUD 48.4 million, up 12.1% on the first half of 2021 as a result of our targeted investments which are deriving good outcomes. Our employee expenses are up 13.3%, largely driven by variable compensation that is accrued for fiscal year 2022 as a result of the excellent performance in the first half of 2022.

We have just over 400 employees, with 170 of them in revenue generating roles, being sales, dealing, marketing and customer service, and we continue to invest in these areas. Promotional costs are AUD 7.9 million, up 15.1% with an increased investment in brand campaigns across our major markets. Search spend now makes up less than 40% of the promotional costs. The OFXpert campaign continues to resonate and we have seen first 3-month revenue from customers up 31.3%. Technology costs of AUD 3.8 million, up 38.1%, and as guided, we continue to increase as we invest in reliable scalable systems and risk management.

You can see the direct output of this investment with bad and doubtful debts at zero for the half, as fraud losses have significantly reduced and we have had some recoveries on prior write-offs. We could not be more pleased with this investment, but remain as vigilant as always to new and different types of fraud. As discussed at the AGM, when we presented the first quarter 2022 results, we continue to invest to grow the business. Over and above what we have already discussed, we have also just released a North American online seller campaign to drive momentum in the second half of 2022. We are proud, we are a proud sponsor of the National Hockey League in North America. The NHL is the world's pre-eminent hockey league and is the most popular league in Canada and fourth most popular in the U.S.

It also has the most affluent fan base. Turning to slide 15. We continue to have a strong balance sheet, no debt, and generate good cash flows. Our net cash held position, which includes cash held for own use and deposits due from financial institutions, AUD 63.1 million, up AUD 2.6 million from 31 March 2021. We hold some of this cash as collateral for our trading lines in a bank guarantee. Collateral and bank guarantees are relatively constant at AUD 25.5 million, resulting in net available cash of AUD 37.6 million, up AUD 0.8 million on the 31st of March 2021. Cash flows from operating activities is AUD 19.6 million, which is an excellent cash conversion rate from our underlying EBITDA of AUD 20.3 million.

Of the AUD 19.6 million of cash from operating activities, we've invested AUD 5.1 million in intangible assets as we continue to deliver our single scalable platform and our payment and risk capabilities. We also successfully closed the TreasurUp investment of AUD 6.1 million and purchased just over 1.9 million shares as part of our share buyback program for AUD 2.65 million instead of paying a dividend. You'll see our balance sheet now includes the investment at cost of AUD 4.7 million and a loan to TreasurUp as we have closed the transaction. The TreasurUp team has a really nice pipeline of activity to generate future growth. Slide 16 is an overview of ongoing capital investment in our global operating model, reliable and scalable systems, risk management, and people. This slide is only the investment in tangible assets.

There has also been considerable investment in people, software as a service, and in service delivery. In the first half of 2022, our investment of AUD 5.1 million has included delivering better payment capabilities across four key currencies, being the Philippine peso, Indonesian rupiah, Malaysian ringgit, and the Indian rupee, and more to come. This not only reduces the settlement time from days to minutes for our customers, but also provides bank fee cost reductions so everyone wins. We've improved customer verification tools in the U.K. with consumer conversion rates up 130 basis points and continuing to improve. We've also implemented improved onboarding processes for online sellers, customers, and have gone live for the first week of October with our CargoWise solution with WiseTech. A great success for both teams as they work so well together to create a great client experience.

We're expecting the investment in tangibles to increase in the second half of 2022 and remain at the AUD 12.6 million level for a year or so as we continue to work in the payments excellence, risk management, and customer services space. These investments provide a return via growing enterprise revenue, lower cost of payments, and increased revenue from conversion rates. I will now hand back to Skander to take us through the fiscal year 2022 outlook.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Thank you, Selena, for that excellent coverage of our financial performance. In this section, I will share with you our view of the rest of fiscal year 2022 and touch on how we feel about our future. Turning to slide 18. We've worked very hard over the last 2 years, in particular, to get a deep understanding of what the opportunity is for OFX, where we wanna play, and how we can be distinctive. If we execute against that, why we will be a more valuable company in the future. This slide summarizes that thinking. Firstly, our total addressable market, or TAM, is huge, with McKinsey estimating the total cross-border payments market at over AUD 130 trillion in turnover per annum. We have a small fraction of that, supporting just over AUD 25 billion in payments last year.

