Stride, Inc.
Q3 2017 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Greetings and welcome to the K12 Fiscal 2017 Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. Mike Kraft, Vice President of Finance. Thank you Mr. Kraft, you may now begin.
  • Mike Kraft:
    Thank you and good afternoon. Welcome to K12's third quarter earnings call for fiscal year 2017. Before we begin, I would like to remind you that in addition to historical information, certain comments made during this conference call may be considered forward-looking statements made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and should be considered in conjunction with cautionary statements contained in our earnings release and the company’s periodic filings with the SEC. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual performance or results to differ materially from those expressed or implied by such statements. In addition, this conference call contains time-sensitive information that reflects management's best analysis only as of the day of this live call. K12 does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. For further information concerning risks and uncertainties that could materially affect financial and operating performance and results, please refer to our reports filed with the SEC, including without limitation cautionary statements made in K12's 2016 annual report on Form 10-K. These filings can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website at www.k12.com. In addition to disclosing financial results in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles in the U.S., or GAAP, we will discuss certain information that is considered non-GAAP financial information. A reconciliation of this non-GAAP financial information to the most closely comparable GAAP information was included in our earnings release and is also posted on our website. This call is open to the public and is being webcast. The call will be available for replay for 30 days. With me on today's call is Stuart Udell, Chief Executive Officer, and James Rhyu, Chief Financial Officer. Following our prepared remarks, we will answer any questions you may have. I’d like to now turn the call over to Stuart. Stuart?
  • Stuart Udell:
    Good afternoon and thanks for joining us on the call today. First, let me start by highlighting a few results for the quarter. Revenue for the quarter was $222.5 million, an increase of 0.5% year over year and slightly above our guidance provided last quarter. We posted operating income of $12.8 million which included a set of specific charges adding up to $11.4 million as outlined in our press release and in our 10-Q. Without these specific charges, our business delivered $24.2 million in operating income in the quarter, an increase of 26.7% year over year. This $24.2 million was above our guidance of $14 million to $17 million as a result of the timing of some revenue events and expense actions as well as management's focus on expanding operating leverage and generating positive cash flow while continuing to drive improved academic outcomes. Our forecast for the fourth quarter places our full year expectations in line with our original guidance for the year. This underscores K12’s commitment to deliver upon our financial objectives while remaining focused on our core mission to transform learning for every student we serve. Now today I want to focus on three key topics
  • James Rhyu:
    Thank you, Stuart. Good afternoon everybody. First, a quick recap of our reported results. Stuart mentioned, revenue for the quarter increased 0.5% to $225.5 million. Operating income on a reported basis was $12.8 million, a decrease of $6.3 million or 33% from the prior year. Adjusted operating income was $18.0 million, a decrease of $5.4 million or 23.1% from the prior year. And just as a reminder, adjusted operating income and adjusted EBITDA excludes the impact of stock based compensation. Capital expenditures were $33.2 million, a decline of $7.8 million from the prior year’s nine months ending in March. As you saw in our press release and Stuart has already mentioned, our operating results for the quarter include a $11.4 million of charges that I will detail in a few minutes. These charges primarily stem from our ongoing effort to review our operations and portfolio of assets and to look for ways to improve our long term profitability. In this case, we took a number of actions including reducing our real estate exposure, lowering our human resource costs and recording some additional reserves for receivables that have been outstanding for a while. Excluding those charges, we would have reported operating income of $24.2 million for the quarter and adjusted operating income of $28.7 million. A little more detail on the $11.4 million in charges. First, as we previously discussed, from a real estate perspective we're consolidating our corporate headquarters and much like many corporations have done, we evaluate our space needs, we implemented smarter guidelines and we reduced our footprint. In addition, we exited underutilized facilities for schools that have closed in prior periods. In total, $5.5 million of the charges related to the accounting for this action. Second, from a resource standpoint, we have practically reviewed our organization since Stuart joined last year, and we refined our headcount in Q3. This evaluation included overlaps caused by the acquisition of LTS last