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Alarm.com Holdings, Inc. (ALRM)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 was a clean beat: Total revenue $254.3M (+8.8% YoY) and non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA $48.4M (+13.0% YoY), with diluted non-GAAP EPS $0.60; management raised FY 2025 guidance across SaaS & license, total revenue, adjusted EBITDA, and adjusted net income .
- Versus consensus, ALRM beat Q2 revenue ($254.3M vs $244.0M*) and diluted non-GAAP EPS ($0.60 vs $0.51*), driven by broad-based strength and hardware outperformance; gross profit rose to $166.8M with ~40 bps gross margin improvement YoY . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Guidance catalysts: Q3 SaaS & license guide set at $171.4–$171.6M, and FY 2025 raised by ~$5.2M at the midpoint for SaaS & license, with increases to total revenue and adjusted EBITDA; share-count assumption trimmed partly due to Q2 buybacks, supporting FY adjusted EPS $2.40 .
- Strategic momentum: growth initiatives (commercial/OpenEye, EnergyHub, international) approached ~30% of SaaS revenue at ~25% YoY growth; new AI/video features and platform extensions (e.g., Apple CarPlay) should support engagement and cross-sell .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Hardware revenue outperformed, supporting EBITDA and reinforcing ALRM’s efficient go-to-market; management noted hardware gross profits historically cover >50% of sales & marketing customer acquisition costs .
- Gross profit rose to $166.8M (+9.4% YoY) with ~40 bps gross margin improvement, aided by revenue mix and quality .
- Growth initiatives momentum: commercial/OpenEye AI analytics, EnergyHub secular demand and device expansion, and faster international growth in LatAm/Middle East (strong RVM adoption) .
What Went Wrong
- Operating cash flow moderated in 1H 2025 ($46.8M vs $72.8M 1H24), translating to lower non-GAAP FCF ($36.1M vs $67.8M), partially reflecting Section 174 cash tax timing earlier in the year .
- Retention rate normalized from ~95% in Q1 to 94.1% in Q2 (still high), with management expecting ~93.7–94% in 2H amid housing turnover dynamics .
- Tariff uncertainty required a June price pass-through (baseline 10% tariff; ~7.5% pricing to partners given margin) which may slightly dilute margins, even as gross profit dollars remain roughly unchanged; some partner inventory build likely pulled demand forward .
Financial Results
Values retrieved from S&P Global for consensus estimates.
Segment revenue breakdown:
Margins (S&P Global):
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
KPIs:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “The major components of our business performed well… Revenue outperformance, particularly in hardware revenue, resulted in stronger adjusted EBITDA.”
- “Their [commercial, EnergyHub, international] collective contributions to our consolidated SaaS revenue approached 30%… combined YoY growth rate around 25%.”
- “Gross margins improved by 40 bps… total gross profit grew 9.4% YoY to $166.8M.”
- “Hardware gross profits… cover over 50% of our sales and marketing customer acquisition costs.”
- “We implemented a price increase in early June to reflect the 10% baseline tariff… pass-through will slightly dilute margins, but gross profit dollars will remain roughly unchanged.”
- “Federal budget… allows companies to transition back to immediately and fully deducting all domestic R&D… eliminates just under $200M in total cash tax payments over the next five years.”
Q&A Highlights
- Growth durability: EnergyHub benefits from AI data center/manufacturing-driven utility demand; commercial benefits from cloud migration and unfortunate security events; international growth driven by market build-outs; combined growth ~25% with components within ±500 bps; investment may scale in 2026 .
- Hardware and tariffs: 2H hardware revenue implied ~$150M (slightly skewed to Q3); tariff pass-through (~7.5% pricing) keeps gross profit dollars roughly unchanged; no structural change to acquisition economics .
- Retention: Q2 rounded to 94% (actual 94.1%), normalizing from ~95% in Q1; 2H expected ~93.7–94% depending on housing/macros .
- Pricing: No broad-based SaaS price hikes planned for 2H or 2026 despite tariff pass-through on hardware .
- International: LatAm and Middle East outpaced expectations; strong adoption of remote video monitoring .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 vs consensus: Revenue $254.3M vs $244.0M*; non-GAAP diluted EPS $0.60 vs $0.51*; both beats driven by hardware strength and diversified growth . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Near-term consensus (Q3 2025): Revenue $251.1M*, EPS $0.61*; management’s Q3 guide is only for SaaS & license ($171.4–$171.6M), implying continued steadiness; Street models may need to reflect raised FY ranges and 2H hardware cadence . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Q2 2025 consensus detail:
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Q3 2025 forward (consensus):
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Broad-based beat and raised FY guide underline durable growth across segments; hardware outperformance supported EBITDA and highlights the flywheel between device installs and recurring SaaS .
- Hardware tariff pass-through (~7.5% to partners) and available inventory mitigate 2025 tariff risk; margins may see slight dilution but gross profit dollars remain stable—a manageable near-term headwind .
- Growth initiatives (commercial/OpenEye, EnergyHub, international) are now a meaningful ~30% of SaaS at ~25% YoY growth, with product innovation (AI search, deterrence) and regional expansion as catalysts .
- Strong cash balance ($1.02B) and improving medium-term FCF outlook from Section 174 reversal support capital flexibility (organic/inorganic investments, buybacks) .
- Retention remains high (94.1%) and expected to hover ~93.7–94% in 2H, reflecting resilient demand for professional-grade security and smart property solutions despite mixed macros .
- Q3 setup: SaaS & license guide $171.4–$171.6M; 2H hardware implied ~$150M (Q3 modestly above Q4), which should anchor revenue cadence and EBITDA delivery .
- Tactical trading: Raised FY ranges and visible hardware cadence are near-term positive supports; watch tariff codification details and housing turnover (retention) for incremental volatility; product announcements (e.g., Apple CarPlay, new T25 thermostat) add engagement levers .
Note: Asterisked values are consensus estimates. Values retrieved from S&P Global.