Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Auto Trader's half year results for the six months ending the 30th of September 2022. Today, I am joined by our CFO, Jamie, and our COO, Catherine, who will join me for Q&A at the end of the presentation. Due to tube strikes in London, we've reverted back to a virtual presentation, but we hope to see you all in person for our full year results next year. Our performance for the first half of the year demonstrates the strength of our marketplace and the quality of the partnerships we have with customers. While looking forward, the economic environment is uncertain, we are well-positioned to navigate the months ahead and to support our customers and car buyers to do the same. I'd like to thank our people, customers, shareholders, and wider stakeholders for their continued trust in our business.
Importantly, our people have not only delivered strong financial results, but have delivered products and solutions that will underpin growth for many years to come. Our partnerships across the business feel stronger than ever, and our core marketplace continues to deliver for our customers. There will no doubt be challenges ahead. However, the strength of these results during a period where industry-wide audience stock and transaction volumes were all down on the previous year, gives us confidence in navigating the second half of the year. Starting with our strategic overview. The performance of the core Auto Trader marketplace has strengthened over the last six months. We've achieved double-digit year-on-year growth in revenue and operating profit for the first time since 2016. Our customer numbers and product uptake have exceeded expectations, and our competitive position remains strong with no meaningful change in the competitor landscape.
In April 2022, we delivered our annual pricing event, including our Auto Trader Connect platform and its first module, Retail Essentials, which gives customers access to our most fundamental and powerful data, including our taxonomy, improving advert quality, pricing decisions, and enabling stock to be updated on Auto Trader and across other sales channels in real time. Beyond Retail Essentials, uptake of other products continues to be strong. We've seen further growth in our prominence products, including our new high-level advertising packages, Market Extension, and our pay-per-click product, which appears at the top of search listings. We've also seen more customers buying into our data products using real-time pricing, demand, and supply data to ensure they're staying on top of market changes, either using our Dealer Portal or with our APIs and their own operational systems.
Providing consumers with the confidence and ability to complete more of the car buying journey on Auto Trader remains a key focus. We've launched a small trial for our Deal Builder journey on Auto Trader, which combines part exchange, reservations, and finance applications to form an end-to-end journey for car buyers. While it is early days, feedback so far from both retailers and car buyers has been encouraging. On the 22nd of June, 2022, we completed the acquisition of Autorama, one of the U.K.'s largest marketplaces for leasing new vehicles. We believe there is a significant structural opportunity for new car leasing driven by the growth of electric cars, new manufacturers entering the U.K. market, lower take-up of company car schemes, and the shift towards digital distribution models.
Over time, by leveraging Auto Trader's platform, we can create a compelling proposition for manufacturers, retailers, and funders, while also reducing customer acquisition costs for Autorama. In the short term, Autorama's trading has been more challenging due to the acute supply constraints across all new vehicle types. However, we know that in time, this will normalize. Given much of the integration work is currently ongoing, we don't expect performance to improve for the remainder of this financial year. With the changes that we're making with Autorama, we expect an improved performance in FY 2024 and beyond. Now turning to the group financial results. Following the acquisition of Autorama, we're now reporting segmented results for Auto Trader and Autorama. The Auto Trader segment is the same view we used to provide in results prior to the acquisition. Group revenue increased by 16%.
Auto Trader revenue increased by 11%, and Autorama contributed GBP 11.6 million pounds since acquisition. Group operating profit declined by 2%, made up of Auto Trader operating profit growth of 11%, a GBP 4 million pounds operating loss at Autorama, and central costs relating to the acquisition of GBP 15.7 million pounds. Group operating profit margin was 60%, with Auto Trader's operating margin broadly flat at 71%. Basic EPS and cash from operations were both down 3%. Excluding the Autorama deferred consideration charge, group operating profit was up 7% and basic EPS up 8%. During the period, we returned GBP 82.3 million pounds of cash to shareholders through a combination of GBP 51.7 million pounds in dividends and GBP 30.6 million pounds before transaction costs in share buybacks.
Today, we are also declaring an interim dividend of GBP 0.028 per share. Now on to our operational results. The average number of cross-platform visits were down by 10% to 67.7 million per month, but remained 18% above pre-pandemic levels recorded in the first half of 2020. Engagement, measured as the volume of cross-platform minutes, was down by 14%, but up 11% on pre-pandemic levels, again in the first half of 2020. We remain the U.K.'s largest and most engaged automotive marketplace for new and used cars, and continue to account for over 75% of time spent across our main competitor set. The average number of retailer forecourts advertising with us grew 2% to 14,161, and during the period, both new business and cancellations have remained reasonably balanced.
Average revenue per retailer per month or ARPA was up by GBP 205 to GBP 2,404, driven by both price and product levers, with stock broadly flat. It is important to remember that stock is a much bigger driver of our financial performance than retailer numbers. Average car stock on site increased by 1% for the period. New car stock declined to an average of 22,000, and used car stock increased 5%. Finally, the average number of full-time equivalent employees increased to 1,112 during the period, with Autorama contributing an average of 122 when we pro-rate their 218 employees. On an underlying basis, Auto Trader employees increased 5% year-on-year. Finally, our cultural KPIs.
We're currently working through the equivalent Autorama measures and will include these at the full year. All measures below relate only to the Auto Trader segment. In our most recent check-in survey in October 2022, 93% of employees said they were proud to work at Auto Trader. We're also making good progress on creating a diverse and inclusive workplace, which is central to the culture at Auto Trader. Our board is majority women and has ethnically diverse representation. Within the organization, women represent 40% of our workforce and women in leadership has increased also to 40%. Ethnically diverse employees represented 15% of the organization, however, only 5% of leadership, highlighting the work we still have to do in this area. We have targets validated by the Science Based Targets initiative for CO2 emissions and have submitted our net zero target for validation.
Our greenhouse gas emissions for the first half are estimated at 3,800 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent across scopes one, two, and three. We are currently building bottom-up plans to meet our goal of net zero before 2040 and to halve carbon emissions before the end of 2030. I'll now hand over to Jamie, who will take us through the financials in more detail.
Thank you, Nathan, and good morning, everyone. Starting with Auto Trader revenue, which includes the results of Auto Trader, AutoConvert, Carzone, and the share of profit from our joint venture Dealer Auction. Total Auto Trader revenue for the first half increased 11% to GBP 238.2 million. Trader revenue also increased by 11%, with the largest component of this being retailer revenue, which also grew by the same 11%. The year-on-year increase was largely a result of customers continuing to see value in advertising on our marketplace and taking additional products. The average number of retailers advertising with us increased to 14,161, which was up 2% compared with the same period last year.
