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Shift4 Payments, Inc. (FOUR -1.65%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Aug 05, 2021, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Welcome to today's Shift4 Payments second-quarter 2021 earnings call. My name is Jordan, and I'll be coordinating your call today. [Operator instructions]. I'm now going to hand over to Sloan Bohlen to begin.

Sloan, please go ahead.

Sloan Bohlen -- Investor Relations

Thank you. I'd like to welcome everyone to Shift4's earnings conference call for the three months ended June 30, 2021. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that this call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements made on this call that do not relate to matters of historical facts should be considered forward-looking statements, including statements regarding management's plans, strategies, goals and objectives; the expected impact of COVID-19 on our business and industry, including with respect to the economic recovery, increases in vaccination rates, the reopening of the country and any volume recovery by us; gateway penetration and spend seen by our gateway merchants; expectations regarding new customers, acquisitions and other transactions; and anticipated financial performance, including our financial outlook for the year ended December 31, 2021.

These payments are neither promises nor guarantees, but involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results. Performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements, factors discussed in the Risk Factors section of our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, as updated by our quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the six months ended June 30, 2021, and our other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by the forward-looking statements made on this call. Any such forward-looking statements represent management's estimates as of the date of this call. While we might elect to update such forward-looking statements at some point in the future, we disclaim any obligation to do so even, if subsequent events cause our views to change.

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In addition, we may also reference certain non-GAAP measures on this call, which are reconciled to the nearest GAAP measure in the company's earnings release, which can be found on our Investor Relations website at investors.shift4.com. And with that, let me turn the call to our chief executive officer, Jared Isaacman.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Sloan. Good morning, and thank you all for joining us. As you saw in our pre-announcement a few weeks back, we achieved reasonably strong results for the quarter setting new records for end-to-end processing volume, gross revenue less network fees and adjusted EBITDA. Specifically, we reported end-to-end volume of $11.8 billion.

To put it into perspective, that is nearly three times the same period last year and is more than double the same period in 2019. Similarly, we grew gross revenue less network fees to $136 million or 81% compared to the same period in 2019. Gross revenue less network fee growth in the second quarter was up 40% compared to just a quarter ago. As was the case last quarter, the majority of our growth was the result of new and larger merchants joining our platform over the last 12 months.

Volume growth also improved as expected, as the country continues to reopen. Consistent with our volume growth, we are driving a higher mix of our revenues from net processing fees as more and more of our gateway customers migrate to our end-to-end solution, which, as you know, represents significant accretion to our profitability. Overall, when we look at our top-line growth, the second quarter is a great example of the multiple ways Shift4 can grow. And our model has inherent operating leverage, evidenced this quarter by the improvement in our adjusted EBITDA margins, second-quarter adjusted EBITDA margins came in at 33%.

We are driving margin improvement while simultaneously making investments supporting our expansion into new verticals, including the introduction of many new digital capabilities. It's also worth reiterating that several of our acquisitions were EBITDA neutral than negative, but are expected to contribute meaningfully as we execute on our integrated payment strategy and unlock revenue synergies. To put it more plainly, we believe there is embedded margin uplift as our new vertical strategies ramp and scale. With that, let me update you on a few strategic initiatives we are pursuing at Shift4 and a few exciting new merchant wins from the second quarter as well as a little color as to where we are going.

Tao Group, which owns many of the most recognizable restaurant and entertainment venues around the world, selected Shift4 as its end-to-end payment solution provider for all of its U.S.-based venues. Tao selected Shift4 not only for our holistic solutions package, but also for our contactless and mobile payments technology, which was critical for their nightlife venues in this current environment. This win should really not be that surprising. As an integrated payments company that focuses on the most demanding environments in commerce, including hospitality and F&B, Shift4 is in an advantaged position for opportunities like Tao Group.

What should be surprising is our notable wins in online, in-venue and the overall regulated gaming market. We, of course, have stated our intentions to pursue this exciting vertical for some time, mostly leveraging our incumbency in many casinos around the country as well as our mobile capabilities in sports stadiums. That stated, Shift4 should have been viewed as the underdog relative to other payment companies that had existing customer relationships and payment capabilities from the more mature European market. As stated, we announced a preferred partnership with BetMGM to power their online gaming and sports betting transactions.

Similarly, through our partnership with Sightline, Shift4 has a growing capability to facilitate regulated gaming transactions, both online and in venue such as our cashless casino payment experience that we expect to roll out at Resorts World Casino in Las Vegas. While we have not been putting out press releases each time a state approves Shift4 for a gaming license, know that we've been accumulating licenses at an accelerated pace. In addition to significant accomplishments in gaming, stadiums and hospitality, you will find other wins in our materials, including reference to some e-commerce merchants, that were the result of our acquisition and ongoing enhancement of the Shift4Shop platform. We continue to see growing adoption of the product.

And since the acquisition, we've added over 36,000 new web stores. Now with over 50,000 businesses on the platform as of June 30, Shift4Shop has grown its merchant base over 230%. It's worth pointing out that it's a long road from a web store creation to a merchant processing transaction. As such, we are evolving our Shift4Shop strategy to include: a, aggressively prioritizing new user experience, restaurant and hospitality specific themes with tight integrations to our POS platform, and I'm going to talk about that in just a minute, as well as our online ordering capabilities and other marketplace initiatives like capital offerings.

And b, simultaneously pursuing partnerships that will accelerate Shift4Shop's entry into new geographic markets, risk management tools and capabilities like crypto acceptance that we have recently released. This two-pronged approach of organic development initiatives supported by strong strategic partnerships will meaningfully accelerate our road map objectives and the overall momentum of Shift4Shop. I spent a good amount of time talking about recent performance and accomplishments. Before turning things over to Taylor, I would like to take a bit of your time to talk about where we're going.

