Bright Horizons Family Solutions Q1 2024 Earnings Report $119.57 +9.34 (+8.47%) Closing price 04/9/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$119.50 -0.06 (-0.05%) As of 04/9/2025 04:05 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Bright Horizons Family Solutions EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.41Consensus EPS $0.35Beat/MissBeat by +$0.06One Year Ago EPSN/ABright Horizons Family Solutions Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$622.71 millionExpected Revenue$614.60 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$8.11 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ABright Horizons Family Solutions Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date5/2/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateThursday, May 2, 2024Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsBright Horizons Family Solutions' Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 1, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryBFAM ProfilePowered by Bright Horizons Family Solutions Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 2, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Bright Horizons Family Solutions First Quarter 20 24 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Michael Flanagan, Vice President, Investor Relations. Operator00:00:29Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:32Thank you, Stephanie sorry, thank you, Stacy. Welcome to Brightrise's Q1 earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call is being webcast and recording will be available under the Investor Relations section of our website, brightrisons.com. As a reminder to participants, any forward looking statements made on this call, including those regarding future business, financial performance and outlook are subject to the Safe Harbor statements included in our earnings release. Forward looking statements inherently involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual operating and financial results to differ materially and should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements that are described in detail in our earnings release, 2023 Form 10 ks and other SEC filings. Speaker 100:01:12Any forward looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it is made, and we undertake no obligation to update any forward looking statements. We also refer today to non GAAP financial measures, which are detailed and reconciled to the GAAP counterparts in our earnings release, which is available under the IR section of our website at investors. Brighthorizon.com. Joining me on today's call is our Chief Executive Officer, Steven Kramer and our Chief Financial Officer, Elizabeth Bollin. Steven will start by reviewing our results and will provide an update on the business. Speaker 100:01:41Elizabeth will follow with a more detailed review of the numbers before we open it up to your questions. With that, let me turn the call over to Stephen. Speaker 200:01:48Thanks, Mike, and welcome to everyone who has joined the call. We are really pleased with the solid start to 2024 and our performance in the Q1. Revenue increased double digits year over year and earnings outperformed our expectations. With occupancy in our full service segment ticking up to greater than 60% globally and backup use continuing its solid year over year growth trends, we are tracking to deliver on our 2024 guidance. So to get into some of the specifics. Speaker 200:02:20Revenue in the quarter increased 12% to $623,000,000 with adjusted net income of $30,000,000 and adjusted EPS of $0.51 per share. In our full service childcare segment, revenue increased 12% in the Q1 to $484,000,000 We launched 6 centers in the quarter, including client center transitions for Aflac and Rockefeller University. Enrollment in centers that have been open for more than 1 year increased at a mid single digit rate in Q1 and occupancy averaged more than 60%. The U. S. Speaker 200:02:55Continues to see the strongest performance with high single digit enrollment growth driven by double digit growth in our younger age groups and mid single digit growth in the preschool age group. The UK led our growth outside the U. S. While our centers in the Netherlands and Australia have had more limited expansion enrollment given they sustained higher than average occupancy levels over the last couple of years. Occupancy in the UK stepped up sequentially on mid single digit enrollment growth. Speaker 200:03:25Although the operating environment continues to be challenging, I'm encouraged by the recent progress we have made to improve the efficiency of our center operations, specifically by retaining and hiring more Bright Horizons employee and reducing our reliance on agency staff. While the UK remains a headwind to our overall full service profitability, I am encouraged by the trends and the fundamentals and expect to see continued performance gains. Let me now turn to backup care, which delivered another strong quarter growing revenue 16% to $115,000,000 on solid utilization. We also continue to expand our client base with Q1 launches for Lincoln National, NXP Semiconductors and United Therapeutics to name a few. Traditional network use remains strong with the largest growth in our Bright Horizons owned and controlled supply. Speaker 200:04:21While Q1 is a seasonally lower use period for backup care, the number of employees utilizing their care benefit was solid in Q1 and serves as a positive indicator as we look ahead to the higher use summer months. With this expanding participation by eligible client employees combined with our broader portfolio of use sites, we continue to track to our 2024 growth goals. Our Education Advisory business delivered revenue of $24,000,000 in the quarter, flat over the prior year. Notable new client launches in the quarter included Danaher, IPG Photonics and W. R. Speaker 200:05:00Grace. As we discussed last quarter, we expect participant levels and use to be relatively stable in this segment this year. We are making strategic investments in the team, product suite and marketing to transform both the service offering and the service experience. Ed advisory is a use driven business and I believe the investments we're making today will ultimately drive greater client adoption and client employee participation in 2025 and beyond. Before I wrap up, I want to share the results of our annual Modern Family Index that we are releasing next week. Speaker 200:05:38For the last decade, we have explored the sentiments of working parents as they balance work and their family responsibilities. What we have seen change over the last decade is working parents new confidence in advocating for family supports as well as their increasing expectations of their employers. For 70% of employees, employer benefits that support a work life balance are non negotiable. Childcare in particular was at the top of parents' wish list, trumping even remote work and increased flexibility. This new view of the relationship between employers and employees is vital for the health of families and employers and it is a clear warning signal for employers who do not invest in family supports. Speaker 200:06:29We are very proud to be the partner of choice for so many leading employers who are already ahead of the curve. In closing, I'm pleased with the strong start to 2024. We executed well in the quarter and the results set a solid foundation for us to accomplish the goals we set for 2024. I believe we are well positioned to continue the positive momentum and operating discipline in Q1. As such, we are reaffirming our 2024 full year guidance, specifically revenue growth of approximately 10% to $2,600,000,000 to $2,700,000,000 and adjusted EPS in the range of 3 to $3.20 per share. Speaker 200:07:13With that, I'll turn the call over to Elizabeth, who will dive into the quarterly numbers and share more details around our outlook. Speaker 300:07:21Thank you, Stephen, and hello to everyone who's joined the call today. To recap the Q1, overall revenue increased 12% to $623,000,000 Adjusted operating income of $40,000,000 or 6% of