Gaia, Inc. (GAIA)
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Earnings Call: Q2 2022

Aug 1, 2022

Operator

Afternoon, everyone. Thank you for participating in today's conference call to discuss Gaia, Inc's Financial Results for the Second Euarter ended June 30, 2022. Joining us today are Gaia's CEO, Jirka Rysavy, and CFO, Paul Tarell. Following some prepared remarks, we will open the call for your questions. Before we get started, however, I would like to take a minute to read the safe harbor language. The following constitutes the safe harbor statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The matters discussed today include forward-looking statements that involve numerous assumptions, risks, and uncertainties.

These include, but are not limited to general business conditions, future losses, competition, loss of key personnel, price changes, membership growth, brand reputation, changing consumer preferences, customer acquisition costs, member retention rates, acquisitions and other risks and uncertainties detailed from time to time in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our reports on Form 10-K and Form 10-Q. Gaia assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Gaia's CEO, Jirka. Please go ahead.

Jirka Rysavy
Executive Chairman, Gaia

Thank you and good afternoon, everyone. Just before end of the quarter, which ended June 30, we achieved our major milestone finalizing our 18 months effort to achieve technology independence, which means that we now able to operate our business on Gaia own hardware and infrastructure. Revenue for the quarter increased 7% to $20.7 million, and member count is up to 792,000 from the year ago quarter. However, because the second quarter is our seasonally slowest one, we pulled back on our marketing spend in the second half and had a negative member growth in this quarter. EBITDA improved 8% to $4.2 million compared to $3.9 million a year ago, and our EBITDA margin was over 20%.

Gross profit per employee improved another $10,000- $567,000. Net income from continuing operation was $0.1 million or $0.01 per share compared to $0.6 million and $0.03 per share a year ago. This decline really reflects the incremental intangible asset amortization from and also some expenses from integrating Yoga International, and definitely also to finalizing our effort of our technological infrastructure independence. Paul will now speak more about the result.

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Revenues were up 7% to $20.7 million for the second quarter of 2022. Gross margins declined slightly to 86.7% for the quarter, compared to 87.1% for the same period in the prior year. The slight decrease is primarily due to additional content amortization compared to the prior year. We experienced our first sequential net subscriber contraction, ending the quarter with 792,000 members, down approximately 31,000 members from March 31, 2022, but up from the year ago quarter by 770,200 members. The decline in the member base was primarily driven by reduced marketing spend during May and June as we experienced a shift back to the seasonal patterns which we historically experienced each year prior to the start of the pandemic in 2020.

Prior to 2020, where we added 58,000 net new members in the second quarter, we typically saw a reduced efficacy of our marketing efforts, which resulted in lower new member additions during May through August as people shifted into their summer patterns in the Northern Hemisphere. In addition, we had further headwinds during the quarter as we had the second annual renewal occur for the large number of members we added in Q2 2020 during the pandemic. As a result of the seasonal factors, we elected to limit our member acquisition spending in aggregate for the second half of the quarter to a total of $7.2 million or 35% of revenues to conserve the marketing spend for a more favorable seasonal period.

While this led to a reduction in the number of members we added during the second quarter as a result, we remain focused on our long-term strategy of maintaining financial independence and ensuring an adequate return on our customer acquisition efforts. We also continue to focus our efforts on building out the Spanish, French and German offerings and expanding these audiences to allow us to leverage lower relative customer acquisition costs compared to the domestic English market. During the second quarter of 2022, selling and operating expenses excluding marketing and member acquisition costs were $8.7 million or 42% of revenues, and corporate and G&A expenses were $1.8 million or 9% of revenues.

We incurred approximately $0.4 million of incremental technology-related expenses during the quarter as we completed our 18-month project to enable technological independence and insulate us from potential future price increases related to our legacy hosting provider. We expect to reduce these expenses going forward as we now focus on optimizing our technology spend with the initial phase of the project having been completed. We also expect to begin recognizing the benefits of the improvements in efficiency for Yoga International we implemented during the second quarter and complete the related back-office integration work by September. EBITDA was $4.2 million or 20% of revenues in the quarter and marks another consecutive quarter of positive EBITDA.

Net income from continuing operations was $0.2 million or $0.01 per share compared to $0.6 million or $0.03 per share in the year-ago quarter. Jirka mentioned, the reduction was primarily due to increased intangibles, amortization, and elevated operating expenses related to the implementation phase of the technology independence project. Overall net income was $0.1 million, which reflects the impact of the loss from discontinued operations associated with the legacy Yoga International transactional core sales business that we exited as part of the acquisition. Our cash balance as of June 30, 2022 was $6.2 million, which reflects an overall reduction in our payables balance of approximately $3.4 million compared to year-end.

While we expect the seasonal headwinds to continue through the summer, we remain focused on maintaining financial discipline and continuing to evolve our content and marketing initiatives to support long-term revenue and cash flow growth. With that, I'd like to open up the call for questions. Operator?

