Block, Inc (NYSE: SQ) Q1 2023 Earnings Call dated May. 04, 2023
Corporate Participants:
Nikhil Dixit — Head of Investor Relations
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Analysts:
Tien-Tsin Huang — JPMorgan Chase & Co — Analyst
Timothy Edward Chiodo — Credit Suisse AG — Analyst
Unidentified Participant — — Analyst
Lisa Ann Dejong Ellis — MoffettNathanson LLC — Analyst
Darrin David Peller — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Harshita Rawat — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC. — Analyst
Ramsey Clark El-Assal — Barclays Bank PLC — Analyst
Michael Ng — Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. — Analyst
Trevor Ellis Williams — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Block First Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. I would now like to turn the call over to your host, Nikhil Dixit, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Nikhil Dixit — Head of Investor Relations
Hi, everyone. Thanks for joining our first quarter 2023 earnings call. We have Jack and Amrita with us today. We will begin this call with some short remarks before opening the call directly to your questions. During Q&A, we will take questions from our customers in addition to questions from conference call participants.
We would also like to remind everyone that we will be making forward-looking statements on this call. All statements, other than statements of historical fact, could be deemed to be forward looking. These forward-looking statements include discussions of our outlook and guidance, as well as our long-term targets and goals. And we may decide to shift our priorities, move away from these targets and goals at anytime. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from those contemplated by our forward-looking statements. Reported results should not be considered as an indication of future performance.
Please take a look at our filings with the SEC for a discussion of the factors that could cause our results to differ. Also, note that the forward-looking statements on this call are based on information available to us as of today’s date. We disclaim any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as required by law.
During this call, we will provide preliminary estimates of gross profit growth in GMV performance for the month of April. These represent our current estimates for April performance as we have not yet finalized our financial statements for the month of April and our monthly results are not subject to interim review by our auditors. As a result, actual April results may differ from these estimates and may not be reflective of performance for the full second quarter.
Moreover, this financial information has been prepared solely on the basis of currently available information by, and is the responsibility of, management. This preliminary financial information has not been reviewed or audited by our independent public accounting firm. This preliminary financial information is not a comprehensive statement of our financial results for April or the second-quarter.
We will also discuss combined company gross profit during this call. Block combined company gross profit assumes we acquired our BNPL platform on January 1, 2022 and includes a $51 million gross profit contribution from our BNPL platform for the month of January 2022. For purposes of comparison, fourth quarter combined company gross profit assumes $185 million contribution to Block gross profit from our BNPL platform in the fourth quarter of 2021, as if we acquired our BNPL platform on October 1, 2021.
Also, we will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures during this call. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are provided in the shareholder letter, historical financial information spreadsheet and Investor Day materials on our Investor Relations website. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for our GAAP results.
Finally, this call in its entirety is being audio webcast on our Investor Relations website. An audio replay of this call and the transcript for Jack and Amrita is opening remarks will be available on our website shortly.
With that, I would like to turn it over to Jack.
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
Thank you all for joining us. Last quarter we shared our investment framework going forward. As a reminder, our framework can be articulated in a single sentence: Block and each ecosystem must show a believable path to Gross Profit Retention of over 100% and Rule of 40 on Adjusted Operating Income.
The principles that led us to this framework were: Number one, ensure our investments are focused on customer retention and growth. Number two, account for ongoing costs of the business, including stock based compensation. And number three, utilize industry standard conventions that are simple to communicate and understand.
We will not be distracted from living up to these principles and building our businesses according to this framework. Obviously, there are challenges ahead, including many out of our control. I wanted to spend a moment talking about those so you’re aware of how we’re thinking about meeting them, and then hand it over to Amrita to discuss our quarter. I’ll start with the macro challenges and then the prevailing trends we can use to advantage our customers and us.
There are three macro challenges affecting all businesses now and over the long term: Number one, constant state of global crisis. Number two, regulatory fragmentation. And number three, global financial system shifts
The world seems to be moving from one global crisis to the next and suffering from an overwhelming amount of information, which is causing people and organizations of all sizes to be distracted and reactive to the moment. From COVID, to inflation, to the war in Ukraine, to bank failures, the number of things we all need to pay attention to grows unbounded. Throughout this time we want to remain focused and not reactive to any one particular moment in time. This is easier said than done, but it’s something that underlies everything we do. Ensuring our long-term view guides all of our actions, especially those we take in the short term. At the same time, regulators around the world are coming up with slightly or entirely different answers to problems facing their citizens. Instead of having global standards, we end up with rules which are different for every market, effectively slowing the pace of development. While this might be a good thing for each market, it makes it very challenging to grow a global internet business, especially for smaller companies. Part of our job will be to help our customers navigate this complexity by taking it on ourselves.
Finally, there have been numerous challenges to the global financial system, and it’s experiencing some significant shifts. From new global reserve currency candidates, centralization of banks through failure of smaller ones, to adoption of Central Bank Digital Currencies with entirely new capabilities.
These all affect our core businesses, and all are trends we need to navigate carefully. I’m confident we will, as we see and acknowledge them early. We want to be proactive in our approach, and not just react when it’s too late. And there are a few technology trends that I believe will help us do just that.
