LendingTree Inc (NASDAQ: TREE) Q4 2019 Earnings Conference Call
Final Transcript
Corporate participants:
Trent Ziegler — Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Youssef Squali — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Eric Wasserstrom — UBS — Analyst
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
John Campbell — Stephens Inc — Analyst
Mark Mahaney — RBC Capital Markets. — Analyst
Kyle Peterson — Needham & Company — Analyst
James Friedman — Susquehanna — Analyst
Stephen Sheldon — William Blair — Analyst
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Chris Gamaitoni — Compass Point — Analyst
Hamed Khorsand — BWS Financial — Analyst
Robert Wildhack — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Melissa Wedel — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the LendingTree Fourth Quarter 2019 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]
I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Trent Ziegler, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Trent Ziegler — Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer
Thanks, operator, and thanks, everyone for joining the call this morning to discuss LendingTree’s fourth quarter 2019 financial performance. I’m joined here in the room this morning by LendingTree’s Chairman and CEO, Doug Lebda and Chief Financial Officer, J.D. Moriarty.
Before I hand the call over, I’ll quickly remind everyone that during today’s call, we may discuss LendingTree’s expectations for future performance. Forward-looking statements are typically preceded by words such as we expect, we believe, we anticipate, or other similar statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties and LendingTree’s actual results could differ materially from the views expressed today. Many, but not all the risk we face are described in LendingTree’s periodic reports filed with the SEC.
We’ll also discuss variety of non-GAAP measures on the call today and I refer you to today’s press release available on our Investor Relations website at investors.lendingtree.com for the comparable GAAP measures, definitions and full reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to GAAP.
With that, I’ll turn it to Doug.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Thank you, Trent, and thanks, everyone for joining the call today. I’d like to start the conversation by recapping some of our major accomplishments in 2019. So, you have a sense for what I’m excited about and where we are heading. Then I’ll turn it over to J.D. to walk through the fourth quarter financials and our guidance for the first quarter.
As I look back on 2019, I’m most proud of the fact that we made incredible progress in improving the financial wellness of millions of customers through My LendingTree. More than half of our users to improve their credit scores within six months of sign-up, but those who saw improvement their credit score improved by more than 50 points. We look at My LendingTree, My LendingTree through two lenses. First, are we adding value to the customer. Second, is it adding value for LendingTree. And the answer to both is an unequivocal, yes.
During the year, we added more than 3.6 million new users to the platform and the revenue contribution from My LendingTree was more than $80 million and grew more than 30%. That is particularly impressive when you consider, we have just recently begun to integrate insurance and credit cards still represents a small piece of that total, despite terrific progress towards better alignment throughout 2019.
Midway through the year, we rolled out a complete redesign of our app enabling us to promote holistic financial wellness to our user base, well beyond the scope of a free credit score in savings on existing loans. The new platform is now capable of providing users with guidance around not only their credit profile and existing liabilities but also positions us to engage with the consumer on their financial future by providing visibility into savings and investments as well as monthly cash flows.
My LendingTree has become an increasingly important component of our business throughout the past year. And I firmly believe we’re just scratching the surface. We’ve learned a tremendous amount in 2019 and our user base has grown and it also has driven significant engagement and I’m excited to share more with you all throughout the year as we continue to launch new features.
As we discussed at our Investor Day in December. We’re also executing on a B2B strategy for distribution where we have six live partner integrations and two other partners active, actively integrating as we speak. These partnerships, with My LendingTree in the hands of more users and the acquisition cost to us or largely risk free. We expect that this will continue to be important, an important channel for us as My LendingTree continues to scale.
Additionally, we’re now putting real investment behind advertising the My LendingTree offering in 2020. As I mentioned on our last call, we ran a series of regional test in Q3 of last year that promoted My LendingTree as a standalone offering. The results of those tests were very positive and informed our strategy heading into this year. While we’re just a month and a half into the new year and it would be premature to offer too much information. I’m happy to report that the early readouts on the advertising is encouraging in terms of new app styles and engaging the existing base.
Moving on from My LendingTree. I’d also like to highlight the success of our ongoing diversification strategy. Our foray into the Insurance business as clearly been a successful one. As we acquired a terrific business at an opportune time. While the industry is growing nicely as insurers increasingly find value in online channels, the execution to QuoteWizard team has been impeccable, and the integration of the ValuePenguin team was seamless. Insurance is now our single biggest business, unfortunately does not carry the same risks as our other businesses, related to interest rates in consumer credit. While Insurance was the big headline, some of our other acquired businesses performed extremely well in 2019. After acquiring SnapCap in the fall of 2017 and taking some time for integration, our small business offering grew 74% in 2019. This is another terrific example of our ability to acquire high-quality assets in an attractive space and leverage our scale and marketing progress for us to accelerate growth.
While our diversification strategy has added nicely to the Company’s growth, growth prospects. It is also provided for a substantially more durable business model. Our diversified, diversified portfolio of businesses enabled us to weather, an extremely difficult environment for mortgage in 2018 and in 2019 it enabled us to navigate some real challenges in the personal loan space. In the most recent quarter, we encountered some unforeseen difficulties in the often-volatile credit card business, which J.D. will discuss. And despite this, we still hit our numbers. Our diversification helps us to deliver and I’m very, very pleased with our execution.
In closing, I’m incredibly pleased with all the accomplishments in 2019 and I’ve never been more excited about what the future has in store. This is a marketplace business design designed to serve both consumers and partners. We are increasingly, increasingly focused on engaging in the consumer in a way that’s beneficial to both of them and our partners. We have laid the rails to expand how we engage with the consumer and we’ll continue to look for, look for ways to drive a more comprehensive relationship. This will no doubt benefit our partners over time as well.
There has been no shortage of interesting M&A activity in the fintech space over the last few weeks. And I am excited as I’ve ever been in a long time about our unique positioning in this space. Our marketing machine and deep lender network across all categories are second to none. But our journey to becoming a legitimate one-stop destination for consumers is only just beginning.
And with that, I’ll hand it to J.D.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Doug, I couldn’t agree more on the progress. I’d like to spend a few minutes walking through the fourth quarter’s financial results and provide some color on our first quarter guidance before we open up the call for Q&A.
I’ll discuss our Q4 results in the context of our newly introduced segment reporting, which I hope you’ll find helpful in understanding the underlying drivers of performance. As a reminder, we introduced this segment framework at our Investor Day in December and provided a restatement of historical results under the new framework via an 8-K filing last week. Our goal is to give investors more transparency into segment-level profitability, and to isolate discretionary brand spend and its impact on the overall results. The definitions of these new measures and the products encompassed by each segment are clearly outlined in this morning’s press release. And you can reach out to Trent after the call with any specific questions.
