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DATE

Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President and Chief Operating Officer — Rati Levesque
  • Chief Financial Officer — Ajay Gopal
  • Operator

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TAKEAWAYS

  • GMV -- $606 million, up 24%, with a 32% 2-year stacked growth figure.
  • Total Revenue -- $190 million, rising 19% and supported by 18% consignment revenue growth and 26% direct revenue growth.
  • Trailing 12-Month Active Buyers -- Increased 10%, reflecting ongoing buyer engagement acceleration.
  • Average Order Value (AOV) -- Reached $646, up 15% due to increased demand for high-value items.
  • Take Rate -- Declined by 220 basis points to 36.4%, attributed to product mix shifting toward higher-value, lower-percentage commission categories.
  • Gross Profit -- $141 million, rising 18%, with a gross margin of 74.5%, 50 basis points lower due to product mix.
  • Operating Expenses -- Leveraged by 730 basis points as a percent of revenue, credited to operational efficiencies and volume driven by fixed cost leverage.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $13.1 million, representing 6.9% of revenue and an increase of $9 million; margin increased 430 basis points.
  • Cash Position -- Ended with $139 million in cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash.
  • Operating Cash Flow -- Negative $16.6 million, an improvement of $11.7 million; management expects cash flow to be weighted toward the back half of the year.
  • Q2 GMV Guidance -- Forecasted at $590 million to $600 million, a 17%-19% increase; 2-year growth expected at 32% midpoint.
  • Q2 Revenue Guidance -- Projected between $186 million and $189 million, 13%-14% higher.
  • Q2 Adjusted EBITDA Guidance -- Anticipated between $11 million and $12 million, or a 6.1% margin at the midpoint, reflecting approximately 200 basis points of margin expansion.
  • Full-Year GMV Outlook -- Raised to $2.42 billion to $2.47 billion, implying 14%-16% annual growth.
  • Full-Year Revenue Outlook -- Expected between $770 million and $784 million, indicating 11%-13% annual growth.
  • Full-Year Adjusted EBITDA Outlook -- Increased to $59 million-$67 million, with an 8.1% margin at midpoint, and approximately 200 basis points of margin improvement targeted.
  • Store Expansion -- New retail locations will open in San Francisco and Boston, with stores cited as generating sellers who produce 40% higher value.
  • Athena Automation -- Targeting nearly 50% of items processed through Athena by year-end to improve processing times, speed, and unit economics.
  • Automated Storage/Retrieval System -- To be rolled out at the Perth Amboy authentication center, increasing capacity by 35% and throughput without new warehouse openings.
  • Active “Flywheelers” -- 43% of new consignors are from the active buyer base, with this segment spending 50% more time on the platform.

SUMMARY

The RealReal (REAL 17.46%) delivered substantial GMV and revenue growth, reporting a 24% GMV increase and 19% revenue rise, with improved profitability as adjusted EBITDA expanded by 430 basis points. Management raised full-year guidance for GMV and revenue, supported by margin expansion from automation and operational leverage, as well as a healthy cash position and improving operating cash flow. Product mix shifted higher in value, driving AOV up 15%, while take rate declined as anticipated due to commission structure. Technology investments, most notably the Athena intake system and a new automated storage system, are expected to increase throughput and reduce per-unit costs without incremental physical infrastructure spend.

