Lightspeed (LSPD) Q4 2026 Earnings Transcript

Source Motley_fool
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

DATE

May 21, 2026

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Dax Dasilva
  • Chief Financial Officer — Asha Bakshani
  • Chief Revenue Officer — Gabriel Benavides
  • Chief Strategy and Transformation Officer — Leslie Martin
  • Chief Technology Officer — Bhawna Singh
  • Head of Investor Relations — Gus Papageorgiou

Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email pr@fool.com

RISKS

  • Bakshani said, "We delivered negative adjusted free cash flow in the quarter of $13 million due almost entirely to timing of working capital."
  • Bakshani noted, "we are not happy with the level of discounting that we saw in the last couple of quarters, and we are implementing and have already actually implemented measures that we expect will improve those margins in F '27."
  • Company guidance incorporated the impact from Upserve divestiture, lowering fiscal 2028 gross profit expectations to $665 million-$685 million and adjusted free cash flow to $95 million from previous targets of $700 million and $100 million, respectively.
  • Bakshani acknowledged, "Our guide takes into account the factors that are in our control, which means that if the macro continues strong, that will land well for us. And if it doesn't, we're confident that we're going to hit those numbers in the guide."

TAKEAWAYS

  • Total revenue -- $291 million for the quarter, up 15% year over year, exceeding prior outlook.
  • Gross profit -- $129 million, up 15% year over year, with margins expanding to 44% from the same period last year.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $15 million in the quarter, up 17% year over year; $72.5 million for the fiscal year, a 35% annual increase.
  • Growth engines revenue -- 24% year-over-year increase, now representing approximately 75% of total revenue after Upserve divestment, compared to 67% previously.
  • Growth engines GTV and locations -- GTV up 19%, customer locations up 11%, with three thousand two hundred net new locations added in the quarter.
  • Gross margin -- Company-wide margin of 44% for the quarter, targeting a 43%-46% range going forward, reflecting guidance after Upserve divestiture.
  • Software revenue -- $93.3 million for the quarter, up 6% overall and 9% within growth engines; software ARPU in growth engines rose 4% year over year.
  • Transaction-based revenue -- $185.3 million, up 17% year over year; transaction-based gross margin reached 31%, up from 29% last year.
  • GPV and payment penetration -- GPV up 22% year over year; payment penetration reached 42% company-wide and 46% within growth engines, compared to 37% and 41%, respectively, a year ago.
  • Capital revenue -- Expanded 73% year over year; merchant cash advances outstanding grew 12%, with the payback period declining 13% to seven months.
  • Adjusted free cash flow -- Positive $18.2 million for the fiscal year; negative $13 million in the quarter due primarily to working capital timing.
  • Cash position -- $454 million in cash at quarter end, following $86 million in share repurchases over the past twelve months.
  • Share count -- Shares outstanding decreased 6% year over year, reflecting board-approved repurchases of up to an additional eight and a half million shares (approximately 10% of public float).
  • Fiscal 2027 guidance -- Total revenue expected between $1.225 billion and $1.265 billion (12%-15% organic growth); gross profit between $565 million and $585 million (12%-16% organic growth); adjusted EBITDA of $75 million to $95 million.
  • Q1 2027 guidance -- Revenue forecasted at $305 million to $350 million (10%-14% organic growth); gross profit between $136 million and $141 million; adjusted EBITDA of $15 million to $20 million.
  • AI and product innovation metrics -- Approximately 30% of restaurant customers adopted Lightspeed Pulse; over twenty thousand reservations processed via Lightspeed Reservations; retail insights usage increased by three times; AI now resolves more than 80% of support tickets, driving operational efficiencies.

SUMMARY

Lightspeed Commerce (NYSE:LSPD) reported double-digit year-over-year growth in revenue, gross profit, and adjusted EBITDA, driven by focused execution in its North American retail and European hospitality segments. Payment penetration increased to 42% company-wide and 46% in growth engines, supporting an improved transaction-based gross profit margin of 31%. Product innovation accelerated, with AI-powered features increasing operational efficiency and more than 80% of support tickets now resolved by AI. The Upserve divestiture has refocused the business, lifting growth engines to 75% of total revenue and tightening alignment with stated strategic priorities. Fiscal year-end cash reserves stand at $454 million, and share count declined 6% after sustained buyback activity.

  • Management reiterated three-year CAGR targets for gross profit (15%-18%) and growth engine metrics, adjusting fiscal 2028 outlooks solely to reflect the Upserve sale.
  • Growth in net new customer locations within growth engines accelerated for the fourth consecutive quarter, reaching 11% year over year and setting a trend for further expansion.
  • Annual contracts have become a greater focus, contributing to higher-quality merchants with lower churn, but moderating near-term software revenue growth due to upfront discounts.
  • AI-driven cost efficiencies led to improved software gross margins, temporarily reaching 87% for the quarter due to a nonrecurring rebate, but normalized closer to 82% by management's estimate.
  • Lightspeed Capital grew rapidly, with a planned pace of "35-plus percent growth" in fiscal 2027 balanced against a stated priority of maintaining default rates in the low single digits.
  • Company's largest variable cash use, outside of shareholder returns, will be expanding the merchant cash advance program, now at $118 million in outstanding balances.
  • Leadership hires in revenue, technology, and strategy functions position the firm for continued execution on stated product and market ambitions without major large-scale acquisitions in the near term.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • GTV (Gross Transaction Value): The total value of all transactions processed via Lightspeed’s platforms during a specified period.
  • GPV (Gross Payment Volume): The subset of GTV processed directly through Lightspeed Payments.
  • Payment penetration: The proportion of payment volume managed directly by Lightspeed Payments compared to total GTV.
  • Growth engines: High-priority segments—retail in North America and hospitality in Europe—targeted for leading growth at Lightspeed.
  • Adjusted EBITDA: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, adjusted for non-core or non-cash items, as defined by management.
  • ARPU (Average Revenue Per User): Monthly average revenue collected per active customer location on the platform.
  • MCAs (Merchant Cash Advances): Short-term, high-margin financing provided by Lightspeed to merchants, repayable as a percentage of daily sales.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Dax Dasilva: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Fiscal 2026 was a pivotal year for Lightspeed. We pursued a disciplined strategy and focused our organization on the two areas where we have a proven right to win, retail in North America and hospitality in Europe. Results today show unequivocally, the strategy is working. Lightspeed delivered revenue and gross profit growth ahead of expectations and gained momentum in the crucial areas, customer location and GTV growth. In Q4, we delivered another strong quarter with total revenue of $291 million and gross profit of $129 million, both up 15% year-over-year and coming in ahead of our previously established outlook. Adjusted EBITDA of $15 million was up 17% year-over-year.

Our performance was bolstered by the strength of our growth engines, where we saw total revenue up 24%, GTV up 19% and locations up 11%. After the divestment of Upserve, our growth engines now comprise approximately 75% of total revenues, and we expect them to grow towards 80% during the course of fiscal 2027. Our accomplishments for fiscal 2026 were on track to meet the 3-year targets we initially presented at our Capital Markets Day in March of last year. In the first year of our transformation, we delivered the following results relative to our CMD commitments. Gross profit growth of 17% versus a target 3-year CAGR of 15% to 18%.

The gross margin of 43% versus a target gross margin of 42% to 45%. Adjusted EBITDA growth of 35%, in line with our target 3-year CAGR. 24% gross profit growth in our growth engines versus a target 3-year CAGR of 20% to 25% and 11% customer location growth within our growth engines versus a target 3-year CAGR of 10% to 15%. Underpinning these targets are 3 priorities that will drive long-term value at Lightspeed. These are: one, growing customer locations in our growth engines; two, expanding subscription ARPU; and three, improving adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow. In Q4, we continue to make solid progress. Let me start with customer location in our growth engines.

We added approximately 3,200 net new locations in the quarter, growing 11% year-over-year. Q4 marks the fourth quarter in a row where customer location growth has accelerated. Total customer locations, including growth and efficiency markets, grew to 150,000. We were very proud to welcome a host of new customers. Within retail, we added the luxury lifestyle brand, AERIN, with locations in New York and Palm Beach. We also added Oshima Surf & Skate, a multi-location Hawaii-based retailer and an avid user of Lightspeed wholesale. Lightspeed Wholesale connects retailers using our Lightspeed retail POS to brands using our NuORDER by Lightspeed platform.

With this integration, retailers can discover and order over 5 million products from over 4,000 brands all on one platform. In this quarter, we continue to add world-class wholesale brands such as Sorel, Nixon, Proenza Schouler and BBC International footwear to the Lightspeed wholesale ecosystem. Within Golf, we added RedWater Golf, which utilizes our specialized tools across 8 courses and 5 indoor simulators in Michigan. In European Hospitality, we are becoming the standard for full-service dining. We added 19 locations with Gaucho, the iconic Argentinian steakhouse chain across the U.K. [indiscernible] in London has also joined us to manage its complex 3-in-1 restaurant concept. And we added [indiscernible], the highly acclaimed modern Turkish restaurants in Berlin.

Turning to software revenue and ARPU. We continue to innovate across our flagship platforms of Lightspeed Retail and Lightspeed Restaurants, which is key for long-term software ARPU growth. Within Lightspeed wholesale, we launched an integration with Faire, a B2B marketplace that will give Lightspeed retailers direct access to over 100,000 lifestyle, home decor, apparel and jewelry brands. Also within Lightspeed Wholesale, we launched AI-driven brand recommendations in our recently released marketplace, which services personalized brand suggestions based on the buyer's profile expanding discovery and opening new revenue opportunities for brands on Lightspeed Marketplace. We also launched our AI-powered OCR tool that automates the tedious task of product data entry helping merchants onboard new inventory, reduce stock discrepancies and improve accuracy.

Within Lightspeed restaurant, we released AI menu imports, which significantly reduces the setup time for new restaurants by allowing business owners to easily digitize and upload venues using photos, online documents or even sketch notes. And the new promotion engine within Order Anywhere, our take-out and delivery offering with buy one get one free functionality, enabling restaurants to create time-limited offers to drive order volume and repeat visits. We also saw strong adoption of our more recent product launches. Almost 30% of our restaurant customers adopted Lightspeed Pulse, which provides live data on restaurant operations right to your mobile device. Since it's recent release, over 20,000 reservations were made using Lightspeed reservations.

Approximately 20% of our target restaurant locations have now adopted Lightspeed Restaurant AI and the number of customers using retail insights has increased over 3x year-over-year. We add popular features to our top-tier plans that help drive higher software ARPU. I am very proud of the innovations that have come out of our product teams this year, particularly around AI. Customers are using our AI agents to drive more productivity out of the Lightspeed platform by delivering tangible results such as getting started faster with seamless onboarding, curating which products to carry an inventory, building an online showroom or receiving on-the-fly reporting and insights to better understand business trends and opportunities.

AI gives Lightspeed the capacity to deliver real product differentiation and sustainable competitive advantage. Every restaurant or retailer has a context and a complexity that is unique to their business. AI helps them solve problems that were previously too tough or too expensive to address. But in order to do so, requires deep native foundational data to solve complex issues such as wholesale buying inventory management, omnichannel selling and business operations. We are in a very unique and advantageous position because we have the data derived from billions of dollars in transactions to build AI agents that can solve for these complex issues at scale.

That secure, [ fiscalized ] and proprietary data, stating wholesale, the merchant and the consumer comes from businesses that operate in physical spaces and use Lightspeed POS solutions that integrate physical hardware and complex workflows seamlessly as their system of record. These businesses were engaged and onboarded by a scaled go-to-market motion specifically crafted to make them successful on our platform. No one is better positioned to deliver AI-backed solutions that can help our customers run and grow their businesses. In the end, our SMB and mid-market merchants priority is to build better businesses, not build their own software. Now turning to profitability. In fiscal 2026, we achieved a landmark accomplishment as a company.

For the full fiscal year, our operations generated $18 million in adjusted free cash flow, a milestone that underscores our commitment to profitable growth. I think this accomplishment is even more impressive when you consider that we did this while meaningfully scaling the business in our focus areas and launching a series of new product innovations, demonstrating our capacity for disciplined investment that results in enhanced financial performance. I also want to take a minute to highlight the changes we have made to our executive leadership within Lightspeed to drive the next phase of growth. Gabriel Benavides joined us as Chief Revenue Officer.

Gabe brings a wealth of experience in scaling global sales organizations and will be instrumental in refining our go-to-market productivity. We have also appointed Leslie Martin as our new Chief Strategy and Transformation Officer. Leslie joined us from Boston Consulting Group with 18 years of experience advising on strategy, operational transformation and performance improvement. And finally, we recently welcomed Bhawna Singh as our Chief Technology Officer. Bhawna is a veteran technology executive with over 25 years of experience in scaling global engineering organizations and leading platform transformations at major firms like [indiscernible] and Okta, where she pioneered AI adoption within the organization. She specializes in aligning technical strategy with business growth.

I look forward to working with our entire executive team as we continue executing in fiscal '27 and beyond. At the beginning of this fiscal year, we launched a corporate transformation aimed at sharpening our focus, improving our execution and delivering results. We laid out our clear 3-year growth targets for locations, gross profit and adjusted EBITDA. In fiscal 2026, we delivered against these goals on all fronts, and we are entering fiscal 2027 with growing momentum. With that, I will pass it over to Asha.

Asha Bakshani: Thanks, Dax, and good morning, everyone. As you've seen in our results today, fiscal 2026 was a defining year for Lightspeed. By focusing the business on our highest conviction growth opportunities, we delivered strong performance across GTV, location growth, payments penetration, profitability and cash flow. After the close of our fiscal year, we accelerated our transformation by divesting the Upserve U.S. hospitality product line. The transaction has made Lightspeed a more streamlined company with our operations now even more tightly aligned to our growth engine. After the divestiture of Upserve, our growth engine where we are highly focused now accounts for approximately 75% of our total revenue versus approximately 67% in fiscal 2026.

We are now a more focused, more scalable and more efficient business. Before I review the financials, I want to highlight the two key trends we experienced in fiscal 2026. First, our strategy to focus on our growth engines, retail customers in North America and hospitality customers in Europe is clearly working. These are regions characterized by tight product market fit, strong close rates and a proven right to win. Our results for the year clearly demonstrate this momentum.

Within our growth engines in fiscal 2026, we saw total revenue grow 24%, software revenue grow 15%, GTV increased 15%, Payment penetration reached 46%, up from 41% last year and we added approximately 9,400 net customer locations for the year, driving an 11% year-over-year increase in ending location counts. And importantly, we are still early in monetization, which gives us a long runway ahead. Second, thanks to our disciplined execution, we're seeing the model become more predictable, more profitable and more scalable for the full fiscal year across the company. We saw gross margin expand to 43% up more than 100 basis points from fiscal 2025.

Adjusted EBITDA grew 35% to $72.5 million, positive adjusted free cash flow of $18.2 million and payment penetration increased to 42% from 37% a year ago. I will now discuss the quarter in more detail and then provide our outlook for Q1 and fiscal 2027. Total revenue grew 15% to $290.8 million, exceeding our outlook driven by an expanding location count, higher software ARPU and increased year-over-year payment penetration. Notably, we achieved 24% revenue growth within our growth engine. Software revenue for the quarter was $93.3 million, up 6% year-over-year and up 9% within our growth engine with softer ARPU rising 4% year-over-year.

As anticipated, software revenue growth moderated from the first half of the year due to lapping last year's price increases and our continued focus on annual contracts. Annual contracts result in modest upfront discount but attract higher-quality merchants with lower churn and higher lifetime value. This reflects a deliberate shift toward higher quality revenue and long-term value creation. Transaction-based revenue for the quarter was $185.3 million, up 17% year-over-year. GPV grew 22% year-over-year. GPV as a percentage of GTV came in at 42%, up from 38% in the same quarter last year.

Capital revenue grew 73% year-over-year, while merchant cash advances outstanding grew a more modest 12% year-over-year, thanks to a payback period that declined to 7 months, a 13% improvement over last year. Overall, Q4 GTV grew 11% to $22.9 million, and total average GTV per location continued to increase as we signed more higher-value customers. Same-store sales were up in both retail and hospitality and across all of our main geographies. Within our growth engine, GTV grew 19%. Total monthly ARPU reached approximately $602, up 10% year-over-year, driven by both higher software and payments monetization. With respect to our efficiency markets, overall revenue in Q4 was essentially flat year-over-year.

When we adjust for the sale of Upserve, Q4 revenue was up modestly. Payment penetration in our efficiency markets increased to 36% in the quarter from 33% in the same quarter last year, but remains below the overall business, giving us plenty of room to further increase payments revenue. Turning now to profitability and operating leverage. Total gross profit for the quarter was strong, growing 15% year-over-year, in line with revenue growth of 15%, driven by strong top line performance and expanding gross margins in both subscription and transaction-based revenues. Total gross margins for the quarter were 44% [indiscernible] to last year, even with transaction-based revenue increasing to 64% of total revenue from 62% last year.

For the quarter, we delivered strong software margins of 87% up from 81% a year ago. Software gross margins benefited from a nonrecurring rebate from a cloud provider. Normalized software gross margins would have been more in line with the first 3 quarters of the year at approximately 82%. This improvement was largely driven by increased cost efficiency consolidating our cloud vendors to renegotiate better terms and using AI to dramatically reduce the cost of support and service delivery. AI now resolves over 80% of our support tickets. This is not theoretical. It is already embedded in our cost structure to date, and we're only just getting started. Gross margins for transaction-based revenue were 31%, up from 29% last year.

This improvement reflects increased payment penetration in our international markets, where margins exceed those in North America as well as growth in our Lightspeed Capital revenue. As we convert customers to Lightspeed payments, we increased our overall net gross profit dollars. And in the quarter, we saw transaction-based gross profit grew 26% year-over-year. Total adjusted R&D, sales and marketing and G&A expenses grew 15% year-over-year. This was primarily driven by meaningful investments in field and outbound sales as well as product innovation within our growth engine. In Q4, we made a conscious decision to pull forward additional hiring for our outbound team.

And as we move into fiscal 2027, we will leverage the investments made last year by deploying AI solutions to further enhance productivity across both R&D and sales and marketing. Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter came in at $15.1 million, increasing 17% from $12.9 million in Q4 last year. This was driven by continued success from our strategic shift and our focus on AI and automation to accelerate operating efficiency. As a percentage of gross profit, adjusted EBITDA was 12%. This level of profitability enables us to continue investing in our growth engines, while maintaining strong capital discipline, including funding product innovation, scaling outbound sales and supporting our capital return priority.

For the year, we generated positive adjusted free cash flow of $18.2 million. We delivered negative adjusted free cash flow in the quarter of $13 million due almost entirely to timing of working capital. We continue to actively manage our share-based compensation and related payroll taxes, which were $11 million for the quarter versus $11.8 million in the prior year quarter, slightly declining as a percentage of revenue compared to Q4 last year. Turning now to capital allocation and our balance sheet. Our balance sheet remains exceptionally healthy. We ended Q4 with approximately $454 million in cash. Approximately $200 million remains under our broader Board authorization to repurchase up to 400 million in Lightspeed share.

Lightspeed's board has approved the renewal of our normal course issuer bid for the repurchase of an additional 8.5 million shares, representing approximately 10% of the public float. Total shares outstanding in the quarter were down 6% versus the same quarter last year due primarily to the $86 million in shares repurchased and canceled over the last 12-month period. Aside from potential buyback, our largest use of cash will be growing our merchant cash advance program. There were $118 million in MCAs outstanding at year-end and we intend to continue growing this high-margin program over time. With respect to M&A, we remain opportunistic in evaluating small tuck-in acquisitions to help accelerate product development.

However, large-scale acquisitions are not a strategic priority for us. Our balance sheet remains healthy and positions us well as we continue executing against our strategic focus. Looking ahead to fiscal 2027. Divesting Upserve allows us to better focus on our growth engines, expand our gross margin and has relatively minor impact on adjusted EBITDA. This is structural improvement in the business, not short-term optimization. Before turning to our fiscal 2027 outlook, please note that the only update we are making to our 3-year target is to incorporate the divestiture of Upserve. You can refer to the outlook section of our press release for more details.

On a consolidated basis, we expect our 3-year fiscal '25 to fiscal '28 gross profit CAGR of 15% to 18% to remain intact, but we will report numbers excluding Upserve for comparability going forward. With the Upserve divestiture, we expect total gross profit of approximately $665 million to $685 million in fiscal 2028 versus our initial guide of $700 million before the divestiture. Excluding Upserve from historical financials results in a target gross profit CAGR between fiscal 2025 and fiscal 2028 of 16% to 17%. We also expect gross margins to now be in the range of 43% to 46% and an improvement from our original estimate of 42% to 45%.

We expect adjusted EBITDA to be approximately 20% of gross profit by fiscal 2028. Excluding Upserve from historical financials results in an adjusted EBITDA CAGR between fiscal '25 and fiscal '28 of over 50% versus the 35% we presented at Capital Markets Day. In terms of free cash flow for fiscal 2028, we now expect adjusted free cash flow of approximately $95 million, a slight decrease from our original outlook of $100 million. Again, due to the divestiture of Upserve. Our outlook for our growth engines does not change.

We continue to expect gross profit to grow at a 3-year CAGR between fiscal '25 and fiscal '28 of 20% to 25% and locations to grow at a 3-year CAGR of 10% to 15%. Now turning to fiscal 2027 outlook. For the full fiscal 2027 year, we expect total revenue of $1.225 billion to $1.265 billion, representing organic growth of 12% to 15%. Total gross profit of $565 million to $585 million, representing organic growth of 12% to 16%. And adjusted EBITDA of $75 million to $95 million. For Q1 of fiscal 2027, we expect total revenue of $305 million to $350 million representing organic growth of 10% to 14%.

Total gross profit of $136 million to $141 million, representing organic growth of 10% to 14% and adjusted EBITDA of $15 million to $20 million. With that, we will now take your questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Dan Perlin with RBC Capital Markets.

Daniel Perlin: Asha, if you could just maybe talk a little bit about the cadence of revenue growth throughout the year. Obviously, the 1Q guide kind of points to an organic growth of 10% to 14% and the full year is 12% to 15%. So there's an accelerant there. And I'm just wondering what those key drivers are going to be?

Asha Bakshani: Yes. Thanks for the question, Dan. You're absolutely right. When you think about the revenue growth, we are expecting uplift as we move throughout the year. There's quite a bit of work that we continue to put into growing the growth engines retail in North America and hospitality in Europe. You've heard about all the product releases Dax talked about as well. So that coming to fruition throughout the quarter should drive top line growth, continued payments penetration as well. So all the things that you've seen from us as before, baked into the accelerating growth as we move into the quarters of fiscal '27 and into '28.

Daniel Perlin: Okay. And then just quickly as a follow-up on Lightspeed Capital. I mean it was up 73% this quarter, so it's clearly growing very quickly. You talked about using some of the proceeds from Upserve to maybe accelerate that growth. I'm just wondering how much are you thinking about pointing towards Lightspeed Capital? And how should we be thinking about potential acceleration there?

Asha Bakshani: Yes. Thanks for the question. We expect Capital to continue to accelerate into fiscal '27. We do need to keep in mind that Upserve was an entity that was heavy on usage of Lightspeed Capital. But when we look at the growth of Lightspeed Capital on a pro forma basis, we still see about 35-plus percent growth in that business. What we have to keep in mind at the end of the day, Dan, is we want to make sure that our default rates remain in the low single digits.

We've done a really good job at accelerating ROI on Lightspeed Capital, reducing the [ months ] payback with which we get repaid, and that's resulted in very low default rates, the lowest we've seen in the industry, to be honest. So what's important to us is to grow this business prudently and we expect to continue to do that with some nice 35-plus percent growth in fiscal '27.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Kevin Krishnaratne with Scotiabank.

Kevin Krishnaratne: First, just a question on the growth engine net adds. Good to see the acceleration. I think you mentioned 4 quarters in a row there. I'm wondering if there's any difference that you'd want to call out between what you're seeing in North America retail and European hospitality? And do we expect another quarter of acceleration in the coming quarter?

Dax Dasilva: Yes. Thanks for the question. Yes, we're obviously super pleased with the acceleration in location growth from 5% to 7% to 9% to now 11% growth, 3,200 locations in Q4. We have doubled down on our growth strategies and our growth engines, outbound sales. Field motions in Europe, we're seeing a lot of new customers come on board in Europe through the field motions. We're also really excited about the progress we've made with the new order-led outbound motions that are outbound remote. So in call centers, but doing outbound for retail. That's -- it's grown from a nascent motion. So that's one that has a large contribution now on the retail side. So very enthusiastic about that.

We are projecting that both of those motions will continue to bear fruit and become even more efficient and more productive throughout the year. I would think about growth in FY '27 as staying in that 10% to 15% CAGR and yes, continuing on this path [ through ] in this range.

Kevin Krishnaratne: Still on the growth engine, but specifically the software growth, I think you saw the 9% this quarter, it was 13% in the previous quarter. One, was that within your expectations? And just broadly, how do we think about software growth trends in 2027?

Dax Dasilva: Yes. So software grew 6% year-over-year this quarter, 8% for the year. In the growth engines, it was, I think it was 15% for the full year. Yes, we are really focused on building up the software business, the software growth in the growth engines is a strong point, but we're -- we brought on Gabe as our new CRO, we're really building out the capability in our cross-sell, upsell and account management as well as new business growth has always been very strong. That's supported by a lot of the product innovation that you're seeing. There's a strong cadence of product release velocity, a lot of innovation on AI.

We published some adoption stats in -- along with we shared those in the script, and that was -- I think that's really landing with customers. So we're seeing that -- the outcome of that and the location growth, but we'll also see that in software growth through the year. We're also really looking doubling down on the partner and channel strategies. We have a great partner channel, great channel strategy, but we're going to be putting even more effort into that as the year goes on.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley.

Josh Baer: One topic, a couple of parts to it, on the divestiture. I thought it was interesting. Not that you'd potentially sell like U.S. hospitality or rest of world retail assets, but that you were able to package Upserve just given timing of the deal. So I guess I'm wondering, first, are there any acquired companies from that 2018 to 2020 that still operate under the legacy brand and operations and not integrated Lightspeed? And then second, was there any potential for this deal to be expanded to broader U.S. hospitality? And then just last, like running through some of the acquisitions, it seems like [indiscernible] are all in the growth engines.

If you could just correct me if I'm off there. But then I'm wondering, if there's parts of ShopKeep as far as U.S. restaurants and Vend, which had a large retail presence in Asia and Europe, which could potentially be divested?

Dax Dasilva: Yes. Then, of course, is our -- the foundation of our flagship X Series in retail. So that's a core part of our strategy. It's sold, of course, in our growth engines, and we also sell it in the international efficiency markets as well. We're always looking -- evaluating all options for future divestitures through that lens of creating long-term shareholder value. So Upserve, I think, was a great [ accounting participant ] divestiture. We're not focused on U.S. hospitality. And so that made a lot of sense that they can grow that business.

The new buyer has a lot more -- able to give it the focus, whereas for us, our priority is European hospitality where we are a clear leader.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Martin Toner with ATB Cormark Capital Markets.

Martin Toner: Just looking at the '25 to 2028 targets. Can you kind of walk us through the change to 20% growth in gross profit? Is it just a function of the divestiture? And can you kind of talk about how location growth being stronger helps you guys meet those goals?

Asha Bakshani: Yes. Thanks for the question, Martin. Yes, all of the Capital Markets Day guide adjustments we made are solely to take into account the divestiture. So the 20% of gross profit target that we outlined for adjusted EBITDA is only simply factored to remove the gross profit and the EBITDA contribution of Upserve. So that's totally accurate.

Martin Toner: When I look at that location growth in the quarter, it makes your 2027 rev target based on the organic growth look kind of conservative. Can you guys talk a little bit about that? And if you agree, it's conservative, why were you conservative?

Asha Bakshani: Yes. There are several factors at play here, Martin. The -- as you heard from us in our prepared remarks, the macro was strong in fiscal '26 both from a same-store sales perspective and from an FX perspective. And EMEA hospitality specifically, we have a pretty thriving business there. Our guide takes into account the factors that are in our control, which means that if the macro continues strong, that will land well for us. And if it doesn't, we're confident that we're going to hit those numbers in the guide. I think that's really the main factor that's causing a slight discrepancy in what you're looking at.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Tien-Tsin Huang with JPMorgan.

Tien-Tsin Huang: I wanted to ask two questions. First on go-to-market and quota-carrying salespeople. Just curious if there's been any change in your growth plan on head count on go-to-market and if you're seeing any changes in ROI there? Then I have a follow-up.

Asha Bakshani: Tien-Tsin, thanks for the question. We're continuing to double down on growth in our growth engines in Retail North America, hospitality in Europe. Outbound is a big part of that strategy as we open new markets we're looking to grow our head count in those markets. We are very, very prudent on the metrics that we track, however, to ensure salesperson effectiveness so that we can ensure profitable growth, and you see that in the growth in EBITDA. Some of the key metrics we track from a sales perspective are per seller productivity quota achievement, cap, payback, all the things that you would imagine. We even look at customer outreach volume, demos, booked leads, disposition.

And we have seen a swift impact from the launch of these outbound motions in our growth markets. And where that seller effectiveness is going super well, we will double down and pivot from areas where they're less effective. We're definitely optimizing these motions as part of the foundation for sustainable growth.

Tien-Tsin Huang: Okay. Great. Perfect. And then maybe for Dax just thinking about product road map and velocity. I'm curious with all this AI stuff changing and definitely seems like a bigger focus on product velocity, especially from the larger incumbent processors. Has that changed your strategy in any way? I'm curious just to hear you if -- on big picture product road map, product velocity and where you're focused.

Dax Dasilva: Yes. If you look at the products released this quarter, almost all of them are AI-powered. Lightspeed AI has been a really big launch for us across retail and hospitality, we're seeing great adoption. We're starting to really double down on building the agentic workflows, particularly as we build out wholesale buying within new order within the wholesale platform. We brought on Bhawna Singh as our new CTO. She's built -- done incredible agentic work at Okta and is going to be working with John Shapiro, to really build out that AI road map.

I think the reality is that the complex SMBs and mid-market merchants that we serve, they have laborious tedious workflows that require a lot of time, a lot of staff like wholesale buying, we're sitting with customers now, watching them in their buying processes. It can be well served by agents that we're doing, offering them options for assortment for negotiation for all the different aspects that are -- that require all of the data that Lightspeed brings together, all the foundational data across wholesale, the merchant and the consumer. We have a view across all of that, which is very, very unique in the market since we have all those components.

With the wholesale platform with the retail POS platform and with all of the consumer payments piece. And so we can bring that together in a unique way and craft a workflow that benefits from the visibility across all of that proprietary and unique data. and in addition, provide value back to the brands that are fueling all that wholesale buying. So yes, I think we're really excited, and I think that we're in a really unique position to be able to build really, really differentiated agentic workflows on retail and as well on hospitality. We've got a really unique network. We're the number -- we're the leading player for full-service hospitality in Europe.

And so therefore, tools like benchmark and trends where we really draw upon that density we have per city to be able to benchmark and offer restaurants insights into what's trending at restaurants and what time of days to offer different kinds of items and when to staff, we can do that because of the density of restaurants that we have and all that data. So all of these elements offer us a very -- a lot of exciting possibilities for road map that's driven by AI.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Matt Bullock with Bank of America.

Matthew Bullock: Great to see the continued acceleration of core location growth. it sounds like we can expect that to be in the 10% to 15% range for the year. But given the pull forward in some of the outbound hiring, I was hoping you could provide some color on the expected glide path of year-over-year growth for core location. Should we expect that to level out throughout the back half of the year? Or how should we think about it?

Dax Dasilva: So there's certainly -- it's -- like I said earlier, we're going to stay within that 10% to 15%. I'm really proud that we -- that's a 3-year CAGR, 10% to 15%. We reached that within year 1 of the transformation. So this is going well for Lightspeed. And just spoke about some of the product things that we're releasing. We have a compelling platform for folks in our growth engines. So that, I think is, for us, a lot of wind in our sales. So what I will say though is that as we go through the quarters of next year, there is seasonality. So the number of locations will fluctuate.

There's definitely some stronger quarters in the raw location number. But the percentage, the growth rate will we're expecting it to stay within the 10% to 15%.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Richard Tse with National Bank Capital Markets.

Richard Tse: Yes. Good work on the locations here. I was wondering if you could maybe help us understand what the mix of those wins from let's say, new logos versus expansions or anything related to sort of price, just to give us a sense of what that would be?

Dax Dasilva: So as I was saying earlier, new business is a very, very strong point for the company. We're bringing a lot of new logos. We shared some of them in the earlier remarks. Of course, a lot of our customers are multi-location. And so it's restaurants adding additional locations, it's retail stores, adding additional locations. But I believe the vast majority of locations is coming from new business, new logos.

Richard Tse: Okay. And then with respect to sort of the outbound, I think last quarter, you had like 150 reps. As you sort of look at these new wins relative to the installed base, how is that sort of LTV to CAC trending kind of in contrast? Like are you seeing increasing efficiencies by the numbers you're putting up here? Or maybe give us some sense of how that's playing out.

Asha Bakshani: Richard, thanks for the question. As I said earlier, we do track LTV to CAC very closely. And as you would expect, our outbound motion drives better LTV to CAC than any other motion inside the company. if you think of feet on the street, an outbound rep is walking into a restaurant, and choosing the restaurant, based on the lifetime value or the GTV of that restaurant. And so definitely the best motion from an LTV to CAC perspective. So we're really happy with the progress we're seeing there. And in Europe, hospitality in particular, where feet on the street is popular, we are entering new cities, et cetera, with that motion.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Harte with BTIG.

Andrew Harte: Asha, could you just kind of get the latest thoughts on payment penetration? Just thinking about where it can get to this year and longer term. I know in the past, there's been some contractual hold-ups on the ability for people to take Lightspeed payments. So I would just like to hear where you see opportunities to continue pushing the payments penetration number higher.

Asha Bakshani: Thanks for the question, Andrew. Yes, payment penetration increased to 42% in Q4, up from 38% a year ago. For the full year, payment penetration was in the 42% range versus 37% the year before. Something to keep in mind is that once we remove Upserve, which we did divest at the beginning of this quarter, payment penetration is slightly under 40% for the company, still 46% in the growth engines. So when we think of opportunity, there's opportunity everywhere, still a ways to go which is we expect quite a nice uplift in payments revenue from that opportunity. When I think about the efficiency portfolio or the rest of the world portfolio, that's where the biggest opportunity lies.

The payment penetration is lower than the growth portfolio. And so when we think about things like the [ nonsolicit, et cetera ], that we've been talking about, we're seeing a lot of those things come up to the end of their contracts and are ripe for the taking from a payments perspective. We're undertaking several efforts in fiscal '27 to convert both the back book and continuing to add new locations on payments. Going after the back book more aggressively. We've taken care of a lot of the friction points that merchants had in the past through product enhancement. So we're really confident that we're going to move the needle on that in the coming quarters and years.

Andrew Harte: And then Dax, following up on some of the questions earlier about bringing AI to your customers. I guess, can you just talk a bit about what the appetite of these SMBs are to add AI? Are they curious to do it themselves? Or do they want to look to you as their POS provider to integrate around that? And then if you could also talk about like is there any ROI or tangible evidence or return you can point us to of why they want to be adopting it? And then how do you plan to really think about monetizing it longer term as well?

Dax Dasilva: Yes. I think it's -- because we house all that proprietary data, we can give insights that other AI tools wouldn't be able to. And it's not just that we have visibility into their retail POS data, we have also all that data from the wholesale buying piece with the brands as well as all the payments transactions and then we have comparative data with all the other merchants that are similar or in other verticals or geographically. So we can do -- we can provide a lot more insight than a general AI tool can, it's looking at general information out in the Internet. So we can provide compelling reasons to want to use AI.

And I think what we're seeing is -- I'll just give you one example, we've seen a threefold increase in the use of our insights tools, which we're now extending with AI and people are starting to use reporting in a very different way and access those insights in a very different way. They can do that in a natural language way.

So if they're a newer business owner or they don't know how to ask for -- or they don't know how to look for a type of report, they can ask that in a natural language way, and we can create a visualization for them that's exactly what they had in mind as opposed to knowing how to navigate a reporting product or knowing how to build a customer report. So it really goes from maybe an administrator being able -- having to navigate that or knowing how to do that to more actionable insights being at everybody who has the permissions to query the system and get immediate results, maybe there's an immediate action that needs to be taken.

Maybe their stock that needs to be bought in a timely way for which they might need to initiate a conversation with our capital department to bring that stock in right away. So I think it's going to allow businesses to become a lot more competitive because they've got the insights at their fingertips and then they've got access to everything on the platform like capital, so they can order inventory that's being recommended to them because they can be that much more profitable.

So I think that we're going to see the activation of a lot of the elements of the product suite that come from the fact that people are using reporting and insights in a whole different way and it's allowing them to do all new things at their business or generate a lot of new ideas on how to generate revenue. And remember, we are -- of course, we're going to be able to sell upgraded plans that include more and more AI-driven features. But if any of these new functionalities generate more income and more revenue for the business, we are an outcomes-based business.

We generate more revenue for these businesses, and they generate more payments volume and potentially more capital volume. So there's a lot of discussion about the new model for software is going to be outcomes-based for us. We are an outcomes-based business. 70% of our revenue is payments, payments and financial services. So we drive more success for our customers through AI-driven tools and will drive more payments revenue.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of [ Sagar Kar ] with BMO Capital Markets.

Unknown Analyst: This is Sagar on behalf of Thanos. My first question is for your wins in the growth markets for situations where you are displacing legacy or other modern solutions. What are some of the top reasons you heard why merchants are picking Lightspeed over other options? Is it pricing? Is it features, better support and all of the above? Maybe if you could speak to that, please?

Dax Dasilva: I think it's all of the above. You've got legacy systems where it's very hard to manage multiple locations. That's a basic benefit of the cloud. But now when you think about the AI era in an era where a lot of the value of the business is driven through data, which relates to my last answer around how important it is for that foundational data in your core platform or your operating platform, your system of record, to be able to provide you value to be able to give you the ability to drive your business to the next level. No business wants to lose that competitive advantage that they're seeing other businesses enjoy, right?

And so -- and that's how we think about how we want to build new modules and new functionality into Lightspeed is accelerating different revenue opportunities for these businesses. It's a competitive economy. It's got all kinds of challenges around cost. And if they don't have a platform where their data is actually benefiting them to be able to navigate that and also generate opportunity then the system is just merely recording transactions. It's just a cash register replacement. And that's not what Lightspeed is. We're a high-powered light ERP for these businesses to be able to accelerate.

And so that's -- that matches the ambition of the customers that we're talking to and that's the whole rationale for everything that we do.

Unknown Analyst: Perfect. That's great. And just switching to a question that's maybe a bit topical for the coming months. With the World Cup coming up, how are you thinking that may impact your hospitality GTV for the summer months? And just generally, how is the health of your end markets?

Dax Dasilva: Sorry, the World Cup in L.A.?

Unknown Analyst: Yes. Like -- so if you have a lot of the European crowd coming over to North America, how will you think that may impact your hospitality [ GTV ] in Europe?

Dax Dasilva: Yes. Listen, European hospitality has had a lot -- several really great seasons since COVID. We've seen -- it's a major, major tourist destination for the world. I mean it's -- there's a lot of commentary that there's too many tourists in Europe. And I think we have a very, very privileged position that one of the main -- one of the main reasons to go to Europe is to eat at some of the best places in the world. Some of the best Michelin star restaurants. And these are on Lightspeed. These restaurants and resorts are by and large on our platform.

And I don't think that this is going to be a disappointing summer in terms of those restaurants doing -- those hospitality business doing very, very well.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of [ Lemar Clark ] with Freedom Capital Markets.

Unknown Analyst: Some of your competitors have called low pressured margins from rising memory costs and broader tariff exposure. And you've been in this negative 70% hardware gross profit margins in the last 2 quarters versus negative 50% or so on average in previous quarter. So maybe provide some color on the negative drivers there? Is this a deliberate loss [indiscernible] strategy tied to payments [ attach ] or tariffs compressed in that line? And if so, could you quantify the headwind to margins?

Asha Bakshani: Thanks for the question. We have not actually seen a big impact inside our business from a tariff perspective. The negative margins are really due to discounts and incentives that we provide to encourage new business just given the competitive nature of our industry and also the payment terminals that we provide to assist customers in transitioning to our unified payments and POS offering. So it's quite normal for hardware to be generally discounted to facilitate the adoption of our other revenue streams.

But having said that, we are not happy with the level of discounting that we saw in the last couple of quarters. and we are implementing and have already actually implemented measures that we expect will improve those margins in F '27, but no real impact felt inside the company from a tariff perspective.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Suthan Sukumar with Stifel.

Suthan Sukumar: For the first one, I wanted to touch on new order. I believe you mentioned some progress on the outbound side of that business. But it does feel like there are a number of early day levers here with this opportunity. Can you speak a little bit about what your priorities are for investment this year? And how should we think about impact and contribution from new order over fiscal '27?

Dax Dasilva: Yes. The new order effort is really firing on all fronts. If you looked at some of the product announcements that were in this quarter, integrating FAIRE, bringing 100,000 new brands to the new -- to the platform, millions of products as well as AI-driven recommendations. The outbound has just been a star. I think we talked about last quarter how we were pulling but you're pulling some dollars from this quarter into last to [ higher ahead ] for those retail outbound folks. They're highly efficient.

They're calling some of the leads provided from some of the brands, new brands that we're signing, like [indiscernible], and we've signed a number of great new brands this quarter like Sorel and Nixon. So a lot of amazing progress, and I think that we really believe in that outbound model for retail. And yes, I think that we'll continue to monitor it, continue to monitor all the metrics and all the seller metrics around it. And I think that we'll continue to grow this team and grow investment in that new order-led outbound motion.

Suthan Sukumar: And just on the growth engines, it looks like you guys are hitting your stride there with the improving organic growth visibility. How do you look at market expansion overall from that lens? Do you see opportunity to expand into net new deals and verticals over time?

Asha Bakshani: Yes, absolutely. Our growth engine growth, honestly, is what we're seeing is structural. It's not cyclical. We had revenue growth of 24% in the growth engines for both the quarter and the year. And we're really excited about the traction we're seeing there in both of those markets, [indiscernible] retail and European hospitality. We have strong product market fit, the highest close rates across the company and increasing attach of both payments and capital. So lots of opportunity, like I said in the prepared remarks, we're still early in monetization, and we expect that we're going to continue to take advantage of that TAM. And yes, we are growing -- opening a couple of new [ geos ] this year.

Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes our Q&A session. I will now turn the call back over to Gus for closing remarks.

Gus Papageorgiou: Great. Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We will be around all day if anyone has any follow-up questions. And we look forward to speaking to everyone on our next call when we report our fiscal Q1. Have a great day, everyone.

Operator: This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect your lines.

Should you buy stock in Lightspeed Commerce right now?

Before you buy stock in Lightspeed Commerce, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Lightspeed Commerce wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $475,063!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,369,991!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 996% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 208% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of May 21, 2026.

This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. Parts of this article were created using Large Language Models (LLMs) based on The Motley Fool's insights and investing approach. It has been reviewed by our AI quality control systems. Since LLMs cannot (currently) own stocks, it has no positions in any of the stocks mentioned. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.

The Motley Fool recommends Lightspeed Commerce. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Pundit Predicts What Will Happen To XRP When Exchanges Run Out Of SupplyXRP’s supply mechanism is one of the most controversial talking points in the crypto market. XRP exchange reserves have been falling for months, and the on-chain numbers are glaring. Now, a crypto
Author  NewsBTC
15 hours ago
XRP’s supply mechanism is one of the most controversial talking points in the crypto market. XRP exchange reserves have been falling for months, and the on-chain numbers are glaring. Now, a crypto
placeholder
Trump administration weighs AI model reviews as tech giants race to ship fasterThe Trump administration is looking at a new order that would let US security agencies check powerful AI models before companies put them out for the public. The plan came up in a White House briefing led by the Office of the National Cyber Director. The meeting included OpenAI, Anthropic, and Reflection AI, all private...
Author  Cryptopolitan
15 hours ago
The Trump administration is looking at a new order that would let US security agencies check powerful AI models before companies put them out for the public. The plan came up in a White House briefing led by the Office of the National Cyber Director. The meeting included OpenAI, Anthropic, and Reflection AI, all private...
placeholder
Why Strategy’s record accumulation isn’t saving BTC’s price?Strategy Inc. now holds more Bitcoin than any other institution, but Bitcoin prices have still fallen to a three-week low. The company bought 171,238 BTC this year, far more than the roughly 62,000 BTC mined globally during the same period. Strategy is buying Bitcoin nearly three times faster than miners can produce it, yet prices...
Author  Cryptopolitan
15 hours ago
Strategy Inc. now holds more Bitcoin than any other institution, but Bitcoin prices have still fallen to a three-week low. The company bought 171,238 BTC this year, far more than the roughly 62,000 BTC mined globally during the same period. Strategy is buying Bitcoin nearly three times faster than miners can produce it, yet prices...
placeholder
Gold Price Risks 6% Drop as Smart Money Quietly Sells the TopGold price sits at $4,491 below most of its short-term moving averages, with commercial hedgers stacking shorts at the top while speculators add longs.The breakdown sits inside a five-month falling ch
Author  Beincrypto
15 hours ago
Gold price sits at $4,491 below most of its short-term moving averages, with commercial hedgers stacking shorts at the top while speculators add longs.The breakdown sits inside a five-month falling ch
placeholder
Nvidia Shares Gain as Chipmaker Tops Estimates on 85% AI Revenue SurgeNvidia delivered another blockbuster quarter, beating Wall Street estimates on revenue, earnings, and data center growth as global demand for AI infrastructure accelerated.The chipmaker’s results rein
Author  Beincrypto
15 hours ago
Nvidia delivered another blockbuster quarter, beating Wall Street estimates on revenue, earnings, and data center growth as global demand for AI infrastructure accelerated.The chipmaker’s results rein
goTop
quote