Let me first start with our Insurance segment, which continued its run of impressive results, delivering revenue in the quarter of $70.9 million, up 127% over the prior period or 37% on a pro forma basis. The profitability of the Insurance segment remained strong with segment profit of $28 million or 39% of revenue. Many of the new initiatives we put in place through, throughout 2019, are beginning to materialize and the Insurance business is off to a terrific start. As we enter 2020.
Second, the Home segment posted revenue of $65.5 million in the quarter. Up 3% compared to the prior year. Within Home, revenue from our traditional mortgage products purchase and refi continued to accelerate growing 16% year-over-year after just returning to positive year-on-year growth in the third quarter. As a reminder, the Home segment includes purchase and refinance mortgage, home equity and reverse mortgage, the latter two were down significantly from Q4 2018 and that’s really a reflection of the market environment. More importantly, the profitability of the Home segment has rebounded incredibly well, with segment profit of $26.9 million representing 41% margin, and year-on-year growth of 25%. While we’ve certainly seen some favorability in the macro environment for mortgage, the team has executed incredibly well on a number of fronts to drive this returning to growth, and improved profitability.
We spent much of the year discussing our efforts to better segment traffic at the top of the funnel and use those learnings to improve our matching algorithms and optimize pricing. Those efforts have clearly begun to pay off. And we’re encouraged to see continued signs of strength in the mortgage business, as we start the New Year.
And finally, in the Consumer segment, revenue of $113.4 million grew 15% year-on-year, while segment profit of $43.3 million declined 9% year-over-year. Let’s put this drop in segment profitability in context. The challenges in the personal loan space were well documented last year and we covered this extensively at our Investor Day. They did persist in the fourth quarter as revenue growth slowed to 5% year-on-year. As we’ve discussed at length, personal loans are both incredibly strategic and a very profitable business for us. This loan growth in that business has a material impact on overall profitability.
On the positive side as we progressed through Q1, we’ve begun to see some encouraging signs of the turn in that business. And we are optimistic that the worst is behind us. Clearly, improvement in that key business will be hugely beneficial to our full year picture. The aspect of consumer that we’ve not discussed in as much detail is the credit card business. Strategically, we were very happy with the top-line growth in card in 2019, as the team posted better than 27% growth in revenue, but as we scale to take market share with key issuers, the profitability in the credit card business lagged the top-line performance.
We acknowledge this at Investor Day and we said that excepting lower card, lower margin in card was a strategic decision to take market share with key issuers. We’ve often spoken to the potential volatility in the card business and the fact that investors can and will, pardon me, issuers can and will flex budgets, budgets many times irrespective of the performance we deliver for them. That volatility was on display in Q4, as a couple of issuers back budget materially towards the end of the quarter.
In addition, we ran some challenges but certain marketing partners in the quarter, which caused our unit cost to increase materially in the short run. Some of those cost challenges have extended into the early part of Q1. We think we have a handle on these issues on the cost side, but they did impact the business in the first half of the quarter. So, this weakness is reflected in our first quarter guidance, which I’ll discuss in a moment. On a much brighter note within consumer, our small business offering continues to scale nicely with revenue growth of 61% year-on-year. We’ve highlighted, we’ve highlighted the small business vertical often throughout 2019 and continue to be incredibly enthusiastic about our prospects in that business. It is clearly an underserved category for small business borrowers, and there is a visible opportunity for us to expand the number and types of lenders we work with.
Very briefly on the other category, which consists of non-core revenue streams, primarily the reselling of adds to third parties. We recorded revenue of $5.4 million and a loss of $100,000. For context, a year ago, this revenue number was $9.9 million. Given some of the marketing mix decisions we are making this year. We anticipate that this revenue will largely go away moving forward.
Summing everything up, consolidated revenue of $255.2 million was up 26% versus the prior year. Layering in brand expense of $4.2 million in the quarter. Through the some of the segment profits, variable marketing margin of $93.8 million was up 19% over last year. And finally, in terms of adjusted EBITDA, we delivered $45.9 million growth of 17% over the same period last year and well within our guidance range provided in October.
On a GAAP basis, net income from continuing operations came in at $1.5 million or $0.10 per diluted share. Our GAAP results were in part affected by a $7.2 million charge to write-up in fair value the contingent consideration related to the QuoteWizard earn out. On a non-GAAP basis, adjusted net income per share was $1.12.
Now, moving on to guidance. The trends we’re seeing, as we start out the year are encouraging and give us confidence to maintain the full year 2020 outlook we provided, just a couple of months ago at our Investor Day. As a reminder, that outlook calls for approximately 15% growth on both revenue and adjusted EBITDA. And for the first time in the last several years, does not include the benefit of acquisitions. Looking more specifically at our first quarter guidance introduced this morning, our overall outlook is in line with our internal plan for the year. Our full year plan contemplated muted EBITDA growth in Q1, given both the Q4 trend in card and the typical step up in opex that we always experienced in Q1.
We are confident that we’ve taken the right steps to address the marketing issues in part and we do not expect them to persist throughout the remainder of the year. On the positive side, both our Insurance and mortgage businesses are trending ahead of the growth, the growth trajectories we provided with our initial 2020 guidance at Investor Day. Outperformance in these two businesses will be far more relevant to our overall 2020 financial performance and we are also hopeful about an improvement in personal loans.
For the first quarter, we expect revenue to fall in the range of $296 million to $306 million, which at the midpoint represents growth of 15% over the first quarter of last year. Variable marketing margin is expected to be in the range of $97 million to $104 million, representing 9% growth at the midpoint and adjusted EBITDA is expected in the range of $43 million to $46 million, representing growth of 3% at the midpoint.
Before we open the line for questions. I’d echo Doug’s prior point about the importance of diversification. We are bound feel volatility in any given business from time-to-time, but the diversification that we’ve put in place, enable us to whether those blips time and again. While our marketplace continues to improve, what is most exciting at LendingTree is the opportunity to capitalize on our unique ability to engage the consumer across all of their financial needs. We are making big progress there and very excited about where we’re heading.
And with that operator, we can open the line for questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question is from Youssef Squali with SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.
