Ellie Mae Posts Strong Growth, Raises Guidance

Image source: Getty Images

Obtaining a mortgage can be a complicated and confusing process, and new financial regulations that have been added in the wake of the housing crisis have only made the process more difficult. That backdrop has greatly benefited mortgage-software specialistEllie Mae(NYSE: ELLI)as financial institutions of all sizes have been rapidly adopting the company's Encompass platform to help them remain compliant and automate as much of the arduous application process as possible.

Ellie Mae has been gaining share in this industry for years, which has turbo-charged the company's revenue and earning growth. That fact has caught the attention of growth investors who have piled in to the company's stock and pushed its P/E ratio into the stratosphere. That puts Ellie Mae under a lot of pressure to keep performing at a high level.

Thankfully, the company once again knocked the cover off the ball when it reported its second-quarter earnings, proving that its growth story is far from over.

Let's take a closer look at how Ellie Mae performed during the period and see what management had to say about its prospects moving forward.

Elli Mae Q2: The raw numbers

Metric

Q2 2016

Q2 2015

Change

Revenue

$90.1 million

$65.9 million

37%

Adjusted EBITDA

$30.9 million

$22.6 million

37%

Adjusted Net Income

$20.1 million

$14.9 million

35%

Adjusted EPS

$0.64

$0.48

33%

Data source: Ellie Mae

Every metric that growth investors pay attention to headed in the right direction this quarter. The results even managed to bestWall Street's bullish expectations.

The company booked 13,000 new Encompass seats during the quarter, raising the total number of active users by 21% to 153,334. Better yet, each of those users is engaging with the company's software more frequently, which caused revenue per active user to rise by 14% over the year-ago period, coming in at $601.

The combination of more users and higher spending per user cause Ellie Mae's top-line to soar, growing by 37% during the quarter. Ellie Mae was also successful at translating that higher revenue into growth on the bottom line, too. Adjusted net income and adjusted EPS -- which adds back in stock-based compensation expenses and amortization of intangible assets -- rose by 35%and 33%, respectively.

Jonathan Corr, Ellie Mae's CEO, expressed his pleasure for the company's results and issues a bullish outlook, stating:

Looking ahead

On Ellie Mae's earnings call CEO Corr had a lot of positive things to say about the company's pipeline of deals, noting "We continue to see demand from a broad array of financial institutions across each of our segments, including mid-market and large enterprise and really feel great about our pipeline going forward."

That strong pipeline caused management to feel good about the company's prospects in the third-quarter. Revenue is projected to land between $90.0 million to $92.0 million, and adjusted net income is expected to be between $17.7 million to $18.9 million, or $0.56 to $0.59 per share. Those numbers indicate that the company's fast growth will continue, and they are also nicely above the $87 million in revenue and $0.56 in EPS that industry watchers were expecting.

The company's strong second-quarter results and upbeat third-quarter outlook have given management enough confidence to raise full-year guidance.

Here's an updated look at how Ellie Mae believes the rest of 2016 will play out:

Metric

New 2016 Guidance

Prior 2016 Guidance

Revenue

$338 million to $341 million

$325 million to $329 million

Adjusted EBITDA

$99 million to $103 million

$93 million to $97.5 million

Adjusted Net Income

$63.5 million to $66 million

$58.4 million to $61.4 million

EPS

$2.00 to $2.06

$1.84 to $1.92

Data source: Ellie Mae.

And yet, despite posting great results and issuing a bullish outlook, the company's shares are actually falling more than 5% in early morning trading. Perhaps that reaction shouldn't be all that surprising considering that shares are up more than 54% since the start of the year, vastly outperforming the markets.

Still, Ellie Mae continues to prove that its Encompass system is a hit, and the company's recurring revenue business model is very attractive. While shares are still being priced for continued prosperity, long-term investors might want to take a closer look at this pullback to see ifEllie Mae's stock deserves a place in their portfolio.

A secret billion-dollar stock opportunity The world's biggest tech company forgot to show you something, but a few Wall Street analysts and the Fool didn't miss a beat: There's a small company that's powering their brand-new gadgets and the coming revolution in technology. And we think its stock price has nearly unlimited room to run for early in-the-know investors! To be one of them, just click here.

Brian Feroldi owns shares of Ellie Mae.Like this article? Follow him onTwitter where he goes by the handle@Longtermmindsetor connect with him on LinkedIn to see more articles like this.

The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Ellie Mae. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.