Nov 2, 2012
Executives
Alex de Aboitiz – Head of IR Pedro Arnt – CFO Marcos Galperín – CEO Osvaldo Gimenez – EVP
Analysts
Nat Brogadir – Stifel Nicolaus Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch Gene Munster – Piper Jaffray Ross Sandler (Connor) – Deutsche Bank Marcelo Santos – JP Morgan Dan Su – Morningstar Phil Bowers – Credit Suisse Scott Devitt – Morgan Stanley Mark Miller – William Blair
Operator
Okay, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the MecradoLibre third quarter earnings conference call. At this time all participants are in listen-only mode.
Later we will hold a question-and-answer session and instructions on how to participate will follow at that time. (Operator Instructions).
As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Alex de Aboitiz, please go ahead.
Alex de Aboitiz – Head of IR
Hello, everyone and welcome to the MercadoLibre earnings conference call for the quarter ended September 30th, 2012. My name is Alex de Aboutiz and I am the head of investor relations for MercadoLibre.
Our senior manager presenting today is Pedro Arnt, Chief Financial Officer. Additionally, Marco Galperin, Chief Executive officer and Osvaldo Gimenez, Executive Vice President of MercadoPago, will be available during today’s Q&A session.
This conference call is also being broadcast over the internet and is available through the investor relation section of our website. I remind you that manners relating to such matters is continued growth prospects of the company, industry trends, and product and technology initiatives.
These statements are based on currently available information and our current assumptions, expectations, and projections about future events. While we believe that our assumptions, expectations, and projections are reasonable in view of the currently available information, you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward looking statements.
Our actual results may differ materially from those discussed in this call for a variety of reasons, including those described in the forward-looking statements and risk factors section of our 10-K, and other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which are available on our investor relations website. Now, let me turn the call over to Pedro.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Thanks, Alex, and good afternoon to all of those joining us on today’s call. As you have just seen from our released results, during the third quarter of 2012, our business has continued to perform well on the basis of strong fundamentals from our multiple business units, marketplaces, payments, classifies, advertising, stores, and now also shipping.
In fact, this overall strength of the ecosystem has compensated for the anticipated year-on-year slowdown in the growth of our core marketplace, as it began to comp against the successful launch of our new technology platform in the third quarter of last year. Consequently, third quarter revenues grew a solid 37% in local currencies as businesses other than the core marketplace came to represent a record 31% of revenues.
It is also worth noting that in addition to our ramp up in revenue contributions, these newer service offerings increase the efficiency of our ecosystem as a whole, providing great long-term synergies for our marketplace and, perhaps more importantly, generating a better user experience on our platform. We have always identified innovation as the key to adding value in e-commerce, and we believe the results we are seeing across the board are proof of our sustained focus on delivering the innovative solutions and formats required by our fast-growing and increasingly sophisticated user base.
So before going into a detailed overview of our operational and financial performance in the quarter, let me first take a brief moment to update you on the progress of some of the key initiatives that we believe are driving growth across our platform that I have just mentioned. Therefore, representing key strategic drivers for the long-term success of our business.
One of these, is the on-platform piece of our payment solution, MercadoPago, which in the third quarter continued to grow its marketplace penetration as we continue to make its use compulsory on select seller profiles and product categories. This process of integrating payment through MercadoPago into the buying flow will necessarily move forward in a slow and careful manner, but we expect it to keep delivering games and payments penetration and user experience as we have seen in the third quarter of 2012, where on-platform penetration grew by more than 250 basis points, versus the third quarter of last year.
We believe this cautious rollout is the correct approach for now, since the long-term benefits of integrated payment also have short-term costs in terms of lower conversion rates as we’ve change the way we have allowed the users to transact on our platform over the past 12 years. Staying with payments, off-platform MercadaPago is a growing part of our total payment volume that requires its own approach, including a strong commercial push to keep spreading the MercadoPago brand beyond our marketplace.
Leveraging on the brand and product recognition afforded by being the exclusive payment solution for our marketplace, we have continued to grow off-platform payments at consistent triple digit rates. The sum of payment volume transacted on and off our marketplace affords us growing scale that makes us increasingly competitive in terms of processing costs and efficiency that we pass onto our clients in the form of competitive pricing.