Youssef Squali — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Okay. Great, thank you very much. It’s Youssef Squali. Hey, guys, just a couple of questions here. I was wondering J.D. If you go back and just go over the two issues related to the profitability and the credit card. I’m not sure I fully understood that and what exactly are you doing to remedy that? And then maybe Doug. There was an announcement of a pretty large transaction yesterday. I was wondering how that is likely at least in your mind likely to change the competitive landscape in particular around verticals like credit cards and whether your customer acquisition cost assumptions basically had already taken into account, the potential increase in competitiveness in that sector? Thank you.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Youssef, let me start with the first one in the card business, you have to think about both sides. You have to think about the payout environment from issuers and how desirous they are growing certain card portfolios and we’ve talked historically about rewards and balance transfers, that wasn’t really the issue in 2019, the issue in the fourth quarter was essentially issuers reigning in their budgets late in the quarter. That’s the top-line side of it. On the cost side, we’ve got to drive high-quality traffic that when it gets to issuers converts and you have good approval ratings. We had a couple of marketing partners that simply were not performing for us and we’ve re-cut some of those deals to improve the economics and better reflect the quality traffic that they were driving in certain in certain cases, we’ve cut off those marketing partners and we won’t be utilizing that those traffic sources any longer. So, effectively we are constantly trying to optimize the marketing mix, to make sure that we’re driving traffic that converts for our issuer partners. Again throughout 2019 and the big picture, we took market share and we’re confident there. We grow revenue growth of 27%, we’re confident there we did make some conscious decisions to operate at lower margins in card throughout the year, because that was the right thing for the strategy of the business, to gain to gain presence with issuers late in the quarter, some of those cost challenges and actually, as I said it carried into January. Some of those cost challenges became things that we had to address.
And so, we feel very confident that we address the cost side of the equation. Issuer behavior, it continues to be very much a month-to-month business and so, that’s the piece that we have two that we, that we have to work with issuers on payouts and approval rates and otherwise. But we feel very confident that we’ve addressed the cost out and equal.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And then this is Doug. On the strategy side, to answer your specific question on customer acquisition costs. I don’t anticipate anything different there. And the reason is LendingTree has so many things that we can market. Kudos to Credit Karma for building a member base around free credit score. LendingTree by having all of our products, plus the mine LendingTree app plus having all the brands plus having our great SEO strategy helps us to not just drive app down, app downloads but also helps us drive first time customers and we think that’s a competitive advantage. We’re continuing to add new features throughout this year and our engagement numbers are actually very, very ambitious and to make, to the extent it makes sense. I’m really open in the future. We’re going to be talking to you guys about weekly, and daily engagement of customers and again to the extent it makes sense, in some ways for loan products you actually don’t need to engage a lot but for other types of products that we’re thinking about more frequent engagement, might actually make sense as well too. But no, we feel great about our strategic positioning. None of this was a surprise to us and it’s go forward for us and we feel great.
Youssef Squali — SunTrust Robinson Humphrey — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Eric Wasserstrom with UBS.
Eric Wasserstrom — UBS — Analyst
Thank you. Hi, how are you. A couple of questions please. The first, Doug, you mentioned the B2B partnerships. Can you just go back to that for a moment and help us understand what’s occurring there?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Sure. Essentially, what you do is you work with people like Fidelity, H&R Block etc to bring alerts effectively, My LendingTree alerts for other financial products to their user basis and we think just like Google at a syndication strategy. We think that’s an integral part to doing that. And we’ve got a lot of plans for that this year.
Eric Wasserstrom — UBS — Analyst
Got it. Okay. Okay. And maybe just moving to the personal loan environment. It sounds like, J.D., there is some expectation of maybe some improvement there. And I just want to understand what end market dynamics are our changing to that cause you to feel that way?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, sure. So, as we talked about at Investor Day, you’re talking about a marketplace that was growing 30% in 2018. I think TransUnion data suggested it grew 9% last year. So, that sort of marketplace deceleration is going to ripple through our business. Now, when we look out on the year, we look at lender, what we call lender wins, where we feel really good about our progress in terms of adding unique lender capacity and then how that will, how that will project through the year. So, we’re obviously monitoring performance. We are, we are encouraged. When we look at particularly January and February data on the stability of the business and how our lenders are performing. And so, that’s when I say that we’re encouraged. We know that our lenders are seeing good profitability again and that’s encouraging. That’s a good read through or leading indicator for our business.
As we’ve talked about in many of our marketplaces, we really focus on lender health and lender health leads to stability and durability, in each of our marketplaces. And so, I think we feel on balance better about winter health in personal loans. I would also say that just purely for us our comparison will get a little bit easier going forward, realize that when we’re talking about the fourth quarter. We’re comparing to fourth quarter of 2018 when our growth and margin in personal loans was, it was, it’s a difficult comparison those comparisons will get a little bit easier as we go through the year.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And the only other thing I’d add on to what J.D. said in personal loans, we’re making a lot of product progress as well and it really goes to how we integrate and work with our lending partners and it’s important that it helps drive conversion rates, but it’s also, at least for me a really important indicator that these lenders are seeing this as a significant enough channel that they’re really increasingly working on integration with us.
Eric Wasserstrom — UBS — Analyst
But in terms of this will be my last question, I’ll hop off. But just in terms of the, the secular margin because you guys have been very transparent about, it’s a very margin rich product for you. Should we think about there being any change outside of some of these cyclical dynamics in terms of the secular margin contribution from the product?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
A little bit. There is a little bit of a normalization I would call it, Eric. But fundamentally that business is a good margin business for us. We’re very train from the reason why right, we’re benefiting from repeat users and we’re benefiting from My LendingTree. So, that is a structural advantage that we have in that business. I think that our margins in 2018 were probably higher than they will be going forward in that business but we’re happy to grow that business at the margins that we’re having today. So, that’s the way I would think about it. It’s still a very healthy margin that will continue to be healthy margin and we just want to grow the business and grow the lender.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And the only other thing I’d add there is, keep in mind that you’ve got personal loans, getting a lot of so-called draft traffic from My LendingTree. And then in addition to that we’re marketing personal loans. However, the mix of that is obviously more weighted towards the second transaction at LendingTree but increasingly as monetization improves and we can go to market that product even more.
Eric Wasserstrom — UBS — Analyst
Got it, got it. So, in other words that I guess, so maybe just quickly to summarize. It sounds like, while there may be some like competitor or end market pressure that’s being partially mitigated through some of these strategic actions that you’ve taken. Is that a fair summary?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I believe so. I got our flip in there.
Eric Wasserstrom — UBS — Analyst
Yeah. Hardly but. Thanks very much.