Average revenue per retailer increased by 9% year-over-year to GBP 2,404 per month, with more details given on the following slide. Also within trade, we've seen an increase in Home Trader Pay As You Go listings, which increased 16% alongside small growth in other trade revenue. Consumer services increased by 4%. Within this, private revenue, which is largely generated from individual sellers who pay to advertise their vehicles on our marketplace, increased by 12%. There was also a contribution of GBP 0.4 million within this line from our Instant Offer product, which allows consumers to quickly sell their car from home with a guaranteed price. Motoring services decreased 9% in the period, mainly due to a decline in insurance revenue.
Revenue from manufacturing agency customers increased marginally to GBP 5.2 million, as new car advertising continues to be impacted by supply challenges. Now on to ARPA, live car stock and retailers. As mentioned, ARPA increased by 9% year-on-year, with the average revenue per retailer generated across the period at GBP 2,404 per month. The chart on the left shows the components that co-contribute to the movement in ARPA compared to the prior year. As you can see, the increase was driven by both the price and product levers, with the stock lever broadly flat. We delivered our annual pricing event on the 1st of April 2022, and this contributed the majority of the GBP 72 price lever, equating to an effective increase of just over 3%.
Products contributed GBP 133 of growth year on year, with the breakdown as follows. Half of this product growth was a result of retailers purchasing more of our three prominence products. These were increasing penetration on our higher yielding Enhanced, Super, and Ultra packages, with 32% of retailer stock on one of these packages above our standard level in September 2022 versus 25% the year before. Our Market Extension product, allowing retailers to sell outside of their local area, had 6% of retailer stock on the product by the end of the period, and there was some contribution from our PPC product, where retailers can boost visibility of their stock in search through pay-per-click campaigns.
Beyond prominence, Auto Trader Connect Retail Essentials module made up much of the remaining growth, which is included in retailer packages as part of our annual pricing event in April 2022. There was also some small contribution from growth in our data products and AutoConvert. Looking now at stock, the chart on the right shows the profile of live physical car stock, which increased 1% in the period. As usual, we stripped out the impact of new cars and provide underlying used car live stock, the darker of the two lines. It's important to note that the stock lever is not driven by live stock, but by the number of paid stock units. Underlying used car live stock increased by 5% in the period.
About a third of this increase was due to increased private listings, meaning underlying trade listings increased just over 3% as we saw supply improve slightly versus the previous year. This increase, though, has led to a reduction in underutilized paid units, a trend that was unique to the market volatility created by COVID-19, meaning the stock level was flat for the period. Total Auto Trader costs increased by 8% to GBP 70.5 million. People costs increased by 5% to GBP 36.9 million. The increase in people cost was primarily driven by an increase in the average number of full-time equivalent employees. This also increased by 5% to 990 as we continue to invest in people to support the growth of the business.
Marketing spend for the period increased by 8% to GBP 11.4 million, which was equal to 4.8% of revenue, consistent with previous years. Other costs, which include data services, property-related costs, and other overheads, increased by 17%. The increase was primarily due to increased overhead costs, including the return of travel, office, and people-related costs and higher IT spend as we completed the transition of all our services and applications to the cloud. Depreciation and amortization decreased marginally to GBP 3.3 million. Capital expenditure in the period was GBP 1.1 million, which is a decrease against the prior period, largely due to investments in our Manchester office in H1 2022. Our low levels of CapEx and depreciation are not a reflection of low levels of investment in our business.
In addition to our investment in cloud-based services, we have over 350 people in product and technology who are continuously improving our platforms and developing new products for consumers and retailers, the cost for which are taken in full through our income statement in people costs. With revenue up 11%, costs increasing 8%, and a GBP 1.1 million contribution from our share of Dealer Auction's profit, operating profit was GBP 168.8 million. This was an increase of 11% on the prior year, and our operating profit margin was broadly flat at 71%. Now on to Autorama's results. Autorama revenue was GBP 11.6 million, with vehicle and accessory sales contributing GBP 7.1 million and commission and ancillary revenue contributing GBP 4.5 million.
Vehicle and accessory sales is the gross revenue for vehicles that pass through the balance sheet. Our primary focus over time is growing commission and ancillary revenues. Total deliveries were 2,747, which was made up of circa 1,900 cars, 600 vans, and 200 pickups. Whilst these units were lower than anticipated, it is worth noting that vans and pickups have been particularly challenged, reflecting weak transaction volumes caused by lack of supply. Average commission and ancillary revenue per unit delivered was GBP 1,635, which was lower than previously reported due to a significantly higher mix of cars. The Autorama business delivered 270 vehicles, which were taken onto balance sheet in the period from 22nd of June to 30th of September. This represented 10% of total vehicles delivered.
The cost of these vehicles is taken through cost of goods sold with the corresponding revenue in vehicle and accessory sales. People costs of GBP 3.7 million was through the 218 FTEs, which were employed on average through the period. Marketing costs were GBP 1.7 million, which was spent on a combination of brand and performance channels. Other costs of GBP 2.5 million related to IT services, property, people-related costs and other overheads. There was depreciation of fixed assets and some amortization of developed software totaling GBP 0.7 million. The operating loss for the period since acquisition on the 22nd of June to the end of September was GBP 4 million.
With total group revenue up 16%, group costs increasing 56%, which includes the GBP 13.8 million of Autorama deferred consideration and a GBP 1.1 million contribution from our share of Dealer Auction's profit, total group operating profit was GBP 149.1 million. This was a decrease of 2% on the prior year, and group operating profit margin was 60%. Cash generated from operations decreased 3% to GBP 164.6 million. The year-on-year decrease in cash generated from operations was bigger than operating profit, mainly due to a negative movement in working capital, in part due to a lower VAT liability at the period end and an increase in debtors given higher revenues. The statutory income statement outlines areas beyond our revenue and operating costs.
Net finance costs reduced by 35% to GBP 1.1 million due to lower amortized debt issue costs. Our profit before tax was GBP 148 million, and our effective tax rate was higher than the standard U.K. rate of 19% due to the Autorama deferred consideration charge being nondeductible. Basic EPS decreased by 3% due to the decrease in profit after tax. Earnings per share, excluding Autorama's deferred consideration, increased by 8% to GBP 0.137. As Nathan said earlier, the directors are recommending an interim dividend of GBP 0.028 per share. Moving now to net bank debt and capital structure.