Our organizational priorities are as follows: number one, leveraging our 350 unique software integrations to pursue $150 billion of gateway volume as well as the rest of the market that relies on the same integration. This is without question playing to our immense strengths in verticals where it's very hard to replicate Shift4's capabilities. As many of you know, the gateway conversion opportunity that is embedded in our business is probably the single biggest point of difference between Shift4 and virtually every other fintech player in the market. In order to achieve our objectives, we're going to continue to make investments in our products and capabilities to solve pain points for these customers as further incentive to move to our end-to-end platform.

Some of these investments take the form of internal systems, customer self-help capabilities, automation and other solutions to deliver a better experience for our merchants and the thousands of software partners that support them. Two, we are about two quarters away from releasing our next-generation restaurant platform. I say platform because this is more than just a new point-of-sale application. It's an entire experience-based platform for restaurants and their patrons.

We are leveraging our immense expertise in the restaurant industry, along with feedback from roughly one-third share of the F&B market that our technology is presently touching today, to deliver a platform that will have a major emphasis on QR and other contactless means to pay, a tighter online ordering experience with our products as well as third-party delivery providers, a modern, low-cost and reliable architecture, business intelligence, analytics and a marketing engine to drive loyalty and frequency from patrons, all wrapped up in a sexy mobile optimized hardware. We're building an ecosystem around this platform to include payroll, capital offerings and other solutions we think restaurant owners will find helpful. We expect to go to market with this solution in late Q1 2022 through our vast network of sophisticated and aligned distribution partners capable of selling and supporting merchants at a local level. This will enable us to pursue an upgrade opportunity with our existing customers, driving incremental SaaS revenues and winning further share of what is an enormous and exciting market.

Three, we're a company that has created a lot of value over the years through a disciplined but aggressive approach to M&A when the right inorganic opportunities present themselves. Our momentum adding new merchants in adjacent verticals such as stadiums and e-com is proof we can successfully identify the right strategic assets to complement our business. We recently completed another convertible bond offering that significantly increased our cash position. We would not have gone down this road if we were not gaining some measure of confidence in our pipeline of opportunities.

As we progress, our road map of opportunities is immense. The three priorities I referenced above really just scratch the surface. We're adding capabilities to our existing payment platform that enable further scale and a right to win in new verticals and even taking us organically into new geographies. So with that, let me turn this call over to Taylor Lauber to give you some additional color on our volumes through the summer as well as some of our recent announcements in sports and entertainment.

Taylor?

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Thanks, Jared, and good morning, everyone. We exited the very strong quarter with solid momentum and remain optimistic that we are returning to a more normal seasonal cadence by the end of this calendar year. For example, July end-to-end payment volume was approximately $4.7 billion, as we continue to benefit from a larger base of merchants and those merchants benefit from increased spending. This continued merchant growth is important to spend a moment on because I think oftentimes, our dominance in hospitality and restaurants can give the misperception that we are an economic recovery play from an investment standpoint.

Note that we exited Q2 with roughly 7% more active merchants than in Q1, and this merchant growth of between 0.5% and 1% per week has continued through July. We would note that forecasting, specifically with regard to seasonality, is quite difficult when you consider the impact of merchant growth, new industry verticals and increased spending as a result of economic recovery. Regardless, it's safe to say that although volume levels are improving, some pockets of our merchant base continue to be impacted by COVID. Barring any material new COVID imposed restrictions, we expect our third quarter volumes to continue benefiting from seasonality and the momentum we have in our business, followed by a more typical seasonal moderation heading into the fourth quarter.

As Jared noted, we continue to sign new stadiums within the sports and entertainment market. And we are excited to see a return to live sporting and entertainment events. Some of our stadium clients have already hosted live events. For instance, last month, Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas opens to a full capacity crowd attending an entirely cashless Garth Brooks concert.

Also, as we mentioned in our release, Shift4 was selected by Chicago's United Center to power all payments throughout their venue, including integration with the Bulls, Blackhawks and United Center mobile apps. In addition to our previous wins, these new merchants represent proof points that our value proposition to provide stadium clients with a best-in-class in-venue mobile shopping experience for their fans, including everything from pregame ticketing to in-seat ordering and scan-on-the-go merchandise. We remain active in the market evaluating M&A opportunities and continue to view acquisitions as part of our growth strategy. The success we had with VenueNext and Shift4Shop, including our recent partnership with Sightline, has helped build upon our already strong reputation in the marketplace as a visionary partner.

With that, let me turn the call over to our CFO, Brad Herring, to review our financials.

Brad Herring -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Taylor. Similar to the last quarter, the numbers I'll be referencing are included in the release we distributed this morning. I'll start with a few quick comments. First, we are very proud to mention that Q2 represents a record quarter to Shift4 across all of our key measures, including processed volumes, merchant counts, revenue production and profitability.

Second, because of the impact of COVID on Q2 2020 results, I'm going to focus more on relevant comparables, such as sequential growth over Q1 and variances against Q2 of 2019, which represents our performance prior to COVID. As highlighted in our release, we generated $136 million of gross revenue less network fees in the quarter. This record figure represents a 40% increase compared to last quarter and an 81% increase over Q2 of 2019 pre-COVID level. The continued growth in revenues over the first quarter was mostly due to a 54% increase in net processing revenues, driven by a new bunch of boardings and further recovery in consumer spending.