Operator
Your next question is from Jed Kelly with Oppenheimer.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Hey, Jerry.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Hey, thanks for taking my question. First one, just on the margins, guidance does imply that the margins will start to expand year-over-year. Can you talk about the drivers of that? Is that more of an impact from My LendingTree of the overall environment improving? And then is there any way to quantify the impact these marketing partnerships add on 1Q and 4Q EBITDA?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Let me take the second question, first. And I think specifically what you’re referring to is in card. Had the card business, it’s I may give you a range of that impact because some of this is a real-time decision that we’re making intra-quarter as to, where we were constantly going after Dow, BMD right and we’re making real-time trade-offs, but the impact had the card business hit its targets in the quarter, you would have been looking at an incremental, call it $5 million to $8 million of BMD. Okay. So, you can factor you could think about that relative to our quarter in terms of that impact. Now, some of that obviously we would have accepted for gains with certain issuers. And some of it, we obviously we have standards where we want to operate certain businesses but had they hit their target. Had the card business hit target that’s pretty much the impact by $5 million to $8 million of incremental BMD.
As it relates to margins go forward throughout the year. Clearly, as you know well. We have certain businesses that will contribute meaningfully in Q3 that will impact margin. And that will be the most impactful thing. And what we’re tracking closely is the health in our in-in mortgage. Obviously, we’re very happy with that and insurance where we’re happy with that margin profile. As we said, we think, personal loans is stabilizing and then basically getting back to a standard within card a reasonable margin, which we think we should be able to do through improved marketing on the cost side. You’re going to see that normalization in the margin profile and the improvement quarter-on-quarter.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
So, just a follow-up, I guess there is nothing that’s changed structurally in cards going forward on customer acquisition. This is mostly you think one-time in nature?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Within our control on the cost side for sure. Yes.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
All right. And then just one more for me. The Home VM margins were strong this quarter. Is 40% the right way to look at it into 2020. Just given that the environment has improved?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
You know it’s interesting, the mortgage business is the one that we’ve encouraged you all to think about the quarter-on-quarter progress. Right, because it really is the business that is influenced by the capacity of our of our lenders and the organic volume that they have and so, we’re obviously in a very low rate environment. That has its pluses and minuses. It’s a good macro environment for us. At the same time, a lot of our of our lenders are going to be getting an awful lot of organic volume. So, that doesn’t necessarily always help us. Our margin improvement here is really driven by improved monetization. As we said at the top of the funnel we’re segmenting the traffic ever more intelligently and we’re giving lenders this. The thing that I’m really excited about, we’re giving lenders, different products, different, different solutions that meet their needs, as opposed to being one LendingTree mortgage solution. So, that’s where you’re seeing that profitability improvement. So, we’re in a scenario where the lenders are benefiting because they’re getting what they want and we’re benefiting because we’re segmenting the traffic. That’s it. That is a repeatable margin improvement. It’s not a zero-sum game where we’re making margin at the expense of lenders. So, I feel very good about the health of that.
And then there is just the sequential how this plays out relative to rates and how much volume they have organically. That’s the part, it’s harder to call. Obviously, we’re an extreme low rate environment right now. On balance, it’s helping us. We’re just, we’re very focused on driving incremental quarterly improvement in the mortgage business and we’re doing it through product innovation and that’s what we’re really happy with.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And the only thing I’d add is over the years of our business, you will see variable marketing margin percentages go sometimes go up and sometimes go down. Based on the, based on the dynamics of that individual market. However, if you look at variable margin dollars that’s that is showing the call it the marketing profitability of contribution margin before our fixed costs and that number is what we focus on every day, every month, every week.
Jed Kelly — Oppenheimer — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from John Campbell with Stephens Inc.
John Campbell — Stephens Inc — Analyst
Hey guys, good morning. On the 2020 guidance you left at in, I just wanted to check on the inputs. J.D., it sounds like you’ve kind of temperature expectations a bit for credit card but mortgage is incrementally better maybe acting I guess somewhat as an offset. Is that fair characterization?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, it was, I think the guide the guide sort of, guide in part contemplated some of the difficulty in card, in the fourth quarter. We do the mortgage is definitively better Insurance. We talked about at Investor Day we talked about implied growth rate there that is better so some of our bigger businesses are definitely trending better and we feel really good about that. As we’ve said, as it relates to guidance, we were going to amend guidance when we see a material change. Right. The good news and what I would be focused on if you think about how our year progresses. Is that those businesses are seeing better trends than they were when we spoke at Investor Day. So, we feel really good about that.
John Campbell — Stephens Inc — Analyst
Okay. And then on the other, rather, it sounds like you’re not going to really see much of that this year. Was that a decision that was made, kind of earlier this year. Was that reflected originally in your guidance when you issued it back in December?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, recognize that other category, yeah, we knew that that line item was going to be pretty much going away. It’s not as clean as going away December 31. So, that other category was never really strategic, it was a marketing decision that we that we would, we would take on certain marketing inventory. If we could utilize it ourselves. Great. If not, we were reselling it and we were trying to be overly transparent and giving you visibility into that line item. And now, but at the end of the day, what we’re focused on as a marketing mix that drives our core business and if that’s not, if that is not working for our core business, then we’re not going to take on that net revenue and in turn resell it. So, that’s why it’s going away.
John Campbell — Stephens Inc — Analyst
Okay. Last one from me on the credit card challenges. And I guess some of the broader profit pressure and consumer. How much of that do you think is driven by the seasonal accounting changes, is there an impact to the pricing just overall on the channel as I don’t know if that, if the ROI, just kind of declines a bit for the larger issuers. I don’t know how much of an impact that has on pricing, are you seeing anything there?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
No, I think was a credit card in Q4 is always interesting and card is, keep in mind with cards and all of our business is a card issuer may switch from one type of card another and that card has a lower conversion rate with customers and you’re also going up against Q4 noise etc. So, we continue to think our credit card penetration is going very, very well, continue to clean up and make changes of user experience and I wouldn’t read anything into much of anything over the long-term. J.D.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
I could agree more.
John Campbell — Stephens Inc — Analyst
Okay. Great. Thanks, guys.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
I don’t think, it’s not part of the year.
John Campbell — Stephens Inc — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Mark Mahaney with RBC Capital Markets.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Mark.
Mark Mahaney — RBC Capital Markets. — Analyst
Okay, thanks. Thanks. Two questions please. This you’re My LendingTree net adds that the roughly $1.1 million adds in the quarter. I think that was a record high or is close to it. Any color on the sources of those on net add, and are they acting similar to the My LendingTree new customers that you brought on in the past? That’s question one.
