Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to PubMatic's earnings call for the third quarter ended September 30, 2022. This is Stacy at The Blueshirt Group, and I'll be your operator today. Joining me on the call are Rajeev Goel, Co-Founder and CEO, and Steve Pantelick, CFO. Before we get started, I have a few housekeeping items. Today's prepared remarks have been recorded, after which Rajeev and Steve will host live Q&A. If you plan to ask a question, please ensure that you set your Zoom name to display your full name and firm. If you would like to ask a question during this time, please use the Raise Hand function located at the bottom of your screen. A copy of our press release can be found on our website at investors.pubmatic.com.
I would like to remind participants that during this call management will make forward-looking statements, including without limitation, statements regarding our future performance, market opportunity, growth strategy and financial outlook. Forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations and assumptions regarding our business, the economy and other future conditions. These forward-looking statements are subject to inherent risks, uncertainties and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict. You can find more information about these risks and uncertainties and other factors in our reports filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our most recent Form 10-K, and any subsequent filings on Forms 10-Q or 8-K, which are on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission and are available at investors.pubmatic.com. Our actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements.
We caution you, therefore, against relying on any of these forward-looking statements. All information discussed today is as of November 8, 2022, and we do not intend nor are under obligation to update any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise, except as may be required by law. In addition, today's discussion will include references to certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA and non-GAAP net income. These non-GAAP measures are presented for supplemental informational purposes only and should not be considered a substitute for financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is available in our press release. Now I will turn the call over to Rajeev.
Thank you, Stacy, and welcome everyone. As we suspected, Q3 marked an inflection point with respect to a deteriorating economic environment. However, despite the impact on global ad spend, we delivered adjusted EBITDA margins of 39% above our expectations and significant free cash flow, highlighting the durability and differentiation of the PubMatic business. Year-over-year revenue growth in the quarter was lighter than we expected and more pronounced in the back half of the quarter, including in the U.S., which is our largest market. On the bottom line, our single omni-channel platform with fully owned and operated infrastructure gives us the high degree of operating agility to create leverage in our business and sustainable profitability. Despite the near-term economic pressure, I am confident in the medium to long term outlook for PubMatic because of our ability to consolidate activity on our platform and grow our market share.
Historically, we have seen that in times of economic stress, our ecosystem leans into deeper partnerships with technology leaders that provide innovation, efficiency and automation. Our customers and prospects want to do more with fewer trusted partners. We are well positioned to continue to gain market share in this kind of an environment, even if absolute rates of growth are lower. Our high margin profile is a distinct competitive advantage and allows for continued, though selective investment. With that investment, we widen the competitive gap and further strengthen our market leadership with a focus on positioning ourselves well for the economic upswing that will inevitably return. Our role in the ecosystem is only getting stronger. I co-founded PubMatic with the mission of delivering a more profitable digital advertising business to publishers so they can invest in the content experiences we all love.
We built our platform to help publishers monetize their inventory across ad formats and geographies, while providing the tools and levers to control how their inventory and audiences are accessed. Today, we partner with nearly 1,600 publishers, which provides a critical scale required by global ad buyers. Our growth and market leadership stems from years of investment and focus in both technology and strong customer relationships, which is difficult to replicate. Today, as consumer privacy is increasingly important and third-party cookies are going away, sell-side technology is becoming even more critical to the digital advertising ecosystem. This is manifesting in a variety of ways, all of which strengthen PubMatic's long-term outlook. There's no question that the open internet is gaining share of digital ad budgets at the expense of walled gardens, in part due to content quality and diversification.
This, along with the shift to fast-growing video and connected CTV formats, is forcing buyers and publishers alike to seek greater transparency into and control over their advertising strategies, which independent technology providers like PubMatic are best positioned to provide. Finding target audiences and delivering relevant ads in a privacy-safe manner is evolving rapidly. The need for publishers to leverage their audience data at scale is increasingly moving to open and transparent sell-side technology platforms like PubMatic, and coincides with our multi-year investment in PubMatic Connect. Without a technology partner like PubMatic, the majority of publishers will not be able to do this, which is becoming fundamental table stakes in commanding higher CPMs and monetizing premium inventory. PubMatic Connect offers a variety of methods for buyers to find target audiences across our publisher base.
Case study after case study shows that PubMatic Connect audiences provide greater ROI and longevity than cookie-based solutions. For example, Wunderkind ran a month-long test campaign using audiences sourced through PubMatic compared to various alternatives. Performance metrics showed audiences delivered via PubMatic Connect had response rates nearly nine times those of alternative data used. Plus, PubMatic delivered impressive win rates and scale benefits. These performance benefits highlight the value that marketers see in moving their targeting efforts to the sell side, closer to the publisher and the consumer. What's more, our strength in data activation and addressability is also unlocking growth opportunities in the fast-growing retail media market. As retailers are increasingly looking for incremental revenue opportunities, data monetization becomes an even more important aspect of their businesses.
Kroger Precision Marketing, for example, works with PubMatic as a scalable technology provider to help their brand and agency clients to activate their retail data science in CTV, video, and display inventory. This also allows PubMatic's buyer and publisher customers to gain improved campaign performance and monetization opportunities using our sell-side platform. Agencies and advertisers are seeking greater control and efficiency of their ad budgets. Supply-path optimization, or SPO, is a way for buyers to consolidate ad spend and gain greater control and efficiencies. We pioneered SPO several years ago, and it continues to grow as a share of our business. In Q3, over 30% of activity on the PubMatic platform was SPO-related. We continued to expand SPO relationships, as we did with Havas Media Group North America in Q3, adding new capabilities, workflows, and data integrations for buyers.