  • Management reported, "First quarter operating expenses leveraged 730 basis points year over year as a percent of revenue," crediting both efficiency initiatives and fixed-cost leverage.
  • Rati Levesque cited, "Stores play an important role in generating supply. Sellers who engage with the store deliver 40% more value," reinforcing retail as a driver for high-value listings.
  • Ajay Gopal noted that the decline in take rate is "due to a favorable mix into higher-value items," which improves absolute profit dollars and unit economics.
  • Athena automation processed 35% of items at the end of last year, with a year-end 2026 target of nearly 50%, supporting further operating leverage and margin gains.
  • Q2 and full-year outlook show lower revenue growth rates sequentially, but management emphasized raised GMV targets and sustained growth in active buyers and high-value consignors.
  • International supply strategies, such as expanded drop-ship and referral partnerships, are accelerating but considered in early-stage development, with local partner networks in Italy, France, and Japan.
  • MyCloset and AI-enabled features, including agentic search and image-embedding for pricing, are being rolled out to further remove friction for both buyers and sellers.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • GMV (Gross Merchandise Value): The total dollar value of goods sold through the marketplace platform before deducting commissions or returns.
  • Take Rate: The percentage of GMV retained by the company as revenue after paying consignors their proceeds.
  • AOV (Average Order Value): The average dollar amount per completed customer transaction.
  • Adjusted EBITDA: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and certain other costs—used to measure core operating profitability without accounting for non-cash or non-recurring items.
  • Athena: The RealReal’s in-house AI-powered intake system automating parts of the item authentication and listing workflow.
  • Flywheelers: Customers who interact as both buyers and consignors, enhancing marketplace network effects and engagement.
  • Agentic AI: Artificial intelligence tools enabling conversational, context-driven search and recommendation, improving product discovery for unique inventory.
  • Drop-Ship: A supply channel where third-party vendors ship items directly to customers, reducing the company’s inventory handling and physical storage.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Rati Levesque: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today's call. Q1 demonstrated the strength of our platform as our financial and operating results exceeded expectations. I'm very proud of the team's execution during the quarter. Q1 was our fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit top line growth and our third consecutive quarter of growth exceeding 20%. We also expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by over 400 basis points year-over-year. Trailing 12-month active buyers grew double digits year-over-year, which reflects higher levels of trust and an acceleration in engagement with our platform. I want to take a step back to provide perspective on where we've been, where we are and where we're headed. 2024 was about stabilization.

We defined our strategic direction and got to work executing against it. We stabilized operations, improved unit economics and validated our transformation. 2025 was about optimization. Last year, we articulated our growth playbook and go-to-market engine to unlock supply and drive profitable growth. The results validated our approach. We surpassed $2 billion in GMV, accelerated top line and delivered positive adjusted EBITDA in every quarter. 2026 and beyond is about compounding. We've laid a solid foundation and the mechanics are working. Now our customer relationships, our data, our brand and our scale are reinforcing each other, each one making the next stronger, compounding our advantages. We've become the barometer of the luxury industry. We capture luxury demand in real time.

The categories, brands and looks trending on our platform are often the earliest signal of where the market is moving. Our customers come to us first to see what's trending, what their items are worth and where fashion is heading. A customer's relationship with TRR begins before the transaction and continues long after it. When you consider that about 50% of our customer base is Gen Z and millennial, it's clear that resale is not a passing trend. It's a core component of the future of luxury. And with 47% of luxury consumers considering resale value when purchasing in the primary market, we're changing how people shop. Our business helped to drive this shift.

We've created a full-service managed marketplace with the authentication, logistics and trust luxury requires. By modernizing how consumers think about fashion and the value of their closet, we're cementing the operating system for luxury ownership. We are leaning into this vision through three strategic pillars. First, our growth playbook, which is how we unlock supply and drive flywheel behavior as we become the default luxury resale destination; second, obsessing over service, which informs our mindset in every customer interaction and turns transactions into relationships; and third, operational excellence, which is how we use AI, automation and data to improve unit economics and enable scale. Our first pillar is our growth playbook and the mechanics are working.

Our sales team remains a key competitive asset. We are actively deepening our moat, empowering our sales team to act as trusted advisers, helping to manage our consignor's closet. Our algorithmic pricing tools equip our sales team with data-driven earnings estimates, giving consignors clarity and confidence. In a brand-forward marketplace, this trust deepens engagement and loyalty, which keeps consignors coming back. We're also extending the reach of our sales team through our referral programs. With the Real Partners program, we're building a network of stylists, closet organizers and real estate agents, the professionals' closest luxury closets who refer their clients to TRR and earn commission.

It's an efficient way to reach high-value consignors, and we see significant long-term potential to expand our partner base. Turning to stores. Our stores continue to deepen the consignor relationship, and we're excited about the new markets we're adding for 2026 in San Francisco and Boston. Stores play an important role in generating supply. Sellers who engage with the store deliver 40% more value. In terms of newer supply channels, our drop-ship and vendor channels are expanding. We're building an asset-light international supply network and starting to develop a partner base in places like Italy, France and Japan. Building on our success with drop-ship in the U.S., we see significant runway to grow this channel over the medium term.

These supply strategies are successfully driving the compounding mechanics of our platform and accelerating our network effects. As buyers become consignors, our flywheel spins. These flywheelers, whom we affectionately refer to as RealRealers, spend 50% more time with us than the average customer and the flywheel accelerates. The next strategic pillar, obsessing over service, propels the growth playbook forward. Service and data insights for both sellers and buyers helps turn a one-time transaction into a relationship. The full MyCloset suite is the product manifestation of our vision to become the personal adviser to the closet, creating the system of record for our customers' luxury assets. MyCloset will provide real-time estimated value, price tracking and trend intelligence.