The economic outlook for the countries and regions where cross-border payments are largest and where we are located, particularly the U.S., the U.K. and Australia, is very good, with GDP growth in those markets in 2021 calendar year estimated at 6.3%, 5.5%, and 4.4% respectively. Healthy and growing economies tend to support increased economic activity, including trade. We have targeted segments of the $130 trillion market that we see as being valuable and where we believe we can be distinctive. Consumers who value great rates and digital plus human service delivery typically send larger transactions than consumers who value a purely digital platform or who send smaller amounts for remittance use cases. In a growing economic climate, we expect that segment to return to growth.

Corporate or SME clients who also value great rates, a digital plus human service, and the expertise of a company able to help, will typically do very well in a growing economic climate also. We expect that segment to grow even faster than consumers. SMEs who specialize through e-commerce are expected to do very well indeed in the year ahead. Again, we see strong growth from them through our online seller segment. Finally, we see more and more enterprise clients flourishing in an increasingly global economy. We also see strong future growth from them, particularly as global banks retreat from this segment.

While each of these segments will grow, it's our job to win disproportionately by being distinctive and executing better than competitors. I have mentioned that our research tells us that the heart of what clients in these segments want is a great digital platform supported by human service to provide expertise where it's valued. To execute that well, we've laid out those elements that we believe and clients have told us are most important. The winners will have a single global platform that provides a world-class payment experience, both in terms of the product and the service, supported by strong risk management and run by the best team. We believe that by unlocking that opportunity through those segments with our execution, we can build an even more valuable company characterized by healthy revenue growth, high recurring revenue, strong EBITDA at attractive EBITDA margins that generates good cash flow.

As we foreshadowed, we see the industry consolidating, and we see ourselves as well-positioned to participate in that. Turning to slide 19, this is a bit more detail on what we're prioritizing in order to win in each segment. In consumer, we'll be focused in the near term on faster, safer, and easier onboarding, with better currencies to use and better pricing. In corporate, we'll also focus on a better, faster, and easier onboarding experience, as well as invest in the risk management tools we know this segment values. We're already learning a lot about what matters and how to execute this digitally through our investment in TreasurUp, and look forward to bringing this to our clients in due course. In online sellers, we're also investing in a better, faster, and easier onboarding experience, as well as more currencies and more payment options.

We have a great marketplace integration with Amazon, and we'll be exploring others in the near term, as well as enhancing what we have. In enterprise, we have a great pipeline and are investing in more people to help us take these opportunities through the pipeline. However, while we will continue to work through these opportunities, we'll also be working hard with existing clients to ensure their customers are getting the best from OFX. A better digital experience through our APIs and more streamlined services in due course. Turning to slide 20, we are well positioned to grow in the post-COVID era. Firstly, we believe our pivot to focus on corporate, online seller, and enterprise segments will be more valuable due to the economic output favoring these segments.

COVID has meant that governments in most countries have reacted with strong fiscal and monetary stimulus, and in turn, GDP growth outlooks look very positive. In a post-COVID world, a larger exposure to these segments, therefore, is a good tailwind, as in general, strong GDP growth ordinarily means SMEs and enterprises growing well as the engine of that economic growth. Secondly, for many years, we've invested carefully and deliberately in our infrastructure and have long believed in the value of working with tier one banks around the world to ensure we have great capabilities and strong liquidity when it's needed. In a post-COVID world where risks are growing, we believe the strength of our banking partners will be more valuable. As regulators and banks globally become more focused on balance sheets, risk management, and governance, all of which we excel at.

