Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Technology
Shopify Inc. (SHOP) Q2 2020 Earnings Call Transcript
SHOP Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Shopify Inc. (NYSE: SHOP) Q2 2020 earnings call dated July 29, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Tobi Lutke — Founder & Chief Executive Officer
Analysts:
Thomas Forte — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Ken Wong — Guggenheim Securities — Analyst
Matt Pfau — William Blair — Analyst
Siti Panigrahi — Mizuho — Analyst
Colin Sebastian — Baird — Analyst
Gus Papageorgiou — PI Financial — Analyst
Ygal Arounian — Wedbush Securities — Analyst
Darren Aftahi — ROTH Capital Partners — Analyst
Deepak Mathivanan — Barclays — Analyst
Brian Peterson — Raymond James — Analyst
Josh Beck — KeyBanc — Analyst
Samad Samana — Jefferies — Analyst
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Chris Merwin — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Walter Pritchard — Citi — Analyst
Tim Willi — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Welcome to the Shopify Second Quarter 2020 Financial Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]
I would now like to turn the conference over to Katie Keita, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thank you, operator and good morning, everyone. We are joined this morning by Tobi Lutke, Shopify’s CEO; Harley Finkelstein, our Chief Operating Officer and Amy Shapero, our CFO. Each of us is dialing in from our homes.
After some brief prepared remarks by Harley and Amy, we will open it up for your questions. We hope you enjoyed the on-hold music created by Shopify’s own internal talent, now for something slighly more riskier by our legal department titled ‘Risky Business.’
We will make forward-looking statements on our call today that are based on assumptions and therfore, subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. We undertake no obligation to update these statements, except as required by law. You can read about these risks and uncertainties in our press release this morning as well as in our filings with the U.S. and Canadian regulators.
Note, that the adjusted financial measures we speak to today are non-GAAP financial measures, which are not a substitute for GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations between the two can be found in our earnings press release. And finally, we report in U.S. dollars, so all amounts discussed today are in U.S. dollars unless otherwise indicated.
With that, I turn the call over to Harley.
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. We hope that you’re all keeping safe and healthy. Over the past few months, we’ve seen the COVID-19 pandemic fundamentally shift away businesses and consumers interact. It has catalyzed e-commerce, introducing major changes in buyer behavior and pulling forward what retail would look like in 2030 to 2020.
Many merchants were caught off guard and we knew that Shopify needed to access to help them survive. So, from late March through the second quarter, we dialed up our urgency to enable independent businesses to adapt and compete in this new reality.
This urgency helped more merchants not just survive but thrive in a period of major upheaval. I cannot recall a time in our history when we’ve shipped so many features in such a short period of time, helping so many merchants recover and many others reach new levels of success.
As a result, Q2 GMV growth accelerated to its highest level since before our 2015 IPO, driving Shopify’s cumulative GMV to over $200 billion. Stores selling on Shopify, sold 1.5 times what they did in Q4 of last year, the seasonally strongest quarter of the year. And that number of stores is growing all the time. This tells me that we’re on the right track and made the right decisions really in the pandemic.
The success our merchants are seeing motivates us to push even harder. In Q2, Shopify hosted its first virtual company even, Shopify Reunite, which attracted more than 50,000 viewers. Far more than would have been able to reach with our annual in-person event.
Our new product and feature announcements span the online store, multichannel capabilities, retail, shipping and finance, all geared towards helping merchants navigate and quickly adapt to a rapidly changing commerce landscape.
I want to highlight a few of these features, and then I’ll provide an update on how our merchants are responding in the current environment, our progress of Shopify Plus and our partner eco-system.
We shipped the Express theme, a free theme designed to get any business online quickly, such as restaurants and cafes. We also introduced online tipping to support the food and services industries and businesses offering local delivery. We introduced natively integrated channels from Facebook Shops, Walmart.com and Pinterest, enabling our merchants to sell in more places where their buyers are, and driving new traffic to their stores.
As COVID restrictions eased, our retail merchants are focused on protecting our customers and employees by leveraging safe distance technologies such as contactless payments. After introducing the new Tap & Chip hardware in the U.S. last year, we rolled it out in Canada, following the global launch of our all-new Point of Sale software in early May. Together, our Point of Sale offering is a powerful product that provides a seamless omnichannel experience for both the merchant and the buyer.
The shift to online commerce is redefining the role of the physical store and many retailers are reimagining their stores to serve as order fulfillment centers to meet digital demand, so we enhance our curbside pickup and our local delivery capabilities to give merchants more control of their retail operations by driving last mile execution.
We also announced two Financial Services products since launch in the U.S. later this year, Shopify Balance and Shop Pay Installments. We’re introducing Shopify Balance to further level the playing field, giving our merchants access to their cash faster and providing critical money management tools to effectively manage their business.
Through our No Fee business account, merchants will be able to understand cash flows, track expenses and pay bills. Merchants will also receive a physical or virtual card, which will help them access their own sales revenue faster than before and get rewards like cash back and discounts that will have more of our merchants reinvest in their future.
