Thank you for standing by, and welcome to CompoSecure's Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call. I would now like to hand the call over to CompoSecure's Investor Relations Advisor, Sean Mansouri, with Elevate IR. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us to review CompoSecure's Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2023 Financial Results. With me on the call is Jon Wilk, CompoSecure's Chief Executive Officer, and Tim Fitzsimmons, Chief Financial Officer. They will begin with prepared remarks, and then we will open the call for Q&A. During the call, we will make statements related to our business that may be considered forward-looking, including statements concerning our plans to execute on our growth strategy and our ability to maintain existing and acquire new customers, as well as other statements regarding our plans and prospects. Forward-looking statements may often be identified with words such as "we expect," "we anticipate," or "upcoming." These statements reflect our views only as of today and should not be considered our views as of any subsequent date. We undertake no obligation to update or revise these forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements are not promises or guarantees of future performance and are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results to differ materially from our expectations. For a discussion of material risks and other important factors that could affect our actual results, please refer to the information in our annual report on Form 10-K and other reports filed with the SEC, which are available on the Investor Relations section of our website at CompoSecure.com and on the SEC's website at sec.gov. Please note that the discussion on today's call includes certain non-GAAP financial measures, including Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted Net Income, Adjusted EPS, and Free Cash Flow. The company believes these non-GAAP financial measures provide useful information to management and investors regarding certain financial and business trends impacting the company's financial condition and results of operations.
These non-GAAP financial measures should not be considered as an alternative to net income or any other performance measures derived in accordance with U.S. GAAP and may be different from similarly titled non-GAAP measures used by other companies. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures is available in our press release and earnings presentation, available on the Investor Relations section of our website. Thank you. And with that, let me turn the call over to John to discuss our fourth quarter and full year results.
Thank you, Sean. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and full year conference call. Our fourth quarter results delivered a strong close to 2023, capping off another year of record revenue and adjusted EBITDA while providing strong Free Cash Flow. I'd like to take a moment to acknowledge the efforts of our team in 2023. While we face challenges in the macroeconomic environment, our deep client relationships, best-in-class products, and a thoughtful approach to managing our business allowed us to deliver adjusted EBITDA in line with our original guidance issued back in March 2023. We accomplished a lot last year. We extended long-term contracts with our top two clients and produced more than 31st million metal cards, which is another record for the business.
We introduced several innovations, such as the Echo Mirror card, that are clear examples of how CompoSecure delivers unique value for our customers. I'll share more on this shortly. Now, to summarize our financial results on slide three, net sales in the fourth quarter increased to $100 million, due primarily to growth in our domestic business, which exceeded our previous quarterly record set in the third quarter. Looking at our bottom line, Q4 adjusted EBITDA grew more than 20% to $37 million, reflecting our most profitable quarter of the year. As we have often stated, our team is acutely focused on profitability while simultaneously driving investments to capture long-term opportunity and value. I wanted to call out a few additional highlights.
In 2023, we supported more than 150 new and ongoing card programs for our customers, up from more than 125 programs in 2022. This past December, ABI Research ranked CompoSecure as the market leader in its assessment of the metal payment card market. We believe momentum is also building for our Arculus products as Fintechs are beginning to leverage and market our innovative technology. More to come on this later in the call. Card issuers reported growth in 2023 and have maintained a positive outlook for the year ahead, indicating continued investments in customer acquisition and retention due to sustained customer demand. For 2024, we are issuing net sales guidance of $408 million-$428 million, and for adjusted EBITDA, we're targeting a range between $147 million and $157 million.
These targets reflect our expectation for continued strength in our business. Our adjusted EBITDA target also factors in a net investment for Arculus... If you remember, in 2022, we had a net investment of $21 million, which we reduced to $14 million in 2023. For 2024, we expect that number to improve once again before turning positive for fiscal year 2025. I am also very excited to announce that our board has approved a securities repurchase program for up to $40 million over three years, providing us with a mechanism to acquire securities in CompoSecure. We believe our securities trade at a discounted valuation for a growing business that commands a leading market share, with gross margins north of 50%, adjusted EBITDA margins in the high 30s, and meaningful free cash generation.
We are trading at only five times trailing enterprise value to EBITDA. Moving on to slide four, we wanted to share several new metal card programs since our last call. Let's begin with one of the unique innovations I mentioned earlier, our Echo Mirror card. The card's surface is as shiny as a mirror, hence the name. Trade Republic, a European fintech, began marketing the card recently, and it's proven to be extremely popular. As a matter of fact, the Echo Mirror card has become the main backsplash image on Trade Republic's homepage. You can also see several vertical-focused programs on this slide, such as the BMW or Fan Ink card, as well as international examples for Kotak in India and Banque Palatine in Europe. Continuing on slide five, I wanted to share how our customers are leveraging our products and brand in their marketing efforts.
