DraftKings Inc. (DKNG) on Q2 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the DraftKings’ Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Stanton Dodge, Chief Legal Officer. Please go ahead. Stanton Dodge: Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Statements we make during this call that are not statements of historical facts constitute forward-looking statements that are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from our historical results or from our forecast. We assume no responsibility for updating forward-looking statements. For more information, please refer to the risks, uncertainties and other factors discussed in our SEC filings. During the call, management will also discuss certain non-GAAP measures that we believe may be useful in evaluating DraftKings’ operating performance. These measures should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for DraftKings’ financial results prepared in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is available in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q filed today with the SEC and in our earnings presentation, which is available on our website at investors.draftkings.com. Hosting the call today, we have Jason Robins, Co-Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of DraftKings, who will share some opening remarks and an update on our business; and Jason Park, Chief Financial Officer of DraftKings, who will provide a review of our financials. We will then open up the line to questions. I will now turn the call over to Jason Robins. Jason Robins: Good morning, everyone. On today’s call, I will cover six key messages. First, we generated $298 million of revenue in Q2 due to excellent engagement from our customers and no discernible adverse impact from the reopening of the economy. Second, we saw positive legislative momentum continue with several states authorizing mobile sports wagering this year. Third, we continue to make big strides on product and technology, including the migration to our in-house bet engine. Fourth, we are laying the foundation for our media and content business. Fifth, we are launching an exciting new vertical in the non-fungible token industry under the brand of DraftKings Marketplace. And before turning it over to Jason Park, I will also provide an update on our ongoing responsible gaming initiative. We continued to deliver strong and healthy revenue growth in the second quarter of 2021. Revenue for the quarter increased 297% year-over-year to $298 million on a pro forma basis. Monthly unique players increased 281% to 1.1 million and average revenue per monthly unique player increased 26% to $80. While year-over-year comparisons were obviously impacted by COVID, our results were very strong relative to our expectation. At this stage, we’re not seeing any signs of the economies reopening impacting demand for our mobile product offerings. We continue to acquire customers efficiently with tech at or below our target. And as a data-driven company, we will dial up or down our investments according to the numbers. ARPMUP is also outperforming our expectations, which may be an indication that player LTVs could be even better than we thought. As of now, we are not making any adjustments to our models or internal path target. Engagement in the quarter was outstanding across all our products, particularly during the NBA and NHL playoffs and finals, major golf tournament, Champions League, Copa América and the Euro Cup. We’re also very excited about the continued traction we were seeing in combat sports, such as the UFC. To give a sense of the engagement we saw in the quarter, excluding new states, NBA playoffs handle and paid active increased 82% and 47% compared to the 2020 playoffs. To give a sense of engagement on a more normalized basis, handle and paid active for the NBA playoffs grew 293% and 119% in New Jersey compared to the NBA playoffs in Q2 of 2019. Also excluding new states, handle for The Masters increased 47% with paid active up 35% compared to the 2020 Masters in November. Handle and paid actives for The Masters grew 241% and 78% in New Jersey compared to The Masters in Q2 of 2019. In fact, overall OSB handle in New Jersey grew 196% and paid actives increased 111% in the second quarter of 2021 compared to the second quarter of 2019. iGaming gross revenue also continued to grow at an impressive rate in the quarter, despite retail casinos reopening to full capacity in all the four states where we operate with iGaming. The overall New Jersey iGaming market group 33% in Q2, which is even more impressive when considering that New Jersey iGaming it’s been available for almost eight years. More importantly, DraftKings iGaming gross revenue in New Jersey grew more than 2.5x the rate of the overall market in the second quarter, which is outstanding given the tailwinds we experienced in the same period last year due to COVID. Our business momentum has continued into Q3. On July 9, we announced an expansion extension of our existing exclusive daily fantasy sports and sports betting relationship with Major League Baseball. As an official sports betting partner of MLB, our brand will be visible throughout digital odds displays and virtual signage within MLB game. The expanded relationship also includes the right to an innovative bet and watch streaming integration with fans with open enacted mlb.com and DraftKings accounts will be able to watch a free live MLB game within the DraftKings app. July 10 was an all time top 10 day for acquiring a new mobile sports betting customers, even though July is traditionally our slowest acquisition month for the year. This critical day included the Wimbledon Women’s Championships, Brazil versus Argentina in the Copa América final and the Poirier versus McGregor fight. On July 15, we received a license in Louisiana Gaming Control Board to launch our fantasy sports product and approved parishes in the state. We moved forward with the launch on July 16. Arizona also recently legalized fantasy sports, and we are actively preparing to launch in this date pending receipt of licensure and regulatory approval. And on July 21, we revealed plans to launch DraftKings Marketplace, which I’ll comment on in a few minutes. Looking ahead, due to the continued outperformance of our core business, we are raising our revenue guidance, which Jason Park will cover in more detail a little bit later on the call. Turning to legalization trend. We have seen continued momentum in both mobile sports betting and iGaming legislation. In 2021, 25 state legislatures have introduced legislation to legalize mobile sports betting. Five state legislatures have introduced legislation to expand their existing sports wagering framework and two state legislatures have introduced legislation to legalize sports betting limited to retail location. In addition, four states have introduced iGaming legislation and three states have introduced online poker only legislation. Six of the states were DraftKings has potential opportunity to participate via market access agreement or direct license, Wyoming, Arizona, New York, Maryland, Louisiana and Connecticut have already authorized mobile sports wagering this year. These six states represent 13% of the U.S. population and brought the percentage of the population with legalized mobile sports betting to 39%. DraftKings is live with online sports betting in 12 states that collectively represent 25% of the U.S. population. Additionally, DraftKings is live with iGaming in four states representing approximately 10% of the U.S. population. Connecticut is also authorized by iGaming, which would add about 1% of the population. I want to provide a bit more color on Florida and New York. In Florida, we have teamed up with FanDuel and Florida Education Champions to collect approximately 900,000 verified signatures. If we were able to successfully collect those signatures, we will have a mobile sports betting question on the ballot in November 2022. It is our shared goal to have a safe, legal, regulated and competitive market for online sports betting in the Sunshine State and Floridians deserve a market leading and technologically advanced product offering. In New York, the RFA for mobile sports betting with issued in July, and we were prepared to respond in a fulsome and timely manner. We look forward to the potential of offering mobile sports betting in New York. Turning to Canada. We continue to believe that the country represents a very meaningful opportunity and we’ve seen strong legislative progress this year. At the federal level, the bill to