Thirdly, like many, we have been investing in technology for many years. In our case, our CapEx associated with technology has grown substantially since fiscal year 2018 as we've built a more contemporary global platform with more emphasis on scalability, security, and client experience. We see lots of good technologies in the market, but very few companies who can combine it with the global network, the global banking partnerships, and the client base and understanding we have. We believe we are very well placed to get substantial returns from this in time, such as what Selena described with our investment in fraud and biometric tools. More than that, it will mean faster payments than peers, better payment options, and lower costs over time.

In a post-COVID world, having a single contemporary global platform delivering a better client experience at a lower cost will be a differentiator versus competitors who lack scale or differentiation. Moving to slide 21, we can confirm our prior guidance for fiscal year 2022. We will continue to invest in the areas that make us more valuable, regional growth in North America particularly, but also globally. We will invest and grow our corporate online seller and enterprise segments as a priority. We will win prospects in our enterprise pipeline and activate the ones we already have. We will continue to win the rebound in consumer as it happens. As we do those, we expect our financial results to be healthy. NOI growth of 10%+ at stable NOI margins.

We will preserve the principle of delivering positive annual operating leverage, though we will keep an eye on opportunities to invest and may do that if we deem the opportunity to be in the medium-term interest of our shareholders. Thank you for your time. Now let me hand back to Maddie for any questions.

Operator

Thank you. As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please enter your question in the Q&A tab at the bottom of your Zoom screen, along with your name and company, and your question will be read out. Alternatively, please use the raise your hand function. We will then unmute you, and you may ask your question.

Our first question will come from Lafferty. Tim, please may you unmute Lafferty. Thank you.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Am I unmuted? Can you hear me?

Operator

Yes, thank you.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Sure. It's Lafitani or Laf from MST. I've got a few questions, if I may. The first one is in relation to Slide 8, the enterprise page. It's good to see some strong progress coming through there. I just wonder if you could add some comments around some of the previous guidance on revenue. You had AUD 5 million odd for WiseTech. I know that one's only early, but for Link you've got AUD 5 million as well. Are both those figures still current? If you could just add some comments around some of the ones that have gone live, Pearler, Douugh, ATO. Is the run rate as per expectations?

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Sure. So maybe I'll jump in. First of all, as you say, WiseTech is very new, so we're very confident in the registrations we're already getting in WiseTech and the integration. For those of you who are able to attend the Goldman Sachs Tech Conference, you heard Richard White, CEO, talk a lot about what it meant for WiseTech. We're very encouraged by the progress so far. On Link, as we've highlighted on the slide there, the activation has been slower than expected, and that's really been caused by a couple of things. The first one is obviously coming out of COVID. You saw about a quarter of all ASX 200 clients of Link's reduce their dividends. The opportunity wasn't what was in our original case.

Really the second piece was what we both wanted to do was have a fully integrated digital experience, and we haven't been able to do that as yet. That's why we have said, in this case, it's been slower than I or we both expected. Having said that, we're very encouraged. We really love the business case, and as we've seen in other examples, when you're integrated and you have a fully digital program that delivers clients that sort of exceptional service, we're very confident that, you know, we'll continue to grow that and we'll grow it well. As I said in the note, we're also exploring other opportunities with Link to continue to grow that portfolio.

In terms of the clients that are in the activation stage, so as you say, Pearler and Douugh and ATO, they're all activating well. We're very happy with that. They're all in line with what we were seeing. We don't guide on individual clients because clearly, in many cases, they're very new use cases. It's difficult to have sort of what I would call reliable assumptions underpinning guidance. We don't guide on those individual cases.

I would also highlight that in that enterprise segment, as I said in my note, in the remarks, sorry, you know, it's also very important to remember our existing clients and obviously we have some of those, and it's great to see the bounce back in activity and progress in those particular clients.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Okay, thanks for that. Just moving on to the balance sheet. You can see there's obvious improvement in the cash balance. Can you just update the thoughts around the current buyback versus dividend policy that's in place?