Our upcoming Buy Now Pay Later product, Shop Pay Installments will let merchants give buyers more options by paying in instalments with no interest and no fees. Working through a partner, a firm, we will offer a product that can help merchants to sell more by increasing cart size and sales conversion rates. Shop Pay Installments will be integrated into our accelerated checkout, Shop Pay, which offers four times faster checkout and close to two times higher conversion than regular checkout options, providing a frictionless experience for merchants and their buyers.
Since its launch, Shop Pay has facilitated cumulative GMV of more than $11 billion. Entrepreneurs have proven time and again that they’re resilient and resourceful, and here’s how merchants are tackling their challenges head on in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.
First, our merchants are creating new buyer opportunities. 39% of brick and mortar merchants in our English-speaking geographies adopted some form of local in-store or curbside pickup delivery solutions in Q2. That is up from 26% in early May, to meet increasing local demand. Merchants also saw more local customers shopping at their stores with the percentage of local customers per shop again increasing quarter-over-quarter. Merchants also grew their multi-channel presence over the second quarter with a greater proportion of merchants installing two or more channels in an effort to reach broader audiences.
Second, more merchants are leveraging Merchant Solutions as they seek to reduce friction while growing their businesses. More merchants access capital quickly in Q2 as a number of U.S. merchants accepting capital rose and we offer financing for the first time to merchants in the U.K. and Canada, where we launched Shopify Capital in March and April, respectively. Cumulative funding across all three countries reached $1.2 billion at the end of June. More merchants also use Shopify shipping, as new users fulfill their very first orders on the platform and we expanded our offerings to Australia. Adoption increased to 49% of eligible merchants in the U.S. and Canada in Q2, up from 42% in the same quarter last year.
And third, our merchants accessed new opportunities to strengthen customer relationships and loyalty. Merchants leveraged tools like Shopify E-mail and the Shop app to deepen merchant relationships with buyers and increased customer lifetime value. Over 150 million e-mails have now been sent through e-mail campaigns since Shopify E-mail launch in Q1.
Shopify Plus merchants experienced an exceptionally strong second quarter. More brands joined Shopify Plus this quarter than ever before, as merchants from lower level plans grow their sales and upgrade and more large brands seek to scale their businesses in an agile and cost-effective manner.
This is especially critical right now, as digital commerce accelerates and an uncertain macroeconomic environment persists. The optionality that Shopify Plus offers from speed to market to cost, and the ability to experiment and act like an entrepreneur is resonating heavily with enterprise level merchants, encouraging them to rethink their channel strategies and accelerate their timelines towards digital transformation.
In our second quarter, brands from different verticals launched stores on Shopify Plus, including the legendary bike company founded in 1895 Schwinn; beachwear company, Hurley; and western apparel brand, Stetson; Canadian grocery store, Farm Boy; U.K. food and drink CPG, Princess; Chocolate bar company, Snickers; and the major many more brands across a range of products and industries.
In Q2, we also rolled out the new Shopify Plus admin, a revamped back-end for merchants to manage their organizations, including multiple stores, analytics, staff accounts, user permissions and automation tools like Shopify flow, all in one place.
Our partner ecosystem continue to work hard for our merchants, with over 30,000 partners, referring our merchant to Shopify over the last 12 months. Speed, creativity in partners, as they help merchants move online and optimize their stores in the shifting landscape.
Our partners have been going above and beyond, getting work out the door faster than we’ve previously seen, with the number of stores created in three days or less increasing by 12% in Q2 versus Q1. They’re also supporting our merchants in a variety of ways, helping them find quick wins that will make a difference to their business now, like running content marketing and social media in their behalf.
The versatility and dedication of our partners truly highlights the strength and quality of the Shopify ecosystem.
Technology has democratized entrepreneurship and everyone’s ability to build a successful business. The acceleration of digital commerce has pushed this opportunity forward and an opportunity that Shopify has been building towards for over 15 years.
With the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the continued uncertainty in our macroeconomic environment and the growing momentum in the fight for a quality, Shopify’s role to level the playing field for all entrepreneurs has never been more clear. Our mission has always been to make commerce better for everyone, and Shopify is working harder than ever to pull entrepreneurs forward into the future that is emerging.
And with that, I will hand it over to Amy.
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Harley. We’re focused on improving the commerce experience for everyone. And that mission starts with helping our merchants. We are on the side of entrepreneurs, whether they are just starting out or are large and established.
What’s important to us is building the best commerce operating system that will help them succeed in any retail environment, especially the one presented in today’s tough circumstances. And when merchants succeed, Shopify succeeds, as evidenced by our merchant sales and our results in Q2.
Revenue almost doubled in our second quarter to $714.3 million, up 97% over the same period last year, largely driven by our acceleration in success-based Merchant Solutions revenue, and to a lesser extent by Subscription Solutions revenue.
Subscription Solutions revenue increased 28% year-over-year to $196.4 million. Monthly recurring revenue grew 21% year-over-year to $57 million, primarily driven by new merchants joining the platform. While growth in the quarter was impacted by the 90-day free trial on standard plans offered from March 21 through May 31, MRR ended the quarter higher than in Q1, benefiting from the highest ever number [Technical Issues]. Additionally, we benefited from standard merchants in the 90-day extended free trial March cohorts, as well as those in the regular 14-day free trial June cohorts, converting in the latter half of June.
