Thank you for joining us to discuss FuboTV's third quarter 2021. With me today are David Gandler, Co-founder and CEO of Fubo, and Simone Nardi, CFO of Fubo. Full details of our results and additional management commentary are available in our earnings release and letter to shareholders, which can be found in the investor relations section of our website at ir.fubo.tv. Before we begin, let me quickly review the format of today's presentation. David is going to start with some brief remarks on the quarter and Fubo's strategy, and Simone will cover the financials and guidance. Then I'm going to turn the call over to the analysts to dig into Q&A.
Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that the following discussion may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of federal securities law, including statements regarding our financial condition, anticipated financial performance, market opportunity, business strategy, and plans, including our acquisition strategy and ability to integrate any such acquisitions, the expected continued rollout of Fubo Sportsbook, and the continued shift in consumer behavior. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks, uncertainties, and assumptions. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements can be found in the Risk Factors section of our quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended September 30, 2021, to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and our other periodic filings with the SEC. These statements reflect our current expectations based on our beliefs, assumptions, and information currently available to us.
Although we believe these expectations are reasonable, we undertake no obligation to revise any statements to reflect changes that occur after this call. During the call, we also refer to non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP measures should be considered in addition to, and not as a substitute for or in isolation from, our GAAP results. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are also available in our Q3 2021 earnings shareholder letter, which is available on our website at ir.fubo.tv. With that, I will turn the call over to David.
Thank you, Allison, and thank you all for joining us today. Before we dive into our record third-quarter results, we are thrilled to announce that since closing the quarter, FuboTV has passed the 1 million subscriber mark. Yes, that's 1 million paying subscribers. This is an extraordinary milestone by any measure, but particularly remarkable given the momentum of our business over just six short years. The implications of the milestone are tremendous and undoubtedly far-reaching. 1 million subscribers means increased relevance, leverage, and influence with content partners and leagues, plus the opportunity to go upstream on sports tentpoles. It also means billions of data points for product iteration and personalization, more monetization opportunities, and increased consumer mindshare. Even at 1 million subscribers, we are still only scratching the surface, as 72 million-plus households still subscribe to traditional paid television.
Our record Q3 2021 results showcase consistent, strong execution of our company's mission. It's a mission to define a new category of interactive sports and entertainment television, turning passive viewers into active participants. We continue to make great traction toward our long-term growth and margin targets, and we are once again raising our full-year guidance. In Q3, we delivered triple-digit year-over-year growth in total paid subscribers, up 108%; total revenue, up 156%; and advertising revenue, up 147% compared to the prior-year period. We added approximately 263,000 net subscribers. That's 56% more than in the third quarter of last year and more than the entirety of 2020.
Also noteworthy, we were able to drive subscriber growth while spending less as a percentage of revenue than in the prior year. Turning to engagement, our users streamed 284 million hours. That's an increase of 113% year-over-year. Our monthly active users watched 121 hours per month on average. While this is strong engagement, it was impacted by the huge influx of new subscribers at the end of the quarter. As these new cohorts mature, we expect to expand their engagement and monetization. The third quarter was also record-breaking for our advertising business, representing our strongest ad sales quarter to date. Ad revenue grew 147% year-over-year and accounts for 12% of total revenue in the quarter. Alongside our record revenue growth, we also made meaningful progress toward our profitability goals.
Adjusted contribution margin was 12.4% in Q3. That's up 189 basis points compared to the normalized third quarter 2020 results. This was driven by ARPU expansion with both advertising and subscription, partly as a result of strong execution associated with upsells and packaging. Our attach rate was 2.3, up from 1.8 in the third quarter of 2020, and we sold 2.2 million attachments as of the end of the quarter. It's also illustrative of our ability to expand ARPU and extend the lifetime value of our customers through the provision of additional products and services. This positions us really well to drive adoption of our wagering product.
Today, we announced a major milestone toward global expansion with the acquisition of Molotov, France's leading live TV streaming platform with 4 million monthly active users. Molotov operates a freemium business model, which leverages a free tier to drive growth, then upsells customers to premium channel packages. The technological capabilities between the companies will enable us to efficiently launch our interactive sports and entertainment streaming platform on a global scale. Our transaction is expected to close sometime within the first quarter of 2022, and that's, of course, subject to certain closing conditions. Our internally built technology stack is the cornerstone of our platform, and that has kept us innovating ahead of the streaming industry. We are prioritizing our product and engineering capabilities to bring to market a category-defining streaming experience that's characterized by interactivity.
This is a long-term commitment we're making in our product and expect it to yield strong and defensible competitive advantages over the next few years. Accordingly, we are thrilled to announce the acquisition of Edisn.ai. Edisn.ai is an AI-powered computer vision platform with patent-pending video recognition technologies based in Bangalore, India. With Edisn.ai, we will be able to create new experiences that integrate interactivity and data directly within our live TV feeds, pushing the boundaries of innovation even further. The acquisition also expands our data science and engineering organization globally. Last quarter, we announced the beta release of two new interactive features, FanView and Free-to-Play Predictive Games. Throughout Q3, we continued to iterate on each and expanded their rollout to additional leagues. We're very excited about the potential to further engage our subscribers and ultimately, to become gateways to real money wagering. Here's a quick video.
Our wagering business also continues to evolve. We are transforming how consumers watch and engage with live television with our first-generation integrated Fubo Sportsbook, which launched November 3rd in our first state, Iowa. This is the first of a healthy pipeline of other states where we plan to launch in the ensuing months, which will allow us to unlock the scale of our growing subscriber base, driving down betting acquisition costs. In addition to serving as an important new on-ramp to our platform, we believe this will over time improve engagement and retention while driving monetization and advertising sales. We believe only FuboTV has brought to market this seamless connection between streaming video and our mobile betting app. We see ourselves in the very early innings of an enormous opportunity to innovate.
While we are very pleased with our progress to date, we are taking a very measured and deliberate approach as we operationalize this initiative. In summary, I am exceptionally proud of our execution this quarter. We are building a category-defining streaming experience that will achieve a strong flywheel, driving subscriber growth, increasing engagement, and enhancing monetization, while also attracting advertising dollars to our high-quality, premium-paying audience, all while we continue to benefit from our optimal position at the intersection of three megatrends: the secular decline of traditional television, the shift of TV ad dollars to connected devices, and the rapid adoption of online sports wagering. I look forward to updating you on the progress and will be on Twitter later this evening to interact with shareholders. Now I'll pass it over to Simone to discuss our Q3 financial highlights and raised guidance for 2021.
Simone, please.
Thank you, David, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm very pleased with our strong third-quarter results as we exceeded our outlook and made significant progress in delivering efficient top-line growth and margin improvements. In the third quarter, we delivered triple-digit year-over-year growth in both subscription and advertising revenue, taking overall revenue up 156% to $156.7 million, up 20% sequentially over the second quarter. Subscription revenue increased 158% year-over-year to $138.1 million, driven by strong growth in subscriber numbers and ARPU. We ended the quarter with 945,000 subscribers, an increase of 108% or 263,000 net additions when compared to Q3 2020.
We delivered this robust growth through acquisition efficiencies as well as improvements in retention resulting from our interactive product and curated content offering. Subscription ARPU expanded by 10% year-over-year to $66.31 as we saw more subscribers taking our premium offerings. Advertising ARPU grew 10% year-over-year to $8.23. Advertising is a key component of our growth and monetization strategy, and we saw continued strength on this front. Advertising sales were the highest to date in the third quarter of 2021, surging 147% year-over-year to $18.6 million and accounted for 12% of total revenue. The strong results for our advertising business were driven by the strength in our subscriber growth, increase in CPM, and fill rate optimization.