In September, we acquired Martin to bring more robust solutions to buyers and accelerate our SPO efforts. Martin brings robust measurement and reporting capabilities as well as workflow tools, and is in direct response to what buyers are looking for. We have begun the integration process, and we expect Martin to accelerate our product roadmap by up to 12 months. We expect the end result to be increased consolidation of ad budgets onto programmatic. Connected TV is moving from insertion orders to a programmatic approach. Both buyers and streaming content providers are leaning into the efficiency, measurability, and scale that automation can provide. I expect the challenging economic environment will accelerate this shift. Advances in data-driven advertising technology like Connect will further fuel the growth of programmatic CTV. As automated buying of CTV becomes ubiquitous across the ecosystem, we are seeing more interest in programmatic buying or unified options.
As an omni-channel platform, we have been singularly focused on scaling this automated approach to CTV buying and selling. No surprise, the results are compelling. Finecast, a subsidiary of WPP focused on addressable TV buying, bought 10% more inventory when compared to non-programmatic approaches as a result of the application of data, automation, and the granular inventory access our platform provides. Advances in data-driven advertising technology like Connect will further fuel the growth of programmatic CTV. We recently released a suite of enhanced capabilities for OpenWrap OTT, helping publishers drive more revenue and increase flexibility and control, while also making it easier to extend their monetization strategies to CTV. Multicultural media company MICO saw benefits from managing all of their inventory types in one place, allowing them to compare, manage, and optimize across platforms.
Similarly, True Digital Group, a business unit of the leading telco conglomerate in Thailand, saw increased fill and higher CPMs for their CTV inventory with OpenWrap OTT. Stepping back, we built a resilient software business that enables publishers and buyers to grow their businesses and compete effectively in the digital advertising ecosystem. Our platform is sticky as our usage-based model drives high net dollar-based retention rates and increased ad spend from buyers. I have never been more confident in our business and the endless opportunities ahead. We continue to move toward our long-term goal of 20% market share. Propelling us forward is our historical and long-term commitment to the dual objectives of revenue growth and profitability. Our strong profit margins and free cash flow generation give us the ability to invest in products and customer relationships, even in today's down cycle, when others may not.
Accordingly, in this environment, we are focused on two operating objectives. First, continued investment in long-term innovation. This unlocks incremental revenue opportunities today, but more importantly, should result in outsized gains when ad spending inevitably re-accelerates. Key areas of innovation include supply path optimization, accelerated by our acquisition and integration of Martin, CTV addressability, and retail media. Second, we are focused on maximizing the efficiency of our CapEx and OpEx investments that have already been made. Over the last three years, we believe we have expanded our competitive moat as a result of significant CapEx investments in our infrastructure and impression processing capacity. We are now focused on optimizing our infrastructure and increasing utilization, which will allow us to materially reduce next year's CapEx spend.
On the OpEx front, we feel confident with the scale of our go-to-market teams in the near term and will lower the rate of headcount growth with a bias towards selective hiring in engineering and innovation in order to be well-positioned for when ad spend growth re-accelerates. Our long track record of profitable growth and significant cash flows, coupled with our strong balance sheet and zero debt, gives us confidence that we will come out of the downturn stronger than most. I'll now turn the call over to Steve Pantelick, our CFO, to walk through the financials.
Thank you, Rajeev, and welcome everyone. In Q3, we delivered outstanding profit and cash flows. Although revenue came in light due to global ad spend deceleration, we continued to gain market share. These operating results underscore the robustness of our business model and our team's proven ability to navigate challenging macro conditions. Importantly, amidst these conditions, we made targeted investments for future growth and strengthened our financial position. On revenues of $64.5 million, we achieved adjusted EBITDA of $25.3 million, a 39% margin. We generated $28.1 million in net cash from operating activities and $10.7 million in free cash flow. It is clear from economic data across the globe that conditions have worsened over the last several months. In all likelihood, some markets are already in recession or soon will be.
With this backdrop, I wanna remind investors about several fundamental reasons why we are confident that we can continue to navigate through the current headwinds and be well-positioned to accelerate our growth when the operating environment stabilizes. First, our business is well-diversified. Our omni-channel platform supports numerous programmatic ad channels and formats, enabling thousands of advertisers across 20-plus verticals to reach the audiences they want. With more than 60,000 advertisers purchasing our publishers' inventory in Q3, we saw spending in aggregate across the top 10 ad verticals increase approximately 19% year-over-year. The impact of diversification was clearly demonstrated. Travel, food and drink, and business were each up over 40% year-over-year, which helped offset softness in shopping, technology, and personal finance. Our Q3 omni-channel video business grew 45% year-over-year and represented 34% of revenues.
This growth is particularly notable as it was on top 80%+ growth in the prior year. These results were propelled by our CTV business, which increased by over 150% year-over-year. This achievement marks the sixth straight quarter of 100%+ growth for CTV. Display revenues declined 3% year-over-year. High levels of inflation, recession concerns, and rising costs of capital put pressure on consumers and advertisers. These factors particularly affected demand for the display format more than other formats. We saw a similar pattern in the depths of the pandemic, and based on our prior experience, we anticipate that this format will return to growth. Our total Q3 revenues grew 11% on top of prior year's 54% growth.
We believe we are outpacing market growth and gaining share based on the results of other public companies in our industry that have reported thus far this quarter. PubMatic's US business grew double digits year-over-year, but decelerated compared to Q2's growth. EMEA's growth slowed as anticipated. With the likelihood that difficult economic conditions will continue in the coming quarters, the durability and strength of our financial model is the second fundamental factor that gives us confidence we can successfully manage through this volatile period. To begin with, we have built a business with high degree of control over our unit economics. For example, through innovation and focus, we have been increasing our revenue mix towards high-value channels and formats like mobile and video. We saw the benefit of this in Q3 with higher video CPMs offsetting lower display CPMs. Overall, our total company CPM was stable year-over-year.