The second one is, you talked about trying to take market share with key issuers in the credit card segment in Q4. Do you feel like you were able to accomplish that? Just, I know that the strategy is become maybe more expensive or less efficient than you thought. The goal of gaining greater market share with key issuers actually did that actually occur? Thank you.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Got it. I’ll take the first one and leave the second one for J.D, if you can answer it. I believe the 1.1 was a record and if it’s not we will tell you. For the most part, they were still coming ins through the LendingTree qualification forms and then we’re introducing you to My LendingTree. So, I would actually read that that number is very good, which is showing we got higher conversion rates. Despite the fact that the, the core business of LendingTree typically doesn’t drive a lot of as much volume in Q4 and I would say the newer cohorts in general when you get apples-to-apples, are actually performing better than older cohorts and that’s because the product continues to improve the monetization continues to improve and that should just continue to get better. And that’s how we’re able to market in Q1 against, against actual app downloads.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Mark, as it relates to your second question on card market share wins. We look at market share, obviously, throughout the year, not in a given quarter because that’s where it progress from a sales perspective and if we’re getting issuers who increasingly trust us to be a partner with which they test new products or give us better payouts because they value, the quality of our traffic, right. So, if I look at that, you would look at our revenue gains throughout 2019, 27% plus percent revenue in the card business and say, that that’s reflective of gaining market share as we grow with issuers. Keep in mind that when we acquired compare cards in 2000, late 2016 and we’ve been very open about this. Greater than 60% of the business was one issuer. Okay. So, this is an ongoing diversify our issuer base initiatives, pardon me, strategy and so, on that for 2019 was a very good year. The fourth quarter is always a little bit challenging in all of our business because somebody can cut their budget or pulled back their spend materially on short notice. And so, I don’t look at the fourth quarter as being reflective of anything other than that volatility. At the end of the day, we have to look at the full year and what gains we made on in terms of market share with issuers. We’re very happy with that.
Mark Mahaney — RBC Capital Markets. — Analyst
Okay, thanks. J.D. Thanks, Doug.
Operator
Your next question is from Mayank Tandon with Needham & Company.
Kyle Peterson — Needham & Company — Analyst
Hey, good morning, it’s actually Kyle Peterson from Mayank. Thanks for taking the questions. I just wanted to dive into the Insurance segment. Obviously, the results, there have been very strong. Is that still mostly coming from auto or are some of the smaller verticals like home, life and health kind of contributing there too? I just want to kind of get the puts and takes of what’s the strength is there right now?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Sure. So, the smaller verticals are doing great but auto continues to be the worst. So, the overall percentage has not changed and auto just because the autos strength remains very healthy. So, there is no material change there. We’re happy with the performance in the other verticals. And we have, we have plans for those other verticals that are very ambitious, but net of the core is still on.
Kyle Peterson — Needham & Company — Analyst
Okay, that’s helpful. And then, just wanted to see if you guys could touch a little on M&A, you guys have kind of talked about kind of additional points of interest, kind of at your Investor Day various such as kind of auto or wealth investing. Just kind to see want to see like kind of what the pipeline is kind of what you guys are thinking about prioritizing from that perspective, kind of as we head into 2020?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Yeah, absolutely. I’ll take it. Doug, can add. We continue to see M&A as a huge opportunity for us. We spent a lot of time in 2019, looking at a few categories. Clearly, because of our prominence in insurance, we looked at a lot of assets there and we will continue to look at that business, but we’re very happy with the core business that we have. We spend a lot of time looking to real estate thinking that there should be some adjacency to our purchase mortgage business and decided not to do anything there. We’ll continue to look. But I don’t see that is due to focus area going forward. We mentioned small business, small business we like of the category, very much. We’re thrilled with the performance of SnapCap. We would, we would look to continue to add to that business, partially because we think it’s a category where we’re adding a lot of value for the small business borrower. Who we think it’s underserved, we also know that that’s mortgages borrower is a repeat customer and we also know that there is the ability to do more than just loans for a small business, the small business credit cards, small-business insurance over time. So, that is an area that we’re interested in.
And lastly, we talked about wealth and investing. And I think this is of particular strategic significance. As Doug said at the outset, when we think about My LendingTree and we think about the engagement that we want to drive we think about using the consumer on more than just credit products and so, over time, wealth and investing will be critical to that. So, we continue to look at assets in that space and how we could potentially drive if everything from how do we engage with the consumer within My LendingTree to also marketplaces for financial advisors. That is a critically important area for us and something that will look to look to grow. As Doug said, our goals for My LendingTree in terms of engagement are actually more ambitious than credit products and you have to have the asset side of the balance sheet to drive that indeed so that that is one key area when we think about M&A, we continue to look at assets.
Kyle Peterson — Needham & Company — Analyst
Alright, great that’s helpful color. Thanks, guys.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And then the only thing I’d add on to that is, M&A has worked well for us because we’ve got a big user base and a brand name and LendingTree that is already very well-known and so we can bring these other companies in and by virtue of having the entire platform and all of the products being able to surround the customer that just gives you a much better marketing edge and a better product for consumers. So, as we look to help consumers make smart decisions. Help them save money. Help them get on the path of financial wellness you could imagine all of the areas that we would want to be in and then it’s a question of whether you build them or whether you do some partnerships or whether you actually take the leap and do M&A and I would say we have, we’ve had a great track record on the latter two.
Kyle Peterson — Needham & Company — Analyst
Okay. Alright. That’s helpful color. Thanks guys.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from James Friedman with Susquehanna.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Hi, Jamie.
James Friedman — Susquehanna — Analyst
Hi. Thanks. Thanks for taking my question. I’ll just ask the two upfront. J.D. in your prepared remarks, you had referenced the talented speaker. You heard at the Analyst Day from TransUnion, the quote that she had was that it had gone the end market for personal lines of decelerated from 30% growth to 9% growth in terms of your comments about the Q1. I thought you had said that the banks were closing the credit box. Are you seeing any improvement there is that it and then I’ll just get the second one and quick Doug and one of your previous answers you had said that the latest cohorts in My LendingTree or better monetize some batching away which some of that effect? Why is that happening. Could you kind of elaborate on that. So, the first one I’m personal lines. Next on the cohorts and MLT? Thank you.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Jamie, I was more commenting on the performance of lenders on our network in terms of conversion rates, cost-per-funded loan etc. So, that’s where we’re seeing I think improvement for them. So it’s less about credit box more about kind of how they’re performing from a customer acquisition perspective, and that’s what’s encouraging right now, we have not seen any discernible change with respect to the credit box decisions of whether it’s banks or the, the more non-traditional lenders. We haven’t seen a discernible change since December now.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And then on the second question, I would say, number one are, the so-called brain, if you will, of LendingTree continues to get smarter of how we can alert customers to actually save money or improve their credit and then save money through refinancing other loans etc. And then the other thing I would say is that as we continue to diversify products. We continue to integrate them with within LendingTree all of those products drive more marketing opportunities to save the customer money in contact them via all the methods of contact to actually close more transactions.
