APPS May 26, 2026

Digital Turbine Q4 2026 Earnings Call - AI-Driven App Growth and International Expansion Fuel Double-Digit Outlook

Summary

Digital Turbine reported a strong finish to fiscal 2026, with full-year revenue rising 15% to $565 million and adjusted EBITDA surging nearly 70% to $122.5 million. The App Growth Platform emerged as the standout segment, jumping 57% year-over-year in the fourth quarter as brands shifted ad spend toward mobile apps. This trend is accelerating, driven by AI lowering barriers to app creation and consumers spending more time in applications rather than on the open web. Management highlighted that first-party data and AI-driven targeting are key to sustaining this momentum, with rates in the AGP business up 40% year-over-year.

Looking ahead, Digital Turbine issued a robust fiscal 2027 outlook, guiding for revenue between $630 million and $650 million and adjusted EBITDA between $135 million and $145 million. The company is capitalizing on international device growth, particularly in Europe and Latin America, and is expanding its Ignite platform to distribute third-party software and AI agents directly to devices. The business model remains insulated from macroeconomic headwinds like tariffs and inflation, as it monetizes digital goods and services in an environment where app usage continues to accelerate. The call also noted a leadership transition, with CFO Stephen Lasher stepping down as Josh Kinsell takes over interim duties.

Key Takeaways

  • Full-year fiscal 2026 revenue reached $565 million, representing 15% year-over-year growth, while adjusted EBITDA surged 69% to $122.5 million, showcasing significant operating leverage.
  • The App Growth Platform (AGP) segment grew 57% year-over-year in the fourth quarter, outpacing global industry growth rates and demonstrating the success of AI-driven targeting and first-party data utilization.
  • On-Device Solutions (ODS) revenue rose 12% to $382 million for the full year, with international device growth exceeding 20% and revenue per device (RPD) expanding over 20% in both U.S. and international markets.
  • Digital Turbine is guiding for fiscal 2027 revenue between $630 million and $650 million, with adjusted EBITDA expected to reach $135 million to $145 million, signaling continued double-digit growth.
  • AI is a primary growth catalyst, with CEO Bill Stone noting that worldwide app releases surged 60% year-over-year in Q1 2026, while open web traffic dropped 10% as consumers shift time toward applications.
  • The company’s brand advertising business grew over 50% year-over-year in the fourth quarter, reflecting a broader migration of advertiser spend from the open web to mobile apps.
  • Digital Turbine’s Ignite platform is expanding beyond its own products to distribute third-party software, including AI agents and e-commerce content, leveraging its access to nearly 3 billion devices.
  • The business model is positioned as resilient against macroeconomic pressures such as tariffs, inflation, and recessions, as it monetizes digital goods and services rather than physical products.
  • Cash operating expenses increased 12% year-over-year to $40.5 million in Q4, reflecting disciplined cost management alongside targeted investments in growth initiatives like AI and data capabilities.
  • CFO Stephen Lasher is stepping down to pursue new opportunities, with Chief Accounting Officer Josh Kinsell assuming interim CFO duties as the company focuses on deleveraging its balance sheet.
  • The App Growth Platform’s revenue per device (RPD) rates jumped 40% year-over-year, directly attributed to improved AI targeting and higher advertiser demand for premium placements.
  • Digital Turbine’s international momentum is being driven by strategic partnerships in Europe and Latin America, including a notable win with Orange, which has more subscribers than AT&T and Verizon combined.
  • The company reported a GAAP net loss of $7.3 million in Q4, but non-GAAP net income was $19.7 million, with non-GAAP gross margin expanding to 50% due to favorable product mix.
  • Total debt decreased to $361 million from $409 million at the start of fiscal 2026, with management committing to further deleveraging using free cash flow in fiscal 2027.
  • Management highlighted that AI automation allowed the company to grow revenue by over $70 million while reducing headcount by 4%, illustrating the operational efficiencies gained from adopting AI-first workflows.
  • The fourth quarter saw a 53% year-over-year increase in adjusted EBITDA to $31.4 million, with margins expanding nearly 500 basis points to 22%, underscoring the scalability of the ad tech platform.