There are three trends we’re focused on. Number one is artificial intelligence. Number two is open protocols. Number three is Global South.
Consider how many times you’ve heard the term AI or GPT in the earnings calls just this quarter versus all quarters in history prior. This trend seems to be moving faster than anyone can comprehend or get a handle on. Everyone feels like they are on their back foot and struggling to catch up. Utilizing machine learning is something we’ve always employed at Block, and the recent acceleration in availability of tools is something we’re eager to implement across all of
Our products and services. We see this first as a way to create efficiencies, both internally and for our customers. And we see many opportunities to apply these technologies to create entirely new features for our customers. More and more effort in the world will shift to creative endeavors as AI continues to automate mechanical tasks away, and we believe we are well positioned for that shift with our strategy for artists on TIDAL.
Open protocols represent another fork in the road moment for people and companies. Bitcoin, nostr, Bluesky, web5 and others are all working to level the playing field for competition and give individuals and organizations entirely new capabilities. I believe this trend is growing as fast as AI, will have just as large an impact, and may even help address some of the harms AI presents. We are embracing this early so we can figure out how to best contribute to these
Protocols, and build valuable businesses on top of them. This isn’t just about centralization versus decentralization. If these protocols are even remotely successful, they will present a customer base far larger than any one company can create alone. And there is good precedent for this happening again, look at the web, email, and the overall internet for proof. We have a number of efforts towards this trend, including our bitcoin wallet, miner, Bitcoin exchange, Spiral,
And TBD.
If we consider where the internet population will grow the fastest, we must look at the so-called Global South, countries within Africa, Latin America, Asia, and Oceania, where most of humanity resides. This region is adopting open protocols faster than Western countries because the use cases they provide are increasingly becoming a necessity, such as money remittance. We are choosing to focus on these markets because we believe the total addressable market
Over time is bigger than anything we’re currently in. The assumption you have to make here of course is that nearly everyone in these markets has access to the internet, which is a credible one to make over the next decade. We have already started this work in earnest, with our partnership between TBD and YellowCard to enable fiat on and off-ramps in 16 African countries. Open protocols and focused AI solutions will help us to move even faster, and in a way that’s complementary to the businesses that already exist within these markets, and the ones starting up in the future.
I realize this is a lot to take in, but I wanted to make sure you all had context for how we will be driving our roadmaps and businesses in the future. With our investment framework, we will have the right accountability as we look to grow Block’s many ecosystems together. Together is the key word here, as our real value comes from our multiple ecosystems working to positively reinforce one another, and provide resiliency through challenging times. I couldn’t be more
Excited about what’s ahead, and how we’re positioned as a company to grow.
Over to Amrita.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Thanks Jack. You’ve now heard three of the longer-term trends we are prioritizing in the coming years to expand our market opportunity and help advance our ecosystems. As we pursue these opportunities, we’ll continue our day-to-day focus on serving our customers, operating with discipline, and driving long-term profitable growth at scale.
There are three topics related to our more recent performance that I’d like to cover today. First, an overview of our strong first quarter results. Second, trends we’ve seen across our business in April. And third, a look at our investments through the remainder of the year. In the first quarter, we delivered strong growth across our ecosystems, with gross profit of $1.71 billion, up 32% year over year. On a combined company basis, gross profit grew 27% year over year in the first quarter, up from 21% in the prior quarter.
We delivered Adjusted EBITDA of $368 million during the quarter, an increase from $195 million in the prior year period. Adjusted Operating Income, which includes expenses related to stock based compensation and depreciation and amortization, was $51 million in the first quarter, up from a $42 million loss in the prior year period.
We also continued to diversify our monetization streams across our ecosystems. In the first quarter, we had 14 revenue streams across Square and Cash App that generated $100 million or more in annualized gross profit, up from [Phonetic]11 a year ago.
Let’s get into each ecosystem. Cash App generated $931 million of gross profit in the first quarter, an increase of 49% year over year. On a combined company basis, Cash App gross profit grew 43% year over year, up from 39% in the prior quarter.
We delivered year-over-year growth across each component of our inflows framework: actives, inflows per active, and monetization rate. We reached 53 million monthly transacting actives in March, an increase of 17% year over year. Inflows per transacting active averaged $1,136 in the first quarter, up 8% year over year and quarter over quarter. And overall inflows into Cash App totaled $61 billion, up 27% year over year. We remain focused on driving growth in inflows per
Active by growing product adoption, diversifying the ways in which people can bring their money into Cash App, and investing in areas that strengthen trust in Cash App. Monetization rate was 1.41% excluding gross profit contributions from our BNPL platform, up from 1.19% in the first quarter of 2022, benefiting from growth in monetized products and pricing changes implemented in 2022. On a quarter over quarter basis, monetization rate was up slightly from 1.39% in the fourth quarter, including a modest benefit from interest income.
Our financial services products are a key driver of inflows into Cash App and help us build retentive relationships with our actives, particularly Cash App Card. In March, there were 20 million monthly Cash App Card actives, up 34% year over year, and average spend per active increased on a year over year and quarter over quarter basis.