repeal the single game sports wagering prohibition has passed the legislature and received royal assent. So it is now law and parlays are no longer required. At the provincial level, Ontario has enacted a law to create the regulatory framework for competitive iGaming and mobile sports wagering market. For context, Ontario represents about 40% of Canada’s population. If Ontario were a U.S. state, it would be the fifth largest state by population. We’re excited about this momentum and we look forward to further progress in Ontario and Canada as well. Moving on to product and technology. I’m very pleased to announce another quarter of significant progress. As we have mentioned in the past, we believe that the long-term winners in this industry will have a relentless focus on bringing the best product experience to customers. For mobile sports betting, we have completed our back-end migration in 11 states, and have just one state left pending final approval. Being vertically integrated will greatly enhance our ability to continuously drive differentiated products and customer experiences and offer market you need to DraftKings. For example, we’re happy to announce that we have launched Same Game Parlays. Same Game Parlays are a thought after feature from our customers that we are now able to offer due to our vertical integration. In addition, we are on track to bring other new features, including new end game markets to our customers by the start of the NFL season. We signed a multi-year support data supplier agreement with Genius Sports, which gives us access to Genius’ full portfolio of global sports data and content, including official NFL data and content. The terms of this deal are consistent with our long-term gross margin expectations. For iGaming, we added DK Craps to our mobile Casino suite in New Jersey with Pennsylvania, Michigan, and West Virginia to follow pending approval. The game is a DraftKings-exclusive and built in-house, perhaps it’s a challenging game to develop, given the seemingly endless path players can take. And our internal teams were able to deliver an authentic and truly differentiated Craps experience. In addition, we have launched our jackpot technology, which is enabled by our prior acquisition of Blue Ribbon. Over the past quarter, we have taken additional meaningful steps to begin building out our media business. We firmly believe that DraftKings has an exciting opportunity to play in the media space, given our brand recognition and trusted relationship with millions of paying customers across our DFS, OSB and iGaming vertical. We also have tremendous relationships across the industry with sports partners and media entities, as well as newly acquired assets like VSiN and our distribution relationship with Meadowlark. When analyzing the media vertical, we see three critical factors that will lead to our success in both the short and long-term. Media is a logical adjacent vertical for DFS, OSB and iGaming given the clear LTV to cash benefits for our core business. Specifically, we have the potential to acquire DFS, OSB and iGaming customers through our content assets, such as VSiN and distribution relationship such as Meadowlark. We believe we will also be able to improve retention of our existing DFS, OSB and iGaming players as a result for our differentiated media content. Given our well-known brand millions of paying customers, ownership of proprietary content in the form of gaming and DFS data and the VSiN platform, we will have the opportunity to be a unique content provider in the sports and entertainment space. Media and of itself is a great business, which has the potential to diversify our revenue stream through ad sales, content distribution deals and potentially even recurring subscription revenue. If I said to say, we are very excited about the future of our media and content business, and we will continue to update you on this topic in the coming quarters. We are continuing to explore exciting new growth sectors. Some of which we can pursue organically, some inorganically. On July 21, we revealed plans to launch DraftKings Marketplace, a digital collectables ecosystem designed for mainstream accessibility. Draftkings Marketplace offers curated NFT drops for U.S. dollar purchase and support secondary market transaction. Our first NFT drop will be in the near future. And instantaneously millions of customers will have the ability to seamlessly buy and sell digital collectables across sports, entertainment, and culture using their existing DraftKings account. This first drop is enabled by our exclusive sports content distribution relationship with Autograph. It was established exclusive relationships with prominent iconic athletes, such as Tom Brady, Wayne Gretzky, Tony Hawk, Derek Jeter, Naomi Osaka, Tiger Woods and more. We are pursuing this vertical because it fits the criteria we have outlined here in the path. Notably that NFTs offer a logical crossbill opportunity with our existing customers. As a result, this vertical can enhance customer stickiness in LTV as well as the potential for new customer acquisition through affiliation with these iconic athletes fan base. It also has very attractive economics given the large potential revenue opportunity based on transaction fees, modest initial investment and excellent EBITDA margin. We also continue to explore other vectors, including deepening and strengthening our existing product offerings and geographic expansion outside of the U.S. I also want to provide some recent updates on one of our highest ESG priorities, responsible gaming. DraftKings responsible gaming mission is to leverage technology, employee training and evidence-based research to protect consumers. In the second quarter, we announced three ways, we are advancing this critical mission. In May, we made a financial commitment to the International Center for Responsible Gaming’s fund to support research on sports wagering. As a result of DraftKings contribution, the ICRG was able to proceed with the competitive request for applications from researchers around the world who were interested in pursuing groundbreaking research. In June, we collaborated with the American Gaming Association to promote the AGA’s Have A Game Plan Bet Responsibly public service campaign. DraftKings is committed to publicize the campaign in many of the companies own channels, including at DraftKings’ retail gaming properties to promote safer play. This collaboration marks the first time in the industry that the Have A Game Plan campaign will be comprehensively rolled out across a national retail sportsbook footprint. Most recently, we finalized a strategic consulting agreement with the Division on Addiction at Cambridge Health Alliance, which is affiliated with Harvard Medical School. In coordination with the DraftKings Responsible Gaming team, the Division on Addiction will create an innovative systems-based safer play approach to training employees across the business in responsible gaming. Responsible gaming is an area in which we will continue to work with the industry and invest in as company. We are committed to continually improving and evolving how we can best support our customers, this goal standard tools for proactively identifying intervening and providing guidance to players can set limits effectively, utilize cool off periods and self-exclusion. I will now turn the call over to DraftKings CFO, Jason Park, who will discuss our second quarter results and revised expectations for 2021. Jason Park: Thank you, Jason, and good morning, everyone. Before I begin, I want to remind everyone that we will be discussing our results on a combined company pro forma basis to improve comparability as if we owned our B2B business starting on January 1, 2020 rather than on April 23, 2020. We are pleased to announce that we generated $298 million in revenue for the quarter, representing a 297% increase versus Q2 2020 revenue of $75 million. Our B2C business generated $270 million for the quarter, representing a 383% increase versus prior year. We continued to drive strong growth in players and player retention as measured through MUP, as well as player engagement and monetization as measured through ARPMUP. B2C monthly unique payers in the quarter increased 281% year-over-year to $1.1 million. The increase reflects strong unique payer retention and acquisition across DFS, OSB and iGaming. The expansion of our OSB and iGaming product offerings into new states and the lack of traditional sports for much of the second quarter of 2020. Q2 MUPs represented typical seasonality with Q2 