year and by the purchase of Middlebury Interactive in Q2 of this year resulted in a modest workforce reduction largely in our headquarters location. In conjunction with these actions, we recorded a severance charge of approximately $2.3 million. And lastly, we took a $3.6 million charge for uncollectable receivables largely associated with troubled accounts from years ago that we've been trying to collect for some time. These charges have been predominantly booked in selling, administrative and other operating expenses on our P&L. For your reference, we provided additional information at the end of our press release that shows our income statement excluding these charges on a line item basis. Then let me turn to some additional details for the quarter. I'm going to focus the remainder of my remarks to be on the pro forma results excluding the charges recorded. Revenue was $222.5 million, an increase of $1.2 million or 0.5% from a year ago. Revenue growth was largely driven by an increase in our institutional business and some modest gains in our managed school programs, somewhat offset by declines in our private pay business. Revenues for managed public school programs increased 0.9% compared to the prior year to $187.4 million. The increase was a result of revenue per enrollment rising 1.6%, offset by a 0.8% reduction in student enrollment. In Q3 we continue to see lower student retention rate compared to the year ago quarter which resulted in enrollment being lower on a year over year basis. However, as Stuart mentioned, we have done significant work this year to address what we believe are the root causes of our retention issues and implemented a series of platform and critical upgrade, as well as new programs to further improve the family and student experience. We believe that these actions will improve retention levels in fiscal 2018. However we may see some continued pressure in retention for the remainder of this year. Revenue per enrollment increased 1.6% this quarter as a result of funding updates, better economics at a school level, improved capture rates as well as some other factors. Funding updates were across a number of states. Many of these factors helped contribute to revenues being higher than our guidance expectations for the quarter. On a full year basis, revenue per enrollment is likely to rise between 1% to 2% versus the prior year. However, it does mean lower revenue per enrollment growth for the fourth quarter on a year over year basis as compared to what we saw in the third quarter. In our institutional business which includes both non-managed public school programs as well as our institutional software and services business, revenue grew 10.4% on a year-over-year basis. Non-managed public school program revenue increased 22%. Enrollment for non-managed programs increased 9.3% to 29,300 and revenue per enrollment rose 11.6%. Both increases were result of the continued success primarily in our larger programs that have scaled throughout the year. Institutional software and services revenues were 3.9% lower this quarter than the prior year. This is largely the result of some customer contracts being renewed at lower funding levels. Over the long term as school districts continue to adopt more digital alternatives, we continue to believe that institutional software and services will provide significant growth opportunities for K12. However in the near term we continue to expect revenue growth to be at an uneven pace. I also want to note that for Q4 last year we had an unusually strong quarter which is going to be a difficult comparison for Q4 this year. Turning to our private pay business, revenues declined 24.5% to $8.9 million. However you will call we exited the UK operations, so executing the impact of that exit, revenue was largely flat year over year. While it may take some time to develop, we still believe that there are a number of potential growth areas in the private pay business. While we don't expect to see rapid growth in this business in the near term, we believe over the long term we do have some solid revenue opportunity growth for K12 in this area. Gross margins were 38.7% in the quarter and were largely flat compared to 39.1% in the year ago quarter. As I mentioned last quarter on a full year basis we expect gross margins to contract marginally somewhere less than 100 basis points year over year. And this is really largely driven by the result of increased amortization for some curriculum we recently put in service as well as an ongoing investments in driving stronger student outcomes and school mix. Selling, administrative and other expenses decreased by approximately 10% from the year ago quarter to $58.4 million. As a reminder, this is where we recorded most of the $11.4 million of charges I discussed earlier. On a reported basis, the selling, administrative and other expenses were $69.8 million. We saw a lower spending trend as a result of refining our headcount levels during the quarter and general belt tightening as we continue to improve operating leverage in the business. While we saw a strong favorability in the quarter as advertising and other expenses increased significantly in the fourth quarter in conjunction with enrollment seasons, not all this favorability will flow through for the full year. So on a full year basis, we would expect selling, administrative and other expenses to be flat to marginally lower, excluding the impact of the California AG settlement last year and excluding the charges that we just detailed for this quarter. Product development expenses for the quarter rose to $3.5 million. On a full year basis, our outlook is for between $12 million and $13 million which is higher than last year by a few million dollars but total cash spend on product which would include our CapEx spend should be down significantly as you can see from our CapEx outlook. EBITDA adjusted for the charges mentioned above for the quarter was $42.8 million, increasing $16.6 million from the same quarter last year. This increase was largely a result of our revenue gains and solid cost controls in the quarter, somewhat offset by the year-over-year increases in stock based compensation. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $47.3 million, an increase of 15.6% from the prior year. Operating income, excluding the charges mentioned above, was $24.2 million, an increase of $5.1 million or 26.7%. Operating income was higher than we had anticipated in our guidance -- the guidance we indicated last quarter as a result of better than expected revenues, which I previously discussed, as well as lower expenses. Our general focus on spending produced better expense levels overall. Adjusted operating income was $28.7 million, an increase of $5.3 million or 22.6% from the per year. Turning to some other items, we ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $194.7 million. This is a decrease of $4.8 million from the third quarter of fiscal 2016, largely related to timing as well as payments we made in Q1 of this year for the California settlement and Q2 to purchase the 40% minority stake in MIL. CapEx which includes capitalized curriculum and software development, and property and equipment purchases was $9.3 million in the quarter, a decrease of $5.9 million compared to last year. This decline is part of our planned reduction in capital expenditures that we announced last quarter. Our tax rate for the quarter was 34.4%. Before moving on to reviewing guidance for the fourth quarter, I want to remind everybody that we introduced some performance-based stock compensation last year which has the potential to vest this coming quarter, depending on whether certain performance metrics are met. So we may see some variability in stock based compensation in the fourth quarter. We've introduced adjusted operating income and adjusted EBITDA this year as those metrics exclude the impact of the stock based comp but our normal operating income and EBITDA will include these potential charges. This vesting could result in charges of up to $4 million to $5 million this year, that was not part of our original guidance for full year operating income, or our guidance for fourth quarter that I'm about to review. So with that as background, for the fourth quarter we're looking for revenue in the range of $215 million to $220 million, adjusted operating income in the range of $7 million to $10 million, operating income in the range of $3 million to $6 million, and capital expenditures of $14 million to $18 million. As you will know, this range of revenue puts guidance at or slightly below the revenues we posted in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2016. This is for a number of reasons. First, as I mentioned before, enrollments have been down and should end the year marginally below last year. While revenue per enrollment continues to be positive, the net is that managed school public revenues could be down year over year. Second, private pay revenues have been lower every quarter as a result of exiting the U.K. business. And third, as I mentioned previously, our institutional revenues continue to be lumpy and we have a tough comparison against the fourth quarter of last year. Operating income -- while this guidance places full year operating income at $23 million to $26 million squarely within our previous guidance, the fourth quarter is somewhat below the fourth quarter of last year excluding the impact of the California AG settlement. This is largely a result of anticipated increases in marketing costs in Q4 to drive some early season enrollments. As we mentioned previously we believe the families who enroll early in the season are more engaged and they persist longer in an online environment which will result in better economics overall for the students we enrolled earlier. You'll also notice that our guidance for capital expenditures targets full year capital expenditures at $47 million to $51 million, which is at or slightly below the low end of our guidance range we previously provided. As we continue to refine our capital planning for the year we further reduced our expectations for current year expenditures. We view this as a positive trend and we're confident that over the next few years, as many of the major capital programs near completion, we should be able to lower and ultimately stabilize outlays in the $40 million to $50 million range on an ongoing basis that we previously discussed. I also again want to remind you that our full year guidance for operating income and adjusted operating income and plus stock based compensation cost of approximately $17 million. I believe the consensus is closer to $19 million. This $17 million that we've implied again excludes any performance based stock that could vest in Q4. Thank you for your support and I'll hand the call back over to Stuart. Stuart?
