Beeline Holdings Q4 2025 Earnings Call - BeelineEquity debuts as capital-light, fee-driven growth engine
Summary
Beeline closed 2025 with clear top-line momentum and a strategic pivot. Q4 revenues rose to $2.5 million, up 127% year-over-year, driven by stronger originations, higher revenue per loan and expanded title fees. Management says operating leverage is emerging as revenue growth outpaces fixed costs, even while the company remains loss-making in the near term.
The call’s headline was BeelineEquity, a capital-light, transaction-based product launched with TYTL. Management positions this as a structurally different revenue stream, earning 3.5% per transaction without taking principal risk. The company retired Series A preferred, materially reduced debt, quintupled warehouse capacity in 2025 and says cash burn should ease in Q1 2026, while preparing to scale originations and fee-based transactions later this year.
Key Takeaways
- BeelineEquity launched in Q4 2025 with initial closings alongside partner TYTL, positioned as a capital-light, fee-driven product that does not assume principal risk.
- BeelineEquity fees are 3.5% per transaction for Beeline, plus title revenue, creating a transaction-based revenue stream independent of interest rate spreads.
- Q4 2025 total net revenues were $2.5 million, up 127% year-over-year and up 8.3% sequentially.
- Full-year 2025 revenue was $7.8 million, composed of $5.4 million gains on loan sales, $1.0 million loan origination fees, and $1.4 million title fees.
- Mortgage originations in Q4 rose to $84.7 million, a 44% increase versus $59.0 million in Q4 2024.
- Average revenue per loan increased 31% quarter-over-quarter, while average cost per loan fell 18% quarter-over-quarter, improving loan-level economics.
- Operational KPIs improved: lead-to-application time fell from 1.1 days in 2024 to 0.5 days in 2025, processing-to-clear-to-close cycle time improved from 22 to 18 days, and lock-to-close conversion rose from 46% to 55.1%.
- Q4 operating loss was $8.0 million, versus $4.1 million in Q4 2024 and $2.9 million in Q3 2025; roughly half of the Q4 operating loss was non-cash stock-based compensation.
- Adjusted EBITDA was negative $3.4 million in Q4, and negative $11.8 million for full-year 2025.
- Total operating expenses for 2025 were $27.3 million, with nearly 30% attributable to non-cash items.
- Cash used in operations for the year was $21.4 million, but year-end cash was over $2 million higher than 12/31/2024, helped by equity raises and debt reduction.
- Beeline significantly reduced debt in 2025, the company is now debt-free except for warehouse lines directly tied to loan production.
- Warehouse capacity was quintupled during 2025, and management plans to increase warehouse lines again in summer 2026 to support higher origination volume.
- Management is targeting a $100 million revenue run rate over the next couple of years, which they equate to roughly 700 transactions per month across origination and BeelineEquity, plus title revenue.
- Series A preferred was retired after negotiating a $2.25 conversion, reducing preferred overhang on the cap table; Series B remains and carries roughly 6% annual cost.
- Management intends to shift incremental spend toward customer acquisition and scaling transaction volume later in 2026, expecting cash burn to fall in Q1 2026 as platform buildout costs subside.
- Key risks remain: near-term profitability depends on scaling fee-based BeelineEquity and higher-margin originations, while core mortgage revenue remains sensitive to interest rate and housing market dynamics.
Full Transcript
Conference Operator, Moderator: Good day, and welcome to the Beeline fourth quarter 2025 financial results conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on a touch-tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star and then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Tiffany Milton, Chief Accounting Officer. Please go ahead, ma’am.
Tiffany Milton, Chief Accounting Officer, Beeline Holdings: Thank you. Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining us today to discuss Beeline’s financial results for the fourth quarter of 2025. I’m Tiffany Milton, Beeline’s Chief Accounting Officer. Joining us on today’s call to discuss these results is Nick Liuzza, our Chief Executive Officer, Jess Kennedy, Chief Operating Officer, and Chris Moe, our Chief Financial Officer. Following our remarks, we will open the call to your questions. Now, before we begin with prepared remarks, we submit for the record the following statement. This conference call contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including, but not limited to, statements regarding Beeline Holdings’ expected future growth of its core business, increased revenue, growth of fee-based revenue streams including Beeline Equity and expansion of our SaaS and AI capabilities and expansion of our warehouse lines.
