Leafly Holdings, Inc. (LFLY) CEO Yoko Miyashita on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Leafly Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:LFLY) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call August 11, 2022 4:30 PM ET

Company Participants

Keenan Zopf – IR, The Blueshirt Group

Yoko Miyashita – CEO

Suresh Krishnaswamy – CFO

Conference Call Participants

Harrison Vivas – Cowen

Eric Des Lauriers – Craig-Hallum Capital Group

Jason Helfstein – Oppenheimer

Operator

Good afternoon. Thank you for attending today’s Leafly Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. My name is Frances, and I’ll be your moderator today. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to pass the conference over to our host, Keenan Zopf with The Blueshirt Group.

Keenan Zopf

Good afternoon, and welcome to Leafly’s second quarter 2022 earnings call. We will be discussing the results announced in our press release issued today. With me are Leafly’s CEO, Yoko Miyashita; and CFO, Suresh Krishnaswamy.

Today’s call will contain forward-looking statements, which are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the services offered by Leafly, the markets in which Leafly operates, business strategies, performance metrics, industry environment, potential growth opportunities and Leafly’s projected future results and financial outlook, and can be identified by words such as expect, anticipate, intend, plan, believe, seek or will. These statements reflect our views as of today only, should not be relied upon as representing our views at any subsequent date, and we do not undertake any duty to update these statements. Forward-looking statements by their nature address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. For a discussion of the material risks and other important factors that could affect our actual results, please refer to the risks discussed in today’s press release, our annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC on March 31st, 2022, and our other periodic filings with the SEC.

During the call, we will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which are not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A reconciliation of the GAAP and non-GAAP results is included in our earnings press release, which has been filed with the SEC and is also available on our website at investor.leafly.com.

With that, let me turn the call over to Yoko.

Yoko Miyashita

Thanks, Keenan, and thank you to everyone for joining us for our Q2 call.

Revenue in the quarter was $12 million, up 14% over Q2 last year and up 6% sequentially over Q1, as we continue to build on the investments we’ve made in the first half of this year. We saw an increase in monthly active users quarter-over-quarter, and ARPA remained relatively consistent.

Like our peers in both technology and cannabis, we have not been immune to the macroeconomic headwinds. So I want to talk to you about those segments and what they mean, and after that, talk about why we’re still bullish about the long-term prospects of this industry and this business.

We’re starting to see some macroeconomic impacts, with signals for retailers, brands and multistate operators that their advertising budgets are under scrutiny. While we’re putting strategies in place to navigate through these challenges, we believe these factors will impact the second half of the year.

Accordingly, we are taking steps to reduce operating expenses, and have implemented a hiring freeze on top of the slower pace of hiring we saw in Q2. Suresh will give specific details around our guidance, but I want to be upfront about one thing. We believe the medium- and long-term prospects for the cannabis industry are strong, and we have a tremendous opportunity in front of us.

Our overall strategy remains unchanged, and we will focus on maximizing efficiencies across all areas by prioritizing projects and products that will result in the highest returns. In spite of some of the headwinds, I’m particularly pleased with the growth we’re seeing from brand advertisers associated with our Q4 2021 product launch. Revenue from brands in the second quarter was up 22% over Q2 last year and up 33% sequentially.

We also saw a stabilization and steady improvement in our monthly active users, highlighting our strategic efforts to expand our consumer audience, deliver an exceptional consumer experience, and drive long-term valuable and returning customers. We’re an essential part of the cannabis industry, and Leafly plays a critical role in connecting retailers and brands with the growing number of cannabis consumers across North America.

We remain focused on the key priorities put in place earlier this year in order to increase our retailer and brand subscriber base, improve our ad platform, reduce friction for B2B partners and create an incredible shopping experience.

To deliver on these, we’ve recruited top technical product and UX talent this year. The team is now structured to innovate and nimbly execute our highest priority needs. In our last call, we talked about creating an incredible consumer shopping experience. And in Q2, we released several enhancements that drive consumer engagement and differentiation.

Our teams have been successful in driving downloads of our native apps this year, an important strategy to increase consumer engagement. Native app consumers are some of the most engaged and active consumers on our platform.

We rolled out a number of app features to improve the consumer shopping experience. Consumers can now place delivery orders directly in our iOS app. They can also now request doctors’ appointments directly from our app, making it easier for them to connect with nearby doctors to obtain medical marijuana cards.