In the period, the group has drawn on its revolving credit facility to fund part of the initial consideration relating to the Autorama acquisition and are now in a net debt position of GBP 57.4 million at the end of the period. The group had drawn GBP 75 million of its GBP 250 million unsecured revolving credit facility and had cash balances of GBP 17.6 million. Cash generated from operations of GBP 164.6 million was used to pay GBP 1.1 million of CapEx and lease payments of GBP 1.6 million. In cash terms, we paid GBP 1.6 million of interest and GBP 31.4 million of corporation tax. There was a GBP 3.9 million loan facility held by Autorama, which was paid off on completion of the acquisition.
Net cash outflow on acquisitions of GBP 153.2 million was made up of GBP 150 million consideration paid for Autorama, less cash acquired of GBP 58.8 million and a final GBP 8.1 million deferred consideration payment relating to the acquisition of AutoConvert. Of the remaining free cash flow, GBP 51.7 million was paid in dividends and GBP 30.8 million, inclusive of fees, was used to buy back shares at an average price of GBP 6.195. In total, we've returned GBP 82.3 million to shareholders in the year. The group's long-term capital allocation policy remains broadly unchanged, continuing to invest in the business, enabling it to grow while returning around 1/3 of net income to shareholders in the form of dividends.
Following these activities, any surplus cash, such as that received from the disposal of Webzone, will be used to continue our share buyback program and steadily reduce gross indebtedness. It is the Board's long-term intention that the group will return to a net cash position. Before closing the financial section, I wanted to make everyone aware of two post-balance-sheet events. The first was the sale of one of our subsidiaries, Webzone Limited, operating under the Carzone brand in Ireland, which was sold for EUR 30 million in October and will create a profit on disposal of circa GBP 19 million, which appears below operating profit. The second event involved a defined benefit pension scheme which the company sponsors. Also in October, we purchased a bulk annuity, effectively reducing the risk and exposure of the scheme.
While there is circa GBP 2 million-GBP 3 million of costs likely to be incurred in the financial year for this exercise, which is accounted for in the outlook statement, it yields longer-term savings in overheads and reduces risk that a change in asset values or increased liabilities could have left the scheme underfunded. That concludes the financials. I'll now pass over to Catherine to take you through our market and product update.
Thank you, Jamie, and good morning, everyone. Moving on to slide 15. Demand for both new and used cars remains robust, but we continue to see supply shortages impacting new cars and segments of the used car market. New car registrations in the six months to September 2022 were circa 800,000, 11% below the first half of last year, with semiconductor shortages and supply chain challenges continuing to impact the volume of new cars available for sale in the U.K. New car registrations were weaker in the fleet segment, down 17% year-on-year, and light commercial vehicle registrations were down 28% year-on-year over the same period. These constraints have also impacted used cars.
Used car transactions were 16% below prior year levels in our first half, as the knock-on impact of low volumes of new car supply in 2020 and 2021 impacted used volumes. This reduced availability of younger cars has particularly impacted our franchise customer segments. Inflation is driving a rise in the cost of living for U.K. consumers and has the potential to impact the demand for vehicles in the short term. Although we are seeing only a relatively small impact on our marketplace. As we did last financial year, we have included transactions data from financial year 2006 to highlight the relatively low levels of cyclicality, particularly in used cars through the economic cycle. For many consumers, purchasing a car is considered a necessity and not a discretionary purchase.
Buyers might trade down on the price of the car or reduce usage, but typically do not forgo the transaction itself. Auto Trader's financial history is hard to analyze as the last U.K. recession coincided with our shift from print to digital. That said, it is our belief that our market position, the quality and scale of consumer engagement on our platform, the partnership we have with our customers and our commercial model all means we are well placed to weather challenging times. We continue to publish a monthly price index of cars advertised by retailers on Auto Trader, the results of which are shown in this chart. Our live retail data on market pricing has been adopted by the Office for National Statistics to power the U.K. Consumer Price Index.
This reflects the scale and accuracy of our data and is an important step towards our goal to be the data currency that powers the industry. The dark blue line on the chart shows the average price of a vehicle advertised since 2014, which you can see has grown over time and accelerated over the past two years in particular. Despite some softening in the year-on-year growth rate over the last six months, prices remain materially above where they would have been in normal market conditions as continued robust levels of demand, combined with constrained supply, is supporting price stability. We see a more stable pricing backdrop as month-to-month movements in pricing levels are either in line with or ahead of historical averages.
For example, the movement in prices from August into September was up by 0.2% against an average movement of - 0.7% over the eight-year period prior to the pandemic. By grouping cars by type, age, and fuel type in the chart, we have isolated the impact of underlying like-for-like price increases. As you can see, in the last 18 months, we have seen like-for-like price increases above 20% in comparison to the prior year. Although, as we have lapped strong comparative periods, the growth rate towards the end of the half are slowing. This is a trend we expect to continue over the second half of the year as the market returns to a more normal pricing environment.
As shown in the first chart, the U.K. car park remained broadly flat through calendar year 2021 at 35.1 million cars, with new car transactions and scrappage rates remaining fairly consistent. The second chart shows how consistently the car park has turned over the past 16 years. Over this period, on average, each car is transacting between three point one and three point five years, except in 2020, where due to the impact of enforced COVID-related showroom closures and the reduced levels of activity, frequency increased to four point two years. As we recovered from the pandemic in 2021, levels of activity increased, although the transaction rate remains above pre-COVID levels due to supply issues, resulting in frequency decreasing to three point eight years. The total number of car transactions each year is shown in the third chart.
In calendar year 2021, 35.1 million cars turned on average every three point eight years and resulted in 9.1 million total transactions, of which 1.6 million were new car sales and 7.5 million were used, an increase of 10% compared to 2020. Over the six months, our audience position has remained strong in comparison to pre-Covid levels. Starting in the top left, this year we have changed the source data from Google Analytics to Snowplow, a market leading analytics tool and key component of our data platform strategy. Prior periods have been restated for both visits and minutes to aid comparison. Cross-platform visits decreased by 10% to 67.7 million per month, but were 18% above the pre-pandemic levels recorded in H1 2020.