Net processing revenue now makes up 68% of gross revenues less fees, up from 61% from the previous quarter as we continue to monetize our services through adoption of our end-to-end solution. Gateway and SaaS other revenue streams both grew double digits from Q1 due to the recovery of the hospitality merchants on the gateway and continued growth in the merchant base. Q2 spreads landed at 78 basis points, increasing three basis points from what we reported in the first quarter. The increase over last quarter is the net of the normal seasonal lift of three to five basis points we would expect, combined with a oneto two basis point sequential quarter decline we have signaled due to our continued shift toward larger end-to-end merchants.

With regards to profitability, we reported a record $45 million in adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter. This represents a 65% increase over Q1 reported results when adjusted for the impact of the credit loss that we absorbed in the first quarter. It also represents a 67% increase over Q2 of 2019 pre-COVID levels, when we normalize for consistent accounting treatment of equipment leases. As Jared mentioned, our second-quarter results represent an adjusted EBITDA margin of 33% against gross revenues less network fees.

This represents 10 percentage points of margin expansion over Q1's adjusted EBITDA margin or five percentage points when adjusted for the impact of the $5.2 million credit loss from Q1. Our margin trends continue to benefit from improved revenue generation and associated scale benefits within the cost structure. It should be noted that the recent acquisitions of 3dcart and VenueNext negatively impacted Q2 margins by 240 basis points, as we continue to shift their pre-acquisition revenue streams to our spread-based monetization model and integrate these businesses into our operating structure. We reported our first quarter positive GAAP net income since our IPO.

And as a result, you will notice we've included an additional section in the table on Page 11 of our press release, reflecting the dilutive effect of unvested restricted stock and the outstanding convertible notes. For purposes of calculating adjusted net income per share, we continue to use a more conservative non-GAAP diluted share count that includes Class B shares. As a result, for the second quarter, our adjusted net income per share of $0.22 is based on non-GAAP weighted average diluted share count of 85.1 million shares. We did not execute on any significant capital transactions during the quarter.

However, we issued just over $630 million of convertible debt in late July. With regard to liquidity, we ended the quarter with approximately $700 million in cash and approximately $100 million of available capacity on our revolving credit facility. Notable for the quarter is a cash outlay of approximately $120 million for employee tax withholdings and payroll taxes on 3.1 million shares of stock vested on the one-year anniversary of our IPO. 80% of these shares were issued at the time of the IPO with a one-year vesting period, but this is not representative of typical cash outlays related to our equity-based compensation plan.

Now on to updates for our annual guidance. To start, we are increasing our full-year volume guide by $2 billion to a range of $46 billion to $48 billion and increasing our full-year gross revenue guide by $100 million to a range of $1.3 billion to $1.4 billion. We are increasing our full-year gross revenue less network fee guidance by $20 million to a range of $500 million to $510 million. This increase is coming from the incremental processing revenue generated by the raise in volume.

For EBITDA, we are increasing our annual guidance to land between $175 million and $180 million. An increase of $10 million over prior guidance is from an assumed 50% pass-through rate on the incremental processing revenue mentioned earlier. We used 50% versus a gross margin of 57% due to continued investments in opex related to technology scaling efforts and additional staffing to support new verticals. Lastly, we would note that our new outlook ranges do not contemplate any potential economic slowdown or further lockdowns due to the COVID-19 Delta variant.

As of now, we do not anticipate any significant negative impact, but we'll update you all if needed. With that, let me turn the call over to the operator for your questions.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

[Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Darrin Peller of Wolfe Research.

Darrin Peller -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Hey. Thanks, guys. Congrats on these results. When we look at the results, what is the driving force of what we saw was a very, I think you said 7% new merchant growth sequentially.

What does that translate to when you think about it on a year-over-year basis? And when we just try to break out the strong volume, the further acceleration in July, I think you said it was $4.7 billion, hitting more than the $1 billion per week, how much of that is reopening versus the new merchant growth you're seeing?

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Hey, Darrin. Thanks for the question. This is Taylor. I think what's great to see about the 7% sequential growth is that if you recall, we had 4% month-over-month growth in April over March, right? And so that's a really important number to ground up because you still had reopening going on, especially within the hotel space as spring break started to occur.

So seeing 7% on a consistent basis over the quarter, it really goes to show you that merchants are joining, right? And that's not a hotel that had closed and reopened for spring break for the first time. So this 0.5% to 1% a week, it sort of bumps around a little bit in between those two ranges, is a consistent number that we've seen joining the platform, quite frankly, going back even before the pandemic. And so to see it continue is, I think, really a testament to the quality of the product offering. Now the mix is augmenting slightly.

But I think what's really important to understand is that the real new markets are not yet active contributors. So you'd have, for example, a small handful of stadiums doing one event or so in July. But not count at all, and yet when they show up in our July reported numbers, next quarter, we're going to see a lot more volume per site out of them. And I think the July number shouldn't be a surprise, right? When you're adding merchants at this pace on the larger merchants, you should continue to grow.

I think the one thing we just want to be mindful of is that in the fourth quarter, we typically see a seasonal slowdown, right, across all of our merchant base. So we want to be cautious that $4.7 billion is a number we're exceptionally proud of and you want to be mindful in the fourth quarter that you see typically a slowdown within your existing base, but we're not seeing a slowdown in merchant adds.

Darrin Peller -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

All right. That's really helpful. So I mean, obviously, it's a mix. When you think about that kind of growth on a year-over-year basis, it's obviously a lot more than just reopening when we think about the number of merchants.

If I remember correctly, it was over 20% or 25% year-over-year trending last quarter. So it almost seems like it's accelerated a bit to some degree on a year-over-year basis. And then quickly, just on the yield. When we think about what the kind of volume that's coming on is and the yielding in general, are we still confident in the 50 basis points or greater for the larger merchant category and maybe 70, 80 basis points averages going forward? Thanks again, guys

Brad Herring -- Chief Financial Officer

Darrin, this is Brad. I'll take that. And you're exactly right. I mean the 50 number we talked about last time is certainly a floor.