This further removes friction for the seller and engages customers beyond the transaction. On the buyer experience, our product road map includes AI recommendations in the near term, followed by enhancements in search and discovery. Every item on our platform is unique, which makes agentic and conversational search powerful, and we're excited to continue rolling out features in 2026. Through our growth playbook and obsessing over service, we are building the infrastructure layer for luxury and efficiently connecting buyers to consignors. Our third pillar, operational excellence drives profitability and scalability. Our AI-enabled intake system, Athena, is automating the repetitive data-driven parts of intake, freeing up our experts to focus on the valuable work that requires specialized expertise and judgment.

We're targeting to end 2026 with nearly 50% of items fully flowing through Athena, improving processing times, speed to site and our unit economics. Beyond intake, our pricing strategy is also getting smarter, building on our foundation of structured market signals to inform pricing, we've recently introduced AI-powered image embedding. By incorporating image data, our models better account for visual characteristics when determining market value. These visual details give us better comparables to price against and help maximize earnings for our consignors. Later this year, we're rolling out an automated storage and retrieval system at our Perth Amboy authentication center, adding automation and increasing our capacity by 35%.

This lets us efficiently handle growing volume at higher speeds without opening additional warehouses, more throughput in the same footprint. Together, these 3 strategic pillars are compounding our advantages and extending our leadership position in the growing luxury resale market. None of this is possible without our consignors. Over the past 15 years, we've paid out more than $6 billion to our consignors, who trust us with pieces that carry real meaning and real value. I also want to sincerely thank our team. None of this happens without you. Together, we built a strong foundation, and I'm excited about where we're headed next. I will now turn the call over to Ajay.

Ajay Gopal: Thank you, Rati. Good afternoon, everyone. I am pleased to review our financial results for the first quarter of 2026, which demonstrate a powerful start to the year and the continued disciplined execution of our strategic pillars. We are helping customers view their closets as an asset class, and The RealReal is the trusted destination to manage and monetize those assets. In Q1, we delivered robust top line growth with GMV increasing 24% and revenue up 19% year-over-year. Beyond the headline numbers, we saw deeper engagement with our platform. In Q1, 43% of our new consignors came from our active buyer base.

These flywheelers or RealRealers, as Rati mentioned, enhance our network effects and are an important driver of our long-term growth. Our approach to unlocking high-quality supply, combined with our focus on operational efficiency is yielding results. In Q1, we achieved adjusted EBITDA of $13.1 million or 6.9% of total revenue and expanded our margins by 430 basis points, which showcases our ability to drive operating leverage. Now turning to our detailed first quarter results, beginning with top line. Q1 GMV of $606 million increased 24% compared to last year. On a 2-year stacked basis, GMV was up 32%. Q1 total revenue of $190 million increased 19% year-over-year.

Consignment revenue grew 18% and direct revenue increased 26% compared to Q1 of 2025. Buyer engagement accelerated with trailing 12-month active buyers up 10% year-over-year. Average order value of $646 increased 15% versus last year. Q1 take rate of 36.4% declined 220 basis points year-over-year. This was due to a favorable mix into higher-value items. As we've explained before, these items carry a lower percentage take rate while generating more profit dollars and improved unit economics. On margins and profitability, first quarter gross profit of $141 million increased 18% year-over-year. Gross margin of 74.5% decreased 50 basis points compared to the prior year, driven primarily by the mix of products sold.

First quarter operating expenses leveraged 730 basis points year-over-year as a percent of revenue. The improvement was driven by operating efficiencies and volume leverage on fixed costs. As we continue to scale Athena, outbound automation and other productivity initiatives, we are driving operating leverage. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $13.1 million, an increase of $9 million versus the prior year and 6.9% of total revenue, an increase of 430 basis points year-over-year. Moving to the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the quarter with $139 million in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash. Our operating cash flow in the first quarter was negative $16.6 million, $11.7 million improvement year-over-year.

As a reminder, our cash flow is influenced by seasonal factors and similar to prior years, we expect our cash flow to be back half weighted. Moving to our financial outlook. Based on our strong performance, we are increasing our full year outlook and providing guidance for the second quarter of 2026. We are raising full year GMV to the range of $2.42 billion to $2.47 billion, representing 14% to 16% growth year-over-year. Revenue is expected to be between $770 million to $784 million, translating to 11% to 13% growth versus last year. Adjusted EBITDA is expected in the range of $59 million to $67 million, which represents 8.1% margin at the midpoint.