As expected, we saw a large influx of subscribers within the last few weeks of September. As these new subscribers become more familiar with the platform and mature into long-term subscribers, we expect to expand their monetization further. Switching now to profitability, we made significant traction toward our long-term goals, delivering an adjusted contribution margin of 12.4%. This was up 189 basis points year-over-year when compared to our normalized Q3 2020 ACM of 10.5%, which we reported in our earnings last year. As a reminder, our Q3 2020 ACM of 16.1% reflected unusual timing of content deals in July 2020. Our contribution margin expansion in the quarter was driven by the improvement of advertising ARPU and subscription ARPU, as well as by the continued data-driven optimization of our content offering.
This positions us well to continue making deliberate strategic investments in content, technology, and infrastructure to optimize our market position and grow share while driving long-term margin expansion. Accordingly, our strategic investments have resulted in an expected increase in expenses on an absolute dollar basis year-over-year in the third quarter. However, expenses continue to grow significantly less than our revenue growth and accounted for 166% of total revenue in Q3 2021, significantly less than in 2019 and 2020, underscoring our continued focus on driving operating leverage in the business. Within expenses, I would like to highlight how subscriber-related expenses, which primarily consist of content costs, accounted for 91.5% of total revenue in the quarter, an improvement of 8.5 percentage points compared to the prior-year period.
Our sales and marketing expenses as a percentage of revenue declined from 36% in the third quarter of 2020 to 32% this quarter, showcasing our efficiency in growing our subscriber base. As a result of this continued operating leverage, we achieved a material year-over-year improvement in adjusted EBITDA margin from -77.6% to -51.9%. Net loss in Q3 was $105.9 million and included approximately $21 million in non-cash expenses in stock-based compensation, remeasurement of warrant liabilities, amortization of intangibles, and debt discount. EPS in the quarter was -$0.74 compared to a loss of $6.20 in the third quarter of 2020.
Adjusted EPS in the third quarter of 2021 was a loss of $0.59, excluding a non-cash impact of stock-based compensation, the remeasurement of warrant liabilities, and amortization of intangibles and debt discount. Expenses incurred for the launch of our wagering business impacted EPS and adjusted EPS by $0.05 in the quarter. Now, turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $398.5 million in cash equivalents and restricted cash. These include $70 million in net proceeds in the quarter from our at-the-market offering, as well as $7 million in interest payments and $33.7 million of cash outflow related to wagering, mainly in connection with our market access licensing deals.
As was previously highlighted, the filing of our $500 million ATM in August is part of our ongoing capital optimization strategy to build optionality to fund growth initiatives while further strengthening our balance sheet. Operating cash flow in the quarter was negative $55.7 million, inclusive of $5 million of non-recurring payments, $5.2 million associated with the wagering business, and $7 million of interest payments for the 2026 convertible notes. Moving on to our outlook: With a strong performance in the third quarter of 2021, we believe we are well-positioned to continue to execute on our long-term revenue and margin goals. We are therefore once again increasing our full-year 2021 revenue guidance to $614.5 million at the midpoint.
This updated number represents a 135% increase year-over-year, up from an increase of 116% reflecting our prior guidance. Similarly, we are increasing our end-of-the-year subscriber guidance to 1,065,000 at the midpoint of the guidance, up 94% year-over-year. This guidance implies full-year 2021 net additions of approximately 517,000, 123% higher than our full-year 2020 net additions of 232,000. Our current guidance does not include any revenue contribution from our sports wagering business, nor from our recently announced Molotov and Edisn.ai acquisitions. In closing, we are very pleased with our performance this quarter, and we continue to efficiently drive robust growth and operating leverage. Thank you for joining our call today.
We will now take your question. Allison?
Thank you, David. Thank you, Simone. We're now turning to the Q&A portion of our call. We ask that, in the spirit of timing, you limit yourself to two questions, please. Our first question comes from Jed Kelly with Oppenheimer. Jed, great to see you. Please go ahead.
Hey, great. Thanks for taking my question. Just two, if I may. First, regarding the acquisitions, what is the strategy to expand internationally versus the U.S., where you still have a lot of opportunity for growth? There are still a couple of channels with a lot of sports content that you don't have on your platform. Can you talk about the acquisition strategy? Second, on the sportsbook in Iowa, what early learnings can you share, or what is the attach rate with subscribers? Thank you.