What we're seeing is certainly a mix across the board, across the spectrum of merchants. So while we are adding some of these large merchants in those 50 ranges, we are certainly adding -- we continue to add restaurants, we continue to add specialty retail merchants in the 80 to 100 basis point range. So it will be going back down to a book rate.

Darrin Peller -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Right. Right. All right.

Operator

Our next question comes from David Togut of Evercore ISI.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Good morning. You've clearly underscored the strength of your liquidity and a number of opportunities in the acquisition pipeline. Could you talk through your focus in terms of acquisition, would this be in terms of adding to horizontal capability like a 3dcart or going more deeper into existing or new verticals like a VenueNext?

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Thanks, David. Jared Isaacman here. Good question.

I'd say the story is really unchanged. We've continued to say that we have a pretty healthy pipeline that Taylor's team has been developing. They're really going in a number of directions, right? Like on one end of the spectrum, you have the big transformational-type acquisitions we're looking for. 2017, when we acquired Shift4 and began our gateway strategy, in which case, we could be talking about moving into new geographic markets, extending our reach there.

We could be talking about an exciting new vertical that kind of shares some of the characteristics that we found very helpful within our current core markets, like multiple different types of software that deliver a commerce experience. That's where we typically would want to focus. And then when you kind of flip to the other end of the spectrum where you're talking about smaller transactions consistent with some of our last deals like VenueNext, like 3dcart, which is now Shift4Shop, in which case, you could be talking about entering into new verticals, you could be talking about accelerants within our existing verticals. For example, we did an acquisition almost a year ago, maybe a little less than that, which was MICROS Retail Systems.

It was a pro serve company and it helped pull forward a lot of our growth within our current markets as well as accelerate some of our gateway conversions as well. So I'd say those are really all on the table and nothing really has changed as much other than you may have noticed in some of my remarks that even things like moving into new geographic markets, which probably we would have said on other earnings calls would have been favored more in terms of like an inorganic initiative, we wound up just allocating some of our dollars toward that. And we're already right now doing some things in the Caribbean. We're already looking to develop that further from an acquiring -- to add additional acquiring type capabilities.

And that was an entirely organic initiative. So even though we have some wish list items, we certainly have a lot of firepower to deploy against them. We're not slowing down on the organic side of it.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Great. I appreciate that. Just as a follow-up question, Brad, I just want to confirm just the guidance methodology. Historically, you've excluded the impact of acquisitions from future guidance.

And in the first quarter, you also excluded the impact of any stadium-related volume. As we think about the implied second-half guide, does that still exclude acquisition impact and stadium volume? Or are those now baked in?

Brad Herring -- Chief Financial Officer

Good question. So no, when you look at the back half, we still do not have any assumed additional acquisitions targeted for Q3 and Q4 embedded in that guide nor do we have significant stadium volume. Taylor mentioned, what's coming through now is measured in hundreds of thousands of dollars. So no, we do not have a significant ramp at all coming in from the stadium vertical.

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Just to clarify, David. We do obviously have the expense base, right? And this has been a theme we want to make sure is crystal clear. So we have the full annualized impact of the expense base of VenueNext and Shift4Shop and the MICROS business that Jared mentioned. So the opex does reflect sort of the incremental employees.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Understood. Appreciate the clarification. Thanks so much. 

Operator

Our next question comes from Ashwin Shirvaikar of Citi. Please go ahead.

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citi -- Analyst

Thank you. Hi, Jared. Hey, Taylor. Good morning.

Congratulations on the quarter. I wanted to ask with regards to the outlook, what's embedded? Sort of what gets you to the high end versus the low end. And you mentioned cadence, I think, in one of the responses here for 4Q growth being a little lighter. Obviously, when we look at the past, both 2019 and '20, it's a little difficult to figure out what true seasonality is.

If you could comment on how you're thinking of that with respect to your outlook.

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Yes. Sure. I'll start. I think it's important to note that we continue to be conservative in our volume guidance.

I mean this is always evidenced, hopefully, by the fact that when we're guiding, annualizing recent trends gets you beyond those guides. So there's not a lot of science in the range, except that we think it's prudent to give a range. And then there's the cautionary statement, which is we see much more normal seasonal patterns this year. And we talked about depressed payment volumes leading up to the middle of February and then a strong increase in March and then a strong increase again in June, sustained due to summer.

And we would expect, to the extent that the first sort of half of the year or first seven months of the year have expressed normal seasonal patterns, that the fourth quarter looks seasonally normal as well, meaning that payment volume per site declines during that quarter. I think the balance to that, right, is our strong merchant growth. The balance to that are things like fall sports events in stadiums that we don't include in our guide because it's a bit unknown. So I think the methodology on our guide hasn't really changed much from what we've done in the past, which is point to the most recent evidence and add some conservatism for the months ahead given what we've seen in the merchant base.

And to the extent that our offering continues to outperform and merchants join at the strong pace, then we hope we'll do better than what the guide suggests.

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citi -- Analyst

Understood. Understood. And in the past, you've often talked about if volumes came back for existing clients, merchants to, say, 2019 levels, it would result in 20% higher, 25% higher outcomes. Where do we stand now, given we have seen quite a bit of a recovery already, if you can comment about that?

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Yes. I'll take this one. Only because I'm probably responsible for the very unclear statement in our prepared remarks on it, because it's hard math to do. I think you have to look at pockets of the merchant base and analyze them on a case-by-case basis.

I would say restaurants, in general, from a payment volume perspective are looking reasonably good. You'd see this in things like the Visa and MasterCard or the American Express category stack data. However, the way it manifests itself is higher prices as opposed to fuller occupancy in most parts of the country. So there is higher prices, but merchant average ticket volumes have gone up in a bunch of different places across our book.

