ZDGE March 12, 2026

Zedge Q2 2026 Earnings Call - Strong Monetization Drives Record Revenue; DataSeeds Early, Emojipedia Impaired

Summary

Zedge reported a beat on monetization in Q2, posting $8.3 million in revenue, driven by advertising optimization, record subscription growth and a big lift in average revenue per monthly active user. Management is explicitly leaning into higher-value users rather than chasing MAU, and that strategy shows up in ARPM rising 47.6%, Marketplace revenue up over 21% year over year, and Zedge Premium GTV up 15.7%.

At the same time the company is juggling a two-speed story. DataSeeds.AI is the growth narrative, but it is still nascent and lumpy, with minimal revenue this quarter and attractive but variable margins depending on deal type. Management is investing deliberately, building an outbound pipeline, an off-the-shelf catalog, and production capacity. Offsetting optimism, Zedge took a $3.7 million noncash impairment on Emojipedia, paused SynCat, and continues to operate GuruShots conservatively. Cash is solid at $19.1 million with no debt, adjusted EBITDA turned positive at $1.1 million, and the company is paying a dividend while retaining a modest buyback capacity.

Key Takeaways

  • Total revenue $8.3 million, up 18.3% year over year in Q2, Zedge’s seasonally strongest quarter.
  • Zedge Marketplace revenue grew over 21% year over year, fueled by advertising optimization and subscription growth.
  • Advertising revenue up 18.3% for the quarter, though Emojipedia was a significant drag on ad revenue.
  • Zedge Plus subscription revenue rose 33% year over year, net active subscribers grew 49% to nearly 1.2 million.
  • Average revenue per monthly active user (ARPM) increased 47.6%, signaling a shift to higher-value users rather than chasing MAU growth.
  • Zedge Premium GTV rose 15.7% year over year, and deferred revenue reached $6.0 million, up 39% year over year.
  • DataSeeds.AI remains early stage, with minimal revenue this quarter, lumpy near-term results, but management reports attractive margins and growing inbound interest.
  • Management is building DataSeeds deliberately: focusing on outbound pipeline, qualifying inbound, creating an off-the-shelf catalog, and expanding a vetted production cloud.
  • Two new alpha product launches bring the innovation pipeline to four of six planned this fiscal year; SynCat failed to meet KPIs and has been shelved.
  • Emojipedia faced structural search headwinds, resulting in a $3.7 million noncash impairment this quarter; the asset remains profitable but restructured.
  • GuruShots is stabilizing after last year’s restructuring, and most current digital goods and services revenue still comes from GuruShots.
  • Cost of revenue rose to 6.8% of revenue from 6.4% last year, impacted by reduced Google Cloud partner discounts and new Tapedeck licensing and DataSeeds production costs.
  • SG&A fell about 6% to $6.7 million, reflecting restructuring savings offset by investments in DataSeeds and Tapedeck.
  • GAAP loss from operations was $2.9 million; GAAP net loss $2.3 million, or $0.18 per share. On a non-GAAP basis, net income was $0.8 million with EPS $0.06.
  • Adjusted EBITDA improved to $1.1 million versus negative $0.1 million last year. Cash ended the quarter at $19.1 million with zero debt; free cash flow was $0.8 million.
  • Company is returning capital: paying a new quarterly dividend and repurchasing shares opportunistically, with roughly $500,000 of buyback authorization remaining.
  • Tapedeck KPIs are trending positively; management is shifting product effort toward expanding the music catalog and discovery to drive adoption.
  • Management called out a one-time $450,000 ad integration bonus in last year’s Q3 that will not recur this year, a reminder to expect some comparability noise going into Q3.

Full Transcript

Conference Operator, Call Operator: Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Zedge’s Earnings Conference Call for the second fiscal quarter of 2026. During management’s prepared remarks, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today’s presentation by Zedge’s management, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, please press star then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star two. I will now turn the call over to Mr. Brian Siegel. Sir, the floor is yours.

Brian Siegel, Investor Relations / Legal Counsel, Zedge: Thank you, operator. During today’s call, Jonathan Reich, Zedge’s Chief Executive Officer, and Yi Tsai, Zedge’s Chief Financial Officer, will discuss Zedge’s financial and operational results that were reported today. Any forward-looking statements made during this conference call during the prepared remarks or in the question and answer session, whether general or specific in nature, are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results in the future to differ materially from those discussed on today’s calls. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, specific risks and uncertainties disclosed in Zedge’s periodic SEC filings. Zedge assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements or to update the factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those that they forecast.