James Friedman — Susquehanna — Analyst
Perfect. Thanks guys.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Thanks, James.
Operator
Your next question is from Stephen Sheldon with William Blair.
Stephen Sheldon — William Blair — Analyst
Thanks, good morning. Wanted to ask about the Credit Karma acquisition again, and you’ve talked about some, but it seems like there. They’ll there’ll be trying to focus on at least some of the same consumer decisions that My LendingTree is help consumers with. But just wanted to ask from a consumer’s perspective how you think about the value proposition of My LendingTree versus others that may be attempting to provide some more platforms that help with similar types of decisions?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Sure. So, one thing I would say at the outset, you see a lot of crossover in these apps. So, for over half of people who have My LendingTree download also have Credit Karma and I guess it’s probably not have the other way. Clearly, but it’s a different, it’s a different product, it’s not mostly focused on credit score as a great way to drive people in which is obviously is a great way to drive people in and as JD talked about, we’re really trying to focus on overall financial health and wellness and then you also in our minds. We always focus on dollars, not necessary not necessarily numbers just like the good old days of the Internet where traffic sort of mattered to some people. We really just focus on how can we profitably continue to go and drive this business. The consumers love our products, who have it. It’s saving them lots of money. It’s improving their lives. And as we just as we continue to add products, which will improve monetization which will enable us to do more marketing. We feel honestly great about our progress and great about where we’re going.
Stephen Sheldon — William Blair — Analyst
Got it. That’s helpful.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Steve, I guess, I would just say, if you go to the My Lending Tree, new at profile you’re going to see something that’s a little bit somewhat differentiated. It’s going to say ways to improve. Ways to improve your financial well, your financial well-being your holistic approach. Right. So, we’re focused on getting our consumers to plan with us on their financial goals and you’ve heard us say for several years, we give them Credit Karma all the credit in the world in terms of using a free credit score to drive a membership base. But we think go forward. It needs to be about way more than that. And so, that’s what we’ve been working on and we think we’re making great progress got it.
Stephen Sheldon — William Blair — Analyst
Got it. And then within Insurance, you talked about auto still being a predominant growth driver, but on the smaller components like home and health, how much of a focus will it be to scale more in those areas over the next few years? And how are you thinking about I guess investing into those other components?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. We’re making investments specifically within, within health at the moment, organically. So, we’re investing in that actually real time, building out that the health pizza. This is the nice thing about how we can help catalyze an acquired business. Right. We can give them the resources to make those investments that they might not otherwise make when there is money to be made in auto and so, health specifically, we made an investment in the fourth quarter that will continue to back throughout 2020. And Home, we’ll continue to try to find ways where QuoteWizard will benefit from graph traffic from mortgage that will be the primary “investment of resources” that you’ll see through 2020 that won’t really be discernible. But we think that there is opportunity there over time but health is the first real true investment that we’re making.
Stephen Sheldon — William Blair — Analyst
Great, thank you.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Kunal Madhukar with Deutsche Bank.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Hi, thanks for taking the question.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Kunal.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Hi, how are you?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Good, thank you.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
If I may. One on the My LendingTree side, and one on the small business personal loan side. So, on the My LendingTree, you talked about like how you have six active partners or six active integrations of the partners and two of them are testing and yet, most of the traffic on most of the app download is coming through the My LendingTree website. So, how do you measure the contribution from the partners, whether it is an app downloads or the revenue contribution. How do we kind of look at the partners. And then on the personal loan small business side, you have a number of lenders out there that like the lending club essentially just bought a bank and the other partners who are operating or active on your side that are looking at bank charters and what have you. So with more regulatory upside. How do you see their risk in the future, their ability to charge interest rates? And how much they can actually spend on marketing on the platform?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Sure. So, on the partnership front, keep in mind we did our first partnership in 2020 with H&R Block. So, we’ve made tremendous progress in a number of those and from a revenue standpoint, those are all on revenue shares, so obviously no marketing risk. And the reason that most of our traffic comes from LendingTree is because we’re driving people in for mortgages, home equity, auto, personal loans and credit cards. And then introducing them to our, to our app that they can then that they can then download.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
So, let me just take and I’ll let me put a finer point on the H&R Block point. H&R Block actually that partnership started in 2018. And they were looking for a way to engage with their consumers, and other points in the year. Right. Other than tax time. But the sign ups that we have had thus far in 2020 via that partnership has been extraordinary. And in fact, thus far in 2020, it’s actually our Number one source of downloads for My LendingTree now exceptional. We got a partner that’s very happy because we’re giving them what they want. Right. And we’re still actually having revenue events from people who signed up in 2018, which is the cohort behavior that we hope for.