So it's hard to pin down precisely a recovery of occupancy versus a recovery of ticket prices or ticket prices, quite frankly, going beyond where they would have been pre-pandemic. I would say the hotel space still at a macro level is depressed although at a more regionalized level, hotels are seeing really good tourism behavior ex international, right? So we're seeing pockets where volume in certain cases is above where it would have been pre-pandemic. In other cases, it's still substantially below when you think about international heavy markets and tourism heavy markets. So it's why we sort of keep pointing people toward the merchant count growth because if anything, in a world where you've seen a pandemic impact our end markets really, really significantly, the idea that we can point to between 0.5% and 1% active merchant count growth every week throughout that time frame, that's what we like to rely on in terms of predictability.

Whether sustained higher average ticket values continue, whether occupancy grows, these are all things that, quite frankly, it's just too hard to predict.

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citi -- Analyst

Got it. Got it. Thank you for that.

Operator

Our next question comes from Tim Chiodo of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. 

Tim Chiodo -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Great. Thanks a lot. Thanks for taking my question. I want to dig into the next-gen restaurant platform that is coming in a few quarters and just talk about that opportunity there.

It seems like a great new tool to give to the bars that would be attractive to them in terms of how they allocate their time in selling and recognizing that they have options. And then also, when we think about it as a way to attract new SMB restaurants, but also is there an opportunity for an upgrade within your existing base that might either be take rate supportive or take rate accretive in some manner?

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Tim. Good morning. Jared Isaacman here. And great question.

The answer is really yes all around. So it's certainly an opportunity to empower our immense distribution network to simply just go out, differentiate and win in what is a huge market. So we touch one-third of the restaurant market today, but not -- but we don't have the end-to-end processing on a third of the restaurant or F&B market today. So they're using some form of payment technology, which is a foot in the door and an opportunity to have a conversation, opportunity to convert gateway volume to end to end.

But there's still the other two-thirds of the market out there, which is pretty exciting. So it's an opportunity for us to grow out, win share in the market. It's an opportunity to upgrade existing merchants that are within our immense base of customers today. And in doing so, that's certainly going to create incremental opportunities from like a SaaS revenue perspective, it's an opportunity to drive gateway to end-to-end volume conversions.

And then it's an opportunity as well to just tap into a lot of revenue opportunities in this, the broader kind of payment application ecosystem. We've talked about in the past, right, that if you look at the size of our customers and certainly the direction we're going, should -- did Shift4 have an opportunity to really get involved in payroll and potentially monetize relationship to a customer that way, through other HR services or capital offerings. As we look to this new restaurant platform that we intend to roll out pretty soon and it's already in betas right now, it's actually beyond betas, I would say it's hitting pretty substantial number of customers, it is an opportunity for us to, kind of, dive into that broader ecosystem. Another thing I'd say too is if you look at some of the applications that will be, I don't know, kind of spearheading what we're describing as this customer patron first approach like QR code-based payments and what we've been doing with SkyTab, you're accumulating a lot of information on consumers that would -- and when I say that, meaning like email addresses for our various marketing and loyalty-based applications, it gives -- it puts Shift4 in an interesting spot where we can start looking at things that otherwise wouldn't have been available to us, not totally going like playing two sides like maybe some of the other organizations, but certainly an opportunity to get a little bit closer to it than we have been in the past, if that makes sense.

Tim Chiodo -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

It absolutely does. Thank you so much for all that context. I appreciate it.

Operator

Our next question comes from Mike Colonnese of Bank of America.

Mike Colonnese -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Good morning, guys. Nice quarter all around, and congrats again on the one-year anniversary here since the IPO. My question is on the revised outlook for 2021. So if I take a look at the midpoints you provided for net revenue and end-to-end volumes relative to the prior outlook, I'm coming up with incremental spreads of 1% by taking the $20 million in incremental revs divided by the $2 billion of incremental volumes for the year.

So I guess what factors are driving your spread assumptions higher compared to the prior outlook?

Brad Herring -- Chief Financial Officer

Hey, Mike. This is Brad. So I'll start off with saying one of the things we learned in the conservative spread outlook last quarter, we probably undershot when we talked about the 50 basis point add. So when we approached it this quarter and we raised guidance, we wanted to make sure we were more reflective kind of on the spread side.

So when you think about how that $2 billion is going to convert to $200 million, the majority of that is certainly coming through processing revenues. We call it in that 80 basis point range, right? It's going to blend down, like I mentioned with Darrin a little while ago, you've got new stuff coming on at a floor of call it 50 basis points, you've got numbers of merchants still coming on in the 100 to 80 basis point range. So it's going to blend down to more of an 80 basis point range. You also do have some lift in the guide related to some of the nonprocessing revenues.

You've got some slight lift in the gateway that recovered a little bit quicker than we thought and some slight lift in the SaaS revenue. So if you think of the $20 million, the vast majority of it is processing, but there are some other components that are non-spread-related.

Mike Colonnese -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Very helpful. Thank you

Operator

The next question comes from James Faucette of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. 

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Thanks very much and good morning everybody. I wanted to touch on a couple of little bit of details, is that, first, obviously, the rate at which you're adding new customers is really impressive. I'm wondering if you can give us a little bit of color on where those are coming from? Are these new custom -- like new businesses? Are they coming from others, providers? I'm just kind of wondering where you're taking those new customers from?

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

James, thanks very much for the question. Jared Isaacman here on this one. This comes back to really just a foundational component to the Shift4 story, which is on the more complex end of the commerce spectrum where we play, there's really only two other platforms that have the software integrations that are capable of really competing with us. It's so important understanding that, right, because the payments landscape is huge.

