reAlpha Q3 2025 Earnings Call - Debt-Free and Scaling with AI-Driven Home Buying Platform
Summary
reAlpha's Q3 2025 earnings call highlighted three consecutive quarters of revenue growth, culminating in a debt-free status following a $7.5 million equity raise and $8.3 million in warrant exercises. CEO Mike Lagozo emphasized reAlpha's focus on scaling their integrated home buying platform—encompassing Realty, Mortgage, and Title services—enhanced by AI-driven tools that have notably increased lead engagement, appointments, and loan applications. The company is targeting expansion into the top 10 U.S. states by real estate transaction volume to synchronize all services, delivering a seamless experience and competitive rebate options to consumers struggling with rising home prices and interest rates. While acknowledging the complexities of public company compliance and integration challenges from acquisitions, management stressed a steady foundation-building approach, aiming to transition from attracting short-term traders to committed investors. Plans for continued AI innovation, strategic acquisitions, and potential partnerships indicate a long-term growth trajectory focused on making home buying more accessible and efficient.
Key Takeaways
- reAlpha achieved three consecutive quarters of revenue growth, with Q3 surpassing all prior quarters.
- The company raised $7.5 million in equity and had $8.3 million in warrants exercised, enabling full repayment of all debt, making reAlpha debt-free.
- reAlpha regained Nasdaq compliance metrics, receiving a six-month extension to meet the $1 minimum share price requirement.
- Expansion efforts are focused on syncing Realty, Mortgage, and Title services in the top 10 U.S. states by real estate transaction volume.
- AI technology enhancements include an AI concierge (Claire), a loan officer assistant, and an AI-powered lead engagement agent leading to 90% higher lead engagement, 200% more home view appointments, and 140% more loan applications.
- The Namche AI acquisition is fully integrated and acts as reAlpha's core technology team, fostering a unified platform and customer experience.
- Customer feedback prioritizes unified service offering across all states for rebate eligibility and a seamless buying process minimizing redundant information entry.
- The platform targets not only first-time home buyers but also repeat buyers and serves a significant portion of the veteran community through VA loans.
- Management is focusing on organic growth by adding loan officers who can generate substantial incremental revenue rather than expanding mortgage brokerages.
- Plans for 2026 include further AI-driven innovations primarily in Realty and Mortgage and continued focus on M&A integration to scale.
- CEO emphasized building a solid foundation akin to a skyscraper’s base, underscoring realistic timelines due to legal and regulatory complexities.
- The company seeks to shift market perception from a volatile, trading stock to a fundamentals-driven investment aligned with long-term growth.
- reAlpha aims to become a full-service, AI-enabled home buying platform combining Realty, Mortgage, and Title with competitive rebates, differentiating it from competitors like Rocket and Zillow.
Full Transcript
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us. My name is Paul Cecil. I’m the Vice President of Strategy here at reAlpha, and I will be your moderator for today’s live video call on X Basis. I’ve got Mike here with me right now. Today is a big moment. We’re here to discuss our third quarter results and do it in a way that reflects who we are: open, transparent, and connected directly with our community. Instead of a closed-door analyst call, we’re hosting this conversation live on X Basis with all of you here with us, and that’s something we’re very proud of. Joining us today is our Chief Executive Officer, Mike Lagozo. Many of you know Mike, but for anyone who’s newer to the reAlpha community, Mike has been with this company since day one. He’s served as CFO, COO, President, and now CEO.
Throughout that journey, he’s been instrumental in shaping the company’s strategy, operations, and culture. Before reAlpha, he spent nearly two decades at BMW Financial Services, ultimately overseeing a $32 billion portfolio across the Americas and later led innovation programs at Elmarks. His background in scaling complex operations and driving innovation has played a major role in getting reAlpha to where it is today and where we’re headed next. Mike is going to walk through the quarter, talk about some key business highlights, and then we’ll jump straight into questions from all of you. Please feel free to submit your questions at any time below in the comments section, and we’ll pin relevant items in the nest, which is on the top of our page right now, including our quarterly filing, press release, latest corporate presentation, and shareholder letter. Before we begin, a couple of small housekeeping items.
