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Earnings Call: Q1 2022

May 5, 2022

Operator

Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the LendingTree, Inc. Q1 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your telephone. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. If you require assistance during the conference, please press star zero. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Andrew Wessel, Head of Investor Relations.

Andrew Wessel
SVP of Investor Relations and Corporate Development, LendingTree

Thanks, Andrea, and good morning to everyone joining us on the call this morning to discuss LendingTree's Q1 2022 financial results. On the call today are Doug Lebda, LendingTree's Chairman and CEO, J.D. Moriarty, President of Marketplace and COO, Trent Zeigler, CFO, and Scott Peyree, President of Insurance. As a reminder to everyone, we posted a detailed letter to shareholders on our investor relations website earlier today. For the purposes of today's call, we will assume that listeners have read that letter and will focus on Q&A. Before I hand the call over to Doug to give his remarks, I wanna remind everyone that today, during today's call, we may discuss LendingTree's expectations for future performance. Any forward-looking statements that we make are subject to risks and uncertainties, and LendingTree's actual results could differ materially from the views expressed today.

Many, but not all of the risks we face are described in our periodic reports with the SEC. We will also discuss a variety of non-GAAP measures on the call today, and I refer you to today's press release and shareholder letter, both available on our website at investors.lendingtree.com, for the comparable GAAP definitions and full reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to GAAP. With that, Doug, please go ahead.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Thanks, Andrew, and thank you all for joining us today. Our business again performed well in the face of a difficult macro environment. Our lending marketplace grew revenue and VMM year over year despite rapidly increasing rates. Improving demand and unit economics across purchase mortgage, home equity, personal, and small business loans helped to offset shrinking demand for rate and term mortgage refinance. As expected, our mortgage lender partners have increasingly relied on us to provide them with new customers as the refinance wave recedes. Improving RPLs across our other mortgage offering prove this business is resilient, helping us to outperform declines in overall origination volumes. The consumer segment of our marketplace has continued strong growth as personal and small business loans perform tremendously well and the credit card business returned to pre-pandemic RPLs.

Insurance has begun what we project will be a robust recovery in its financial performance after dropping in the Q4 of last year. I'm happy to have Scott join us on the call to explain how we differentiate ourselves from our competition and why we have a more positive outlook for the remainder o f the year than others. Our updated guidance for 2022 acknowledges the rapid increase in mortgage rates that we have seen so far this year, as well as continued inflationary pressure our insurance partners are navigating. Lowering our outlook is not something we take lightly, but the economy has been more volatile than we predicted when we first issued guidance at our Investor Day. The underlying strength of our business model and our balance sheet position allows us to continue investing in our growth initiatives as well as our brand.

We expect these investments to generate very attractive returns by driving increased value, engagement, loyalty, and trust with our customers, positioning LendingTree as the best digital consumer shopping experience for financial products in the market. I founded the company over 25 years ago, and LendingTree has continued to evolve and expand its product offerings to address almost every personal finance need a customer has. Harnessing the unmatched depth of our partner network with an improved digital experience will delight customers, provide access to the broadest array of offerings in the industry and foster lasting relationships with our customers. Highlighting some of the progress on our strategy, we are now able to present embedded bindable insurance quotes and pre-qualified loan officers to My LendingTree members digitally. We have a solid pipeline of lenders and issuers looking to access our TreeQual platform to acquire new borrowers.

The improved conversion rates and unit economics from TreeQual will help drive revenue and margin growth in our consumer segment, and we look forward to further integrating our insurance agency and our mortgage partners as we move forward. The team has rallied around our growth strategy, and we are all excited to begin seeing the early results of all that hard work. I look forward to discussing our progress on this call as well as future ones. Now, operator, we're ready for questions.

Operator

Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one on your telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound key. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from John Campbell with Stephens Inc.

John Campbell
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Hey, guys. Good morning.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Good morning.

John Campbell
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Hey, by my math, just within the mortgage revenue, you guys did, I think, as much purchase revenue in 2018 as you did last year and in 2020 combined. I think you've proven you can get better yield out of purchase. You know, also in 2018, it looks like you're facing, you know, a purchase origination level that's gonna be probably lower both from this year and next year. My question is, do you think you can get that purchase revenue back to kind of those past levels, and what kind of changes do you really need to make in the business to start, you know, flipping that mix from refi to purchase and kind of how long that process takes?

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Yeah. I'll answer in concept, and then I'll let others chime in on numbers, John. It's great to talk to you. First off, as I alluded to in my remarks, there's and we've talked about, and a lot of shareholders, by the way, missed this. You're picking up on something that as refi recedes and the RPLs of refi obviously are. Everything works on supply and demand. Lenders obviously always demand refinance volume. That's the demand side. Unfortunately, right now the supply side of that has pretty much gone away. Then what do you do? You switch your capacity over to both home equity and purchase at the individual lender level, and you also start to open up other filters.

What that does is it moves the RPL up in purchase, which then enables us to go market against that. What we've seen so far, I would say, is the result of working with our lenders, and J.D. and team have done a great job at that in getting them to expand filters, so we've had some sales wins. Lenders also do this very, very naturally. On top of that, one of our initiatives in particular, one of our strategic initiatives, Marketplace 24, is working to drastically improve the communications with customers, post-submit when they're actually engaging with our lenders on the marketplace. We're gonna start releasing that in pieces early in May, and it's going to proceed through July. That's one initiative that's aimed directly at that.

As lenders see higher conversion rates, then they bid up the value of a purchase lead. Ultimately, they're all targeting a cost per funded loan. J.D., anything to add on that?

