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Thryv Holdings, Inc. (THRY)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025: SaaS momentum and profitability accelerated; consolidated revenue rose to $210.5M with diluted EPS $0.31, while consolidated Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 24.3% on stronger print and SaaS scale .
- Revenue and EPS beat Wall Street consensus, with revenue at $210.5M vs ~$203.9M* and diluted EPS $0.31 vs ~$0.26*, driven by record SaaS Adjusted EBITDA margin (20.3%) and a normalization of shared cost allocations back to Marketing Services .
- Guidance raised: FY25 SaaS Adjusted EBITDA to $70.5–$73.5, Marketing Services revenue to $323–$325M and Adjusted EBITDA to $78.5–$80.5; FY25 SaaS revenue narrowed to $460–$465M .
- Catalysts: “pinch point” behind them, debt amortization stepped down, potential buybacks discussed, and vertical solutions (HVAC) plus Workforce Center launch support ARPU expansion and multi-product adoption .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record SaaS profitability: SaaS Adjusted EBITDA reached $23.4M (20.3% margin), reflecting improved gross margins (74.0%) and scale efficiencies; management highlighted beat vs guidance and “highest SaaS Adjusted EBITDA margin to date” .
- Estimates beat: Consolidated revenue and diluted EPS beat Street; revenue $210.5M vs ~$203.9M*, EPS $0.31 vs ~$0.26*, aided by strong print normalizing allocations and >100% seasoned NRR (103%) .
- Strategic execution: Pinch point past; leverage positioned to decline as FCF ramps; debt amortization reduced and paid ahead to Q2 2026; management now considering offensive investments and buybacks (“mispriced share price”) .
Quote: “We delivered a solid second quarter – exceeding our prior guidance and achieving strong top-line SaaS growth coupled with our highest SaaS Adjusted EBITDA margin to date” – Joe Walsh, CEO .
What Went Wrong
- Marketing Services decline continues by design: revenue down 35% YoY to $95.5M as legacy products are upgraded to SaaS; billings down 38% YoY, consistent with managed exit by 2028 .
- Keap demand-gen pullback: Thryv curtailed less-profitable Keap direct demand generation to protect cash during the pinch point; near-term organic growth appears conservative despite ARPU gains .
- Mix/allocations volatility: Management cautioned SaaS margins will not hold at 20% each quarter due to print timing; allocations shift back towards SaaS in lighter print quarters, weighing near-term margins .
Financial Results
Q2 2025 vs Estimates (S&P Global):
- Revenue: Consensus ~$203.9M* vs Reported $210.5M .
- EPS (Primary EPS): Consensus ~$0.26* vs Reported diluted EPS $0.31 .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We did it. We made it through the pinch point… from this point forward… leverage is positioned to decline… we’re going to begin to actually develop a little bit of leftover free cash flow” – Joe Walsh (CEO) .
- “SaaS reported revenue was $115 million… Keap contributed $17.7 million… SaaS adjusted gross margin increased 430 bps YoY… record adjusted EBITDA margin of 20%” – Paul Rouse (CFO) .
- “Modest adjustment in SaaS guidance has isolated softness in the Keap business… we increased our SaaS EBITDA target… we are delivering where it counts” – Joe Walsh (CEO) .
- “With strong print quarters expected ahead, we anticipate leverage to step down significantly as revenue recognition ramps and cash flow improves” – Paul Rouse (CFO) .
Q&A Highlights
- Vertical strategy: HVAC automations are an upcharge; expected to lift ARPU, improve retention, and support offense/defense in the segment; more verticals in pipeline .
- Estimates/guidance tone: CEO emphasized conservatism in outlook; no specific business worry flagged despite cautious assumptions .
- Keap trajectory: Pulled back low-LTV direct demand-gen to prioritize ROI and debt repayment; strong synergy capture; revenue synergies to come via Thryv sales and partner channel into 2026–2027 .
- Capital allocation: Buybacks “on the table” given mispricing; CFO reiterates deleveraging focus .
- Margin cadence: SaaS margins will vary with print timing as allocations shift; don’t extrapolate 20% every quarter .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 results vs consensus: Revenue $210.5M vs ~$203.9M*; diluted EPS $0.31 vs ~$0.26* .
- Q3 2025 Street snapshot: Revenue ~$200.8M*, EPS
$0.25*; compares to company segment guidance of SaaS $116–$117M and Marketing Services $84–$85M ($200–$202M total) .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Note: S&P “Primary EPS” may differ from company-reported diluted EPS due to normalization methodology.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Transition inflection: Pinch point is behind them; leverage and FCF set to improve into H2’25, creating optionality (including buybacks) .
- SaaS quality improving: Record SaaS margins and rising ARPU/NRR underscore scaling profitability; multi-product adoption at 19% supports durable expansion .
- Managed MS run-off: Continued YoY declines in Marketing Services reflect deliberate conversion; strengthens SaaS mix and visibility over time .
- Keap integration strategy: Near-term demand-gen pullback trades revenue for profitability; expect revenue synergies via Thryv’s channels and partner ecosystem in 2026–2027 .
- Guidance upgrade: FY25 raises in SaaS EBITDA and MS revenue/EBITDA, with FY SaaS revenue narrowed, signal execution confidence and margin discipline .
- Product catalysts: HVAC vertical and Workforce Center enhance stickiness and ARPU, supporting sustained NRR above 100% .
- Narrative drivers: Potential GICS reclassification to Software could broaden investor awareness and peer comp set, a non-fundamental but meaningful visibility catalyst .