We want to get through as many investor questions as possible. We have already had a lot of engagement, and if you do have multiple questions, we will take two to three per person so others can have the chance to participate as well. We love the engagement. We just want to make sure we can hear from as many voices and investors as possible. One last thing is I need to remind everyone that certain statements made today may contain forward-looking information as defined under applicable securities laws. These may include expectations, forecasts, goals, patterns, plans, projections, or assumptions that are based on our current views and are not historical facts. These statements are inherently uncertain and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. For complete information, please refer to our filings with the SEC, including our most recent Form 10-Q.
We will also not be commenting or answering questions on stock price or stock predictions, valuation targets, nonpublic or unannounced financial activity, anything restricted under SEC and Reg FD guidelines. If any question touches on these areas, we’ll move past it. With that, thank you again very much for joining us, and I will turn it over to our CEO, Mike Lagozo, to kick things off.
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Hi, everybody. I’m really looking forward to today. This is something that’s been a long time in the making, and I’m really looking forward, again, to spending the time with you, sharing our vision, our mission, our results, and then getting an opportunity to answer your questions as well. I’ll turn it over to Paul. Let’s get started.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. Thanks, Mike. Can you tell us why you joined reAlpha?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Absolutely. As Paul mentioned, I joined reAlpha back in early 2021. I was employee number one. I would say the reason why I joined, it was twofold. First and foremost was I believed in the vision of Gary Devenor. Gary, if you’re online, we miss you, buddy. What I wanted to let you know is that Gary is a true visionary. He is somebody who had this great vision to bring the real estate into the digital era. What I mean by that is real estate historically has been behind the times when it comes to technology. The reason for that is because it’s very complex. There’s a lot of fees. There’s a lot of different players involved. This just worked over time, and people dealt with it. It is really ripe for disruption.
The second thing is that the TAM, or the Total Addressable Market for Real Estate, is huge. It’s the largest asset class in the world. Combining those two things together, along with Gary’s track record of being a successful serial entrepreneur who’s taken a previous company to the NASDAQ, it was a great opportunity to come in and try to build another company that we could also bring public and serve a purpose and a mission to try to get homeowners or people to become home buyers again.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. Thanks, Mike. Can you tell us a little bit more about your approach to leadership and communication?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Yes. I would say that I’m a guy who doesn’t do a lot of hype. I try to come in. I set a strategy. I build a good team around me to execute that strategy. I don’t micromanage them, but I hold them accountable. Ultimately, at the end of the day, if we all work together towards a common goal, a common strategy, giving them the flexibility to even adapt, right, as long as we have a common North Star that we’re all aiming towards, and you have faith in the leaders who are strong in their particular areas, and you all work together in the line, you’re going to hit it. Ultimately, I believe we will.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: What’s your vision, and why are you excited about what we’re doing here at reAlpha?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: What we want to do is we want people to obviously become homeowners. What I mean by that is that we all know the home prices are as high as they’ve ever been. We know interest rates are sky high as well. It’s very difficult for people to become home buyers. I just saw that I think the median age of a first-time home buyer now is 40 years old. When I was younger and I bought a house, it was 28. It’s really, really tough for people nowadays, given the cost of homes and the current interest rates, to be one. We wanted to build a platform that really enabled home buyers through technology to live the American dream. That excites me.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. Now moving on to kind of the Q3 earnings highlights, could you give us some highlights about Q3?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Sure. In our Q3, I’ll kind of stick to, obviously, what we disclosed, but we’ve had three consecutive quarters of revenue growth. Our Q1 of this year was more than all of last year combined. Our Q2 surpassed that, and our Q3 surpassed that. If you’re into patterns or trends, I would say that it’s heading in the right direction. We improved our balance sheet. What I mean by that is we raised $7.5 million in equity offerings. We had 8.3 million warrants exercised as of October 20. We used a lot of that to repay our debt in full. We are now a debt-free company. We regained compliance with NASDAQ with our $35 million minimum market value. Many of you have probably seen that we obtained a six-month extension to meet the $1. I feel very confident about that.