Selena Verth
CFO, OFX Group

Yeah. Consistent with what we said at the full year results for 2021 is, in the near term, we see the share buyback replacing the dividend in the near term. It is a distribution of capital back to shareholders. It gives us a little bit more flexibility, which is nice, and as you can see that we closed the TreasurUp deal. Now, we like how it's been going. It's been very successful. So far we've purchased 1.9 million shares for AUD 2.65 million. We will continue the share buyback program. Look, there wasn't a lot of volume in the last few months, so it was a little difficult, but we'll continue that share buyback program. We like what it gives us.

It provides a capital return but also flexibility at the same time. Now, with the cash on the balance sheet, yes, it is high, it is higher. For our business, we do need to hold about AUD 15 million of cash for working capital. Also, what we like is in times of high volatility, you do need to post collateral to keep trading. You do want some cash there, so if a huge volatile event hit, you wanna keep trading 'cause that is very good for the business. If we see opportunities out there to invest, that cash allows us to do that.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Are you able to expand on some of those opportunities, what you see as priorities, for the business? Just can we wrap it up in terms of a broader discussion around both organic and inorganic development within the business? You know, some of your overseas competitors are looking to add sort of investments attached to the multi-currency accounts they've got in various jurisdictions to try and create new revenue opportunities. Are there things that you're looking at that would create new revenue in addition to just increasing the service and speed of your offering?

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Yeah. Maybe I'll take that one, Lafitani. First of all, as Selena outlined in terms of the way we invest, we're looking at, you know, a very strong and healthy product roadmap that includes ways in which we could generate alternative revenue from, let's say, the core FX margin. That said, we're incredibly disciplined about what actually really matters to a client as opposed to a company trying to cross-sell various products because they're trying to diversify their revenue. What we know, particularly in our corporate and online seller segments, is they do value a couple of other areas, and we've laid that out in the past that are on our product roadmap. You should expect to see those over time.

In the organic space as well, you know, as Selena outlined, if you look at, for example, investments in payment corridors, we can actually provide, you know, better value faster, which in turn gives us, you know, more net operating income and a more engaged client. So that's our kind of sweet spot of organic investments. On the inorganic side, as you said, there's a lot of activity. We've been very, very mindful of that. We're very, very clear about our inorganic strategy, as we've previously guided to the market. You know, we've got a corporate development focus with the board. We talk about it. TreasurUp was the first of those investments. We're certainly seeing out in the market that, you know, companies are consolidating because in many cases they're getting up to sort of 3- or 4-year-plus holds.

Also, not all companies are able to sort of grow beyond their core portfolio. Also some companies have less capabilities, globally than us. All of those create opportunities for us, and we're actively working through those with the board.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Okay, just one final question from me. Is there any comment around the NOI guidance? I mean, your first half's up 27% versus PCP. It's still sitting at 10% for the year. Is that just a case of leaving it as per the full year, what was set at the full year result or,

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Yeah.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Is there a reason why it wasn't updated?

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

It's actually 10%+. It's not 10%.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Still.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Just for clarity. Look, you know, we love the growth in NOI. Obviously, we're coming off a softer comp in the first half, but there were also a couple of things that were going on. You saw consumer ATVs jump substantially with, you know, the post-COVID rebound, in particular use cases. That's the highest they've ever been in the company's history. You know, whether they remain at those levels, it's very hard for us to forecast. Secondly, you know, you still have to be very mindful about what's going on out in global markets. We love the NOI growth. We're certainly reconfirming our commitment to 10%+, and obviously we'll continue to update the market if we think it's gonna be dramatically different to that. We're very happy with the growth that we're getting.

Lafitani Sotiriou
Senior Emerging Analyst, MST Financial

Thank you, guys. Thanks.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Pleasure.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Seth Hoskin at Canaccord. Seth, please unmute yourself.