Full Transcript

Nick, Conference Operator: After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star and then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Brian Bartholomew, Senior Vice President of Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Brian Bartholomew, Senior Vice President of Capital Markets, Digital Turbine: Thanks, Nick. Good afternoon and welcome to the Digital Turbine fourth quarter and fiscal year 2026 earnings conference call. Joining me today on the call to discuss our results are CEO Bill Stone and CFO Stephen Lasher. Before we get started, I would like to take this opportunity to remind you that our remarks today will include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are based on our current assumptions, expectations, and beliefs, including projected operating metrics, future products and services, anticipated market demand, and other forward-looking topics. Although we believe that our assumptions are reasonable, they are not guarantees of future performance, and some will inevitably prove to be incorrect. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements.

For a discussion of the risk factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those contemplated by our forward-looking statements, please refer to the documents we file with the Securities and Exchange Commission. During this call, we will discuss certain non-GAAP measures of our performance. Non-GAAP measures are not substitutes for GAAP measures. Please refer to today’s press release for important information about the limitations of using non-GAAP measures, as well as reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial results to the most comparable GAAP measures. Now I’d like to turn the call over to our CEO, Bill Stone.

Bill Stone, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Digital Turbine: Thanks, Brian. Good afternoon, everyone. I want to open my remarks by recognizing our team for delivering another quarter of strong results that exceeded our expectations, both for the March quarter and for the fiscal year. Our current June quarter is off to a positive start and, combined with the broader business momentum, is enabling us to issue an annual outlook for fiscal year 2027, guiding to another year of double-digit top and bottom-line growth. I’m going to break my prepared remarks into four areas. First, we’ll be looking back at our fiscal 2026 results in March. Second will be some commentary on the operational and strategic elements of our business, driving our expectations for continued double-digit growth this fiscal year. Third, I want to provide some commentary on AI and macroeconomic trends in our business. Finally, I wanted to provide an organizational update.

Revenue for fiscal 2026 came in at $565 million, representing 15% year-over-year growth. We also achieved nearly 70% year-over-year growth in adjusted EBITDA during the same period, demonstrating significant operating leverage in the model as we scale. Breaking our results down by segment, our On-Device Solutions or ODS business generated $382 million in revenue in fiscal 2026, up approximately 12% from last year. In particular, it was encouraging to see over 20% growth in global devices for the year. Growth in revenue per device or RPD continues to be the bright spot, with over 20% year-over-year growth in both U.S. and international. Our Application Growth Platform or AGP business was another bright spot for the year, with revenue for the March quarter growing 57% year-over-year and over 20% year-over-year for fiscal 2026.

This compares to a global market that is growing in the high single digits. In other words, our AGP business is growing 2x more than the global industry growth rate. In the quarter, I was particularly pleased with our brand business growing over 50% and our DT Exchange or SSP business growing over 60% year-over-year. The hard work we did over the past few years to stay the course and integrate the legacy tech stacks into a common platform is now paying dividends, and we expect the momentum to continue into the future. There are three key growth drivers powering our improved performance in the March quarter. First was higher advertiser demand, which translated into improving pricing fill rates, particularly for premium placements on our platform.

This strong advertiser demand drove international RPD expansion in our ODS business, resulting in over 40% growth year-over-year. We also had strong demand with our brand and DT Exchange businesses, each growing over 50% in the March quarter compared to the last March quarter. As I’ll discuss later in my remarks on AI, we are seeing brands migrating spend away from the open web to applications as brands and agencies adopt the power of AI. The second driver was increased supply. Our global devices grew more than 20% year-over-year, driven by strong volume from our international partners. In addition, our AGP supply volumes increased impressions by over 15% year-over-year, driven by expanding distribution of our SDK footprint, strong performance in the APAC region, and strong increases in non-gaming inventory.

Finally, we made meaningful progress leveraging first-party data in our AI and ML platform, which is setting the foundation for smarter targeting, higher return on ad spend for advertisers, and improved user experiences are the direct benefits of us better leveraging our data. Specifically, our rates were up 40% year-over-year in our AGP business, which is a direct result of better targeting and AI capabilities as our advertisers are willing to pay more for better outcomes. Looking to the current fiscal year, we’re guiding today for continued double-digit growth both on the top and bottom lines.

The drivers for these growth rates are, first, AI and data. I’ll provide some additional commentary later in my remarks on the macro impact of AI on our business and how leveraging unique first-party data across our platform with DT iQ and Ignite Graph drives better outcomes, which in turn drives more revenue. The second driver is the flywheel. Connecting our diversified demand and supply drives each other. We have nearly 3 billion devices and more than 80,000 applications using our ad tech technology today. The opportunity for these apps to drive more user acquisition to our platform, and hence more monetization, will be a growth driver. The third driver is our brand business. Our brand business showed impressive 50% year-over-year growth. Our focus is leveraging the macro tailwinds of more time being spent in apps, combined with our data and audience targeting capabilities, to drive even more scale and growth.