In March, we had 2 million monthly direct deposit actives, one-tenth the scale of Cash App Card monthly actives. In particular, paycheck deposits continued to increase as a percentage of overall inflows, totaling $2.5 billion in March or $30 billion on an annualized basis. These paycheck deposits grew 69% year over year, two and a half times as fast as overall inflows into Cash App. We’ve driven adoption for direct deposit actives through unique Boosts, and more recently we’ve introduced free in-network ATM withdrawals for those receiving their paycheck in Cash App.
We also launched Savings on Cash App earlier this year, which was a top requested feature amongst our customers. This gives customers a simple and flexible way to manage money, and easily set aside funds as a separate savings balance. Since it launched in January, more than three million Savings actives added funds to their savings balance as of the end of April.
Square generated $770 million of gross profit in the first quarter, an increase of 16% year over year. On a combined company basis, Square gross profit was up 12% year over year, and further excluding gross profit from PPP loan forgiveness, Square combined company gross profit grew 21% year over year in the first quarter, up from 16% in the prior quarter.
Looking at the drivers of Square’s first quarter performance. First, we continued to drive growth in software and integrated payments, with gross profit from these products up 19% year over year. Within this, we’ve seen strong momentum from our vertical point of sale offerings across Retail, Restaurants, and Appointments, where gross profit was up 42% year over year, in aggregate. By channel, gross profit from in-person channels grew faster than our online
Channels, as we’ve seen online growth rates normalize compared to pandemic levels.
Second, we continued to grow with larger sellers. Gross profit from mid-market sellers was also up 19% year over year. We remain focused on driving acquisition of larger sellers across our three key verticals of restaurants, retail, and beauty, and our software offerings for those verticals. We recently introduced vertical-specific homepages on our website that offer customized experiences to sellers. The updated website funnels demand to our sales teams, which we are also verticalizing in order to further support our go-to-market efforts.
Third, we continued to expand globally. Gross profit in our international markets outpaced overall Square gross profit, up 28% year over year excluding contributions from our BNPL platform. We remain focused on Square’s top strategic priorities of omnichannel software, upmarket, and global, and have been orienting our roadmaps and investments towards these areas of meaningful growth in recent years.
These priorities have helped us proactively evolve our business mix from our roots in sidecar payments, or transactions where sellers enter an amount on the keypad and hit charge, towards software and integrated payments, which enable us to create more retentive, long-term relationships with sellers. As a result, Square’s gross profit from sidecar payments grew 5% year over year, and represented 21% of Square gross profit during the first quarter, down from 30% two years prior. We intend for the mix of Square’s business related to sidecar payments to continue to decline over time as sidecar use cases are now also well served by peer-to-peer solutions, such as Cash for Business within our Cash App ecosystem.
Finally, our BNPL platform generated $5.6 billion of GMV in the first quarter, an increase of 18% year over year, inclusive of January 2022 volumes. Losses on consumer receivables were 0.7% of GMV, an improvement year over year and quarter over quarter.
Next, an update on April trends. For the month of April, we expect total gross profit growth of 24% year over year, which we expect to remain relatively consistent for the second quarter. Looking into the dynamics of each ecosystem. For the month of April, we expect Cash App gross profit to grow 35% year over year, a moderation compared to 43% combined company growth in the first quarter, as we have lapped the benefit of pricing changes made in the first
Quarter of 2022.
We expect Square gross profit to grow 14% year over year in April, compared to 12% combined company growth during the first quarter, as we lap the more meaningful PPP benefits from the first quarter of 2022. Excluding PPP, combined company gross profit for Square is expected to be up 16% year over year in April, consistent with the fourth quarter’s 16% growth, and moderating compared to the first quarter’s 21% growth. While first quarter growth benefited from
Lapping omicron in the prior year period, April trends were in-line with the fourth quarter which was when we started to see a moderation in processing volume growth, particularly in discretionary verticals.
For our BNPL platform, we expect year-over-year GMV growth of 20% in April, an improvement from 18% in the first quarter.
Turning to our expectations for the remainder of the year. Given the gross profit momentum in our business during the first quarter, we are increasing our expectations for profitability this year. We expect to deliver Adjusted EBITDA of $1.36 billion and Adjusted Operating Loss of $115 million for full-year 2023.
This primarily incorporates stronger top-line outperformance during the first quarter, as we intend on shifting some expenses that we had intended for the first quarter to later in the year. We remain focused on operating with efficiency in 2023, driving operating leverage across hiring, sales and marketing, and corporate overhead. For the full-year, we continue to expect margin improvement year over year on both an Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted Operating
Income basis.
Shifting to share-based compensation. Last year, in the second quarter, our share-based compensation expenses increased by $47 million quarter over quarter, when excluding a one-time SBC expense of $66 million related to the acquisition of Afterpay recognized in the first quarter of 2022. We expect a similar quarter-over-quarter increase in the second quarter of this year. This remains an area on which we are focused, and expect to drive greater leverage over time.
I’ll now turn it back to the operator to start the Q&A portion of the call.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of 10 Jin Wong from JPMorgan. Please proceed. Your line is open, sir. Please go ahead.