being a slower sports quarter than Q1. Average revenue per monthly unique payer or ARPMUP was $80 in Q2 representing a 26% increase versus the same period in 2020. Our ARPMUP was positively impacted by the return to our more normal sports schedule, which resulted in stronger and more consistent customer engagement across our DFS and sportsbook product offering. The launch of our sportsbook and iGaming product offerings in additional states also positively impacted our product mix. We also continue to drive engagement across our B2C product offerings, as we cross sell our users into more products. Clearly, a portion of the tremendous year-over-year growth of our B2C business is due to the sports cancellations and postponements that occurred in Q2 2020 due to COVID-19. Second quarter 2021 revenue also exceeded our expectations, not only due to the over performance of our core business as a result of continued strong customer acquisition, retention and monetization, but also due to higher than forecast OSB hold percentage, which contributed about $20 million to our outperformance in the quarter. Year-to-date in 2021 higher than forecasts OSB whole percentage has contributed approximately $40 million to our outperformance. B2B revenue was $27 million for the quarter up 44% versus prior year, which was negatively impacted by COVID. We generated $139 million of gross profit dollars on an adjusted EBITDA basis for the entire business in the quarter representing a 223% increase versus the prior year period. Gross margin rate on an adjusted EBITDA basis for the business was 47% in the quarter. As we have noted in the past, our gross margin rate is impacted by a mix shift out of our more mature and thus higher margin DFS product offering and into a higher growth rate and lower margin OSB in iGaming product offerings. In addition, gross margin rate within a period is impacted by promotional intensity, typically most intense when a new state launches and at the beginning of a major sports season, as we aim to acquire customers. Gross margin rates for OSB will be positively impacted by the conversion to our own bet engine, which is now complete in all states, but one pending approval, though we will continue to pay our third-party bet engine provider through the end of Q3 2021. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was negative $95 million as we invested in external marketing and in our product technology and G&A function. Our sales and marketing expenses were $157 million, which included our external marketing. External marketing was higher than prior year due to there being a full sports calendar in Q2 2021 versus a COVID impacted calendar in Q2 2020, as well as being live in 12 total states versus eight in Q2 2020. We are continuing to see very attractive CAC opportunities that support this investment in marketing. Our general and administrative and product and technology costs on an adjusted EBITDA basis for $41 million and $36 million respectively, as we continue to invest to achieve scale in our back office functions such as customer service, finance and accounting, legal and human resources, as well as adding to our technology team. A majority of the combined $17 million of year-over-year growth in these two expense lines was from compensation. Much of the head count growth was in our customer experience department, where we are focused on providing best in industry customer experience. And it’s largely a variable cost impacted by our rapid growth in month. In the quarter, we expense $226 million in items that we exclude from adjusted EBITDA, but are included in GAAP operating income, including $172 million for stock-based compensation and $54 million for amortization of acquired intangibles, depreciation and other amortization and other non-recurring expenses. The expense associated with our stock-based compensation awards is based on a defined service period for our time-based brand and a probability based model for performance based and long-term incentive plans brand. Our Board grants equity awards to retain, motivate, and incentivize key employees, align their interests with them as shareholders and tie a significant amount of their compensation to working together to produce outstanding company performance. Moving onto our balance sheet and liquidity, we ended the quarter with $2.6 billion of cash on our balance sheet. We are very well capitalized to execute our multi-year plan and address our key priorities of customer acquisition, entering new states as they legalize, continuing to lead the market on product innovation and exploring opportunistic and accretive M&A. Looking at the rest of 2021 on our first quarter earnings call in May, we increased our 2021 revenue guidance to $1.05 billion to $1.15 billion from $900 million to $1 billion. Given our continued strong performance in 2021 in underlying acquisition, retention and monetization of player, we are increasing our guidance to $1.21 billion to $1.29 billion of revenue for 2021, which equates to year-over-year growth of 88% to 100%. We are raising the midpoint of our 2021 revenue guidance, which results and implied second half growth of more than 40% based on our strong results in Q2 and Q3 to date, as well as our demonstrated and continued plan for strong user engagement and efficient customer acquisition. We expect both MUP and ARPMUP to grow in 2021. With MUPs increasing at a higher rate than ARPMUP. We also assume that all professional and college sports calendars that have been announced come to fruition, and that we continue to operate in the states in which we are live today. These states collectively represent 25% of the U.S. population for mobile sports betting and 10% of the U.S. population for iGaming. The Wyoming, Arizona, Maryland, Louisiana, Connecticut, and New York have authorized mobile sports wagering. We did not know the exact date, these states will launch nor in the case of New York, the results of the selection process. As such, we are not including them in our revenue guidance. The underlying strength in our business is responsible for the revenue guidance increase. Regarding our 2021 quarterly revenue cadence, we have a high conviction plan in place for the start of the NFL season and have incorporated sensitivities on a variety of internal and external factors, the largest being sport outcome variability. Based on this analysis, we expect Q3 to be roughly 17% of the midpoint of our new 2021 revenue guidance, which is similar in dollar terms to the guidance we shared with you on May 7, due to ongoing excellent customer retention, the efficacy of our customer acquisition investments and new product features. We expect Q4 to account for approximately 34% of our revenue for the year based on the midpoint of our revised guidance range. While we are not providing guidance for 2021 adjusted EBITDA, our investment in sales and marketing as the key input, we always use facts to inform our decision on where, how, and how much to invest in external marketing. Our results since the economy fully reopened confirmed that our CAC continue to be very attractive. Based on the attractive LTV to CAC ratio opportunities we’re seeing, we plan to continue to invest in sales and marketing to take advantage of these circumstances. From a quarterly perspective, we plan to deploy and optimize, but overall similar promotional and marketing campaign, as we did in Q3 of 2020, including more activity in the later part of the quarter, which will disproportionately affect adjusted EBITDA in Q3. In the fourth quarter, we expect a slight improvement compared to adjusted EBITDA in the second quarter, as we monetize our Q3 promotional and marketing investments and benefit from higher seasonal revenues. As a result, we expect our adjusted EBITDA loss in the second half of 2021 to be approximately 60% of our total annual loss for 2021. Before wrapping up, I want to touch on state level unit economics. As you know, our business model is predicated on states turning profitable after two to three years due to underlying LTV to CAC dynamics. At this point, I want to affirm our outlook for our most mature state New Jersey, which we said would generate $210 million in net revenue and $65 million in contribution profit at our March investor day. Our other states are on a similar trajectory, and I look forward to providing you updates on those in the near future. As a reminder, our marketing spend is highly flexible and can be reduced or paused altogether, if the sports calendar shifts or if LTV to CAC opportunities become less attractive. Our spend is