This is an improvement of approximately 200 basis points versus 2025, and we remain on track to reach our target of 15% to 20% adjusted EBITDA margins over the medium term. Moving to our outlook for the second quarter. We expect GMV in the range of $590 million to $600 million, representing 17% to 19% growth year-over-year and 32% on a 2-year basis at the midpoint. Revenue is expected to be between $186 million to $189 million, representing 13% to 14% growth versus last year. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA is expected to be between $11 million and $12 million, representing 6.1% margin at the midpoint and approximately 200 basis points of margin expansion year-over-year.

In closing, our performance is evidence that our strategy is working. We are driving top line growth while strategic investments in AI and automation are enabling us to expand margins over time. Each year, over 35 million buyers purchase luxury goods in the U.S. primary market and resale adoption is growing. We are helping to drive that adoption through our unique approach to unlocking supply, removing friction for our sellers and accelerating the flywheel. I want to extend my gratitude to our entire team for their hard work and execution to start the year. With that, we will move to Q&A. Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question will come from Marvin Fong with BTIG.

Marvin Fong: Congratulations on the strong results. I guess I'd like to just kind of start -- I mean, obviously, we can see your guidance is calling for fairly consistent growth on a 2-year basis for GMV. But just in light of the Middle East conflict and surging fuel prices, just both on the demand and the supply side, is there anything to call out shifting product mix on buyer demand and on the supply side, might you be seeing any incremental supply coming your way as consumers try to cope with the cost of living?

Rati Levesque: Thanks, Marvin. Thanks for the question. A couple of things. So I'm hearing what is kind of our confidence in the full year. This is now our fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. We're seeing the customer, both buyer and consignor being quite resilient actually, and that continues. That trend continues. Our value props are resonating with our customer. And I think at the end of the day, it's that intersection between value and luxury that we can offer. So when value of dollar becomes top of mind for our customer, that's kind of where we are. And we, of course, have that higher income customer profile as well.

Our supply looks quite healthy, all driven from our growth playbook that we talk about, retail becoming mainstream, but also this flywheel. So you saw an acceleration in our buyers and those buyers becoming sellers. So the top of funnel metrics were focused more of our marketing dollar and top of funnel, but also around our social channels working, and really driven by mostly Gen Z and millennials. So continuing to build trust with our sellers and continuing to see kind of the top of funnel metrics be quite healthy.

Marvin Fong: Got it. And if I could do a follow-up, just obviously, we saw the surge in AOV and consumers clearly are shopping your higher-end items. Just why do you believe that's happening? And how sustainable is that trend, I mean, considering, theoretically, the consumer is a bit stressed here, but you guys continue to outperform in handbags, jewelry and those types of items, it sounds like. So just any thoughts on how sustainable that trend is?

Ajay Gopal: Thanks for the question, Marvin. We've seen a healthy balance between price and volume in our -- over the last few quarters that's been driving our growth. I think the shift to AOV is it's a testament to the trust that we've built in our platform and the willingness that customers demonstrate on being interested in coming to The RealReal for high-value product. For us, what's exciting, it really showcases the flexibility of our marketplace, right? As customer preferences shift from one category of fashion to another, we are able to quickly pivot and meet them and get them exactly what they're looking for.

Operator: Your next question will come from Dylan Carden with William Blair.

Dylan Carden: I hope that worked. Curious, you're seeing this really nice balance between customers and AOV. And I'm just kind of curious how you're thinking about that through the balance of the year. And then on marketing and sort of customer acquisition, it seems you speak to flywheel and this idea of compounding. And I'm just curious if there's sort of also a healthy repeat trend in this business where you're out there acquiring either sellers or buyers and part of what you're seeing, particularly on sort of the order side or the order value side is sort of return of some of the efforts that you made in the last sort of 2 or 3 years.

Ajay Gopal: Yes. Dylan, thanks for that question. Yes, we are seeing a nice mix of customer growth and sort of their willingness to buy higher-priced items. In Q1, we reported an acceleration in active buyers, which came in at 10% on a trailing 12-month basis. And we've seen a lot of success in mixing -- in shifting the mix of our products into higher value and capitalizing on that opportunity. I'm going to turn it over to Rati for the other part of the question around flywheelers because it's a really exciting story there.