Tien-Tsin Huang — JPMorgan Chase & Co — Analyst
Hi, great thanks. I hope you can hear me okay. I appreciate your opening comments, Jack, on constant crisis and your thoughts on long-term trends here. But I want to ask about the near term, if you don’t mind, because we’ve fielded a lot of questions on the short report earlier and now get a lot of questions on term on the banking system. So I’m curious if these let’s call them challenges change your near-term priorities or strategy in any way in 2023? And I want to also ask just from a risk management standpoint. How do you think about benchmarking your investments and governance and compliance and things of that nature versus peers? Thanks.
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
So I’ll take the first part of this question. I would say that we stand by our response to the share report. We will not be distracted from our strategy and from our privatizations. We have a pretty compelling road map ahead of us in every one of our ecosystems. And we — as I said in my opening remarks, we think it’s really important to focus as much as possible on that despite what’s happening around in macro. And as you mentioned, there’s a lot happening, obviously, in the financial industry and finance larger. And being able to acknowledge us, take them into account and make sure that we’re building appropriately according to what our customers need and what our customers want in growing that customer base is the most important thing to us.
We also want to make sure that we continue to build trust. And as I talked about before, trust is earned in many ways. It’s through transparency, through reliability, dependability, and that is all something that we earn. We’re not given, and that comes over time. And a lot of that has to be focused on how our customers ultimately trust us, our partners, including our banking partners and the regulatory — regulators trust us as well. So this is a significant focus for us and always has been, has to be as you do anything in the financial space has certainly always been part of our mindset and our approach and turn it over to Amrita to talk about benchmarking against [Phonetic]peers more broadly investment.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Yes. Thanks for the question, Tien-Tsin. Block operates a business that is highly regulated, and our goal is ultimately to expand access to the economy through intuitive financial products. In order to do that, we must maintain a culture of compliance and responsible risk management, including through investment in programs, processes, controls and teams with deep compliance expertise, prioritizing compliance ultimately helps us drive trust to their customers with regulators and external partners, and that enables us to then develop innovative products responsibly. We have significantly grown our investment in compliance over the last few years.
At a company level, we expect to invest approximately $160 million in compliance in 2023, which represents an increase in our investment dollars of more than 5 times since 2020, outpacing OpEx growth by approximately 2x during that same period. Specifically within Cash App, the pace of growth on compliance investment has been even faster than that. With regards to how you might benchmark that, other companies may calculate compliance investment differently. So it can be hard to benchmark across companies. What we include in these figures is investments that go towards personnel, as well as software and tooling amongst other areas to support our program.
These dedicated compliance resources support our business units and our customers that our business units serve and ultimately provide oversight across the ecosystem. Maybe just to very quickly, handle, you also asked about banking sort of banking crisis and our partner ecosystem. Look, we benefit from having a diverse ecosystem of products and services with diverse business models. As you heard now with 14 revenue streams at $100 million or more in gross profit, up from 11 a year ago. Across our products and our partners, we are always focused on building redundancies wherever we can in addition to assessing potential future risks. So we have a diverse set of products, and we build redundancies where we can, and we have a transparent approach to our partnership as we always have.
Tien-Tsin Huang — JPMorgan Chase & Co — Analyst
Perfect.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Tim Chiodo from Credit Suisse. Please proceed.
Timothy Edward Chiodo — Credit Suisse AG — Analyst
Great. Thank you, everyone. I want to touch on the verticalized offerings in retail, restaurants and beauty. They are the key to moving up market. They were a focus at the Investor Day. I know they’re in the letter and you touched on it earlier, but specifically for those 3, could talk a little bit about the investment you’ve made behind the product specifically? And then on the distribution, you mentioned the call to action on the website and how that’s changed and drive more leads for the larger sellers. But maybe you could also talk about maybe the next steps around on the street salespeople that will also support the vertical offerings.
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
Yes. I’ll set this up. So the key differentiator to remind is our ecosystem of tools. And it’s not just about any one particular vertical, but how everything works together, ultimately. We have over 30 products, including some vertical-specific software and a developer platform, which is our customers don’t find the tools they need in our platform, they can always build their own or higher developer to do the same. And we also see — because of that, we see a lot of growth in upmarket because we provide flexibility for folks.
In terms of our vertical software, our solutions addressing key verticals of restaurants, retail and beauty allow us to serve much more complex sellers with very specific needs, which again goes back to that flexibility point and the strength of our ecosystem and the developer platform continues to be stronger and stronger as we move forward.
In terms of just the investment behind products that I can talk about like go-to-market actually a little bit. We’re constantly looking for refinements for how we think about rolling these tools out, including the website and the first time as someone see Square. This is inclusive of sales. This is inclusive of our direct marketing. And this is something that is never done in terms of having a final point. It’s just a constant iteration, and we’re really excited to always take a fresh look at how to improve this and make it better.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
And I’ll add, Tim, just a couple of data points to help frame up the response. So in the first quarter, as we look at this broad set of mid-market sellers that we can serve and the specific solutions, we see outsized growth in those areas, around vertical points of sale and developer solutions. So mid-market sellers overall, up 19% year-over-year in the first quarter, outpacing our blended Square gross profit growth rate of 16% and our strong growth in our vertical points of sale growing at 42% year-over-year. With gross profit growth from our developer tools also outpacing overall Square gross profit growth. This is a large TAM that we’re addressing here with upmarket and with our vertical points of sale.
We believe that we’re less than 1% penetrated in the larger seller opportunity just in the U.S. based on gross receipts alone, which is why we’re making the investments and doing the hard work of verticalizing our sales force and our go-to-market efforts. So to contextualize that a little bit, we have pulled back meaningfully on Square sales and — sales marketing investments year-over-year. As we optimize channel mix and refine our operations in the first quarter, and we’re seeing positive growth in acquisition even as we’ve pulled back on spend.
Within sales, the work that we’ve been doing is continuing to shift to a verticalized software-led sales team. We’ve now implemented this with our U.S. inbound sales team, which is verticalized. And over the next 2 quarters, we’re going to be doing that with our U.S. outbound sales team. It’s early here, but we’re seeing encouraging improvements in the efficiency and productivity of our sales reps. From a website perspective, we recently redesigned the Square website, allowing our sellers to select vertical specific experiences, cater to the products needed to run their businesses. And to direct sellers to our sales team, making it easier for both existing and prospective sellers to contact support. And again, it’s early, but we’ve seen strength in overall acquisition as well as new lead generation for sales since introducing our new homepage. These are long-term initiatives that we’re continuing to work on, and we expect them to drive results over the coming years as we continue that work.
Timothy Edward Chiodo — Credit Suisse AG — Analyst
Thank you, Jack and Amrita.
Operator
We have [Phonetic]Dan Chapman dialing in to ask a question. Your next question comes from the line of Dan Chapman. Please proceed.
Unidentified Participant — — Analyst
Hey, thank you for taking my question. My name is Dan, of course, and I use Square to run operations for a couple of businesses, craft beer and pizza restaurant, we call AW Wander and 105-year-old movie theater called the [Phonetic]Mali Cinema. I’ve been a Square seller for about 6 years now, and I currently use Square point of sale, Square Online, gift cards, loyalty and a few others. When the pandemic struck, we are forced to quickly pivot our business model and set up an online store within 2 days. And I always credit Square for giving us the tools we needed to be flexible in the moment. Now business owners like myself must adapt again as we face economic uncertainty. My question is, how can small business build resilience and really set ourselves up for success in this current climate?
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
Thank you, [Indecipherable] and thank you for the question. I’ll spend some time with this. I would say that the biggest lesson I’ve learned in building our business is just the importance of having really good and clear data about how your business is doing and making sure that you can compare that and kind of look for patterns elsewhere, whether those be patterns within your own community, your talent, your city against other competitors. To me, that’s the only way to really inform decisions in order to create resurgence, especially in more challenging times, making sure that like you are looking for opportunities to convert more customers to recurring and ways to get them to keep coming back and we constantly respond to, which, again, continues to seem to get harder right now.
But I think there’s a general trend. And I think the trend will continue to more and more local and less and less about global answers. And I think small businesses are set up extremely well for that. And we’re really happy to support in every way that we can, that effort and that trend. And hopefully, we’re doing the right work by making sure that our tools just work together. And you don’t really have to think much about adding an entirely new system like customer relationship management or subscriptions or moving to an online business, you just press a button and it’s done so that you can really focus on the core fundamentals of your business by looking at the data and making informed judgments around us.
So we’ll continue to improve our dashboard, where hopefully, you’re seeing a lot of those metrics and information and enable more and more actions and activities that you can make based on that inflate in data.
Unidentified Participant — — Analyst
That’s great advice. Thank you. Really appreciate it.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Lisa Ellis from MoffettNathanson. Please proceed.
Lisa Ann Dejong Ellis — MoffettNathanson LLC — Analyst
Hey, good afternoon and thanks for taking my question. I wanted to focus in on Cash App gross profit growth there. You said on a combined company basis, up 42%. Again, up from 39% in 4Q, so an acceleration, another quarter of really extraordinary growth. Can you just help disaggregate a little bit where you’re really seeing that acceleration in growth and how you’re thinking about the sustainability of it going forward, for example, continuing to diversify Cash apps revenue streams, et cetera? Thank you.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Thanks so much for the question, Lisa. I can start us off here. I would look at unpacking Cash Apps performance according to our inflows framework, where we have seen strong growth in each of the 3 variables that ultimately ladder up to gross profit, whether it’s active, inflows per active or monetization rate. So if we look at Q1 growth, monthly transacting actives were $53 million in March, up 17% year-over-year. This is really driven by both the virality of our peer-to-peer network effects as well as increasing focus on leveraging marketing and acquisition tools to drive qualified new customers and higher product adoption over time. We’ve been targeting using marketing, new and higher-value audiences while also remaining disciplined in how we deploy those funds to ultimately see returns.
From an inflows proactive perspective, at 1,136 in the first quarter. This is an increase of 8%, both on a year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter basis, where we’ve been encouraged by the healthy trends we see here. The key drivers of inflows per active are really around product adoption where we continue to see strong adoption of products like Cash App Card, now reaching 38% of those monthly transacting actives. The 20 million Cash App Card customers actives in our March time frame. And with strong growth in spend to our Cash App Card active as well. Underpinning the overall inflows that we see growing in the overall Cash App ecosystem. So this product adoption on critical products like Cash App Cards leads to greater activity on our platform stronger engagement and ultimately inflows per active.