In terms of unit costs, by owning and operating our own infrastructure, we have multiple ways to optimize and drive down our unit costs. One important lever is having control over the magnitude and timing of infrastructure CapEx. Over the last 2 years, we have strategically invested to grow our competitive moat and ensure we avoid supply chain disruptions. Since Q1 2021, we have more than doubled our ad processing capacity. Looking ahead to 2023, we see many opportunities to optimize our infrastructure and expect to be able to significantly lower our CapEx. In aggregate, we anticipate these efforts will lead to higher gross margins and improve free cash flow margins as ad spending normalizes. Another area of strength comes from our usage-based model, which aligns incentives and leads to long-term relationships with the world's leading publishers and buyers.
Innovation, customer focus, and initiatives like supply path optimization helped us achieve strong net dollar-based retention. On a trailing twelve-month basis, our net dollar-based retention was 120%. PubMatic has consistently achieved high adjusted EBITDA margins and profits. Q3 was our 26th consecutive quarter of positive adjusted EBITDA. For 19 of the last 20 quarters, we have generated positive cash from operating activities, with the only exception being the pandemic quarter of Q2 2020. For the trailing twelve months through Q3, we generated approximately $96 million in cash from operations and $50 million in free cash flow, which represented growth of 40% and 91% respectively, compared to the prior year period.
At the end of Q3, we had no debt and $166 million in cash equivalents, and marketable securities. Excluding our recent acquisition of Martin, our overall ending Q3 cash position would have been $194 million. With our strong balance sheet and efficient business model, we believe our position in the ecosystem will continue to grow via new and expanded customer relationships. We also anticipate being able to strategically invest in future growth opportunities where others may be constrained. Beyond our current balance sheet, we have enhanced our financial resources with a new $110 million undrawn committed credit facility. The third fundamental factor that gives us confidence in our future is our proven innovation engine. We have built this competency over the last 16 years and have consistently invested in high ROI growth opportunities.
We have a distinct advantage as a result of our development organization in India. In Q3, we increased our India-based headcount by 46% year-over-year compared to a global headcount increase of 29%, supporting further innovation and cost efficiency in 2023 and beyond. One important area where we continue to innovate and lead is in supply-path optimization. In Q3, SPO represented over 30% of activity on our platform. With our recent acquisition of Martin, we added key technical talent and new tools to fulfill buyer requests for more robust measurement and reporting capabilities. In spite of the top-line headwinds that increased through the quarter, our Q3 adjusted EBITDA came in above expectations. We achieved this outcome because we have significant control over our cost structure and have been proactive over the last several months optimizing costs across the company while adjusting discretionary spend.
Operating expenses in the third quarter were $33.3 million, up 19% year-over-year, reflecting the combination of increased headcount for growth and stock-based compensation. Q3 GAAP net income was $3.3 million. Note, Q3 net income includes a non-cash impairment charge of $6.4 million related to an equity investment made several years ago. Non-GAAP net income, which adjusts for unrealized gain or loss on equity investments, stock-based compensation expense, acquisition-related and other expenses, and related adjustments for income taxes, was $12.4 million or 19% of revenue. Q3 diluted EPS was $0.06, and non-GAAP diluted EPS was $0.22. Turning to Q4, the softness in advertising demand that began early in the year has continued. It is clear that advertisers are wrestling with a myriad of economic challenges and preparing their businesses for the likelihood of a global recession.
We expect these impacts to persist at least through the first quarter of 2023 and possibly longer. Nonetheless, based on the unique strengths of our business, our omni-channel platform, our financial strength, and our ability to continue making investments in innovation, we anticipate continuing to grow faster than the market. Q4 headwinds include continued pressure on our display formats that will be disproportionately impacted by macro conditions. We also expect Q4 seasonality to be muted with lower than normal holiday ad spend. In terms of tailwinds, we anticipate our omni-channel video revenues will continue to grow and SPO activity to increase. Given the range of macroeconomic pressures, we believe there could be a wider range of outcomes in Q4 than we typically see, especially as our Q4 revenue tends to be back-end weighted. Our revenue expectations for Q4 are $75 million-$78 million.
This guidance is consistent with the rate of year-over-year growth we have seen in the month of October. As communicated last quarter, we proactively initiated cost-saving measures to unlock several million dollars by the end of the year relative to our original planned expenses. This agile execution and strong unit economics supports our high margin rate now and in the future. We expect adjusted EBITDA between $33 million and $36 million, or approximately 45% margin at the midpoint. Note, included in our Q4 adjusted EBITDA expectations are the incremental operating costs of approximately $1 million for our recent Martin acquisition. Based on our Q4 revenue guidance, the implied full year revenue range is $257 million-$260 million or 14% growth at the midpoint.
With digital advertising projected to grow less than 10% in 2022, we are well-positioned to continue to grow our market share. Consistent with the revenue range and cost-saving plans already in place, we anticipate our full year adjusted EBITDA range to be between $98 million and $101 million or 38% margin at the midpoint. We anticipate CapEx between $34 million and $36 million this year. Based on equipment availability and logistics, the bulk of our CapEx occurred in Q3, which reduced our period gross margin and our free cash flow. With much of our multi-year CapEx investment plan completed, our team is now focused on optimizing these investments. We expect 2023 CapEx to be at least 50% lower than 2022, which will result in higher gross margins and improved free cash flow margins when macro conditions stabilize.