Engagement, which we measure as the total number of minutes spent on our platforms, decreased by 14% to an average of 498 million minutes. Although again remained strong against pre-pandemic levels, up 11% against H1 2020. We have maintained our position as the U.K.'s largest and most engaged automotive marketplace for new and used cars with our share of total minutes amongst our main competitor set, as measured by Comscore, remaining strong at over 75%. The chart on the right shows the total minutes spent across an expanded set of competitors, retailers, and manufacturers. It shows that we continue to have a significant lead in terms of both volume and engagement against both our closest competitor and all other marketplace participants.
Our traditional competitors have not changed significantly over the past six months, and we have not seen new entrants nor players exiting the market. We continue to be significantly larger than those retailers who are large enough to appear in Comscore and all manufacturer websites combined. Now onto our product update. We continue to make good progress against our three strategic priorities. Our classified marketplace is at the center of our strategy. Our marketplace is still very much the core of our business and has lots of opportunities for growth. The platform layer is where we've taken the technology and data platforms that power Auto Trader and made these services available to retailers and other partners, helping them to save costs, time, and improve yield. Integration work with the technology partners is well progressed for the Auto Trader Connect Retail Essentials module and is underway for Valuations.
Embedding our technology and data creates deeper relationships with our customers, improves the performance of our advertising products, and acts as a significant enabler for digital retailing. Our goal with digital retailing, the outer ring of our strategy, is to enable any retailer to sell their cars online on our marketplace to support and strengthen retailers' existing forecourt experience. It is not about Auto Trader retailing cars directly. We are bringing technology and automation to a process that today is driven by sales executives, manual tasks, support people, and limited technology. From a new car perspective, we have acquired Autorama to accelerate our move to retailing new cars online on behalf of leasing companies, manufacturers and retailers, all on Auto Trader.
We continue to invest in our electric vehicle offering on and off-site to ensure that we are the number one destination for car buyers interested in purchasing an EV, and therefore remain number one as EVs account for more and more of the car park over time. Last year, we created an Electric Car Hub focused on helping car buyers understand the benefits of switching to EVs. This included advice on ownership and cost comparisons. Our monthly electric car giveaway continues to drive engagement and has had 1.4 million entries across the half year period. We have enhanced the information around electric vehicle charging on Auto Trader, which is included in the Electric Car Hub, in search filters, and on each vehicle product page. Charging information on EVs is complex, with each OEM presenting the data differently.
We have simplified and standardized this across makes and models, allowing consumers to easily compare. This is part of our broader strategy to provide accessible buying and owning advice and to offer a simple buying experience by featuring range and charging time within our core search function. This is a role that Auto Trader can uniquely play, and combined with having more EV stock than any other destination, means we are well placed to continue to both support and to benefit from the shift towards EVs. The next module of Auto Trader Connect, Auto Trader Connect Valuations, has been launched and will be available to all of our retailers as part of the April 2023 event next year.
Some retailers already have early access where their technology partners, such as stock management and retailer website providers, have integrated the solution into their platforms, or through using our own Dealer Portal, where we have surfaced this data. Since the launch of the first phase of Auto Trader Connect Retail Essentials in November 2021, more than 90 partners have integrated the services into their platforms. This new valuations module will embed the industry's most accurate pricing data into retailers' existing processes and systems, enabling them to buy and price their stock with confidence, maximizing the profit potential of every sale. It is designed to inform retailers' sourcing and pricing strategies with the most accurate and current view of the market.
Our valuations are calculated from daily pricing analysis of over 1 million vehicles, which includes the roughly 440,000 listings on our marketplace, as well as retailer OEM fleet and auction data. It is the most comprehensive and accurate view of the live resale market, which when combined with Auto Trader Connect's real-time capability, means retailers can immediately respond to changes in the market, helping to drive more profitable sales and to improve stock turn. We believe this is one of the most powerful ways we can help our partners, given the pace of change in the market. In August 2022, we launched a small trial of our Deal Builder journey on Auto Trader. This combines the component parts of parts exchange, reservations, and finance applications, forming an end-to-end deal journey. Deal Builder addresses key pain points that both car buyers and retailers experience.
Car buyers want to do more online, which Deal Builder enables, giving the buyer the control to do as much or as little online as they choose, and to switch to human support as and when they need it. For retailers, it means more qualified buyers, many with a parts exchange price agreed or a finance application already approved, all resulting in a much quicker sales process. This is an important shift, moving Auto Trader from a marketing channel to a sales channel, which we think over time will be transformative to our business. Over the coming months and into the next year, we plan to onboard more retailers onto this early beta trial, including larger groups who use our retailer portal system. Over time, we will also integrate with retailers directly through their dealer management systems using the Auto Trader Connect platform.
Initial feedback has been positive and we continue to see more deals processed through the Deal Builder journey. We are working closely with the early retailers on the beta to optimize the journey and to understand and improve conversion. I'll now hand over to Nathan to take you through our second half focus areas and the outlook.
Thanks, Catherine. In the second half of the year, we'll continue to prioritize our strategic focus areas. Within our classified marketplace, we're investing in insight tools for our customer-facing teams to support retailers in these less certain times with their performance and choice of stock, made possible by many years of work and investment to develop our data platform and data lake. We can very quickly identify where customers are underperforming relative to their competitors and provide specific areas of improvement across advert quality, pricing, and desirability. There is also further growth potential in our prominence products, and while some customers may become more price sensitive in a tougher market, others will see it as a way to boost their performance. We'll embed our next Auto Trader Connect module Valuations ahead of the April 2023 event next year.
A number of retailers already have early access through their technology partners and are seeing the benefits of being able to make faster and more accurate pricing and sourcing decisions, helping to drive more profitable sales, improve stock turn, and reduce risk. On digital retailing, as Catherine said, Deal Builder went live with one single site customer in August, resulting in our first completed online deal within days. Over the coming months and into next year, we will onboard more retailers, including larger groups who use Dealer Portal or integrate with us via our APIs. As stated earlier, we're also working through the integration of the Autorama buy online journey into Auto Trader's search listings. Now on to the outlook. We recognize the current high levels of economic uncertainty, but have confidence for the second half of the year because we've seen stable and consistent trading throughout October.
Our revenue is generally recurring, and most of our growth initiatives for the year have been implemented. We have also already seen some impact from the changing economic environment, such as lower audience, lower live stock volumes, and weak used car transactions across the industry, but have nonetheless performed well. We feel confident that we can maintain Auto Trader's margins at 70% despite high inflation, particularly given we have already built the core components of our digital retailing journey. As per our previous outlook statement, we still anticipate average retailer forecourts to be marginally down year-over-year. However, we now expect stronger ARPA with the full year growth rate likely to be slightly above the first half, and we expect the stock level to be flat for the full year.