Again, we have six months to do it, but things, as I mentioned, are heading in the right direction there. We’ve expanded our service availability. In this past quarter, Realty, we expanded into Georgia, mortgage into Utah and Nevada. Our technologies feel really proud about what we’ve done there. We took Claire, and we’ve turned Claire, who is our AI agent, into a true concierge that will take a home buyer prospect through the process, answering questions that they have and trying to guide them all the way through to pre-approval. We launched our AI loan officer assistant. What this does is this is really more for internal facing, but it ultimately, I would say, will benefit the customer just due to the less friction and faster turnaround times by helping our loan officers do their work more efficiently.
We also did an AI-powered engagement agent. What that does is that actually helps create leads into our platform and allows for the humans to focus on the ones that are, I guess, the highest probability leads. What we’ve seen is a 90% increase in lead engagement, a 200% increase in the appointments for people to view a home, and a 140% increase in the loan applications. I believe what we’re doing is really making sense. These are statistically significant numbers that we are sharing with you. As we go on and scale with these types of improvements, we feel really good about where we’re headed and the types of things that we could do with the staff that we currently have. We’ve also done a lot of, I would say, integrations internally.
One of our first acquisitions was an AI company in Nepal called Namche. We have fully integrated them into reAlpha. They are our true tech team now. We have basically a one reAlpha mindset that I’ll talk a little bit about as we go through today. Namche is fully integrated. They are all reAlpha. Everything that they have is all on the same platform as ours. We’re starting to do that now with our unified messaging with our other acquisitions, so whether it be Realty, Mortgage, Title, to have, again, a unified experience for the customer.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. Thanks, Mike. With that, we’ll start to move on to questions. I’m going to take the ones first that we’ve kind of received ahead of time. If there are any additional questions that we have not answered, I will ask Mike those questions as well. First, Mike, we have a question from the OG Stocks ticker. Can you tell us more about the overall plan of expansions of reAlpha to other states? It would be nice to have an overview of which services will be rolled out to which states in the next months.
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Sure. Those of you who have seen our latest investor deck, there’s a map on there which shows all of the states in which we’re operating. We have three different dots on there. One represents the Realty, one Mortgage, and one Title. You will very quickly realize that the dots are not in sync. They’re out of whack. They’re heavily weighted towards Mortgage. In Mortgage, we’re in 32 states, for example, and Title, we’re in three. What we’re trying to do is to sync those up. I would say we’re focusing primarily on the top 10 states when it comes to residential real estate volume or transactions. Just to put that in perspective, the top 10 states represent over 60% of the real estate transactions.
If you’re a company that’s trying to scale, instead of trying to be everywhere, why not try to be in the areas that have the largest transaction volume? What I mean by that would be, if you think about it, it’s obviously Florida, Texas, California, North Carolina. I think Ohio is in there as number nine. We can’t explicitly say where we’re going, but like I said, top 10 states is kind of where I believe we need to be. It’s about really syncing up the Realty, Mortgage, and Title because that ultimately benefits the customer. That’s our true service offering to the customer. Truly, where the value proposition lies is utilizing all three of those services, giving them an opportunity to get a rebate back, and then also giving them the flexibility as to where they want to use that rebate.
They could use it as cash at closing. They could use it as a portion of their down payment to get into their home, or they could use it to buy down their interest rate. We all know in today’s environment, that’s a really important thing too. That only happens when we have all three lined up. That’s our goal right now is to try to, at a minimum, try to get in the top 10 states where we could do that.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Okay. We have several questions from That Man, Billy. First of all, the Q3 results mention several strategic developments. Which of those does management believe has the greatest strategic importance right now?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: I would say the capital that we’ve raised had the most strategic importance. What I mean by that is that we are a company now that has runway. Now that we have runway, we’re focused on growth. I would say that that was the most important. I think that they all were important in their own way. Having capital solves a lot of problems. It allows us, again, to focus on growth, which is what you guys want to hear.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Absolutely. Additionally, are there areas of the business where you believe that additional automation, partnerships, or technology investment could accelerate scaling?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: I do. It is multifold here. We will continue to look at acquisitions, accretive acquisitions that align with our core product and allow us to scale faster. We are also looking at kind of adding on to our core as well. Our core product right now, it is a home buying product, right? It has a Realty component, a Mortgage component, and a Title component. If you think beyond that, beyond the closing of the transaction, there are other things as well that we could be one-stop shopping for. Think about moving services. Think about utility setup services. Why not be the one-stop shopping for all of that? I would say for some of those types of things, we may not want to acquire, but maybe there is an opportunity for partnerships with a moving company or maybe an insurance company.
There’s plenty of opportunities out there, but right now we’re focusing on the core because we think that that is where our focus needs to be, right? We have a lot of growing to do and a lot to prove to you.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Absolutely. As a reminder to everyone, if you do have additional questions, please put them in the comments down below. I will not be adding additional speakers onto here, but I can take the comments from below. Okay. Next question from That Man, Billy. How is customer feedback shaping your product roadmap or service improvements? Are there themes emerging from those insights?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: I would say that, the number one customer feedback is the fact that we’re not synced up in all of the states. Customers want to be able to get that rebate and benefit from using all three services. We’re not there, and we need to be there. That’s number one customer feedback. Number two, I think, is really more about this one reAlpha theme that I mentioned earlier about what we don’t want to do is have Realty, Mortgage, and Title operating in different verticals or vacuums, right? It needs to be a cohesive process. We don’t want to just replicate how things are being done today. Like today, what happens is a customer has to navigate the Realty process that Realtor set up for them. Then they have to navigate the process that Mortgage sets up for them.
They have to navigate the process that Title sets up for them. They’re all typically usually different companies. There’s handoffs. It’s a gauntlet if you think about it from that perspective. What we’ve done is we’re putting the customer in the center of the process, and we’re building the process around the customer. Not having to enter in information more than one time, trying to remove the friction and make it seamless. Yes, I mean, we’re still kind of building that out because we’ve grown through some acquisitions. These are companies that have been standalone, and now they’re becoming part of a greater product. We’re trying to reduce the amount of friction and all of the handoffs that go on to make this as seamless and frictionless as possible.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Definitely. Okay. We have a question from Saqib Sabi, 85909. Why are investors now interested in investing in reAlpha stock? What will you guys do next for the company and investors?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: I would say this is a pretty important point for me. I want to make sure I drive this home. reAlpha historically has attracted what I refer to as traders. And what I mean by that is because of our volatility in our stock and because of the size of the transactions, which are really big for a company of our size, it attracts a lot of day traders or people who are coming in to get in and get out. What we’re starting to find now, and I think this is due to the quarter-on-quarter growth that we’re seeing, is people who are interested in more fundamentals and more of a longer game who are willing to come in with bigger check sizes and kind of they believe in the vision. They believe in the mission. They’re starting to see the fundamentals come into place.
That’s when this company starts to attract what I refer to as investors. Kind of transitioning from attracting traders to investors is really what we’re trying to get to as a company because that brings a little bit more stability and then ultimately will help us continue to grow on that path.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Most definitely. We have a question from Map0987. The quiet period is now over. We’ve released quarterly earnings. What innovations are planned for reAlpha in 2026?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: We’re going to continue to bring out the AI. We had the loan assistant phase two. We’ll continue to build on that on the mortgage front. We’ll continue to build it on the real estate front as well. Eventually, I would want to start seeing it on the title front as well. I would say the Realty and the Mortgage are our primary focus areas there. We’re going to continue to, as we acquire companies, we’re going to continue to have to integrate those companies into our product. We’ll have to focus on that. Post-M&A integration, I’m finding, is probably one of the most crucial things of a company that relies on inorganic growth. If you don’t do it correctly, it could hurt you or it could even kill you.
What we’re learning is how to pick the right companies and how to integrate them in a way to where it becomes truly part of one product.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Absolutely. Thanks, Mike. We have several questions now from Not a Dead Cat One. What specific problem does the business solve for its customers?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Very similar to what I said earlier. The problem now is that home buying is really expensive. Between the high home prices and the interest rates, it’s tough for people. Again, the median age now is 40 years old for a first-time home buyer, when it was, I think it was 28 when I was back in the day, in the 1990s when I bought mine.
The fact of the matter is that if we could bring a product to the table that allows you to go through the same process as you would with independent Realtors and Mortgage and Title, do it all in one place, and then offer you a rebate on top of it, to which you have the opportunity to choose how you want to use it, whether it’s cash, down payment, or buy down your interest rate, I think that solves a lot of problems for a lot of people.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Agreed. Who are the main competitors and what makes the business unique in comparison to its competitors?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: I truly believe what we’re building is really a new category. Yeah, there’s tons of Realtors out there, and there’s tons of mortgage players out there and tons of title companies out there. There’s some really good ones that do very well, make a lot of money. This is a home buying platform that has the ingredients of Realty, of Mortgage, of Title. I really don’t know of one out there that really does all three with the rebate facilitated by AI. However, I would be remiss to say that seeing Rocket doing what they’re doing with the acquisitions of Redfin, Mr. Cooper, trying to move further up in the process, clearly would make them a competitor. Also seeing Zillow trying to move back in the process as well. I would say that those are two very large ones that exist.
Obviously, we’re probably not even a blip on the radar right now. My goal is to make sure that they know about us here soon.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Absolutely. Who are the primary customers and what is the customer retention rate?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: With respect to the customers, I would say that when we initially started going down this path, we thought that we were going to cater more towards the millennials, thinking that millennials were more first-time home buyers, thinking that they’re more tech-forward. People are buying cars on their phone now, so why wouldn’t they want to try to buy a house on their phone? What we’re finding is we’re appealing to people who have also bought a home before. Maybe they’re on their second home or maybe they’re on their third home. They see the value that we could provide. They also realize that they don’t need to have their handheld throughout the entire process with a Realtor like many first-time home buyers.
I’m seeing a little bit more appeal with people who have already bought a home before and say, "I don’t need to go through the old way. I’ll do it through the new way, and I’ll save some money." The other thing is this is because of the acquisition that we made with Be My Neighbor Mortgage, is that we cater a lot towards the veteran community because VA loans are very complex. That mortgage brokerage, when we acquired them, I think 70% of their mortgage deals were VA loans. We continue to do that. We’re very proud of being able to serve the veteran community. That’s another customer base that we want to continue to serve there. As far as retention rate, we’re really too new, given the fact that home buying doesn’t happen often, or you buy maybe two, three homes in your lifetime.
We really do not have a retention rate yet. We would love to have a high one, obviously, and obviously through referrals and stuff like that. The retention rate is not quite there at this point.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Very good. This is just more of a general question because I’ve seen a lot of questions come through about the potential reverse stock split and meeting NASDAQ standards. Is there anything you want to touch on here?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Yes. Again, I can’t talk too much about the stock other than the fact that we meet all of the NASDAQ requirements other than the $1. We got the 180-day extension. Essentially, we have six months to correct it. I’m giving you everything that I got to ensure that we get there. We are focused on basically growing this business. We believe that if we focus on the things that we could control, right, which is scaling, building our revenues, things will take care of itself. There are things that we just can’t control in the external environment. We have to learn to adapt to those things when they come. If you focus on the things that you can control and be willing to adapt to the things that you can’t, we’ll end up being successful in the end here, I assure you.
It takes a little bit of time. One of the things that I want to say is that I know the retail community, particularly some people in the retail community, they want to see things happen faster. And believe me, I want to make things happen as fast as possible. As a matter of fact, we talk about it all the time, how fast could we go? At the end of the day, there are financial complexities. There are legal complexities. There are regulatory compliance complexities that we have to navigate being a public company. Sometimes it takes a little bit longer to kind of navigate through the process, to be quite honest with you. It does not mean that we’re not busting our ass every day, ensuring that we can move as fast as we can and build this.
The second thing I want to talk about is that I’m going to regress for a little bit because it’ll come back around. Two weeks ago, we had a board meeting in New York. We were in Manhattan. I happened to look out, and we saw the new JP Morgan building there. For those of you who have seen it in person, you know how impressive it is. If not, look it up online. It is really, really cool. I looked it up, and I saw that it took like 4.4 years to build that thing. I also learned that it took like one and a half of those 4.4 years putting the foundation in place. What I mean by this is that I want reAlpha to be a skyscraper. I really do.
However, we need to have the foundation in place, and it has to be solid in order for us to build on it. That sometimes means it’s not the sexy stuff, and it’s not the stuff that you guys are going to see day in and day out. What we are doing is we’re putting a very solid foundation in place so we can build a very tall skyscraper for our shareholders. I know that trust means that I have to earn that over time. It also takes time to get some of this stuff done as well. I want to be very transparent and very clear with you that we will communicate whatever we can, as frequent as we can. I also want you to understand what we’re dealing with here and what we’re trying to build.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Love it. All right. Digging into the comment section now, we have a comment from Al3Offman. Apologies if the pronunciation was off there. Is there any expansion plan outside of the USA?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: I think ultimately, we would love to be outside of the U.S. I mean, the U.S., it’s a really big market. Just to put it in perspective, I believe, given the TAM, if we had 1% or less than 1% of that, we’d be a multi-billion-dollar company. That’s how big the TAM is, just in the U.S. Yes, I would love to be outside of the U.S., but we have some growing to do here on our own home soil right now.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Absolutely. We actually have a comment from another Mike. Mike Skevius, I think I’m pronouncing that correct. Are we going to be the next Carvana CVNA, but for homes? Also, good work, Mike. We believe in you.
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Thank you. Carvana was a company that we studied. We saw that the traditional way of buying a car was disrupted through them. And for those of you who know, right, me coming from the car industry and the whole used car dealer experience, I kind of gravitated towards what Carvana was doing. We studied it. Yes, there’s a lot of similarities there. You’re kind of combining in the financing and the title along with the purchase. Yeah, we’re learning a lot from those guys. Home buying is still a little bit more complex. It’s very fragmented when it comes to not just state by state, but county by county. We’re having to learn how to kind of navigate through this. I wish it was as easy as buying a car, but it’s not. We’re going to solve it.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. We’ve got time, I think, for one more question. We do have a comment that I appreciate from Billy here. That man, Billy, how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time, 80/20 rule. Yes, sir. We appreciate it, Billy.
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Very good.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Awesome. I don’t think there were any other questions that we can—oh, here we go. There’s one coming in. We have one from Scott Buck. Mike, what is the outlook on hiring additional mortgage brokers? Do you have a target in how many mortgage brokers you would like to add?
Mike Lagozo, Chief Executive Officer, reAlpha: Yeah, thanks, Scott. We do plan on bringing in more mortgage brokers. As a matter of fact, that is a great way for us to continue to grow organically. We do not just want any mortgage brokers. We want to bring in ones who can continue to contribute to the team that we currently have. I think that focusing more honestly, actually, Scott, I am going to kind of address my or change my answer a little bit. Mortgage brokerages, maybe not. Loan officers, yes. I think that we have a solid mortgage brokerage in place already. We are already in 32 states. What we need to do is we need to expand kind of the staff within the mortgage brokerage that we have.
The types of loan officers, just to give you guys an example, for every loan officer that we’re targeting right now, they bring in $250,000 of revenue, let’s say, based on their books that they manage. Bringing four of those in is a great way to build our revenues. That is just, to be quite honest with you, just keeping the business as is. That is not even expanding it like we continue to. I look at it as kind of fuel that we can continue to throw on the fire here as we’re moving forward.
Paul Cecil, Vice President of Strategy, reAlpha: Absolutely. All right. Since it is 12:30, we are going to go ahead and wrap up. Thanks to everyone so much for joining today. Thanks for all the questions that were submitted either during or prior to the meeting. If we did not happen to get to your question for whatever reason, please feel free to email us at investorrelations@realpha.com. Our team will get back to you. As a reminder, we would encourage everyone to subscribe to the investor updates and follow Mike, Gary, and myself on Twitter, X, sorry, Elon. You can also subscribe to our investor updates, which can be found at irre.realpha.com. The recording will also be available on there shortly, probably within about 48 hours. We appreciate everyone hopping on. Thank you so much.