We also anticipate that our increasing mix of video and other high-value formats will provide another tailwind to higher gross margins and improve free cash flow margins. With regard to the strengthening of the U.S. dollar, we anticipate the impact on our revenues to be neutral to positive because the transactions flowing through our platform are largely denominated in U.S. dollars. On the expense side, we also expect the U.S. dollar strength relative to the Indian rupee and U.K. British pound sterling to have a neutral to positive impact. In closing, there are multiple reasons we are confident in our long-term prospects despite the difficult macro conditions dampening global ad spend. Our business has structural advantages emanating from our own and operating infrastructure and offshore R&D that enables us to expand our competitive moat and consistently invest in innovation on behalf of our publishers and buyers.
We have numerous growth drivers and see a long runway of growth ahead of us as our TAM continues to grow. We are consolidating the sell side as one of the few scaled global omni-channel platforms. Our profitability gives us a high degree of agility to weather challenging economic conditions and invest in long-term market share gains. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator to open it up for questions.
Thank you, Steve. As a reminder, you can ask the question by raising your hand located on the dashboard. In the interest of time, we ask that you please limit your question to one and one follow-up. With that, the first question comes from Jason Helfstein from Oppenheimer. Please go ahead, Jason.
Hey, thanks, guys. Question. It would seem that programmatic advertising becomes even harder to predict in this kind of environment as buys become more last minute. Maybe just comment a bit more, kind of what you're seeing and the extent you get to the end of a month or the end of a quarter and there's budget left, you also, you know, get those dollars as opposed to IO orders which become too hard. Just second, it sounds like display will be a drag on the fourth quarter. Just maybe comment what guidance assumes for growth ex-display, 'cause it seems like that'll still grow meaningfully faster. Thanks.
Great. I'll take that. Good to connect, Jason. A couple points. You know, with respect to programmatic, certainly the pros are that it's data-driven and provides a level of transparency that many other forms of digital advertising do not provide . With that, you know, comes the ability to bid in real time. There is a bit of that yin and yang with respect to the timing. Overall, the long-term secular trend is incredibly positive for programmatic advertising. Quarter to quarter, there might be some variations, but the reality is the long-term trend is moving in the right direction. The reality is the visibility that any company in this space , ours included, you know, we're largely driven by factors outside of our control.
You know, the most important thing that we focus on is what does it look like for the long-term perspective. From the way we think about it is that the fundamentals of our business remain very robust, and they're intact. This gives us confidence, as I indicated in our comments. You know, we are expanding our SPO relationships. We're able to continue to grow our omni-channel video business very strongly. These have really helped us, you know, continue to grow faster than the market over the last couple of years. Now, with respect to the display format, you know, as I referenced in my comments, this is a pattern we saw during the pandemic, and it was one of the first formats to really feel the pressure of shifting buying.
I do expect it to come back. It's a very long-term stable format. For the coming quarter or two, there will be pressure. I anticipate the format, you know, will probably decline to high single digits in Q4. Hard to say right now in terms of Q1. Overall, of course, our growth would be much higher if that format was more stable. Now, just as a reference point, though, last quarter, Q2, our display format business grew 19%. Clearly we are doing things right in this space regarding this display format. Overall, as an omni-channel platform, you know, we really find pockets of growth when there's softness in other areas.
Great. Thank you, Steve. Our next question comes from Brent Thill at Jefferies. Please go ahead, Brent.
Good afternoon. Rajeev, maybe just walk us through kind of what you're hearing from some of your bigger partners about what they're seeing and what are some of the explanations. Is this just macro jitters? Is it supply chain? What are you hearing is kind of the common reasoning of some of these pullbacks?
Sure. Yeah. You know, I think what we are hearing and what we're seeing is that, you know, there was a deceleration through Q3. And that's a pretty common macro theme, right? What we are focused on, and I think what's most important to me personally, is that we continue to consolidate ad spend and gain market share. If we just look at some of the, you know, Q3 numbers that are out there, you know, Meta was down -4% to -5%, Google and their network business, -2%. I think Snap was +6%, Pinterest +8%, Roku +12%. You know, and our full year guidance has us at roughly 14% for the year, which is well above the market rate of growth, you know, which is running at 10% or lower.
Clearly, you know, there's a step function down for our Q4 guidance, but, you know, we think the vast majority of that is driven by the macro environment. What does give us confidence as we go into the downturn is that, you know, we've got many tools at our disposal.
First of all, significant profit margins, and that gives us the agility and the ability to focus on long-term innovation in select high growth areas. As we highlighted, you know, we're gonna be very focused on optimizing the infrastructure and the capacity that we've already put in place, and that allows us to commit to reducing CapEx by half, at least, next year. You know, which will be reflected in gross margins as well as in the bottom line. Third is that we've got a management team that's got a long tenure. We've seen this play out before in both the great financial crisis as well as COVID, you know, and come through with flying colors.
We definitely cannot control the macro, but we feel good about our ability to execute and create differentiated outcomes for this.
Rajeev, I know this is tough to probably gauge, but have you gotten a signal when you think this starts to improve? Is it back half of 2023? Is it or is it just too hard to tell for you at this point?
I mean I can start and maybe Steve, you wanna chime in on it. I would say it's too hard to say at this point. I know everybody's, you know, looking for the bottom, of course. I think, you know, we gotta kinda take it one month at a time and see what's out there. Obviously, the big unknowns, right? Which you know well are, you know, what happens with inflation and then resulting interest rate changes, and then what happens with the war in Europe. I don't think anybody has, you know, any ability to predict those things. We just gotta take it, you know, a month at a time.