It is important to note that the 90-day clock is still ticking for those who signed up for the 90-day trial in April and May, with any standard merchant conversions from those trial cohorts benefitting Q3.
Shopify Plus are accounting for $16.6 million or 29% compared with 26% of MRR in Q2 of 2019. Strong app and themes revenue related to the 71% year-over-year increase in new store creations in Q2, contributed to the approximate seven percentage point difference between the growth of subscription revenue and MRR. Merchant Solutions revenue grew 148% to $517.9 million in Q2 compared to the same period in 2019.
This is the third quarter in a row of acceleration and the growth rate we have not seen since before our IPO, driven primarily by Shopify Payments, followed by growth of other merchant solutions revenue like capital, shipping and transaction fees. All of these were driven by the spike in GMV, which increased 119% year-over-year to $30.1 billion, as well by increased adoption of the solutions by merchants and growth in partner referral revenue.
Even excluding GMV from new stores created on the extended free trial, GMV per merchant increased in Q2, as merchants of all sizes and across all geographies benefited from the tailwinds of the shift to online commerce. $13.4 billion of GMV was processed on Shopify Payments in Q2 132% versus the comparable quarter last year. Payments penetration of GMV was 45% versus 42% last quarter as well as in Q2, 2019.
Penetration levels reached new highs across our merchant segments as new merchants joining the platform opted to use Shopify Payments, and Shopify Plus and international merchants expanded their share of GPV.
Demand for Shopify Capital was strong in Q2, with merchants receiving $153 million in funding across the U.S., the U.K. and Canada. This represents a 65% increase in funding over the second quarter of 2019, while maintaining loss ratios in line with historical periods.
Access to capital is even tougher in times like these, which makes it even more important to continue lowering this barrier by making it quick and easy, so merchants can focus on growing their business.
Adjusted gross profit dollars grew 84% over last year’s second quarter to $381.4 million, which reflects the significantly greater mix of Merchant Solutions revenue versus last year, the impact of the 90-day free trial, which reduced subscription revenue without a corresponding decrease in related cost of revenues, the acquisition of 6 River Systems in Q4 of last year and our ramp up of investment in Shopify fulfillment network.
Adjusted operating income was $113.7 million in the second quarter compared to adjusted operating income of $6.4 million in the second quarter of 2019.
Adjusted operating income in Q2 2020 reflects our strong revenue performance in the quarter and excludes a one-time impairment charge of $31.6 million resulting from our decision announced in May 2020 to work remotely permanently. I will go into this in more detail in a few minutes.
Adjusted net income for the quarter was $129.4 million or $1.05 per share, compared with $10.7 million or $0.10 per share in last year’s second quarter. Note, this is based on diluted shares outstanding due to the GAAP profit recorded in Q2.
Finally, our cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities balance was $4 billion on June 30, strengthened by the capital we raised in our second quarter. Our healthy balance sheet gives us greater optionality that we believe increases our competitive advantage.
To retain this financial flexibility, we began the process to renew our shelf prospectus yesterday evening. We consider this to be ordinary course of business, given the pending expiry of our current shelf.
Our strong track record of capital allocation is reflected in the investments we’ve made in our platform and the resulting successes of our merchants. Before providing an update on key investment areas, I will provide an overview of our decision to work digital by default, related financial implications in Q2 and expected impact for the rest of 2020.
We are making changes to how and where we work to keep our employees safe and healthy, to create opportunities for existing and future talent and to continue effectively solving critical problems for our merchants.
We’ll be keeping our offices closed for the remainder of 2020, redesigning our spaces for a new future and reducing our office footprint.
This means that most of our employees will work remotely on a permanent basis and leverage our office spaces when it makes sense. This also represents an opportunity for Shopify to open up and further diversify our talent pool, unconstrained by physical location.
While our offices were a special part of the Shopify experience, our culture is not defined by it. It is defined by our employees, the values intrinsic to Shopify and our alignment with our mission to make commerce better for everyone.
Our Q2 2020 results include $37.1 million of incremental expenses related to these facilities’ changes reflected in two areas. First, we are exiting some of our secondary offices in major cities, for which we took a $31.6 million impairment charge in Q2, related to right-of-use assets and leasehold improvements. The impairment charge in Q2 is recorded in general and administrative expenses and excluded from adjusted operating income given its one-time nature.
Second, for offices we are keeping and retrofitting, we are accelerating depreciation on $40.5 million of leasehold improvements over two- to three-year period. The impact in Q2 was an incremental increase in expense of $5.5 million. Accelerated depreciation is allocated across cost of revenue and operating expenses in Q2 and is included in adjusted operating income, given its recurring nature.
We don’t currently expect to make any further material office footprint changes for the remainder of 2020.
Now, turning to our key investment areas. As we discussed on our first quarter earnings call, our key investments coming into 2020, like Shopify Fulfillment Network, were validated by merchant needs that were escalated by COVID, and we made adjustments to our plans to quickly deliver on features that would help our merchants adapt and thrive both now during COVID and over the long term.
Over the time, we believe that actively managing a portfolio of growth investments with different return time horizons is necessary for continued growth.