also impacted by the launch of new states. That concludes our remarks. And we will now open the line for questions. Operator: Our first question will come from the line of Shaun Kelley from Bank of America. You may begin. Shaun Kelley: Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if we could just dig in a little further on the customer acquisition spending outlook for the third quarter of the back half. Maybe just help us a little bit with the timing. It looks like you got very good cost leverage this quarter with on the sales and marketing line and those numbers coming down sequentially, so just what’s the right expectation for thinking about that investment, especially into NFL and giving the timing of probably some of your larger broadcast contracts and like? Jason Robins: Thank you, Shaun. So really, we’re going to start with – we’ve seen recently that while we kind of expected or at least about there might be some slowdown in performance due to the reopening. We’re not seeing that though, based on what we’re seeing today, I would expect we’re going to get very good results going into NFL. NFL is basically like our holiday season. It’s when we acquire the most new players and reactivate portions of the player base. We do have a lower CAC target, as the players that we acquire tend to be a little bit more casual than the ones that we acquire and say, Q2. So we’re going to manage that CAC target and we’ll dial the investment up or down accordingly based on results, which is really hard to predict. I mean, we always learn a lot the first week going into NFL and based on what we’ve seen recently, I would expect strong results, we’ll continue and we’ll want to invest into it. But it’s really hard to say. And we’ll be monitoring the data on an hourly basis and turning campaigns on and off accordingly. Shaun Kelley: Thank you very much. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Stephen Grambling from Goldman Sachs. You may begin. Stephen Grambling: Hey, thanks. I guess just following up on the outlook, I think that you referenced that the dollar guidance is roughly unchanged. When we think about the math, I guess, what are some of the puts and takes to think about that could drive numbers above or below, I guess, as we think about the strong growth that you’ve seen, and it looks like that’s embedding some deceleration? Jason Robins: Are you talking about Q3 specifically? Stephen Grambling: I guess both Q3 and Q4. Jason Robins: I think, we raised a little bit in the back half of the year, but you’re right, we aren’t necessarily banking on the over performance we’ve seen in Q1 and Q2 carrying over. I think that continues to be us being a bit cautious about what this NFL season might look like. Obviously, COVID has been up and down and we could see this swing either way, but based on what we see today, everyone’s going to be back in stadiums, gatherings will be back to normal generally in most places. So we’re just being a bit cautious given how significant the NFL period is for customer acquisition and activation about what we think will happen in the back half of the year. Also, there’s only three weeks of NFL in Q3. So it’s not – it’s an interesting period because you activate a lot of players, but a lot of their spending comes in Q4. So the ARPMUP is typically not as high in Q3 as we see in other quarters. So that’s something we’re also paying attention to. Stephen Grambling: Got it. And I guess the NCAA being back would be maybe a partial offset. I guess, one follow, I guess, on the SBTech integration. I know that you talked about some of the increased functionality. How are you thinking about the kind of milestones? Do you feel like the most challenging aspects are behind you or do you still have to kind of test it through the NFL season? Thank you. Jason Robins: Yes, that’s a great question. So we’ve definitely tested it quite extensively over the last few weeks. We’ve migrated in all, but one state not one is pending approval. So we feel pretty good, obviously, we want to see how NFL looks from a trading perspective, but we’ve done pretty rigorous testing throughout the other sports on the calendar, and we feel pretty good about it. We launched Same Game Parlays last week, which was a big feature that our customers have been asking for also typically has a higher margin. So we have not built in any additional revenue or any additional whole percentage based on new features we’re launching. We don’t sort of building off what you said. We want to test those things and see how they look going into NFL before we would promise any more revenue based on it. But we do think that there’s some potential upside in the new features that we’ll be launching in the coming weeks and months. Stephen Grambling: Thanks. Best of luck. Operator: Our next question will come from Jed Kelly from Oppenheimer. You may begin. Jed Kelly: Great, thanks for taking my question. Just falling back up on the SBTech and Same Game Parlays, I expect you plan the market that product into NFL, and you think that will close the yield gap with some of your competitors at a little more vertically integrated and then another question just on the seasonality on MUP, the decline in sports betting, Jason, how do you think of sort of making sports betting a year round phenomenon and not as decently dependent on football? Thank you. Jason Robins: So on the first question I think that we certainly have seen evidence across other companies in the marketplace that Same Game Parlays have a higher yield. So we could certainly see that we have not built that into any of our forward looking guidance. So we’re not counting on it, but it’s something that we’re certainly hoping will be the case. And in general, I would say, we’re not really trying to maximize whole percentage at this stage. We’re on boarding a lot of new customers. It’s the early days of the industry. So really we’re focusing on getting people onto the platform, getting them active and there’ll be a time and a place where we’ll focus more attention on increasing whole percentage. It’s just not right now. And then sorry, what was the second question? Jed Kelly: Just on MUPs, we saw a seasonal decline. I mean, how do you think about sort of making sports betting more year round and not as dependent on football, it might be impossible, but how do you think about that? Jason Robins: I don’t know – certainly, we think that as more people try more sports, it’ll smooth out a little bit. There are certain sports like soccer, which are very popular among the younger generations, which I think over time will increase, but you’re right. The sports themselves are seasonal. So it’s very hard for us to control anything, when there’s popularity difference between different sports. And there are only certain times a year is try as hard as we may try. We’re not at any time soon going to be able to get more people to bet on basketball or baseball than they do on NFLs, just based on the fan base size. So that’s something that I think just we’ll always have to kind of live with on sports, but what we can do is continue to launch other types of products. So obviously, iGaming has been a good one for us. That’s something that people can play around. We’re cross selling very effectively onto that product. So well certainly we see bumps when there’s more actives. We do think it’s a bit smoother seasonally. We recently announced that we’re launching the marketplace. So NFTs, I think will be a year round thing. There might be some seasonality given the sports focus, but we’re also going to branch into NFTs for other things outside of sports. So I think is that that product continues to grow in the coming years. We’ll see that help smooth out. So I think really that’s the way that we’re looking at moving smoothing seasonality is just trying to diversify into other products that we can effectively cross sell our customers into and might have a little bit less seasonal variation. Jed Kelly: Thank you. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Michael Graham from Canaccord. You may begin. Michael Graham: Yes. Thank you and congrats on the great performance, I wanted to ask two, one on ARPMUP. Jason, if you could just take us under the hood a little bit on what’s driving that strength. You mentioned cross-selling a minute ago, is it iGaming? Is it more sports being engaged in by each player or bigger bets from players? Or just can you tell us anything that helps us understand that? And then you had mentioned a long time ago that when you got to one-third coverage of the United States, that you would switch a lot of resources towards national ads. And I know you’re sort of like almost there, but not quite there. Just wondering if you could update us on sort of how you’re thinking about the marketing mix going forward. Jason Robins: So thanks for the question that regarding ARPMUP, certainly there’s some seasonality to it Q3 because it’s a high activation quarter, but only a few weeks of NFL to monetize, I think we’ll have lower ARPMUP than Q2. But even relatively speaking, meaning, year-over-year and actually, given the sport calendar change really looking at 2019 can be helpful versus Q2 2021. I think that we’re cautiously optimistic that we might just have a higher LTV player than we thought. And I think that’s probably the biggest driver beyond anything else. We have also improved cross sell rates. So iGaming is helping, but even on the course, sports betting products, I think that it’s still looking like ARPMUP was higher than expected again with the caveat that, it’s hard to compare anything Q2 versus 2020 Q2. And looking back at 2019, it was a very different time than only a few states that we had. I think, live was sports betting at that point. So actually I think it might’ve just been New Jersey at that point. Although, it could be wrong on that, there might’ve been one or two others. Never mind, I’m sorry. It was New Jersey, West Virginia and Indiana at that point. So there were only a few. So it’s a little hard to compare, but that’s why we’ve also not changed our CAC targets. We’re not counting on higher LTVs, but we’re certainly optimistic cautiously that that could be the case. And we’re going to be monitoring that in the coming quarters and hopefully, we’ll have more data as the sports schedule stabilizes and it’s easier to make year-over-year comparisons. And then the second question was sorry, remind me what the second question was? On national ad spend, right? So we’re at right now 25% of the population. I do think there’s a possibility that some new states will launch either right before during the NFL season Wyoming and Arizona being two that seemed like they’re on a good track. And I think others like Louisiana may get in there as well. And if that happens, I still don’t think we’ll quite be at 33%. But I do think you’ll see us start to mix some national advertising in this year to test that. I think it’s important that if we’re planning on shifting quite a bit, as we get into the mid-30s and 40s level international advertising, that we have some data in this NFL season to look at, to be able to optimize for next year. So you will see us start to test into that this NFL season. Michael Graham: Great. Thank you. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Bernie McTernan from Needham and Company. You may begin. Bernie McTernan: Great, good morning. Thanks for taking the question. Just to follow up before Jason, you mentioned a bit more cautious on the NFL. I was hoping to dive into that a little bit more. Is it competitive environment or something else you were referring to? Jason Robins: Well, I think we’re still waiting to see what a year it’s potentially people in stadiums and more of an open economy looks like that. The biggest factor, of course, that could change. We also don’t know that. So I think there’s a lot of moving variables and we’re just trying to exercise caution and not getting overly bullish based on results that we’ve seen. Early on suggesting that the reopening is having no adverse effect on the momentum we’ve seen. If we get an NFL season under our belt with the economy, generally open around the country and around the states, we have online sports betting and iGaming. I think then we start to feel really good that we’re not going to see any adverse impact in that. It’s really just truly momentum in the industry and with drafting. Bernie McTernan: Understood. And then just to drill down the NFT marketplace for a second, could you just talk about like what the economics of a transaction in the marketplace are the level of investment of time and money that it will take and kind of what’s the upside opportunity? I think there’s three or four major NFT marketplaces right now. Do you need to be a top operator to really move the needle for the company? Or is that the right way to think about it? Jason Robins: I think it is the right way to think about it, because being marketplace having liquidity is important that said we also have exclusive rights that we’ve secured through our relationship with Autograph to be able to sell an NFTs that are for top athletes like Tom Brady, Wayne Gretzky, Naomi Osaka, Tiger Woods, Derek Jeter, and many others, Tony Hawk, many others. So we feel pretty good that having that exclusivity, no matter how liquid our marketplace is, initially, we will drive a lot of traffic, but over the long-term, I think being a marketplace, it’s important to have the highest or close to highest level of liquidity, people are going to go where there’s the most buying and selling when they’re posting secondary transactions and things like that, which is true of any marketplace really. So I think that is how we’re looking at it. We do have a much larger user base than any of the other marketplaces that exist today. So we feel like we’re starting from a position of strength. Much like the daily fantasy user base has helped us with we launched online sports betting into other states. I think that having a big database with millions of active customers will really be a leg up for us and it just comes down to how effectively can we cross sell. And I think we feel pretty good about that given our track record of selling other – cross selling other products, but this is also our first foray into something it’s a little bit different. So we’re going to have to see how the data shakes out. Bernie McTernan: Understood. Thanks taking the questions. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Ben Chaiken from Credit Suisse. You may begin. Ben Chaiken: Hey, how’s it going? It looks like the –it seems like the media angle is particularly interesting. You talked about MLB streaming, I think you mentioned exploring some subscription revenues, if I caught that I guess when it comes to unique sporting events that require a one-time payment or some type of exclusive access I guess I’m thinking like boxing or out of network game, why not offer a promotion that allows access upon signup and deposit with DraftKings high level, it just seems like the cost of that versus your normal CAC is compelling relative to other channels. Is that something you could do? And then forgive me if this question lacks awareness in some way, and there’s no obvious answer. Why it wouldn’t work? Thanks. Jason Robins: All right. I think it’s a great idea. That’s definitely something we’ve talked about. In order to do, it depends on the event, but most of the time you have to have the rights. So that’s something that we’ll look into exploring as well and those rights of course costs money. So while, giving it away is one way to look at it. It’s actually really the cost of the right that matters, which of course are lower than the cost of the pay-per-view because that’s how money is made by companies that traditionally do that. So that’s something that we’re absolutely looking at amongst other things. We’re still very early in developing our media strategy. Our goal is to have much more of it fleshed out by the end of the year and have explored some of those opportunities in the marketplace, such as the one you mentioned to see if we don’t – it could be something that works for us. We do want the media vertical to on its own be a profit generating vertical certainly over the long-term. I think, we have the flexibility to not do that if we wanted to, but as of today, we believe that we can both make a profit directly in the vertical and have the synergistic benefit of being able to acquire and keep retain users using the content that we put out there as well. Ben Chaiken: Got you. That makes sense. And then just quickly follow-up or second question would be, I think – I know Canada is not in your numbers, but it sounds like Ontario is going to be alive maybe by the end of this year, October, November, who knows. But will that fall – will Canada follow a similar cadence to how you’ve launched new states, and I think you’ve provided some guidance around New Jersey and other states about how you think about promotion, external marketing. Is that a reasonable way to think about Canada? Or is there a different format just because this is a little size-wise is different? Jason Robins: I