Thank you, Jed. As always, excellent questions. You know, as it relates to the acquisition strategy, I think we've said many times we're going to be opportunistic. I think there are, you know, two different acquisitions here. One is technology-based. I'll talk about Edisn.ai first. We're really, really excited about this company. It actually provides foundational back-end tech for our company. If you think about it, you'll be able to extract metadata from the video in real-time. A lot of these things that you and I discussed offline about how you see this business changing over time, you can think about the number of use cases with technology like this. You know, A, you'll be able to, in the very short term, sync the video to the data stream. That's very important.
You can do that by capturing clock data. There are other, you know, use cases for this over the long term that will touch on the video experience at the core, things like improving EPGs, DVRs as it relates to overtime. Obviously, there are going to be advertising opportunities as well, because you'll be able to extract a lot of the contextual, you know, the contextual value out of the frame that, you know, is currently being displayed. With that type of technology, we think we're really well-positioned to continue to focus on our integration strategy. As it relates to Molotov, I think there are two very important reasons why we did this deal. One is, as you know, there are some significant headwinds here in the U.S. with respect, you know, to the labor situation.
It's very difficult to hire engineers. Molotov has a very, very strong team of 100+, which, if you think about it, our businesses are very similar in many respects. There's an alignment of technology and infrastructure, tooling, and also, obviously, the operational model. We think that we could pretty much integrate relatively quickly. That is kind of our goal in the short term. That should really improve development velocity. That's sort of the first point on that. It allows us to also plant a flag in another country to allow us to access even more talent. That's probably one of the more important reasons. The second is, it's the number two streaming application in France, which is the second largest European market with over 60 million households.
With 4 million monthly active users, we thought this was a great opportunity for us to learn about their business model. Remember, we do not have a freemium model. Just to highlight again what that is, a freemium model really means that you have a free tier of content, which in their case is live TV channels, that they then use to upsell to a paid tier. Now, when we think about our capabilities here in the U.S. and the knowledge that we continue to really garner, this is going to give us an opportunity to really leverage what we know in that market as we develop a scalable global platform. This doesn't in any way impact our focus on the U.S.
I hope, given that 1 million subscriber number, that makes you comfortable that we are completely focused on driving additional subscribers in the U.S. and really scaling out our business. The second part of your question, if I recall, was about the book. As you know, we launched—
Attachment rate in Iowa.
Yeah. We launched November 3. Look, we're very excited. We did what we said we were going to do. This was not an easy task. It was not an easy lift to launch Fubo Sportsbook in less than 12 months. We've been working with regulators and, you know, we shared with you our live sync feature. So far, it's very early. I mean, we've been live for a week. We'll have to sort of take our time over the next couple of weeks to really better understand what we're seeing. So far, I think what's interesting is that there is interest from our subscribers to play. That's a very important piece here if you think about the reason why we did this. The whole point of this was really to reduce the cost of entry, number one.
Number two is to create very attractive user economics. We think that what we've seen in these early moments is really important. What I will say is that the market access licenses are probably an area where we're going to focus throughout 2022, because given what we've seen, at least in the first few days, we want to take advantage of our growing subscriber base. When you have a million people that you can talk to every day, and you've seen how successful we've been with our attachments, selling over 2.2 million attachments this year, we're very comfortable in our ability to actually create a new revenue stream and upsell existing customers.
Great.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Jed, thank you for your thoughtful questions. Our next question comes from Shweta Khajuria, who is with Evercore. Shweta, always good to see you. Please go ahead.
Thanks, Allison. Let me try two, please. David, what would be your top three investment areas for next year, in terms of resources as well as the focus of your team? Then a quick follow-up.
Churn. In the shareholder letter, you said churn improved on a year-over-year basis. How did it trend sequentially? Thank you.
Yeah. Very good question, Shweta. You know, I'd love to tell you about our go-forward strategy, but obviously, if we tell you, then we're going to make it very difficult to be able to acquire assets the way we've done this year, which we're very happy about. I think what I'll continue to say is we're going to be opportunistic. We're looking for companies that fit culturally, number one, because this is a performance-driven company. We continue to execute quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. Again, it's something we'll continue to look at and refine over the course of 2022. With respect to churn, as you said, minus 78 basis points of churn. We're very happy with that.
We said that our goal this year was to get churn to a place where we're very comfortable. You know, I would say churn is relatively flat quarter-sequentially. Remember, we also had the Olympics in July, which typically, a lot of these one-off events drive significant churn. We have been able to really mitigate a lot of the churn that we felt would put us at risk for the third quarter. As you can see, it really drove up our subscriber numbers. We're very happy about that. We're also happy about our reactivation numbers that have been extremely strong. All of that is really related to the content offering that we provide to our subscribers, as well as the product improvements that we're seeing.
You know, we're very happy with this quarter and looking forward to Q4.
Okay. Thanks, David.
Thank you.
Thank you, Shweta. Always good to see you, and thank you for the questions. Our next question comes from Laura Martin with Needham.
Hey there, David. Fourth quarter as a public company, fourth quarter of beat and raise.
That's what we do.
These are excellent numbers again.
Thank you.
That's why you're here. You've done your job.
That's why we're here. Thank you so much.
Okay. Two questions for you. One is, the NFL ratings are astronomical this year, and that seems to be a key catalyst to driving your extraordinary subscriber growth. My question is, post-Super Bowl Sunday, what are you going to do to try to hold on to these guys to, you know, increase their longevity past the end of the NFL season? Let's start with that one.
I think that's a great call. The NFL season has been tremendous for us. Let's not forget, we also had a full season of college football. We're super excited about the return of college sports. That has certainly had an impact, particularly in September. Look, we're focused on continuing to improve our product. You know, we're looking for ways to improve certain features that will drive engagement. I think this cohort, the September cohort, is actually quite interesting. We actually got to 96% viewership of sports on the platform. This is by far the greatest percentage of sports viewership on the platform ever. I think the last record was about 93% or 94%. When you think there's no more room, there certainly is.
Again, we're focused on continuing to do what we did in the first quarter of 2021. We'll focus on continuing to upgrade our product, and hopefully, as we get into the first quarter, we'll be able to talk more about our free-to-play capabilities as well as our predictive games. What we believe to be the sportsbook entry point into some of these states will also improve retention.
Okay. That's super helpful. When I think about CTV, you had really good, the highest CTV revenue growth of any company that's reported.
Mm-hmm.
Which is actually saying something. I love what it's doing to your gross margins. You really have strong gross margin over-delivery. Is most of that coming from advertising, David, or is some of it actually coming from, you know, subscription? That's a variable cost business subscription.
Right.
I'm just trying to figure out if you're really getting leverage on the variable cost piece of the business in addition to advertising.
Well, you know, we did mention in our shareholder letter, as well as in my opening comments, that, you know, given the scale that we're experiencing to date, we're going to continue to see some level of escape velocity. When you start to experience that, you typically have some control in terms of the conversations we're having with our content partners. As you know, we've continued to update our content portfolio, and we made some changes at the end of the second quarter, which we believe positively impacted, you know, our margin profile as it relates to the variable cost. On the advertising front, you know, we're continuing to see a lot of strength in that area.
Advertisers are not only moving away from TV, but they are also shifting towards data-driven ad buys, an area where we are starting to make a significant impact. I also believe that what's compelling is the fact that we have three levers we can pull. When you look at our CPM year-over-year, it's still relatively low, having increased by about 4% from approximately 21 and change to 23. If you consider this, what we have here is what I like to call a high-class problem. There's room for about 50% growth in the CPM, assuming all else stays equal. You can really start to understand the opportunities we have in the advertising space and what it can truly do to drive margins over the long term.
Thanks, David.
Thank you.
Thank you, Laura. As always, great questions. Our next question comes from Dan Salmon at BMO. Dan, please go ahead.
All right. Thank you, Allison. Good evening, everyone.
Hey, Dan.
Hey, David. Hey, Simone. David, Molotov, as you said, is a leading platform in France. They've also got a little footprint in Africa.
Right.
are expanding there.
You've got the Canadian and Spanish businesses. What is the scope of your international ambitions right now? You seem to have a healthy part of North America and EMEA covered. I mean, should we expect APAC and South America to come next? And then, just the second one, there's some wording in the shareholder letter about crossing the 1 million mark that gives you some better most-favored-nation protection. Can you just speak to that a little more specifically and if there are some milestones in your contracts that passing that activates in particular?
Yeah. Dan, it's good to see you. It's been a while. Look, your first question is about our international ambitions. This company has one massive ambition. We are looking for global domination. We're doing that. We're demonstrating quarter in, quarter out, that we're able to do this in the United States. You know, just to quickly touch on our net adds, 263,000 net adds. If you look at the traditional pay TV churn level, it was roughly around 1.2%-1.3%. We took in about 20% of the traditional churn into net subscribers in the third quarter. When I think about that and I think about where I believe the market will trend over the next 5 or 7 years, it gets me really excited.
Our team is performing exceptionally well in the United States. What we've decided to do is to take our time internationally, picking assets that we believe might provide significant value. Again, the cultural importance is something that I really have to stress because we are a performance company. I'm not saying that we're going into Latin America or any other region, but if we see an asset that we believe will create a lot of value for the business, there's no reason why we shouldn't, you know, leverage our market cap to acquire an asset. But I also wouldn't overlook the Edisn.ai transaction because it is transformational. I don't think people really understand how transformational computer vision really is.
You can track players, you can track frame-accurate data, extract metadata from live, real-time video, and really leverage that across advertising, across product sales, you know, across everything that we do. To me, this is an extremely important acquisition. Well, it sets us up really nicely, you know, for our global product. Last but not least, on your question around, you mentioned Molotov and Africa and all these other questions. One of the reasons why we really like Molotov, in addition to obviously the 4 million monthly active users and the 100+ team that they have, is to be able to really sort of, you know, increase the velocity of our development team. But they're also available in these other countries.
The key is the technology they've developed that allows them to localize very efficiently in different geographies. Again, if you think about the DNA of Fubo, we're all about opportunities, moving quickly, and leveraging data. This provides the one thing that I value most in the world, which is optionality. Thank you.
Dan, thank you for your thoughtful questions. Our next question comes from Jim Goss with Barrington. Jim, always good to see you. Please proceed with your question.
Great. Hi, David. Hi, Simone.
I don't think we can hear.
When you're talking about global ambition, I wonder if you might frame domestic growth in terms of what sort of pace we can expect over the next several years. Who do you think you will take share from? I assume you're taking share from broadcasters. Do you think you're also taking share from some of the competitors in your space?
Yeah. Thanks for the question, Jim. I think in terms of the overall growth that we have in the business, as you're seeing with the guidance, it's a very significant number. To David's earlier point, we are taking on a significant portion of people that are coming out of the regular, traditional cable offering. We are, therefore, taking a significant portion of that. As you can imagine, our market share is expected to continue to grow within the virtual MVPD space as well.
I think there is definitely an influx of subscribers coming from the traditional cable ecosystem, as well as subscribers who appreciate the features we provide on our platform. This allows us to attract them to our platform from the existing traditional vMVPD space, as reflected by the most likely market share increase within the virtual vMVPD.
If you all could talk about the usage patterns. I assume most viewing is going to be at home, but are you gaining an increasing number of users using areas remotely outside when they're traveling?
Yes.
To the extent they're traveling.
Yeah. We're seeing a lot of viewership on our connected televisions, which is actually really good for advertising purposes. As well as, to your point, we offer the flexibility of an app that is downloadable and usable on many different platforms and devices. It's actually allowing us to provide flexibility for people across the board. That is a benefit that we think is resonating well with subscribers.
Okay. I also meant to ask, could you flesh out the concept of the non-betting games? What exactly do you think you are going to bring to the table? How would you sustain engagement in that area?
Sorry, Jim, I can't.
Yeah. Jim, could you ask that question again? Hi, it's David. Sorry, I couldn't hear the first...
Yeah. Okay. You've also talked about some additional types of games that you would engage users in, and you'd use those for sustaining engagement.
Yep.
I'm just wondering what's your take on that area?
Yeah. You know, we've been very focused on free-to-play games. You know, I think we showcased a video where you could see you can get into this sort of a user-initiated format where you can watch an event and then play these predictive games. You could ask questions like, you know, "Will they score a touchdown? Will they kick a field goal? Will he throw a pass? Will there be an interception? You know, will this player play?" All of these sorts of engaging questions during the game, we think, add a lot of value, and we've seen that. We've run a bunch of tests on our CONMEBOL games, and we've seen engagement increase by anywhere between 30% and 40%.
We're going to continue to work on that and create a platform on which we think users will engage more. If they're engaging more, as you know, that impacts your advertising sales and also your retention. The more we can get people to stay on the platform, the better. The other thing I think is also important, a bit secondary at the moment, but I think will come to the forefront pretty quickly in 2022, is the fact that we are now isolating players or people that like to play these games. The question is, if you're a casual bettor or someone who likes to play these games, will you potentially participate in a bet for events that you typically watch? We can tell what you watch.
You pick field goals, you pick football games, you pick soccer games. That gives us another edge in trying to reduce that cost of entry and drive subscribers into our betting funnel at, you know, almost no cost. That's sort of the plan with that. Again, this acquisition of Edisn.ai is important because it allows us to sync a lot of this information, allows us to learn what people are viewing and watching. Then on a discrete basis, we'll be able to provide, you know, hundreds of games, thousands of games. All of this is kind of something we've been talking about for a year. What's interesting is, you know, Netflix is doing the same thing, right?
They're launching their gaming platform to engage with consumers to extend the brand value of shows like Squid Game and Stranger Things. These are all things that we felt we've been pretty much first on, but we're starting to see other companies develop platforms in similar ways. We're super excited about that.
Thanks very much.
Thank you.
Thank you, Jim.
Jim, thank you so much. Our next question comes from Zachary Silverberg with Berenberg. Zach, good to see you. Please proceed with your question.
Okay. Good evening. Thanks for taking my question. My first one is sort of on your partnerships with NASCAR, the Jets, and the Cleveland Cavaliers. What do these partnerships mean for the growth of the sportsbook, customer acquisition, market entry, and what sort of partnerships can we sort of see on the horizon?
Yeah, good question, Zach. Look, we're getting into the space. We're getting our feet wet right now. We want to make sure we have certain partnerships to be able to leverage IP with some of these major partners. As you know, we've now exceeded 1 million subscribers. We want to build on that brand equity, and we're looking for those right relationships. As we continue to develop our gaming strategy, we'll look to expand our partnerships. Right now, we're pretty happy with the partnerships we have in place.
Got it. On the ad revenue side of the business, can you sort of just talk about what's driving some of the stronger ad growth year-over-year?
Yeah. I mean, again, it really comes down to basic elements of advertising. As I just mentioned, there are really three components that drive advertising sales for the company right now. One is the fill rate, number two is the CPM, and number three is the viewership hours. Those are the three levers that you can pull to drive. Now, the good news is we don't have to drive all three of them every quarter. We can drive, you know, sometimes it's three, sometimes it's two, sometimes it's one. This quarter, what we've seen is a combination of a few elements.
One is the increase in CPM that we're seeing from somewhere around the 21-23 range, which really, again, keeps me excited because there's a long way to go to hitting the CPMs that we're typically seeing on connected devices, which is 30+. That should indicate to you that there's strong growth. The other one is, you know, the viewership hours I'll leave for last, and then there's the fill rate. The fill rate, again, we have opportunities. We've been testing 15-second, you know, units versus 30s, and advertisers seem to really like those, so we're going to continue to focus on kind of CPM and fill rate for now. The good news is we've got a long way to go. Viewership hours continue to increase.
Obviously, there was an influx of subscribers at the end of the third quarter, which brought the number down somewhat. On a year-over-year basis, we feel very comfortable we'll continue to drive engagement. Advertising is certainly a very exciting space for us, and we'll be investing in our ad tech to be able to drive those numbers higher. Thank you.