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you'd like to ask a question, you may do so by pressing star one on your touch-tone telephone. Star one for questions. Please make sure the mute function on your phone is turned off so the signal can be read by our equipment. Star one for questions. We'll pause a moment to assemble the queue. We'll take our first question from Eric Wold with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Thank you. Good afternoon. Paul, I know you mentioned obviously the return to normal seasonality and the kind of tough comps to the two-year large subscriber we had at the start of the pandemic. Can you dive in deeper into that, the reduction in subscribers, anything in there that would be you know something that was surprising to you than just normal seasonal trends? Was there you know certain cohorts of kind of age of you know kind of the length of subscribers that weren't renewing or were not coming on? Anything that would give you a sense of you know socioeconomic movements from what you can tell that would make it seem more cost related than anything? Anything that could you know little more detail if possible.

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Yeah, sure. Something I've been paying obviously very close attention to discern what we think the future trends might look like. You know, honestly, as I look through all of the retention data by kind of the monthly cohorts that we've been looking at it for the last 9+ years we've been running this business, there's nothing really alarming that is indicative of a future problem that I see today as it relates to retention. The biggest factor of going backwards for the quarter was the pullback on the marketing spends because we weren't adding new subscribers. Then that's compounded with the new subscribers that we did sign up during the quarter that we're typically seeing in that three month to six month retention band, our historical drop off that we've seen. There's no net change in the retention dynamics.

It's really a matter of the efficacy of adding new subscribers.

Jirka Rysavy
Executive Chairman, Gaia

Yeah. I would add that.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Got it.

Jirka Rysavy
Executive Chairman, Gaia

The retention actually somewhat improved. It's kind of pretty much steady or actually better than historical. It's really the addition to new members, it's not the losses.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Got it. Thank you, Jirka. Paul, you mentioned, you know, the, you know, the pullback in spend in May and June, given a return to kind of normal seasonal difficulty in adding subscribers. How is the paid, you know, marketing environment right now? Is that still, you know, as difficult as it has been? Has it been getting easier? You know, I guess, is that more of a tailwind or headwind right now to normal seasonal patterns?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

I would say we're neutral as it relates to the cost of the media. Really what we're seeing is the guest to member conversion rate has steadily declined as we've gone from winter into spring into summer. That's really what precipitated us pulling back on the marketing spend, because if you have a reduction in the guest to member conversion, that's a corresponding inverse correlation to the cost per adding each member. While the overall media is behaving relatively consistently with what we've seen in this time of year, the conversion rates is what we were responding to from guest to member.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Got it. Just final question for me, maybe, you know, a larger one. I know the, you know, the value of the exclusive, you know, content library that you've built over the years is just that, it's exclusive and, you know, can't be shown on other platforms. But clearly it's not getting any recognition, you know, by investors at this valuation, in my opinion. I guess, does it make sense to look at other options to monetize that content in other ways, either through licensing other people, selling some off, you know, any considerations there?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

I'll let Jirka answer that one.

Jirka Rysavy
Executive Chairman, Gaia

Well, obviously, since Netflix started to talk about it, as far as this year, we're not going to do anything. We'll see how that's happened. We actually be pretty happy with our retention, and we also finalize several projects. You know, after Labor Day, we'll see how the market is and do we need to do something. You know, we talked several times about I don't think we would right now look like having, like, ads or something. It's always possible. We'll see how it plays for other players. There's definitely a way we could potentially do something with, like, potentially some kind of classic television and stuff, as we talked before, but it's nothing that we plan to do before end of the year.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Got it. Thank you both.

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Mm-hmm.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Jacob Stephan with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Jacob Stephan
Senior Research Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets

Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. I just wanted to focus on the customer acquisition spend just a little bit more. Maybe if you talk about the Yoga International acquisition and kind of, you know, the customer acquisition differences between, you know, the legacy and the new business.

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Yeah. I'd say generally what we're seeing in the yoga space is that there's been a significant return to in-studio practice, which has caused obviously some headwind for getting sign-ups to a digital online platform. That's really in line with the seasonal patterns that we had historically seen pre-2020. Again, I don't believe it's a trend that is anything different than a reversion to what our historical patterns have been. You know, we have two years that we've all experienced and gotten used to, but there's been a rapid unwinding of that behavior as we've gone into this spring and summer, and I think that's what we're seeing there. Again, we're not really in a position where we're trying to press it.

If the return on the spend's not there, we'd rather save the dollars for a time period when they are there, and we're focusing our efforts on accelerating and completing that back office integration work so that we can be ready as we go into the post-Labor Day period, where historical trends would tell us things start to be more favorable for adding new subscribers.

Jacob Stephan
Senior Research Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets

Okay. Maybe just talk about content costs. At this point, is it still maybe, you know, a little cheaper or, you know, could you potentially see some synergies from acquiring more content through acquisition? Or is generating, you know, your own content still more cost-effective?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

I would say just generally creating our own content is more cost-effective unless there's a need to fill in parts of the library with a licensing style arrangement with the content creator, or as we're looking at geographic expansion, I think that's really where the build versus buy with the time component built in really tips in the favor of acquiring. I'll let Jirka add a little bit of commentary on that.