The fourth driver is our Ignite platform. Our international ODS momentum has been fueled by Latin America and Europe, and the recent wins with partners like Orange, who have more subscribers than AT&T and Verizon combined, should accelerate our momentum in the EU. In addition, our Ignite platform is showcasing there’s more opportunity to not just grow device supply with these new wins, but also leverage the platform capability as a software enabler for distribution of other products on the screens of devices versus just our products today, such as SingleTap, out-of-the-box setups, notifications, and so on. We’re doing this today in the U.S. with an AI-first partner distributing AI agents to devices, we see this expanding into other areas such as e-commerce, lock screens, and other forms of content distribution. The final driver is alternative applications.

We continue to ramp and scale more and more partners distributing their versions of applications, helping them get to devices, whether this is via our data and targeting capabilities, SingleTap, our DSP, and so on. Mainstream partners like King, Zynga, Playtika, and others are customers today leveraging our platform to distribute their own alternative direct-to-consumer billing options to customers. To close out my prepared remarks, I wanted to provide some commentary on the impact of AI and other macroeconomic factors to our business. Regarding AI, it’s clearly transformational and an exciting time and a tailwind for our business. It’s reinventing businesses, including ours, in three main ways. First is the automation and simplification of workflows and processes.

Over the past year, we grew our revenues by more than $70 million. We accomplished this with 4% less headcount as we were able to use AI and automation to drive efficiencies in our business. We have implemented numerous new AI automation and simplification activities and processes from areas such as quality assurance, our back office, campaign management, software development, and data management, just to name a few. We’re seeing an acceleration in these activities as we organize our people, our systems, and our processes for this AI-first world. The second is leveraging AI and our data to improve our outcomes for customers. As you have seen in our recent Google and Databricks press announcements, we’re combining our unique first-party data signals with AI enhancements to drive better outcomes for customers, leveraging our DT iQ and Ignite Graph capabilities.

These will be revenue and EBITDA drivers for us into the future. The third area is how the broader AI landscape will leverage our distribution and on-device footprint and data to help their businesses grow. There are three unique trends that we expect to be tailwinds for us. The first is more applications. According to recent analysis from market intelligence provider Appfigures, worldwide app releases in the first quarter of 2026 were up 60% year-over-year across both the Apple App Store and Google Play. AI makes it easier for anyone to create apps, driving growth in both app stores as creators no longer need technical skills to build mobile software. These applications all need distribution to reach consumers, given the inherent discovery limitations in the two legacy app stores. The second trend is the increase in time spent in applications.

Today, the average consumer is spending five hours per day inside applications, which is up one hour from the past decade. This trend is accelerating as the integration of AI chatbots creates a shift in the channels of how we all consume information, leaning towards apps and away from the open web. Multiple measurement sources have reported that AI has likely caused a 10% drop of open web traffic so far, with some informational categories seeing 20% to 40% declines. The final trend bringing all this together is monetization. For centuries, one trend’s been consistent. Media dollars follow eyeballs, and as our eyeballs continue to spend more and more time in apps because of enabling technologies like AI, which is creating more breadth of apps and more depth of time spent in apps, this is a positive for us.

In addition to AI, I’ve also been receiving many questions on potential macroeconomic impacts to our business. One of my favorite things about our mobile AI cloud business is that we are more insulated than the vast majority of companies to things like tariffs, energy prices, recessions, inflation, any single geography, and so on. Our business is a digital one without the traditional input cost pressures many companies must navigate. Plus, the majority of our customers are using our platform to sell their digital goods and services versus goods that may be more sensitive to these risks. Of course, no single business is 100% insulated from macroeconomics, but as we saw during the pandemic, our business is a resilient one, insulated from these factors given our mobile-first approach matching where consumers are spending their time. Finally, I wanted to provide an organizational update.