I think from our perspective, again, we feel really good about our ability to be very agile in this environment, given the strong profitability and balance sheet that we have.
Yeah. Let me add further to the points that Rajeev made. You know, from my perspective, you know, as CFO, you know, what I focus on is the fact that we can grow faster than our peers. That we can leverage, you know, our very efficient business model, and that we stay ahead in terms of investments for future growth. So wherever that bottom is, you know, we feel very good about the point that we're gonna be when we exit this current cycle. You know, it's hard to say what that growth rate will be over the coming quarters. Historically, we've proven that we can grow faster than market, and I don't see any reason why that premise doesn't hold true.
I really want to reinforce the point that Rajeev made that, you know, going into this cycle, we feel that we're on the front foot. We've been proactive, and we believe that, you know, we are uniquely positioned because we continued to make growth investments over the last several years. As Rajeev said, we're now turning our attention to further optimization of our infrastructure and selected targeted growth investments. Overall, feel really good about where we are in the cycle and our ability to exit very strongly out of it.
Steve, can I just clarify that the end of October or you said things got a little tighter at the end of the quarter. How did things trend in October? Was it a similar trajectory, you know, getting slowly worse or did it stabilize from what you saw at the end of September?
Yeah. The softness, you know, that we saw in the third quarter really did continue into October. You know, as I had mentioned, you know, there was the macro factors that we all are aware of. I particularly saw it in a couple different places, you know. Just to set the context, you know, in terms of the expectations for the fourth quarter, you know, there's clearly a seasonal uptick that occurs every calendar year. You know, when we took a look at the numbers, you know, we factored in, you know, not what, you know, how we exited Q3, but, you know, what's happened up to today's call. Shopping continues to stay under pressure for the first part of this fourth quarter.
It's roughly flat year-over-year. A couple other categories like personal finance is down about -15%. Now, having said that, we have other categories that continue to perform strongly like travel and automotive. You know, the benefits of our business that we've built is that it does have a level of diversity in it, and so we can manage through, at some level, these puts and takes. When we put together our Q4 guidance, you know, I took a look at the year-over-year trends, you know, bottom-up from a publisher by publisher perspective, and then also just looked at sort of the seasonal expectations.
One thing I'll call out is, you know, going into the fourth quarter, you know, we had expected, you know, mid-30s seasonal sequential growth versus Q3. That's looking to be more like 20%. It's very nice sequential growth, but relative to sort of the, you know, the median average over the last decade is about 35% sequential growth. Clearly, you know, softness is in the business right now. We feel really good about the financial strength we have and our ability to continue to invest through this and be very well positioned, you know, as it stabilizes.
Thanks.
Thanks, Steve. Our next question comes from Shweta Khajuria at Evercore. Please go ahead, Shweta.
Thanks, Stacy. Could you please explain, Steve, you just talked about the fourth quarter guidance, but what is the assumption that's baked into your guidance? So to see the high end of the guidance, what is the assumption and what would have to happen for you to be at the low end of the guidance in terms of the trajectory of growth rates from October to November to December? And then the other question is how are you thinking about OpEx, not only this year, but just in general next year? You talked about CapEx. Could you comment on OpEx? Thank you.
Sure. Happy to. In terms of the expectations for Q4, you know, it is really as straightforward as I just outlined. You know, we take a look at the trends so far through this past weekend, and then, you know, extrapolated them forward based upon, you know, those trends. Clearly we had a bit of an uptick benefit from political spend this year, but that was never a significant part of our expectations. It's really just looking at, you know, the current trends publisher by publisher, and where we see strength in ad vertical and where we see some softness. The softness is within those categories that are typically strong at this time of year, food and drink, for example.
Now, having said that, you know, I think that, you know, we try to create a range that we felt we can deliver within. So that's my expectation. I think, you know, there might be some puts and takes, you know, up and down, but I feel like, you know, we've given a realistic range based upon what we're experiencing. Now, with respect to OpEx, you know, I really wanna underscore the point of how we think about the opportunity ahead of us. Ultimately, as we've shared, in the past, it's all about innovation and doing that cost effectively. We built an incredible development organization in India, and we're gonna selectively continue to invest to support that organization and ultimately innovation.
Where we're paring back is, you know, in selected go-to-market organizations. Our fundamental belief is we go into this cycle in very strong financial health. We have the ability to continue to invest. What we saw back in the pandemic period, you know, the down quarter of Q2, we were one of the only companies that consistently invested right through, and we saw the benefit of that in the succeeding quarters and years. From our perspective, we're gonna obviously keep a close eye on OpEx. You know, Rajeev and I commented on our focus on optimization, and that's gonna continue to flow throughout the organization. You know, I expect, you know, increased productivity in all the functional areas.
You know, there will be some growth in OpEx, not at the same rate as we've seen it historically. We see that there's an opportunity that we can't miss in terms of the long-term secular trends and the fact that we are absolutely becoming a bigger part of the ecosystem. Now with the Martin acquisition, you know, providing the tools to consolidate more ad spend onto our platform.
Okay. Thanks, Steve. Is there any contribution from Martin included in the guidance?
No. In fact, in the fourth quarter, I assumed roughly $1 million impact cost, and that's included in our financials.
Okay. Thanks, Steve.
Our next question comes from Matthew Swanson at RBC. Please go ahead, Matthew.
Thank you guys so much. Starting, Rajeev, you know, last quarter, we talked for a little bit about the challenging macro potentially being a tailwind to SPO, right? With advertisers really focusing on ROI. I was just curious if you saw anything like that again this quarter. Then maybe if you could remind us a little bit about, like, the deal cycle time on SPO in terms of when a conversation starts to where it's kinda, like, up and running.
