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TransUnion (TRU)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 revenue was $1.037B (+9% YoY reported; +9% organic constant currency) and Adjusted EBITDA was $378M (+16% YoY), both above company guidance; GAAP diluted EPS was $0.34 and Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.97 .
- U.S. Markets Financial Services (+21% YoY) and Insurance led growth; International delivered double-digit revenue growth with India (+17% YoY), APAC (+19%), and Latin America (+7%) .
- Management raised capital returns and tightened targets: quarterly dividend to $0.115, new $500M share repurchase authorization, and a lower leverage ratio target (<2.5x) for 2025 .
- 2025 outlook: revenue $4.333–$4.393B (+3.5–5% as reported; +4.5–6% organic CC), Adjusted EBITDA $1.549–$1.590B, and Adjusted EPS $3.93–$4.08; headwinds include FX (~1–2%) and higher tax rate (Adjusted ~26.5%) .
- Narrative catalyst: launch of freemium direct-to-consumer credit education and monitoring with Credit Sesame; expected to reinvigorate Consumer Interactive while 2025 guidance remains prudently conservative amid muted credit volumes .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- U.S. Financial Services revenue +21% YoY; Insurance drove double-digit growth in Emerging Verticals; International broad-based strength, especially India, APAC, and Latin America .
- Margin expansion: Adjusted EBITDA margin improved to 36.5% (+230 bps YoY) on revenue growth and transformation savings; Adjusted EPS up 21% YoY to $0.97 .
- Strategic progress and product innovation: freemium direct-to-consumer launch with Credit Sesame and accelerated OneTru/OneDev modernization; “we expect to deliver 4.5 to 6 percent organic constant currency revenue growth with modest margin expansion” .
What Went Wrong
- Consumer Interactive declined 11% YoY as the company lapped a large breach win in the prior year; management acknowledges uneven breach revenues and a transition year in 2025 as freemium launches .
- Mortgage volumes moderated; Q4 mortgage revenue +80% YoY but inquiries rose only ~4% and were “modestly below expectations” as rates rose late in the quarter; Q1 2025 mortgage inquiries expected to decline >10% .
- India online consumer credit volumes remained soft due to RBI tightening; management guides to ~10% India growth for 2025 with stronger trajectory exiting the year .
Financial Results
Segment revenues trend (gross):
Balance sheet and leverage KPIs:
Notes:
- Company stated Q4 exceeded revenue and Adjusted EBITDA guidance; Adjusted EBITDA margin improved YoY .
Guidance Changes
Assumptions/headwinds called out:
- FX headwinds (~1% revenue, ~2% EBITDA in Q1; ~1% FY) and mortgage tailwind (~2 pts) embedded in 2025 guidance .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “TransUnion finished the year with strong revenue growth and margin expansion... U.S. Markets grew by high single-digits... International segment delivered double-digit growth led by India, Asia Pacific and Latin America.” — Chris Cartwright, CEO .
- “We are lowering our Leverage Ratio target to under 2.5x, raising our quarterly dividend to $0.115, and announcing a new $500 million share repurchase program.” — Chris Cartwright, CEO .
- “We expect to deliver 3.5 to 5 percent revenue growth (4.5 to 6 percent organic constant currency) [in 2025]... with modest margin expansion at the high end of our range.” — Chris Cartwright, CEO .
- “Adjusted EBITDA margin was 36.5%, up 230 basis points and above the high end of our expectations.” — Todd Cello, CFO .
- “We expect our adjusted tax rate to be approximately 26.5%... impacted by global tax reform including global minimum tax.” — Todd Cello, CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Guidance conservatism: Management continues a prudently conservative stance; high end assumes conditions similar to 2024; upside if credit volumes improve .
- Consumer Interactive & freemium: The freemium launch is a strategic reset to monetize traffic, enhance direct and indirect channels, and support longer-term sustainable growth .
- India outlook: RBI policy shift toward growth; rates cut; expect soft H1 and stronger H2; ~10% FY25 growth guided for India .
- Mortgage prequalification: Shift from tri-bureau to 1–2 pulls in prequal observed; pricing pass-through of third-party scores continues; majority revenue still tri-bureau .
- Regulatory tone: New administration pausing CFPB activities; company remains focused on operational rigor; waiting for landscape clarity .
- Margin investments: 2025 growth investments (~$30M) in tech/product/sales/international; incremental margins will improve if credit mix normalizes toward higher-contribution products .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus data for Q4 2024 was unavailable due to provider limits; therefore we cannot quantify beat/miss versus Wall Street estimates for revenue/EPS/EBITDA.*
- Company reported exceeding internal Q4 guidance on revenue and Adjusted EBITDA; Adjusted EPS increased 21% YoY .
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Growth mix: Financial Services (+21% YoY) and Insurance led U.S. Markets; International remains a multi-geography growth engine (India/APAC/LatAm) .
- Margin durability: Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded to 36.5% on transformation savings and revenue growth; incremental margin upside if credit volumes rebound .
- 2025 setup: Guidance embeds FX/tax headwinds and mortgage +2 pts tailwind; conservatism creates potential beat/raise cadence if volumes improve .
- Capital returns pivot: Dividend raised, $500M buyback authorized, leverage target lowered; expect more balanced capital allocation with natural delevering .
- Consumer Interactive inflection: Freemium launch with Credit Sesame and planned Monevo integration target sustainable growth; 2025 is a transition year .
- Mortgage dynamic: Pricing tailwind continues, but inquiries volatile; near-term caution (Q1 down >10%) even as medium-term refinance optionality exists .
- Execution risk and monitoring: Regulatory uncertainty (CFPB) and India H1 softness are watch items; management’s conservative guidance and transformation progress mitigate risk .