Seth Hoskin
Equity Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Australia

Thanks, operator, and hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. Just continuing on the NOI guidance question, it really is just sort of about near-term macroeconomic uncertainty and particularly use cases. Is that what you're pointing to?

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Yeah, it's a comp question, Seth. You know, we really like it. Let's be very clear about that. As we've been very clear about and consistent about, we're actually working all of the levers on NOI. We care a lot about how we run our margins. We care a lot about things like bank fees. We care a lot about partner commissions. All of those are trending in the right direction. As you say, there's a bit of a macro backdrop around, okay, well, what are clients thinking? You know, what are the use cases in consumer? How will online sellers, you know, evolve over the next 6 to 12 months? There are some uncertainties in there.

We just felt, you know, we're more in a sort of keep promise mode than make promise mode, and we just felt it would be prudent to retain that 10% plus. And again, if there were substantial changes, we'll update the market.

Seth Hoskin
Equity Analyst, Canaccord Genuity Australia

Sorry, apologies, guys. I actually am having a few technical issues, so I'm gonna have to jump back into the queue. Thanks for the answer.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

All right.

Operator

Thank you, Seth. Our next question is from Helen Manning. She asks, "Will you be resuming paying dividends and when?

Selena Verth
CFO, OFX Group

Yeah. As we answered a couple of questions ago, the policy at the moment is in the near term, we're doing a share buyback instead of paying a dividend. We like the flexibility that gives us. It's also a great way to redistribute capital to shareholders. We'll continue to look at that. We always have discussions with board. Is that the right approach? In the near term, that is the strategy, and then we will revisit that in due course.

Operator

Thank you, Selena. Our next question is from Lafitani Sotiriou. He asks, "Does positive operating leverage excluding capitalized spending?

Selena Verth
CFO, OFX Group

Yes. Our definition of positive operating leverage is basically that your NOI is growing faster than your operating expenses, which effectively generates EBITDA growth. Expenses are your operating expenses for your P&L. It doesn't include your capitalized costs.

Operator

Thank you. We have another question from Mark Williams, who asks, "Can you comment on seasonality in the business? Historically, the second half has been stronger than the first half.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Thanks, Mark, and maybe I'll tackle that one. Yeah. You can observe that over time, but it's not dramatic. You know, typically the seasonality that you might be referring to is in the EBITDA line, where we tend to normally spend more promotional expense in the first half than the second half, and that's because we wanna generate as many new dealing clients as possible to get as much as possible. What I would say is, though, if you think about this first half versus the second half. You've got an absolutely exceptional, bad debt outcome. I don't think that's ever been produced, certainly not in my time. So, you know, don't count that for your second half estimate, because obviously we'll keep very, very vigilant, and we're not aware of anything at this point.

It's always a challenge to, you know, keep on top of our fraudsters and bad actors. I'd say the other thing is we've made it very plain to the market that where we see advantages, such as, for example, you know, our approved PSP status with Amazon, we're gonna go spend money because we really like that advantage. As I touched on, you know, the team decided to go and invest extra promo expense in our online sellers segment. For that reason, we were getting some really nice leads, so we wanted to do that. Sometimes the timing of expense too, in the second half, you know, can be affected by those opportunities. You know, there is a bit of seasonality, but I wouldn't say it's dramatic.

We're absolutely pushing to continue to invest where we see opportunity.

Operator

Thank you, Skander. I will now ask for a final reminder for Q&A. If you wish to ask a question, please enter your question into the Q&A box at the bottom of your screen or raise your hand. There are no further questions today. I will now hand back to Mr. Malcolm for closing remarks.

Skander Malcolm
Managing Director and CEO, OFX Group

Thanks, Maddie, and thank you to all who joined the call. We're obviously delighted with this result, and we look forward to catching up with you individually over the next few weeks to answer any further questions you have.

Operator

Thank you, Skander. That concludes our conference for today. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

Powered by