Probably everybody thinks that everybody has some right to win, especially as you kind of move up into that more upmarket end of the spectrum, but it's really just not the case, right? In a world of integrated payments where you're connecting software to a payment platform, especially multiple different types of software, we're talking about like specialty retailers or ski resorts, big hospitality resorts or complex restaurants like Tao Group, for example, that we referenced in our prepared remarks, there's only three platforms that have those software integrations that would be able to compete for that business. And that's really the case on the whole upper end, more complex end of that commerce spectrum, and Shift4 is one of them. Now we've said for a while, we own more links in the value chain than any other payment provider. So what does that mean? We just have more tools available to us to differentiate when we're already afforded a seat at the table.

So things like QR code-based payments and contactless payments and mobile payments and online ordering, we own all of these capabilities already. So we just have so many different levers to pull some of the incentives and carrots as inducements to make available these customers to move over to our end-to-end platform. It's a very powerful value proposition because it really comes down to taking out a lot of complexity, which means taking out a lot of costs, which was important to our customers in like the best of economic times before the pandemic, it was obviously very relevant to them, through the pandemic because we were adding a lot of customers and actually growing volume during such a challenging time period. And that's what we just continue to do as part of our ongoing strategy, recognizing we're in such an advantaged position.

We look for capabilities to further differentiate. We look to take the strengths that we have in this complex end of the market and bring it into other comparable verticals like sports entertainment and theme parks and do exactly the same thing right now. So really, we're in a competitive landscape with you, and we're able to differentiate in a very effective way. And that's why we're growing customer count and which is contributing volume.

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

The one thing, James, that I just want to be very specific on because there was a comment by Jared during the prepared remarks. When we say active merchant count growth, that is merchants producing volume on our rails. And that's really important, right? So when a stadium signs up and they don't have an event yet, that's not included in that count. When a web store is built, unless that web store is actively selling product every week, it's not in that count as well.

So all Jared's comments ring true. There's not a lot of the sort of emerging markets in that count yet because these are things that we're still growing. Even though we're adding customers, until the volume comes through, it doesn't show up in that incremental submission.

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Got it. And I guess kind of a somewhat related question to your comments, Jared, in terms of the capability and the speed at which you're adding capabilities. Clearly, we've looked at and you have been very successful in finding acquisitions to add in to the capability stack of Shift4 over the years. But if you're unable to or you're not finding the things, solutions that you want in the market that you can acquire or that kind of thing, should we think that it might make sense to increase R&D or spend elsewhere to try to continue to improve the advantages of Shift4 more aggressively? Or do you think that you can still continue on the kind of the strategy and the capital allocation path that you have in the past? 

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

So I think the answer is we're doing both. We certainly like M&A. I think we've been pretty successful at it over the years. We've done a number of transactions that have unlocked substantial amount of value.

We continue to look. The other thing too is we just -- we're not going to be pressured to do a deal that we're going to regret. I know a lot of us here, myself included, we consider this like a life sentence. So we don't want to do a transaction two years down the road we're kicking ourselves for.

So we're trying to remain pretty disciplined in that regard. And what happens is, we identify an opportunity and if we can't solve for it in a way that an M&A transaction could, we just prioritize an organic initiative. A good example of that is what we did with pay at table, order at table, which is our SkyTab product, that was a solution we released in 2019 that really took off during the pandemic and continues to be one of the strongest technology initiatives that we've gone to market with. And the real reality was that every solution that was out there that we would look at from an inorganic perspective was just no good.

And that was why pay and order at table just never took off in the U.S. market for like 20 years, even though it was predicted. And international, I think pretty much every earnings call since we've been public, somebody asked the question about what are you doing to enter into new markets. And we point out that we have a lot of customers that have international presence and that this is not -- like we're very aware of the opportunity in front of us.

We just don't want to be pressured into a bad deal. What did we do? We prioritized some internal resources to start expanding our reach slowly, like we didn't organically make a leap across the Atlantic into Europe, but we're starting to do more things in, say, the Caribbean markets. And we're learning from it, and it's an organic initiative. And we'll see if we want to continue to fund that to potentially take us even farther geographic areas.

So the answer is, you just -- we're just balancing both. If something gets us really excited and we think we can create a lot of value with it, we're certainly happy to allocate dollars in that direction. It's not -- we're able to achieve an awful lot of like really powerful things in terms of our organic investments.

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Appreciate that. Thank you. 

Operator

Our next question comes from John Davis of Raymond James. Please go ahead.

John Davis -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning, guys. Jared, I just wanted to touch on a comment I think you made, and I wanted to clarify, in the prepared remarks. The gateway volume was now about $150 billion.

I think we go back a year at the IPO, it was $185 billion. So just curious how much of that has been converted? And if you don't have an explicit number, just maybe an update on gateway conversions.

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Yes. Let me just clarify, and then Jared can talk about the conversion pace. We just pulled -- we just referenced the stats that we gave on our last earnings call. So that was a March annualized number of $150 billion of gateway volume.

We haven't refreshed that for the second-quarter earnings.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. And my apologies if I didn't add in approximately in there. I don't think we're significantly off. I think that approximately $150 billion of gateway volume to go is probably pretty accurate.

Because even though, as Taylor mentioned, that was the number we cited at the end of quarter 1. And we, of course, had a fair amount of conversions. Like the actual pace of conversions from gateway customers to end to end has been unchanged for several years now. You also would have had somewhat of a recovery from within the gateway base anyway, so you probably -- just as markets open.

So you're probably in that same ballpark. But in terms of pace of conversion, it's very consistent, I mean, very consistent that we win approximately 50% of our new customers to be just winning share of the market connected to any number of our integrations. And the other 50% is customers that are on our gateway that migrate over. Yes.