Another key piece of that is driving increasing the ways in which customers can inflow their funds into Cash App over time, which can lead to incremental volumes as we’ve seen in the past, for example, with things like our paper money inflow channel. Finally, on inflows per active, a key driver that we’ll be mindful of as we move forward is the mix shift of our customer base. As we target a younger audience and see success with Gen Z or with their families product, there could actually be some pressure on inflows per active over time as those customers are likely to have lower inflows proactive earlier in their financial journey. But we’d expect to see that grow over time as they become the earners and spenders of the future. Even with that mix shift, we’ve continued to see strong growth on inflows per active.
And then the third key driver, of course, for Cash App is monetization rate, which also grew strongly year-over-year given the pricing changes and more moderately quarter-over-quarter on the back of some interest income benefits. Ultimately, as we look forward, as you noted, in the first quarter, a combined company growth rate of about 43% for Cash App. What we saw in April or expect to see in April was about a 35% year-over-year growth rate. This is as we expected and as we shared on our last earnings call, now that we’re lapping pricing changes that we instituted in the first quarter of 2022, but still strong growth at 35% year-over-year in April.
Final thing to note here is, of course, margin expansion for the Cash App business, again, as we noted last quarter. We expect to see this year Cash App to not only grow strongly, but continue to see operating leverage in the Cash App margin. As we continue to operate our business with discipline and continue on the path that we’ve been on for a few years now with Cash App and growing our margins.
Lisa Ann Dejong Ellis — MoffettNathanson LLC — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Darrin Peller from Wolfe Research. Please proceed.
Darrin David Peller — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Hey, thanks guys.
Look, GPV growth was obviously strong in the quarter, and it was good to see the spread versus the industry hold up well. I think you talked about 40% gross profit growth into April for Square. If there’s any comments you can give us on volume growth in April or May versus the 17% that you would be really helpful. And then more importantly, I think just revisiting the key drivers of the GPV and the seller — or the Square business overall differentiation and the sustainability, international, obviously, was up over 40%. So maybe you can comment on that together with e-com and some of the other drivers that we’ve been seeing and your view of sustainability. Thanks again, guys.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Thanks for the question, Darrin. I’ll start us off. So look, overall, as we think about the health of the ecosystem, I’d orient you more to gross profit than GPV as we look at our performance. Let me start there with gross profit in April at 16% year-over-year. This is on an ex PPP basis for comparison purposes. The comparable figure was 21% in Q1 where, obviously, we had a more favorable comp related to Omicron in the prior year. And then in the Q4 comparable ex PPP was 16% on a combined company basis. So that trend in April looks very consistent with the trend that we saw in Q4, from a gross profit perspective on a combined company basis ex PPP.
And really unpacking some of the trends that we see is growth in the areas where we are strategically oriented, software and integrated payments, versus side car or vertical points of sale. And even in Q1, we saw outsized growth and in person versus online channels, albeit omnichannel more broadly is a key focus for us. We’ve also seen strength from our banking ecosystem with loans, ex PPP, Instant Deposit and Square Card outpacing overall Square gross profit growth. Now when we look at the overall sort of growth rates in terms of key verticals, we have seen some moderation as we noted. Since that mid-Q4, mid-November time frame, across certain discretionary verticals, food and beverage and retail. Churn has been relatively stable where we’ve seen a bit of pressure on the processing volumes at existing sellers, similar to the trends that we noted back in February. Because of the breadth of the overall Square ecosystem, we have resilience because we serve multiple verticals, multiple types of customers increasingly at market. And obviously, multiple revenue streams across multiple products.
And then maybe to address your international question, we have also seen some strong growth in international, ex BNPL, we grew 11 — mix was about 11% of Square’s gross profit and ex BNPL grew 28% year-over-year, outpacing overall Square gross profit growth. We’re really taking sort of a product-led product-centric approach to our global expansion where, again, the key differentiator is the breadth and integration and the cohesion of our ecosystem. And so our priority continues to be driving product parity in these markets. And as we bring new markets — new products to bear, look to global launches of those products, increasingly so.
In the first quarter, we had Square Loyalty and Square for Restaurants in Japan. And we’ve also had tap-to-pay launches over the past couple of months across Android and iPhone in the U.S. So more to come here. And again, our key focus is on these top 3 strategic priorities in driving the Square business forward.
Darrin David Peller — Wolfe Research, LLC — Analyst
Thanks.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Harshita Rawat from Bernstein. Please proceed.
