HomeBusinessLemonade investors just got some incredible news

Lemonade investors just got some incredible news

Lemonade (NYSE:LMND) Shares just hit a 52-week high following third-quarter earnings reports. In recent months, post-earnings gains have always been followed by a plunge back to where they started. Will this change? The insurance tech company reported great results, so this could stick, and Lemonade stock could finally be on the rise. Let’s go through the results and what they mean for the future of Lemonade.

Lemonade is an insurance company and measures its growth and success somewhat differently than other types of companies. Revenue and profit are still important metrics, but Lemonade’s favorite revenue metric is current premiums (IFP), or the average of current policies in force during the quarter. Because policies are paid for by customers, but not everything turns into revenue, this is the metric that gives investors a more accurate picture of the story.

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IFP rose 24% year over year in the third quarter, an acceleration, and revenue rose 19%. The total number of customers increased 17% year-on-year to 2.3 million, and premium per customer increased 6%. Lemonade’s strategy is to attract younger customers and grow with them, which leads to more policies and more expensive policies over time, and it’s working.

Lemonade is a young company and not yet profitable. It went through a launch phase as it expanded from renters insurance to homeowners, pets, life insurance and auto, and it is still being rolled out across the US. It also has some international activities.

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Investors are dissatisfied with the pace of improvements, but management is confident that the benefits of digital systems will emerge over time and with scale and that Lemonade will become profitable. You can already see some results as sales grow without increasing headcount. At the same time, the IFP increased by 24%, while the workforce decreased by 7%.

Net loss rose to $68 million this year from $62 million last year, but loss per share was better than Wall Street’s expected $1.03 at $0.95. Operating cash flow was positive $16 million, and net cash flow, which is defined as the change in total cash, cash equivalents, restricted cash and investments, was $48 million.

Lemonade is still spending heavily on marketing as it gets its name out there, and expects to increase marketing costs next quarter. So while scale leads to profitability at one level, it is not – yet – enough to surpass costs and make the company profitable. At this point, analysts still expect Lemonade to be unprofitable at least until 2025, but management expects adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) to turn positive in 2026.

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