Rati Levesque: Yes. So with the flywheelers, you've heard us talk a lot about that, and our strategy there is working. So we've seen acceleration in buyers, but it's not just about bringing in any buyers. It's bringing in the buyers that are sticky but also turn into consignors. So as retail is becoming more mainstream, we can kind of target the right flywheelers and bring them into our ecosystem. And again, that's more driven out of Gen Z and millennials. So our marketing investment has very much been focused around that. They have a high confidence in our ROI, and then obviously, leveraging AI through our smart engine and more targeted offers as well.

And you hear me talk about social, but also things like our affiliate program and referrals are our fastest-growing segments. And so we're optimistic in our investment here in focus.

Dylan Carden: Would further retail expansion be a piece of that going forward? Could you accelerate stores? Do you need to accelerate stores?

Rati Levesque: Stores is always a part of our strategy, our retail locations, and that's the buzzwords, you always hear me talk about the growth playbook, but that's a part of the strategy. It's marketing. It's our sales engine, the IP of our sales team and the retail location. So that trifecta really working together compounds our growth rate and compound supply.

Operator: Your next question will come from Ike Boruchow with Wells Fargo.

Irwin Boruchow: I guess maybe Ajay, I'm trying to think about how the flow of the model should move from here. I understand what's going on with AOV and take rate. I think you had said 3 months ago, take rate should be pressured in the first half and normalize in the back half. Can you kind of give us some specifics on how you're expecting that to flow? And then kind of a similar question on the direct side of the business, I think up 26%. Like does that growth rate moderate further as you move through the year? Just kind of curious on those two line items, how we should be thinking about the model?

Ajay Gopal: Absolutely. Thanks for the question, Ike. So maybe starting with take rate, our blended take rate in Q1 was 36%. And just as you pointed out, and we'd mentioned earlier, right, we do expect pressure on our take rate just from the shift in the mix, right? We -- our take rate is designed in such a way that it gives us strong unit economics across a pretty wide price band. And as we mix into higher-value items, the percentage is a little lower, but those items generate better unit economics and stronger profit dollars. So a good trade-off for us at the business. We expect that to continue, as you can read into our Q2 guidance.

And we do expect that to sort of start to -- those two lines to get a little closer as we get into the second half. That's our expectation. But at the end of the day, like I said earlier, it really depends on where the market preference shifts and our ability to be able to capitalize on that shift in real time. The direct revenues, we've made some changes to direct revenue last year. We really looked -- took a hard look at the mix of what was in there and improved the margins as well. So in Q1, it grew 26%, slightly higher than the aggregate business, but not by much, right?

Because GMV was up 24% for the total business and direct revenues grew 26%. So we think it's in a good place right now. It will scale with the business, and we expect it to be in that range of 10% to 15% of total revenues going forward.

Operator: Your next question will come from Bobby Brooks with Northland Capital Markets.

Robert Brooks: So obviously, you're seeing excellent buyer growth in the Gen Z and millennial cohorts. But I was curious, is that the same from the consignor growth point of view? I think that a bigger piece of that supply that you guys talk about or kind of we all know that is just sitting in people's closets, collecting dust are probably more towards the Gen Xers and even maybe baby boomers. And maybe the consignor growth matches the generation mix of the buyer growth. And if that is the case today, could you just discuss your approach to winning the consignors and buyers from that older demographic?

Rati Levesque: Yes. Thanks for the question, Bobby. So actually, many -- like I said, many of our new consignors come from our buyer population. And those trends and patterns, we have not seen change. They may be a little more diverse on the supply side, but still driven by millennials and Gen Z as well. As far as tactics specifically to bring on the flywheelers, like I mentioned, reconsign is a big one. So MyCloset, you heard me talk about that a little bit, but this one-click reconsign button to get people to consign as first-time consignors before we know when they bought a handbag, for example. And 6 months later, they're ready to consign it.

How do we give them the right signals and how do we personalize our offerings to bring them on as consignment. That's really working. Pricing estimators are really working, leveraging our sales team is all really working, giving them the base of consignors to go after our leads and opportunities is also really working. So all of that kind of together, along with our retail locations is bringing on the supply, but also in this kind of those same cohorts as the buyer, very similar to the same cohorts as buyers.

Robert Brooks: Got it. And then just mention building this international pipeline of supply, and I think you specifically called out France and Italy. I just want to unpack that a little. Is that with the kind of individual consignors that you guys -- are currently your bread and butter in the U.S.? Or is that working with brands directly or manufacturers directly? Just really curious to hear more there.

Rati Levesque: Yes. So drop-ship, it still continues to be early days here. We continue to learn. I will say it's meaningful growth rate, but not what's driving the growth. So yes, directly able to unlock supply from international vendors or partners like we talked about in the opening remarks. This enables us to kind of test and learn as we think about a more localized approach to international. So we're kind of taking this crawl, walk, run approach.

We're launching cross-border this year, again, focus on demand there with the idea that we're focused on drop-ship and bringing on some of these international partners that way, looking to see what kind of product we can get from some of these international partners look like, what does the sell-through look like? Before we kind of move into a broader, more localized strategy. The opportunity here is huge. As we know, the TAM is really big, and we're excited about the next steps here.

Robert Brooks: Got it. And then just one last one for me. So the implied revenue guide, a little bit of a decel comparatively to 1Q, but 1Q had the easier comp with the California fires from last year, right? And it seems -- it just seems like listening to the commentary and the tone that things are really accelerating for the business and maybe that year-over-year 2Q revenue guide at face value doesn't really express that fully. So I was just curious to hear your thoughts on kind of my line of thinking there.

And maybe if I am right, could you just expand a little bit more like below the numbers on the acceleration or momentum that you're seeing in the business?

Ajay Gopal: Thanks for that question. I can take that one. So Q1 was really strong. GMV was up 24%, and it was also our fourth consecutive quarter of accelerating GMV. When we look at what's driving that strength and what's driving that performance, it's a lot of the fundamentals, right? We are -- it's the growing interest in resale as a category. It's our ability through our strategic initiatives to unlock supply and bring that supply on to a high-trust marketplace. And we're seeing that translate into strong growth of the business, attracting more buyers, which also came in at a nice 10% growth on an active basis.

So when we look at Q2, all of those fundamentals continue to be true, right? We have high confidence in the guide that we've provided. We're starting the quarter strong. And when I -- it gives that confidence also translates into the full year guide where we've increased the midpoint of our guidance from 13.5% GMV growth to 15% GMV growth. So we'll keep executing and delivering against that plan.

Operator: Your next question will come from Matt Koranda with ROTH Capital.

Matt Koranda: A lot of the demand stuff has been covered, but I wanted to dig a little bit more into the O&T expense. You leveraged that nicely in the quarter. But I guess on a per order basis, it was kind of flattish. As Athena penetrates further into the business later this year, I guess, how should we be thinking about per order sort of O&T expense and whether we get leverage later in the year?

Ajay Gopal: Yes. Thank you for that question. Operations and tech was a significant source of operating leverage for us. It has been -- it was true in last year when it leveraged 330 basis points. And in Q1, it drove 320 basis points of leverage. We think it continues to be a source of where our margin expansion is going to come from. When you look at our full year expectation to expand EBITDA by 200 basis points as we balance our expanding margins with delivering growth, ops and tech will continue to be a key component of that margin expansion.

Matt Koranda: Okay. And then just philosophically, if you get upside from efficiency around Athena implementation, is that -- are those dollars that you would consider reinvesting in marketing to speed up customer acquisition? Or is that something you'd let flow to the bottom line? Maybe just a little bit on your thought process around how you think about upside as you implement Athena?

Ajay Gopal: Yes. Great question. I mean we love that question. Definitely see it being reinvested back into growth, right? We are -- you've seen us put more money into marketing as we are able to gain more confidence on the return against that spend. The ROI is definitely there. We're also excited to invest a little in product and technology. There's been some very impressive gains in the world of artificial intelligence. And we see an opportunity to translate those gains in AI into our business model. So we will continue to lean into things that drive growth and balance that with expanding margins. I think we are set up to do both.

Operator: Your next question will come from Mark Altschwager with Baird.

Mark Altschwager: I just wanted to ask about the supply pipeline, watches, jewelry, handbags, that's really been the AOV story for a few quarters now. Can you talk us through the supply visibility as you look 6, 12 months out? I mean, are you seeing any signs of tightening in those particular categories? Or is it still feeling pretty robust there? And then relatedly, Ajay, just bringing it back to the model, we do begin to cycle the step-up in AOV from last year. I think the revenue guide seems to imply some moderating AOV growth in the back half. I mean is that the right expectation?

Or is there a view that you could still be in the early innings of this AOV momentum?

Rati Levesque: Thanks, Mark, for the question. I'll take the first one before I hand it over to Ajay. So on the supply side, what are we seeing? Watches, jewelry, handbags, high-value items in general, seeing strong supply coming in through there, strong inventory. Again, this is because of our retail locations, because of our incentives for the sales teams and how we've really prioritized this area. Our NPS is great for the mid- and high-value product as well. So we're seeing like all of that top-of-funnel metrics, our investment in marketing really pay off and bring in the right type of supply. The interesting thing about us is all this data that we have, right?

The 15 years of proprietary data to help us leverage AI. So what that means is we have this agility to our business so we can scale up supply in the areas where customers want very quickly. And we see those trends very quickly, and we can take that out to the sales team and make sure that they're incentivized the right way. So we're not seeing any slowdown in high value. If anything, that's picked up pretty nicely, and obviously has a lot to do with how big the TAM is. But the top of the metrics are solid. And just tactically, I brought up the flywheel, but also Real Partners and affiliates.

So these closet organizers, these stylists, we're really starting to see momentum there with the type of product they're bringing in that again gets -- is a mix of a really nice high and mid-value product, the agentic kind of search on the discovery side, of things selling through in a nice way, gets more money for our consignor and kind of accelerates that flywheel.

Ajay Gopal: I can take the second question, Mark, around sort of AOV for the second half. I think it really goes back to this concept of balance between price and volume growth for us, right? We've seen a healthy balance between the two, and there are quarters where one tends to be a little higher than the other. When you read into our implied second half guidance, yes, we do expect the balance to shift a little bit versus Q1 to a more -- less on AOV, more on units. But really, it comes down to what the customer is looking for and where fashion preferences shift. We have the ability to quickly move in that direction.

And just as you saw us capitalize on that trend with jewelry and watches, to your point last year, we'll do the same regardless of where that shifts.

Operator: Your next question will come from Ashley Owens with KeyBanc.

Victoria Apostolico: It's Victoria on for Ashley. Given the recent increase in oil and gas prices and the pressure we're seeing on the lower-income consumers, are you seeing any divergence in activity between higher-value customers and the more aspirational buyers on the platform?

Rati Levesque: Thanks, Victoria. Yes, we're not seeing any kind of change in trend when I'm looking at the health of the consumer. Right now, like I said, the buyer and consignor continues to be resilient headed into the quarter. And I really think, again, testimony to our trust, but also, again, that intersection between value and luxury, so that dollar going a lot farther with us. The resale continues to become mainstream. And we're seeing -- as far as trends go, we talk about high-value, but also emerging brands and vintage. So we're much more now the place where people are discovering new brands as well.

And if anything, we're also seeing -- because of the trust that we built and the testimony to our trust, we're seeing first-time buyers spending more in their first purchase. So that's the great thing about our marketplace. And I'd say one other thing that I'm seeing is, I'd say resale in the past was maybe one transaction. It's becoming -- it's less of a trend and a fad now and more we're developing this deeper connection with our customer. And we talk about it a lot in the metrics, right? Almost 50% of customers consider the resale value before purchasing in the primary market now and almost 60% prefer the secondary market outright.

So we're seeing definitely a change in the behavior as people are changing the way they shop.

Victoria Apostolico: Okay. Great. And then just concerning the consumer pressure, I was curious about how prior cycles went. Has this helped grow adoption for resale in the past?

Rati Levesque: Yes. So we haven't been through like a recession, for example, a macro. I would say that we were built out of a recession. We say that quite often. The question is do people want to monetize their closet if they're feeling a little bit of pressure. Again, I don't know. But what I do know is and what I can tell you is what we're seeing right now. And supply pipeline looks really good, new consignors, new buyers. We are seeing people wanting to monetize their closet right now. We're seeing people really buy into the value play. And like I said, that intersection between value and luxury really works in our favor right now.

Operator: Your next question will come from Jay Sole with UBS.

Jay Sole: Hope you can hear me. My question is on just AI and operational throughput. I guess how much of the margin expansion in Q1 was driven by Athena and some of the smart sales impacted by smarter AI pricing? That's the first question. And then sort of any color on AI rollouts versus any kind of seasonal tailwinds, specifically, are you seeing a measurable decrease in time to site for unique SKUs?

Ajay Gopal: Yes. Thanks for that question, Jay. I'll take the first part of it and then hand it to Rati to talk about the broader sort of AI strategy that we see on our business. As it relates to Athena, it is a pretty material component of the source of efficiency that we are seeing in operations and technology, at the end of the year with 35% of items being processed through that workflow, and we see that getting close to 50% towards the year, so -- towards the end of this year. So it will continue to be a source of efficiency for us. We also have other things we're working on within the operations line.

One of our investments this year is in implementing an automated storage and retrieval system in one of our fulfillment centers, and we're excited about that because it's going to allow us to move things faster through our fulfillment centers, and it also allows us to get more out of our existing capacity footprint. So 35% more from the fulfillment center where we would be putting in this technology. So that's as it relates to what we're doing around operations in Athena. I'll turn it to Rati to talk about sort of the broader AI strategy in our business.

Rati Levesque: Yes. Thanks, Jay. So I mentioned this earlier, but I think what puts us in a really great position is we have 15 years of proprietary data to position us and leverage AI. So at the end of the day, it's about removing friction, unlocking supply, lowering fixed and variable costs. Our objective is to find these efficiencies, also shorten our SLA, service level agreement with our customer, but while also taking dollars out of the unit cost. So Athena is one way that we do that, but also how do we get to 15%, 20% adjusted EBITDA margins. It's leveraging our moat, our expertise, authentication, pricing and data, our sales team.

We're well positioned to kind of take advantage of these efficiencies. So examples might be smart sales, which you've heard us talk about in the past, authentication as well. An automated storage and retrieval system we're launching right now that will really help a lot of the OpEx costs. And then leveraging across our corporate functions as well. And then on the site experience side, we think about improving discovery or conversational search via agentic AI. So we're pretty excited to test and start using the agentic AI, this human agent collaboration. And it's early innings of capitalizing on the significant and growing TAM.

Operator: Your next question will come from Marni Shapiro with The Retail Tracker.

Marni Shapiro: Congratulations on a fantastic quarter. I'm curious, I know we love talking about technology and everything, but I'm kind of curious about the customer side of things just a little bit more. I have a couple of friends -- several friends who actually consign with you and buy with you. And a few of them have said that the experience has been a lot better. So I'm curious about what you're doing to enhance that experience on the buyer side, on the consignor side? And how is it, I guess, rolling out? And what should we expect the rest of the year?

Rati Levesque: Yes. Thank you for the question. As a team and as a company, we've really been focused around obsessing over service. You hear me talk a lot about that in our script. So whether that is a pricing estimator that we've launched, reconsign, our operational excellence, really looking at kind of the exceptions and making sure that they're going down the right path. MyCloset is another one, right? Or just that deeper connection that we're -- that we have now with the consumer to build trust with our sellers, empowering them with that rich data that we have. And then search and discovery is something else that we're working on this year.

So really thinking about both the consignor and seller -- sorry, the consignor and the buyer experience and really kind of listening in on what the pain points are and addressing them as a team. So still we get really excited about talking about that and how do we kind of continue to increase our NPS. The price estimator is actually launching today. There's a select group of sellers, so check that out, and we'll continue to do our hard work here.

Marni Shapiro: And can I ask a follow-up on that? Because I feel like there are a lot of places to consign or try and sell your pre-loved merchandise. Are you hearing from your customers, whether it's consignors and/or buyers that the trust factor is the thing that's most important. It feels -- we all know that there's a lot of dupes out there. We all know it's hard to verify some of them. Is that the kind of the moat, I guess, that you guys have? I know it's not digital, but I feel like trust is almost more important than making it easy in a weird way.

Rati Levesque: Yes. So it's definitely around our trust is really important. And the way that we kind of cement our trust is through our sales organization, our pricing and data, our expertise that we have. It's great to see growing interest in the category, but it validates that resale is not just a trend, but really here to stay and kind of cemented into the infrastructure layer of the fashion industry or marketplace. So our value props really resonate with our customer. And like I said, the IP of the sales team, the authentication and expertise and just building that trust and community, again, driven by Gen Z and mostly millennials.

But we are definitely unique and really doubling down on our competitive moat here.

Marni Shapiro: That's great. And also, I know this wasn't new, but amazing that Andy was wearing thrifted and pre-loved items throughout Devils Wears Prada 2. I was like, oh my God, this is just genius for you guys. So congratulations.

Rati Levesque: Thank you.

Ajay Gopal: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. That concludes the Q&A session and today's call. You may now disconnect.