think we look at it the same way. It’s an LTV to CAC question. We have plenty of daily fantasy customers in Canada, and we don’t see really any differences between their spend levels and the customers that we have in the U.S. So I don’t really have any reason to believe it’s different. The interesting thing about Canada is that most major operators around the world have been in Canada for quite some time. So it’s a little bit different than new U.S. states where they’re opening up. And in some ways I think we have to focus on taking customers that have already been playing as much as trying to convert new customers, which is why we projected a lower long-term market share for Canada than we have for the U.S. One thing I wanted to – just on your previous question note as well that occurred to me after I answered. A lot of pay-per-views that distribute through multiple platforms, they actually have in their contracts with the platforms they distribute on that no one can give away for a free, or even under a certain price because it undermines the other platforms. They would say, why would anyone pay to for a pay-per-view on my platform, if they’re getting it free elsewhere? Very common in the media industry, there’s lots of things like this, MFMs are a very common thing and also restrictions on what you can and can’t sell things for very common. So, that’s something we would have to work around unless we had exclusive rights to distribute a pay-per-view. Ben Chaiken: Makes sense. Thank you. Jason Robins: Thank you. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Robin Farley from UBS. You may begin. Robin Farley: Great. Thanks. Can you quantify a little bit of how much of the revenue raised for the year is due to new initiative like Marketplace? Jason Robins: Hi, Robin. We have not built in any additional revenue expectation from new initiatives. We really don’t have enough data, we have no data to base it on. So we haven’t assumed any new states. We haven’t assumed any new initiatives generating revenue. Those are all things that once we have a little bit more clarity on the state side as to which dates and when might go live, we would be able to update. And then as we get a little bit of data on new initiatives, I think we’d be able to update that. That said, I wouldn’t expect new initiatives to generate a huge amount of revenue this year. This will be very early days of us launching them. Obviously, we have very strong conviction and are very excited about the long-term prospects and think that the market that we’re entering like NFTs could be really, really large. But it’ll take a little time for those new products to ramp. Robin Farley: Okay. Thanks. And then other question is on the agreement that you signed with Genius Sports, you mentioned your access to all of your other data outside of the NFL or that was part of the deal. Does that lower your cost in some way for things outside of the NFL, in other words, was it packaged with other things that lower the cost that you’ve been paying for that data elsewhere? Jason Robins: That’s a great question. We aren’t really able to give any specifics on that contract. But what we will say is that we do not expect any adverse effects to our long-term gross margin projections based on the pricing that we receive. So I think you can kind of read between the lines based on that. But due to confidentiality, we’re not able to disclose any details of the contract. Robin Farley: Okay. Great. Thank you. Operator: And our next question will come from the line of David Katz from Jefferies. You may begin. David Katz: Hi. Good morning, everyone. My one question and it’s one that I’ve asked two quarters back, but not lately is around in-game wagering and the breadth of offerings there, obviously we’re reminded by the parlay indication. If you could just talk about the breadth of offerings where you are today and what we can reasonably expect in the future. And is that something that’s entirely driven within the confines of OSB tech or other, B2B services or tuck-ins or other things you may need to fully build that out? Thanks. Jason Robins: Thank you. One of the things that really we’ve noted, we’re excited about with now having migrated to our in-house platform is the ability to drive innovation and things like in-game wagering and other innovative types of bets that previously we had a lot more dependence on our partner can before. So we’re really excited about that. And it’s been an all consuming thing the migration. As you can imagine, it was a large project, the largest we’ve ever done from a product and technology perspective. And it’s a real testament to the great people on our product and engineering team to be able to have not only done that a little bit ahead of schedule, but also to have continued to launch new things, including our upcoming launch of Marketplace, but also several new states and other sorts of things along the way, including DK Craps and many iGaming games that we released. So really just – I’m so proud of that team for not only ahead of schedule completing a very smooth migration, but also continuing to innovate. But it is true that it was very all consuming. And so, I think now that that’s mostly behind us, we do still have one state left. We’re really in a position to start focusing on driving innovation and launching new things. As far as third-parties, much like our iGaming product, we’re going to do both. There’s just a speed to market aspect of being able to integrate different providers and also at the same time launch things ourselves. And much like what we’re doing with iGaming, we’ll look at things that either we can’t get through third-party providers or economically, it just makes sense for us to bring in-house. And we’ll do that over time with the goal being most things are in-house over the long-term. But there’s just such a long tail of different types of bets and same thing on iGaming, different types of games that there’s always going to be a mix of things that we’ve completely built on our own and things that we’ve built either partially or in partnership with third-parties. David Katz: Okay. Perfect. Thank you. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Joe Stauff from Susquehanna. You may begin. Joe Stauff: Good morning, Jason and Jason. One other question to add on regarding your product offering. How do you think about, especially given your newfound flexibility in the in-house platform about extending out to different consumer segments? Again, whether they be off shore or something – I know it’s not an immediate thing, but how do you think about extending your product into those other consumer segments say over time? Jason Robins: So I definitely think that there’s an opportunity as you noted to expand globally, and that’s something that we’re looking at doing either inorganically or organically or a combination of the two. But I think within sports betting, the opportunity to maybe branch into other sports that we haven’t had as deep of an offering, it could reach different types of people is interesting. And I think something that we’re exploring. And then, outside of sports, which we’ve always – isn’t specific to the migration of course. We definitely feel in the iGaming segment that we do better with people who are sports fans that we can cross sell. And we’ve been working hard to try to extend our brand and extend our reach into the non-sports fan iGaming audience. And that’s something I think we’ve been getting a bit of traction on, but really need to continue to invest. I think that’s probably the biggest opportunity for us now in terms of consumer segments that we’re just not penetrating at the moment. Joe Stauff: Thank you. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Stephen Glagola from Cowen. You may begin. Stephen Glagola: Hi. Thanks for the question. I just wanted to unpack the announcement with Genius yesterday, a bit more on Same Game Parlays. Where the Same Game Parlays launched on the app a product built in-house by DraftKings? Or are you using Genius’ BetBuilder product? And if it is Genius’ product, why are using their product? I believe, BetMGM is also using that same product and FanDuel has developed an in-house parlay product. So if you can just talk around that please. Jason Robins: Yes. I mentioned this a few moments ago, but we’re going to put out a mix of different things that are organically developed and things where we’re partnering. And it’s going to depend on a variety of factors, such as the opportunity cost of building them in the short-term, the actual cost of using a third-party. In this particular case, it was packaged up with a larger deal. So we felt like it was a good way to get Same Game Parlays into the market really quickly in advance of NFL. And it frees up our engineering time to focus on other things. So that’s a lot of how in the short-term we’re going to look at it. If there’s a good solution, it gets us something as good or better than what our competitors have. And we can free up engineering bandwidth to focus on other things that maybe our competitors don’t have. That’s going to be the initial focus. And then over time, I think we will take things that prove to be large parts of our offering that we think there’s an economic benefit to vertically integrating and focused on those. But in the short-term, it’s really about as quickly as possible having the broadest and deepest product offerings, since we think at this stage of getting maximum activation and retention of consumers is the most important thing. Stephen Glagola: All right. Thanks, Jason. But just to be clear, so that is – it is the – that is the Betgenius product and that is on the app right now for the parlay. Jason Robins: I believe so. I know we were using, because we just announced the deal, I think yesterday and we had the Same Game Parlays we launched earlier this week. I know we were using another provider. I’m not sure if we fully switched over to Betgenius yet, but that’s the plan. Stephen Glagola: Okay. Thank you. Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Barry Jonas from Truist Securities. You may begin. Barry Jonas: States have been slower to legalize iGaming than say sports betting. I know your expectations there as the same as sports betting, but what do you think needs to happen to get more momentum on the iGaming legalization front? Jason Robins: I think, we’ve always felt, and I think have said that it’s going to be sports first and then iGaming. I think that that’s just the kind of natural evolution of things that states are going to be more comfortable in many cases going sports first. And then, once they get used to the tax revenues coming in, see more and more states doing iGaming, we think more and more states are comfortable with iGaming as well. Some states such as Connecticut this year chose to do them all at once, Michigan did the same thing, Pennsylvania did the same thing. So we may see that here and there. And then we may see states like West Virginia, for example, that it’s sports betting first and then a year or two later, did iGaming. So I think it will be a mix, but we certainly expect the momentum to be first with sports betting legalization, and then iGaming to be something that follows that. I think that in terms of your question about how to get them comfortable, I think there’s really two things. One is just most states don’t want to be the guinea pigs. So more and more that they see other states particularly it tends to be regional in their geographic areas doing it. And the more that they feel like, everything’s going well and the playbook on how to regulate it is clear, the more I think, comfort they’ll get. I think also seeing how much tax revenue can be generated and back to the kind of regional point, if there’s bleed from states like, right neighboring them because they have iGaming and a state that’s chosen to do sports betting does not. I think that could be a reason that they move faster. But it’s really just time. And we’re going to continue to push the message out there that this is something that can be done in a safe manner. We have great guardrails in place and are continuing to invest in getting better at responsible gaming and there’s real meaningful tax revenue that can be generated by adding that product. Barry Jonas: Thank you. Operator: Our next question will comes from the line of Ryan Sigdahl with Craig-Hallum Capital. You maybe begin. Ryan Sigdahl: Good morning, guys. Thanks for squeezing me in. Nice metrics on New Jersey iGaming that you gave, really strong performance there. What do you think is driving that accelerated market share gain recently here versus the past several quarters? And then secondly, why do you think you’re having more success taking share on gaming versus the OSB? Thanks. Jason Robins: Great good question. I mean, I think iGaming is actually and hopefully it foreshadows OSB a great example of where we’ve invested in launching our own games and enhancing our own products. And for example, we mentioned we had launched our own in-house Craps game last quarter. And I think that that’s really helped generate momentum and gain market share. And we’ve been really consumed with the migration. And also of course, there are many things we couldn’t do on the product front before migrating. So I think now that we’re finally in a position where we control our own destiny there and we’re able to innovate, I hope to be able to do many of the same things that we’ve done in the last several quarters on the iGaming front product-wise. And we hope that that helps us gain more share and retain and acquire customers more effectively. Ryan Sigdahl: Great. Thanks guys. Good luck. Jason Robins: Thank you. Operator: And our last question for today will be coming from the line Mike Hickey from The Benchmark Company. You may begin. Mike Hickey: Nice. Good morning, Jason, Jason, nice quarter guys and guide. Congrats. First one, just any progress that you made on sort of adding social layers to your app. I think that was sort of a theme on your last call tie in on retention there on your user base. And the second question on NFTs, just curious, obviously the crossbow opportunities seems like a no brainer but curious on the user acquisition side, thinking about key offerings maybe tied into live events and that can bring players into the ecosystem. Thanks guys. Jason Robins: Thanks. Social is off to a great start. It’s very early. I mean, we launched an MVP only a few months ago, and so we still feel like we have a very lengthy and exciting roadmap there. But the early results have been very strong. We’ve seen great adoption. We monitor daily and monthly active users on the social features, separate from daily and monthly active users on the product – on the other products. And we’ve seen that continually increasing since we’ve launched. And I think we’ll learn a lot in NFL season based on how many of our customers that we acquire and active we’re able to get adopting those social features. So very excited about it. I think it’s too early to share any metrics. But we’re starting to flesh out what metrics we might be comfortable sharing on the coming – in the coming quarters. On the NFT side, I definitely feel like it’ll be a great cross-sell product. We’ll know when we get the data, but we’ve done enough market research on our customers to know that quite a few of them are interested in it and there’s good overlap with our current customer base. And I do agree that it could also potentially have some upside on the customer acquisition side, just like we do with every product in our portfolio, which are the best products to most efficiently bring people onto the platform. And then once they’re on the platform, we try to cross sell them across everything we do. And I think there could be some upside on that front for sure, but we’re going to have to wait and see, and really we’ll do whatever the data suggests. But it’s something that we’ve talked about it’s a potential upside. And in general, I think just having the broadest product portfolio gives us the most options for how we can acquire different pockets of customers. So not only does it increase LTV, but also has positive effect on our tax efficiency over time to just have the broadest and deepest product portfolio possible. Operator: Thank you. That’s all the time we have for questions today. Jason Robins: Thank you all for joining us on today’s call. We appreciate your questions and look forward to continuing our conversations with you. Our performance in 2021 continues to be very strong and we’re excited for what the rest of the year and beyond holds for us. DraftKings is well-positioned with $2.6 billion in cash to capitalize on legislative advancements in several states, complete the migration to our own in-house set engine, expand and initiate relationships with important organizations and advanced new product technology and content initiatives. I hope you all stay safe and well and we look forward to speaking with you on our next earnings call in November. Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
DKNG Ratings Summary
DKNG Quant Ranking
Related Analysis