Our key investments fall into three categories: core, expansion and ambition, which include near, medium, and longer-term initiatives, respectively. The core bucket includes merchants and products, which Shopify has invested in for a few years and continues to build, such as our platform Shopify Plus and merchant solutions like Shopify Payments, including multi-currency and other payment-related products, Shopify Capital and Shopify Shipping.
Investments in core generally have strong returns today that help us reinvest to build for the long term. A great example is our newly released Shopify Plus admin, which is resonating with merchants of scale with early merchant feedback highlighting increased operating efficiencies and the ability to rapidly expand into new geographies.
Our expansion initiatives, which include international growth and retail POS, we expect will deliver over the medium and into the long term. Continued investments to help international merchants get up and running as easily on mobile as on desktop, enhance their cross-border selling capabilities and make the platform more intuitive on a regional basis should all help continue progress like we saw in Q2, where international merchants led the pack in year-over-year GMV growth.
For retail merchants, we will continue building out retail inventory and fulfillment capabilities, helping them adapt to a retail landscape that delivers a seamless commerce experience, bridging online and offline.
We are on the right track as Q2 saw POS GMV start to recover. Healthy adoption of our all-new POS software, sustained levels of use of the local features we rolled out over the past few months and increasing hardware sales in the U.S. and Canada.
Finally, our success to date would not be possible without investing for the out years, which are represented by ambition initiatives. These represent bold initiatives that will power the flywheel longer term. These investments, which are in their earlier stages, take time to scale but are expected to become game changers for Shopify and our merchants. They include Shopify Fulfillment Network, 6 River Systems, Shopify Balance, Shop App brand, wholesale B2B and more.
We announced Shopify Fulfillment Network just over a year ago. And although we are still early in our planned five-year build, we are pleased with the progress we’ve made so far in developing the technology, our partner network and the merchant experience.
In Q2, we enrolled more merchants and increased performance volumes by 2.5 times over Q1, as existing merchants fulfilled more orders and new merchants brought on new volume.
Our focus this year remains on building product market fit, automating and improving merchant onboarding experiences and working with our partners to develop a strong network of notes. We want to ensure that the foundation of our Fulfillment Network is strong and the merchant experience is outstanding before entering the scale phase towards the end of next year, or soon after.
We believe 6 River Systems will be helpful here as throughput rates have increased, approaching two times previous levels, where we’ve integrated 6 River Systems technology. So, we anticipate other notes will benefit as they adopt it as well. Its value proposition as a flexible, easy to implement warehouse fulfillment solution is resonating right now, and adding momentum as both existing and new customers begin to prepare for the busy holiday selling season.
Wrapping up, we believe the COVID pandemic has permanently accelerated the growth of online commerce, changing the retail landscape forever. Shopify’s task is to help our merchants adapt and succeed in the world that emerges by investing in and building a global commerce operating system that evolves with their journey as the macro environment technology and consumer behaviors change. We will continue to help entrepreneurs power through these difficult times and position themselves for longer-term success.
Due to the continued lack of visibility into the coming months, given COVID and macro-economic uncertainties, we are not providing guidance for our third quarter or the full year. We continue to closely monitor the factors impacting our business to act nimbly and quickly serve our merchants’ needs. Our merchant-first mission and business model, together with our strong balance sheet, our disciplined approach to capital allocation and rich partner ecosystem, positions Shopify to capture what we believe is a tremendous opportunity to improve lives around the world by helping more people reach for independence.
With that, I will turn the call back to Katie.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thanks, Amy. Before handing it back to the operator, I will remind everyone to please limit yourself to just one question. This way, we can hopefully get to everybody and everybody will get a chance to ask a question on our call today. So, with that, I will hand it back to Arial, who will begin pulling for questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Thomas Forte of D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.
Thomas Forte — D.A. Davidson — Analyst
Great. Thanks for taking my question. Tobi, Harley, Amy and Katie, hope you are all well. So, I have a question for Tobi. The CEOs of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google are expected to testify today before the House Judiciary Committee, examining antitrust concerns. These companies are strategic partners and also your competitors. For example, Amazon called out Shopify as a competitor in its pre-released opening remarks. Tobi, I wanted you to comment, I was curious on your inputs and the implications to Shopify.
Tobi Lutke — Founder & Chief Executive Officer
Yes, thanks, Tom. Yes, I think — I mean, look, we have really focused here on our mission, which is to make commerce better for everyone. The — our core business doesn’t directly compete with any of them and we have partnered with all of them. And so, I don’t think we have any particular insights beyond just fellow travelers in the world of technology.
And so, that’ll be an interesting angel to see how it goes.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Okay. Thanks, Tom. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brad Zelnick of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Brad Zelnick, your line is live. Our next question comes from Ken Wong of Guggenheim Securities. Please go ahead.
Ken Wong — Guggenheim Securities — Analyst
Great. Thanks for taking my question. In your prepared remarks, you guys mentioned seeing GMV decelerate in June and July. And given the magnitude of how you guys performed this quarter, can you give us a rough sense of what that step down in June and July look like, so we can flow some of that through our models with, since there is no guidance?