So there's certainly a lot of opportunity that remains within the existing basic gateway customers. I don't think our position has changed at all in terms of what we think is addressable, which is all of it. It's just a healthy base that we're pursuing with our thousands of really aligned software partners.

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Yes. And this shouldn't surprise people, right? So when we quote that 0.5% to 1% end-to-end customer growth and everyone sort of recognizes how great that is, keep in mind, we've got three to four times the volume in our gateway that we have on our end-to-end platform. So it should be an awesome feeder system for us for many years to come. There are certain things that accelerate portions of those, and we spend a lot of time with our business development teams each week identifying pockets that are more right at that point in time for conversion than others.

I think hotels coming back to life and bringing their technology staff back in, for example. But it's a constant effort, and it's a really, really big population. So it's largely unchanged, as Jared mentioned, and still a ton to go if we see it as great.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Maybe just to build on that more. So Jared again here. When I went in my prepared remarks, I said our No.

1 priority is still pursuing the opportunity in our 350 unique software integrations affords us, of which the gateway volume is really top of the list, right, $150 billion in volume. And we've always said that we develop various capabilities in order to -- and then give them away at like little to no cost as an incentive to help those customers migrate from gateway to end-to-end because it's such a significant lift in gross, annualized gross profit. So what did I already share in the remarks. We're developing a next-generation restaurant payment platform, POS platform.

A lot of that $150 billion in gateway volume are restaurants, right? So maybe the incentive that they were waiting for over the last couple of years is the next-generation platform that does things for them that their current solution is unable to do. Maybe it's free loyalty because we've been developing and enhancing our current loyalty capability. And they would otherwise be paying a third party in order to deliver a loyalty experience for their customers, right? So these are things that are orders ahead that are additional incentives and capabilities to incentivize those customers to migrate to our end-to-end platform, which is no different than what we've done with QR codes, QR ordering or online ordering or pay-at-table, order-at-table, delivery and takeout. It's just another example of it.

So No. 1 priority focusing on that $150 billion in volume that we're just in such an advantaged position to pursue as well as all of the other volume that's connected into those same integrations that are pretty uniquely situated on the Shift4 platform.

John Davis -- Raymond James -- Analyst

OK. Great. And then just as a follow-up, Jared. We've been talking about M&A for a while.

You guys have done a couple of nice tuck-ins. How much of a struggle is valuation? Is that something that's holding you up? Obviously, assets are relatively expensive. So does that mean probably more likely tuck-ins in the near term? Or just curious on how much of a hang up valuations have been in your hunt for maybe something larger?

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

So just to be clear. Like it's not just valuation, right? It's also the quality of the asset itself. So when I think back to 2017 when we acquired our first gateway, which was the Shift4 Gateway, I mean that was like a record multiple for us. I mean it was probably 24, 25x forward EBITDA on a fully -- even I think at year 1 synergized basis, it averaged down pretty quickly.

But we were prepared to pay up for what would probably been considered toxic valuations at that time period. I don't actually think anything's changed in terms of 2021 or 2020 in terms of the valuation we're willing to pay for a quality asset. I just don't think a lot of the deals -- of course, you probably would have seen some of them would have been announced from others who end up pursuing them were that high quality, where we felt like we could leverage a playbook that's worked incredibly well for us to just unlock an integrated payments opportunity. So yes, I mean, valuation is certainly part of it, but we want good quality assets, and I don't think there's been too many out there that got us super excited.

I don't know, Taylor, if you want to layer on that.

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Yes. It's something we talk about a lot, especially with investors given the current climate. I think the public markets and the SPAC sort of subsector of the public markets have done sort of very good and very bad things for those of us focused on M&A. In the good camp, they have shaken more trees than a single strategy department could ever shake.

And so the attitude toward selling your business is much more positive. And therefore, we see a ton more than we would in a normalized environment. It's very easy to sort of get your phone call taken. On the other side of the coin, it set valuation expectations that are flat out like unreasonable.

And so in many cases, we find ourselves sort of waiting for a normalization or waiting for sort of a reckoning which we saw a little bit, right, in Q2 within the SPAC market of valuation expectations tempering. Again, none of this impedes sort of the excellent, highly strategic transactions because we still have managed to find plenty of them to spend time on. But I do think it's worth sort of noting that, right? Like it is a myriad of opportunities, a lot to sit through, to Jared's point, on quality because the difference between a nice product that might get traction later and a really strong embedded base of customers to cross-sell is radically different in our minds. And I think the latter is tremendously undervalued right now.

I think the idea of finding a pocket of merchants that you can deliver a much wider platform through the way we have with our point-of-sale acquisition and our gateway acquisition, this goes to our benefit, but I think that the market is sort of missing that at the moment, that's what makes us excited.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Jared again here. I would like to think over the long run that just continuing to be disciplined in our strategy is going to pay off very well for our shareholders and Shift4 as an organization. To be honest, like it's not hard to win an auction.

We just take the last comp and add like 20% or something to it. So I don't think it's very -- you're very good as a management team just to win every auction and like set new revenue multiples on every transaction.

John Davis -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Very helpful. Appreciate it.

Operator

Our next question comes from Chris Donat of Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Chris Donat -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I wanted to ask about the new restaurant platform. And partly about the timing of it now of why working on it now? Is it sort of pandemic related? Or is it just a need to refresh a bunch of technologies.

And then thinking about it from the restaurant perspective, what is a typical life cycle for a platform from a restaurant? Like how often do they typically revisit what they do? Or I imagine there's a lot of variation there, but I'm wondering if there's a general rule of thumb of when you might get an opportunity to revisit with restaurants.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Thanks, Chris. Jared here. So this new platform, which is internally codenamed Edgewater, existed prior to the pandemic.