Please note that our earnings release is available on the investor relations page of the Zedge website and has also been filed on Form 8-K with the SEC. Finally, on this call, we will use non-GAAP measures. Examples include non-GAAP EPS, non-GAAP net income and adjusted EBITDA. Please see our earnings release for an explanation of our use of these non-GAAP measures. Now I would like to turn the call over to Jonathan.

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Thank you, Brian, and good afternoon, everyone. Let me start with what stood out to me this quarter. The quality of our monetization continues to improve and this is leading to record results. We achieved record levels of revenue and average revenue per monthly active user in our seasonally strongest quarter, driven by continued advertising optimization, record active subscription numbers and record Zedge Premium GTV. What that tells me is that the investments we have made in optimizing our ad inventory and subscription offerings continue to pay off. Although MAU contraction remains, we are focused on acquiring higher value users and monetizing our audience more effectively. That makes the core marketplace more resilient and durable. Turning to innovation, starting with DataSeeds.AI. It remains early and we are excited about this market and its incredible growth potential.

The appetite for AI training data is virtually insatiable, and we are productizing offerings we believe can meet the needs of model builders and doing so intelligently and cost-effectively. This is in contrast to the many venture-funded startups in this market, many of which are overcapitalized and burning money like there is no tomorrow. Data is the fuel that powers AI models, and we do not believe this is a bubble. Our challenge is in making the right bets, continuing to grow our library of relevant content, and executing well in a rapidly developing market. We’re witnessing continued inbound interest and have started building an outbound pipeline. Some of our customers have returned, placing new, larger orders after proving that we were able to meet their highly discerning needs with high-quality outcomes. Enterprise customers tend to scale relationships over time based on consistent and reliable performance.

Our operational focus is on building a high-quality outbound pipeline and on better qualifying inbound requests. Not every opportunity converts and not every deal is feasible. Being selective, focusing on those needs that we can meet, and executing well on the opportunities we pursue is critical to building long-term credibility in the enterprise market. In addition, we are building an off-the-shelf or OTS catalog to drive down cost and accelerate order delivery. Our production cloud is growing as well with a set of vetted production teams that we can call on to create data sets as needed. Revenue remains lumpy at this stage, but engagement trends are encouraging. Our priority is building the infrastructure, supply depth, and operational rigor required to support larger, more consistent opportunities over time without getting too far ahead of ourselves and hurting profitability. Our innovation team is humming.

We recently launched two more alpha products, bringing us halfway toward our goal of introducing up to six this fiscal year. As expected, not every initiative will make the cut, but we learn from each new launch. SynCat, our first release under the Product Innovation Team framework, did not deliver the KPIs we were shooting for, and we are ceasing development of this product. Our framework is simple. Pre-qualify, develop rapidly, test quickly, measure objectively, and invest in the winners. Adopting this operating mentality is challenging and requires great discipline and the ability to avoid getting attached to a product because of personal affinities. Turning to Emojipedia, we continue to face structural headwinds tied to the evolving field of search. We recorded a non-cash impairment this quarter to reflect the likely impact of these changes.

The business remains profitable and the cost structure, which had always been efficient, is aligned accordingly. GuruShots appears to be stabilizing and is being operated conservatively following last year’s restructuring as we evaluate longer-term options. From a capital allocation standpoint, we generated solid free cash flow even after investing in DataSeeds, Tapedeck, and other innovation priorities. Cash strengthened to $19.1 million with zero debt. Our free cash flow yield remains in the double digits, and we are now paying a quarterly dividend while continuing to invest in innovation and repurchasing shares when the market conditions are right. Stepping back, our priorities are straightforward. Strengthen monetization in the marketplace, build DataSeeds deliberately, and expand our innovation pipeline in a disciplined way. We believe that balance positions us well for the remainder of fiscal 2026. With that, I’ll turn it over to Yi.

Yi Tsai, Chief Financial Officer, Zedge: Thank you, Jonathan. Total revenue for the second quarter was $8.3 million, up 18.3% from last year. Remember, historically, Q2 is our seasonally strongest quarter due to the holidays. There are a couple of items of note in the quarter’s results. First, Zedge Marketplace revenue was up over 21% year-over-year, driven by strong advertising, CPMs, and subscription revenue. Consistent with Jonathan’s comments earlier and on our last call, Emojipedia was a significant drag on top-line growth. When combined with year-over-year declines at GuruShots were a material drag on our overall revenue growth rate. That said, GuruShots continues to stabilize on a sequential basis. Advertising revenue was up 18.3% for the quarter, as strong growth in the Zedge Marketplace was offset by lower ad revenue at Emojipedia.

Zedge Plus subscription revenue increased 33% year-over-year, and our net active subscriber base grew 49%, reaching nearly 1.2 million subscribers. We continue to optimize our subscription plans and are seeing the benefits of those changes. Deferred revenue, which primarily represents subscription-related revenue, reached $6 million, up 5% sequentially and 39% year-over-year. This is an important metric as it reflects future revenue that essentially carries a 100% gross margin. Zedge Premium GTV was up 15.7% from the year-ago quarter, and ARPM increased 47.6%, continuing the shift toward higher-value users and improved monetization efficiency.

This quarter, note that our digital goods and services revenue includes contributions from both GuruShots and DataSeeds.AI, with a vast majority being generated by GuruShots at this stage, as we recognize minimal DataSeeds.AI revenue in the quarter. We expect to see DataSeeds.AI increase its contribution in the second half of fiscal 2026. Cost of revenue was 6.8% of revenue, which was up from 6.4% last year due to the reduction in partner discounts from Google Cloud Platform, as well as the introduction of Tapedeck licensing fees and DataSeeds.AI production costs. SG&A decreased about 6% to $6.7 million for the quarter. This reflects the net savings from our restructuring, partially offset by investment in ramping DataSeeds.AI and Tapedeck.

GAAP loss from operations was $2.9 million, compared to a loss of $2.2 million last year. This quarter, we took a $3.7 million asset impairment charge related to Emojipedia, while last year we had $1.3 million in restructuring charges. GAAP net loss and loss per share were $2.3 million and $0.18, compared to a loss of $1.7 million and a loss per share of $0.12 last year. On a non-GAAP basis, net income was $0.8 million and EPS was $0.06, compared to a loss of $0.2 million and a loss per share of $0.01 last year. Cash flow from operation was $0.9 million, and free cash flow was $0.8 million for the quarter.

Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $1.1 million versus negative $0.1 million last year.

From a liquidity perspective, we ended the quarter with $19.1 million in cash and cash equivalents and no debt. In addition to our dividend payouts, we still have about $500,000 available under our current buyback authorization. I want to point out one item as we look to our Q3. Last year, we had a one-time benefit to revenue of $450,000 related to an integration bonus from an ad partner that will not repeat this year. Thank you for listening to our second quarter earnings call. We look forward to updating you again soon when we report results for the third quarter of fiscal 2026. Operator, please open the line for questions.

Conference Operator, Call Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press Star, then one on your touch-tone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. To withdraw your question, please press star two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Thank you. Our first question is coming from Allen Klee with Maxim Group LLC. Your line is live.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Yes. Hi. Nice quarter. For DataSeeds, could you kind of walk us through how you think about I know you’re building a pipeline, but as you get these, how long do you think it takes to be able to deliver on a win? How is this considered, you know, how you think about it from a margin perspective, potentially at when it scales? Anything else related to the pipeline and the size of orders that might be in the pipeline. Thank you.

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Hi, Allen. Thank you. A couple of different observations about DataSeeds.AI. As we’ve said in the past, DataSeeds.AI is a B2B offering. From what we’ve seen, the progression of a deal depends on how well a proof of concept goes. If we deliver well according to spec in the time frames that we are given, the customer has interest in coming back to us. The growth of those deals is very much dependent on what the customer needs, whether it’s a custom-made deal, whether it’s an off-the-shelf deal. We are still in the midst of refining that process to make sure that we are investing our resources in the right area with the right data, with the right prospects, and so on and so forth. In terms of margins, thus far the margins have been attractive.

We do have target margins, but margins are also dependent on what type of deal it is. Off-the-shelf will command a lower margin than custom-made by and large. Pardon me. Depending on whether or not there is a middleman, meaning a marketplace that’s involved, that also impacts margin. These are all variables that are being considered by us as we further invest in expanding this business.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Okay. Last quarter, I think you’ve mentioned. This makes perfect sense for you guys on photos with your having GuruShots. You also, I think, mentioned you might be looking at other type of data. How are you thinking about that now?

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Yes, we are focusing on multimodal data. That can be images, audio, and/or video. We are focused on each of those verticals in terms of actual data. The typical entry point is based upon our reputation and business in the image space. We’ve already completed one proof of concept on the video side, and we’re speaking to several prospects about some audio work.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: That’s great. On your alpha product launches, you mentioned you’d launched two more to get to four out of six. Is there anything you can comment on the two new ones?

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: The two new ones literally are fresh out of the starting gate. What I can comment on thematically is these are being built off of foundation that continues to evolve such that we can build things in a much more modular fashion, allowing us to accelerate and get stuff out the door sooner rather than later. We also are expanding and monetizing not only through subscription, which was SynCat related, but also through advertising. The refinement that we have in terms of even selecting what to produce next is continuing to improve.

We’ve run fake door tests against the cohort of different ideas that we have researched through using various industry tools, measuring where is there traction in the market sizing, and then taking a look at things like conversion rates, cost per acquisition, among other KPIs. After we’ve analyzed that data across a cohort of different ideas, we will select two winners, and then we start the development process. The goal is ultimately to have a foundation which allows for very fast turnaround so that we can build in a modular fashion, as opposed to having to start from scratch every time we go out with a new app.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Right. You’re still seeing good momentum on subscription revenues. Is anything different in what’s driving that or kind of the same trends?

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Yeah. What’s driving it is really our ongoing investment in optimizing our subscription offering and trying to find those pockets of prospective subscribers that will be attracted to what we have to offer.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Okay. In terms of Zedge Marketplace, that’s also doing very well. Talk a little bit about kind of what’s been driving that.

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Well, it goes without saying, you know, our fiscal Q2 overlaps with year-end advertising spend.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Right.

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Pardon me. Furthermore, we’ve been doing a lot of work on the data science side in order to better segment users and optimize their performance from a monetization perspective.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Okay. In terms of, like, your active users, what’s your strategy there on trying to increase that?

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Sure. We’ve got three tracks underway. Number one is marketing. Trying new marketing mechanisms that we’ve not used in the past. Let’s just say influencer marketing. Number two is we’re testing new product features and capabilities that will draw back users on a daily basis. Just by way of example, we’re gonna be testing the notion of offering alarms such that you can wake up in the morning to an alarm. A user would need to interact with the app in order to turn the alarm off. Product features. The third is that we’ve got a data science project that we’ve initiated to help us better isolate prospective new users that we can bring into the app based upon the wonders of data science.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Okay. That’s great. I’m sorry. I forget. The marketplace where you’re offering independent music makers to where they can get the royalties, could you talk a little bit about how that’s progressing?

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Sure. First of all, as an aside, there was a really fantastic article that came out in Billboard magazine over the course of the last couple of days, featuring Tapedeck and really touting the value that Tapedeck brings to the world of indie music. In terms of the actual product itself, the KPIs are trending in the right direction. We are slowing down in terms of ongoing product development and focusing our efforts more closely on expanding our music catalog. The need to find and build a music catalog that will be attractive to users, that is material in size, provides variety, and exposes users that are, you know, hyper fans to their respective indie musicians is table stakes for the success of that business.

That is where we’re shifting our focus to because most of the product needs are completed, at least for this phase of the rollout.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: To what extent is discovery important for the success of this? As maybe people don’t know the particular artist that. If they can find he or her, you know, might get excited and do it. How do you engage that? How do you think about that?

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Discovery is obviously important. If one opens up the Tapedeck app, they can search for their artist who will come back. If their artist isn’t there, it will recommend alternative artists, genres, and so on and so forth that align to that style. What we’ve also started to do is to work directly with artists that are within Tapedeck in terms of promoting the app to their fan base.

Allen Klee, Analyst, Maxim Group LLC: Great. Okay. Sounds good. Thank you so much.

Jonathan Reich, Chief Executive Officer, Zedge: Thank you.

Conference Operator, Call Operator: Thank you. As a reminder, ladies and gentlemen, if you have any questions, please press star one on your keypads. Thank you. As we have no further questions, this will conclude our question and answer session and our conference call. We thank you for attending today’s presentation, and you may now disconnect.