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, I mean, we’re not going to provide guidance on the degree of deceleration. We’re not giving guidance for the third quarter or the full year because of the uncertainties related to COVID and the macro environment. One month in our third quarter may not be representative of the full quarter. So, for that reason, we’re not providing guidance.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you, Ken. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Matt Pfau of William Blair. Please go ahead.
Matt Pfau — William Blair — Analyst
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. So, you’ve made several recent announcements that you discussed about increasing your merchants ability to sell over multiple channels. And specifically, I’m thinking about the Walmart and Facebook announcements. So, clearly, these are beneficial for your customers, but maybe you could just dig in a little bit more on the benefit here to Shopify? Is it just sort of further differentiating the Shopify platform or are you able to monetize the transactions that are processed over these other channels?
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Thanks for the question on that. It’s Harley here. So, look, in terms of our channel strategy, which we’ve been working on now for years, the idea is, we think the future of commerce and retail is going to be everywhere. And Shopify plays a more central role in the lives of more than a million merchants on our platform. We need to be the retail operating system, which means we need to make it easier for them to sell anywhere where potential customers may be, whether that’s on a place like Pinterest or social media platform or on a marketplace like Walmart. But it all feeds back into one centralized place where they can manage the entirety of their business.
And so, as new potential opportunities arise, new channels, we think it’s our responsibility to make sure that we make it easy for merchants to sell there and put it all through that Shopify operating — that retail operating system. And so, you’ll see more of those come out, but we’ve been doing this for a long time and the neat part I think about the Shopify offering is that before Shopify, you had to have 20 different tabs open to manage a multi-channel omnichannel business, now you don’t. You can do everything from Shopify, which makes us further being the heart of their business, which is important to us.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you, Matt. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Siti Panigrahi of Mizuho. Please go ahead.
Siti Panigrahi — Mizuho — Analyst
Thanks for taking my question. Just during this time, you’ll see the basic necessities, like, we say, food, beverages and tobacco spike in terms of demand. I’m wondering, could you share what percentage of the GMV that represent?
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, we don’t break out our GMV to that level. We did see food, beverage and tobacco increase as a percentage of our mix in the second quarter, but we also saw mainstays and apparel, accessories and cosmetics recover through the quarter.
So, the GMV growth was really a mix of all categories and consumer verticals.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you, Siti. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Colin Sebastian of Baird. Please go ahead.
Colin Sebastian — Baird — Analyst
Good morning and thanks for taking my question. Perhaps a bigger picture question for Tobi or Harley. You have access to such a tremendous amount of data around e-commerce and transactions, lots of potential there to capture insights from this data. If you could talk about the bigger opportunities from that data, including on the consumer-facing side of the business and whether you’re still confident that the underlying technology stack used by Shopify is adequate to manage the increasing complexity? Thank you.
Tobi Lutke — Founder & Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Thank you. You’re right in as much as one piece of the puzzle of data that Shopify didn’t have insight into is how entrepreneurship and small business formation would act or look like during a pandemic. So, that picture is filling itself in. Of course, they are still early, so it remains to be seen. We have some minor data from the last financial crisis, but of course that played out very-very-very differently.
So, I mean, the way we are thinking about data is that what we really want to do is have merchants surface their own data, like given the insights from their own sales patterns, had them with their own decision making on business expansion on a macro-aggregated level via learning how businesses are best grown, what might be the next steps might be for the merchants that are looking for next steps to expand their business against the backdrop of different economic environments and states and industries and so on.
So, all of this is beneficial. This is all built on, I won’t call it bleeding edge, but like — we are very good at getting leverage from the latest technologies, like on day-one when I make technology decisions, I talk about very seriously, and build Shopify on a very-very modern stack and in a modern approach and this is sort of a core value for engineering.
So, we feel very-very confident in our technological foundations and being able to use the latest the technology industry has created and come up with, to make commerce better for everyone kind of, sort of, [Indecipherable]
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thanks, Colin, for your question. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Gus Papageorgiou of PI Financial. Please go ahead.
Gus Papageorgiou — PI Financial — Analyst
All right. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on a great quarter. Amy, I’m wondering if you could just give us some color on, if you look at the GMV growth sequentially, how much — I guess, year-over-year, how much of that was kind of from your base of customers growing their sales organically due to increased sales occurring on e-commerce platforms and how much of it was from adding new customers? Any kind of sense you could give us would be helpful.
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Let me just start by saying that the GMV growth overall was really driven by the sudden shift to consumer spend from offline to online driven by COVID. And so, what we saw was GMV per merchant increased significantly quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year as our merchants benefited from that tailwind. But we also saw more merchants and new stores joining the platform during Q2.
And so, we know that a higher percentage than normal were established businesses rushing online, Shopify Plus had a record quarter of net adds and new stores joining on the 90-day free trial for standard plans. There was a healthy mix of established businesses rushing online.
So, it really was a combination of those two. And again, I also like to just emphasize how broad-based the GMV growth was across all merchants segments and all geographies and across all consumer verticals.
Gus Papageorgiou — PI Financial — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you, Gus.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ygal Arounian of Wedbush Securities. Please go ahead.
