VI
Veritone, Inc. (VERI)·Q3 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2024 revenue was $22.0M, down 21% year over year; non-GAAP gross margin compressed to 71.2% from 74.9% YoY; non-GAAP net loss improved to $7.1M (vs $7.9M) as cost actions offset lower gross profit .
- Veritone closed the divestiture of Veritone One in October for up to $104M, used $30.5M to pay down term debt; post-deal, no single customer exceeded 5% of revenue, reducing concentration risk .
- FY 2024 guidance was reset lower (revenue $92.5–$93.5M; non‑GAAP net loss $(37.5)–$(36.5)M); FY 2025 outlook targets revenue $107–$122M and non‑GAAP net loss $(25)–$(15)M, driven by a >$100M pipeline and public sector growth expectations of 100–150% YoY .
- Management shifted projected cash‑flow profitability to FY 2026, citing business refocus and debt service reductions; restructuring delivered >15% OpEx savings in FY 2024, with >$40M annualized cost saves since 2023 .
- Near-term catalysts: closure of several large 7- to mid‑8‑figure public sector deals over 3–12 months; multi‑year renewals/expansions with NCAA, iHeartMedia, ESPN underscore commercial momentum .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “The divestiture of Veritone One marks a defining moment... positioning us as a pure‑play enterprise AI company,” enabling focus on higher‑growth, higher‑margin verticals (public sector, commercial enterprise) and reduced customer concentration .
- Commercial momentum: multi‑year agreements and expansions with NCAA (> $40M contract value), iHeartMedia (extension to >850 stations), ESPN; 28 media deals executed in the quarter .
- Bookings and mix improved: total new bookings rose to $16.5M (+17% qoq; +6% yoy); ARR mix shifted to 76% subscription vs. consumption, improving revenue stability .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line pressure: revenue fell 21% YoY to $22.0M, driven by declines in consumption‑based customers (including Amazon) and lapping ~$2.7M one‑time software revenue in Q3 2023 .
- Margin compression: non‑GAAP gross margin declined to 71.2% from 74.9% YoY due to revenue mix shifting away from >90% margin items .
- Guidance reset: FY 2024 revenue and non‑GAAP net loss guidance were materially lowered versus Q2 outlook, reflecting divestiture and timing of public sector deals; cash‑flow profitability pushed to FY 2026 (previously as early as Q4 2024) .
Financial Results
Q3 2024 vs prior quarter and prior year vs estimates
Notes: SPGI consensus estimates attempted but unavailable due to daily request limit; no estimate comparisons provided.
Quarterly trajectory (Q1–Q3 2024)
Segment revenue breakdown
Sub‑components:
- Managed Services – Advertising (Q1/Q2): $10.98 (Q1) , $10.48 (Q2) ; Representation Services (Q3): $2.73 .
- Managed Services – Licensing: $5.44 (Q1) , $4.89 (Q2) , $4.57 (Q3) .
- Software – Commercial vs Public: Commercial/Public software revenue: $13.70/$1.52 (Q1) ; $14.51/$1.12 (Q2) ; $13.10/$1.60 (Q3) .
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO Ryan Steelberg: “The divestiture of Veritone One marks a defining moment... positioning us as a pure‑play enterprise AI company... We’re now poised to capitalize on the unprecedented growth in the AI solutions market” .
- “Post divestiture, Veritone has eliminated our customer concentration risk with no single customer accounting for more than 5% of our revenues” .
- CFO Michael Zemetra on the deal: “Total consideration... up to $104 million... net cash proceeds were $59.1 million... used to pay down $30.5 million in principal... improving our balance sheet... reducing annualized debt carry costs” .
- Pipeline and guidance: “Public sector expected to grow year‑over‑year anywhere from 100% to 150%... Fiscal 2025 revenue $107–$122 million... non‑GAAP net loss $(25)–$(15) million” .
- Margin outlook: “We expect our non‑GAAP gross margin to range from 73% to 74% in Q4 2024... FY 2025 conservatively 72% to 74%, with potential expansion closer to 75%–77%” .
Q&A Highlights
- 2024 guidance reset attribution: Management clarified the change is “100% allocated to timing on public sector” push‑outs, with potential upside if deals accelerate .
- 2025 growth bridge: Growth addition (~$30M at high end) largely from public sector; commercial sector contributes but public is the “large portion of growth” .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus for Q3 2024 revenue and EPS was requested but not retrievable due to SPGI daily request limit; therefore estimate comparisons are unavailable for this recap. We attempted to fetch “Revenue Consensus Mean” and “Primary EPS Consensus Mean” for Q3 2024 and FY periods, but data was not provided.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- The business is now a pure‑play enterprise AI platform post divestiture, with reduced customer concentration and a higher‑quality ARR mix (76% subscription), improving durability into FY 2025 .
- Near‑term revenue headwinds from consumption declines (including Amazon) and lapping one‑time software in Q3’23 pressured margins; cost structure improvements helped narrow non‑GAAP net loss despite lower gross profit .
- FY 2024 was reset lower due to divestiture and deal timing; watch for closure of several large public sector contracts (7- to mid‑8‑figure) over the next 3–12 months as key stock catalysts .
- FY 2025 outlook implies double‑digit growth (22% midpoint) and substantial non‑GAAP loss improvement; public sector expansion (DoD, federal, international) and AWS/partner integrations are the primary drivers .
- Margin trajectory depends on mix; management guides 73–74% in Q4 and 72–74% in FY 2025, with upside to 75–77% at high end of revenue—track mix shifts and contract types in upcoming quarters .
- Balance sheet improved via $30.5M term debt paydown; management considering additional deleveraging pathways—reduces risk and interest burden into 2025 .
- Absent SPGI consensus, frame results vs prior guide: Q3 revenue missed prior $34–$35M guide; investors should recalibrate models to new FY 2024/2025 ranges and monitor public sector bookings conversion rates .