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Pinned straw:

Last edited 2 months ago

Prologue

Hipages is an online marketplace where home owners can advertise jobs they need done and then tradies can provide quotes. Tradies, rather than the home owners, are Hipages’ customers as tradies pay a subscription model to use the platform.

Hipages might be one of the lowest quality marketplace companies around:

  • Once a job is complete, home owners could choose to build a relationship with their tradie outside of Hipages, circumventing the platform.
  • Home owners can easily shop around on the various other classified sites (Yellow Pages, Oneflare/Airtasker, search engines etc).
  • Tradies also could shop around on the same other platforms.
  • Customers may simply choose to not go ahead with a transaction if it is not urgent repairs.

Because of this, network effects do not really come into play like with other platforms such as realestate.com.au.


Chapter 1: The Changing Business Model

Management have long acknowledged the above problem with their business model. By the end of FY25 they have laid the foundations for a change to a new, hopefully more profitable, business model. 

  1. They have transitioned from a commissioned-based model to a subscription model. 100% of their NZ tradies are now on the subscription model generating $1,190 average revenue per user (ARPU). As of their FY25 report, 81% of Australian tradies were on the new platform, generating $2,381 ARPU. 
  2. In FY24 they unified their marketplace and their ‘Tradiecore’ SaaS product into the ‘Single Tradie Platform’ (STP). Tradiecore was a job management and admin software that tradies could integrate into their accounting systems and manage their job leads. Hipages hopes that this combined STP will become a ‘mini-ERP’ for tradies (their words not mine).

Overall, the change in the subscription model has resulted in the business generating much better free cash flow from a step change in the ARPU.

The fact they seem to have experienced minimal churn is a good sign that tradies are getting value out of the platform and that Hipages has at least some pricing power. 

The strategy is to use this newfound FCF to build out the SaaS components and features to make the tradies even stickier, add incremental ARPU and attract more tradies to the platform.


Chapter 2: The Outlook

Management have provided guidance for FY26 of:

  • Revenue growth of 10% - 12%;
  • EBITDA margin of 24%-26% (FY25:24%); and
  • FCF of $8m - $10m (FY25: $5.6m).

When the remaining 19% of Australian tradies transfer over to the new pricing, this should add $1.43m of revenue alone (+1.72%).

They have CAGR of 12% ARPU growth over the last four years for the Australian business. They can easily hit revenue guidance if they achieve ARPU growth of 7.8% over the new pricing model for the Australian business alone. This is assuming the number of tradies remains constant and does not rely upon growth in the NZ business.

Given they have achieved revenue CAGR of 10.5% over the last four years, this guidance seems quite reasonable and very achievable.  


Chapter 3: The Valuation

The current share price of $1.28 implies an EV/FCF ratio of 28.5, and a P/E of 77. This feels quite high, all things considered.

Assuming they hit the $8m of FCF as per guidance with an assumed growth of FCF of 9%, I get a valuation of $1.16 per share.


Epilogue

What I like:

  • Consistent revenue and ARPU growth since IPO. However, this is only a short history of 5 years.
  • Founder-led business with management KPIs are aligned to revenue growth and growing the tradie base which is much needed for the long-term success of this company. 

What I don’t like:

  • They capitalise ~75% of their software development which is why FCF is a better metric of profitability. I would prefer to see them expense more moving forward given they have merged the two platforms.
  • Their strategy may not provide much of a moat, if at all. Competitors will be able to replicate relatively easily.
  • Management have a very small share in ownership. The Founder/MD holds all the shares owned by management, while the remaining board members have a tiny fraction of shares on issue. 

Overall, the company seems like a solid business. It is growing and the strategy seems sound to address the key problems of the business.

If I was to ask myself, is this the best idea I could do with my money? Probably not. I think that I would wait to buy this on a pull back, but I see the vision.

Tom73
Added 2 months ago

Thanks for your analysis @Keyboardcat999 it is quite timely for me, I had a quick look at it earlier in the week after it was covered by @Wini on The Call: small caps | the call: 05th December | NZM CMA MTO RNT HM1 BIT SKK WTL HPG VYS on ausbiz I found myself agreeing with the points raised but more negative of value at the current price.

Having avoided it as overhyped for it's opportunity when it first came on the market it was refreshing to see it’s turned into a good business. I was surprised looking at the accounts and history, solid cash generation and very little dilution to reach it’s current point. Nice pricing model switch as well.

Your articulation of the business is a great summary and I don’t have much to add other than around valuation.

I have added it to my watch list with a view to revisiting if the price drops below $1.00, because I don’t see it as having significant growth or operating leverage potential, well far less than what is priced in. As you point out, it’s a low-quality market compared to other’s out there, but it’s value still has the halo effect of those better companies.

I think it is more appropriately valued as a moderate growth industrial or service company, a PE target is tricky given the capitalisation and depreciation of the development costs so the EV/FCF seems more appropriate and for this I wouldn’t pay over 20 and wouldn’t see it as an asymmetric investment over 15… 

I really don’t see any upside surprise opportunities on this, so would only pay for what I know it can deliver. So will keep an eye on it and if this changes or the price comes off a lot I may just invest – something I hadn’t even contemplated because of the issues I saw in the model.

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Keyboardcat999
Added 2 months ago

I think it is more appropriately valued as a moderate growth industrial or service company

That's a great way of putting it. Moving forward, maybe this will change but I am comfortable waiting to see the new strategy being validated first before committing any money. After all, if management aren't holding, why should we?

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