Ygal Arounian — Wedbush Securities — Analyst
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I want to ask on the POS. And you noted in the release that it’s getting back to February levels, which I thought was surprising if not interesting, retail in the U.S. back to where it was in February. So, can you talk a little bit about what that means for Shopify? Is it taking share? Are your customers with their omnichannel presence are more inclined to drive stronger in-store growth and have POS kind of outperform overall retail? What are you seeing there that’s getting your POS kind of ahead of retail overall? Thanks.
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Thanks for the question. Yes, I think we mentioned on our last earnings call that we did see POS GMV decline between March 13 and April 24 relative to the comparable six week period, but that we also saw that those physical retail merchants managed to replace about 94% of those that lost GMV through online stores over that same period. So, we were pleased to see the resiliency there.
We are now beginning to see more brick and mortar stores reopen up, not just in the U.S. but around the world. And so, we are starting to see more of that retail GMV come back.
That said, one thing that has happened through this whole process and through the crisis is that we now are seeing our physical retail merchants look at multi-channel in a much different way. For example, 26% of our brick and mortar merchants in English-speaking countries are now using some form of local in-store or curbside pickup and delivery options. That’s compared to like 2% at the end of February.
So, we are seeing this new — as physical retail reopens up, the business model for those physical retailers are also contemplating a new type of resilient model which allows them to sell online and offline. And then we continue to rollout great new features for Point of Sale, things like staff permissions, retail level reporting. And so, the Point of Sale product, the physical retail product just keeps getting better and better. But certainly, we are seeing more GMV flow back through physical retail than we did in the beginning of the pandemic
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thanks, Ygal.
Operator
Our next question comes from Darren Aftahi of ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.
Darren Aftahi — ROTH Capital Partners — Analyst
Yes, thanks for taking my question. Hope you’re well. Question maybe for Amy. So, as you kind of think longer term with the work-from-home and appreciate the impairment cost savings you kind of detailed. But as you think about things like travel spend, marketing etc. Like, how does the P&L kind of benefit or not? What are the puts and takes longer term, or we just reinvest those dollars you saved into other categories as you go forward? Thanks.
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Longer term, yes, we would expect to save some amount of money obviously on the office footprint itself, right? Most of those benefits, we’re not going to see until a couple of years out. But that would be one benefit. Travel spend, yes, would decline. We’ve seen that happen as we’ve been working remotely through COVID. So, we would expect that would continue.
However, we would redeploy some of those savings back into helping our employees work-from-home effectively in their home set ups and helping them, make sure that they have great Internet connections and things like that. So, it will be a little bit more like a shifting of expenses over time.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you, Darren. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Deepak Mathivanan of Barclays. Please go ahead.
Deepak Mathivanan — Barclays — Analyst
Great, Thanks, guys, for taking the question. Harley, can you give us some color on how merchants are generating growth during this COVID period? Are there any channels where margins are seeing the biggest success? Clearly, there is a big online demand generation. I mean, shift to the online channels from a consumer standpoint. I was wondering whether merchants are using any specific channel that are seeing better success now? Thank you.
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Thanks for the question. It’s important to understand that because we put a broad range of merchants on our platform, and I mentioned some of them this morning, brands like Snickers and Chipotle and Coors — Molson Coors, but also million — over a million small businesses, not every channel is appropriate for every particular merchant.
And so, the onus is on Shopify to make sure that we have all the right channels for any particular merchants’ businesses. A particular type of product that would sell really well on walmart.com may not sell as well in Pinterest or on Instagram or Facebook.
And so, that I think is the one of the nice — one of the advantages of the Shopify platform is that regardless and despite whatever you are selling, that is likely the right appropriate channel for you.
Now, of course, the most important and the most impactful channel is the online store followed by the physical retail shop by Point of Sale. But after that, we see merchants selling across a whole variety of channels, which is why we have to keep adding these channels over time.
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Okay. Thanks, Deepak. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brian Peterson of Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Brian Peterson — Raymond James — Analyst
Hi, everyone, thanks for taking the questions. So, I wanted to hit on the strength that you saw in Shopify Plus. I’m curious, has there been any change in terms of the net new logos that you’re adding? And I know one of your competitors has a product that’s going into place. I’m curious if that’s been a catalyst at all? Thank you.
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Thanks for that question. So, we are seeing an acceleration of companies replatforming off legacy platforms. We’ve been seeing that for a while, but that acceleration has continued. We’re also seeing digital transformation generally is pushing larger retailers to look at partners who are nimble, who are flexible, who are certainly cost effective. And that’s us, that’s Shopify Plus for the larger brands.
Legacy platforms were never meant to change quickly. And frankly, retailers need that right now. And so, what we’re seeing in terms of the types of customers that are dominating our Plus pipeline, its digital natives that continue to choose Plus scale globally, large CPGs that are rushing to go direct-to-consumer and we are the preferred choice, because they know how fast they can launch experiment with us. And then, more traditional retailers looking to transform their companies are choosing us to do that as well.
So, that’s the reason why are seeing brands like Hurley and Schwinn and Snickers, Molson Coors and just Chipotle Farmers Market, all us Shopify. It’s — there’s not one type of particular merchant we’re kind of seeing the — we’re seeing the acceleration happen across a bunch of different categories and from a bunch of different re-platforms.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thanks, Brian. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Josh Beck of KeyBanc. Please go ahead.