revenue increased 9% over Q1 of 2023, while adjusted EBITDA of $75,000,000 or 12% of revenue increased 7% over the prior year. We ended the quarter with 10 44 centers adding 6 new and closing 11 centers in the Q1. To break this down a bit further, full service revenue of 484,000,000 dollars was up 12% in Q1, at the high end of our expectations on increased enrollment and tuition pricing. Enrollment in our centers open for more than 1 year increased mid single digits across the portfolio. Speaker 300:08:14As Stephen mentioned, occupancy levels averaged over 60% for Q1, stepping up sequentially given normal enrollment seasonality and the growth we saw. U. S. Enrollment was up high single digits and international enrollment increased in the low single digits over the prior year. In the center cohorts we've discussed previously, we continue to show improvement over the prior year period. Speaker 300:08:39In Q1, our top performing cohort defined as above 70% occupancy improved from 35% of our centers in Q1 of 2023 to 44% of our centers in Q1 of 20 24. In our bottom cohort of centers, those under 40% occupancy now represents 14% of centers as compared to the high teens in the prior year period. Adjusted operating income of $21,000,000 in the full service segment increased $11,000,000 over the prior year. Higher enrollment, tuition increases and improved operating leverage more than offset the $15,000,000 reduction in support received from the ARPA government funding program in Q1 of 2023. As Stephen discussed, while the U. Speaker 300:09:29S. Full service business continues to be a headwind to our overall segment profitability, we are seeing good progress in reducing the losses with improved staffing, continued enrollment gains and the ongoing center portfolio rationalization. Turning to backup care, revenue grew 16% in the Q1 to 115,000,000 dollars a touch ahead of the high end of our expectations with adjusted operating income of $16,000,000 or 14% of revenue. Adjusted operating margins in the quarter were affected by the closeout of the Stephen Katz Camps earn out, which resulted in a one time $2,300,000 charge in the quarter and by the timing of quarterly overhead spending allocations. Our estimates of overhead support costs for the backup segment for the full year is unchanged, but the phasing of these costs is reflected more ratably as the spending occurs resulting in a relatively higher overhead allocation in the first half of the year as compared to the prior year with the second half expected to see a relatively lower allocation as compared to 2023. Speaker 300:10:48Lastly, Educational Advising segment reported $24,000,000 of revenue and delivered operating margin of 10%. The operating margins contracted over the prior year driven in large part by the investments we are making in the team and the product suite. Interest expense increased $2,500,000 to $14,000,000 in Q1, excluding the $1,500,000 per quarter in 2023 of deferred purchase price interest accretion that we've previously discussed. The structural effective tax rate on adjusted net income was 28.3 percent, roughly consistent with Q1 of 2023. Turning to balance sheet and cash flow, we generated $116,000,000 in cash from operations in the Q1 compared to $67,000,000 in Q1 of 2023. Speaker 300:11:39We made fixed asset investments of $19,000,000 consistent with the prior year period and in early January paid the remaining $106,500,000 dollars due for the Oak acquisition that had been deferred for 18 months. We ended the quarter with $64,000,000 in cash and reduced our leverage ratio to 2.5x net debt to adjusted EBITDA. Now moving on to our 2024 outlook. As previewed, we are maintaining our 2024 full year guidance for revenue in the range of $2,600,000,000 to 2,700,000,000 and adjusted EPS in the range of $3 to $3.20 a share. At a segment level, we expect full service to grow roughly 8% to 12 percent, backup care to grow 10% to 12% and Ed advisory to grow in the low single digits. Speaker 300:12:33As we outlined last quarter, there are 2 discrete items affecting our reported margins and earnings growth rates in 2024. Specifically, we expect those items to account for an approximately $0.52 to $0.55 headwinds to growth for the full year, reflecting the lapping of approximately $34,000,000 of ARPA funding for P and L centers that we received in 2023 and an estimated increase of $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 in interest expense for the year. As we look specifically to Q2, our outlook is for total top line growth in the range of 9% to 11%, with full service of 9% to 11%, backup of 10% to 12% and then advisory in the low single digits. In terms of earnings, we expect Q2 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $0.70 to $0.75 a share. Regarding the discrete items I mentioned above, we expect a $9,000,000 headwind from the ARPA support we have received in Q2 of 2023, as well as approximately $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 more in interest expense than last year. Speaker 300:13:41So with that, we are ready to go to Q and A. Operator00:13:45Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer Your first question comes from Andrew Steinerman with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:14:13Hi. I was really encouraged by the margin in full service. And I just wanted to kind of make sure that there wasn't anything that was kind of one offish about it that it was sustainable and should improve from here? Speaker 300:14:30Yes. Thanks, Andrew. We are encouraged as well by that, the K. Than we had expected this early in the year. We had previewed that we expect the UK to be improving in 2024 against 2023 and that would have been ramping in during the year. Speaker 300:14:52So there is a bit better performance from the UK. It's recurring and that we see that being sustained improvement as we go along. But I think that what you're seeing is solid performance there. One thing I would call out is, as we are ratably distributing the overhead, as I mentioned in backup, there's a little bit of a headwind to backup. There's a slight benefit to the full service segment, but a fairly small portion of that gain. Speaker 300:15:25Same overall expense for the year, but the Q1 benefited by something 0.5% or so. Speaker 400:15:33Okay. Thank you. Operator00:15:37Next question, George Tong with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:15:41Hi, thanks. Good morning. You mentioned that your occupancy rates are now over 60%. Can you provide your latest views on how you expect occupancy to play out over the course of the year taking into account seasonality trends and where you hope to end the year by? Speaker 300:15:59Yes. So as alluded maybe in your question, George, the first half of the year is the stronger portion of the year for full service enrollment. So we would expect to see some gain on that in the second quarter, improving enrollment in Q2 and then tapering some with the seasonality in Q3 and into Q4. So likely expected for the year being in the 60% to 65% range, but ending the year close to where we are at this stage. So tapering growing a bit in Q2 and then tapering back similar level to where we see the Q1. Speaker 500:16:39Got it. That's helpful. And then in the UK business, you mentioned it's still seeing some headwinds. Can you talk about some of the latest initiatives you've Speaker 400:16:46undertaken to try to improve performance there and Speaker 500:16:46what the timing could look Speaker 600:16:54improve? Speaker 200:16:56Sure. So as Elizabeth just alluded to, we're obviously pleased with the progress that we are making. Certainly, 2023 was a particularly challenging year in the UK and we put a number of actions in place that we said we're going to take time to start to season in. Examples of that were recruiting efforts that really focused on enlarging our apprenticeship program, ensuring that we had a seamless candidate experience and really trying to move that to something that was a bit quicker and a bit more seamless for the candidate. And then finally doing some international recruiting. Speaker 