Forward-looking statements are typically identified by words such as believe, expect, anticipate, plan, intend, seek, estimate, will, would, could, may, continue, forecast, target, potential, project, undertake and similar expressions. These statements are based on management’s current assumptions, beliefs and expectations and are not guarantees of future performance. Actual results may differ materially from those described in forward-looking statements due to various risks and uncertainties. These include, without limitation, the risk factors we provided in our 2025 Form 10-K we are filing tomorrow and prospectus supplements we have filed with the SEC. We caution investors not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements made during this call. All forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this presentation and are based on information available to Beeline as of today.
We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise these statements to reflect events or circumstances occurring after today’s date, except as required by law. Now, with that being said, I’ll turn the call over to Nick Liuzza. Nick, please proceed.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. 2025 was a transformational year for Beeline. We simplified our balance sheet, grew the core mortgage business and began to demonstrate operating leverage in the model. We also introduced new capabilities across the platform, including version 1 of our self-service mortgage experience, designed to streamline and simplify the borrower journey. As we enter 2026, our focus is on building on that progress, disciplined execution, continued growth in the core business and the expansion of new revenue streams, positioning Beeline to accelerate its revenue growth with stronger loan-level economics. Some of the 2025 highlights include. We became a public company, strengthening the balance sheet through equity capital raises and the elimination of debt. We increased year-over-year revenues by 127%.
We delivered strong growth in our core mortgage business with improvements across originations, revenue per loan and conversion efficiency. We began to see operating leverage in the model as revenue growth outpaced growth in fixed costs. We laid the groundwork for additional capital-light, fee-based revenue opportunities. We executed through challenging market conditions while navigating increased expenses as a new public company. Today, we’ve established Beeline as a digital-first real estate finance platform with a diversified mix of mortgage products and an increasing mix of fee-based revenue streams. Let me frame how we think about the business going forward. Our core focus remains on serving borrowers that are often underserved by traditional lenders, including self-employed individuals, younger borrowers and real estate investors. This is a large and persistent segment of the market, and we’ve built our platform specifically around their unique needs with a fully digital experience and integrated title capabilities.
At the same time, we’re beginning to expand beyond traditional mortgage lending, adding a more capital-light transaction-based revenue stream to our existing suite of mortgage products. An exciting development this year in that regard is the encouraging early progress of our BeelineEquity platform and our partnership with TYTL Corp. We appear to be ahead of the market with a unique equity product that is not tied to interest rates, infusing much-needed liquidity into the market with little to no direct competition. BeelineEquity is not just a new product. It’s a new transaction layer for residential real estate. BeelineEquity allows homeowners to access a portion of their home equity without refinancing or taking on additional debt while creating a new investable asset class. For Beeline, this is a fee-based model where we provide the infrastructure around the transaction.
BeelineEquity is a pure equity play unlike many of the HEI products on the market. Importantly, our model is capital light and fee driven. Beeline primarily provides the infrastructure, customer acquisition, property analysis, the operational platform, title, settlement and compliance. We earn 3.5% per transaction without assuming any principal risk. We also earn title revenue. We began closing initial transactions with TYTL as our partner in the fourth quarter and are building a growing pipeline heading into 2026. We monetize transactions, not interest rate spreads, which fundamentally changes the economics of our business. Our model scales with transaction volume, not balance sheet capital. Our focus is on measured scaling and validating the unit economics as the product develops. We believe this is a structurally different and more scalable business model than traditional mortgage lending.
To frame the opportunity, there’s nearly $40 trillion of home equity in the U.S. that is effectively illiquid. BeelineEquity is designed to unlock that liquidity in select zip codes, and we see significant opportunity over time, particularly given the limited number of solutions available to access it without recording a debt instrument. As the market develops, we believe Beeline is uniquely positioned as a first mover with a fully integrated platform. The expected initial use case for BeelineEquity is to enable homeowners, including many older borrowers who have built meaningful equity in their homes, to access liquidity without taking on additional debt or selling their asset. More broadly, we are building a product set that addresses different borrower needs over time, from acquisition and investment financing to home equity access.
In general, the primary use case for the BeelineEquity product is retirees who are asset rich but cash poor and are reluctant to sell their properties. Beeline now has products across the demographic spectrum, a wider variety of loans for younger borrowers, equity products for older homeowners who need or want to tap into some of that accumulated wealth. At the same time, our core business continues to improve. I’d like to turn the call over to Jess Kennedy, our COO and co-founder, to discuss our core business and the significant improvements we’ve driven in our KPIs over the last few months. Jess.