I already mentioned Trade Republic, but you can see an example of how they are marketing this on social. In the past, I've mentioned Change Finance. Change is an international fintech that has started selling a company-branded cold storage wallet powered by Arculus. Venus.io, a Latin American-based company, is using a similar approach for their branded cold storage wallet. And for Radix, a DeFi-based fintech, we also created a co-branded card that allows them to leverage the strength of our Arculus brand in the market for their cold storage wallet. On slide six, I mentioned card issuer trends earlier, and I'd like to provide some further insight. The information is based on quarterly reported public information. After seeing accelerated growth driven by pent-up demand during the pandemic, our large customers continue to see strong purchase volume.
In addition, you'll notice similar trends around new card acquisitions, as well as a continued commitment to marketing spend. Looking at the overall payment card market, we highlighted several customer and partner quotes on slide seven. We're hearing positive sentiment related to growth and consumer spending in 2024, backed by a strong labor market and wage growth. Consumer demand for products is expected to continue, and card issuers remain committed to marketing investment to drive customer acquisition. These factors point towards continued growth for the premium payment card market. I always like to take the opportunity to outline our Arculus platform on every call to provide clarity around our product capabilities. Let me start on the right side with our Arculus B2B cold storage, which allows users to securely store, send, and receive digital assets. As you know, we offer both white label and co-branded solutions for our customers.
On the left, you can see several use cases for our Arculus Authenticate offering, such as secure login, new device authentication, and high-risk transaction verification. On slide nine, we recently partnered with Forbes to help us better understand business leader perceptions related to fraud and user authentication as we drive forward on Arculus opportunities. Forbes surveyed 200 U.S.-based leaders from medium to large organizations across a variety of financial institutions. The results showed that passwords remain a challenge for the industry, with negative impacts on consumer experience, organizational efficiency, and the bottom line. While passwords are a clear issue, the real challenge highlighted by the research continues to be: how do businesses deliver a higher level of security while maintaining or improving the consumer experience?
We believe that Arculus technology, tied to a payment card, can help deliver the right solution for both improved security and an enhanced customer experience. With that, I'll hand it over to Tim to review our financials before returning for closing remarks.
Thanks, John, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll provide a more detailed overview of our Q4 and full year 2023 financial performance and then turn it back to John before we open the call for questions. Unless stated otherwise, all comparisons and variance commentary are on a year-over-year basis. In Q4, net sales increased 7% to $99.9 million, compared to $93.8 million. The increase was driven by continued domestic growth in our metal payment card offerings, partially offset by lower international sales, which is a more variable market due to customer mix and a smaller sales base. Gross margin for the quarter was 53%, compared to 54% in the prior year. The decrease was primarily due to lower production efficiencies from new quad constructions and customer designs.
Net income for the quarter increased 39% to $31st million, compared to $22.4 million in the prior year. The increase was driven by prudent operating expense controls, as reflected by a reduction in selling and general administrative expenses, as well as changes to the fair value of warrants, earn-out consideration, and derivative liabilities. Adjusted EBITDA in Q4 increased 22% to $37.2 million, compared to $30.6 million in the prior year. Our adjusted EBITDA margin increased approximately 461 basis points to 37%, compared to 33% in the fourth quarter of 2022. The increase in adjusted EBITDA was driven by net sales growth and the aforementioned operating expense controls. On Slide 12, you can see our full year performance.
Net sales were up 3% to a record $390.6 million, driven by continued strong US demand, partially offset by our international business, which was impacted by global economic conditions. Our full year gross margin was 54%, compared to 58% the prior year, due to lower production efficiencies from new quad constructions and customer designs. Net income from the year was $112.5 million, compared to $131st.8 million in the prior year. The lower net income was driven primarily by the non-cash changes in the fair value of the warrant, earn-out consideration, and derivative liabilities. Adjusted EBITDA for 2023 increased 6% to a record $145 million, compared to $136 million in the prior year.
Adjusted EBITDA margin for the full year increased 114 basis points to 37%, compared to 36% in the year 2022. Looking closer at the split between domestic and international, you can see that our fourth quarter domestic net sales remained strong at $86 million, which is up 9% year-over-year and surpassed our record result in Q3. International net sales for the fourth quarter of 2023 were $14 million, which was up sequentially, but down year-over-year. As we have communicated in the past, we expect our international business to account for roughly 20% of our annual total net sales mix. It was 18% of the mix in 2023 and 22% in 2022. Moving on to the balance sheet.
At December 31st, 2023, we had cash and cash equivalents of $41.2 million and total debt of $340.3 million, which includes $210 million of term loan and $130 million of exchangeable notes. This resulted in a total net debt of $298.5 million. In addition, I want to mention our inventory levels. John often shares our thoughtful approach to managing the business while effectively balancing our investments. One such example is that we have proactively increased inventory levels near the end of 2023 to ensure we are in the best position to deliver on our clients' needs throughout 2024. As always, we provide both our overall debt leverage ratio and our bank agreement secured debt leverage ratio, as our bank agreement is calculated with slight differences.
At December 31st, 2023, our overall leverage ratio was 2.35 times, based on a total net debt of $340.3 million and trailing 12-month Adjusted EBITDA of $145 million. This compares to 2.6 times at December 31stst, 2022, with the improvement driven by paying down debt and increased TTM Adjusted EBITDA. At December 31stst, 2023, we had a bank agreement secured debt leverage ratio of 1.39 times, based on a total secured debt of $210.3 million and trailing 12-month bank Adjusted EBITDA of $151 million. This compares to 1.62 times at December 31stst, 2022. Turning to Slide 15.
At December 31stst, 2023, we had Free Cash Flow of $55 million, based on $104 million in net cash from operations, less investment in capital equipment of $11 million and tax distributions of $38 million. This resulted in a Free Cash Flow yield of 13% based on a market cap of $429 million. This compares to a Free Cash Flow at December 31stst, 2022, of $47 million, which also gave us a Free Cash Flow yield of 13%. Note, you can see the GAAP cash flow statement and a footnote on the calculations of the market cap on this slide. I want to turn now to earnings per share.
As a reminder, our method under GAAP for calculating basic and diluted EPS allows us to allocate changes in adjustments of mark-to-market instruments among the public company and the operating subsidiaries to better reflect the actual economic impact of the conversion of such instruments on our net income and our per share basis. GAAP EPS for the three months ended December 31stst, 2023, was $0.17 per basic and diluted share. This compares to $0.14 per basic and diluted share in the year ago period. The increase was driven by operating expense controls, as well as changes to the fair value of the warrants, earn-out consideration, and derivative liabilities, primarily due to changes in our stock price.
You can read through the footnotes on the slide that take you through the complexities of the allocation of net income due to the UPC structure and the shares that are included in the basic and diluted calculations. Turning to slide 17 for our full year GAAP EPS, which was $1.03 per basic share and $0.96 per diluted share. This compares to $1.21 and $1.13 for basic and diluted share, respectively, in 2022. Again, this was impacted by the same factors I outlined on the previous slides, as non-cash adjustments can have either a positive or negative impact on net income. On slide 18, we're also providing a non-GAAP adjusted net income and adjusted EPS, which excludes the impact of non-cash fair value adjustments for the warrants, earn-out revaluations, and stock compensation.
We believe that this provides a clearer picture of the economics of the company's operating results. With that background, our non-GAAP EPS for the fourth quarter of 2023 was $0.29 per basic share and $0.26 per diluted share. This compares to $0.23 per basic share and $0.20 per diluted share in the year ago period. In the appendix, you'll find a reconciliation between the GAAP and non-GAAP net income used in these calculations. Turning to slide 19, adjusted EPS for the 12 months ended December 31st, 2023, put us at $1.12 per basic share and $0.97 per diluted share. This compares to $1.10 and $0.94 per basic and diluted share, respectively, in 2022. I'll now turn it back to John to discuss our guidance and give closing remarks.
Thanks, Tim. As I mentioned earlier, we expect our 2024 net sales to range between $408 million and $428 million, and adjusted EBITDA to come in between $147 million and $157 million. Turning to slide 21, I want to conclude by summarizing a few key themes that we covered today. As I've stated in the past, we've always had a thoughtful approach to managing the business while effectively balancing our investments, which has resulted in a long history of delivering profitable growth. Our team delivered a record year in 2023, including meeting our original adjusted EBITDA guidance. The consumer continues to prove resilient, and global issuers are actively expanding their metal payment card programs to satisfy that growing demand.
We believe Arculus is starting to gain momentum as fintechs seek to leverage our innovative technology to expand their capabilities. As mentioned, we expect the net investment for Arculus to continue to improve and turn positive for fiscal 2025. Last, we believe our current market valuation reflects a discount for our category-leading business, and the securities repurchase program we announced today equips us with another tool to deliver shareholder value as we execute on our growth and profitability objectives. With that, I'd like to open up the call to Q&A.
To ask a question, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. To remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of John Todaro of Needham & Company. Please go ahead, John.
Hey, thanks for taking my question. I just have one here. So you mentioned the net investment for Arculus turning positive in 2025. Is there just any kind of metrics we can get on Arculus in that growth? Because, you know, just thinking Bitcoin around all-time highs here, a lot of volume activity has picked up in the space. Is there kind of almost night and day differences in what we're starting to see in Arculus now versus maybe six months or so ago? And if not, kind of what environment is needed then to really get Arculus to start contributing?
Thanks, John, for the question. We're not disclosing deeper metrics at this point. You know, we are gonna continue to show you and others, examples of Arculus executions, like the Change Finance, Radix, Venus.io, and others, where we are seeing exactly the types of things we wanna see, John, where people are sort of white labeling, co-branding the solution in, in various, alternatives, and delivering those to the market through their channels. So, you know, we are seeing that kind of momentum in both executions, in our pipeline, and in the discussions that we're having as well. And yes, you know, we've seen an uptick from the market and I think, the increase in crypto prices, and, and that's certainly, we believe, a positive.
You know, if you look at the net investment in Q4 at, you know, roughly $2.4, you know, it's headed in exactly the right direction that we want. And, you know, we think that'll improve again next year, while turning positive in 2025.
Got it. Thanks.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Hal Goetsch of B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead, Hal.
Hey, you guys mentioned inventories. You know, they've been actually flat since the Q1 report, but you called out as them being maybe elevated versus maybe year-end 2022. Where do you think inventories are on the channel? And do you think over time inventory levels around 2022 levels are possible again, or are you just really comfortable at this level going forward?
Yeah. So Hal, we separate those, I think, issues of, you know, inventory in channel. We touched on it briefly last time we spoke with, you know, a couple limited examples of people managing inventory on their end. We think those have largely subsided. From our perspective, you know, we were almost inventory limited for a long time in terms of our ability to ensure that we had enough chips, metal, and other sort of key items for us. And, you know, we feel comfortable at the levels that we're operating to ensure that we can deliver against the growth that we've outlined.
Okay. And if I could ask one follow-up on new program wins. That's, that was some great new information going from 125 to 150 or so. How many of them are in new products like Echo Mirror and some of the other products? Or can you just kind of give us a feel of if those new products are part of those programs?
Yeah. Those new products like our LED Card, Echo Mirror, and others are definitely part of those wins. And typically, you know, we see those ramps build from sort of initial executions with clients that make a big splash and have early success, followed by others in the market. So, you know, we're quite encouraged, Hal, I would say, by the take-up of some of these new products and look forward to seeing that build with products like our Lux Glass Card that, you know, we expect to see tick up here over time.
Right. Terrific. Thank you.
Thanks, Hal.
Thank you. Once again, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone. Again, that's star one one on your telephone to ask a question. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Palmer of Benchmark. Your line is open, Mark.
Yes, thank you for taking my question. What would you say are the main swing factors between the top end and the lower end of your guidance for net sales and Adjusted EBITDA for 2024? And what portion of that is simply due to the macro?
Thanks, Mark. Look, we've laid out a range, you know, for sales. We've got, we think, very good visibility, as we look out into the year, you know, through our top clients, and as in any year, you know, there are things that we need to lock down, both with our largest clients and the visibility that we've been given with high confidence, as well as, you know, the other identified opportunities. And so it's just essentially executing against what we can see in front of us. And, you know, that's how we laid out that range and feel quite good about it.
Just one follow-up. With regard to the $40 million that repurchase program over the next three years, what will drive the decision making with regard to the allocation across common stock warrants and converts?
So Mark, our board, you know, has been and will continue to look at capital allocation. You know, historically, it's been focused on driving organic growth and paying down debt. We've had the conversations throughout about sort of all of the different things we could do with capital to help drive shareholder value. And, you know, the board authorized the plan to enable us to do any of those things that we outlined. And, you know, we will continue those discussions with the board around, you know, which of those avenues at, you know, what prices, all those things will be sort of in consultation with the board as we execute.
Thank you very much.
Thanks, Mark.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joe Flynn of Compass Point Research and Trading. Your question, please, Joe.
Uh,
... Hi, guys. I know we're still relatively early until ultimately the deal closes, but if you guys could comment maybe on the Capital One Discover deal and ultimately your kind of outlook of how that, you know, impacts the volume of metal cards longer term, that'd be really helpful.
Thanks, Joe. When we think about that deal, you know, Capital One is a client today. You know, we do cards like, Venture X, Venture, Spark, and others. Discover, you know, we have very little business. You know, we see this as, I'd say, neutral to positive for us, as it may open up additional opportunity, but no additional comments really beyond that.
Then I wanted to ask one more question on the kind of the capital allocation side.
Sure.
I guess, you know, you guys have definitely shown, like, you know, increased flexibility with, you know, focusing on paying debt down and now the buyback. I just wanted to know, spread the discussions over, you know, potentially doing, like, share distributions to potentially, you know, lower some of the impact of the ops structure, or just anything you could provide there would be helpful.
Yeah, just foundationally, as I said in my prepared remarks, you know, we believe our stock is undervalued. We have a market-leading company with strong gross margins, north of 50%, our EBITDA margin is at 37%. You know, and we're trading at, you know, near five times enterprise value to EBITDA. Like, we fundamentally believe our stock is undervalued. And so, you know, we've looked at that and said, you know, the board has authorized what I call additional flexibility around, you know, stock buyback, warrants, notes, or other levers that, you know, we and the board deem appropriate to drive shareholder value. And so this is, to me, us leaning in, saying, "You know, we fundamentally believe we're undervalued, and, you know, we're gonna make sure that we've got the necessary tools to address that in the market." And your comments were right.
We've been very successful in paying down debt. You know, our leverage ratio's at, you know, 2.4 times total debt, 1.4 times on our bank leverage. You know, we paid down additional debt this year, incrementally. If you look at the cash position at the end of the year, we both paid down additional debt and ended the year with, you know, substantially increased cash, and that's what we believe we can do in this business. So, you know, beyond that, I'm not gonna get more specific at this point, but we've got the tools in our toolset, we believe, to, you know, address challenges we see to drive shareholder value.
Great. Thanks. That's all for me.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Reggie Smith of J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead, Reggie.
Hey, good evening. Thanks for taking the question. I was hoping that you could maybe talk a little bit about, I guess, the revenue cadence for next year, if we should think about kind of a similar profile, to previous years or how you guys are thinking about that, and I have a follow-up as well. Thank you.
Thanks, Reggie. We don't generally see seasonality in our business, driven by, I'd say, time of year, right? It's typically just driven by timing of different programs as we move through the year. Beyond that, you know, it's not something we look at and say, you know, X quarter is always typically higher or lower than others. We believe well positioned to kind of hit the total ranges that we've laid out for the year.
Got it. Thank you. And then, you know, kind of looking at, looking like historically, like, your revenue growth rate has bounced around quite a bit. Obviously, 2022 was a record year in terms of growth. And I know you've talked about, you know, kind of double-digit growth longer term. Just curious, like, what your thinking is currently on the long-term outlook for metal cards and your business in general. And then just including that, if it's significantly higher than what it is today, is that-- is it macro or is it adoption? Like, what's the bridge to kind of get back to whatever you deem to be kind of the longer-term growth profile? Thank you.
Thanks, Reggie. Look, when we look at the growth rate of this company over the last five years, 10 years, it's a double-digit grower, and, you know, we have done that consistently, literally over that kind of timeframe. So, you know, yes, you look at our growth since we went public, and you've got the 41% growth. You've got obviously lower growth last year. You know, net-net, we still believe, you know, over time, this business is a double-digit grower. And, when you talk about what helps it get there over time, I go back to kind of the core tenets that we're going after to grow the business, which is, you know, continued domestic expansion, outside of our, you know, including, but then outside of our top clients.
I think we've continued to demonstrate progress on that front with the number of new clients that we're opening, top 10, top 20 U.S. banks. Second is international, and while, you know, you do see some variability over there, you know, it did come in for the year, right about 20%, a little bit under. But, you know, we look to see that continue to grow and be an important part of that as well. And on top of that, we've got fintechs, U.S. and international fintechs, that help drive that growth. And so for us, it's continuing to build out the sales force, build out our distribution partners and, you know, execute on that. So that's the way we think about it.
That makes a lot of sense. Perfect. Thank you, guys.
Thanks, Reggie.
Thank you. As I show no further questions in queue, that does conclude today's conference call. Thank you for participating, and you may now disconnect.