As you’ll recall, we launched a new delivery functionality directly within Leafly in Q1 of this year. And in Q2, we made a number of enhancements, including the addition of more filtering options so consumers can better see what dispensaries deliver, and shop by product. This is a fundamentally different way to shop for cannabis. It’s a product for shopping experience that leverages our reviews and content, similar to how consumers are accustomed to shopping on other non-cannabis marketplaces.

We continue to capitalize on our unparalleled strain database with our best buzz, strain quiz. This simple personalized quiz helps users identify which strain most closely matches the feelings and effects they are looking for, connecting them more quickly with the right product. We believe this more seamless connection to products that matter, help demystify cannabis and build shopper confidence. Personalization remains one of the biggest and unmet needs for consumers. And Leafly with its unique data and assets, is poised to solve this challenge.

We see the consumer experience as a foundational element of our flywheel, and it expands across all sections of our platform from the information and resources consumers have come to expect to the ease of ordering. In addition, our consumer and content teams have been laser-focused on expanding our consumer audience.

We’ve made technical improvements in our top-of-funnel acquisition that’s in the news and Learn sections of our site, and implemented a stronger content strategy focused on our most popular top-performing material. We continued to see increased MAU growth through July due to the hard work and investments in this area, particularly to high-demand areas of our site, like our defense refinder. Our long history, category expertise, deep catalog of content and our strain database, strongly position us to expand our consumer base, as cannabis becomes more mainstream.

On the advertising side, retail markets across North America continue to evolve at different paces. Illustrating this are our top penetrated markets, which continue to drive growth in the business and provide key learnings, as we expand into newer markets. I’m proud to share that our new automated auction-based bidding tool for retailers has now been rolled out in five states. We saw increases in ad revenue in the majority of those markets. These bidding-based ad products offer retailers greater opportunity to reach our valuable consumer audience and drive sales.

We’ve built automation into our bidding process, resulting in greater efficiency as we take these ad units out for rebidding every 90 days. Our bidding success in early markets have demonstrated our ability to move retailers up the ARPA curve as markets mature, providing continued proof points that support our strategy.

In lower penetrated markets, we continue to bring new retailers onto the platform to reach critical scale, although we still continue to see churn in these lower penetrated markets and in markets with structural challenges. Our new restructured sales team were designed to focus on our local market strategy to both increase penetration and reduce churn. We repeatedly hear from retailers that greater flexibility and reduced friction is essential to empowering them to manage their ad spend and generate sales.

We’ve greatly reduced the barrier of entry for retailers to work with Leafly. This past quarter, we launched pickup and delivery integration with BLAZE Point-Of-Sale, which has allowed retailers using BLAZE to increase the volume and velocity of their sales. We are now menu integrated with almost half of the cannabis point of sales systems, serving licensed retailers in North America.

This aligns with our strategy of integrating with existing systems rather than forcing retailers into a closed technology environment. We continue to emphasize putting cannabis retailers and brands in control of their businesses through access to data, so they can attract consumers on our platform.

In Q2, we released improvements and enhancements to our retailer dashboard, giving retailers greater visibility and transparency into their success on Leafly.

More recently, we rolled out tools that allow clients instant access to ROI metrics and best-in-class insights so they can regularly see the value they are getting from us. We also recently launched our deals packages where retailers can offer promotions to consumers directly on our site in the path to purchase.

We’re seeing early adoption of this product, which provides an incremental revenue stream. We believe this product resonates well in the current macro environment where consumers are looking for value and retailers are competing for sales. Now, focusing on some other momentum we are seeing.

In Q2, we reached 100% market penetration in the Garden State, meaning, every dispensary in New Jersey had a menu on the Leafly platform. It is a strong indicator of our focus on important East Coast markets and the power and reach of the Leafly brand spurred by our ability to build a presence even before a market legalizes.

As we continue to invest for long-term growth, the industry is evolving at a rapid pace, and our strategy is directly aligned to capitalize on the great momentum we expect to see. The Leafly brand is becoming more widely recognized as a thought leader in the cannabis space. We are one of the largest repositories of cannabis data.