Zach, thank you for your questions. Our final question is with Dillon Heslin with Roth. Dillon, please proceed with your question.
Hi, Dillon. Sorry, we can't hear you.
He's muted. You're muted.
Oh, you're muted, Dillon.
Dillon, you're muted.
Don't worry about it. Happens to me all the time.
We still can't hear you. You need to unmute yourself, Dylan. Still muted.
Now? Is it now better?
Yep.
Now we can hear you.
Perfect. Thank you. We can hear you now. Go ahead.
My apologies.
No worries.
Yeah, so-
It happens to all of us. Thank you.
Thanks for taking questions.
You bet.
Congrats on the 1 million subs. First, on some of the attach rates, you talked about the the 2.3 million attach rate this quarter. Can you talk a little bit about what that mix is between your existing subs who are deciding to sort of up their plan later on versus a new sub who comes on at that higher ARPU off the bat?
Yeah. Well, I think it's clear that it's not just new subscribers coming in because we sold 2.2 million attachments at the end of the quarter. What that's telling you is that for every average subscriber, we're selling 2.3 products. It's actually across the board. What we typically see seasonally is that in the third or fourth quarter, people subscribe to our Sports Plus packaging, which includes the NFL RedZone. You know, we anticipate, and we've seen this again every year, that there is some decline in ARPU after the NFL season due to people taking down their package, which typically includes NFL RedZone.
Got it. As a follow-up, on the sales and marketing expense, I know you talked about that being down as a percentage of revenue, about 300 basis points year-over-year, but it's up over double quarter-over-quarter in absolute dollar terms. I mean, obviously you had the subs to back that up. I mean, where do you start to think you can see that—
Yeah
Absolute dollar figure plateau?
Well, you know, it's tough to look at it from an absolute dollar value perspective because right now, you know, you're talking about a company that is just 6 years old, right? If you look back at 2020, the average IPO, the average age of a company was about 12. This company is in complete growth mode. You know, when I look at revenue, or I should say sales and marketing as a percentage of revenue, whether it's Roku or DraftKings or anybody else, or Netflix for that matter, you know, it's relatively high. Roughly around that 30%-35% range is kind of where we want to be.
At the same time, you know, that number has come down to some degree, and we feel comfortable our average subscriber acquisition cost is in the range that we've always guided to since testing the waters, which is between 1 and 1.5 times our first month's ARPU. Now, note that as our first month's ARPU continues to increase, we obviously can spend more money attracting subscribers. One thing that is important: we have added extremely high-quality subscribers over 2021. That is reflected in the continuing improvement in retention. Frankly, our September cohort for this NFL actually outperformed anything we typically would see.
Again, we're super excited about where we are in terms of spend and the quality of customers we continue to attract to the platform.
To add to that, Dylan, I mean, ultimately the whole improvement in our operating leverage is driving efficiencies in marketing as well as in all the other expenses. You also see it on the content side, with subscriber-related expenses going down 8.5 percentage points compared to last year, same quarter. That is continuously reflected in our improvement in adjusted EBITDA margin and in general in our margins.
Yeah. Dillon, I'll just say one thing. We are at the very early stages of the evolution of this business. It's actually quite remarkable. I just want to give a quick shout-out to the team. They have done a phenomenal job. Expectations, as you know, are extremely high. The competitive set is very difficult for us to deal with. Our numbers are public. Everybody's looking at them. Again, I just really want to give a quick shout-out to the team, the retention team, the marketing team, the product team, the engineering team, the Fubo Sports Network team, the finance team. All these groups are really working cohesively to be able to drive value across all of our KPIs.
Thank you, guys. Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Dillon, thank you. This concludes the Q&A portion of our call. We thank everybody who participated for their time and thoughtful questions, and we look forward to continuing to update you on the progress of the business in ensuing quarters and would encourage you to reach out if you have additional questions. Thank you again, and we look forward to speaking to everybody soon. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.