Stephen Lasher will be stepping down from his role as CFO and will support a transition in June as he pursues another opportunity outside of DT. One of my favorite expressions is leave it better than you found it, and Stephen embodies this. I want to thank Stephen for his significant contributions, and particularly his leadership in strengthening our balance sheet through the refinancing of our debt, as well as his role driving improved operating and business performance. On a personal level, I’ve enjoyed really getting to know Stephen and look forward to continue keep in touch with him during his next chapter. Josh Kinsell, our Chief Accounting Officer, will assume interim CFO duties. With that, I’ll turn it over to Stephen to take us through the numbers.

Stephen Lasher, Chief Financial Officer (CFO), Digital Turbine: Thank you, Bill, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I turn to our financial results and our outlook for fiscal 2027, I’d like to say a few words about my time at Digital Turbine. As Bill mentioned, I will be leaving the company to pursue another opportunity, and I want to take a moment to reflect on what we’ve accomplished together. I’m exceptionally proud of where Digital Turbine stands today. It is a meaningfully stronger company than the one I joined. The platform’s performance has improved dramatically, and that improvement is now drawing greater spend from advertisers and publishers who are looking for a stronger return on advertising spend. The balance sheet is significantly stronger following an important refinancing and subsequent deleveraging. On a personal note, I’m genuinely enjoyed the camaraderie of this team.

I leave with many valued friendships and colleagues that I will carry with me, and I’m grateful. With that, let me turn to our fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2026 results. Our fourth quarter results reaffirmed the momentum we have been building throughout the year. Starting with the top line, we delivered 20% year-over-year net revenue growth, with total net revenue for the quarter of $142.5 million. On-Device Solutions net revenue was $91 million, up 5% year-over-year, while App Growth Platform net revenue was $52.1 million, up 57% year-over-year. With On-Device, growth was once again driven by our international partnerships, where we expanded both the number of international devices and revenue per device year-over-year. The standout in the quarter was App Growth Platform. The 57% year-over-year growth was the segment’s highest growth rate in more than three years.

These results reflect our strategic focus on better utilizing first-party data and on showcasing our AI-driven capabilities to deliver stronger outcomes for our publishers and advertiser partners. The combination of strong top-line growth and sustained operational execution delivered 53% year-over-year adjusted EBITDA growth in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA totaled $31.4 million, with margin expanding nearly 500 basis points to 22% versus the year ago quarter. Non-GAAP gross margin reached 50% in the quarter, up from 48% in the prior year, driven primarily by favorable product and segment mix. Cash operating expenses were $40.5 million, up 12% year-over-year, reflecting continued expense discipline, streamlined business processes, and targeted investments in our key growth initiatives. We will continue to identify additional efficiency opportunities while making the tactical investments needed to support future growth.

On the bottom line, we reported a GAAP net loss of $7.3 million, or $0.06 per share in the fourth quarter. On a non-GAAP basis, we generated net income of $19.7 million or $0.16 per share based on 122.8 million shares outstanding. Let me comment briefly on the full year. Total net revenue was $565.3 million, up 15% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA was $122.5 million, up 69% year-over-year. GAAP net loss was $37.3 million or $0.33 per share. Non-GAAP net income was $64.9 million or $0.56 per share. Free cash flow was $11.8 million for the year, an improvement of more than $21 million versus the prior year. Moving to the balance sheet.

We ended fiscal 2026 with cash of $38 million and total debt net of issuance costs of $361 million, down from $409 million at the start of the year. The improvement reflects positive cash flow generation supplemented by proceeds from at-the-market offering, which we terminated earlier this year. We are pleased with the progress we have made on the balance sheet in recent quarters, and we intend to continue deploying free cash flow towards further deleveraging in fiscal 2027. Turning now to our fiscal 2027 outlook. Given our stronger than expected fiscal 2026 performance and the continued momentum we are seeing in the June quarter to date, we expect another year of robust revenue and EBITDA growth.

We are introducing fiscal 2027 guidance today with revenue in the range of $630 million-$650 million and adjusted EBITDA in the range of $135 million-$145 million. Let me hand the call back to Nick, our operator, to open the line up for questions. Nick?

Nick, Conference Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. At this time, I’ll pause momentarily to assemble the roster. Please stand by as we poll for questions. Showing no questions, this will conclude our question-and-answer session. I’d like to turn the conference back over to Bill Stone for any closing remarks.

Bill Stone, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Digital Turbine: Yeah, thanks, Nick, and thanks for everybody for joining the call tonight. We look forward to connecting with you in a few months to update you on our fiscal 2027 first quarter earnings call. Have a great night. Thank you.

Nick, Conference Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.