Auto Trader's operating profit margin for the full year is expected to be in line with financial year 2022. All this outlook takes account of the Webzone disposal covered in post-balance sheet events. Autorama is likely to make a loss of GBP 11 million for the year, with continued supply challenges across all vehicle types, resulting in lower delivery volumes. Group central costs will be around GBP 45 million, largely made up of the Autorama deferred consideration and some amortization in relation to the acquisition. The outlook for future years is inherently less certain. However, the used car market is less cyclical than the new car market, and new car registrations are expected to recover in most scenarios, given they are at their lowest level in nearly 30 years.
We continue to believe that there are significant opportunities for Auto Trader to grow revenue at high margins through our price and product levers, and we'll continue to bring more of the car buying journey online through Deal Builder and Autorama. As ever, and especially in a weaker economic environment, we will continue to be disciplined on priorities, costs, and capital allocation, ensuring we manage the business responsibly. That now concludes the presentation. We'll now move to Q&A with analysts. As I do say in most results presentation, if I can just ask everyone to try and keep their questions to two to make sure we do get around everyone. If your question isn't answered by the end, you can always rejoin the queue. Operator, over to you for Q&A.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one and then one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. Once again, it's star one and then one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. We are now going to proceed with our first question, and the questions come from the line of Giles Thorne from Jefferies. Please ask your question.
Thank you. My first question is on the stock ARPA guide plans. There's evidence out there of sales lead times going up to dealers and later stage for new car registrations in the U.K. for the past couple of months. For both the U.K. and actually across Europe, it's a growth in new car registrations year on year. The supply constraints in used car, on the face of it, could be easing. It may be more of next year's feature, an FY 2024 feature than an FY 2023, but wouldn't be interesting to test any upside risk to that flat stock offer guidance. Then my second question is on digital retailing. It's a bit of a medium-term question.
The guidance down for Autorama today is another reminder that your earnings profile is gonna be more linked to the transaction cycle than it's ever been to date. This will only increase as Deal Builder ramps. It would be interesting to know, in addition to the changes in reporting that you've already signaled at the Capital Markets Day, could you share some early thoughts on how this could impact the way you guide and, perhaps most importantly, the way you allocate capital, if at all? That was it. Thanks.
Yes. Why don't I take the stock level question. Obviously we've delivered a flat stock level in the first half. We're guiding flat for the full year. I think while the live stock volumes are improving and the year-over-year growth rates have been pretty good through the second quarter and in October, it's worth just highlighting that some of that year-over-year growth is private listings being particularly strong. You can strip that out so that it's a filter on the website. You know, there's probably, you know, 5% growth that we've seen through sort of trader used car listings. I think as I've mentioned in the first half, there's been some sort of underutilization of slots diminishing through the period.
I think while most of that is now done, I think you've got a tougher comp in the second half. Those increasing used car volumes sort of keep you in line with prior year. I think generally, you know, even right at this point in time, particularly from a large customer, if you're stocking younger vehicles, we're not seeing supply particularly ease. Where that sort of live stock improvement has come is in slightly older vehicles, certainly over four or five years, I would say. I think, you know, if you saw stock volumes significantly improve throughout the second half, there's potentially some upside. Agree, if you get a sort of slowing market, you could see higher volumes being held.
I think from our perspective, we're viewing it more into, as you said, FY 2024 than expecting it to have a meaningful impact in the second half.
I'll take your second question, Giles. In terms of the reporting, I mean, I think it was reasonably clearly laid out in the Investor Day. I think the question you were really poking at was one around business quality and quality of earnings, which is understandable. I think the way that we think about this, there's probably three things I would say. The first is that any transactional revenue we generate, certainly from used cars, also new as well, is going to be a relatively small part of Auto Trader's financial story for some time to come, which is why we're making sure we're very clear to that people can look through and see the business, the Auto Trader business that they always knew.
When it comes to the transactional revenues, I would say that the way that we're thinking about the business model at the moment, and we're yet to monetize it, is that we'll have an element of subscription and an element of transaction about it. We can still balance how much of that will be annuity-like, subscription-like revenue versus being exposed to transactions. For the transactional element, and this is really the third point I'd make, I think there's two considerations. The first is that our focus and the bigger number of transactions is used cars, and used cars is less cyclical, far less cyclical than new cars, and probably less cyclical than many other elements of the economy. The second thing, I would say is that we're starting from a very small percentage.
At the moment, retailers will talk about maybe 2%, 3%, 4%, 5% of transactions happening online. We wouldn't be surprised to see something like that and expect it to grow very, very gradually over many, many years. It's almost like a market share gain, which should buck any cyclical elements. If we get to the point where 100% of transactions are on Auto Trader, 100% of transactions are taking place online on Auto Trader, then yes, you'll be exposed a bit more to cyclicality, but by that time, we'd, you know, I think based on what we set out in the investor, on the Investor Day, we'd be twice as big a business from them. It, it's not necessarily a big problem.
Thanks, Nathan.
Thanks, Giles.
That was useful color. It wasn't actually so much quality of earnings that I was trying to get at. It was more your thinking about capital allocation, the leverage you carry, the shareholder remuneration profile, finance to growth investment. Again, it's not something that's gonna impact anything tomorrow, as you've just said, but is there any insight into how those things will change as you become more exposed to the cycle?
Okay. I think, I mean, maybe we can all pitch in on this. I'd say my headline is the approach that we're taking is explicitly capital and asset light and also reasonably operationally cost light as well. For that reason, we're very much taking the same approach that we've taken to Auto Trader for many years. We're applying that in a transactional world. For that reason, I wouldn't see it dramatically changing our capital allocation approach policy or where we invest internal capital either. Over time, obviously, you know, that might change to some degree, but we certainly don't see ourselves ever becoming a retailer, which would be, you know, the most extreme answer to your question.
We're definitely at the other end of the spectrum, where we're looking to facilitate others that are using their own capital as opposed to using ours. Jamie, did you
Yeah, I think we've made some investments, both you know, both kind of organic investment in the platform and inorganic investment in terms of Autorama. There's plenty there for us to be getting stuck into and focused on, and prioritizing. You know, I think the capital policy, you know, certainly over the next 18 months, if not going beyond that, you'd expect that, you know, there's less likely to be more of that, certainly inorganic investment, I think. You know, I'd expect higher volume of share buybacks in the second half than what we've done in the first half.