This includes our cannabis data library of tens of thousands of cannabinoid and terpene strain profiles from Leafly certified labs, subjective strain effects from consumer reviews and cannabis popularity metrics. Given the breadth of this library, we recently launched a program called Leafly PLUS University, which allows accredited cannabis researchers to supplement their work with our large cannabis data set, that would otherwise not be available. Rhode Island is expected to begin adult-use sales in December. With Connecticut and New York expected to come on, hopefully soon thereafter, we’re closely watching the midterm elections that could bring legalized cannabis to millions of more consumers across the U.S. We’re also excited about the 185 conditional retail licenses that were recently issued in Illinois after being tied up in litigation.

These elections in moments change the landscape within local markets. Governments hold the keys to when and how markets open up. From number of licenses to legalize e-commerce and delivery, we’re closely watching the prospects for federal banking legislation this fall. Over the years, we’ve seen tremendous momentum in this industry. And while we face headwinds today, the industry is set up for long-term growth, and Leafly is positioned to reap the benefits of this growth as we continue to serve consumers, brands and retailers who join us along on this journey.

With that, I’ll turn it over to Suresh.

Suresh Krishnaswamy

Thank you, Yoko, and welcome, everyone.

Revenue in the second quarter was $12.1 million, up 13.8% year-over-year. We saw continued strength in local markets where we have high penetration and increased ARPA in those markets. Ending retail accounts grew 18.8% year-over-year. Breaking revenue down further.

Revenue from retail was $9.1 million, up 11.3% over last year. Revenue from brands was $3 million, up 22.2% over last year. On a sequential basis, total revenue was up 5.5%. Revenue from retail was down 1.2% quarter-over-quarter, primarily as a result of slightly higher-than-normal churn rates in lower penetrated markets, where the marketplace dynamics haven’t developed sufficiently to fuel a competitive marketplace. Combined with slower-than-expected new retailer additions, ending retail accounts at the end of Q2 declined 3.2% sequentially.

Retail ARPA in the second quarter was $579, a 9.8% decline over last year. This is an aggregate across all markets with a wide range between the low and high end. In the majority of markets with greater penetration, ARPA is significantly higher than our average. Once markets achieve scale between consumer demand and strong retail penetration, we can introduce bidding, which typically drives ARPA higher. ARPA was up just slightly from last quarter, reflecting increased pricing leverage in our top markets, and early quarter success from our bidded ad products.

Arizona is an example of one of those top markets where ARPA increased 25.9% quarter-over-quarter. Although currently, retailers are showing softness in ad spend due to the macroeconomic backdrop, we believe that over the long term, our auction bidded products will drive increased monetization from retailers. Turning to brands. On a sequential basis, revenue grew 33.2% over Q1. Growth came primarily from the new menu merchandising products we launched in Q4, and from owned channel advertising, reflecting continued growth of those products over time.

Brand accounts grew 6.4% over Q1, as we continue to increase the brand’s subscriber and advertiser base on our platform. As mentioned, we’re starting to see some macroeconomic impacts on the business with softer ad spend as budgets are under greater scrutiny, particularly in discretionary spend.

We started to see this late in Q2, and we expect to see this downward pressure continue in both retail and brand advertising spend through the second half. Now turning to gross margin. We are asset-light, and we continue to benefit from high gross margins, as our fixed cost to operate the platform are relatively minimal.

Total gross margin in the second quarter was 88%, a decrease from 88.5% in Q2 2021, driven by increased business platform expenses. Moving on to operating expenses. Total operating expenses were $19.5 million, an increase of 83.9% over $10.6 million in Q2 2021. We started investing in the business following a convertible note raise at the end of Q2 ’21, which is reflected in the significant year-over-year increase. This increase was largely due to increased headcount in marketing and advertising costs.

In the second quarter, we continued to invest in, and align our organizational structure across our sales and product teams. For example, we moved to a geographically based local sales model. In the product and design team, we reorganized the teams to be able to deliver against our highest road map priorities. These reorgs are complete, and we expect to scale over the long term. Breaking these line items down further.

Sales and marketing expenses increased 86.7% over Q2 last year. We increased headcount and invested more in advertising and marketing, primarily around $420 million, our delivery product launch, and targeted paid advertising in strategic markets. G&A expenses increased 141.2% over last year, and included additional headcount and associated compensation as well as public company costs, which includes D&O insurance. Product and development expenses increased 26.2% over Q2 last year. Total operating loss for the second quarter was $8.9 million.

Net income was $14.8 million, which benefited from a $24.4 million change in the fair value of derivative liabilities. Total adjusted EBITDA in the second quarter, which excludes the change in fair value of derivative liabilities, was negative $8.4 million compared to negative $0.8 million from a year ago, and prior to investments.

Looking ahead, we are implementing plans to reduce operating expenses, excluding stock-based compensation by close to $3 million for the second half of the year, primarily in marketing and T&E and the savings from implementing a hiring freeze. We continue to manage our expenses carefully and look at ways to proactively manage our cash flow. Now turning to the balance sheet.

We ended the quarter with $35.4 million in cash and $31.9 million in restricted cash. Effective August 1st this year, holders of the forward share purchase agreements exercised their options to have the company repurchase all of the remaining shares under the agreement for a total repurchase price of $31.7 million.

Now let me provide some details on a go-forward basis. For the full year 2022, we now expect revenue between $48 million and $51 million, representing 15% growth over 2021 at the midpoint and more weighted in the fourth quarter. Our full year forecast is impacted by the following.

We restructured our sales organization, and the pacing of retailer acquisition and increased monetization were impacted during that transition. In addition, we’ve seen higher than normal churn levels, including out of business churn, reflective of the current macroeconomic environment.

Combined with the softening in ad spend we expect in the second half of the year, the impact of these headwinds in the first half is leading us to reduce growth expectations from retail by approximately $4 million for the full year. In brands, we’re taking a cautious outlook as a result of the softer demand for ad products we’ve already seen in June and July. We’ve also paused additional product launches as we’re focused on driving greater value for customers from existing products.

This will have a roughly $2 million expected impact to the full year. We have since redirected resources to strengthen B2B integration, and invest in our platform. At the low end of our guidance, we have built in assumptions that retailer and brand ad spend softens further than what we’re seeing today.

At the high end of our guidance, we assume churn stabilizes or returns to historical levels, pacing of acquisition and upgrades improves, and retailer ad spend on auction bidding inventory increases. As a result of the lower revenue projections, we have made adjustments to our expense structure.

With a disciplined approach, we now expect an adjusted EBITDA loss of approximately $26 million to $28.5 million for the year. This implies a significant reduction in previously planned second half investments, and includes a hiring freeze that we’ve already implemented. With the talent we have on board, our focus remains on positioning for long-term growth, and in the short term, driving better productivity and value for our retail and brand customers, building out our consumer experience to drive high-value consumer traffic to Leafly, and continued improvements in our B2B integration, which makes it easier for retailers and brands to do business with us.

We are navigating through an uncertain economic environment, but the cannabis industry continues to grow, and we have significant opportunity in front of us. We have laid the foundation for growth. Our focus now is on streamlined execution.

With that, I’ll turn the call over to our operator and open it up for questions. Thank you.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Harrison Vivas with Cowen. Please go ahead.

Harrison Vivas

Great, thanks. So first question, I kind of wanted to dig in on churn, kind of a multipart question. So you called out churn – higher degrees of churn and underpenetrated or new markets. My understanding is that these are historically lower ARPA markets, and so you think they’re most affordable for retailers. So can you just talk about, I guess, specifically what markets you’re seeing the greatest level of churn in? And then, I guess, just given the uncertainty, I think transparency is a long way. So can you kind of maybe break out more the new account adds that you saw during the quarter, the number of accounts that were closed? And are you pulling any retailers off the platform because they’re either late or not paying to be on?

Suresh Krishnaswamy

Harrison, thanks for the question. So what we’re seeing in churn and what we saw in the second quarter is really, we had sort of in the first half, two categories of churn, right? So we did talk about this a little bit in Q1 where we do have structurally challenged and low penetration – markets in which we have low penetration, right? Some of these are – Oklahoma, for example, is something we called out. And in these markets, really, the marketplace dynamics have not developed sufficiently to really allow for a competitive marketplace. And so, we did see that churn increase.

I mean, they are lower ARPA markets. So that impacts the number of ending retail accounts, and obviously has a lower impact on overall revenue. But the other thing that we did see is the emerging macro impacts, and we really saw that in the second quarter. So we saw rising out of business churn, which really reflects the challenges that our clients are facing in the current environment. So basically, what we’re doing is, looking at the second half of the year, and really projecting some of those trends to continue.

In terms of new account adds, and specifically in the second quarter, it was also impacted by a few things. One, we had our sales reorg in the second quarter. We talked about that. And while that positions us really well at the local market level to scale, it also temporarily slowed down our execution, and that had impacts on retailer acquisition pacing. So that is something that we can point to that directly impacted the rate of retail acquisition in – of new accounts in the second quarter.

And on that, I’d say that we’re encouraged by the pace that we’ve seen so far in the third quarter. July has stabilized, and our guidance does project a continuation of the recent trends that we saw. In terms of pulling retailers off the platform and your question about that, we have seen increased churn, like I mentioned. We have seen some impact on higher-than-expected movement into the bad debt bucket. However, we’ve not seen that significantly impacting our revenue projections.

I mean what we’re really looking at is, on a go-forward basis, where do we see the trends given the macro environment, and where we think we have room to continue to add accounts. And we’re seeing that so far start off with a pretty – on a pretty positive note in Q3.

Harrison Vivas

Just one small follow-up. Can you talk more about the dynamics in Oklahoma, maybe as something like a read-through to the broader space? But Oklahoma is a very dense dispensary market. So you think that the competitive dynamics are there to drive either higher ARPAs or higher utilization from dispensary? So can you talk about why that’s – what you’re seeing from that market specifically?

Yoko Miyashita

For Leafly, I think it’s the intersection of two things. It’s a mobile penetrated market in terms of our – the establishment of our marketplace, combined with the structural issues that we’re well aware of, right? You’ve got the unlimited number of licenses compared to the number of patients. And I think we’re all starting to acknowledge that oversaturation of licenses is as problematic as insufficient number of licensed stores. So what’s interesting about Oklahoma for us is, not one of our best states, but by zone, it can be attractive.

And we’re looking at strategies of taking where the marketplace has taken within Oklahoma, to drive monetization. But from our perspective, the structural issues work themselves out over time. Unfortunately, that’s more out of business until the market reaches equilibrium, as well as continuing in our local market strategy with our sales teams to work with those retailers on the ground.

Harrison Vivas

Third question on MAUs. I guess – last quarter, I guess you were talking about MAUs being down year-over-year. Obviously, there’s core benefit to 2021. And I think you talked about, Yoko, seeing more traffic to the higher value parts of the site. This quarter, I understand – I’m hearing that it seems like there was a focus on driving more traffic to the top-of-funnel portion of the site, which – I guess, I’m just trying to understand how are you balancing investment behind driving traffic towards top of funnel versus towards the bottom of the funnel on the site?

Yoko Miyashita

What I think we’ve had over the last, what I’ll call it, six months, is really a keen understanding of what works and what doesn’t. We’re really interested in developing that high-value organic traffic, and we’re really pleased with how we’ve built back over the last quarter, and are continuing to see that growth into Q3.

We’re not going to be spending our marketing dollars and paid acquisition every quarter. That’s not our model. That’s not who we are. So for us, it’s been this investment in building a sustainable long-term traffic source that we control and is really brand aligned. All of those things remain true. You’ve got to drive the top of funnel and you got to drive them through the funnel to high-value portions of our site that really deliver the kind of audience that our retailers and brands are looking for, and that’s where we’ve been focused.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from Eric Des Lauriers with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please proceed.

Eric Des Lauriers

Thank you for taking my question. So you mentioned you rolled out bidding and – or automated bidding in five markets. You saw increased spend in most. What is your perspective on the markets that did not increase? I mean, is this just a simple factor of timing? They’ve only been out there for a couple of weeks? Is it sort of amid the macro tightening of ad spends? Or is this something that you see about the product overall? Would just love to get your perspective. Thank you.

Yoko Miyashita

Yes. That is a great question, Eric. And reminder, when we launched this, we launched the total manual telephones and spreadsheets Q4, and we launched that in two markets, and we’ve expanded this now over five, and we are just coming out of our second full round, and actually early third rounds in some markets. But we’ve really leveraged the learnings out of this first year of bidding to know what are the right market conditions that drive the bidding outcomes we’re looking for.

So let me give you an example of that. What is the right concentration of stores in a zone to drive bidding? What are some of the default settings in your bidding process if you win or lose a spot. And it’s that kind of iteration that we’re excited about, that continues to inform the evolution of our bidding strategy.

Operator

Thank you for your question, Eric. Our next question comes from Jason Helfstein with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.

Jason Helfstein

A few questions. First, when did you roll out the new retailer dashboard? And can you tell us like what percent of retailers have already interacted with it? I mean I’ll just add some one of the time questions.

Yoko Miyashita

I would – our retailer dashboard is in constant evolution. In terms of engagement metrics, we have not disclosed those. But you’re trying to get a deeper point there. So tease that out for me as I think about…

Jason Helfstein

Basically, like your – an improved dashboard will take the learnings you’ve learned, right, and help the retailers make smarter decisions about what – should they be raising their bid, should they not, et cetera? And because we’re dealing with small businesses, how many of them just set it and forget it and then don’t look. And so you may be making progress with some, but if – I don’t know, like a high percentage haven’t interacted with the new dashboard, that’s kind of something to look forward to. That’s what I’m trying to understand.

Yoko Miyashita

Absolutely. And I think it’s not just a dashboard, but it goes to fidelity of adoption of the products, right? Like how do you actually drive the benefit of these, and that comes through in what we’ve done with the local market sales structure. When you can match them to a CSM and an account manager in your zone, it’s the power of the platform and the data combined with that human touch of reaching out to our small – so they are long tails saying, are you using our data properly, let us show you best practices, let us teach you how you can use the data and what other tools you can use on Leafly to increase sales on our platform.

Jason Helfstein

So then just, could you clarify the comment just – and the wording may be a little confusing about – churn was impacted by immature competitive marketplace dynamics. Are you specifically referring to like the situation in Oklahoma that you’re talking about?

Yoko Miyashita

Yes. In terms of marketplace dynamics and churn, right, you got to reach sufficient penetration, and we’ve got some numbers in mind and where we see the best behaviors rolling out. And remember for us – you got to have the retailers on the demand to your start because they’re reading our content. Then you get the retailers on. When you get the retailers on, you get their menus on.

The more menus, the better consumer experience. That’s the flywheel. So for us, hard to do when you don’t have the majority of the retailers in a particular area on platform. That’s why in our local market focus and our lower pen markets were focused on penetration. But that takes time. It’s not instantaneous. And until you can prove that value by making that flywheel work for you, we do expect to see some churn in those zones.

Jason Helfstein

So then the comment on the subscription and the subscription box, is that – are you – so you’re now selling – is that a box of items that people subscribe to and that’s in the brand bucket now?

Yoko Miyashita

Oh, I think you’re – maybe you’re referring to our brand subscription products. We are not a subscription in a box. We have our retailer subscription, and we have our brand subscription product. Am I following?

Jason Helfstein

Okay. I just want to clarify because yes, there was some picture in the slide of a box of stuff. And then just – I wanted to just ask some more color about the share count. So you gave us kind of like a post kind of FPA treasury share count of 3-point – you gained a share account fully diluted at 63.6. Is that using the treasury method based on the current stock price? Because it seems high based on the current stock price.

Suresh Krishnaswamy

Yes, that’s using – that’s just a full number of shares in each of these cases. So what we are using, we sort of listed out the potential diluted securities and that adds up to 56.6.

Jason Helfstein

Okay. So I mean, you don’t – I mean just you want to share it. I mean, I don’t – you’re on record, but I mean based on our math, it seems like at the current stock price, the dilutive impact is like more like 53 million shares. Does that make more sense?

Suresh Krishnaswamy

Yes. I could do the math and just get back to you on that.

Jason Helfstein

And then maybe just one more. So just to clarify, I think it’s just good to have on record. So post the FDA, you have $35 million in cash. And then, are any of the noncurrent liabilities still – do those still exist? Or some of those went away with the FDA and the lockup?

Suresh Krishnaswamy

Yes. No, we had $31.9 million in restricted cash and the FDA holders redeemed all their shares, so $31.7 million basically in return. So we’re ending up with what we ended Q2 with in terms of free cash of $35.4 million.

Operator

Thank you for your question, Jason. There are no further questions in the queue at this time. This will conclude today’s Leafly second quarter 2022 earnings call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines.

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