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Well, yeah, the only thing I would add, John, you've heard us talk about parsing the funnel more intelligently over time. I think if you were to look at it from the perspective of one of our lender partners, they would say not all purchase traffic is equal. We've sort of taught them that over the last couple years. We're selling early funnel, mid funnel, and late funnel purchase. Late funnel is very well valued right now. Now why is early and mid-less well valued? It actually is very much tied to the lack of housing, pardon me, the lack of inventory in the market and the tightness of the purchase market overall, which is obviously well-publicized.

As that loosens up, which there's recent evidence that it is actually getting a little bit better, that will better enable us to get paid for early and mid because it will convert at a higher rate. In a strange way, what's really happening is over the last couple years, our network has gotten healthier, meaning there's less inefficiency for our lender partners 'cause they're getting what they want, but the disparity between what we get paid for early and mid versus late funnel purchase is pretty significant. We just need a little better housing market in terms of those consumers being able to find a home and get a transaction complete, and that will drive our purchase revenue.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

The only thing I'd add to that is the parsing. I know we're gonna get a question on insurance at some point, and getting the right consumers to the right partner has been a source of value. The other thing I'd say is RPLs on purchase have moved up considerably because of that switching and what J.D. talked about. It's moving in the right direction and it'll continue that way.

John Campbell
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Okay, that's great to hear. One quick follow-up. On the guidance, it looks like you've got revenue growth assumptions, you know, are growing faster than VMM growth. It looks like maybe a little bit of pressure on segment margins here and there, but maybe if you could unpack that. I mean, it sounds like Mortgage is in a really good spot. Obviously, you grew that 500 basis points or so due to all the stuff you just mentioned. You know, Insurance looks like it's probably gonna be pretty heavily weighted in the first half and then get better in the second half. Just maybe some thoughts on Consumer and then also on the brand spend side as well.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Yeah. I know, like, I'll let Trent let me hit it early, and then I know one thing is we're recognizing marketing margins. We've talked in the past or in this quarter about home, for example. While our RPLs are doing well, the customer acquisition cost, while still very profitable, we're not seeing relief like we would normally see when rates go up. We're still seeing a number of other parties that are in those auctions keeping pricing up higher in Google and others. We're assuming that gets a little bit better, but not as well as we thought. Trent, what else would you say?

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah, I mean, it's a good point on mortgage, John. I mean, as we've seen in prior cycles, as competition starts to fade just as the market shrinks, we would expect to see some relief on the customer acquisition side. We haven't seen that, to Doug's point, to the degree that we expected, and so that's sort of being reflected in the margin expectation for the rest of the year. You know, kind of going back to your question on the outlook for the rest of the year, if you go back and you look at the segment level guidance that we gave at Investor Day, we're still pretty well in line with that outlook, you know, perhaps trending toward the bottom end on several of those measures.

The one caveat just being the outlook for margin and insurance is a bit more cloudy. I mean, obviously you saw where the margin profile of that business was in the Q1 at 26%. We expect that to obviously improve as we progress throughout the year. We're gonna need that to improve. I think on the margin relative to the guidance that we gave in February, that's a bit more cloudy.

John Campbell
Managing Director and Research Analyst, Stephens Inc.

Okay. That's all. Very helpful. Thank you, guys.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Thanks, John.

Operator

Our next question comes from Jed Kelly with Oppenheimer.

Jed Kelly
Managing Director, Equity Research - Consumer Internet, Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.

Hey. Hey, great. Thanks for taking my question. Just circling back on insurance. Is this a case of the carriers not calculating, you know, the inflationary impacts this time around versus used car prices, I guess, a couple months ago? How long will it take for them to get to like to reset the rates and I guess just when do you actually think they will be coming back at marketing? I heard that Scott's on the call. Can you actually discuss some of the differences between where you are and some of your competitors? Thank you.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Yeah, I'll start and hand it over to Scott. By the way, Scott, thank you for being up at 6:00 A.M. out in the West Coast. Listen, I'm very pleased with how our insurance team is working, and they're doing a really, really good job. The issue that we've talked about before, and Scott will address the underlying reasons, is that carriers, in general, are not demanding, back to supply and demand, as much volume, the same prices as they did several years ago. However, it's trending in the right direction. We've had a number of sales wins, and we're certainly doing better than competitors. I'm really, really proud of what the team's done.

Scott, why don't you take that question?

Scott Peyree
President and Chief Executive Officer, LendingTree

Yeah, sure, Jed. To answer your question about, you know, inflationary pressures and loss ratios and underwriting profit with carriers, it is a matter of, I think the levels of inflation and the cost per incident that the carriers are dealing with is just much higher than anyone expected. You know, just inflation, where it's going, they worked their models, they were just not expecting it to keep running out of control like it's happening. When you submit rate increases to the states, a lot of times you're limited into how much the rate increase you can submit every six or 12 months, you know. They're just trying to keep pace, and they're having a hard time doing it to some level.

That said, it depends on the carrier with where they're at. A major carrier just came out yesterday and made public comments that they feel they're largely done with all their rate increases, and they feel like they're in a good spot. But she also indicated that they're going to wait in a number of states a few months just to check on the profitability of the policies of the new rates before they really start leaning into marketing. All of that said, I do feel like it's a very turbulent market still. Certain carriers are leaning in, certain carriers are leaning out, but the overall trend that we're seeing at QuoteWizard is a steady increase in demand. We're seeing growth. We saw growth at Q1 over Q4, and we're expecting more growth in Q2.

We're seeing a general positive trend as far as the majority of our carriers are spending more today than they were spending last month, and we expect them to continue just spending more as the year goes on.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Scott, can you address like, you know, why, and we talked about this at our board meeting yesterday, but why, like, some of the, you don't need to go into names, but the carrier wins and also Jed's question of why, you know, we seem to be doing better than competition.

Scott Peyree
President and Chief Executive Officer, LendingTree

Yes, sir, happy to do it, Doug. I would say I'll go back to 2016 when we went through a very similar period in the insurance industry, and we're largely doing the same playbook there. We as QuoteWizard are being hypervigilant on focusing on quality of consumers and what the carriers wanted. You know, they were throwing up red flags to us probably early in the Q2 last year, that things were trending the wrong direction. We made a proactive decision to really lean into what our carriers needed, understanding that we were heading into pretty rough waters in the industry. Honestly, we probably made some decisions that affected revenue for our company in the second half of last year.

I think we were viewed in a really positive light with our partners by making some of those moves and not trying to hold on to unnecessary revenue that they didn't want. I think that is paying off for us here in the first half of the year as they are coming back in and there's that trust level. We've gained significant SEM market share, which was a big goal of ours. I think that's a combination of taking market share from some of our competitors, as well as just consumer shopping behavior in general is up. I think we've got a really good mix of traffic going to the carriers right now, and that's why we're seeing them lean into us a little bit.

Jed Kelly
Managing Director, Equity Research - Consumer Internet, Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.

Great. Just on a follow-up, I think you've always talked about having, you know, probably better paid search conversion better than your competitors. Is that deteriorating just on more of your competitors in Google trying to acquire traffic on people shopping? You know, how should we think about the arc of the VMM margins sort of returning to those high thirties VMM levels throughout the balance of the year? Thanks.

Scott Peyree
President and Chief Executive Officer, LendingTree

Yeah, I mean, I would say we're seeing generally a less competitive marketplace in the Google marketplaces right now. I would also say, you know, our carriers, our RPLs are still down year-over-year. That's a lot to do with carriers just hyper-focusing on certain geographies and certain demographics on the most profitable consumers right now during these very turbulent times in the industry. What will happen over time is these carriers, I mean, they want to grow. They wanna grow their policies. When they are feeling more comfortable about overall profitability of the policies they're writing, they're gonna start opening up those demographics and geographies again.

That's the point where we have better levers where we're making more monetization per consumer coming through our funnel, and that gives us more leverage to increase margins. Working and feeling our margins are gonna increase a few points in Q2, and we feel that trend will continue on an upward trajectory over the next six to 12 months.

Jed Kelly
Managing Director, Equity Research - Consumer Internet, Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Ryan Tomasello with KBW.

Ryan Tomasello
Managing Director, KBW

Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess, shifting to capital allocation, can you give us an update on how you're thinking about the various outlets for deployment for the rest of the year? Obviously, nice to see the share repurchase in the quarter. You know, do you think you'll continue to be active there? You know, any updates on your thoughts around M&A and where you think that could fit most nicely into the existing business? Thanks.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah, I'll start. This is Trent. Yeah, I mean, look, we've been happy to be buying our stock back the way that we have over the last couple of quarters. You know, having addressed about 5% of the float in between Q4 and Q1, you know, certainly happy to be buying with the stock, you know, trading where it was and even more so now. You know, our kind of primary goal in capital allocation is we obviously wanna preserve the flexibility that we've built up to be able to execute on M&A when opportunities present themselves, and we don't wanna encumber that flexibility.

That said, we've got a business that's still generating cash every quarter, so we can kind of use that as a proxy for how much we're willing to put into the buyback. We'll continue to think about it the same way. There are some nuances coming up in Q2 with t he settlement of the convertible notes that we have maturing in late May. We kind of need to get through that before we reevaluate our buyback plans. That's how we're thinking about it, and certainly we've been active in the market, and we'll continue to be, you know, based on our relative view of the stock. I'll kick it to J.D. to talk a little bit about how we're thinking about M&A.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Sure. Hey, Ryan. We're probably from an M&A perspective and just in terms of the things we're seeing, we're as busy as we've ever been. That's really because it's those opportunities are coming to us from a wider range of things, right? There are people who are in our traditional customer acquisition business, and obviously, those multiples have come in dramatically if you look at any of the public comparables. Then there are a number of, you know, fintechs that have been incredibly well valued by the private markets over the last couple of years, and those values have come in dramatically. We have a wide range of things to look at, and we're gonna be selective, and obviously, we're always comparing those opportunities versus buying back our own stock.

I think the really nice thing is we've been able to buy back our own stock in a significant way two quarters in a row and not impair our ability to be aggressive with M&A. We have been incredibly selective over the last couple of years. We obviously had a multiple environment that we didn't really agree with relative to the earnings power of many of the companies that were so dearly valued. That's coming back to earth. That will present opportunities for folks like us who generate real earnings. We're excited about the period in front of us. Last couple of years have been frustrating from an M&A perspective. That's okay.

We're certainly seeing more in light of the way the funding market, both the private market has changed really in terms of the opportunities for many of the startups that were so well valued over the last couple of years. That's not the only thing we look at, obviously. There are some companies, as I mentioned, in our traditional space that will become very interesting here. I would expect that M&A continues to be core to our strategy for the next couple of years.

Ryan Tomasello
Managing Director, KBW

Great. Thanks for that. I guess.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

The only thing I'd add to that, we still have $97 million and an authorization from our board. We still see very, very attractive IRRs on our stock, and subject to maintaining flexibility, you know, we think that's a good use of our cash.

Ryan Tomasello
Managing Director, KBW

Great. Thanks for that. I know we've already spent a good amount of time on, you know, the headwinds in mortgage, but I think it would be helpful if you could put more specific assumptions around how you're viewing the market outlook this year versus, say, what you were thinking back in February. You know, I realize that there's no direct framework, but if it's possible to put any guardrails around the revenue and earnings sensitivity to, you know, worse or better than expected conditions in that market, particularly if purchase begins to fade given the affordability pressures.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah.

Ryan Tomasello
Managing Director, KBW

that continue to build there. Thanks.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah. I'll hit the high notes and then move from there. The interesting thing about mortgage, and I'll return to conversion rates, we have so much traffic even today coming through both purchase and refinance, that the magic, as long-term shareholders have known, is getting at the conversion rate from us sending a customer to a lender and them converting it. In a 2% conversion environment, whether it's a purchase or a refinance, we still have 98 to go, and our Marketplace 2.0 initiative is, as I said earlier, really aimed at improving that conversion rate. We really don't need to go get more volume.

I mean, at the end of the day, we're still only closing a couple points of all the mortgages in the U.S. , and when you have 20 or 30 times that on your site already, who are shopping there but just not closing here, it presents an enormous opportunity, and that's why we're working on fixing the customer experience because that has a direct impact on our revenue.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

J.D., anything else to add? By the way, other than that, we assume the MBA statistics and the market just makes life a little bit harder, and it's more related to lender profitability and lenders being able to profitably convert loans than it is necessarily the size of the market. J.D., what would you say?

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah. Ryan, I'd just say every year, you know, obviously, as we map out the year ahead, we look at the MBA data, we look at, you know, Black Knight and others that publish data on affordability, on consumers who would benefit from a refinance, and obviously we monitor that throughout the year. We also are very mindful of our cycle. We're watching obviously affordability for the consumer, we're watching gain on sale for the lender. Usually when we watch that gain on sale compress, as we all know that it has this year fairly dramatically, we watch for loan officer employment indicators. It's many of our lenders, many of our lender partners have announced layoffs of loan officers.

That is typically something that is followed by or along with that is the cost environment for us to acquire traffic actually improves quite a bit. As we look at the year in mortgage has generally played out on the volume side as we expected, right? We expected volume to be down dramatically in refinance. It has. The cost environment has not come down as much. We think that is still to come. We need to shift to purchase and home equity. We're doing that. Both those businesses are doing well. We actually feel reasonably good about our projections that we made in December. I would say that from January to April, it has been a bit more dramatic on the macro side than we would've expected.

You know, if you think about the affordability for the consumer, that shift has been pretty dramatic. If you think about, you know, I think Black Knight estimates the refi population in March at two million. In January, refi population that would benefit from a refinance at two million. In January, that was 5.9. That's a pretty dramatic shift. We have to acknowledge it is a little bit more dramatic than we anticipated it in December. That is actually part of our shift in guidance, right? It's just acknowledging that. When we look at our performance across that backdrop, we're actually really quite pleased, and we just have to continue to navigate an environment like this. The piece that has not yet happened, and we think will, is the cost side of the equation. That's still in front of us.

While it'll be tough to drive volume and things like refinance, we should be able to drive better margin over time.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

One thing J.D. said to accentuate is the consumer benefit, and it also ties to rates. In refinance, obviously it doesn't make sense. If you're not gonna save money, you shouldn't do it, and consumers know that. The key thing to focus on is that LendingTree's refinance business on a day-to-day basis doesn't work on sort of aggregate rate levels or rates high or low. It really works on the rate of change. You'll see this in mortgage companies right now, where some people are laying off, but they're all trying to hold on because they know someday rates are not gonna. They might go from 5% to 4%. They might go from 5% to 6%, and then somebody's gonna say there's a recession, then they pop back to 5%, and all of a sudden, you get a refi flood.

Unless you have the loan officers and the technology, you can't do that. We'll see that effect immediately and, you know, you're setting up little as rates go higher, you can actually get more benefit because rates can move lower. There's, you know, when you're at 2% and going to, like, 1% 7% 8%, it's, you know, there's not that much movement. As they go a little higher, it's gonna set us up for refi boomlets and busts just like happen every day. Not every day, but every week or month. This year, right now, you're going through the adjustment period, which we always go through, you know, during the switchover, if you will.

Ryan Tomasello
Managing Director, KBW

Thanks. Appreciate that thorough remarks.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Thanks, Ryan.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Robert Wildhack from Autonomous Research.

Robert Wildhack
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Autonomous Research

Good morning, guys.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Hey, Rob. Good morning.

Robert Wildhack
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Autonomous Research

Doug and Scott, just to follow up on insurance and the decision you outlined to lean into what carriers need in delivering high quality consumers, all of those things, when do you expect you'll start to see those investments and decisions come through in market share gains?

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Well, I'll start and then let's back up. I think we're seeing them in market share gains right now, and I think that's why we're doing better than competitors and why carriers are increasing buys with us. I'll let Scott talk more.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah, I agree with Rob, with what Doug just said. I think we're already seeing market share gains in the space, and we're seeing it as budgets very cautiously come back. We're one of the early winners of getting those budgets. I would also add on some of the products, new product growth we focused on, like inbound calls for our clients, direct to click, for our publishers. The agencies are growing really rapidly. Our health and home insurance industry has had a spectacular Q1. A lot of those internal initiatives are really outperforming and performing at high levels that we were hoping they would, and that helps as the legacy business has been down over the past couple quarters.

I think as that legacy continuing business continues to come back, which it is, it bodes really well for the future.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah, we look forward to talking more about the agency in the future. It's doing better than expected from an economic standpoint, from a customer satisfaction standpoint, and the customer experience of being able to give you actually real bindable quotes from multiple carriers online with a person who can also help you make that decision, integrated inside of My LendingTree. Like, that's where we're pointing the direction of that ship, and it's going really well.

Robert Wildhack
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Autonomous Research

Okay, thanks. Just to follow up on that. When you say that the budgets were cautiously coming back and you guys were seeing some early wins, was that? Were those coming back throughout the Q1 , or was that something that happened more towards the end of the quarter and into April?

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah, I would say from our standpoint, it started in January. It obviously did not balance as much as we wanted, as we were hoping in January, and that was just because the carriers didn't bounce back from a profitability standpoint as much as they wanted. But we've seen what I would call a gaining momentum every month throughout the year. You know, we got the initial bounce-up in January, and then our momentum has been growing in February, growing in March and April. You know, I mean, I'm sorry, May is looking very strong right now. I would say it's just all in all, there's ups and downs at the individual client level, but at the overall level for insurance, it's a pretty steady growth year to date.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah. Yeah, I've been looking at a business with, you know, here that is run rate very nicely and is having steady improvements weekly, monthly, and it's nice to see that. The aggregate number is reflected in the guidance, but the momentum is what gives me a lot of excitement.

Robert Wildhack
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Autonomous Research

Okay. Thanks for all the color there.

Operator

Thank you.

Robert Wildhack
Director and Equity Research Analyst, Autonomous Research

Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from Youssef Squali with Truist.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

Morning, guys. Sorry about that. Just wanna go back to the consumer segment in particular. I guess maybe, Trent, starting with you. Relative to you know, kind of the expectations that you outlined at Investor Day and whatnot, how has that progressed throughout the quarter and particularly as you look forward to the rest of the year? Has your expectation changed?

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

Just because of rise in rates? I have a follow-up.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah, Youssef. I mean, consumer relative to our outlook at the beginning of the year, you know, consumer is the one segment that's squarely on track. I mean, obviously, we've talked about sort of the macro implications on both mortgage and insurance, but consumer remains pretty squarely on track. You know, as we highlighted in the letter, both personal loans and small business are performing exceptionally well. Credit card continues kind of a steady recovery. And the end market backdrop there, like the health of the network, the health of our partners in those businesses is really strong. You know, the market outlook for growth and personal loans as an asset class continues to improve. We continue to have really productive conversations around our TreeQual offering in both personal loans and card.

You know, among the three segments, we feel really good about the outlook in consumer.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

On the competitive front there, I think some of your competitors have also put out some pretty decent numbers for credit cards and personal loans and SMB loans, et cetera. Have you seen any kind of change, material change just because that sub-segment remains really healthy, so I'm assuming it's attracting a lot of interest?

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Maybe I'll start and J.D. can pile on. I mean, certainly the card category has been for a long time, very competitive, and we know that. I don't think there's been any dramatic change from a competitive standpoint as we look at kind of our business and our relationship with our partners in those products.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

No, the card business, Youssef, you know, it's been a process of. The personal loan business kinda came back before the card business did. As Trent points out, personal loan network health is really good. One of the things that occurred in 2021 is the expansion of our lender base there. Card, the desire on the part of the issuers is absolutely there. We are gradually waiting for the interest from the consumer in new cards to return. It has gotten better. It 's still not quite back to 2019 levels. Now obviously, the interest on the part of the issuers toward, you know, reward cards associated with travel, given the backdrop and the loosening of mask mandates, et cetera, that's a very real thing that will benefit us.

I would say the card business is basically on par with our plan this year, but getting better each month that passes. Okay? That's great to see. Personal loan business is very, very strong. We feel really good about it. Small business, very strong. Ahead of our expectations, and so we're thrilled to see that. The only business within consumer that is having some challenges is student. That's because of the extension of the CARES Act. That's a macro factor sort of beyond our control, but it's relatively small. As Trent points out, the consumer segment overall, really strong. Now, the competitive environment when businesses like personal loans do well, yeah, we've got a tough competitive environment.

That is not causing any problems for us at present, and we're actually really excited about the traction that we're seeing with a bunch of our personal loan and credit card issuers. We've talked about TreeQual. That's a key part of our strategy to embed ourselves further with our partners in both credit card and personal loan and deliver the right borrowers to them, right? We're making great progress there. You know, to the extent that you think about short-term and long-term this year in consumer, I think we're making great progress on both fronts. Short-term, those are businesses that are dramatically better than they were a year ago. Long-term, the product innovation we're really excited about.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

That's great. Thanks for that. One last one, if I may. My LendingTree, MyLT continues to grow kind of very nicely. Can you just quickly give us an update as to kind of the engagement you're seeing there, conversion from that channel? Any kind of KPIs that you can, you know, help share there would be really helpful. Thanks.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah, no. Absolutely. It's J.D., I'll start. We're really excited about the future of MyLT as it relates to things like TreeQual. As MyLT grows, and we're now over 22 million members are going to see real offers inside of MyLT. Engagement will be defined a little bit differently. It will not just be a function of coming to check your credit score, it will be a function of actually coming and checking on your credit score, but also receiving an offer, right? Receiving an offer for a credit card that's appropriate for you, receiving a personal loan offer. We're making good progress towards things like that, which I think will define better types of engagement, and candidly, for us, will result in a much better economic proposition, right?

We have actually been through a very strategic reduction in email traffic to our My LendingTree base over the last year, to be more selective with what we email the base. That is often how people measure engagement. Did somebody read that email? Did they open that email? We've actually reduced the noise in the channel to the base, and we're really happy with the progress that we're seeing in My LendingTree in terms of revenue contribution despite that, 'cause we think it leads to a better customer experience. We're trying to make sure that we don't spam our base with useless emails. I think the quality of the dialogue with the My LendingTree member is improving, and the economics continue to be consistent. I think over the next year, you're going to see more behavior-based offers.

Because you improved your credit score, this card is now available to you, right? The big thing in our strategy with My LendingTree is true adjacency of a reward for the consumer and sort of a members-only approach, which is it's not a paid product, but we're looking at it like from the mindset of what would the consumer pay for? Let's deliver that and find a way to do it on a free basis. That's the strategy.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Yeah, the only other things I'd add to that, I thought that was a great answer, is if you think about My LendingTree and as the upgrade from you came into the marketplace, you clicked on an ad, you filled out a form, you closed or you didn't close, and then we're offering you the opportunity to say, "Hey, you can set it and forget it, and we'll just alert you whenever we can save you money." That's where J.D.'s talking about the quality of the traffic. The beauty of having all of these lenders networked up is that we can then deliver you real offers through TreeQual. In My LendingTree, we're putting the best customer experience first, and then we're worrying about the monetization as a secondary basis.

We've got, you know, that's why we wanna have the insurance agency embedded in there, so you can get real offers. TreeQual, so you can get real offers for credit card and personal loans and not have a click out. Mortgage, we're working on some enhancements there. That's what the goal there is. Then really importantly, from a business model standpoint, the goal then is that your recurring revenue, every time that person needs to check their credit score, et cetera, that we can give them the best offering, as J.D. said, at the right time, and we don't need to pay for you again to come through LendingTree. A lot of our repeat traffic still comes from you clicking on an ad, which means we're paying for you twice.

Over time, our VMM should do better as well, in addition to improving the customer experience.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

That's great.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

The only thing I would add.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

Yeah.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

The only thing I would add on MyLT, you know, Revenue or contribution from MyLT users is up about 20%, so that's a good story. Now, keep in mind, that tends to track with personal loans, so obviously, as RPLs are higher, those MyLT numbers are going to look better. Revenue per engaged is, you know, 1.6 times, so that's actually really good to see. Our base, as we've talked about, we've been able to build this base of 22 million users without a lot of basically no marketing spend against it. What you're gonna see us do over time is actually diversify that base, driving folks from a mortgage funnel, driving folks from other funnels, insurance, etc., into the MyLT experience. As that base diversifies, there will be all kinds of benefit for the marketplace business. That's

I just wanna emphasize that's really the strategy. The two have to go hand in hand.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

The last thing I would say is, as you heard on Investor Day, we have an internal project called Digital Advisor, and that's going very well, and it's on track.

Youssef Squali
Managing Director and Head of Internet and Digital Media Research Group, Truist Securities

Good to hear. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Melissa Wedel from J.P. Morgan.

Melissa Wedel
Vice President, U.S. Equities Research, J.P. Morgan

Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions today. Wanted to follow up on some of your comments on TreeQual. I'm unclear if the scope has expanded on that in terms of incorporating more network partners into TreeQual, or is that stable? If so, are you still on track to sort of implement that across most of the space by year-end?

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Let me start, and then I'll hand it off to J.D. Let me just for everybody describe again what TreeQual is. By the way, that's an internal name. In both the personal loan and the credit card business, there are slight nuances to fulfill. Let's take credit card. You come to LendingTree or any credit card comparison site, you enter in some basic information, it gives you a list of credit cards and some potential rates and terms that you will probably be approved for, and then you click on that, you go to their website, fill in the rest of the information, and then a month later, the issuer tells us whether or not you closed.

Imagine instead, you come to LendingTree, you fill in information, and you're presented with two or three actual card offers that when you click on it, the card goes in the mail. In personal loans, basically the same thing. Lenders, the initial lenders like this because it increases their conversion rates. J.D. said earlier about getting them the right volume. They're only seeing people who are clicking on an actual real live offer, so they're all gonna get approved. It massively improves the customer experience and the customer satisfaction, and it improves our unit economics and our monetization because we're not sending 100 people over to a lender and getting three closings back. We're gonna send 100 people over and get 95 back. Now, it's not gonna be quite that stark, but that's TreeQual.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Melissa-

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

I'll throw the mic down to you.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Right now we've got three credit card issuers live on it today. Metrics that we anticipated have all been at or actually better than what we anticipated when discussing it with the partners in testing. It's actually returning better outcomes, mostly better outcomes than we anticipated. That's great to see. That's what we would call the inventory side of it, so what does a consumer see? We're about to launch our first personal loan partner, and that's really exciting. You know, we've got that pipeline of partners. There's some complexity to this because you have to work with a couple third parties and work through it with the partner to onboard them. You know, Q2 , I would anticipate.

You know, we've got another handful of credit card and personal loan, I'd say five or six in the pipeline. Whether they all get done in the Q2 or if it bleeds into the Q3, that's kind of the timeline that I would think about. That's a dramatic change in both of those businesses. As Doug points out, what it will do for us, I mean, some of our partners in personal loans, we're anticipating that we could maintain our existing business with them and that TreeQual could actually replicate and double it. All right? To give you some sense for how it enables you to take market share. It's just a more efficient way to deliver them the consumer that they want.

We think it's a bit of a moat or barrier to entry in both of those businesses. I just keep telling the team. You know, somebody said to me, "Geez, this is really hard to implement." I said, "Hard is good. Hard is a barrier to entry. It's a quality of revenue issue." I think in both personal and credit card, that's exactly what we're doing. We're improving the quality of the revenue.

Melissa Wedel
Vice President, U.S. Equities Research, J.P. Morgan

Yeah. No doubt the functionality of TreeQual is certainly compelling. I think one of the other things that jumped out to me in looking through your letter this morning was that you noted dramatically improved performance for those partners who have been onboarded so far. I was hoping we could dig into that a little bit. I guess I'm wondering what metrics you're looking at or they're looking at. Are you seeing already an increase in allocated budget to LendingTree versus others as a result of that? Or how would you see that filter through?

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

In personal loans, particularly in personal loans, it's you don't necessarily have budget allocations lenders want typically if they're because it's so electronic that many times they're able to run uncapped. The key metric you look at is the conversion rate from when we send a consumer to somewhere else than LendingTree and the percentage of those people who actually come back with a closed transaction. That relates to the unit economics on your revenue per customer directly because most of those things are our credit cards are. We get paid on a cost per issue or revenue per issue, and the same thing is mostly true with personal loans. We get paid on a closed loan.

If we can make dramatic changes in the conversion rate, we can make dramatic changes in the unit economics, and then that business will grow. The only other thing I would say, when I started LendingTree, the whole premise is you fill out a form, and you get multiple real offers to compare. In credit card, less so in personal loans, like, that's not happening. This is just getting you to actually be able to see real offers. J.D., what else would you add?

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Yeah. Melissa, I think in terms of, like, it translating into more budget, in card, that tends to be month-to-month. The payouts will not be different. The efficiency will be really on the marketing side for us. You know, as payouts for certain cards go higher, we'll just be able to deliver more approvals and garner more from our base. That's why it's so critical that we expand our My LendingTree base as well. Now, this is not exclusively tied to My LendingTree, but that's why the strategies are so linked. I think in terms of impacting the margin profile in each of those businesses, I don't think that's a 2022 thing. I think that's something that will start to ripple through in 2023.

We're gonna have to kind of look at all the data in terms of TreeQual this year as we assess our budget for next year and look at what it does for those two businesses. I'm very confident that we will garner more market share and wallet share with partners in those businesses. That's not a debate. This is very much what they want from us. What it means in terms of, can it get big enough to dramatically change, like, a margin structure in those businesses, that's a more open question that we've got to work through. It's just a matter of size and getting enough volume to them through it.

Melissa Wedel
Vice President, U.S. Equities Research, J.P. Morgan

Got it. Very helpful. Thanks so much.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Nat Schindler with Bank of America.

Nat Schindler
Director Equity Research and Head of SMID Cap Internet, Bank of America

Yes. Hi, Doug, J.D., and can you help me out a little bit because I saw very different behaviors from some of the public fintech players in the personal loan space. Obviously, there's a lot of growth in the demand side from consumers. I know that demand and supply go backwards. I think you call that supply. But the consumer is more interested. They have higher credit card balances, and there's less stimulus checks. People are spending money again. But you saw also from at least a couple of the players in the fintech providers that are public to very opposite stances, cutting their credit box dramatically on one side and another one dramatically expanding the credit box as both taking a different take on what's gonna happen to the consumer in this changing inflationary environment, potentially recessionary. What do you?

What would happen to your business, and how would it affect you, if in either side of those is correct? Where do you see the consumer coming out longer term in-

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Uh-

Nat Schindler
Director Equity Research and Head of SMID Cap Internet, Bank of America

As we move forward with these rising rates?

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Yeah. I'm not. I won't speculate on where the consumer is going, but I will say in personal loans in particular, what you just described is what makes a marketplace. The more lenders you have with the more diversity of their credit boxes means that on any given day, we can deliver the consumer the best deal on the market from whoever sees it that way. What I always like to say is if lenders are willing to lend and borrowers wanna borrow, we are able to make a marketplace in that, particularly in personal loans. The time when the business gets tough is when those personal loan or any lender starts to see obviously huge defaults, and then they, you know, cut it or they see they have a capital. They can't get capital.

This happened in the personal loan market several years ago, and the air hose shuts off. Then, you know, and then you wait it out. The nice thing for us is you reduce your marketing spend and the thing, and it kind of balances out. J.D., what else would you add? Where's the consumer going?

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Well, I mean, Nat, I guess it's what's gonna happen, there's greater dispersion in pricing for any of our products right now. We're in that environment, right? So think about what our value add is as a marketplace. In a marketplace based on comparison alternatives for the consumer, if everybody's at the same price, there's not a great deal of value for the consumer. If there's great spread, there's more value. So in some respect, in the interim, that's not a bad thing for us in terms of the call to action to compare. So that's kind of one way to look at it. In terms of, I don't think there's enough data out there yet in terms of where all of our lender partners are going.

We're certainly seeing, as we've mentioned, in consumer partners who just very much wanna grow. I'm not hearing a ton of credit box tightening discussions when we go out and talk to our partners for the first time in a while in person. There's not a whole lot of credit box tightening discussion going on right now. That's not reflected across our network today. You're hearing a couple data points of that. In a higher rate environment, we actually think that's a good call to action for people to compare.

Nat Schindler
Director Equity Research and Head of SMID Cap Internet, Bank of America

Great. Thank you.

J.D. Moriarty
President of Marketplace and COO, LendingTree

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Jamie Friedman with Susquehanna.

Jamie Friedman
Senior FinTech and IT Services Research Analyst, Susquehanna

Hi, Doug, J.D., Trent. Was wondering, at least at a high level, can you talk us through your thoughts on the VMM and especially the EBITDA margin contemplations at a segment level, if you can, for the remainder of the year?