That's great. Thank you very much, and thanks for the follow-up.
Thanks, Giles.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question come from the line of Jo Barnet-Lamb from Credit Suisse. Please ask the question.
Excellent. Thank you for taking my questions, guys. My first question, I'll go off sort of the flip of Giles' stock question, if you like. In answer to his question, Jamie, you alluded to easing supply and an elongated listing duration as potentially providing upside pressure on stock. I guess a counter argument could be that the cost of holding cars will rise due to sort of raising rates and also potential risk to used car pricing. I'm interested in your views on that thesis and whether retailers could potentially run tighter forecourts due to that cost of holding stock rising. That’s question one. For the second question, you spoke about the embedding of Auto Trader Connect in the bundle. How material an event is that?
Can you quantify what the sort of alpha tailwind is through the product lever due to that? Thank you.
I'll take the first one. Hi, Jo. In terms of what we're seeing today, we're seeing days to sell overall on the marketplace still trending ahead of pre-pandemic levels. We haven't seen any slowdown yet in the pace at which cars are turning or any extra risk exposure from retailers from cars being on the balance sheet for longer, and therefore, stocking loans and other things kicking in to a greater extent. Clearly, there's ups and downs for our stock level in terms of how the market trends play out in the next few months.
I think as in response to the new car supply question earlier, we are expecting gradual and incremental return of new car supply, but we're still overall operating in a supply constrained environment, which means that pricing continues to be robust and pretty stable. At the moment, I think our best guess for the second half of this year would be that supply continues to be reasonably constrained. Days to sell remains pretty strong and in line with the levels that it's currently at. We might see some slowing as we enter the Christmas period, but that's normally a seasonal low anyway. We're not expecting significant uplift from a longer holding period playing through into the stock lever in the short term.
I think as we go into next year, that might become more of a risk factor for retailers, potentially an upside for our stock lever, but we'll continue to track the data closely, and we'll be on top of any movements that we see playing out.
I was just gonna add one thing to Catherine's last point. I think I alluded to this when we were talking to the slides, but in the event, I think it's quite unlikely that you know, stock becomes more expensive to hold, for example, because stocking loans get more expensive, therefore, retailers hold less stock. That might be true, but that stock will still be presented for sale in a wholesale market. So it tends to be price. This is, I think Catherine's point around the risk to dealers.
It tends to be price that equalizes as opposed to stock, which is why it can potentially be well, we will be more linked to the stock presented for sale than we will necessarily the retailers that kind of have that stock because it will find its way out into the market. Jamie, did you wanna take?
Yeah. The product lever and Auto Trader Connect, it's worth just re-emphasizing something that we said or that we covered in reasonable detail at the Investor Day, that Auto Trader Connect is effectively a platform that we have integrated with, you know, a number of customers and a number of third-party providers and DMS providers. There's still further integration work ongoing, but we're integrated with over 90 third parties. What we're doing with that platform is we are rolling out modules that benefit our retailer customers.
We rolled out and included in the package the Retail Essentials module, which gave access to a number of things, but in particular, the taxonomy that powers Auto Trader, and that has contributed to the product lever in this first half and will contribute to the product lever for the full year. It was just under half, you know, not far off GBP 50 contribution in these reported numbers. Catherine then touched on the next module that we've launched to certain customers or those that have that integration, which is around valuations, so effectively being able to absorb our valuations into existing systems and leveraging the power of our real-time pricing data. That's gonna be included in the packages from next year.
I think in terms of the contribution, part of the early rollout is to really get a sense of how it's used, the value that it has, the feedback that we get from customers. The actual contribution is still to be determined. I think we'll be able to give a better steer when we report our results in June. I think the really important point though, again, reiterating the Investor Day, is we've created this platform, we've monetized the module, we've launched another module, and I think, you know, over time, particularly with regards to digital retailing, I would expect further modules in the future.
Excellent. Thank you very much, team.
Thanks, Jo.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Will Packer from Exane BNP Paribas. Please ask your question.
Hi, Nathan. Hi, Jamie. Hi, Catherine. Thanks for taking my questions. Two, please. Firstly, as we head into calendar year 2023, macro uncertainty and cyclical risks are in focus, and I wondered if you could just give us your initial thoughts on two or three thematics, which are a big focus for investors right now. We have questions over used car volumes, over the normalization of car dealer GPUs, and the normalization of your forecourt number, which has been elevated during COVID. Just some initial views on the risk associated with those factors, those three factors to your business. Then the second question was around Autorama. It's quite a change in expectations so soon after the deal. Could you just help us understand in a bit more detail what's changed?
Is it simply that the new car market has deteriorated? My understanding was you were pretty cautious on your assumptions there already, so some color there would be helpful. I suppose as a follow on from that, is it still sensible to think of Autorama breaking even in fiscal year 2025? Thanks.
Right. Thanks, Will. Market?
Yes, fine. Will, used car volumes, I think, was the first part of the question and what macro or wider thematic trends we might see, how it plays out for used car volumes, GPU for retailers and then forecourts. The three are all clearly connected in some meaningful way. I think, starting with used car volumes. We've seen a new car market now that's been about 700,000 transactions smaller every year for the last few years. We're expecting a slightly better new car market next year, potentially somewhere between 1.7 million and 1.9 million transactions. We're hopeful towards the second half of that of next year that some of that volume will begin to flow through into the used car market.
You will have seen from the latest SMMT data that all the growth in used car transactions, where there is growth, is coming from older age cohorts of cars. Not just five years and out, but actually in the 10- to 15-year category and some of the very old vehicles that we see in the car park. That is clearly driving retailers to change stock mix quite significantly in some cases. We are seeing franchise customers holding cars that are typically a year older and looking to extend their retailing presence into spaces that would typically see occupied by independent retailers. Volumes, I think, used car volumes into next year, more of the same of what we've seen this year. A market, hopefully somewhere a bit closer to 7 million rather than the level I think at which we'll end this year.
In terms of how that plays through into retailer profitability, we take the franchise segment first. There's a number of positive factors still actually playing out for our bigger franchise customers. Firstly, we've got the fact that actually for most of them, new car order books are really strong, and they've still got, in some cases, five, six, seven months of new car orders to deliver on that have been locked in at pricing and margin positions that are strong and attractive for them.