Josh Beck — KeyBanc — Analyst
Thank you for taking the question and glad to here everyone is doing well. I wanted to ask a bigger picture question about what’s happening with the acceleration of e-commerce. I think you had commented that 2030 is maybe being pulled ahead a decade. And then you also made the comment that you expect this trend to persist.
So, I’d love to hear a little bit more, because we have such great visibility and such a unique view about why you view this trend is durable? Because I just think that’s such an important investor question. We’d love to hear a little more color on that topic.
Tobi Lutke — Founder & Chief Executive Officer
Yes, gladly. So, yes, my comment was — I mean, I came at this question a little bit more from a product perspective than from a financial perspective or from a market mix perspective. And I said that 2030 has gotten pulled forward into 2020. What I specifically meant is like, anyone who’s ever used like software that was written 10, 15 years ago, realize that it doesn’t fit into the current times anymore, because it’s built on fairly outdated assumptions, given how fast technology moves.
I think in retail, they are all finding us from one day to another, a software that feels like a decade-old, because all the assumptions have been like tossed into the air and reassembled based on COVID. Like, an obvious example of this is the massive and quick rise of orders placed within 25 miles to local stores and local pickup and curbside pickup and all these kind of things that have to be tooled by technology, and which we have done, I think, fairly quickly, and we see those bigger factors on the platform.
But zooming out, multiple things happen at the same time, right? Like, there’s a lot of businesses who were just local stores. And that’s the only way we’ve been connected to the global world of commerce. And once you have them in place, orders came along. They realized that the only way for them to access their customer base was no longer functioning. And then either through — in some cases, through community efforts, which I think is one of the cooler things we’ve observed, and sometimes for their own adaptability, they set up the online channels, inform the local environments that they are still open for business and sort of may do this however they could. And that, I think, worked surprisingly well for a lot of entrepreneurs.
And so, as more and more local businesses came online, local stores came online, I think one thing that was surprising to a lot of people, but actually seemed — I think we’ve had internal bets on this, is that the demand for being able to buy from more diverse group of merchants was actually there, but the supply wasn’t. I mean, it’s very-very rare, but there’s such a discrepancy between supply and demand.
But the reason why the supply didn’t come online is because of the steep complexity and just because of inertia, right? So, why go online? Why setup — like, why change your point of sale system for something integrated in your online store? Why try switching to Shopify, if your business is sort of working, right?
And so, COVID has accelerated this thing that was already going on. People noticed that they did well, as Harley already mentioned. We are seeing strength in the Point of Sale channel. But of course, we also now, from the macro numbers that small business have been going out of business, like there have been closures.
If this is not — I can’t say this for sure, but like anecdotally, the business that did — that were adoptable, switched to Shopify or started online stores or have been on Point of Sale and added the online channel successfully, which is our slice of the retail base.
They’ve actually done okay and may have seen some growth because of the business that weren’t as adaptable have — maybe not made it out by the site after the shelter-in-place was over.
And so, I think a lot of ideas that were floating around, a lot of things that people were saying in the industry have gotten validated in this great experiment and test that we all went through in this industry. And now, that there’s a significant more supply of merchants out there and that more buyers have the familiarity of buying from merchants directly and also the awareness of what that does for the local economies, and that there’s value in supporting local businesses, especially if you want them to stick around. All these things kind of mixed together into one big like average number, percentage mix. And that’s, I think, just a good deal higher than the e-commerce numbers before.
So, yes, there’s been some acceleration. It’s going to be very hard to see. I don’t — I mean, I don’t think we can discern from our slice of the market exactly what these numbers are, just because I think we are dealing now on Shopify is just a very adaptable and — like it’s a very specific slice of the retail industry. And — but I think we’ve had a lot. And so, that’s clearly good for business. And I think that’s why you see some of the numbers to be the way they are.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you for your question, Josh. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Samad Samana of Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Samad Samana — Jefferies — Analyst
Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Amy, maybe this one is for you. So, GMV was about 50% higher than 4Q. And — but I’m curious that platform and other revenue didn’t quite spike way that it normally does from 3Q to 4Q. So, I was curious, if there was either a mix shift in whether the GMV was generated, whether it was more of the non-Plus customers? Or if there is a reason why we didn’t see as much of a platform fee overages in 2Q? And how we should think about that maybe going forward?
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
I mean, we still saw a healthy increase in the platform fee revenue. So, I’m not sure I would read anything into that or in terms of mix. But I think it’s largely because GMV was just so broad-based. And again, the highest grower in the category was international year-over-year. And so, that does have a lower mix of — it’s more standard merchants, but it was broad-based, and we still saw a healthy increase in the platform fee for Plus customers.
Also, just keep in mind, sometimes the platform fee for Plus is impacted by certain merchants who are having flash sales, which may skew any given quarter.
Samad Samana — Jefferies — Analyst
Great. Thanks.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thanks, Samad. Sure. Next question, please.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brad Zelnick of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Great. Can you guys hear me now? Hello?
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Yes. We hear you fine.