We did think it was pretty prudent during the pandemic, especially considering how impacted our end markets were, to reprioritize dev resources to adding capabilities to existing solutions. First, I mean it just wasn't like an environment conducive to people coming on site and like ripping out hardware and software and reinstalling new ones, like nobody even wanted to visit face to face. So as it became clear that we were emerging from the storm, if you will, we just put the resources back on the project that we've been excited about for several years, which is Edgewater. And what is Edgewater designed to do is designed for like take all the different capabilities that we think are essential for an SMB-type restaurant environment and deeply integrate into a single application.

So instead of paying third parties for gift and loyalty and online ordering, of which there's like 100 companies out there doing that, plus point of sale plus analytics plus marketing and combining it all into a single ground-up application, Android-based, hybrid cloud, everything customers would want. We've been excited about that idea for a long time. Now we do have, I would say, measured in the hundreds out there in beta, which has been deployed slowly through our existing distribution channels. And as we continue to gain confidence, have more capabilities, we think it will be a pretty big hit for existing customers and new ones.

Now in terms of like timing for customers, I'd say like if we look at the like upmarket toward more enterprise customer, regional chains, not uncommon for them to be seeking bids in a three to five-year type interval, whether it's like a formal RFP or just soliciting interest. I'd say SMBs, like until they have a problem, they're going to continue to roll with what they got. That's pretty much the general trend. Like we've certainly seen restaurants in the smaller end of the spectrum to roll out a solution inside of like months or a year, if it wasn't solving the pain point that they felt was most relevant for the business.

We've also seen plenty of stuff out there that's been around for quite some time. What I would say like with high confidence is like overwhelming vast majority of the restaurant industry is using Windows-based point-of-sale application. And Windows comes with like a lot of headaches, right? It's just a lot of upkeep, and it's pretty draining on hardware and every time there's a Windows update or something, things start breaking. So the market that's going to be right for like a very sexy new platform, following along with our existing strategy of don't charge for like 100 different annoying things and just monetize the relationship through payments, we think, is pretty large and rightfully well timed for our solution.

Chris Donat -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

OK. And then just related to that. Do you think this -- the platform will -- do you expect it to bring in more competition on sort of the smaller size SMB payments world? Or are you still -- this is a different class of restaurant than, say, like a Square goes after.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Definitely different class than where Square would go after. I mean you're really talking about, within the restaurant market, as of today, if you were to size it up, there's Shift4 and all the various applications we've got and then there's Toast. And we think Shift4 is in a pretty advantaged position because we already touch or power about a third of the restaurants in the United States already.

So that's beyond the foot in the door. That's a conversation any time you want it. It's actually -- it's a black email away. So we already touch one-third out there that we think are going to be interested in migrating toward that more modern architecture, that more modern platform that I just described.

And then we also have literally thousands of sophisticated distribution partners that are out there, able to have a conversation at a local level, which further differentiates us from really the only other player out there. So we think it's a pretty big opportunity. And we think the competitive landscape within this space is still quite narrow, and we have our natural advantages.

Chris Donat -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks very much.

Operator

[Operator instructions] Our next question comes from Andrew Jeffrey of Truist Securities. The line is yours. 

Andrew Jeffrey -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Good morning I appreciate you squeezing me, and lots of good stuff discussed already. Jared, I wonder, could you update us on your thinking around the gateway strategy broadly? And I guess what I'm asking is, is there any thought that you could move directly to offering end-to-end processing solutions as of -- in addition to the conversions within the existing gateway as a means of accelerating growth? And I guess what would be required? And are you investing against that kind of opportunity today?

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

So I want to make sure I understand the question because we've been pretty consistent that about 50% of our production in any given month comes from just winning share of the addressable market. They're going right to the end-to-end platform, leveraging the software integrations we already have. So only about...

Andrew Jeffrey -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

I guess I'm thinking about more of an enterprise level, thinking about more enterprise-type customers that might traditionally have been on the Shift4 gateway.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

For sure. I mean I can think of just a number off the top of my head that we announced over the last year that were just enterprise-grade customers that ported directly to our end-to-end platform. So Virgin Hotels, the Vegas property, half of the Sonesta relationships, I mean there's some M&A activity going on there from the customer, not us, that we're all net new. Wind Creek Casino and Resorts, that's a handful of resort, casino, restaurant wholesale properties, I think mostly on the East Coast.

That was all a net new win. Tao Group, which is pretty huge, was a net new win as well. So yes, we're winning enterprise customers independent of the gateway business. In fact, it's kind of one of the reasons why, I mean, everybody always asks us to give like specific merchant counts on gateway conversions and it gets hard because UPS Store at the time the contract was inked was a net new win.

We had no gateway affiliation with them whatsoever. We were displacing Chase, we were in competition with FreedomPay. Then we acquired Merchant Link and that happened to be the gateway platform they were leaving and they kind of muddied the waters and you call that a conversion. But point being is like a number of our just pure net new wins independent of the gateway are enterprise customers.

Operator

We have no further questions on the phone line. So I'll hand back to Jared for closing remarks.

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Thank you very much. I appreciate everyone's time today, and we'll speak very soon. I wish you all well.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 61 minutes

Call participants:

Sloan Bohlen -- Investor Relations

Jared Isaacman -- Chief Executive Officer

Taylor Lauber -- Chief Strategy Officer

Brad Herring -- Chief Financial Officer

Darrin Peller -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst

Ashwin Shirvaikar -- Citi -- Analyst

Tim Chiodo -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Mike Colonnese -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

John Davis -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Chris Donat -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Andrew Jeffrey -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

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