200:17:36And I think that what we saw in the Q1 is some of those actions really starting to benefit our ability to attract and retain the staff that we have and needed. And then certainly starting to reduce the reliance that we had, to a certain extent in our agency staff. So we continue those efforts. Speaker 400:18:00And then Speaker 200:18:01at the same time, what we're finding is the macro environment there, especially on the labor side is starting to ease a little bit. And so I think it's the combination of those two things that give us confidence that we're going to continue to see good improvement through 2024 and into 2025. Speaker 500:18:23Got it. Very helpful. Thank you. Speaker 200:18:26Thank you. Operator00:18:27Next question, Josh Chan with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:18:32Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Could you just talk about the conversations you have with kind of prospective customers, whether the tone has shifted on that front and also whether your center openings and closing targets for the year has shifted much? Thank you. Speaker 700:18:51Sure. So I Speaker 200:18:52think the conversations with our perspective and current clients continue to be positive. Specifically on the center side of our business, as we've shared the last few quarters, there has certainly been an elevated level of interest specifically in the centers. And the reality is that along with that has been certainly an elongated sales process. So while we've seen elevated interest, certainly employer clients are being even more deliberative about coming to a decision. I'd say a bright point in that and we certainly saw this in the Q1 is that some of that elevated interest is in the form of transitions of management. Speaker 200:19:37So for centers that are currently today self operated, we are seeing again interest in examining the possibility of outsourcing centers that exist today are self managed often in healthcare and higher ed and at least considering the outsourcing. So I would say overall positive, but on the other hand, certainly deliberative as it relates to timing. And we see that certainly in our current client base as well, which is our current clients are really pleased with the services that we're delivering for them and believe that we will continue to see the kind of retention rates that we have enjoyed historically. Thank you for the color. Operator00:20:24Next question, Manav Finnek with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:29Thank you. Good evening. First question just on maybe a similar thing on the backup side. Can you just talk about the underlying conversations, health, maybe pipeline and maybe just remind us of just the seasonality through the course of the year in terms of the backup usage typically? Speaker 200:20:48Sure. So first, I'll make the natural observation, which is we were really pleased with the performance of the Q1. It was a touch above the high end of our estimate. So that's a really positive way to start the year. As you alluded to Manav, it is the smallest quarter in terms of use and revenue. Speaker 200:21:09And so certainly the comps in the second half of this year are stronger and off of a larger base. And so again, I think that it is prudent for us to stick with our guidance that we had in place. What I would say in terms of the existing client base in the pipeline, I think our existing client base continues to be strong and very committed to the services that we are delivering for their working parents. And then on the pipeline side, we continue to see good interest among a large cross section of industries and employer size. Speaker 600:21:52Okay. And then maybe just the same thing on the margin side, Elizabeth, maybe like so that earn out payment that was just one time for the year, I guess, or do you will you see that repeat? Just I know you said you basically it sounded like you said you pulled forward the Speaker 300:22:12Yes. The settlement of the earn out was a one time payment. So that's all there is on that. It was a settlement of the deal that we had made on Stephen Katz in the early phase of COVID. It was a 2021 deal and we wanted to have alignment with the business performing and so structured the acquisition with an earn out. Speaker 300:22:35So came to a place where it was appropriate to settle that. So that's behind us. And so it won't affect the margins going forward. What we would expect to see more aligned to the say 20% range in operating margin stepping up from where we would have otherwise barring that we would have seen Q1 in the mid to higher teens range stepping up a bit in Q2 as the use begins to pick up toward the summer and then margins well over the 30% level in Q3 with the growth of the use and then this radical alignment of overhead for the year. So that's where you'll see the backup margins just more up more aligned to what you've seen in the past and still looking at margins for the year that are aligned with where we reported in 2023. Speaker 600:23:32Got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:23:34Thank you. Operator00:23:36Next question, Jeff Meuler with Baird. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:23:40Yes. Thank you. I'm sorry, I know you just gave some of this, but can you just be adding more specific quantification by quarter on the overhead alignment or allocation changes and kind of the quarterly impacts for each of the segments? Speaker 300:24:03So essentially the view is overhead is a fairly we incur it on a pretty ratable basis throughout the year. It's not a perfect 25% per quarter, but it's closer to that than a revenue basis where we have the kind of seasonality that we do now with backup sort of much more amplified in Q3 and even partially into Q2 compared to particularly Q1. So the effect is most outsized in Q1. It's 300 basis points or so affecting Q1 where it's a couple of 100 basis points in the second quarter likely and then it reverses in the back half of the year. So that's the same again, same amount overall for the year. Speaker 300:24:48It's just allocated differently to the quarters and the same amount, obviously, a quarter that we're reporting actuals. Speaker 500:24:55Okay. Speaker 400:24:57And then just how big is the self managed center market? And of that, what is the, I guess, serviceable addressable market for you, meaning roughly what percentage of that market would you view as a potentially good fit for Bright Horizons to that you'd be interested in managing them if you had the opportunity? Speaker 200:25:20Sure. So what we have identified and we focus on sort of an addressable market where the size of the center, the quality of the center and the employer themselves would be appropriate for us is, I would say, low 1,000, but is of significance. And typically these programs have been in existence for quite a number of years. And so that's why I really highlighted the fact that these are very deliberative in terms of decisions because in many cases these centers have been operated by call it the higher end institution or the healthcare institution for as much as 10, 20, even 30 years. On the other hand, I think that what we certainly saw in terms of transitions pre COVID, in COVID and what we project going forward is an opportunity that certainly we are focused on, given the fact that like operators in general, it has been a difficult operating environment for a number of years. Speaker 200:26:30And so I think that there is more open mindedness among employers where their core business is not running a childcare center for their employees, it makes sense for them to at least examine the possibility of working with experts like ourselves. Speaker 400:26:50Got it. And then I hear you that the younger cohorts are growing at a higher rate from an enrollment perspective than the older cohorts. But as it stands today, just how much is your mix kind of shifted towards the older cohorts versus what it was kind of pre COVID just as we think through kind of the age out dynamic later this year? Speaker 300:27:16So we're actually slightly overweight in the younger age groups at the moment. By that by slightly, I mean a couple of 100 basis points weighted toward the infant toddler, 2 group versus the older age group. Speaker 400:27:30Okay. Awesome. Thank you. Operator00:27:41Next question comes from Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:27:46Thanks so much. I remember last year in I believe it was 2nd and third quarter you benefited from the Stephen Katz camps. And I know this wasn't a 2023 deal. But could you just remind us, did you ramp up the marketing there? And what the reason was for that huge ramp in 2023? Speaker 800:28:07And I'm only asking from the perspective of it seems like the comp is a little bit tough and I know you had guided earlier to being back to sort of more of a normal growth range and backup for next quarter. But just wanted to make sure I remember the dynamics of what went on in 2nd Q3 of last year with regard to the camps. Speaker 300:28:31Yes. So I can let me start, Tony, and maybe as Stephen add some color, I'll just double check some of my specific statistics here. But Stephen Katz brought in a they have been a partner of ours prior to the acquisition and they provide camp programs typically in the summer and then for us in addition in break times and throughout various off days or particular pop up arrangements where we can deploy a school age type program for older children in kindergarten through younger school or younger to middle school. So it opened up an opportunity to serve more children. And with the expansion of the capacity for that kind of a use case and a provider expansion from both having them with us, opening more camps than they had operated and then being able to provide that in other venues besides just in the summer camp timeframe. Speaker 300:29:32We've been able to expand that school age type programming in a broader way as an additional use case. So we did see with the it's concentrated in the summer, but with those programs coming into their 2nd to 3rd year after the acquisition maturity, if you will, there was an opportunity to serve more families that way. We also last year had more use from other care types as well. We had introduced pet care in the latter part of 2022. And so that was also seeing good uptake from a number of our clients who introduced it as a new use type that opened the door to many new users who may not have ever used backup care before, also an intermittent use case. Speaker 300:30:17And then also academic tutoring continued to be an opportunity for parents who had school age to access both virtual and we also introduced in person tutoring. So there were a number of incremental use cases that were available last year in maybe a more robust fashion that drove some of the backup use. But as you say, we were stacking by the back half of this year, we're stacking pretty robust 2 year growth rates in backup, which we know each year we're replenishing the backup use. We've got a lot of happy users who return, but it's something we're cognizant of in terms of making sure that we've got the network, the provider, the use cases, etcetera, to deliver on the kind of growth we're talking about. Speaker 800:31:08Yes, makes sense. And then just wanted to ask about the M and A pipeline. Are you starting to see any more willingness from small providers to sell given that ARPA is behind us now? Any just commentary on how the pipeline looks and Speaker 300:31:32your appetite Speaker 800:31:32for M and A? Thanks. Speaker 200:31:36Sure. Thanks, Tony. So I think that we are still early in that curve. ARPA ended September of 2023. We have always sort of forecasted that this would be sort of a 12 months to 24 months from the end of ARPA before owners started really making either decisions or different decisions than they otherwise would have made. Speaker 200:32:03I would say in terms of being really specific about the acquisition pipeline, I would say that we continue to cultivate those relationships. We continue to look at some smaller opportunities, especially where we are looking to densify near high performing centers. And so overall, it's definitely a part of the growth algorithm. Although again, at this point, we continue to be very focused on continuing to enroll within our existing centers and moving ahead on that front. Speaker 800:32:37Super. Thanks. Operator00:32:40Next question, Jeff Silber with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:32:45Thanks so much. You talked a little bit about what you're doing from a labor perspective in the UK. I'm just curious if you can address what's going on in the U. S. In terms of labor supply, availability and wage inflation. Speaker 200:32:58Yes. So I would start by saying, we're really pleased with the retention rates that we are achieving here in the U. S. So again, in the depths of COVID, that was a real challenge in terms of our ability to retain and therefore the need to attract more new staff to Bright Horizons. So we still continue at a level that is stronger than what we enjoyed even in 2019. Speaker 200:33:25So for me, any conversation around talent starts with retention and feel really good about where we are from that perspective. In terms of the labor market, there are still pockets of sort of heat pockets in the country where it is still challenging to recruit the full complement of staff that we would like to have. On the other hand, broadly, we feel good about the progress that we continue to make here in the U. S. And then in terms of wage rates, I think that we feel really differently than we felt again in the depths of COVID when we needed to accelerate wages in a more significant way. Speaker 200:34:06It feels like we are now in a place where we are paying really competitively. And therefore, at this point, expect that wage increases will be much more in line with what we had seen previously as opposed to significant stepped up basis that we incurred in the depths of COVID. Speaker 700:34:28Okay, that's helpful. There was an earlier question about center closures and forgive me if I missed the answer, but I think the question was about your goal for center closures this year. I think you had previously said it will be the same as last year. Is that still the same? And are they skewed to any specific geography? Speaker 700:34:45And if they're more in the U. S, is there any specific region? Thanks. Speaker 300:34:52Yes. So we would still expect to be in the range of what we closed in 2023. We closed 49 centers last year, so still in that range. Some disproportionate skew to the U. K. Speaker 300:35:05Could be the U. K. Is not 40% of our overall business, but they certainly could be 40% to 45% of those closures. But there are still some underperformers in the U. S. Speaker 300:35:18That we are looking at addressing in the same way that we've talked about rationalizing the portfolio in the U. K. So those are the 2 geographies where we're seeing the more outsized closures and that there's no particular we closed 11 this quarter. So there's a cadence that we're following against overall performance when the leases are up, what we can exit and the timing of all that for parents. Speaker 700:35:47Okay. That's really helpful. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:35:50Thanks, Jeff. Excellent. All right. Well, thank you all very much for your time. We appreciate it and look forward to seeing you soon. Speaker 300:35:58Thanks, everyone. Have a good night. Operator00:36:00This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBright Horizons Family Solutions Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Bright Horizons Family Solutions Earnings HeadlinesBright Horizons Family Solutions Inc Launches New Podcast Season on Work-Life BalanceApril 7 at 5:56 PM | gurufocus.comBright Horizons Announces New Season of The Work-Life Equation Podcast, Kicking Off April 8April 7 at 4:05 PM | businesswire.com$2 Trillion Disappears Because of Fed's Secretive New Move$2 trillion has disappeared from the US government's books. The reason why is a new, secretive move being carried out by the Fed that has nothing to do with lowering or raising interest rates... but could soon have an enormous impact on your wealth.April 10, 2025 | Stansberry Research (Ad)Earnings are growing at Bright Horizons Family Solutions (NYSE:BFAM) but shareholders still don't like its prospectsApril 7 at 10:47 AM | finance.yahoo.comMarch 19, 2025 | gurufocus.comBright Horizons Family Solutions Full Year 2024 Earnings: EPS Misses ExpectationsMarch 4, 2025 | finance.yahoo.comSee More Bright Horizons Family Solutions Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Bright Horizons Family Solutions? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Bright Horizons Family Solutions and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Bright Horizons Family SolutionsBright Horizons Family Solutions (NYSE:BFAM) provides early education and childcare, back-up care, educational advisory, and other workplace solutions services for employers and families in the United States, Puerto Rico, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Australia, and India. The company operates in three segments: Full Service Center-Based Child Care, Back-Up Care, and Educational Advisory and Other Services. The Full Service Center-Based Child Care segment offers traditional center-based child care and early education, preschool, and elementary education services. The Back-Up Care segment provides center-based back-up child care, in-home child and adult/elder dependent care, school-age camps, virtual tutoring, and self-sourced reimbursed care services through child care centers, school-age campuses, and in-home caregivers, as well as the back-up care network. The Educational Advisory and Other Services segment offers tuition assistance and student loan repayment program administration, workforce education, and related educational consulting services, as well as college admissions and college financial advisory services. The company was formerly known as Bright Horizons Solutions Corp. and changed its name to Bright Horizons Family Solutions Inc. in July 2012. Bright Horizons Family Solutions Inc. was founded in 1986 and is headquartered in Newton, Massachusetts.View Bright Horizons Family Solutions ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Lamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside?These 3 Q1 Earnings Winners Will Go Higher Upcoming Earnings Bank of New York Mellon (4/11/2025)BlackRock (4/11/2025)JPMorgan Chase & Co. (4/11/2025)Progressive (4/11/2025)Wells Fargo & Company (4/11/2025)The Goldman Sachs Group (4/14/2025)Interactive Brokers Group (4/15/2025)Bank of America (4/15/2025)Citigroup (4/15/2025)Johnson & Johnson (4/15/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Bright Horizons Family Solutions First Quarter 20 24 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Michael Flanagan, Vice President, Investor Relations. Operator00:00:29Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:32Thank you, Stephanie sorry, thank you, Stacy. Welcome to Brightrise's Q1 earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call is being webcast and recording will be available under the Investor Relations section of our website, brightrisons.com. As a reminder to participants, any forward looking statements made on this call, including those regarding future business, financial performance and outlook are subject to the Safe Harbor statements included in our earnings release. Forward looking statements inherently involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual operating and financial results to differ materially and should be considered in conjunction with the cautionary statements that are described in detail in our earnings release, 2023 Form 10 ks and other SEC filings. Speaker 100:01:12Any forward looking statement speaks only as of the date on which it is made, and we undertake no obligation to update any forward looking statements. We also refer today to non GAAP financial measures, which are detailed and reconciled to the GAAP counterparts in our earnings release, which is available under the IR section of our website at investors. Brighthorizon.com. Joining me on today's call is our Chief Executive Officer, Steven Kramer and our Chief Financial Officer, Elizabeth Bollin. Steven will start by reviewing our results and will provide an update on the business. Speaker 100:01:41Elizabeth will follow with a more detailed review of the numbers before we open it up to your questions. With that, let me turn the call over to Stephen. Speaker 200:01:48Thanks, Mike, and welcome to everyone who has joined the call. We are really pleased with the solid start to 2024 and our performance in the Q1. Revenue increased double digits year over year and earnings outperformed our expectations. With occupancy in our full service segment ticking up to greater than 60% globally and backup use continuing its solid year over year growth trends, we are tracking to deliver on our 2024 guidance. So to get into some of the specifics. Speaker 200:02:20Revenue in the quarter increased 12% to $623,000,000 with adjusted net income of $30,000,000 and adjusted EPS of $0.51 per share. In our full service childcare segment, revenue increased 12% in the Q1 to $484,000,000 We launched 6 centers in the quarter, including client center transitions for Aflac and Rockefeller University. Enrollment in centers that have been open for more than 1 year increased at a mid single digit rate in Q1 and occupancy averaged more than 60%. The U. S. Speaker 200:02:55Continues to see the strongest performance with high single digit enrollment growth driven by double digit growth in our younger age groups and mid single digit growth in the preschool age group. The UK led our growth outside the U. S. While our centers in the Netherlands and Australia have had more limited expansion enrollment given they sustained higher than average occupancy levels over the last couple of years. Occupancy in the UK stepped up sequentially on mid single digit enrollment growth. Speaker 200:03:25Although the operating environment continues to be challenging, I'm encouraged by the recent progress we have made to improve the efficiency of our center operations, specifically by retaining and hiring more Bright Horizons employee and reducing our reliance on agency staff. While the UK remains a headwind to our overall full service profitability, I am encouraged by the trends and the fundamentals and expect to see continued performance gains. Let me now turn to backup care, which delivered another strong quarter growing revenue 16% to $115,000,000 on solid utilization. We also continue to expand our client base with Q1 launches for Lincoln National, NXP Semiconductors and United Therapeutics to name a few. Traditional network use remains strong with the largest growth in our Bright Horizons owned and controlled supply. Speaker 200:04:21While Q1 is a seasonally lower use period for backup care, the number of employees utilizing their care benefit was solid in Q1 and serves as a positive indicator as we look ahead to the higher use summer months. With this expanding participation by eligible client employees combined with our broader portfolio of use sites, we continue to track to our 2024 growth goals. Our Education Advisory business delivered revenue of $24,000,000 in the quarter, flat over the prior year. Notable new client launches in the quarter included Danaher, IPG Photonics and W. R. Speaker 200:05:00Grace. As we discussed last quarter, we expect participant levels and use to be relatively stable in this segment this year. We are making strategic investments in the team, product suite and marketing to transform both the service offering and the service experience. Ed advisory is a use driven business and I believe the investments we're making today will ultimately drive greater client adoption and client employee participation in 2025 and beyond. Before I wrap up, I want to share the results of our annual Modern Family Index that we are releasing next week. Speaker 200:05:38For the last decade, we have explored the sentiments of working parents as they balance work and their family responsibilities. What we have seen change over the last decade is working parents new confidence in advocating for family supports as well as their increasing expectations of their employers. For 70% of employees, employer benefits that support a work life balance are non negotiable. Childcare in particular was at the top of parents' wish list, trumping even remote work and increased flexibility. This new view of the relationship between employers and employees is vital for the health of families and employers and it is a clear warning signal for employers who do not invest in family supports. Speaker 200:06:29We are very proud to be the partner of choice for so many leading employers who are already ahead of the curve. In closing, I'm pleased with the strong start to 2024. We executed well in the quarter and the results set a solid foundation for us to accomplish the goals we set for 2024. I believe we are well positioned to continue the positive momentum and operating discipline in Q1. As such, we are reaffirming our 2024 full year guidance, specifically revenue growth of approximately 10% to $2,600,000,000 to $2,700,000,000 and adjusted EPS in the range of 3 to $3.20 per share. Speaker 200:07:13With that, I'll turn the call over to Elizabeth, who will dive into the quarterly numbers and share more details around our outlook. Speaker 300:07:21Thank you, Stephen, and hello to everyone who's joined the call today. To recap the Q1, overall revenue increased 12% to $623,000,000 Adjusted operating income of $40,000,000 or 6% of revenue increased 9% over Q1 of 2023, while adjusted EBITDA of $75,000,000 or 12% of revenue increased 7% over the prior year. We ended the quarter with 10 44 centers adding 6 new and closing 11 centers in the Q1. To break this down a bit further, full service revenue of 484,000,000 dollars was up 12% in Q1, at the high end of our expectations on increased enrollment and tuition pricing. Enrollment in our centers open for more than 1 year increased mid single digits across the portfolio. Speaker 300:08:14As Stephen mentioned, occupancy levels averaged over 60% for Q1, stepping up sequentially given normal enrollment seasonality and the growth we saw. U. S. Enrollment was up high single digits and international enrollment increased in the low single digits over the prior year. In the center cohorts we've discussed previously, we continue to show improvement over the prior year period. Speaker 300:08:39In Q1, our top performing cohort defined as above 70% occupancy improved from 35% of our centers in Q1 of 2023 to 44% of our centers in Q1 of 20 24. In our bottom cohort of centers, those under 40% occupancy now represents 14% of centers as compared to the high teens in the prior year period. Adjusted operating income of $21,000,000 in the full service segment increased $11,000,000 over the prior year. Higher enrollment, tuition increases and improved operating leverage more than offset the $15,000,000 reduction in support received from the ARPA government funding program in Q1 of 2023. As Stephen discussed, while the U. Speaker 300:09:29S. Full service business continues to be a headwind to our overall segment profitability, we are seeing good progress in reducing the losses with improved staffing, continued enrollment gains and the ongoing center portfolio rationalization. Turning to backup care, revenue grew 16% in the Q1 to 115,000,000 dollars a touch ahead of the high end of our expectations with adjusted operating income of $16,000,000 or 14% of revenue. Adjusted operating margins in the quarter were affected by the closeout of the Stephen Katz Camps earn out, which resulted in a one time $2,300,000 charge in the quarter and by the timing of quarterly overhead spending allocations. Our estimates of overhead support costs for the backup segment for the full year is unchanged, but the phasing of these costs is reflected more ratably as the spending occurs resulting in a relatively higher overhead allocation in the first half of the year as compared to the prior year with the second half expected to see a relatively lower allocation as compared to 2023. Speaker 300:10:48Lastly, Educational Advising segment reported $24,000,000 of revenue and delivered operating margin of 10%. The operating margins contracted over the prior year driven in large part by the investments we are making in the team and the product suite. Interest expense increased $2,500,000 to $14,000,000 in Q1, excluding the $1,500,000 per quarter in 2023 of deferred purchase price interest accretion that we've previously discussed. The structural effective tax rate on adjusted net income was 28.3 percent, roughly consistent with Q1 of 2023. Turning to balance sheet and cash flow, we generated $116,000,000 in cash from operations in the Q1 compared to $67,000,000 in Q1 of 2023. Speaker 300:11:39We made fixed asset investments of $19,000,000 consistent with the prior year period and in early January paid the remaining $106,500,000 dollars due for the Oak acquisition that had been deferred for 18 months. We ended the quarter with $64,000,000 in cash and reduced our leverage ratio to 2.5x net debt to adjusted EBITDA. Now moving on to our 2024 outlook. As previewed, we are maintaining our 2024 full year guidance for revenue in the range of $2,600,000,000 to 2,700,000,000 and adjusted EPS in the range of $3 to $3.20 a share. At a segment level, we expect full service to grow roughly 8% to 12 percent, backup care to grow 10% to 12% and Ed advisory to grow in the low single digits. Speaker 300:12:33As we outlined last quarter, there are 2 discrete items affecting our reported margins and earnings growth rates in 2024. Specifically, we expect those items to account for an approximately $0.52 to $0.55 headwinds to growth for the full year, reflecting the lapping of approximately $34,000,000 of ARPA funding for P and L centers that we received in 2023 and an estimated increase of $8,000,000 to $10,000,000 in interest expense for the year. As we look specifically to Q2, our outlook is for total top line growth in the range of 9% to 11%, with full service of 9% to 11%, backup of 10% to 12% and then advisory in the low single digits. In terms of earnings, we expect Q2 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $0.70 to $0.75 a share. Regarding the discrete items I mentioned above, we expect a $9,000,000 headwind from the ARPA support we have received in Q2 of 2023, as well as approximately $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 more in interest expense than last year. Speaker 300:13:41So with that, we are ready to go to Q and A. Operator00:13:45Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer Your first question comes from Andrew Steinerman with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:14:13Hi. I was really encouraged by the margin in full service. And I just wanted to kind of make sure that there wasn't anything that was kind of one offish about it that it was sustainable and should improve from here? Speaker 300:14:30Yes. Thanks, Andrew. We are encouraged as well by that, the K. Than we had expected this early in the year. We had previewed that we expect the UK to be improving in 2024 against 2023 and that would have been ramping in during the year. Speaker 300:14:52So there is a bit better performance from the UK. It's recurring and that we see that being sustained improvement as we go along. But I think that what you're seeing is solid performance there. One thing I would call out is, as we are ratably distributing the overhead, as I mentioned in backup, there's a little bit of a headwind to backup. There's a slight benefit to the full service segment, but a fairly small portion of that gain. Speaker 300:15:25Same overall expense for the year, but the Q1 benefited by something 0.5% or so. Speaker 400:15:33Okay. Thank you. Operator00:15:37Next question, George Tong with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:15:41Hi, thanks. Good morning. You mentioned that your occupancy rates are now over 60%. Can you provide your latest views on how you expect occupancy to play out over the course of the year taking into account seasonality trends and where you hope to end the year by? Speaker 300:15:59Yes. So as alluded maybe in your question, George, the first half of the year is the stronger portion of the year for full service enrollment. So we would expect to see some gain on that in the second quarter, improving enrollment in Q2 and then tapering some with the seasonality in Q3 and into Q4. So likely expected for the year being in the 60% to 65% range, but ending the year close to where we are at this stage. So tapering growing a bit in Q2 and then tapering back similar level to where we see the Q1. Speaker 500:16:39Got it. That's helpful. And then in the UK business, you mentioned it's still seeing some headwinds. Can you talk about some of the latest initiatives you've Speaker 400:16:46undertaken to try to improve performance there and Speaker 500:16:46what the timing could look Speaker 600:16:54improve? Speaker 200:16:56Sure. So as Elizabeth just alluded to, we're obviously pleased with the progress that we are making. Certainly, 2023 was a particularly challenging year in the UK and we put a number of actions in place that we said we're going to take time to start to season in. Examples of that were recruiting efforts that really focused on enlarging our apprenticeship program, ensuring that we had a seamless candidate experience and really trying to move that to something that was a bit quicker and a bit more seamless for the candidate. And then finally doing some international recruiting. Speaker 200:17:36And I think that what we saw in the Q1 is some of those actions really starting to benefit our ability to attract and retain the staff that we have and needed. And then certainly starting to reduce the reliance that we had, to a certain extent in our agency staff. So we continue those efforts. Speaker 400:18:00And then Speaker 200:18:01at the same time, what we're finding is the macro environment there, especially on the labor side is starting to ease a little bit. And so I think it's the combination of those two things that give us confidence that we're going to continue to see good improvement through 2024 and into 2025. Speaker 500:18:23Got it. Very helpful. Thank you. Speaker 200:18:26Thank you. Operator00:18:27Next question, Josh Chan with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:18:32Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Could you just talk about the conversations you have with kind of prospective customers, whether the tone has shifted on that front and also whether your center openings and closing targets for the year has shifted much? Thank you. Speaker 700:18:51Sure. So I Speaker 200:18:52think the conversations with our perspective and current clients continue to be positive. Specifically on the center side of our business, as we've shared the last few quarters, there has certainly been an elevated level of interest specifically in the centers. And the reality is that along with that has been certainly an elongated sales process. So while we've seen elevated interest, certainly employer clients are being even more deliberative about coming to a decision. I'd say a bright point in that and we certainly saw this in the Q1 is that some of that elevated interest is in the form of transitions of management. Speaker 200:19:37So for centers that are currently today self operated, we are seeing again interest in examining the possibility of outsourcing centers that exist today are self managed often in healthcare and higher ed and at least considering the outsourcing. So I would say overall positive, but on the other hand, certainly deliberative as it relates to timing. And we see that certainly in our current client base as well, which is our current clients are really pleased with the services that we're delivering for them and believe that we will continue to see the kind of retention rates that we have enjoyed historically. Thank you for the color. Operator00:20:24Next question, Manav Finnek with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:29Thank you. Good evening. First question just on maybe a similar thing on the backup side. Can you just talk about the underlying conversations, health, maybe pipeline and maybe just remind us of just the seasonality through the course of the year in terms of the backup usage typically? Speaker 200:20:48Sure. So first, I'll make the natural observation, which is we were really pleased with the performance of the Q1. It was a touch above the high end of our estimate. So that's a really positive way to start the year. As you alluded to Manav, it is the smallest quarter in terms of use and revenue. Speaker 200:21:09And so certainly the comps in the second half of this year are stronger and off of a larger base. And so again, I think that it is prudent for us to stick with our guidance that we had in place. What I would say in terms of the existing client base in the pipeline, I think our existing client base continues to be strong and very committed to the services that we are delivering for their working parents. And then on the pipeline side, we continue to see good interest among a large cross section of industries and employer size. Speaker 600:21:52Okay. And then maybe just the same thing on the margin side, Elizabeth, maybe like so that earn out payment that was just one time for the year, I guess, or do you will you see that repeat? Just I know you said you basically it sounded like you said you pulled forward the Speaker 300:22:12Yes. The settlement of the earn out was a one time payment. So that's all there is on that. It was a settlement of the deal that we had made on Stephen Katz in the early phase of COVID. It was a 2021 deal and we wanted to have alignment with the business performing and so structured the acquisition with an earn out. Speaker 300:22:35So came to a place where it was appropriate to settle that. So that's behind us. And so it won't affect the margins going forward. What we would expect to see more aligned to the say 20% range in operating margin stepping up from where we would have otherwise barring that we would have seen Q1 in the mid to higher teens range stepping up a bit in Q2 as the use begins to pick up toward the summer and then margins well over the 30% level in Q3 with the growth of the use and then this radical alignment of overhead for the year. So that's where you'll see the backup margins just more up more aligned to what you've seen in the past and still looking at margins for the year that are aligned with where we reported in 2023. Speaker 600:23:32Got it. Thank you. Speaker 200:23:34Thank you. Operator00:23:36Next question, Jeff Meuler with Baird. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:23:40Yes. Thank you. I'm sorry, I know you just gave some of this, but can you just be adding more specific quantification by quarter on the overhead alignment or allocation changes and kind of the quarterly impacts for each of the segments? Speaker 300:24:03So essentially the view is overhead is a fairly we incur it on a pretty ratable basis throughout the year. It's not a perfect 25% per quarter, but it's closer to that than a revenue basis where we have the kind of seasonality that we do now with backup sort of much more amplified in Q3 and even partially into Q2 compared to particularly Q1. So the effect is most outsized in Q1. It's 300 basis points or so affecting Q1 where it's a couple of 100 basis points in the second quarter likely and then it reverses in the back half of the year. So that's the same again, same amount overall for the year. Speaker 300:24:48It's just allocated differently to the quarters and the same amount, obviously, a quarter that we're reporting actuals. Speaker 500:24:55Okay. Speaker 400:24:57And then just how big is the self managed center market? And of that, what is the, I guess, serviceable addressable market for you, meaning roughly what percentage of that market would you view as a potentially good fit for Bright Horizons to that you'd be interested in managing them if you had the opportunity? Speaker 200:25:20Sure. So what we have identified and we focus on sort of an addressable market where the size of the center, the quality of the