Jason Robins
Analyst · Jefferies. Your line is open.
No. It's a great question. Obviously, the shorter the period, the more that volatility in sport outcomes can affect things. So only being about a month into Q4, I think, just the timing of when you're seeing the guide, it's obviously going to -- a month period is going to have more volatility. And as you noted, it could swing either way. Just last night, Bengals make that 2 point conversion and that last touchdown doesn't go in for a fourth parlay leg to hit for, the touchdown parlay, then it would have been very different outcome. So things can swing either way. I think certainly over longer periods of time, it normalizes. It was a little bit of a down year this year. This year, we were around -- will expect to be around 10.5% structural hold and we'll finish just over 10% actual, at least that's where we're tracking now, maybe sport outcomes will improve. But that's -- typically over the course of the year, pretty big number. So I think over a year, it's pretty smooth. And what you'll see, I think as the business evolves, right now, our adjusted EBITDA is a small percentage of our revenue as that continues to go up and we approach our long-term 30% plus margins, you're going to see the impact of sport outcomes, because they affect revenue flow through at a much -- excuse me, affect the EBITDA at a much lower percentage. Think about it this way. Next year, our adjusted EBITDA is going to double at the top end of our guidance range, but we expect revenue to grow at a just over a 30% pace. So the impact of sport outcome on revenue is obviously going to be the same, but on EBITDA could be -- excuse me, it will be about -- a little over 30% higher, but on EBITDA, it will be on a number that's 4 times bigger. So, as we scale and the business generates more and more EBITDA, these impacts will become more rounding errors, but obviously, now in a year where we're just turning positive adjusted EBITDA for the first-time in company history, it's going to be a bigger impact.