Harshita Rawat — Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC. — Analyst
Hi, good afternoon. Can you talk about recession sensitivity, the growth of different businesses? On the Square side. How should we think about exposure to net business formation, consumer discretionary spend? And then on the Cash App side, are you more exposed to unemployment trends, consumer spending trends, given the demographic SKU? And then just as a follow-up, can you also touch upon your credit businesses and the sensitivity there to a credit cycle? Thank you.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Sure. Thanks for the question, Harshita. Let me start with saying, first, the work that we do to broaden our ecosystem is bearing fruit in the diversity of our revenue streams now. In the first quarter, 14 revenue streams at $100 million or more in annualized gross profit across Cash App and Square Cash App with 6, and Square with 7 along with BNPL as well. And so each of our ecosystem is doing the work to broaden our product set that can serve our customers in uncertain times. And doing that increasingly at scale. It was — we were at 11 revenue streams a year ago. So we’ve grown 3 new ones while continuing to grow our currently at scale revenue streams.
And I think this is really important as we think about our ecosystems driving resiliency to uncertain times. And when we look at engagement on our platforms, we’re also seeing that grow through these uncertain times. Cash App, as I noted earlier, growth across each of the various components of inflows in particular with Cash App Card, we get to see both discretionary spend and nondiscretionary spend. In 2022, nearly 1/3 of spend on Cash App Card was for grocery gas, auto, utilities, et cetera. And with spend per active — average spend per active for Cash App Card growing both year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter. So clearly, we see that signals around consumer spend and discretionary and nondiscretionary income, along with signals around the strong engagement on our platform.
From a Square perspective, we have an ecosystem now of 30-plus products that helps to drive those retentive relationships. And as we see — we’ve shared last quarter as more customers take on more of our products that we see a meaningful improvement and retention over time. So our focus there being on continuing to drive product adoption and the breadth of our ecosystem, which drives retention and overall growth for us. Ultimately, the signals that we can read in real time across our key indicators across both our consumer ecosystem and our seller ecosystem is what enables us to be able to be agile to the environment and move quickly. Addressing our customer needs as well as our own business and how we’re able to react.
From a lending product perspective, look, I think there are [Indecipherable] products share some attributes that make them fairly unique in an uncertain macro environment. First, we take a very data-driven approach. Our risk and underwriting models are updated in real time based on a broad set of customer data, both about individual — that individual customer as well as millions of other customers like them. And in fact, some of our core lending products like Cash App Borrow and Square loans are offered to customers based on specific eligibility criteria, where we determine those eligibility criteria.
There’s also unique structures to these products where we design our products to really simplify access to capital. They’re often shorten duration and have simplified repayment processes. That’s part of the reason that we’ve seen healthy repayment behavior across each of these different lending types. And as we noted with Afterpay, actually saw an improvement in gross loss as a percent of receivables in Q1 both quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. And finally, we see strong repeat usage. Historically, we’ve seen strong adoption from these customers with increasing frequency. These are customers we know well and have a history of repayment and have ability, therefore, to better underwrite.
So we think those unique attributes of these products that really serve as working capital to our customers are important to note during uncertain times like this.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ramsey El-Assal from Barclays. Please proceed.
Ramsey Clark El-Assal — Barclays Bank PLC — Analyst
Hi, thank you for taking my question.
I wanted to ask about the Cash App, the savings product. And just wondering if you could comment on just how that product fits into the overall Cash App value proposition? And also just give us your latest thoughts on the product road map and Cash App in terms of what types of other adjacent financial services, you might contemplate adding or what looks most attractive from here?
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
Yes. Just some context for one. Earlier this year, we launched our savings product to allow customers to hold a separate savings balance within Cash App. And we’ve heard from our communities that they want more tools for budgeting and money management. So this is where that can come. And it allows our customers to easily set and track towards financial goals, and they can easily add money to the savings count using their Cash App balance. In debit card or through Roundup on purchases with the Cash App Card. So far, it’s one of our fastest-growing products. And while early, we see that it’s a feature that can drive a lot more inflows into our ecosystem over time? By the end of April, we had more than 3 million actives that have added funds to their savings bonds account. And more than half are savings through roundup on Cash App Card. So this is another strong example of how our products across our ecosystems can reinforce one another and actually build on one another.
Are you asking more about the general product road map for Cash App? Or with savings [Indecipherable], just clarify a question.
Ramsey Clark El-Assal — Barclays Bank PLC — Analyst
More in general, just other adjacent financial services, that might look attractive? Or any kind of color in terms of the general product road map more so than just specifically within savings.
Jack Dorsey — Co-Founder, Block Head, Chairman & President
Yes. All of our products within Cash App from looking at these adjacencies. And we started with the most viral with the greatest network effective test period of here. And that is a base level of utility that has a lot of value for tons of people, an easiest way to get into the app and into our ecosystem. But as we look at what our customers are doing and what products they’re adopting and what they’re more importantly, trying to do, that’s where our new product ideas come. And I think our strength is really simplifying something that was traditionally fairly complex is something that’s very easy to our purchase of taxes, for instance.
So we’ll continue to look for more of those. And we do see behaviors today that are interesting. But a big part of our focus at the moment is making sure that like the products that we do have are easily accessible and can actually spread and really focused on providing more opportunities from Discover and from that little search icon at the bottom of your Cash App. This is going to be a launch pad for much of the Cash App ecosystem and certainly as a way to bring in full bearing the Afterpay acquisition that we made, but it allows us to get more potentially daily usage as people can find things mattress online, but also around them that then touches on every one of our financial products. And really brings to life those adjacencies.