Yeah, sure. Why don't I start with the second part of your question, then I'll get to the first. In terms of the deal cycle, you know, there's a wide variety of ranges. Some advertisers are relatively quick. Agency holdcos tend to be longer. We could see from an advertiser perspective maybe a couple of months. A holdco to get a deal in place could take 12-18 months. Then there's the actual implementation process. Advertisers, again, tend to be simpler and quicker to implement. That can be a matter of, again, a couple of months. Whereas a holdco, you know, you've gotta go region by region, country by country, and bring those trading teams on board.
That can take another, you know, 6, 12, 18 months, depending on the agency. That kinda gives you a reference in terms of the timeframe. I think what we typically tend to see, on the first part of your question, is that in a time of economic stress, that there is a consolidation within our ecosystem. The buyers, the publishers, they need to figure out how to do more, you know, with less resources, how to become more efficient. They typically tend to streamline the number of partners that they work with, and lean into, you know, those activities that can make them more efficient. I think we're gonna see that play out here.
It's a little bit early in the, you know, in the slowdown cycle from an economic perspective, but I suspect that we will see that play out here. That was part of the reason why we made the acquisition of Martin, you know, is really to build upon the four-year investment that we've made in supply-path optimization and continue to have that as a very strong lever of spend consolidation on our platform and therefore share gains. We are absolutely talking every day with our buy-side customers and partners about, you know, what are their challenges, what are the opportunities, how data-driven advertising, how the ROI that can be driven from real-time bidding can increase accountability and increase client outcomes and grow their business and grow our business.
Yeah. No, that's super helpful. It kinda gives some context based on those sales cycles that SPO revenue might kinda be a lagging indicator for how fast the business, you know, is growing in terms of your OpenWrap. The one other question I wanted to ask was on the CTV side, and obviously a lot of focus on the streaming services switching to AVOD. I was just curious, in 2023, with this much inventory coming to the market, do you think that pushes the CTV market more in your direction with publishers maybe having to turn to biddable environments sooner? Right, just not able to handle so much direct with more competition.
Yeah. I think we definitely are gonna see a shift towards biddable that's gonna be driven both on the sell side and the buy side. You know, from a buyer's perspective, you can imagine that if we go back a couple of years, there was only a handful of really large platforms, CTV streaming platforms that buyers could buy from, and fairly straightforward from an operational complexity perspective to buy via insertion orders. Now, you fast-forward to today's environment or next year's environment, and in any given geo, there may be dozens of high scale inventory sources. In that environment, you know, obviously buyers wanna buy across, you know, all of those scaled supply sources.
The operational complexity, the economic complexity, you know, making sure that clients are getting strong ROI, that really requires a bid-based approach. We're gonna, I think, continue to see pressure from the buy side. As that pressure comes from the buy side, I think similarly, we're gonna see the sell side, you know, want to match how buyers wanna buy. I think they're gonna come under pressure to move towards more data-driven approaches to selling their ad space, so that they can measure and deliver the ROI to the buyers. We feel like, you know, the setup was already to move towards more of a bid-based CTV environment. Economic pressure, you know, whatever recessionary environment we're headed into, is only going to accelerate or increase that pressure.
All right. Thank you so much for the time.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Andrew Moreau from Morgan James. Please go ahead, Andrew.
Thanks for taking my question. You talked about areas of investment that will position the company better coming out of the downturn. Can you talk about prioritization of these initiatives kind of in the context of slowing ad count growth?
Yeah, absolutely. I think first and foremost, I'll give you the kind of functional prioritization, which really is around engineering and innovation. You know, as the rate of ad spend growth decelerates, you know, what that allows us to do, you know, given our profitability and our balance sheet, is to really think about how do we maximize share gains, you know, when the upturn inevitably happens. That's gonna really be driven by having the right products and the right solutions in the market, you know, whenever that happens. To do that, you know, we're shifting our focus of investment towards products, towards engineering, towards software, towards infrastructure, so that we can, you know, make sure that we have the right products.
Now, in terms of those, you know, those areas that we're focused on, there's really just four kind of primary areas. The first is supply path optimization, so making sure that we have the right, you know, capabilities and products for buyers so that as this, as we anticipate a spend consolidation may happen, we're in the right position to bring those dollars onto our platform. Second is around video and CTV. So obviously there's, you know, huge growth of consumption of that ad format, and of course, advertisers love it because of the rich opportunity to tell a story to the consumer. There's a lot of first party or logged in user data around CTV in particular. Third is addressability.
This whole shift away from, you know, cookies or IDFA to new or varied ways of delivering a relevant ad to the consumer. Then the fourth is retail media, you know, which we see as a $100 billion-$150 billion addressable market, where we have a lot of the capabilities in place and are, you know, building more product and then a go-to-market around.
Great. Thank you. You spoke a little bit about the U.S. versus some of your international markets performance. I guess anything to call out in the macro situation versus your expectations in some of the different regions? I think, you know, Europe in particular was called out prior as a place that was experiencing some macro pressure earlier. Was that kind of in line, worse, better, and same for APAC?
Sure. The expectations we had for the third quarter for EMEA came in line. You know, we believed it was gonna decelerate, and it did. It did decelerate. The real change was the trajectory for the Americas. As a reminder, in Q2, our Americas business grew 27% year-over-year. The third quarter, we saw that decelerate to about 10%. The core drivers of that, you know, go back to the points that I had mentioned earlier. You know, the core verticals of shopping, personal finance, technology, you know, had all decelerated, you know, August onwards. You know, given that Americas represents roughly two-thirds of our overall revenue, clearly that was felt through that business unit.