We've also, the pricing backdrop is also a real positive for those customers in that while they are buying into older age profile of vehicles, actually the pricing for that stock, the risk profile of that stock is not as significant as it would have been a few years ago, where we were seeing greater depreciation levels on those cars. We've got a pricing backdrop that's positive on both new and used, and a new car market that still looks like it will be supply constrained into next year. Margins also at the moment are still trending about double what we would typically see for those larger groups in particular, and still for our smaller independent customers, growth profit per unit looks robust.
Combination of energy prices, real wage and minimum wage increases and increase in cost of funding stock on the balance sheet is undoubtedly gonna weigh increasingly, I think, during next year. That said, retailers are entering a period that feels like it's gonna be a bit tougher in a very, very strong position with stronger balance sheet positions, stronger profit on the vehicle at the moment. Actually they feel better set up than they've ever been to cope with some of those cost pressures that we think will inevitably play out to some extent during next year. Finally then in terms of forecourt numbers. Forecourt numbers are positive, continue to remain positive in this half.
I think most of our guidance for the second half is actually driven by the Webzone disposal, where the contribution was over 500 forecourts, and for the half year effect, it'll be about half of that in the second half. I think overall, in terms of forecourt numbers, we're still seeing what we would consider to be relatively normal levels of churn and new business. Forecourt levels feel robust for the second half of this year, but potentially with some of those cost pressures, some risk into next year, and we probably expect that number to trend down slightly, I think, in the core.
I'd just add on to that retailer forecourt point. Yes, there's about 225 dealers is the headwind for fiscal year 2023 because of the Webzone disposal, and then obviously you get a subsequent drop in fiscal year 2024. There is a little bit within the guidance, I think, for some lessening of volume of forecourts, but not significant. You know, I think the really important point that Catherine made in the presentation is, you know, stock feels like a bigger driver of revenue than that volume of forecourts. I think then in terms of Autorama, I'm happy to take that one. I think you're absolutely right that the expectations are less good for fiscal year 2023 than we'd originally thought.
I think the biggest driver is, you know, a weak market from transaction perspective, but particularly in vans and pickups, which are the higher yielding units. You know, supply there is weaker than it is on used cars, and that's flowed through to volumes. I think the way we thought about the guidance for the full year is, you know, it has been slightly disappointing, the three months, just over three months of consolidation in. You know, the business is operating in a standalone capacity at the moment and is likely to for the balance of the year. We're not sure on the market, so let's just guide for more of the same for the balance of fiscal year 2023.
That just feels like the right approach, even though it could be, you know, could be marginally cautious. I think the work that we're doing that Nathan referenced is we are working to integrate the journey onto Auto Trader. That work is likely to be completed at the beginning of fiscal year 2024, and I think this is the strategic rationale behind making the acquisition. That it's a good platform that when integrated into an area where you have significant volume of car buyers can drive a significant volume of sales. I think that FY 2025, to the crux of your question, we still feel very confident that breakeven is achievable.
Many thanks for the color. Appreciate it.
Thanks Will.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Sarah Simon from Berenberg. Please ask your question.
Yes, morning. I've got a couple. The first one was you talked about the uplift of penetration on the higher yielding packages. Where do you think that can go to in the medium term? Do you think that the uplift is because car dealers need more help to shift stock in a potentially tightening environment, or do you think it's just retailers becoming more sophisticated? The second one was just on cost inflation. We heard from ITV yesterday that there is, you know, significant cost inflation going into 2023. Do you have any view as to what that might look like for you, in, I guess, the sort of fiscal 2024? Because you're slightly off cycle. Thanks.
I mean, I can take the first one. On the penetration of the premium products, this isn't the first iteration of these. We generally kind of cycle the core Auto Trader advertising packages every three to four, even five years, depending on that penetration uptake. I would say historically, we've seen our higher level packages get well and truly over 50% penetration. I think there's definitely some runway to go. Now, it's always different depending on the nature of the product and how the dynamics work as you add more customers to it.
I think the packages that we've got today are quite scalable, and we're seeing customers. We're very accurately able to predict the sort of uplift that they would get, and then they can kind of square that off with the costs that they would have to do it. I think at the moment, I would say if you rewound a year, we would say that actually retailers are being making hay while the sun shines is probably the best way to describe it. They saw a good market. They saw very good gross margins on cars, so they tried to sell as many as they possibly could, and those prominence products let you do that. They could shave easily five, six days off your days to turn.
I think that has become kind of less and less, I think as the market's gotten back to more and more normalization. Now, we've still seen those packages grow, and we would still expect to see them grow because it's an economic, you know, it's a very economically rational choice for a retailer to make. If you look at, you know, paying whether it's GBP 100 and GBP 200 extra, if it means you can sell another car, then you can recoup that five times over with one sale. Depending on what happens over the next 12 months, which we're not claiming to be smart enough to do, I imagine there will be some retailers that might pick up those prominence products to combat a tougher market.
As we said in our comments, there will be some retailers that, just as they have been making hay while the sun shines, they'll batten down the hatches as things get more difficult. Where that ends up net, I mean, it might still end up as being the same. It's hard to know. There'll definitely be those. There'll be two types of customers taking two very different approaches to those. Jamie, did you wanna speak to inflation?
I mean, it's easier to talk about the Auto Trader segment. I mean, that's where the majority of the cost base is. I mean, we're guiding for the full year fiscal 2023 for 70% margin. I think we feel with relative confidence that we can achieve 70% margins in fiscal year 2024 as well. You know, which is broadly, you know, the cost base growing at a similar rate to revenue. You know, there are inflationary pressures in there, and there's investment in the business.
I think we manage our costs at an incredibly detailed level, and the way that we've been trying to run the business, you know, for a long time is you know, real scrutiny of the things that you're not getting as much use out of, whether you can bring services internally. You know, you see some of it in the kind of post-balance sheet events that we've announced in terms of the Webzone sale, removing the risk around a defined benefit pension scheme. You know, all of these things are you know, there's cost in this financial year, but it's actually creating efficiency and savings going forward.
I think, you know, we continue to run the business that way and, you know, with as much confidence as can be given, acknowledging the uncertainty, you know, we think that margin guidance will hold, you know, over certainly over this year and into next.
Great. Thanks a lot.
Thanks a lot.
We are now going to proceed with the next question. The question's come from the line of, Bridie Barrett from Stifel. Please ask your question.