So there’s a lot of work to do there just to strengthen those connections and to make sure that we’re building something that’s robust and we can continue to add more new products and more new features.
Ramsey Clark El-Assal — Barclays Bank PLC — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Ng from Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
Michael Ng — Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. — Analyst
Hey, good afternoon. Thank you very much for the question. It was just about OpEx. First, OpEx came in a little bit better than guidance in the quarter. I was just wondering if you could talk about any areas of efficiencies that you may have benefited from in the quarter or timing elements that might impact how OpEx is recognized throughout the year? And then second, could you just talk about how you’re viewing full year OpEx growth any notable areas of investing you’re making for the year and whether there are any change in OpEx plans relative to last quarter? Thank you.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Mike, thanks for the question. Let me start actually with talking about the full year and our view on profitability for the year, and then we can kind of slice and dice OpEx from Q1. So look, of course, our goal, as always, is investing responsibly to deliver profitable growth. And for the full year, we’re raising our profit target to $1.36 billion on adjusted EBITDA, more than 35% growth year-over-year and $115 million adjusted OI loss with improving margins on both. This primarily — this outlook primarily reflects our strong gross profit growth during the first quarter.
On the expense side, we are deferring some of the investments that we had intended for Q1 to later in the year. Longer term, the investments that we’re making should follow our path to deliver a Rule of 40 on an adjusted OI basis longer term, given the returns that we see. As we think about what underpins the work that we’re doing, the investments that we’re making, as I noted earlier, we continue to expect Cash App margins to expand. This is a trend that we’ve seen this quarter and a continuation of improving profitability over the last few years, while we expect Square margins, which are already healthy to more consistent year-over-year. And we intend to hold these targets in the midst of macro uncertainty. If we see growth slow, we’ll pull back on our planned expenses.
The key areas of leverage that we think about across the year or similar to what we noted last quarter, which is hiring as we see strength in the business, we’ll react accordingly. But we are deliberately slowing the pace of hiring as we showed last quarter, expect to increase headcount in the approximately 10% year-over-year range in sales and marketing to increase at a much lower rate than the 25% growth we saw in 2022.
Now to unpack some of the quarterly variations for the second quarter, we expect EBITDA to be lower than the normalized rate that you saw in Q1 as implied in our guidance, given the timing of expenses during the year. And that then brings me to sort of the operating expense growth that we saw in the first quarter. Which came in about $60 million in change lower than what we had included in our guidance. And it was really broad based across our key areas of investment. So sales and marketing was relatively flat year-over-year. Cash App sales and marketing expenses were up 9%, driven by an increase in peer-to-peer processing costs, peer-to-peer transaction losses and card issuance costs, but the rest of sales and marketing was down year-over-year. Product development grew primary driver here is our teams and our personnel costs related to engineering, data science and design.
And then G&A, down slightly year-over-year, but excluding certain onetime expenses related to the Afterpay acquisition also grew year-over-year with investments in human resources, compliance and customer support personnel. Risk also grew year-over-year, but we also now have a full quarter of Afterpay in our books this year versus last year. So these are kind of the key elements that we’re focused on operating with discipline across our business, and we’ll continue to do that through the year.
Michael Ng — Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. — Analyst
Thanks so much. That’s very clear. Thank you.
Operator
All right. We will now take our last question. Our final question comes from the line of Trevor Williams from Jefferies. Please proceed.
Trevor Ellis Williams — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
The BNPL folded in. Amrita with the ex BNPL monetization rate you gave for Cash App, we were backing into just over $140 million of BNPL gross profit for the first quarter. If you could just comment on that number? And then anything you can share on BNPL gross profit growth within the 24% combined company growth for April would be great. Thanks.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Trevor, it cut out the first part of your question. Do I take your question to be primarily around sizing the performance for the NPL for the quarter?
Trevor Ellis Williams — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Yes, BNPL in Q1. And then if you could parse out the BNPL growth within the 24% for April.
Amrita Ahuja — Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer
Sure. Look, I think we’ll orient here to the volume-based metrics that we provided earlier, which is 18% GMV growth in the first quarter. GMV continued to grow faster than gross profit in the first quarter, given the mix shift to enterprise sellers and newer markets. So gross profit growth was below this. But we expect GMV growth in the April — in the month of April to be up from what we saw in the first quarter, 20% versus the 18% in the first quarter. We’re encouraged by what we see here, which is continued growth in high-quality customer acquisitions with repeat engagement and healthy repayment rates. We’ve seen 98% of purchases not incurring late fees and 95% of installments paid on time, consistent with what we’ve shared in the past.
And of course, we continue our work of integrating Afterpay with our Square and Cash App ecosystem. This combined scale of which we believe will be a true differentiator for us. within Cash App unlocking commerce with the Discover tab to drive increased engagement. And when within Square, launching BNPL in person and online, where we’ve seen encouraging early adoption. We’re focused here on using that combined base across our ecosystem to build a strong pipeline of new merchants and to continue attracting new customers, new consumers to our BNPL platform.
Trevor Ellis Williams — Jefferies LLC — Analyst
Okay. Thanks.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]