Jirka Rysavy
Executive Chairman, Gaia

No, it's. I think what Paul said is accurate. I mean, but for us, if you're kind of looking for increasing pressure on content costs as other people see it, we don't see it at all. I think pretty much we pay same thing what we paid two , three years ago. Unless, you know, we kind of add more animation and stuff, so they would push it up, but it's our decision, and we kind of peg it to the number of subscribers. We don't see any pressure on, in either, you know, licensing or creation.

Jacob Stephan
Senior Research Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets

Okay, maybe just last one. Looking at live events, have you seen any, you know, progress with the upsell to premium subscription and, you know, how have your live events been perceived by the public and your customers?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

I'll answer the second part first. The reception of the events by the people that attend them are phenomenal. We're you know high 90s Net Promoter Score as we poll the audience, both in person and the online audience that participates live. We're in the kind of a soft spot in the schedule right now. As we go into the fall, we'll have more events coming up, and we really try to tie our marketing efforts around those events. We're again in a little bit of a soft spot as it relates to summertime with just people getting out and traveling. It's not really effective to try to be messaging them too significantly right now.

We're ramping up for the fall and going into the winter around that, particularly with the holiday, and gift-giving potential opportunity as we think about doing something that we haven't historically done differently and really focusing our efforts on that.

Jacob Stephan
Senior Research Analyst, Lake Street Capital Markets

Okay, great. That's all I have. Thank you.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Thierry Wuilloud with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead.

Thierry Wuilloud
Managing Director, Water Tower Research

Yes. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions, although you've answered quite a few of them already. I was curious, any update on the international or foreign language effort? Are you seeing traction in some of those areas at that stage?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Yeah. As I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we're able to actually still pretty effectively spend money on the languages because it's off of a pretty new market opportunity. That's allowed us to spend a bit more percentage-wise than we would have ordinarily because we pulled back on the domestic English spending. It's a good avenue for us to continue to invest and get a good CPA on it. I'd say we're still early innings and focused primarily on getting learnings and figuring out our in-language marketing campaigns and what conversion rates and retention rates look like. I'd say we're ramping up with the expectation of firing on all cylinders going into the fall.

Thierry Wuilloud
Managing Director, Water Tower Research

Okay, great. I was a bit curious. I would have thought Events+ would be. This could be kind of a good time of the year because, again, people are traveling. Colorado is a nice destination. But you think it's more of a third quarter, maybe end of the year when you will be pushing that more?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Well, we're speaking specifically of the $299 digital subscription, when we talk about Events+.

Thierry Wuilloud
Managing Director, Water Tower Research

Oh, okay.

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

I'd agree with you as it relates to the events, but we're really focused on the subscription component of it, and that's really what we're talking about. Now we have a pretty robust catalog now with the 13 or 14 events that we've had. As we get back into the fall time period, we'll be able to start marketing and promoting the catalog of events that are already available while selectively sprinkling in the upcoming events.

Thierry Wuilloud
Managing Director, Water Tower Research

Okay. I see. Great. Thank you very much.

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Yeah.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, star one for questions, please. Star one for questions or comments. We'll pause a moment to assemble the queue. We'll take a follow-up from Eric Wold with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

Thanks. Appreciate it. I guess just circling back to some on the subscriber trends call, I guess how much of a surprise was it, for kind of the normal seasonality to come back in the quarter, kind of from where you stood at the end of, you know, on the conference call for the Q1 call, you know, three months ago? I guess any updated thoughts on kind of the run rate exiting this year versus what you thought at the end of the Q1?

Paul Tarell
CFO, Gaia

Yeah. I think when we spoke in early May, the trend hadn't solidified quite as strongly as it did as we rolled through the end of May and got into June post-Memorial Day. At this stage, I think we're really looking at the historical pattern and not trying to predict what's gonna happen, but understanding that seasonally, Labor Day and after is when we start to see the dynamic shift back. We're playing for that to occur this period until we have information that tells us otherwise. No real prediction at this point because we're still in the middle of the summer, and it's hard to have a gauge on what to predict. I think the focus for us is to stay positive on the EBITDA and net income side and ride this out.

That's really what we'll be looking at and not trying to chase it from a spend perspective to drive subscriber growth if the dynamics aren't there.

Eric Wold
Senior Analyst, B. Riley Securities

That's helpful. Thank you.

Operator

At this time, we have no further questions in the queue. I'd like to turn the conference back to management for any additional or closing remarks.

Jirka Rysavy
Executive Chairman, Gaia

Okay. Thank you, and thanks to everyone for joining, and we look forward to speak with you when we'll report the third quarter in early November. Thank you very much.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's discussion. We appreciate your participation. You may now disconnect.

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