DraftKings Added to Morgan Stanley's Top Picks, Shares Rise

DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) shares rose more than 2% intra-day today after Morgan Stanley added the stock to its Top Picks list, despite Illinois recently adopting a higher, progressive tax structure. The investment bank contends that tax hikes do not automatically translate to identical impacts across all markets and should not be considered inevitable.

Morgan Stanley noted that not all states face budget shortfalls, so higher taxes should not be universally expected. They also emphasize that increased taxes may not be directly comparable since operators often reduce their investments, marketing efforts, and promotions in response.

The bank highlights that in states needing to address budget deficits, the expansion of legalized gaming could present opportunities, such as online sports betting in California and Texas, or iGaming in Maryland, New York, and Illinois. The analysts believe concerns over taxes are exaggerated and that positive earnings will serve as a significant catalyst.

DraftKings Inc. Maintains Buy Rating from Needham Amid Market Volatility

  • Needham reiterates its Buy rating on DraftKings, highlighting the company's resilience and potential for growth despite recent market challenges.
  • The impact of legislative changes in Illinois on DraftKings and the broader sports betting industry underscores the importance of regulatory factors.
  • DraftKings' stock demonstrates potential for recovery, supported by its strategic position near a bullish trendline and positive analyst sentiment.

On Tuesday, May 28, 2024, Needham reiterated its Buy rating on DraftKings Inc. (NASDAQ:DKNG), maintaining a hold action on the stock. At the time of the announcement, the price of DKNG was $40.81. This endorsement was published by StreetInsider, further emphasizing Needham's confidence in the company's prospects. DraftKings, a prominent player in the online sports betting and gaming industry, has been under the spotlight due to its dynamic market performance and the evolving regulatory landscape affecting its operations.

The recent legislative changes in Illinois, which introduced a tax increase on sports betting, have notably impacted DraftKings and its parent company, Flutter Entertainment. This development, as highlighted by Market Watch, led to a decline in the trading value of both companies. The tax hike poses a challenge to their financial outlook, emphasizing the importance of regulatory factors in the sports betting industry. Despite these hurdles, DraftKings continues to attract attention from investors and analysts, as evidenced by its activity on Zacks.com.

DraftKings has experienced market volatility, particularly after its earnings report on May 3, which resulted in a 2.8% drop in its stock price. However, the company's stock has shown resilience, trading at $42.42, despite a series of declines. This resilience is attributed to DraftKings nearing a historically bullish trendline, suggesting a potential rebound. According to Forbes, the stock's approach within one standard deviation of its 80-day moving average has historically led to an average return of 8.9% one month later, indicating a promising outlook for investors.

Furthermore, the affordability of DraftKings' options, with the stock's Schaeffer’s Volatility Index (SVI) ranking in the lower 3rd percentile, presents an attractive opportunity for investors. The company's market capitalization of around $19.43 billion and a trading volume of 7.17 million shares reflect its significant presence in the market. Despite the challenges posed by regulatory changes and market volatility, DraftKings' strategic position near a bullish trendline and the positive sentiment from analysts like Needham suggest a potential for recovery and growth in the near term.

DraftKings Reports Q4 EPS Beat, Raises Guidance

DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) announced its financial results for the fiscal fourth quarter and adjusted its financial outlook upwards for the year 2024.

The company outperformed with earnings per share (EPS) of $0.29, surpassing the analyst consensus of $0.08. However, its revenue of $1.23 billion was marginally below the anticipated $1.24 billion.

Looking ahead, DraftKings has revised its revenue expectations for the fiscal year 2024 to a range of $4.65 billion to $4.9 billion, compared to the analyst consensus of $4.69 billion. This update marks an increase from the previously forecasted range of $4.50 billion to $4.80 billion.

Furthermore, DraftKings has raised its adjusted EBITDA outlook for 2024 to between $410 million and $510 million, an adjustment from the prior estimate of $350 million to $450 million.

DraftKings Reports Q4 EPS Beat, Raises Guidance

DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) announced its financial results for the fiscal fourth quarter and adjusted its financial outlook upwards for the year 2024.

The company outperformed with earnings per share (EPS) of $0.29, surpassing the analyst consensus of $0.08. However, its revenue of $1.23 billion was marginally below the anticipated $1.24 billion.

Looking ahead, DraftKings has revised its revenue expectations for the fiscal year 2024 to a range of $4.65 billion to $4.9 billion, compared to the analyst consensus of $4.69 billion. This update marks an increase from the previously forecasted range of $4.50 billion to $4.80 billion.

Furthermore, DraftKings has raised its adjusted EBITDA outlook for 2024 to between $410 million and $510 million, an adjustment from the prior estimate of $350 million to $450 million.

DraftKings Upgraded to Buy at Stifel

Stifel analysts upgraded DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) from Hold to Buy, increasing the stock's price target from $40 to $45 per share. The analysts highlighted DraftKings' promising prospects for 2024, suggesting that current short-term challenges are overshadowing the company's positive trajectory this year.

The analysts noted that despite DraftKings' slight pullback from its late-2023 highs, its performance remains closely tied to market shares in state-reported handle/GGR. They observed that from October to December, DraftKings saw a reduction in market share compared to competitors like FanDuel and ESPN Bet.

However, the analysts see an opportunity in this minor correction. They argue that near-term challenges, such as competitive promotions from ESPN Bet and sports seasonality, are diminishing. This shift allows investors to refocus on DraftKings' fundamental strengths, including robust same-state handle growth, structural hold-rate expansion, disciplined marketing and promotions, and fixed cost efficiencies. These factors, the analysts believe, could lead to potential upside beyond DraftKings' already promising EBITDA guidance.

DraftKings Stock Jumps 6% Following Upgrade

MoffettNathanson analysts upgraded DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) from Neutral to Buy rating, boosting their price target from $31 to $37. As a result, shares jumped around 6% intra-day today.

Reflecting on DraftKings' Q4/22 letter, the analysts highlighted CEO Jason Robins' strategy to boost profitability by judiciously reducing expenses yet continuing to invest in the company's long-term strengths.

The analysts commended DraftKings for both cutting costs and surpassing revenue expectations. Additionally, they pointed out that DraftKings is closing its market share gap with U.S. sports betting leader FanDuel and surpassed BetMGM as the top U.S. iGaming entity in the recent quarter.

DraftKings Stock Gains 3% Following JPMorgan Upgrade

DraftKings (NASDAQ:DKNG) shares saw more than 3% increase intra-day today after an upgrade by JPMorgan.

The bank upgraded the company from Neutral to Overweight and raised the price target from $26 to $37, suggesting a potential 35% upside from the previous day's closing price.

The upgrade comes in response to DraftKings' underperformance since July, with a 13% decline compared to a 6% drop in the S&P 500. The analysts are optimistic about the sports betting industry's growth potential, both in existing markets and new markets, amid a trend toward better cost control.

The analysts believe DraftKings has a strong competitive position, including a robust product, scale, and brand, that will enable it to compete effectively against new entrants like ESPNBet and Fanatics.