Good afternoon, and welcome to A-Mark Precious Metals Conference Call for the fiscal Q1 ended September 30, 2023. My name is Jenny, and I will be your operator this afternoon. Before this call, A-Mark issued its results for the fiscal Q1 2024 in a press release, which is available in the Investor Relations section of the company's website at www.amark.com. You can find the link to the Investor Relations section at the top of the homepage. Joining us today for today's call are A-Mark CEO, Greg Roberts, President Thor Gjerdrum, and CFO, Kathleen Simpson-Taylor. Following their remarks, we will open the call to your questions. Then, before we conclude the call, I'll provide the necessary cautions regarding the forward-looking statements made by management during this call.
I would like to remind everyone that this call is being recorded and will be made available for replay via a link available in the Investor Relations section of the A-Mark's website. I would now like to turn the call over to A-Mark's CEO, Mr. Greg Roberts. Sir, please proceed.
Thank you, Jenny, and good afternoon to everyone. Thank you for joining on our call today. As you can see, our Q1 results demonstrate the strength and scalability of our fully integrated platform to generate profitable results even during slower market conditions. Despite facing a less favorable macroeconomic environment and softened levels of demand compared to recent quarters, we still delivered $30 million+ of EBITDA and diluted earnings of $0.77 per share and continued to grow our direct consumer customer base. Consistent with our commitment to generate shareholder value, the company also repurchased a total of 171,268 shares of our common stock for $5 million during the Q1, bringing our total treasury stock to 14.8 million.
We continue to view our share repurchase program as an attractive investment opportunity for the company and another way to deliver value to our shareholders. Finally, we amended our trading credit facility during the quarter, resulting in increased liquidity and the reclassification of debt to long term. With that, I will now turn the call over to our CFO, Kathleen Simpson-Taylor, to walk you through our financials in more detail. Then our President, Thor Gjerdrum, will discuss our key operating metrics. Afterwards, I will provide a further update on our business and growth strategy and welcome your questions. Kathleen?
Thank you, Greg, and good afternoon, everyone. Our revenues for fiscal Q1 2024 increased 31% to 2.5 billion from 1.9 billion in Q1 of last year. Excluding an increase of 660.1 million of forward sales, revenues decreased 75.8 million or 5%, which was due to a decrease in gold and silver ounces sold, partially offset by higher average selling prices of gold and silver. The DTC segment contributed 13% and 23% of the consolidated revenue in fiscal Q1 2024 and fiscal Q1 2023 respectively. Revenue contributed by JMB represented 12% of the consolidated revenues for Q1 of 2024, compared to 20% in Q1 of last year.
Gross profit for fiscal Q1 2024 decreased 36% to 49.4 million, or 1.99% of revenue, from 76.6 million, or 4.03% of revenue in Q1 of last year. The decrease in gross profit was due to lower gross profits earned from both the wholesale sales and ancillary services and DTC segments. Gross profit contributed by the DTC segment represented 43% of the consolidated gross profit in fiscal Q1 2024, compared to 55% in the same year ago period. Gross profit contributed by JMB represented 36% of the consolidated gross profit in fiscal Q1 2024, compared to 48% in Q1 of last year. SG&A expenses for fiscal Q1 2024 increased 23% to 21.8 million, from 17.8 million in Q1 of last year.
The increase was primarily due to an increase in consulting and professional fees of 2 million, an increase in compensation expense, including performance-based accruals of 1.2 million, higher advertising costs of 0.4 million, an increase in insurance costs of 0.3 million, and an increase in information technology costs of 0.2 million. Depreciation and amortization expense for fiscal Q1 2024 decreased 12% to 2.8 million, from 3.2 million in Q1 of last year. The decrease was primarily due to a 0.5 million decrease in amortization of acquired intangibles related to JMB. Interest income for fiscal Q1 2024 increased 20% to 6.1 million, from 5.1 million in Q1 of last year.
The aggregate increase in interest income was primarily due to an increase in other finance product income of 0.7 million, and an increase in interest income earned by our secured lending segment of 0.3 million. Interest expense for fiscal Q1 2024 increased 60% to 9.8 million from 6.1 million in Q1 of last fiscal year. The increase in interest expense was primarily due to an increase of 3.2 million associated with our trading credit facility, due to an increase in interest rates, as well as increased borrowing and the AMCF notes, including amortization of debt issuance costs, as well as an increase of $0.5 million related to product financing arrangements.
Earnings from equity method investments in Q1 2024 increased 1% to 2.71 million from 2.68 million in the same year-ago quarter. Net income attributable to the company for the Q1 of fiscal 2024 totaled 18.8 million, or 0.77 per diluted share. This compares to net income attributable to the company of 45.1 million, or $1.83 per diluted share in Q1 of last year. Adjusted net income before provision for income taxes, a non-GAAP financial performance measure, which excludes acquisition expenses, amortization, and depreciation for Q1 fiscal 2024 totaled 26.8 million, a decrease of 56% compared to 61.3 million in the same year-ago quarter.
