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Usio, Inc. (USIO)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue was $22.01M (+5% YoY) with gross margin 21.9%; EPS was ($0.01), and Adjusted EBITDA was $0.67M as processing volumes surged but mix and lower interest income constrained margins .
- Against S&P Global consensus, revenue was essentially in line at ~$22.01M vs ~$22.05M, while EPS missed ($0.01) vs $0.02; management reiterated FY25 revenue growth guidance of 14–16%, framing H2 as the acceleration phase as implementations ramp * .
- ACH remained the growth engine (check dollars +42%, transactions +36% YoY), PayFac revenue grew 25% and is ~59% of card revenue, and Output Solutions saw strong electronic-only document volumes; prepaid loads were $98M as COVID-era spoilage/breakage fully wound down, pressuring YoY interest and mix .
- Cash rose to $8.7M with $1.37M positive operating cash flow and $350K buybacks; management emphasized operating leverage, disciplined SG&A, and M&A optionality; key near-term stock catalysts are implementation timing, sustained ACH/PayFac momentum, and proof-points from the new Usio ONE cross-sell motion .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Record Q1 revenue ($22.01M) with strong processing growth: total transactions 13.7M (+41% YoY) and $2.0B processed (+34% YoY) .
- ACH led performance: check dollars +42%, transactions +36%, with complementary services (PINless debit, RCC) contributing; PayFac revenue +25% YoY and ~59% of card revenue, improving card mix .
- Management reiterated FY25 revenue growth of 14–16%; cross-sell “Usio ONE” officially launched in April, with early wins and unified sales process (“one voice, one effort”) .
- Quote: “We are generating strong processing volume growth... and remain very comfortable with our expectation for 14% to 16% top line revenue growth this year.” – Paul Manley .
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What Went Wrong
- EPS missed vs consensus (reported ($0.01) vs $0.02 est.) and gross margins declined ~120 bps YoY to 21.9% on lower interest income and mix; Adjusted EBITDA ($0.67M) declined YoY * .
- Prepaid revenue fell YoY (-13%) and interest income on prepaid fell (-55%) following the full wind-down of COVID-related programs; prepaid loads were $98M but pricing/recurring focus tempers near-term revenue contribution .
- Analyst concerns on the gap between +36% processing dollar growth and +5% revenue were addressed: ACH revenues are transaction-based (not dollar-based), while PayFac earns on dollars .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results (oldest → newest)
Segment Revenue – Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024
KPIs and Operating Metrics
Results vs. S&P Global Consensus
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are generating strong processing volume growth, consistently cash flow positive… we remain very comfortable with our expectation for 14% to 16% top line revenue growth this year.” – Paul Manley .
- “ACH revenues were up 33%… PINless debit and RCC remain strong contributors… Output Solutions… electronic-only documents delivered exceeding 20.5 million… Card issuing… volume is positioned to ramp significantly.” – Louis Hoch .
- “We’re moving closer to a demonstration of our biometrics AI-driven application… uses AI to automatically select the payment method that delivers the greatest value.” – Louis Hoch .
- “PayFac… dollars processed were up 33%… revenue up 25%… 17 new ISVs in various stages of implementation.” – Greg Carter .
- “Our goal is 25% gross margins… long-term EBITDA margins 8% to 10%.” – Louis Hoch (Q&A) .
Q&A Highlights
- Organic growth: Adjusting for >$1M spoilage/breakage in Q1’24, organic growth was >10% (management affirmed the ~$1M figure and that it was the last comp quarter) .
- Gross margin drivers: Decline due to lower interest income on customer funds; ACH growth offsets but mix matters; interest income is essentially 100% margin .
- Operating leverage: Infrastructure can support “tons” more transactions; incremental headcount tied to revenue; management emphasized leverage .
- M&A criteria: Must have clear synergies, be acquired below USIO’s multiple, and be self-sustaining post-acquisition .
- Revenue vs processing growth: ACH revenues are transaction-based (not dollar-based), while PayFac is dollar-based, explaining 36% processing growth vs 5% revenue growth .
- Sales motion: 12 quota-carrying reps; moving to one CRM (HubSpot) and “one voice” cross-sell under Usio ONE .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 results vs S&P Global consensus: revenue ~$22.01M vs ~$22.05M; EPS ($0.01) vs $0.02; modest top-line shortfall and a more notable EPS miss, largely explained by lower interest income and mix shift *.
- Street models may need to lower interest income run-rate assumptions and reflect continued mix toward ACH/complementary services and PayFac within card; management reiterated FY revenue growth (14–16%), which should anchor revenue estimates despite Q1 EPS variance .
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- H2 is the focus: management reiterated FY25 +14–16% revenue growth, citing a “never stronger” implementation queue across ACH, PayFac, issuing, and Output; timing of large implementations is the near-term swing factor .
- Mix, not demand, drove the EPS miss: margins dipped on lower interest income and revenue mix, while volumes were strong; monitor interest income sensitivity and ACH/complementary mix in models .
- ACH and PayFac are compounding: ACH dollars +42% and transactions +36%; PayFac revenue +25% and now ~59% of card revenue – both support medium-term margin expansion as scale and mix improve .
- Operating leverage intact: SG&A was flat YoY in Q1 and management highlighted capacity to onboard meaningful volume with limited incremental cost; cash grew to $8.7M with positive operating cash flow .
- Capital allocation optionality: $350K in Q1 buybacks; $4M repurchase authorization; management also seeing more M&A opportunities under strict criteria .
- Emerging tech optionality: biometrics/AI-driven payments demo upcoming—an upside narrative if commercial traction develops, though not in FY25 guidance .
- Prepaid normalization continues: loads at $98M, with revenue headwinds from COVID-era wind-down; strategy prioritizes recurring programs and cross-sell of ACH/PINless to issuing clients .
Appendix: Additional Operating and Balance Sheet Notes
- Operating cash flow: $1.37M (Q1); Cash & equivalents: $8.72M; treasury buybacks: $350K during Q1 .
- Balance sheet steady: Total assets $109.6M; stockholders’ equity $18.99M as of March 31, 2025 .