Brad Zelnick — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Excellent. Thanks for getting me back in and congrats on all the success. I wanted to ask about GMV trends, specifically for those merchants located in countries that are easing social distancing measures. Are they decelerating faster or at similar rates to other areas like the U.S.?
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Yes. I think, it’s really early to tell that right now. I mean, we are seeing, certainly, as Amy just mentioned, GMV growth in terms of — the growth percentage was highest internationally, but we’re also doing a lot internationally for those merchants and trying to find product market fit there. But I wouldn’t necessarily say that we are seeing anything that is notable yet at this point, although we monitor it pretty closely.
Tobi Lutke — Founder & Chief Executive Officer
Yes. The markets that have really done this, going back to normal are also the markets that kind of weren’t hit as badly, right? So, like it’s — its really-really hard to back out these numbers.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Great. Thank you, Brad.
Operator
Our next question comes from Chris Merwin of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Chris Merwin — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Thanks very much for taking my question. Can you talk at all about the early impact that SSN has had on the merchant and customer satisfaction or order volume? I think you also mentioned that SSN would be reaching scale phase at the end of next year. So, does that mean — well, I guess, will that include just partners? Or would you need to build out some of your own capacity at that point? Just curious what the current plans are? Thank you.
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
I can take the capacity question and the plans. We’re still on the same five-year plan that we announced last year at Unite, where we’ll build the Shopify Fulfillment Network over a five-year period. We’ll be in product market fit phase in 2020 and into 2021, with the expectation of entering the scale phase at the end of 2021 or soon thereafter, which is about the midpoint of the five-year build. And that is absolutely consistent with what we said last year.
That plan that we announced last year had us mostly working with partners to add nodes to the Shopify Fulfillment Network. We had the seven up and running that we said, we would have up and running, and we plan to add additional partner nodes this year. We’re not going to say how many or where pre-announcement. But we’re continuing down that path, working with partners because it’s been working well.
We said that we would continue down that path as long as they could meet our capacity and quality needs. And so far, they are. We did leave open the ability to build a few warehouses ourselves. We do have a test dev facility in Ottawa.
But in the plan, in the $1 billion, which was mostly variable spend to fulfill goods, there was some fixed costs allocated to a couple of warehouses, so that we could build and test and learn in the event that we do decide to build warehouses. But right now, we’re on the same plan that we’ve been on.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thank you, Chris. Next question please?
Operator
Our next question comes from Walter Pritchard of Citi. Please go ahead.
Walter Pritchard — Citi — Analyst
Hi. Actually, related question to the one that you just had there. So, about $4 billion in cash on the balance sheet was recent financing. We obviously know about the fulfill plans that require some capital. And you’ve got products like the Shop Capital product. Can you help us understand how you’re thinking about that cash you have as needed to run some of those businesses that are more capital-intensive versus M&A potential with capital you’ve raised versus just sort of having raised opportunistically to have some cushion? Thanks.
Amy Shapero — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I mean, we’ve been pretty consistent in saying that the $4 billion in cash is to increase our flexibility and optionality, whether it’d be build, partner or buy, in order to accelerate our product road map. And so, we continue to just want the maximum amount of flexibility.
And I think this actually might be a good place for me to address the shelf renewal that we did. I did address it in my remarks, but I think publicly, I’ve seen some headlines that weren’t correct.
I just want to emphasize that the shelf registration — our shelf registration was due to expire in September. They’re only good for 25 months. We did decide to renew a little early, so that we could do it in conjunction with this earnings call, which is consistent with how we’ve done it in the past. And we had to put a fixed dollar amount on the shelf under Canadian regulations, which is different from the U.S., where seasoned issuers do not have to put a dollar amount in. The dollar amount just makes sense for flexibility. We absolutely consider this just normal ordinary course of business and wouldn’t read anything more into it than that. Thanks.
Walter Pritchard — Citi — Analyst
Okay. Thank you.
Katie Keita — Senior Director, Investor Relations
Thank you. We have time for one more question.
Operator
Our last question comes from Tim Willi of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Tim Willi — Wells Fargo — Analyst
Thank you and good morning, everybody. Just had a question about the restaurant vertical. It’s obviously changed dramatically in the last several months to really become an e-commerce and omni-channel industry, probably much more show than it’s ever been. So, I’m just sort of curious on your perspective, how you think about that vertical as a new opportunity to maybe develop product or sales channels to be much more visible, and the bigger part of that industry than maybe you otherwise would have had been if this crisis had not occurred? Thanks.
Harley Finkelstein — Chief Operating Officer
Thanks for that question. Look, I mean, we’ve been very clear that our focus is on retail, and particularly, physical goods. The restaurant thing is not — historically has not been in our focus. Although, we did feel that when COVID first hit, there was a way for us to help restaurants by doing things like turning them into retailers, whether they’re selling meal kits or they’re selling some sort of physical product.
And so, we did create a theme that allowed them to very quickly set up a very — a beautiful online store and allow them to start making some cash flow during a very difficult time. But in terms of our focus on restaurants as a new vertical, that is not something that we’re currently looking at right now. But if they do turn into retailers, as some of them have, or wine stores as others have, we certainly can help them.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
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