Now, more importantly as it relates to My LendingTree, what we’ve built is, when we talk about these partnerships. I wouldn’t focus on six. What I would focus on is our strategy, which is, we’ve built it so that the APIs are easily ingestible by our partners and they can take what they want from it and build a business on the back of it. So, you’re going to see partners big brand names like H&R Block. And then you’re going to see smaller partners who are going to utilize My LendingTree as well. And so, that’s the strategy and that’s what we’ve been building in the background is something where we can really engage with partners. That’s what’s been going on for the last 18 months at LendingTree, right. You’re not just, it’s not just the, what the consumer sees as the app. It’s the ability to integrate with partners easily. So, what took time to integrate with H&R Block in 2018. The timeline from agreement to the partner being up and running has shortened significantly. And so, I think what you’re going to see as 2020 progresses is simply more partners and greater growth through those partnerships because we’re going to be able to on-board them much more quickly.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Great. Perfect. Coming from that. Thanks for, thanks for that answer, Doug and J.D. As you think off like Intuit acquired Credit Karma and potentially building maybe a similar kind of been a comprehensive financial suite of products for consumers. How do you, how do you think the competitive landscape is going to change for you?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
So, this is an interesting, give you a short-term and a long-term answer I think. Over 25 years we’ve seen Microsoft come in into mortgage and real estate, Google has tried twice into it. This is their third or fourth shot depending on how you count meant and we just keep chugging along. And I think it is going to be competitors. But is, this is a big space. And when you think of all the financial products that are surging through consumers and your ability to add value to them. We think that we will have a product that is every bit is competitive that is more, it is as or more compelling to consumers that monetize as well and that we can work with partners, and we can drive it ourselves and I feel great about our positioning.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Great, thanks.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
If anything, it makes me more confident to see that that some of the big boys are ready to play ball again and which I think is going to get, there is a lot of activity in this space and a lot of focus and that means that lenders are going to start getting more automated. It means marketing partners who understand this more and LendingTree is positioned everywhere across the board.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Thanks. And one last one. The second question that I had initially raised was as more and more of your or as some of your financial partners are either becoming banks or trying to get bank charters. How does that change this capital-light and speed and agility and their ability to spend on the platform?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
I think it will help at the margin, just because it cleanup for them for lenders some reporting and regulatory issues. It’s not, it’s not a game changer. And we think, as I talked about for example with personal loans that just improving the user experience and conversion rates that that will, that will has way more juice, if you will, and people have bank charters but bank charter certainly do help their business.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I mean I guess one way to look at it, I don’t think it’s an interesting, it’s an interesting to see isolated decisions to go down that path. And clearly there are benefits associated there are, there are down, there are costs and there are benefits associated with that decision. Why somebody doing it, they’re doing it to have greater stability and knowledge of what their cost of capital is and so if that’s more stable and for them, they can make more consistent marketing decisions with respect to acquiring customers and so in some respects, it could actually make them a better partner for us. But I don’t think that’s going to play out overnight.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And as I said, I think it’s going to be a major game changer, but it certainly a helps.
Kunal Madhukar — Deutsche Bank — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Chris Gamaitoni with Compass Point.
Chris Gamaitoni — Compass Point — Analyst
Hi, good morning. Just one follow-up. On partnership revenue given it’s a revenue split, how does the accounting work. Is it contra-revenue item or is or is that the split in VMM or other expense?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
At the top of my head, I believe you book to revenue and then you book it is a marketing cost, it probably tracks pretty closely to probably a little lower than normal VMM percentages, but also keep in mind, the great thing about that is, when you’re marketing a lifetime value product like My LendingTree your marketing that alone, that’s going to have, that’s going to take a while. Till that first cohort makes money. When you’re doing it on a rev share, You’re obviously making money from day one as well.
Chris Gamaitoni — Compass Point — Analyst
Right. So, just to be clear, the revenue share is whenever product is purchased and there is an actual item. There is no initial customer acquisition cost for the download or the customer?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
No. Whenever, whenever we make money, we give them a percentage.
Chris Gamaitoni — Compass Point — Analyst
All right, perfect. Thank you so much.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Sure. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Good morning. Just first off, just wanted to ask, does the changes in the traffic with your partners this Q1 for credit cards. Does that have any impact on the seasonality lift that you see in the segment? I’m just trying to dissect question, I apologize. With respect to card seasonality.
Hamed Khorsand — BWS Financial — Analyst
Yeah, correct. And right Q1 is usually a very strong quarter for credit cards?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah. So right now, we’ve got, if we’re not happy with the performance of a given channel we simply invest in another channel and replace that traffic. And so, as we look at, as I mentioned, some of that weakness persisted in January and we’ve taken action to correct it and we’ve replaced those traffic sources with other alternatives. So, it’s really a marketing mix issue. So, no, I don’t think it’s going to really play out other than we’re going to fix the cost side of the equation for car.
Hamed Khorsand — BWS Financial — Analyst
And then is it purely to advertising spend that you’re doing for My LendingTree that caused the subscriber numbers to increase from the Analyst Day to what you ended the year end number with and is that trend going to continue in Q1?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
No, the if you believe J.D. referenced this that, we did some testing in Q3, and then we’re doing actual spending in Q1, so Q4 was, was us doing good work.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I think it’s, honestly we think about it right, we were at a re-launched the product middle of the year. I think we’re benefiting from a better products as well.
Hamed Khorsand — BWS Financial — Analyst
Okay, thank you for letting me ask the question.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Yeah. Thank you, Hamed.
Operator
Your next question is from Rob Wildhack with Autonomous Research.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Good morning, Rob.
Robert Wildhack — Autonomous Research — Analyst
How are you?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Good, how are you?
Robert Wildhack — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Good. You talked about the macro environment and mortgage bid and we can obviously see the rate piece. But I just wanted to see where we stand today and what you’re seeing in terms of lender capacity in the eligible refi population?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Anecdotally, and then J.D. can give more specific. I’m hearing at least just channel checks and things that we’re talking about hearing very good things and that our biggest lenders are in particular and obviously a small ones are asking for more volume. And I think while capacity is constrained. My gut is telling me that every time we hit these things capacity gets a little bit better. And I think that’s happening through automation. See if J.D. has any specific numbers on that. But it just seems like our lenders in in refi boom can handle more than they could have, let’s say in the past. And then in when that goes away that there that they can that there even hungrier.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Not surprisingly, the focus, the lender focus is entirely on refi. I don’t have a current number for you in terms of those who would benefit from a refinance, we can certainly get that, but it’s, that’s going to be a lagging, the lagging number given the movement in rates. But lender help fields, feels very, very good mortgage for sure.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And yes, there will be increases in lend, we call that sort of lend ability and if you’re getting somehow home price appreciation obviously reduction in rates and through My LendingTree improvement in your credit score that definitely improves the land ability.
Robert Wildhack — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Great. And then just quick on the marketing partners in credit card that were underperforming. Were there any similarities between the partners there was that related to any specific channel or was it broad based?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Sure. It’s mostly in display and some of the partnerships we’ve had there. So, if that’s not working. We’re not going to continue to support it. And so, that’s where we’ve, we’ve made some very conscious decision.
Robert Wildhack — Autonomous Research — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Melissa Wedel with J.P. Morgan.
Melissa Wedel — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Good morning, guys.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Hey, how are you?
Melissa Wedel — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Good. Thanks for taking my question. As we look at the new categories where you provided a little bit more transparency and thank you for that. Is there anything that you think we should be keeping in mind in terms of seasonality at the category level throughout the year in terms of revenue growth?
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
The biggest thing when we look at, when I look at like people’s quarterly progression despite all our efforts for communication people continue to underestimate the impact of students in the third quarter. So, that is the most obvious one, when you look at our third quarter and we always get the question of, if you like the fourth quarter is kind of falling off a cliff relative to the third. And that’s really student predominantly it’s also the strongest quarter for a number of our other businesses. That’s the most obvious. In the new segments, I think most of it will be somewhat muted, that student continues to live in that consumer area. Really see a ton otherwise in terms of specific businesses with great, great seasonality and that’s the one that really impacts the quarter.