EBITDA, a non-GAAP liquidity measure for Q1 fiscal 2024, totaled 30.4 million, a 51% decrease compared to 62.2 million in Q1 fiscal 2023. Turning to our balance sheet, at quarter end, we had $48.2 million of cash, compared to $39.3 million of cash at the end of fiscal year 2023. Our tangible net worth at the end of the quarter was 421.7 million, down from 436.8 million at the end of the prior fiscal year. As Greg mentioned, we amended our trading credit facility during the quarter, resulting in increased liquidity and a reclassification of the debt to long term. The facility now matures in September 2025 and provides for automatic annual renewals.
A-Mark's board of directors has continued to maintain the company's regular quarterly cash dividend program of $0.20 per common share. The most recent quarterly cash dividend was paid in October. It is expected that the next quarterly dividend will be paid in January 2024. That completes my financial summary. Now I will turn the call over to Thor, who will provide an update on our key operating metrics. Thor?
Thank you, Kathleen. Looking at our key operating metrics for the Q1 of fiscal 2024, we sold 495,000 ounces of gold in Q1 fiscal 2024, which is down 21% from Q1 of last year and down 39% from the prior quarter. We sold 30.4 million ounces of silver in Q1 fiscal 2024, which was down 15% from Q1 of last year and down 33% from last quarter. The number of new customers in the DTC segment, which is defined as the number of customers that have registered or set up a new account or made a purchase for the first time during the period, was 39,100 in Q1 fiscal 2024, which is down 20% from Q1 of last year and down 57% from last quarter.
Approximately 32% of the new customers from the last quarter were attributable to the acquired customer list of BullionMax in June 2023. The number of total customers in the DTC segment at the end of the Q1 was approximately 2.4 million, which was a 16% increase from the prior year. The year-over-year increase in total customers was due to organic growth of our JM B customer base, as well as the acquired lists of BGASC and BullionMax in October of 2022 and June 2023, respectively. The DTC segment average order value, which represents the average dollar value of products ordered, excluding accumulation program orders, delivered to DTC segment customers during Q1 fiscal 2024, was $2,440, which is up 5% from Q1 fiscal 2023, but down 26% from the prior quarter.
For the first fiscal quarter, our inventory turnover ratio was 2.5, which is a 7% decrease from 2.7 in Q1 of last year and a 22% decrease from 3.2 in the prior quarter. Finally, the number of secured loans at the end of September totaled 803, a decrease of 26% from September 30, 2022, and a decrease of 9% from the end of June. The dollar value of our loan portfolio at the end of September totaled 99.2 million, a decrease of 1% from the end of last fiscal year. That concludes my prepared remarks. I'll now turn it over to Greg for closing remarks. Greg?
Thanks, Thor.
... I do apologize, everybody. I'm not too sure where that music has come from. Just bear with me two seconds while I try and sort the technical issue out. Is everything okay?
Yeah, yeah. I'm sorry. We had a problem with the phone. Where did it?
Okay.
Where did I leave off?
So we got to your closing remarks, Greg, but did you want me to run the Q&A and see if we have anybody in the Q&A?
It's fine. Yep.
Yep. Okay, so we will now open the floor for questions. If you would like to ask a question via the webcast, please click on your Ask Question box on the left side of your screen, type in your question, and hit Submit. If you would like to ask a question via the phone lines, please press star one on your phone keypad now. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For anyone using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before you press the keys. Please hold a moment while we poll for questions. Thank you. Your first question is coming from Lucas Pipes, from B. Riley Securities. Lucas, your line is live.
Thank you very much, operator. Good afternoon, everyone. The music at the beginning was better than just now.
We'll work on that. If there's a particular type of genre you'd appreciate next time, let me know in advance.
No, I appreciate that. Look, I appreciate you taking my questions. My first one is just on the demand that you're seeing in the market today. Obviously, there's been a lot of geopolitical uncertainty. It seems like demand is firming up, but it would be really good to kind of get your take on the market and what might have changed since the September quarter. Thank you.
Sure. I think, you know, we did indicate on our last call that we did see some lower demand for product. As you have noted before, we did see some compression of our premiums, which did affect our gross profit percentage. I think that there has been an ongoing sentiment in the marketplace that our consumers and our customers seem to be a bit unsure as to where precious metals prices are going. Throughout the last 60 days, we've seen some significant increase in the spot prices of gold and silver. Also, over the last 60 days, we've seen a number of dips that have resulted in significant increase in demand. So I think you have a combination of things going on here right now.
We definitely have an increased supply, particularly in silver. You combine that with some uncertainty and some choppy demand, you're going to see some compression in premiums. I think at the moment, you have had gold twice over the last couple weeks test, you know, new highs and get very near all-time highs. You know, the all-time high in gold in U.S. dollars is around $2,060. You know, we did test that number a couple of weeks ago. I think there needs to be some conviction in the marketplace as to whether or not we're going to see a breakout to new highs or, you know, if we're going to see a retreat.
I think in the quarter we're reporting right now, we did see significant activity and significant uptick in demand when we did see some dips in prices on spot prices. So, I think it's a combination, but I think that kind of, you know, I hope that answers your question.
That, that's helpful. Thank you for that. And then, I apologize. I didn't see the margins in the wholesale and DTC segments, and didn't have the time to dig further into that. But can you remind us what the margins were in the Q1 and how you would expect those to trend, the gross margins, here in the Q2? And not sure if you want to venture into a longer, kind of, medium-term outlook, but would appreciate your perspective on that.
I mean, I think in the, in the quarter we have just finished, the one that we're reporting on right now, you know, we did see, you know, a lower gross margin, and we, you know, as we enter this quarter, we're, you know, we're experiencing some similar market conditions as we did last quarter. So, you know, but I would say, you know, from a positive note, I, I believe the company is continuing to outperform the market conditions, and I think that we're, you know, we're investing in the business, we're growing the business, and, you know, we're seeing the results that we would expect in, in the market conditions.
I think that as I look forward, you know, there, to me, in doing this for the last 40 years, I do see a number of macro issues continuing to pile up that I believe would be favourable to our business. Whether they materialize or not, or how they have an effect on our business, you know, I don't. My crystal ball isn't quite that clear, but I do like the way, you know, things are setting up right now.
But we are going to need to see a pickup, you know, in demand, and, and obviously, you can see from the spectacular results we had last fiscal year, and particularly the results we had in Q1 of last fiscal year and Q4 of last fiscal year, the company, when given the opportunity, will perform and, and has a very high ceiling on what performance can be. But as it relates to micromanaging what's going on this quarter, and you know, exactly what's, what's happening today or tomorrow or next week, as we have said before, our, our business is very volatile. I wake up every day and look at the news and look at the price of gold and the price of silver, and there's a lot of things that go into whether we're going to have a busy day or a busy week.
You know, trying to identify those days in the future, you know, can be challenging.
Thank you so much, Greg, and I'll try to squeeze one last one in. In terms of the buybacks, is that more opportunistic, or is there something to read into in terms of where your stock, where you see your stock trading vis-a-vis opportunities in M&A? Thank you.
I mean, I think we've talked a little bit about it before. I think nothing has changed. I look at our business, and I look at our balance sheet, and I look at what it takes to run our business. I look at, you know, our liquidity, our bank lines. A number of different factors contribute to the decision-making as to how we allocate capital. We highlighted in this press release that we did sign and enter into a new agreement with our lenders. That agreement, I believe, was a lot of hard work by Thor and Kathleen with our great partners, CIBC.
The result of the new credit facility, moving to two years committed, moving to long-term debt, as well as increasing our flexibility as it relates to how we're going to deploy capital, was a big win for A-Mark, and I don't want to minimize that. It was a lot of hard work, and, you know, we're very thankful and very appreciative of our partners in the bank group. As we look at the stock buyback in particular, it to me, it's just, it's like any other trade we do. Where is our capital best allocated to return the best result for our shareholders? And that's something that I focus on all the time.
As we look at opportunities, whether it be capital expenditures, whether it be holding inventory, whether it be acquisitions, or whether it be stock buybacks, I, you know, I view this and the board to this you know, the board and I are very well aligned on this, that we're looking for whatever the best return is for the shareholders. And you know, I believe that at the moment, you know, the stock offers to me a better opportunity than maybe it did a few months ago. So I think, you know, certainly the market cap of the company as it relates to our tangible net worth and our book value, as well as you know, inventory or M&A opportunities, they're all factors.
And obviously, as you know, buying back stock in my, you know, in my assessment, if I believe buying back the stock a few years from now is going to be the best investment and the best way to deploy our capital, we will do that. If we believe an M&A opportunity is going to return a better ROI, we're going to look at the M&A opportunity. And if, you know, we need to expand our mints or we need to expand our storage or we need to inventory more product, we're going to do that. So, you know, to me, it's something I do every day. I don't believe that there's a playbook for it, that every, you know, every opportunity and every decision is easily defined.
It's a little bit of experience and gut, and, you know, that's, that's what I do. So I hope that answered your question.
It was very helpful, and I appreciate that approach, and thank you for that detail.
Thank you very much. Your next question is coming from Tom Forte of D.A. Davidson. Tom, your line is live.
Great. Thank you, Greg. I have two questions. I'll ask them both at the same time. Can you talk about would it be too strong of statement to say that $0.70 a quarter in GAAP earnings is a current low for the business as configured? The second part for that one is, what is it about the way that you've put together the business right now that enables you to generate such tremendous profitability in a soft quarter? I feel like if I looked back in time when there was soft quarter, you often actually lost money and didn't make money.
And then second, maybe just at a high level, can you compare how the core customer is responding to the, you know, Israel-Hamas conflict or the, government shutdown, you know, news that came out at the end of September, and maybe how that compares with, you know, the, debt ceiling or the Silicon Valley Bank or, you know, the Russia-Ukraine? Just, you know, high-level comments there. I'd really appreciate it.
Sure. Let's start with the first one. I am thrilled and very optimistic that with the environment we encountered in the Q1, we made $30 million EBITDA, which we've just announced. I think that is a tremendous performance when you view the, you know, what we dealt with and what was going on as it relates to the supply and demand and the sentiment of our shareholder base. I believe that we have, as you pointed out, sometimes it's easy to lose perspective on performance, and you know, being a public company, I realize that our investors are looking at a year-over-year, quarter-over-quarter.
But as you've pointed out, and you've been here for quite some time, you know, $30 million, if that is near or around our, you know, low baseline of what we can do, and $75 million-$80 million is our upside, I'm very proud of our employees and our management and thankful to our customers for everything they do to, you know, to cause these results. So. And, I am, you know, I know when $5 million was a great quarter for us.
So, you know, I agree with what you're saying, and I believe that, you know, this business is built for the long term, and this business is built to take advantage when the opportunities are there to have outsized returns that you just don't see very often in any companies. And I love it, and we're very good at what we do, and when we have a slow quarter, as I have said before, and we've illustrated before, there's a lot that goes on to building the business and keeping the business running and prepared to take advantage and take market share when the market gives us an opportunity. So for all we accomplished in Q1 and to make $30 million EBITDA, I'm very pleased with the performance.
I think that we are in a situation, to kind of move towards your second question, I think we are facing some very uncertain times as it relates to what's going on in the world. I don't think that, you know, any CEO can get on the phone like this and talk about that they have any certainty as to how certain things that are going on in the world today are going to affect their business. You know, the crystal ball does become a little foggier when you have events going on that are really unprecedented. As I said a little bit earlier, in all the years I have done this, there are a lot of factors, you know, affecting the world economies right now that have really never come together at the same time.
To kind of dissect your questions related to individual events, I think that in hindsight, it's very easy for me to understand and explain how certain events affected our business, either positively or negatively. You know, before the events happen, it's very difficult to understand what's going to happen and when, and then, you know, predict what will be the result of those events. Actually, you asked four specific questions, and I will go, you know, what I think is chronologically, although I guess we could debate whether it's directly chronological. I believe that the war between Russia and Ukraine had a very positive effect on our customer base and commodities and precious metals in general.
You had a country that was a big producer of oil, of silver, of platinum, of a lot of commodities, you know, that had basically unlimited capabilities as it relates to, you know, going to war. Become involved with an ally of the United States, that was very important to us from a trading perspective as well as a geographic perspective. And I believe that the world reacted to that and hadn't really expected or seen something like that before. And for 4-5 months, A-Mark, you know, was the beneficiary of a great deal of uncertainty and how it would affect the U.S. economy.
I think that the Silicon Valley Bank crisis was unique amongst, you know, it was unique to anything I had ever really seen before, where you had, you know, a top 15 bank in the country go under in a matter of days. You had a panic that came about in all financial institutions, and you had a flight to quality and a withdrawal of assets from a number of very large financial institutions. And that withdrawal of assets, a good percentage of it, in our world, flowed into our products. So that event, again, was a little more short-lived, but it was extreme. And as I've talked about before, all of these, what I call earthquakes, and the aftershocks that follow are all...
You know, they all affect how we do business and what results we can hope to accomplish. The congressional shutdown, the interest rate environment, which has taken a number of people by surprise, what appears to be backtracking and re-trading by the Fed on what they're actually going to do and how they view inflation and how they view what they're going to do about it, and interest rates. To me, that's just a huge macro issue, you know, that affects huge markets, way bigger than A-Mark's markets. And it's not, in my mind, going away anytime soon, and I think it paints a very positive picture for alternative currencies, as well as commodities and precious metals in particular.
I believe that issue is more long-term and ongoing, and it's not doesn't have the same exact effect as what I would call a Silicon Valley Bank earthquake that is, you know, a big deal and then kind of wanes over time. You know, we'll see how a government shutdown affects our business. I think that, you know, right now, it seems to me that the markets are very skittish, and I think that is, you know, it's instilling a little bit of uncertainty in all investors. And I think it's a very difficult time right now to really predict, you know, how this is going to play out. I love the business we're in. I think we are positioned tremendously to take advantage of whatever happens.
We're going into an election cycle, which historically has you know created increased activity in our markets, so I look at that as something to keep an eye on. And then lastly, you know, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or the Israeli-Hamas conflict is just a horrible situation. It's just, you know, it's very difficult to watch. It's very difficult for me to you know wrap my arms around. And I think that our customers, and probably shareholders, are somewhat frozen, and I see that event as a situation where people are you know just not really focused so much on what's going on at the price of silver or gold, and they're focused on you know things that you know were unimaginable 60 days ago.
And so I think that this particular conflict has probably slowed down just a lot of decision making as it relates to, you know, hedging your equities or protecting against a deflation of the dollar or, you know, different reasons why people look at our business and our products. So I think it has. It has been a little bit of a kind of sit on your hands and do nothing the last since October seventh, I believe it was. So I think that's, you know, that's natural, and I think it's understandable. And you know, I think you know, the next few months are going to be very interesting, how this plays out. But you know, it's hard for me to speculate on how it's going to affect the economics of A-Mark.
Thank you, Greg. Very thoughtful. Appreciate it.
Thank you very much. Your next question is coming from Andrew Scutt of Roth MKM. Andrew, your line is live.
Good afternoon, and thank you for taking my questions. So my first one kind of piggybacks off the previous question. When you look at your DTC business now, you know, there are multiple avenues and store fronts you guys have and a broadening demographics of the customer base. I was just wondering if you could kind of dig deeper into the activity you saw there. Maybe were there some pockets of customers that were weaker? Were there others that may have provided some countercyclical boost? Just anything you could provide there would be great.
Yep. I think first and foremost, as I look at our numbers for this quarter and I look at, you know, our premiums that we're dealing with, I think that the new customer acquisition funnel that we get across all of the platforms are robust. I think our new client acquisition and our ability to take customers from our competitors and our ability to just onboard new customers, I thought it was a great month for that, considering the environment. We did test on a number of occasions at JM Bullion in the last 90 days.
We've tested, really what price we need to sell product at, and we set goals for ourselves as to how many ounces we might be able to sell if we were to test some lower premiums and some lower sale prices. I believe that was only possible in the current environment, and I will say that our customer base reacted better than I expected. We had a number of promotions in the last 90 days, where I set what I thought were some very high-end goals for what would be expected results. And I think the team at JM Bullion and in the DTC segment, they performed very well.
So I was very pleased with, with what we were able to gain as it relates to knowledge and what I believe we gained as it relates to new customers and taking market share from our competitors. So I was very pleased with that. I think that JM Bullion, in particular, is the, you know, the lead bull in our DTC segment. Their results have been astronomical in previous quarters. As you can see, they at times contributed, you know, 60% of our gross profit. So JM Bullion, in particular, it was a very high bar for them to, you know, to match or to keep up with. And we are, you know, we did see a slower result in this quarter, which, you know, we will report.
I think that a couple of things on the positive note, some of the smaller platforms and brands that we acquired over the last 12 to 18 months, BullionMax, in particular, you know, we saw some increased demand at very high average order value this last quarter, from customers on that platform. Numbers that we really hadn't seen in the diligence before we bought them. And I attribute that to Rob and his team at JM Bullion as it relates to their marketing and their taking over of that website. So, definitely a positive on that particular platform from what we're seeing.
We've also seen a shift to a number of orders that are very large from a dollar perspective and are concentrated in gold over the last 90 days. And we have seen a bit of a shift in our market mix, our product mix, moving over to gold from silver, which is reflected in our results, and that gold is usually slightly lower margin for us than silver. And, you know, we attribute that and those orders, those very large orders; we think that is very healthy in that it relates to some large customers that are placing big orders. So overall, I thought all of our platforms did very well.
I think, you know, I think JM had a very high bar, so in looking at the results, you know, it feels like, you know, maybe they underperformed. But in the environment we're in, I feel like, you know, all of our DTC brands did very well, considering the environment.
That's great to hear you're finding ways to navigate the weaker environment. My second one for me is just on the two mints. Could you just comment on the production out of the mints in the quarter and maybe if the waning demand would it change your thought process on production rates moving forward?
Yeah, I think that the mints have done very well. The mints have navigated managing expectations and what can be expected in the current environment. I can say that I think they have really outperformed and have been very nimble and flexible in what they produce. I think one of the beauties and positive takeaways that I see in our business, you know, for the next 10 years, is our ability to shift production in a week to the products that we can sell. I think we have been very fortunate that Jamie at Silver Towne and Tom Power at the Sunshine Mint and Jason at Sunshine, that runs things for Tom, they've been very, very good at shifting products daily. We're able to pivot to whatever we can sell.
You know, we've been very fortunate over the last 3-4 months that we've had a very good demand for larger sized silver bars, and we've been able to pick up our production and shift it to that product that we can sell, which just again keeps us nimble and keeps us ready to take advantage of, you know, when and if we need to shift back to one ounce silver products that, you know, that maybe are a little less in favor at the moment. But I can't say enough about the employees, management at the mints keeping everybody busy, you know, managing the production and, you know, cutting back on overtime and watching their expenses. And it's just. It was a very good job this quarter by our mints.
Great. Well, appreciate the detail, and, thanks again for taking my questions.
Sure.
Thank you. Your next question is coming from Greg Gibas of Northland Securities. Greg, your line is live.
Hi, good afternoon, Greg, Thor, and Kathleen. Thanks for taking the questions. I think, you know, apologies if I missed it, but did you see more or less margin compression with the wholesale business versus DTC? Wondering if you could just kind of speak to that.
I would say that we have seen more margin compression in the DTC. I would say that, you know, we have tested lower premiums. We have done a number of specials over the last 90 days to really test the elasticity of the market, to really find out what depth in product our competitors have, as well as what price and premium motivates our customers. So I would say in this quarter, we have experimented, and I believe it has been a very positive outcome, in that I think that I have a really good idea today in this environment, what price I can sell a million units of one ounce silver product for. I don't know that I had that six months ago because I don't think we had the same, you know...
We hadn't really experienced this exact same environment in a while. But we did a number of tests where we set very large targets to see and to educate ourselves on what price and premium under what spot price conditions, you know, we could overachieve as it relates to units. So I think, you know, we've tested that, but with that, we probably have seen a little more compression in gross margin and premium at the DTC side. I think, you know, the wholesale side has been compressed, but it probably not to the same extent as DTC.
Got it. That's helpful, Greg. And you know, a little bit more of a broad question, but, you know, wanted to see if you could address kind of avenues for growth in DTC and, you know, how you can capture more of the market. And, you know, I guess along with that, you know, are inorganic opportunities more attractive in this kind of weaker macro environment?
I mean, for me, I don't want to leave any money on the table. I mean, I look at our business as Sunshine and SilverTowne, take 1,000-ounce silver bars that our A-Mark wholesale traders buy, our logistics gets the metal to the mints, the mints create the product, and that profit opportunity, you know, goes from that 1,000-ounce bar all the way up our integrated business to the end user. And I think that, you know, we're, we're unique, and we are separated from our competition because we have a lot of competition in different parts of the value chain as it relates to our, our gross profit individually.
But we really are the only fully integrated business, that, you know, can take 1,000-ounce bars off the exchange and turn them into 1-ounce silver rounds and get, you know, our retail consumer to respond to... If we want to be the cheapest, we can be the cheapest. I think the balance is, you know, always testing, testing quantity, testing price, testing product, and making sure at that DTC level that we are valuing new customers, which we have a metric for that.
We're valuing the sale, and we're, we're valuing, you know, how it affects the rest of our vertically integrated businesses, and, and just how to maximize and, and sell the right amount of ounces at the right price, all the while making sure we're keeping our new customer count up because we're fully committed to that new customer count, whether it be organic or whether it be through acquisitions. And, you know, if we have most of the customers, you know, we're going to get most of the business. We're going to live through, you know, different macroeconomic, different environments, different supply and demand imbalances either way. But if we have the customers, and we make sure that we know how to motivate those customers, and we have a good idea of what we can expect from them if we test them...
You know, I feel like we don't really care where we get the customers, organically or through acquisition. We just want to get as much out of those customers as we can, and if it's in an acquisition, we want to get more of the wallet and more out of those customers than the company that ran it when we acquired it, the management or the company platform. If we're taking customers from competitors, and we're gaining market share, and we're adding new customers that way, we value those customers maybe a little bit differently. And again, we want to make sure if they have $100 to spend, we're getting their $100. And as it relates to geographic, we continue to work very hard on opportunities that we see out there geographically, to bring in new customers.
We work on how we're going to value those customers and how that affects how we deploy our capital in an acquisition. We are, I believe, the best in the business at analyzing opportunities and deciding, you know, where we're going to deploy our capital. Now, obviously, as I've talked about before, you know, in our current situation, there is a lot of analysis that goes into capital deployment. Whether it be stock buybacks, whether it be dividends, whether it be special dividends, whether it be, you know, M&A opportunities. We're very focused on, as a management team, being able to pivot quickly and being able to take advantage of opportunities, that, you know, that will have the best ROI for our shareholders, myself included, as one of the larger shareholders.
I'm super committed to what we're doing here and long-term value and what—making the right decisions today that will be positive in the future. You know, I think that the benefit we have, which I have said before, is when we face some headwinds in the market, and we have what, you know, many would look at as a slow quarter, $30 million EBITDA is still fantastic. And I would say that there are many millions of dollars that are potentially out there for us because our competitors are probably going to feel this slowdown more than we are, because we have the best business in the industry.
We're going to also be offered, you know, opportunities for M&A, that we would hope will be, you know, be better, better return on investment, you know, equations, than maybe in a very hot market. I think, as I've talked about before, you know, we went through three out of four quarters last fiscal year, where, you know, we were outperforming everybody, but all of our competitors were doing very well. You know, we were able to make outsized profits in that environment, but it didn't bode particularly well for M&A on a large scale because I was very concerned about, you know, what would the business be worth if we did have a slowdown?
Well, right now we're in that period, as you can see in this quarter, and we're taking a very close look at how a slow quarter affects valuation on potential acquisitions. So, to me, it's just opportunity. I feel like we have great opportunity. I feel like the business is operating at a very high level, and you know, this is going to be a good ride. You know, I'm very much looking forward to what the next three or four years brings.
Makes sense. Appreciate your thoughts. Thanks, Greg.
Thank you very much. Our last question comes from Sy Jacobs of Jacobs Asset Management. Sy, your line is live.
Hey, Greg, how are you?
Hello, Sy. How are you?
I'm doing well, thanks. So I just wanted you to run a little more with that last point about M&A and then kind of tie it to the buyback. You know, last quarter, you sounded pretty optimistic that there were some, you know, attractive live things in your M&A pipeline. I think you might even have mentioned, you know, one of them being, you know, an option to, you know, raise a minority stake to a higher level and then-
Mm-hmm.
- and then some other organic things. And then, you know, business was slowing at that time, and you have mentioned the dynamic where, like, asking prices are sometimes too high when business is good, and, sellers become more motivated when business is bad. You know, if you can give us an update on what your pipeline looks like in that regard, and then tie it to the fact that... You know, I couldn't help but notice that, you know, you bought back stock at an average price that indicated it happened right at the end of the quarter, 'cause that's the only time the stock was trading below 30. So you kinda knew how the quarter was going, and you bought stock there. Now, the stock's lower and-
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, so just kind of juxtapose what, you know, even lower stock price where you were than where you were eager to buy it versus, you know, maybe even more attractive, you know, opportunities to do accretive M&A.
Yeah. You know, I'll focus on what I talked about before. We have disclosed, and we have a contractual option to increase our stake in Silver Gold Bull, the company in Calgary, that is a very well-run company. The founders are great. We appreciate all they do. We think they run a really good business. We have an option window that opens to take a controlling majority ownership. I believe it opens in December. I believe it's open for eight months. It's very specifically defined as to how that investment would be made and at what valuation. We're assessing the performance of that business today.
We understand that we negotiated this option to give us the flexibility to take advantage of the increased ownership, when we felt it was the right deal at the right time, related to all of our other options you just mentioned. And that one's, you know, it's pretty baked. We're going to continue to look at the window of exercising. We're going to continue to look at the economics of that deal, and we're going to continue to look at the economics of all the deals we're looking at, including the buyback. As you can imagine, as our share price reflects our performance, or it reflects the sentiment of our shareholders, and the price goes lower, buybacks become more attractive, because, you know, I believe the stock is on sale.
I have in my head, and I always have in my head, what A-Mark is worth. I'm a trader by nature. I have a very good idea what I think the bid side is and what the ask side is. And one of the benefits of being public is that there are supply and demand imbalances, just like silver and gold, where our stock becomes on sale. So as I look at that, and I look at what I think my ask price is, I can have a very clear picture of what I think the return on investment is if I buy stock at 30, 29, 28, 27, 26, and it goes into my, you know, internal calculations as to where our each dollar of capital should be deployed.
So, you know, if I thought the stock was a great deal at 28 or 29, I think the stock's a better deal at 27. And we will act accordingly. As it relates to M&A and acquisitions, I tell people that A-Mark gets priced every hour during trading sessions, five days a week. The value of A-Mark is what it is. You know, right now, it's trading at a certain multiple. Our balance sheet is huge. Our tangible net worth is huge. Our book value is $600 million, approximately. I tell people, "You know, I can't buy you if I buy A-Mark at, you know, at a certain price." And unfortunately, when I say, "I want to buy you," I have to...
I don't always get the response that I want, you know, other people- I, I have to live with A-Mark being priced every day, and I've become very accustomed to that. I- it doesn't bother me at all. But as it relates to what I'm going to pay on an acquisition, as I tell people, "You know, the deal has to make sense. Otherwise, why am I going to buy you if I can just buy back A-Mark stock, um, and by myself, which I have, you know, a great deal of confidence and control over?" So when those discussions happen in a slowing environment, and somebody thinks their business is worth X, and I tell them now it's worth 70% of X, two things are going to happen. I'm either going to be right or I'm going to be wrong.
Sometimes it takes a little while for the seller to get their arms around what their business is worth. So deals that, you know, may have looked good four, five, six months ago, they have to be repriced today. It's just the way the markets work. But I'm very patient. I mean, I have, you know, I have deals that we've looked at four or five times over the last three or four years. Some of them we act on, and some of them we're very patient, and we will not act unless we get them at the right price. So I am responsible for your money, and I take that responsibility very seriously, and I feel like we've made very good decisions how we invest your money, and we're going to continue to do that, Sy.
Great. I agree, Greg. Just one little definitional thing. Is it disclosed, or can you disclose specifically or generally, this option you have to, you know, go to, majority ownership in, Silver Gold Bull or whatever it's called in Calgary?
Yep.
Can you say how many-roughly how many millions of dollars that would be cash or whether there would be stock?
Yep
... involved? Just trying to put it in context of, you know, you spent $5 million buying back the stock, your cash still built by $9 million this quarter.
Yep.
You've got-
Yep.
I forgot what the number was, $50 million, $40-some-odd million in cash. What's the scope of that possible-
Yep
- outlay?