  • Stuart Udell:
    Thank you, James. Manny, if we have any questions we'd be happy to take them now.
  • Operator:
    [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Corey Greendale of First Analysis.
  • Ken Wang:
    Thank you. This is Ken Wang on for Corey. First of all, congratulations on a very strong quarter. So just going off of the press release yesterday on the North Carolina Virtual Academy seeing an increase in student applications. Just wondering if you can offer any additional color on whether you're seeing any similar demand increases in other states?
  • Stuart Udell:
    Well, we're fairly early in the enrollment season, it's very very early. Most of our schools just opened pretty recently. North Carolina is an interesting state because right now demand greatly outpaces supply and that's something that we hope the state will take a look at over time, when you have so many families who are interested in getting into school, but that's obviously a great situation if we can get a school like North Carolina fill very quickly and we get to then focus on other areas.
  • Ken Wang:
    And then any change in your thoughts on use of cash.
  • Stuart Udell:
    Well, that's something we clearly think about periodically and while we consider all options and have periodic conversations with our board about that, we are most focused on looking at M&A opportunities. We are very active in doing so but we also remain very disciplined in our approach to strategic combination and making sure that they provide both strategic value and that they are priced reasonably. So that's a discipline we have internally as James shared. In the last year or so we were able to close the LTS acquisition and acquired the remaining share of Middlebury Interactive and it’s something that we are certainly very focused on on the management team. That is our primary anticipation of these to cash at this point.
  • Ken Wang:
    And just one quick one for James. Anything you can offer on the expectation for tax rate in Q4.
  • James Rhyu:
    Yeah, I think well -- I think on a full year basis we should land well within sort of 40 – sub-40 range I think. So I think that -- what that implies is for Q4 at least we'll also probably be in the high 30s type of range.
  • Operator:
    Thank you. The next question is from Jeff Silber of BMO Capital Markets.
  • Jeffrey Silber:
    Just wanted to go back to your initial remarks – and forgive me, I don't know if I copied this correctly, but I think you talked about a delay of potential new school openings from fiscal 2018 to fiscal 2019. Can you go over the reasons for that again?
  • Stuart Udell:
    No, that's not so much a delay but as you know, I mean we have roughly 16 or 17 possible new states within which we can open up a new state entirely. So every year we queue up two or three that we hope to have a good shot at and we're working hard in those states. We're not sure we'll be able to get a new state entirely open this year but we certainly will continue to open new schools in existing states. And we'll be able to add programs like career and tech education to existing schools. So we remain very focused on growth via a number of avenues but new states in and of themselves are binary. They either happen or not, we're working hard on a couple of them.
  • Jeffrey Silber:
    All right. Thank you for clarifying that. And then I think you said you were looking for a “modest growth” in managed public school enrollment next year. How do you define modest?
  • Stuart Udell:
    I think it's a little early in the season, we continue to believe that we have growth opportunities, we're not really giving any guidance for the fall enrollment number. But we do think that -- we do think that managed school programs is going to continue growing.
  • Jeffrey Silber:
    And then I ask this every quarter; can we get an update on what's going on in Ohio?
  • Stuart Udell:
    Yes, we've been in conversations and negotiations around contracts -- contract renewals for some time. It’s part of the standard process and I would generally say that things are going the way we want them to be going. So we'll hopefully have an update very soon.
  • Jeffrey Silber:
    And is typically announcement made publicly and if so does that happen before the end of the current school year?
  • Stuart Udell:
    Typically it's not been our history to announce contract renewals but as I said things are going quite fine in our estimation and we certainly hope to get things moving along a little more quickly. But there are a lot of players involved. End of Q&A
  • Operator:
    [Operator Instructions]
  • Stuart Udell:
    Well, thank you again for listening in everybody. We appreciate your continued interest and support. Manny, if there's no more questions, we are ready to close the call. And we will join everyone again in about 90 days.
  • Operator:
    Thank you ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation.