Dojo reports a strong 2023, maiden operating profit and debt refinancing

Paymentsense, parent company of the Dojo brand which has taken the UK market by storm, has reported its first operating profit and refinanced its debt mountain with a new facility which does not expire until 2030.

Paymentsense is the brainchild of two low-profile serial entrepreneurs –  Juan Farrarons and George Karibian. The duo intend to keep their foot on the gas, saying “the investors in the business continue to prioritise long term growth over short term profit.” 

According to documents filed at Companies House by Typhoon Noteco, the ultimate UK holding company of Paymentsense and Dojo, payment volume for the year to March 2024 rose 29% to £43bn, continuing the astonishing growth witnessed since 2021.  The number of transactions processed was up 32% at 2.2bn with ATV falling 2% to £19.24. This mirrors a consistent trend across the market as low ticket transactions continue to move from cash to cards. 

Revenue rose 37% to £409m. The overall take rate increased 6bps to 0.96% and revenue per transaction was up 3% at 9.8p. 

Paymentsense cleverly built the Dojo brand around the PAX A920. Other providers can re-sell PAX devices but only Paymentsense sells Dojo. In just a few years, the eye-catching white terminals have become ubiquitous on Britain’s high streets. Initially, known for its keen pricing and generous contract-buyouts, Dojo has begun to increase prices and the service, based on a branded PAX A920, is no longer cheap. Standard pricing is £30/month for a terminal (rental + “platform fee”) + 5p per transaction + 0.75% debit or 1.2% credit for processing.

Dojo has made a push into integrated payments in partnership with software vendors (ISVs) and claims 400 ePOS partners. This brings a better quality of merchant – higher transaction volumes and less likely to churn. And the customers seem happy. In this case study, a small restaurant chain reduced till discrepancies by 90%, saving 10 hours of admin per week. 

The combination of price increases and ISV distribution is making Dojo’s underlying metrics look very good indeed. Although Dojo only grew customer locations by 3% to 150K, volume per location was up 25% at £284K and revenue per location up 34% at £2,700.

Total gross profit rose 36% to £218m.

In advance of the refinancing, management took steps to reduce costs saying that the business has “undergone a restructuring process…. streamlining various business units, optimising the organisational hierarchy and reallocating resources to key growth areas.”

30% of the sales team was axed although with additional recruitment in back-office functions total staff numbers rose from 960 to 1136. Employee costs were up 17% to £83m at an average of £73K each.. 

Management continues to invest in scaling the “cloud native next generation card acquiring Dojo platform” which it hopes will allow the business to expand into larger merchant segments as well as new territories. The business says that becoming an acquirer was a critical support for its growth strategy. Paymentsense has now received an e-money license for Ireland which it uses for a new Dojo business recently launched in Spain. Paymentsense believes that the hospitality-heavy Spanish payment market is ripe for a modern restaurant-focused payment proposition.

There is an intriguing subplot revolving around the company’s swanky central London office in the Brunel Building at Paddington, a location shared with the Premier League. Management reported £6.8m of property income generated by subletting unused floors of the Brunel building but has now committed to staying in the Brunel and leasing additional space. Before this decision, Paymentsense looked seriously at moving to the nearby Paddington Cube and is in dispute with its prospective landlord. The case will go to trial in 2025 although these matters are normally settled out of court.

Adjusted EBITDA rose from £69m to £94m with margin held steady at 23%. 

Net debt rose £98m to £596m requiring interest payments of £91m, up from £62m in 2022. Paymentsense will need to maintain its fast pace of growth to support the higher interest payments associated with its new, long term debt. Total debt is equivalent to 6x EBITDA, still chunky, but down from 7x EBITDA in 2023.

Paymentsense made an operating profit for the first time of £32m, a very welcome milestone but not yet enough to cover the increasing cost of servicing its expanding mountain of debt. The business remains loss making at a pre-tax level although deficit was cut to £59m in 2023 from £141m the previous year. Accumulated losses now stand at an eyewatering £644m. Paymentsense has consumed a remarkable amount of capital.

Nevertheless, with its debt refinanced, management will be delighted with the 2023 results. All UK metrics are looking positive and the business is getting good at converting additional payment volume into profits. Continued growth in the UK will be challenging as Dojo maintains its higher price points and new entrants such as Shift4, Toast and a revitalised Global Payments compete for SME POS payments. Much may be riding on the Spanish expansion.

1 thought on “Dojo reports a strong 2023, maiden operating profit and debt refinancing”

  1. […] Dojo, a fast-growing London-HQ’d acquirer has also been taking large chunks out of Barclaycard’s SME customer base. Processed volume has grown from £10bn to £40bn in just three years. Dojo has reported its first operating profit although the bottom line is still weighed down by a mountain of debt.  More details on the Business of Payments blog. […]

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