Yeah. I try for strategic reasons. Now, I don't you know, I don't know exactly what we said when we took the increased stake to get us to, I think it's 47% or 49%. I will say that the increase would take us to 75%. And I don't believe the size of that 25% would not be normal course for us if we chose to do it. You know, it's certainly more than $5 million, and if you go back and, you know, look, and you can see what we paid for the increase that we did make, you know, you can kinda figure it out. There's, you know, there's probably enough information there. I don't want to speak to it at the moment.
I just know that, as it relates to the way I just described all the decisions in front of us at the moment, we have been preparing in our own minds for the last six months, knowing that this opportunity is there, that this window is going to open, and that we feel that that is a top priority because we believe we value that option, and we believe that we think the option is an asset of A-Mark. And, you know, we will be prepared, if we think it, you know, it's the right opportunity, we'll be prepared to take it. I don't think the cost or the investment will, you know, it won't affect our decision-making. I think we have enough liquidity to do that.
We have enough liquidity to pay our dividend. We have enough liquidity to buy back stock when we think it's the right time. And, you know, we have two or three other acquisitions we're looking at right now. So, I mean, I feel like we're very well prepared to take advantage, you know, when others need to sell. So I like, I like the hand we have, and I think we're playing the hand very well.
Greg, on that point, just last part of the same question. If you were to... You know, you said that that option is sort of like fully baked.
Yeah.
If you were to exercise it and go over 50%, and this could be a question for Kathleen, possibly, 'cause it's off-
Mm-hmm.
Account, GAAP account.
Yeah. Kathleen, stand up. Come on over. It is going to be for Kathleen, because I know exactly what you're going to say.
Yeah. Is, would it be a situation like JM Bullion, where by going over 50%, does the price of the option, is it struck at a price that would cause you to need to write up your minority investment and produce a GAAP earnings gain?
Yes.
And then you would also get, I assume, the other GAAP effect, that you would just have a higher stream of income flowing through the GAAP income statement because you own more of it?
Yeah, you can look back at, to the JMB acquisition. We had that remeasurement gain, right? So the book value of how we carried the investment versus what the implied enterprise value is when you would buy the incremental piece. So that would most likely result in another remeasurement gain.
Okay, great. I appreciate it.
And I, I'm assuming, Kathleen, that we would then consolidate their financials if we did that.
If we're up to 75, we would be required to consolidate.
Right. Okay. Is that good, Sy?
That's awesome. Thanks, both of you.
Thank you.
Thank you very much. Well, at this time, that does conclude our question and answer session. I'd now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Roberts for his closing remarks.
Thank you, Jenny. Once again, I appreciate all the shareholder confidence. A lot of you have been-we've been talking for a very long time. I really do appreciate your patience and your support as we navigated, as we've said before, a fairly volatile company as it relates to the lumpiness and choppiness of our earnings. I think, you know, it's very important, you know, to look at our business and look at it over a year or two years, and again, quarter to quarter can be a little bit difficult, both to a blowout quarter or a slow quarter.
So I think it's, you know, it's great that everybody is, over time, has educated and is learning the company, and I thank you all for that support. I'd also like to thank again our dedicated employees and all of their commitment to A-Mark's success, and we look forward to keeping you apprised of A-Mark's progress in the future. Thank you very much. Jenny, take it away.
Thank you very much, Greg. Before we conclude today's call, I would like to provide A-Mark's safe harbor statement, that includes important cautions regarding forward-looking statements made during this call. During today's call, there were forward-looking statements made regarding future events. Statements that relate A-Mark's future plans, objectives, expectations, performance, events, and the like, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These include statements regarding expectations with respect to the dividend declarations, the amount or timing of any future dividends, future macroeconomic conditions and demand for precious metal products, and the company's ability to respond, to effectively respond to changing economic conditions. Future events, risks, and uncertainties, individually, in the aggregate, could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in these statements.
Factors that could cause actual results to differ include the following: the failure to execute the company's growth strategy, including the inability to identify a suitable or available acquisition or investment opportunities, greater than anticipated costs incurred to execute the strategy. Changes in the current international political climate, which have favorably contributed to demand and volatility in the precious metals markets. Potential adverse effects of the current problems in the national and global supply chains. Increased competition for the company's higher margin services, which could depress pricing. The failure of the company's business model to respond to changes in the market environment as anticipated. Changes in consumer demand and preferences for precious metal products, generally. Potential negative effects that inflationary pressure may have on our business. The inability of the company to expand capacity at Silver Towne Mint.
The failure of our investee companies to maintain or address the preferences of their customer base's general risk doing business in the political and governmental risks, and other risk factors described in the company's public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. Listeners are cautioned not to place undue reliance on those forward-looking statements. Finally, I would like to remind everyone that a recording of today's call will be available for replay via a link in the Investors section of the company's website. Thank you for joining us today for A-Mark's earnings call. You may now disconnect.