Melissa Wedel — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay. And then I guess a follow-up on that. Within students do you see that most of the revenue from that category is driven by in school origination or are you also participating in the refi space?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
We certainly participate in both. the in school was the third quarter impact, we acquired student loan hero in 2018. In an effort to round out our business to have more refi presence throughout the year. It has increased our presence obviously with our, with our vendor partners. But no, it’s, so we’re in both aspects of this for sure.
Melissa Wedel — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay. And then my final question would be around share repurchase, that’s something you guys have done pretty opportunistically in the past and I guess I’m trying to understand how you guys think about your willingness to repurchase shares, offset by any M&A transactions you may be contemplating but then also. I’m wondering if your assessment of the value added through share repurchases impacted at all by some of the transaction levels that we’ve seen recently that comparison?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So, I guess it’s the, it’s, it’s a good question. We obviously have a view on our stockholders, but our decisions around share repurchase or not solely influenced by that because we’re cognizant of what we want to do on the M&A front. Now, if you look back, we were a company that has acquired. We’ve acquired nine businesses in 2016. Most of those have been smaller acquisition and we can really move the needle with some of the smaller acquisitions Snap-cap being the most prominent example of that. But obviously, as we become bigger those acquisitions will become larger and we’ll be very conscious of having a balance. We did expand our revolver in the fourth quarter and that was probably the greatest acknowledgment of the, what probably some of our goals are with respect to M&A and recognizing that that’s a strategic decision to make sure we have access to capital. We’re generating cash and paying down the revolver. The revolver has served us very well it enabled us to do well. The revolver, combined with the capital that we raised the convert in 2017. Enabled us to do QuoteWizard transaction and the ValuePenguin transaction and, and we’re now at the point where we paid down the vast majority of that revolver. So is the revolver has served us very, very, very well. But as we go forward is bigger entity obviously larger acquisitions will be part of it, and that will influence the way that we think about repurchasing stock. We have been opportunistic. We bought our stock back very well. We have a volatile stock and it service. It served us well. So, we’ll continue with the same strategy, we have our internal kind of view on value. That’s not the only way that we think about it, we have to think about what, what our alternatives are.
And then what our alternatives might become now part of your question is also transactions away from us and I think the, the size of those acquisitions, we have to be mindful of that. But we’re going to look at those opportunities in isolation, not just the market is paying this and so we’ve got to pay this. That’s not the way that we’re going to look that. We’re going to look at what it does for LendingTree and we’ve got a pretty good track record on the acquisition front.
Melissa Wedel — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
That’s really helpful. Thanks guys.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Nat Schindler with Bank of America.
Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America — Analyst
Yeah, hi guys. Two quick questions, one on the acquisition you guys alluded to Credit Karma buy Intuit. Do you have any information on the relative size of Credit Karma relative to you at this point? Across our businesses. No there particularly big credit card, but how would they fared in other parts of the business or at least how do you believe they have? And my second question, your QuoteWizard business run very consistently, a great, it very solid growth rates and we see from a competitor up in Boston ever quote is less consistent, but right now we’re showing much higher growth rates, as is your 36%. They did 86% this quarter in the largely the same businesses. Do you know, do you do you seen much what is change anything changing in the market or have you seen any direct movement of advertising dollars from one to the other?
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
Nat it’s J.D. Let me take the first, second question first and then we’ll get to the, to Karma in the second. Listen, what we look at when we look at Evercore’s results is not the growth rate because candidly, if you’re comparing their fourth quarter to their fourth quarter of ’18 that was a pretty easy comp for them. So, that percentage growth is a reflection of a weaker fourth quarter 2018. I look at the relative scale and relative profitability and that’s what we’re focused on at the end of the day, we acquired a profitable business. And while Evercore goods had good performance. I look at how are we doing in terms of market share and how are we doing in terms of the profitability. So, that’s what we’re focused on when we look at our Insurance division. And at the end of the day, you’ve got now with our new segments, the ability to have full transparency on our Insurance business. And so, we’re really happy with their results. I wouldn’t look at that growth rates because there’s just a lot of noise there.
The second question was around Karma I’ll let Doug, Doug address that.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
And I would add J.D. to chime in as well. Our understanding, which first, as I said before their numbers that came out were not a surprise to us, we believe we’re roughly comparable, but what I focus on most is the number of products, the customer experience and the amount of money. We’re saving people and how and how much we are improving and that is going very, very well. Anything else on that, J.D.
J.D. Moriarty — Chief Financial Officer
No, I guess I’ve been piecing together data points on Karma for the last couple of years. All right. And when I say data points at a conference will reveal how much revenue. They’ve got etc. So, yesterday, there wasn’t a whole lot in the Intuit release, other than $1 billion in revenue and 20% growth. My understanding is that the vast majority of that is in credit card and personal loan, again that’s not terribly surprising there wasn’t a whole lot of new information there. So, our point of differentiation is obviously great diversification in terms of where our revenue sits right. We’ve obviously built a very diversified business that we think leads to a more durable revenue model over time. And that you know we are about $1.1 billion won in revenue. So, as Doug said, very comparable with respect to revenue. There wasn’t anything in the release with respect to profitability and I would say we’re proud of our consistency there.
Nathaniel Schindler — Bank of America — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Operator
I am showing no further questions at this time, I would now like to turn the conference back to Doug Lebda, CEO.
Douglas Lebda — Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and Founder
Thank you, all and thank you, all for joining us. We had a wonderful 2019 as I said, and I’m really, really thrilled with how we’re hitting in 2020. We’ve got such deep penetration across all of our loan products and insurance products and we are continuing to not only make product improvements in those areas, but also on the lifetime value product through My LendingTree expect to see us make a lot more progress at a lot of new things so that we can surround the customer with everything that we can do to help them make smart decisions at the most critical times in our lives and just us and it’s going to be quite exciting this year. Thank you all and we’ll talk to you next quarter.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
Disclaimer
This transcript is produced by AlphaStreet, Inc. While we strive to produce the best transcripts, it may contain misspellings and other inaccuracies. This transcript is provided as is without express or implied warranties of any kind. As with all our articles, AlphaStreet, Inc. does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company’s SEC filings. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed in this transcript constitutes a solicitation of the purchase or sale of securities or commodities. Any opinion expressed in the transcript does not necessarily reflect the views of AlphaStreet, Inc.
© COPYRIGHT 2020, AlphaStreet, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, redistribution or retransmission is expressly prohibited.