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah, Jamie, it's Trent. I mean, again, I'd kind of point everybody back to the segment-level guidance that we gave at the Investor Day. I mean, you know, we said the home segment was probably gonna be down 15%-25% on a revenue basis in light of what we knew was coming in terms of higher rates and lower refi volumes. We still feel like the bottom end of that range is achievable and likely. We guided for a margin profile of 35%-40%. We still feel like that's definitely achievable as well. You know, you look at consumer, as I already said, our outlook there remains fully intact. I mean, we guided for 45%-55% growth, totally achievable.

Certainly the trends from Q1 and into Q2 support that. Similarly on the margin profile, something in kind of the mid-40%. Insurance is the one where there is a little bit of a caveat. I mean, we expected that business to be up 10%-20% on the year. You know, sitting here today, I think with being cautiously optimistic, that's probably more like a 5%-10% type grower. The margin profile of that business, you know, certainly the Q1 results suggest that we're trending a little bit beneath the segment-level margin that we guided for there, but we're hopeful that that will recover as the year progresses.

You know, in terms of how all that translates into EBITDA margin, I mean, I do wanna point out that we've done a pretty good job being disciplined in our OpEx. We've clearly moderated the rate of growth in our fixed cost structure, in our non-marketing cost structure. You know, the fixed costs in our business have remained relatively flat for the last three quarters. You know, we're certainly doing our best to hold the line on that piece of it.

Jamie Friedman
Senior FinTech and IT Services Research Analyst, Susquehanna

Got it. If I could just ask about this callout in the shareholder letter about consumer, specifically on credit card, where you call out that the revenue per approval increased 47%. Is that because the revenue per approval grew less than the card business. I'm sorry if I'm being slow thinking this through, but is that a function of increased volume or are the origination dollars smaller? Why is that happening?

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Yeah. I mean, revenue per approval is a function of the number of approvals that we deliver for our issuers in aggregate, and what we get paid for that. You know, the increasing revenue per approval is a function of increased demand from the issuers for, you know, for new originations, for new issuance. As J.D. talked about earlier, I mean, we're clearly seeing a healthy backdrop there in terms of issuers wanting to spend marketing dollars, wanting to put on new issuance. Where we've been a little bit more challenged is on our ability to drive new consumers and new approvals to them. Just the marketing backdrop there has been more difficult. It is competitive and remains competitive.

Our focus in that business is obviously to get more efficient through TreeQual as we onboard more partners, but also to look for other marketing outlets, other sources of traffic. That's where we're focused in the card business.

Jamie Friedman
Senior FinTech and IT Services Research Analyst, Susquehanna

Got it. Thanks for that. I'll drop back in the queue.

Operator

Actually, Mr. Friedman, you're the only one left in the queue. You can continue.

Jamie Friedman
Senior FinTech and IT Services Research Analyst, Susquehanna

All right. Well, what I was trying to get at though, Trent, is that the revenue actually grew faster than the approval. I s that because, I guess, is it volume discounts 'cause you had more approvals?

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

The number of approvals that we're delivering for our partners is up, and the amount we're getting paid per approval is also up.

Jamie Friedman
Senior FinTech and IT Services Research Analyst, Susquehanna

why would the revenue in the segment grow faster than the revenue per approval? I'm sorry, Doug, if I'm being exceptionally slow.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Because the revenue. Jamie, the revenue per approval would be a function of how the issuers across our network say, "We will pay you X per approval." They incent us to deliver them volume, we succeed delivering them more volume, and it's just the math of a higher rate, a higher price, just like everything else, is inflated over the last year, and more volume. It's two metrics working in tandem. That's gonna lead to a higher percentage. Those right? We've got a multiplier effect of more volume across a higher base price.

Jamie Friedman
Senior FinTech and IT Services Research Analyst, Susquehanna

Got it. Okay. All right. Thank you. That's the extent of my questions.

Trent Ziegler
CFO, LendingTree

Sure.

Operator

Thank you. I'm showing no further questions at this time. I'd now like to turn the conference back to Doug Lebda, CEO.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Thank you very much and thank you all for listening and your great questions. I just close with this. 25 years ago, when I started this company, I first spent a little bit of money on advertising and with a simple website and had hundreds of customers filling out the first QFs on the internet applying for loans. When I turned to the lender side with my co-founder in tow, ready to build interfaces to every financial institution, my first lender said, "Can you fax it to me?" We had to build a system that we could fax customers to the lenders who would then input that data back several days later.

As we sit here, I never thought that it would take 25 years to get to the place that we are in 2022, where I believe that we are at the cusp of finally having fully digitized loans and fully digitized insurance. That we have a marketplace right now where you've got public companies in each of those areas who are lending, as one of our questioners referred to, in personal loans. We've got fully digitized at-scale mortgage companies who are on the internet. Every single bank in the country is working towards the same goal of acquiring more customers over the internet. We think that we are perfectly positioned in that future, and here's why. One, we have a loan and an insurance marketplace machine that works every single day to produce substantial cash flows.

We are one of the only companies that I know of that doesn't have a customer acquisition cost problem. Our marketing is very, very profitable. Two, we have a brand that's very, very well-known, and with our customer experience improving, it's gonna get even better. Three, we have every significant financial services company in every single category plugged into our exchange and as a client of ours and as a real partner of ours, and those partnerships are getting stronger, particularly now post-COVID, where we can actually go see each other again and really work together again. Fourth, we have our strategy and all of our key initiatives to revolutionize our customer experience, and with that comes direct unit economic improvement.

Fifth, and most importantly, we have what I believe is the best team we've ever assembled at LendingTree, who's perfectly ready, has been digging in, during COVID, making changes, building the company of the future, and it's a fantastic team to work with. We are fired up and, excited to, see where we can take this company from here. Thank you all very much.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

Doug Lebda
Founder, Chairman, and CEO, LendingTree

Great job, guys.

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