Jess Kennedy, Chief Operating Officer, Beeline Holdings: Thanks, Nick. I’m pleased to join today’s call. As Nick mentioned, we’re excited about the opportunities ahead with BeelineEquity. At the same time, we remain focused on methodically strengthening our core mortgage business. Let me highlight a few key metrics that underscore our progress. We delivered strong growth across our core operating metrics. Mortgage originations increased to $84.7 million, up 44% from $59 million in the fourth quarter of last year. The average revenue per loan increased 31% and the average cost per loan decreased 18% quarter-over-quarter. This trend continued into January 2026, and we expect continued improvements in loan level economics as we move through the year. In addition to the top line momentum, there are meaningful improvements in our operational efficiency across the platform.
Lead to application time was cut by more than half from 1.1 days in 2024 to half a day. We are reaching our customers more quickly through better workflows and Bob, our proprietary AI agent. Cycle time from processing to clear to close also improved from an average of 22 days in 2024 to 18 days in 2025 on larger unit volume. Lock to close conversions increased from 46% to 55.1%, a 20% improvement from 2024 to 2025. These operational gains reflect the strength of our digital-first AI-driven platform, which continues to streamline the customer experience while driving faster cycle times and higher conversion. Importantly, we are increasing both volume and revenue per loan with modest increase in headcount, which is translating into operational leverage. Looking ahead to 2026, our priorities are clear.
Continue growing our core mortgage business with a strong focus on efficiency and revenue per loan. Scale BeelineEquity in a disciplined manner while maintaining a prudent risk posture. Expand our SaaS and AI capabilities. Drive revenue growth across both volume and margin. Progress towards positive operating cash flow. Our objective is straightforward: to strengthen Beeline’s financial profile while building a scalable platform capable of delivering sustainable, long-term, high-margin growth and providing an exceptional customer experience. With that, I’ll turn it over to Chris Moe, our CFO, to walk through the financials.
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: Thanks, Jess. Starting with the fourth quarter, total net revenues were $2.5 million, an increase of 127% compared to $1.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. Sequentially, the fourth quarter increased by 8.3%. Gains on loan sales and loan origination fees increased both sequentially and year-over-year as we continue to scale the platform. Title fees were up 91% year-over-year and effectively flat sequentially as this business continues to generate stable and predictable revenue streams. We invested considerable resources to support our growth. Compensation, commissions, and benefits increased by $5.2 million. The majority of the compensation expenses were non-cash, stock-based compensation expense of $2.9 million. General and administrative expenses were up $2.4 million, primarily related to non-cash stock-based compensation expense of $1.4 million.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: As a result, our loss from operations was $8 million, compared to $4.1 million in the fourth quarter last year and $2.9 million in the third quarter of 2025.
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: Fully half of the loss from operations was non-cash stock-based compensation, and total non-cash items comprised approximately $5 million of the $8 million operating loss. Adjusted EBITDA was a negative $3.4 million in the quarter compared to a negative $3.2 million in the fourth quarter last year and negative $2 million in the third quarter of 2025. Let me now shift to the full year results. Since 2024 reflects the sub-period October 8 to December 31, 2024, I will only address full year 2025. Total revenue is $7.8 million, comprised of gains on loan sales of $5.4 million, loan origination fees of $1 million, and title fees of $1.4 million. These results reflect strong growth across our core businesses and continued momentum exiting the year.
Total operating expenses were $27.3 million, with almost 30% related to non-cash expenses. Net loss was $31.5 million and full-year adjusted EBITDA was negative $11.8 million. From a cost perspective, we maintain discipline while continuing to invest in growth. Importantly, we are beginning to see operating leverage as revenue scales faster than fixed costs. Turning to the balance sheet and comparing 12/31/2025 with 12/31/2024, we ended the year with cash balances higher by more than $2 million compared to 2024, supported by equity raises and improved capital structure. We significantly reduced debt during the year and today the company is debt-free outside of our warehouse lines which are directly tied to loan production. Speaking of warehouse lines, we quintupled our warehouse capacity over the course of 2025.
Based on our current growth rates, we expect to increase our warehouse lines this summer to support continued origination growth. Accounts payable and working capital metrics improved meaningfully, reflecting tighter operational execution. AP was reduced by over $1 million and working capital improved by $9.2 million. Total equity increased by $4.6 million year-over-year, driven by capital raises and restructuring. Turning to cash flow. For the full year, cash used in operations was $21.4 million, as expected for a company in a scaling phase. Shifting to 2026, the heavy lifting on our platform is now complete. We are focused on variable spending to support growth. As a result, we expect our cash burn to decrease in the first quarter of 2026. We continue to prudently utilize our ATM facility and believe we have sufficient resources to fund our near-term growth plans.
Investing cash flow of $1.1 million reflects continued investment in technology and platform development. Financing cash flow was $24.9 million, supporting both growth and balance sheet strengthening. To summarize, we delivered strong revenue growth. We improved operating efficiency. We materially strengthened the balance sheet and we’re entering 2026 with improving cash flow dynamics. As we scale revenue, particularly from higher margin capital-light initiatives like BeelineEquity, we expect continued improvement in both profitability and cash flow. With that, I’ll turn it back to Nick. Before we begin the Q&A session, I’d like to make 3 points. First, we’ve built a platform that combines mortgage origination, title, AI, and fractional equity that allows us to serve a segment of the market that is underserved by traditional mortgage lenders.
Second, we are adding a more capital-light fee-based revenue stream, which we believe can improve both scalability and returns over time. Third, we are increasingly focused on parts of the market where we believe we can build a more unique and durable position supported by our integrated platform and capital-light model. Our priorities are clear. Grow the business, scale new revenue streams in a disciplined way, and continue improving cash flow. If we continue to execute on these priorities, we believe the financial profile of the company will continue to strengthen. Thank you for your time and your continued interest in Beeline. I’d now like to turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A.
Conference Operator, Moderator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star and then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble the roster. The first question will come from Michael Legg with Ladenburg. Please go ahead.
Michael Legg, Analyst, Ladenburg: Thanks. Good afternoon. Congrats on the quarter. Wanted to kind of talk about, you mentioned a $100 million run rate over the next couple of years. Can you talk about whether that’s with the current, you know, three business lines of digital mortgage origination, AI, and the equity ownership pieces, or do you foresee adding any more legs to the stool? Thanks.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Hey, Michael, it’s Nick. Thank you for that. Yes, I see us focusing on the transactions that we discussed on the mortgage origination side and on the BeelineEquity side. There’s tremendous opportunity. There’s tremendous TAM. We are an early adopter of the blockchain in the BeelineEquity piece. I see that revenue coming from the two channels of Beeline Origination primarily and BeelineEquity.
Michael Legg, Analyst, Ladenburg: Great. Okay. Then, you know, you mentioned obviously fee-based, volume-based business, but interest rate, you know, obviously is correlated with the real estate market if rates come down. Could you just kinda talk about what type of environment you might see for your products?
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Chris, you wanna take that?
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah. I think the question is how exposed are we to interest rates? Is that fair to say, Michael?
Michael Legg, Analyst, Ladenburg: Yeah. How, you know, industry fee-based, volume, et cetera.
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah. Obviously our core mortgage business is still influenced by rates which have, by the way, ticked up in the last 30 days or so ever since the war started. But two things I think are worth stressing that are changing with Beeline. First, we’re improving our efficiency, particularly in the sales funnel. Like each step of the sales funnel, if you tighten it up like 2, 3, 4, 5%, by the time you get to the bottom of it could be like 20% better. The ratio of our ad spend to our revenue is one of the things we look at heavily. And then also revenue per loan, which as Jeff said earlier, has been growing.
It used to be sort of in the low 2s, meaning 220,000, and then now it’s sort of averaging around 300,000, and that helps offset volume variability. Second, as Nick alluded to earlier, and more importantly, we’ve expanded into transaction-based fee-driven revenue streams, which are less dependent on rates or are frankly, I think in the case of BeelineEquity, independent of rates. Overall, over time, that should reduce our sensitivity to interest rate increases.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah. Let me add something too as well, if you don’t mind. Look, when you think about the $100 million run rate, it’s about 700 transactions per month, give or take, along with our title business. When you think about that and you think about how big the addressable market is for Beeline Equity, a $39 trillion market opportunity with not much competition and creating liquidity for a class of people that need liquidity, you can start to visualize the opportunity. Then secondly, you know, our loan economics have not been positive. As a result of that, our appetite to spend on marketing hasn’t been as high as it’s going to be a little later this year, right?
As a result of that, we see our origination business growing on higher volumes as we continue to put the pedal to the metal in terms of spending more to create more origination volume, and then combining that with our BeelineEquity product, getting to 700 transactions to create the $100 million run rate seems like a very obtainable task.
Michael Legg, Analyst, Ladenburg: Great. Just last question. You know, we basically have one day left in the quarter. You mentioned the fourth quarter was sequentially up, I think 8.3%, you said. Are the same trends showing up in the first quarter? Can you comment at all on the direction we’re seeing?
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah, let me take that, Nick. Obviously I gotta be careful about giving any guidance, but I think I’m not gonna lecture you. I think, Mike, you recognize that this is a somewhat seasonal business. Beeline, I would say, is less seasonal than the average mortgage banker. The fourth quarter tends to be soft just because on the purchase side, people aren’t usually closing on houses in November. We have basically a 12-week quarter that 3 or 4 weeks are zipped out of it because of the holidays. Typically, if you know, for someone that’s running more or less level, the fourth quarter will be down. The fourth quarter was up 8.something%.
First quarter will be up yet again, but I’m not gonna say the amount. It’s not 8.7%.
Michael Legg, Analyst, Ladenburg: Great. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: You’re welcome.
Conference Operator, Moderator: Again, if you have a question, please press star and then one. The next question will come from Jacob Frank, Private Investor. Please go ahead.
Jacob Frank, Private Investor: Hey, Nick. Hey, Chris. Great results. Just wanted to check, are we on track to be cash flow positive as a group, not just the lending entity? Because the last update was in October 2025. I just wanted to ask about the Series A redemption. It looked like a very friendly deal for the company. I don’t know, like, what’s the color, what’s the background, what motivated the investors to offer these terms? Thank you.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah, I’ll take the first part and then I’ll let Chris. Go ahead. Go ahead, Chris.
Chris Moe, Chief Financial Officer, Beeline Holdings: Well, I was gonna say, I’ll take the first question and you can take the second one, but we can play around as needed. So yeah, thanks for your question. Yeah. Yes, we’re very much on trend. You know, our results for last year, you know, were clouded both from the investor perspective and also internally just because so much was going on in our birthing process of becoming a public company. Almost all that static is behind us. We’re very focused on operations and I’m confident that the lines will cross in a positive way in the near future. More than that, I can’t say for obvious reasons, but to answer your question, we’re very much on track, if not, you know, above the expected trajectory.
Nick, you wanna comment on the Series A?
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah. What was the question on the Series A? I’m sorry.
Jacob Frank, Private Investor: Yes. The question is, what’s the background and what motivated the investors to offer the terms? Because the issue price actually went up, so I believe we saved on issuance of shares.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: The Series A has now been retired. Basically, the way that series worked was we had the holders had the right to convert at $1.75, and we had the right to buy the shares back at $2. As the war broke out, right, we were uncertain of how we wanted to handle that with a, you know, a pending date of the end of May for the holder to convert. We went to the holder and we negotiated a $2.25 conversion. We issued the shares and put that to bed.
We’ve got very limited preferred overhang that’s currently in the cap table with the Series A currently completely retired.
Jacob Frank, Private Investor: Got it. That’s amazing. I do have one last question. I know that we have the at-the-market program, and I understand the potential uses could be blockchain investments, acquisitions and other things, right? How is the management thinking about the overall capital allocation strategy and how is the money
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah.
Jacob Frank, Private Investor: being spent? Because I also note that the Series B is still costing us 6% annually, so any thoughts around it?
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah. I think the question is how do we see potential acquisitions going forward? Is that the root of the question?
Jacob Frank, Private Investor: No. It’s like, how do we decide on how we spend the money? Because I believe we have so many areas we can spend on hiring, blockchain investments, could even potentially retiring the, I believe, the last remaining preferred Series B.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Yeah. Got it. Look, our primary focus is spending our money to grow our revenue as profitably as we possibly can. As mentioned on this call, right, we’re in a position now where that spend is not as great as it once was in developing and building the platform and then leveraging the AI to be even more productive. On a going forward basis, you know, that’s where we’re gonna put our dollars. It’s a lot fewer dollars than what we’ve had to put toward in the past. You know, as it relates to, I think you mentioned acquisitions, you know, I mean, look, we’re gonna look at potential acquisitions at some point next year.
There’s a lot of opportunity to potentially, A, consolidate or, B, pick up a company that can drive business to our platform. As of right now, the dollars we’re gonna spend are gonna be driving transactions, and that would include, you know, forming partnerships potentially, with entities that can drive business at the end of the day. There may be some dollars spent in that direction as well.
Jacob Frank, Private Investor: Okay. Thank you. Wishing all of you all the best.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: Thank you very much. We appreciate that. Thank you.
Conference Operator, Moderator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Nick Liuzza for any closing remarks.
Nick Liuzza, Chief Executive Officer, Beeline Holdings: I wanna thank everyone for their support. You know, we’re now in our first year as a public company. The management team, I wanna let everyone know, is completely committed. We are, you know, we sit side by side with our shareholders as every member on this phone is an investor in Beeline with their own hard personal cash, and it goes way beyond the three of us. As we move forward, understand that the decisions we’re making are not only for the best of Beeline, but for the shareholders, and we’re shareholders as well. We’ve got our next earnings call in the next 45 days, since this one’s a little late in the quarter. We look forward to seeing everyone on that call and sharing our Q1 results.
Thank you, everyone.
Conference Operator, Moderator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.