Forum Topics AIM AIM FY24 Results

Pinned straw:

Last edited 3 months ago

Media Release: https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20240829/pdf/0676bss606c3jj.pdf

FY24 Annual Report: https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20240829/pdf/0676bnpw5ms0lw.pdf

FY24 Presentation: https://announcements.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20240829/pdf/0676bzwbglkvw6.pdf

FY24 results were released today and once again the top line results were a yawn-fest with revenues growing by 7% to $66.2m. However, the real story lies beneath the surface, where the company’s dynamics are shifting. Ai-Media’s fast-growing Technology division (good co) contrasts with its declining Services division (bad co), leading to significant changes behind the scenes.

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The company continues to recomposition itself from Services to Technology leading to increased gross margins

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The positive trend in profitability continues

Technology revenue grew by 37% over the year and now run-rating at 52% of the group’s revenue and 68% of its gross profit. Ai-Media is rapidly transforming from a people-driven captioning service company into a caption technology and AI company. Management anticipates that Technology revenue will comprise 80% of the Group’s revenue by December 2025. If anyone needs a reminder of how well the Technology division has grown over the years, just take a look at the revenue chart below.

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EEG was acquired by AI-Media in 2H FY21

This is one where I’ll need to go back and review my notes and old transcripts, but as my memory stands right now, there appears to be a distinct shift in management’s optimism during the conference call.

The key talking point was their “aspirational” five-year organic growth target: $150m in revenue and $60m in EBITDA. This translates to CAGR of 17.8% for revenue and 70.9% for EBITDA over five years. This is a significant leap from the single-digit top-line growth rates of recent years. However, it’s also quite attainable, given the rapid expansion of the Technology business, which now accounts for a much larger share of revenue and gross profit. Management believes they can achieve this by expanding beyond their core US broadcasting live caption market, targeting new geographies (with Europe and the UK as key areas), sectors (focusing on Government and Enterprise), and product offerings (including new AI-enabled language services).

The prevailing sentiment is that Ai-Media is positioned at the right time and in the right place. They provide the industry-standard captioning infrastructure used by US live broadcast companies, and there is surging demand for AI technologies to reduce captioning costs and extend reach, especially since the rise of generative AI tools like ChatGPT in recent years. The company has already demonstrated high-profile, high-stakes use cases for fully AI-generated live captions, such as during the recent Paris Olympics for broadcasters in the US (NBC in English and Telemundo in Spanish!) and Australia (Channel 9). Moreover, access to new large language models and machine learning advancements is making it increasingly feasible to develop additional automated services beyond traditional live captioning. Over the next 12 months, the company plans to roll out human-level language translations, voice dubbing, audio descriptions, topic models, and sound effect recognition.

In a recent, and super awesome, episode of Invest Like The Best with Gavin Baker, there’s a segment on “AI First” companies. It’s around the 56min mark: https://overcast.fm/+ABA27uWiTk8/56:00. I immediately thought about Ai-Media. They act as a thin wrapper around AI models (leveraging transcription services from Microsoft, AWS, and Google), delivering what feels like magic to their customers and not only going after software budgets but labour budgets. Gavin also asserts that although AI First companies are experiencing rapid growth, it’s very challenging to build long-term defensibility around their business models.

But this is where the comparison ends. Ai-Media isn’t an AI First business; it’s a labor-based company that has transformed into an AI business. The company dominates the North American live broadcast market, with its hardware and software encoders deeply embedded into their customer’s workflows. Additionally, Ai-Media still offers a labor component for customers who require that extra peace of mind. This integration provides a level of defensibility that the vast majority of pure AI First companies lack.

Despite the bump today, it’s still trading at trailing 1.4x sales and 34x Normalised EBIT. The market is still skeptical that a 30%pa growing Technology division with a 80%+ gross margin will become the vast bulk of the business going forward.

EDIT: I had a EBIT multiple wildly wrong

mushroompanda
Added 3 months ago

For those that are interested in some further background information on Ai-Media, I made the following post on MicrocapClub on the 6th March 2024 which may be of interest:

https://roeroeboat.com/Ai-Media Investment Case.pdf

Once again, it's on my own domain due to the pdf upload limit.

While I made a similar post here around the same time, it lacked the historical context and background information that are crucial to understanding the full investment thesis. This more comprehensive write-up should provide additional insights into Ai-Media's story and potential.


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Noddy74
Added 3 months ago

Was the $150 million revenue target and $60 million EBITDA target (both "aspirational") new @mushroompanda ? I haven't heard it before but am a relatively new investor so admit I haven't pored over every investor call. When Tony raised it, I felt like I'd missed something because he was initially so offhand with the comment but then the Q&A became a little obsessed with it and then the SP went off like a rat up a drainpipe (up 20% at one stage) - I started to think this is new.

To get to what he's talking about you need close to 18% p.a. top line growth, which is achieveable in my view, But you need to accompany it with single digit opex growth, which I would love...but just haven't seen it the sector. I hope they are the exception.

To me this has been THE standout result of reporting season so far. I bought after the open and gave myself a high five, which is depressingly similar to a (the) clap, to get it below yesterday's close, which was before the call.

[Held]

15

mushroompanda
Added 3 months ago

@Noddy74

Yeah it's very new. You can see on the intraday chart exactly when Tony made the comment and slaughtered all the bears. Just like how $PWH.AX slaughter all the bulls during its conference call guidance the other week.

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I wish companies wouldn't do this and just put it in the pack.

12

Wini
Added 3 months ago

@Noddy74 Yes, the aspirational target is new and the way Tony mentioned it off the cuff at the start of the call I had the same double take as you.

Normally I am not a fan of these long term targets (cough LBL cough) but for AIM I will give them a pass because as @mushroompanda points out they are dealing with the classic good segment/bad segment where the terminal decline of Services is masking the extraordinary growth and margins of Tech.

Given how myopic the market is to short term results (look at the initial reaction to this result which came in slightly light at EBITDA consensus) I think Tony and John moving the markets attention to the medium term is a great idea.

The guidance seems unachievable at first. Maybe revenue not so much, high teens CAGR is actually below recent trend and Tony did a good job highlighting the growth potential ex US and from upsells of new products.

EBITDA seems a stretch, anything requiring a 70% CAGR would. However if you take a step back from the absolute numbers and ask what EBITDA margin an industry standard platform/protocol can earn at scale, 40% doesn't seem unreasonable.

Anyway, Tony and John have shot for the stars here. Now comes the hard part and delivering on the potential!

22

Strawman
Added 3 months ago

Top shelf analysis, as always @mushroompanda

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