We are growing our payments business on a firm foundation of quality and value, positioning us well in the future. In the third quarter, the number of payment transactions off our platform continued their impressive streak, posting a growth well over 120% year on year.
In the meantime, our mobile efforts keep picking up speed. This initiative is proving to be more than a novelty to our buyers and is quickly becoming a format where transactions occur.
It accounted for more than 4% of our gross merchandise volume in the third quarter, with certain countries already having more than 10% of transactions coming through mobile devices. With approximately 4 ½ million accumulated downloads at the close of the quarter, we are confident that mobile volume originating from both our native apps as well as our HTML-5 versions of the site are just getting started.
As you may recall, mobile is one of many efforts enabled by our new technology platform. Similarly, we expect a growing number of developers to link up to our APIs and begin building a innovative integration and application for our users.
Just yesterday, we hosted the first MercadoLibre Developer Conference in San Polo, and we extremely pleased, not only with the turn out, but also with the intense networking we generated. We believe this is just the first step in the crucial initiative to open up our business, which will have important implications as we continue opening up the platform and making it publically available to third parties, so that customized solutions and functionalities can be built that will allow for more efficient trading on MercadoLibre.
Moving onto our work with vertical product categories, this is another good example of developing a consistently richer supply and delivering new formats and features to meet the demands of our users. As I mentioned earlier, during the quarter we saw very strong results coming from our accelerating classifieds verticals, and in addition to that, we have continued advancing with more verticalized apparel categories in Brazil and Argentina and have also started to lay the ground work for further verticalization across other relevant categories, such as auto parts.
We are also looking ahead in terms of our shipping efforts, rolling out our solution to a wider base of sellers than last quarter. As the number of sellers offering integrated shipping grows, we are also giving these listings more prominent placement throughout the site.
This will ensure that this added value penetrates our marketplace at a faster pace and that increasing number of purchases made on MercadoLibre offer sellers integrated payments and shipping, greatly improving the convenience of the purchase. There is still plenty of work to be done, but we are positive about the initial results and see this is a truly transformative initiative that we look forward to updating you on in the future.
Finally, a brief mention of our customer experience efforts, another important area of focus for us where our investment in new resources and a growing team is paying off. We continue to further integrate salesforce.com CRM tools, with our existing platform and feel better equipped than ever to keep delivering improvements in customer satisfaction and retention rates.
Having just covered some of the more relevant initiatives for the quarter, let me say that we are very pleased with our focus and the direction in which we are headed. These initiatives point at strengthening our already broad ecosystem, getting a better rap around the user experience that we offer, and ensuring the excellence of service that our users deserve.
Advancing on these lines, we trust that we will keep building the most comprehensive e-commerce hub in all the markets in which we operate. Now, let me give you a detailed overview of our key operational metrics in the quarter, those that best illustrate the underlying foreign exchange neutral growth of our business.
During the third quarter of 2012, 4 million new users registered on our site, growing our base of confirmed registered users 25% year on year. Successful items grew 22%, reaching 17.6 million for the quarter.
The number of payment transactions grew 65%, to 6.4 million. Gross merchandise volume was $1.44 billion, growing 20% when measured in local currencies.
And total payment volume was $480 million, growing 55% when measured in local currencies. These operational metrics translated to a solid financial performance as well.
More specifically, in the third quarter of 2012, net revenues were $97.3 million, a 37% growth in local currencies. Gross profit margin came in at 73.6%, income from operations was $33.7 million with an operating income margin of 34.7%.
In local currencies, operating income grew 27% year on year. Net income before income asset tax expenses was $36 million and grew 16% in local currencies.
Net income was $26.1 million, a 14% year on year growth in local currencies. Diving into further detail on our top line, our core marketplace revenues outpaced GMV rate of growth.
This revenue growth was attributable mainly to final value fees growing slightly above GMV, based on higher averaged pricing than one year ago, and growth in listings driving additional placement fee revenues versus last year as our supply has broadened considerably, illustrated by a 29% year-on-year growth in live listings on our platforms. As for payments revenue, off-platform processing fees kept outpacing the rest of our ecosystem on the strength of triple digit growth in volume, while revenues from installment purchases accelerated versus the second quarter of this year, resulting in total payments revenue growth higher than 60% in local currencies year on year during the third quarter.
Classifieds and advertising also had a good quarter. Classified’s new listings growth remains solid through the quarter.
Monetization improved, dealers continue to gain share of listings year on year. In the meantime, advertising contributed to revenue growth through improved volume of inventory displayed and higher CPCs than last year.
As a result, classifieds and advertising accelerated their growth trajectories to a combined rate north of 50% when measured in local currencies. In summary, robust contributions from our business units, particularly the newer ones, lead to solid top line growth despite the tough comparisons brought about by the launch of our new platform in the third quarter of last year.
Year on year, consolidated net revenues in local currencies grew 25% in Brazil, 69% in Argentina, 29% in Mexico, and 57% in Venezuela. Now, I’d like to walk you through a more detailed look at our entire P&L.
Growth profit grew 16% in the third quarter to $71.6 million. Gross profit margin was 73.6% of revenues, versus 75.4% in the third quarter of 2011 and 73.1% in the second quarter of 2012.
Year-on-year gross margin contraction is primarily attributable to our payments business growing faster than our marketplace. COGS associated with payments grew in line with total payment volume, representing approximately 280 basis points in margin contraction, while incremental expenses, primarily related to our investments in hosting and customer service, represented another 70 basis points in margin contraction.
These negative drivers on margin were partially offset by efficiencies in sales taxes that generated 160 basis points of gross margin improvement. Operating expenses for the period totaled $37.9 million, a 20% increase versus the third quarter of 2011.
Operated expenses as a percentage of revenues were 38.9% during the third quarter versus 38.7% in the same period last year as the expected scalability of our business model was offset by investments in new development and customer service offices, cost associated with hiring and retaining talent in our offices and the deceleration of our top line growth. Let me now walk you through a brief breakout by line item of these operating expenses.
Sales and marketing, our largest line item, increased 11% for the quarter, to 18.6 million, dropping as a percentage of revenues to 19.1%, versus 20.5% for the same period last year. We benefited primarily from continued efficiencies in marketing spend, and the reduction in our bad debt ration contributing a combined 250 basis points to margin.
These efficiencies were enough to offset 50 basis points in margin contraction, brought about by higher compensation costs from last year, and 60 basis points worth of higher buyer protection program expenses, resulting from increased coverage brought about by the higher use of MercadoPago on our platform. Product development expenses grew 35% to 8 million, compared with $5.9 million for the third quarter of 2011, reaching 8.2 of revenues versus 7.3% last year.
120 basis points of margin contraction came from higher compensation costs, as year on year, we grew our investment in a programming team that is crucial to our focus on product innovation. G&A expenses grew 26% year over year, to 11.3 million in the third quarter, representing 11.6% of revenues versus 11% last year.
Approximately 100 basis points of margin contraction came from compensation costs and 45 basis points from legal fees, partially offset by scale in other G&A concepts. As a result, operating income for the second quarter of 2012 was $33.7 million.
Operating income margin for the quarter was 34.7% versus 36.7% in the third quarter of 2011. Below operating income, we benefited from $2.9 million of interest income, practically even with the third quarter of last year, as lower yields, primarily in Brazil, offset the greater cash balances invested in present.
Forex expenses were $194,00, but bear in mind in the third quarter of 2011, our Forex line was aided by the appreciation of U.S. dollar balances held by our subsidiaries contributing roughly $3 million to this line last year.
This generates 420 basis points of margin contraction due to foreign exchange when looking at the third quarter of 2012 versus that of 2011. With this, we arrive at a pre-tax income of $36 million, 2% higher than in the same quarter of last year in dollars, and 16% higher in local currencies.
Income tax expense was $9.9 million during the third quarter of 2012, resulting in a blended tax rate of 27.5% versus 25.1% in the third quarter of 2011, and 27.7% in the second quarter of 2012. I’d like to remind you that last year’s tax rate was unusually low due to a $2 million reversed tax valuation in Brazil.
Net income for the three months ended September 30th, 2012, was $26.1 million, decreasing 1% when compared with 26.3 million during the same period of 2011. Net income in local currencies, however, grew 14% versus last year.
Had we not had the one-time tax benefit last year, net income growth for the third quarter would have been 7% in dollars, and 23% in local currencies. Net income margin was 26.8% in the quarter, resulting in a basic net income per common share of $0.59.
Property and equipment and intangible asset purchases for the quarter totaled $3.3 million, and consequently, for the period ended September 30th, 2012, net cash provided by operating activities minus purchases of property equipment and intangible assets, our calculation of free cash flow totaled $21.9 million, versus 19.2 million last year. Cash, short-term investments and long-term investments at the end of the quarter totaled $237 million.
Now that we have gone through the financials, wrapping up I would like to reiterate that we are pleased to see the business deliver 37% revenue growth in local currencies, and in particular with the performance of our adjacent business units, which represent a growing share of our revenue. We feel the growth rate, despite decelerating versus Q2, is solid.
This quarter marks the first anniversary of the launch of our new technology platform and the subsequent acceleration of this brought about in our business, making for tough year-over-year comparisons. Furthermore, looking beyond 2012, we believe that as a result of the successful launch of this new technology platform, we are in a much better position to continue to carry out the plan and vision we have for the company.
Thanks a lot, and with that we are open to taking your questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions). Our first question is from Nat Brogadir from Stifel Nicolaus, your line is open, please go ahead.
Nat Brogadir - Stifel Nicolaus
Two questions from me quickly, when I do some back-of-the-envelope math, is it possible that our marketplace revenue was down on a year-over-year basis or flat-ish? And secondly, just looking at the consensus number for 4Q, your organic growth rates, it seems like there is some expectations for re-acceleration from the 37% growth in 3Q, you know, is that expectation correct or should people expect the tough comparisons that continue into 4Q?
Thanks a lot.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
So, first of all, none of our business units had negative growth in dollars or in local currencies. The core marketplace, excluding classifieds and advertising continued to grow year over year in dollars and more than that in local currencies, since obviously Forex continues to be a headwind.
In terms of the next quarter, as you know we typically don’t guide and so we will be more than willing to go over those numbers once we report Q4.
Nat Brogadir - Stifel Nicolaus
Could you give, you know, if marketplace is revenue, could you give some color if it was up double digit percentages? I am just looking at the payments revenue is up 60%, you know that implies you know, just modest growth in the marketplace revenue line if I am backing up payments, so just some color there would be helpful.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah so you have the financials for the marketplace business in the financials. In dollars, marketplace, as reported, grew 16%, so that’s certainly double digits.
Even if you were to back into the core marketplace excluding classified and advertising, we are still talking double digits, in dollars obviously more than that in local currencies.
Nat Brogadir - Stifel Nicolaus
Okay.
Operator
Thank you, our next question in queue is from Bob Horn of Merrill Lynch. Your line is open, please go ahead.
Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch
For your Brazilian GMV growth please, in local currency?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah Bob, hi. So we haven’t been disclosing local currency GMV by country for a few quarters now.
I think the indication of the question you are trying to get at is to get a sense of relative growth among the different markets. I think one way to look at this is if you look at unit growth, which strips out a lot of the foreign currency stuff and puts the different markets on equal footing, you know, our three largest markets and all of our markets except for one of them are growing very close to the overall corporate average for unit growth, so in the low 20’s, and Brazil is included within that.
Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch
Okay, that is fine, and then when you look at the, maybe the early experiences right now that you have with the management API, can you talk a little bit about the number of sellers you have that are piloting the API and you know, what is it doing in terms of the conversion rates that they are seeing or the increase in listings you are getting from those sellers?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Great, so as I mentioned we had the first developer conference yesterday, it was extremely successful, we had a packed audience, but this was obviously very, very early days. We’ve seen hundreds of thousands of listing being listed via the API since yesterday, many of those are classifieds from classified integrators, so in terms of how the technology is holding up and the first attempt by third party developers to upload listings, obviously very positive, but again Bob, this is day two, so I think way too early to give any significant indications of how it’s performing.
Next quarter we should be able to give some more color on that.
Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch
You ended the day yesterday at about 6:00 p.m. and since then you have seen hundreds of thousands of listings in classifieds using the API?
Is that correct?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
So I don’t know if it is since 6:00 p.m. but over the last few days and more specifically since the conference yesterday, we have seen hundreds of thousands of listed properties coming into classifieds from web properties we have been working with to list through the API into classifieds, so that is correct.
Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch
Okay, and one last question if I might, just in the last week it looks as if it is going to be some pretty big changes in the regulatory environment for payments in Brazil, and I was wondering if you had time to evaluate the implications of that for Pago yet?
Marcos Galperín – CEO
Hi, Bob. This is Marcos.
I think it is also too early to tell. There has been big rumors going around but we still haven’t got a hold – we haven’t yet received the actual changes they are making, so it is too early, until we have that we don’t know what the impact will be.
Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch
Right now it is fair to say, most likely favorable right?
Marcos Galperín – CEO
Yeah.
Bob Horn – Merrill Lynch
Fair enough. Thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you, our next question in queue is from Gene Munster of Piper Jaffray, your line is open.
Gene Munster – Piper Jaffray
You said 37% local currency, but the business was driven outside of the core marketplace and that accounted for 31% of revenue outside of the core market, my first question was what was the 31%, what is that compared to maybe last quarter and last year, and second is from a big picture we think about how the business is going to evolve in this year of three more quarters of tough comps, should we generally think about a little bit more growth from some of these other things, whether it be payments or advertising and mobile, versus traditional marketplace, and then a follow up question to that.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah. So year over year evolution of the newer businesses grew, I would say roughly four percentage points in terms of mix versus last year.
Going forward, these newer businesses obviously have tremendous potential, they are growing from a smaller base in the case of payments we have always said there is tremendous opportunity and a very large addressable market. So if we continue to execute well, I think it is very likely that those businesses can continue to gain share of revenues.
Notwithstanding, the marketplace I think continues to perform well once we take into consideration the tough comps, and as has been the history going back, there are certain quarters where maybe the marketplace is outperforming the adjacent business and quarters where the opposite occurs. Then in terms of the comps and going forward, again I think it will make more sense for us to address future quarters once we have actually released numbers around those.
Gene Munster – Piper Jaffray
Yes, on the comps I know you are going to wait until next quarter, but was there any kind of anomalies in terms of the September quarter in terms of how the comp played out? For example, some of the changes a year ago happened two-thirds into the quarter or a third of the way into the quarter and the December quarter is going to be the first full quarter where we are going to have the difficult comp, is there any sort of nuisances like that that we should be aware of?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
You know, I think it was in a quarter that was necessarily characterized by any significant differences in either beginning or end. When you look at the growth trajectory, last year the fourth quarter was the strongest in terms of growth, but that is also because it was comping off of a relatively easy quarter.
I would say nothing very specific, probably a similar comparative trend as the one we witnessed in the third quarter, which is we had a very, very strong back half of last year, so that obviously effects the headline growth number for this year.
Gene Munster – Piper Jaffray
Got it, then a couple quarters ago you guys had kind of given some trajectory about how marketplace was growing, exiting the quarter I think you kind of said that it exited the quarter growing faster than it entered the quarter, something to that effect, but is there any sort of details you can give us on how it trended throughout the quarter in terms of marketplace?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
I think as I just said, no significant divergence in the growth path, beginning of the quarter to end of the quarter, nothing that warrants any specific kind of different call out relatively similar growths in the three months.
Gene Munster – Piper Jaffray
Okay, great thank you.
Operator
Thank you, our next question in queue is from Ross Sandler of Deutsche Bank, your line is open, please go ahead.
Ross Sandler (Connor) – Deutsche Bank
Hi guys, this is Connor, I am calling in for Ross, a couple of questions for you. My first question is, I am hoping you guys can characterize the environment in Argentina right now in terms of consumer demand, are you seeing any drop off from macro-related issues at this point?
My second question is now that Amazon is officially started to hire specifically for their warehouse personnel in Brazil, I am wondering if you guys can speak more formally about any strategic priorities that have moved up to better prepare for when they enter the market? Thank you.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Right, so Argentina, I mean to your specific question around demand and what we are seeing in terms of consumer consumption, still continues to be an economy that is somewhat driven by consumer consumption, there is an electoral year next year, so I think it is in the governments best interest to try to continue to hold consumer demand high. So we haven’t seen any negative impact from that.
The challenges in Argentina are more around the overall environment to repatriate funds, but as we have always said, we feel that given the limitations that are never great, we feel pretty comfortable with our ability to manage that and also as we have always said, Argentina is a country where we do think there are strategic assets where we can deploy cash that is generated in Argentina to the benefit of the overall company.
Marcos Galperín – CEO
With respect to competition, as you know we use to competing, we have been competing intensely, for the last 13 years and we expect to continue doing so for the foreseeable future. We are operating in a market that we consider very attractive that we believe has strong secular trends that favor this market, therefore, it is also seen by other players and it is going to continue attracting competition.
What we have always done and has worked for us was the [inaudible] to look at every competitor, try to learn as much as we can from each one of them, and then focus intensely on what we need to do and doing it the right way. So we continue to, we will continue to do that, and without really having much to say in particular with respect to any competitor at any given point in time.
Operator
Thank you, our next question is from Marcelo Santos of JP Morgan, your line is open.
Marcelo Santos – JP Morgan
Two questions, the first question is about the fraud issues that you are facing with MercadoPago. If you could please comment if you are improving on that front, if there is much room to improve, have you already turned to the normal levels of fraud or do you have some room to gain there?
The second question is about verticalization, I just wanted you to talk a little bit about how that has developed because I think in previous quarters it was going a little bit slow but now it seems that the speed increased up there so if you could talk a little bit about lessons learned?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
I’m sorry, could you repeat the second question? We caught the back half of it but not the beginning.
Marcelo Santos – JP Morgan
Sure, just on the verticalization initiative, in previous quarter it looked like it was still slowly developing but now it looks like it has sped up a lot. So I just wanted you to comment about lessons learned, how things have developed, give a little bit more color, please?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yes, so let me start with verticaliztion, and Osvoldo can take the one on loss pervasions from fraud. So verticalization efforts have continued and I think we have been fairly consistent, we have continued to expand the number of apparel vertical categories where we are rolling out some of the new features for verticalization.
We are also preparing a new vertical category to launch which will be auto parts, a lot of that is still in the back end work on that category. So I think the important thing here is we are long term committed to more vertical experiences, it is still early days, there is still a lot of features and functionalities to roll out, but we continue to see positive progress there and we are already beginning to think of additional categories.
Obviously the more traditional verticals classifieds, and real estate, those are performing very, very well and as we called out in the financials, are one of the very attractive newer businesses in terms of growth rate, growing north of 50% year over year.
Marcos Galperín – CEO
Let me just add with respect to verticalization, we are also doing these efforts, not only on the web but also on the mobile apps for [inaudible], we recently released a click to call functionality on the mobile classifieds, and real estate classifies on the IOS app and it is getting great results.
Osvaldo Gimenez – EVP
With regards to fraud in MercadoPago, I’ve said that the third quarter was worse than the second quarter but better than the first one, throughout the quarter we have identified several improvement opportunities and we have executed on them during the quarter.
Marcelo Santos – JP Morgan
Okay, thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you, our next question is from Dan Su of Morningstar, your line is open.
Dan Su – Morningstar
Regarding shipping, so can you please update us on the progress that the company has made in terms of integrated payment and the shipping? Specifically can you talk about participation among sellers for this program and any patterns in terms of product category, average ticket size, or where the sellers are located?
Then, is it fair to say that the shipping volume for this program is fairly concentrated to a few large metro areas, or is it actually quite spread out? Then I have another question, thank you.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
I think the most important characterization here is that it continues to be very early days, so volumes are still insignificant in material in terms of overall volume, but we continue to on-board new sellers and more importantly also, the product has more features and more flexibility so that it now enables sellers who want to combine their existing shipping capabilities that they already run on their own websites with what we are trying to do on MercadoLibre, that has become available so that should help us pick up the pace of adoption for the shipping solution. In terms of traffic patterns, ASPs, again, I think the volume set is too small and it would be a mistake to try to drive any conclusions from that.
Dan Su – Morningstar
Thanks. The other question is, can you talk about where the cash on the balance sheet is located right now and please talk about the priorities in terms of capital allocation in the near future?
Thank you.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah so I think the first thing in answering that is we need to differentiate, think of the cash on the balance sheet in two large buckets. One is funds payable to MercadoPago accounts, in other words Pago stored balance.
That, which is about maybe 30%, slightly less that 30% than the cash equivalents and investments on the balance sheet, are obviously located in country, because what we want to do is match the funds payable to the customer with our cash reserve. The remainder of the cash or cash equivalents, which are actually the corporate balance sheet, are by in large in the US in US bank accounts in dollar denominated instruments.
We have depending on the specific date and quarter, anywhere between 20 to 30 million dollars in Brazil, in Brazilian Ray eyes and that is a bit of a yield play. Then obviously because of cash restrictions, there are slightly more than 25 million dollars in Venezuela held in [inaudible].
We don’t typically comment on any pending tactics investments, I think as we have always said, the balance sheet is enough we feel to carry out our strategic investments and we continue to be committed to our dividend policy.
Dan Su – Morningstar
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, our next question is from Phil Bowers of Credit Suisse, your line is open, please go ahead.
Phil Bowers – Credit Suisse
I just had a question about the take rate, I wanted to know what drove the take rate increases year over year and this quarter? Was it mainly the increase of MercadoPago, or is there something else I am missing?
Thank you.
Pedro Arnt – CFO
So I briefly covered this in the earnings call. The growth in the newer businesses be that MercadoPago off platform processing, the financing business, the classified businesses have obviously been accretive to take rate, since those businesses have grown faster than GNV.
Additionally, if you were to look just at the core marketplace take rates, those have also gone up, in a very ballpark figure of about 20 basis points, driven in part by final value fee pricing and in part by placement fees that have grown at a faster pace than GNV as well.
Phil Bowers – Credit Suisse
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you, our next question is from Scott Devitt of Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Scott Devitt – Morgan Stanley
Can you talk about your ability to raise prices and the plan for that?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
I think that continues to remain unchanged, you know if you look at our take rates, they continue to be lower than US equivalents. If you look at the core marketplace take rate, I would say significantly lower, and we think that is the right way to manage the business for now.
Continue to focus on growth and market share and not necessarily on maximizing short term monetization. Implicit in that answer is that we think there is pricing power in the model, but now hurry to drive that pricing power.
We have always said that as payment deduction continues to grow, there is an increasing cost that we are incurring, you can see that in our declining gross margins, so one way to offset some of that gross margin compression is pricing, but not necessarily have any pricing on value fee planned for the remainder of the year.
Scott Devitt – Morgan Stanley
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question in queue is from Mark Miller of William Blair, your line is open, please go ahead.
Mark Miller – William Blair
Good afternoon, I was wondering why the installment purchases went up in the quarter given that the growth in Brazil slowed, and how significant was the impact on margins overall?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah, so the biggest driver of increased financing revenues is obviously that we are processing a lot more payments volume. So a greater number of our transactions are flowing through MercadoPago, and that allows us to offer the credit offering.
So Pago penetration is a significant driver of increased financing. Additionally, spreads have also improved somewhat, so that also helps the take rate on the financing.
I don’t remember what the second part of the question was, sorry.
Mark Miller – William Blair
You said that the level of purchases on installment went up, so I was trying to understand what was driving that?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah sorry, so it is essentially what I said, but the more payments we are processing through Pago, the more our base of volume that we can cross sell the financing on is, and therefore that drives the growth in the financing business.
Mark Miller – William Blair
Okay great, and then can you clarify the comments you made about bad debt? I think you said it was coming down but then I thought you said the fraud experience was worse than the second quarter but better than the first, can you tie those two together?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah so bad debt typically we refer to as marketplace bad debt, so sellers who have sold items on the marketplace and who those accounts go delinquent, those ratios have been coming down consistently over time, and have actually been accretive to margins in this quarter, about 130 basis points of improvement from bad debt. The fraud loss provisions are what we call charge backs, and that is a different accounting line for us.
Mark Miller – William Blair
Okay and just a last question, I think you talked about your net promoter scores being up in the first half, are there any updates on how people are viewing the customer service improvements you have made?
Pedro Arnt – CFO
Yeah, so net promoters scores on a sequential basis have actually been somewhat flat-ish, so I think we gained some very good traction in the beginning of the year, not so queue on queue. Again, another example of something that is relatively early in terms of the sales force implementation, we have done a lot of work, we feel a lot better about the ability of our customer service teams to deliver value given the new tools, but there is still room for net promoters scores to grow and we feel confident that they will.
Marcos Galperín – CEO
Let me add, I think we are half way in all of the things that we need to do with respect to our back end tools. We have a huge effort in terms of converting our front end and out site into the platform which we opened yesterday in the conference, we are doing an equivalent effort with our back end.
We have done great progress but it is still very much a work in progress, and we still have, we are barely half way along the way. Just for you to set your expectations properly.
Mark Miller – William Blair
Great, thanks.
Operator
Thank you. With that I am showing no further questions, ladies and gentlemen thank you for your participation in today’s conference.