Now, having said that, you know, we delivered a really strong, robust, EBITDA, 39% EBITDA margin in the third quarter despite that, you know, shift in the top line.
Really, it underscores the control that we have over the various levers in our business. We're turning that focus and we're gonna continue to optimize the investments that we've made. My expectation is that the Americas business going forward will mimic sort of the macro trends. You know, we will see recovery, but there's still a lot of uncertainty. The other point I'll call out is just the great progress that we've made in terms of omni-channel video. I don't want it to be lost in the headlines, because we grew that business 45% in the third quarter, and that was on top of 80% growth last year. We're really hitting on all cylinders.
You know, I underscored the point, you know, the challenge right now is the omni-channel video represents 34% of our revenues. The balance is display, and display is, which is both mobile, web display, app display, as well as desktop display, is under pressure right now given the overall macro conditions. Because we have this mix, you know, and the fact that the mix is growing over time, we feel really, that we're well-positioned, you know, as the cycle progresses, not just from a financial perspective, but also, you know, what happens, when we come out of it. Americas will certainly lead us out of that situation.
Understood. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Andrew Boone at JMP. Please go ahead, Andrew.
Hi. Thanks so much for taking my questions. I have a big picture question as we think about kind of the market growing 10% or lower, which I think you guys referenced earlier, versus kind of guidance for 14% growth for 2022. Can you just talk about the competitive environment as we go through a downturn? There's long been a thought that ad tech will consolidate. Does this accelerate that? Or is there anything else that you guys are seeing on your end as we think about the competitive set within ad tech?
Yeah. Why don't I kick that off, and then Steve, you can maybe chime in. You know, I think our focus is really on continuing to grow our share of the market. It's very possible that, you know, that action could drive consolidation. You know, again, when I look at our rate of growth relative to the market, you know, historically, we've been growing at roughly twice the rate of growth in the market. We don't see any reason why we shouldn't continue to grow faster than the market, even if it's at a lower rate on an absolute level as the macroeconomic environment, you know, clearly indicates a deceleration.
You know, we think we're very well-positioned, and I would say uniquely positioned in terms of our balance sheet, you know, with no debt and then the ongoing profitability in the business. I think there will be you know more opportunities for consolidation in the future, whether it's organic or inorganic. It's hard for me to comment on you know what's gonna happen in the rest of the industry. We absolutely see you know these types of challenging times really as market share growth opportunities for us, you know, given our historical and long-term focus on both revenue growth and profitability. Let me turn it over to Steve for any other comments.
Sure. You know, I think, you know, core to the point of view we have is that we feel really good about our business in terms of the model, in terms of the fundamentals that I outlined in my prepared comments. I'll just sort of summarize because I think it's you know, really underscores the point that we're making. You know, we believe that we've built a very efficient business. We've owned and operated our equipment for many years. We've been driving efficiencies out of that at significant rates. We've gone through a multiyear investment cycle and doubled the capacity that we could process. That all is raw material for us to leverage and grow over time.
We don't need to then build more to generate incremental revenue in the near term. That's a really big leverage point for us. We're gonna be focused on optimization, and we think by virtue of the fact that, you know, we are one unified platform, we're gonna be able to deliver innovation on quicker cycles. You know, we have a credible asset, as I commented on earlier, in terms of our R&D organization in India, that we, you know, have been growing over time, and they are all pointing towards high ROI investments. If you factor all those things together, by, I'd say, definition, we should end up consolidating the business because there are gonna be companies that cannot keep pace on any of those or altogether, those fronts.
Yeah, I just wanna kinda underscore the magnitude, I think, of our owned infrastructure advantage. You know, Steve mentioned, you know, we're gonna reduce the CapEx by at least half for next year. You know, if you're in AWS or something like that, you know, maybe you can reduce your infrastructure bill by 10%, you know, if you really focus on it. It's gonna be hard to get significant gains beyond that. That's just a, I think, an example of a significant advantage that we have.
That's helpful. Thanks so much. Secondly, if I think about your CTV publisher wins, it steadily continues to increase over the last few quarters. Can you just talk about where you guys are actually winning share? Like, what publishers are coming on the platform? Is there a trend there of a type or anything else you can share? Thanks so much.
Yeah, sure. Yeah. I think we're seeing growth really in two areas, both in net new. One is in net new, and the other is in the penetration, deeper penetration of the existing publisher base. We're seeing growth I think from both of those categories. In terms of the types of publishers, you know, there's really three or four types of publishers that we're going after. One is kind of the tier one, you know, really large platforms, broadcasters, you know, that are pretty scaled in terms of their monthly users. The second category is one level down from that. These are more niche content providers. They maybe have 20, 30 million uniques in a month, very high value content, but smaller in nature.
They're very well suited to a biddable auction environment because you need automation to bring dollars, you know, the right campaigns to that inventory. Third is the FAST, the free ad-supported TV category. You may have some big players there. That's a key part of our business. Fourth would be the TV OEMs or manufacturers, and we're working with 4 or 5 out of the top 5 in that category. These are kinda, that's the playing field that we're going after pretty much in any given geography.
Again, I think we're gonna see penetration, new publisher acquisition, but also, you know, with the likes of SPO bringing more dollars to the existing publishers that are in our stable.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Justin Patterson at KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead, Justin.