Thank you. Two questions from me, slightly related if you don't mind. Just kind of coming back to your market share. I mean, you give us data on the share of consumer engagement, which has been stable. Putting the data together, it's, you know, it's clear that you've gained quite a lot of market share in this period with, you know, used car sales down double-digit, but your listing's up 3%. I'm just wondering if you can help me understand what is your market share in terms of transactions that you're associated with. Put another way, you know, your listing volumes relative to actual used car transactions.
Sure. Was that part one, sorry, or was that both?
That's part one, yeah. It, depending on your answer.
Oh, fire away with your second question, and then we'll get to answering the first. What was your second question?
The second question is just, with respect to promotions. I know in the past, pre-pandemic, promotional activity was much higher than it has been over the last 12 months. Can you also just give us a sense of, you know, how much of your activity is related to promotions and what your expectations are in the second half of the year?
Okay. Go on.
On market share and our relative position, I think we kind of agree with the sentiment that our market position from a consumer perspective certainly feels as strong as it's ever been. We haven't seen any change in that position really over the last couple of years. If anything, it's strengthened, as you say, during the course of the pandemic, as we've been able to invest and continue to push on with our app organic and owned media investments, while other competitors haven't been in a position to.
I think when we then think about how that translates through to used car transactions and what proportion we influence of the trade transactions that happen, so cars being sold by retailers or dealers, we estimate very roughly that we see about 70% of those, of the stock and the vehicles, and influence probably a similar number as well.
Thank you. That's gone up quite markedly, hasn't it, since last year, so?
All right.
To some degree, but I don't think it's significant. I think the transaction. I think the one thing that you'd just be aware of is transaction volumes in terms of what's reported, used car transactions and live stock on site. You've got the speed of sale in there.
Mm-hmm.
I think compared to last year, where you had speed of sale going very, very quickly because you had sort of pent-up demand and tight supply, we have seen a slight lengthening in terms of the speed of sale. Although I think it's worth noting it's still actually marginally quicker than it was pre-pandemic. I think that's the additional lens that has changed from last year to this year.
Okay, thank you.
Bridie, in answer to your question on promotions, I hope I've understood it properly, but you're right. During the course of the pandemic, we did probably the most extreme promotion that we've ever done, where we gave away our core advertising packages for free. Outside of that, I would say that as a business, philosophically, we are not one to be a discounter or to go out with one-off promotions and do deals. I'd say very much it runs right to the core of our culture and the relationship we have with our customers, that we're fair, transparent, and everyone gets the same deal. The slight exception to that was, we used to very regularly do stock offers, which most analysts are well aware of, because it used to make
Yeah
Understanding the live stock charts quite confusing. We've actually not been doing those since the pandemic and haven't started back doing those and don't necessarily have an intention of going back to doing those because there is just such a lack of stock at the moment, and dealer profitability is all quite stable. We don't currently have any plans to look to reintroduce that, and that's really the only exception to our kind of no discounting rules, and it does obviously apply to all customers.
Thank you. Yeah, it was those stock offers that I was referring to.
Yeah.
I suppose I was just thinking that.
I sort of think it was.
You know, things get a bit pricey. You could encourage more market share onto your platform by maybe bringing some of those back.
Yeah. No, that was definitely always the interesting. It was always the theory behind them. As you find with promotions, that can be true momentarily. Whether it persists beyond that is, sometimes we're not always sure. Interestingly, in a period of having not done that, while our share increase is not significant, it certainly hasn't gone down by not doing those. I'd say if anything, it's slightly up. That has been a core insight for us, I think, over the last 24 months.
Understood. Thank you.
Thanks a lot.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Pete-Veikko Kujala from Morgan Stanley. Please ask your question.
Hey, it's Pete from Morgan Stanley. Thanks for taking my questions. Two from me. First on the Autorama business and the kind of car market characteristics. If we assume that the supply of new cars is going to ease going forward, so the supply chain issues are going to ease or be removed, how does the increase in supply impact the Autorama business? And if that leads to a fall in prices, how does that impact the Autorama business? The increasing supply, but potentially falling prices. The second question on the Auto Trader Connect. You mentioned that you now have 90 third-party integrations there, but what percentage of the dealer base does those 90 third- parties cover?
Do you think it's going to increase, like the dealer stickiness, especially given, we might be heading to a more difficult market for dealers? Thanks.
I can take the new car market. You know, this applies to vans and pickups as well. Supply improves, it will be supportive to that business unit. I think the thing to bear in mind, I think we saw a little bit of this in October, is some of the new car improvement or LCV improvement could just be filling in order bank that currently exists. You might need to clear through some of that. Generally, more volume is gonna be supportive, you know, because there's a hierarchy in terms of how vehicles get allocated. More vehicles, the more that are likely to be allocated into the fleet sector.
In terms of pricing, you know, prices coming down again will help marginally because, you know, lower price is more attractive to consumers. Because every unit is sold on a PCH deal, so it's all monthly payments. I'd say the pricing probably has a. It is positive, but it's probably less, you know, not as positive a driver as the volumes.
On Auto Trader Connect and Retail Essentials and the Valuations module, talk about both. We've now, as Jamie said, integrated with over 90 third- party technology and dealer management system providers. That gets us to over 70% of the addressable stock for the Auto Trader Connect product. The Retail Essentials module, we included in packages last year, so it's available to all retailers as part of their package. The great thing about the product is because it's enabled through third party integrators, it becomes completely embedded and integrated into retailer systems. With Retail Essentials, now they're using our underlying taxonomy to create their stock record and then to price that stock record from. That is now a big operational and process change that's happened within retailers that those third parties have enabled for us.
We've had universally very positive feedback from retailers about the cost savings, the time savings, the pricing accuracy, the improvements to margin and yield from embracing that product. That feels very embedded and very sticky in that customer base and is now part of packages. There's no incentive or mechanic really for retailers to move away from it now the tech integration work's done. We're at the beginning of doing the work for the valuations module. The fact that we have those 90 integrations already live, we hope will make the valuations module more efficient to roll out because we have connectivity. We have some integrations already established with those third parties. So far, the valuations module is going well and smoothly and will similarly be embedded and integrated. It will become the way retailers price through these third-party systems.
Again, very embedded, very sticky, and very much part of retailers' business processes in the future.
Great. Thanks. That's very clear. Thank you.
Thank you, Peter. Operator, I'm afraid we'll have to make this the last question. We've just gone slightly over on time.
Okay. We have no further questions at this time. I'll hand back to you then. Thank you.
Oh, that's fantastic timing. Almost as if it was planned. Well, thank you everyone for joining us on the call. We look forward to speaking to you in future.