Great. Thank you. Good afternoon. Two, if I can. First, Rajeev, appreciate your comments on retail media as a growth opportunity. There's obviously a lot of companies focused on that space. When you look at the assets PubMatic has today and, you know, where you need to invest to gain market share, could you kinda shed a little more light on where you think you can get some wins and how we can think about the timeline for that? So that's question number one. And then Steve, I just wanted to kinda get a finer point on some of the optimizations you're talking toward. If I step back, if you're getting more utilization on the data center and then also having this mix shift dynamic away from lower priced desktop to potentially having more mobile video, that seems pretty positive from a mix dynamic.
Acknowledging the growth rate is what it is for 2023, it's a guess for all of us. How should we think about just the how margins are insulated from these optimizations and mix shift taking place? Thank you.
Yeah. Great, Justin. In terms of the retail media question, you know, it's definitely a long-term growth opportunity for us. We view it as a natural extension of our platform. I think you're right, there's obviously a handful of companies that are going after it, but we think between our programmatic kind of DNA and infrastructure, the global capabilities that we have, multiple ad formats, and then the investment that we made in Connect, our you know, data and addressability platform to manage first-party data, identity data, contextual data. You know, all of those pieces put us in a good position to field a competitive product. We're already working with the likes of Kroger, eBay, Asda, Rakuten, Groupon, Bed Bath & Beyond, and many others.
In terms of the components, you know, there's on-site advertising and there's off-site. On-site, you know, our core SSP business is a key product offering. Off-site, we think we have strong potential there, in part with the Martin acquisition. The area that we're working hardest on right now is for on-site sponsored listings. These are the types of ads that you might see where somebody is shopping or sees product listing ads or product ads as they're going about a retailer site and shopping. That's a newer area for us, and there will be some building there. In terms of timeline, you know, I think this year and next year are significant product innovation and building time frames.
I think meaningful revenue contribution will come sometime post-2023. I'll turn it over to Steve on the second part of your question.
Sure. Justin, to talk a bit more on the optimization front. You are absolutely correct in assuming that the optimizations that we can do and have been doing will improve not only gross margins, but EBITDA margins. There's obviously a number of reasons for that. I'll start out with, you know, the owned and operated part of infrastructure, which you've heard from us for many earnings calls, is really a strength of ours on numerous fronts. Number one, you know, we get to control the timing and magnitude of CapEx. We decide when we wanna invest, when we wanna pare back, when we wanna even move equipment because it's all our equipment.
We take a look at the market indicators, and then we make the decisions in terms of how to best manage that. Clearly over the last couple of years, we made a strategic decision to increase the competitive moat and be able to process more impressions. We made that decision because there is, you know, tremendous opportunity in areas like CTV and omnichannel video. We have been, you know, doing that very judiciously. As we look ahead in terms of this part of the cycle, where the macro conditions are such that, you know, it's natural that ad spending is gonna come down for some period of time, that we then are able to leverage the infrastructure that we already built.
From a cash generation perspective, these are high ROI outcomes, because we've already incurred those costs. From a GAAP P&L perspective, we depreciate the equipment over 3 years, and we typically keep the equipment in service 4, 5, 6 years. You can see the kind of leverage that we'll get over time. Now, the optimization doesn't just stop at the infrastructure. Throughout the company's history, we've always looked at opportunities to continue to drive productivity. In times like this, when we're making very conscious decisions to focus, let's say, our investment in technology engineering and not as much in GTM, it's really ripe for us to continue to improve workflows, automate workflows, et cetera.
That's what we have an organization that's very capable of doing and has been doing for a long time. Obviously, with the kinds of EBITDA margins that we have been able to achieve, you know, in the high 30s% last year, last couple of years above 40%, I expect that the long-term trajectory of both gross margin and EBITDA margin will be up to the right. It's really a function of how we organize ourselves, how we execute against the opportunity, and how we are able to consistently invest in innovation and then, you know, when it's required to focus on optimization.
We feel that, as I mentioned earlier, we are on the front foot going into this cycle, and we feel really excited about the gains that we're gonna make over the coming quarters, from a competitive perspective.
Great. Thank you.
Thanks, Justin.
We have time for one more question from Maxwell Michaelis from Lake Street. Please go ahead, Maxwell.
Hey, guys. My question here is just focusing on customer behavior. Just in terms of customers continuing to use several SSPs, are you seeing any consolidation in spend from customers maybe taking it from several SSPs down to maybe one or two? If they are they choosing you, and why are they choosing you?
Yeah. Hey, Maxwell. We haven't seen a significant trend towards consolidation on the publisher side at this point. We certainly do see that on the buy side from a supply path optimization perspective. For instance, you know, in the last quarter, we announced an expanded Havas SPO relationship, and in Q2, you know, we announced an expanded. I think it was Q2, GroupM, you know, global relationship. We definitely view the buy side as really the leader in terms of consolidation. I think on the sell side, it's possible that we will see some publishers consolidate due to, you know, operational investments in maintaining multiple SSPs. So far, we have not seen that. I have not seen that play out in the cycle just yet.
Okay. Thanks, guys.
Yeah.
We have no additional questions in the queue. I'll now turn the call back to Rajeev for some quick closing remarks.
Thank you everyone for joining us today. You know, there's no doubt that it's a softer macro environment today versus a year ago. Ad spend growth is decelerating market wide, but we continue to consolidate and grow market share. Our focus, investments and continued innovation set us apart from others while still delivering high margins and cash. While we can't control the macro, our business model provides resiliency and highlights our ability to execute and create differentiated outcomes. We do anticipate that ad spend will come back even bigger at some point in the future, as it historically has, and we intend to be well-positioned to maximize further market share gains. I look forward to connecting with many of you at upcoming investor conferences.
Thank you everyone.
Thank you all.
This concludes our call this afternoon. Thank you everyone for joining us. Take care.