center and the employer themselves would be appropriate for us is, I would say, low 1,000, but is of significance. And typically these programs have been in existence for quite a number of years. And so that's why I really highlighted the fact that these are very deliberative in terms of decisions because in many cases these centers have been operated by call it the higher end institution or the healthcare institution for as much as 10, 20, even 30 years. On the other hand, I think that what we certainly saw in terms of transitions pre COVID, in COVID and what we project going forward is an opportunity that certainly we are focused on, given the fact that like operators in general, it has been a difficult operating environment for a number of years. Speaker 200:26:30And so I think that there is more open mindedness among employers where their core business is not running a childcare center for their employees, it makes sense for them to at least examine the possibility of working with experts like ourselves. Speaker 400:26:50Got it. And then I hear you that the younger cohorts are growing at a higher rate from an enrollment perspective than the older cohorts. But as it stands today, just how much is your mix kind of shifted towards the older cohorts versus what it was kind of pre COVID just as we think through kind of the age out dynamic later this year? Speaker 300:27:16So we're actually slightly overweight in the younger age groups at the moment. By that by slightly, I mean a couple of 100 basis points weighted toward the infant toddler, 2 group versus the older age group. Speaker 400:27:30Okay. Awesome. Thank you. Operator00:27:41Next question comes from Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:27:46Thanks so much. I remember last year in I believe it was 2nd and third quarter you benefited from the Stephen Katz camps. And I know this wasn't a 2023 deal. But could you just remind us, did you ramp up the marketing there? And what the reason was for that huge ramp in 2023? Speaker 800:28:07And I'm only asking from the perspective of it seems like the comp is a little bit tough and I know you had guided earlier to being back to sort of more of a normal growth range and backup for next quarter. But just wanted to make sure I remember the dynamics of what went on in 2nd Q3 of last year with regard to the camps. Speaker 300:28:31Yes. So I can let me start, Tony, and maybe as Stephen add some color, I'll just double check some of my specific statistics here. But Stephen Katz brought in a they have been a partner of ours prior to the acquisition and they provide camp programs typically in the summer and then for us in addition in break times and throughout various off days or particular pop up arrangements where we can deploy a school age type program for older children in kindergarten through younger school or younger to middle school. So it opened up an opportunity to serve more children. And with the expansion of the capacity for that kind of a use case and a provider expansion from both having them with us, opening more camps than they had operated and then being able to provide that in other venues besides just in the summer camp timeframe. Speaker 300:29:32We've been able to expand that school age type programming in a broader way as an additional use case. So we did see with the it's concentrated in the summer, but with those programs coming into their 2nd to 3rd year after the acquisition maturity, if you will, there was an opportunity to serve more families that way. We also last year had more use from other care types as well. We had introduced pet care in the latter part of 2022. And so that was also seeing good uptake from a number of our clients who introduced it as a new use type that opened the door to many new users who may not have ever used backup care before, also an intermittent use case. Speaker 300:30:17And then also academic tutoring continued to be an opportunity for parents who had school age to access both virtual and we also introduced in person tutoring. So there were a number of incremental use cases that were available last year in maybe a more robust fashion that drove some of the backup use. But as you say, we were stacking by the back half of this year, we're stacking pretty robust 2 year growth rates in backup, which we know each year we're replenishing the backup use. We've got a lot of happy users who return, but it's something we're cognizant of in terms of making sure that we've got the network, the provider, the use cases, etcetera, to deliver on the kind of growth we're talking about. Speaker 800:31:08Yes, makes sense. And then just wanted to ask about the M and A pipeline. Are you starting to see any more willingness from small providers to sell given that ARPA is behind us now? Any just commentary on how the pipeline looks and Speaker 300:31:32your appetite Speaker 800:31:32for M and A? Thanks. Speaker 200:31:36Sure. Thanks, Tony. So I think that we are still early in that curve. ARPA ended September of 2023. We have always sort of forecasted that this would be sort of a 12 months to 24 months from the end of ARPA before owners started really making either decisions or different decisions than they otherwise would have made. Speaker 200:32:03I would say in terms of being really specific about the acquisition pipeline, I would say that we continue to cultivate those relationships. We continue to look at some smaller opportunities, especially where we are looking to densify near high performing centers. And so overall, it's definitely a part of the growth algorithm. Although again, at this point, we continue to be very focused on continuing to enroll within our existing centers and moving ahead on that front. Speaker 800:32:37Super. Thanks. Operator00:32:40Next question, Jeff Silber with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:32:45Thanks so much. You talked a little bit about what you're doing from a labor perspective in the UK. I'm just curious if you can address what's going on in the U. S. In terms of labor supply, availability and wage inflation. Speaker 200:32:58Yes. So I would start by saying, we're really pleased with the retention rates that we are achieving here in the U. S. So again, in the depths of COVID, that was a real challenge in terms of our ability to retain and therefore the need to attract more new staff to Bright Horizons. So we still continue at a level that is stronger than what we enjoyed even in 2019. Speaker 200:33:25So for me, any conversation around talent starts with retention and feel really good about where we are from that perspective. In terms of the labor market, there are still pockets of sort of heat pockets in the country where it is still challenging to recruit the full complement of staff that we would like to have. On the other hand, broadly, we feel good about the progress that we continue to make here in the U. S. And then in terms of wage rates, I think that we feel really differently than we felt again in the depths of COVID when we needed to accelerate wages in a more significant way. Speaker 200:34:06It feels like we are now in a place where we are paying really competitively. And therefore, at this point, expect that wage increases will be much more in line with what we had seen previously as opposed to significant stepped up basis that we incurred in the depths of COVID. Speaker 700:34:28Okay, that's helpful. There was an earlier question about center closures and forgive me if I missed the answer, but I think the question was about your goal for center closures this year. I think you had previously said it will be the same as last year. Is that still the same? And are they skewed to any specific geography? Speaker 700:34:45And if they're more in the U. S, is there any specific region? Thanks. Speaker 300:34:52Yes. So we would still expect to be in the range of what we closed in 2023. We closed 49 centers last year, so still in that range. Some disproportionate skew to the U. K. Speaker 300:35:05Could be the U. K. Is not 40% of our overall business, but they certainly could be 40% to 45% of those closures. But there are still some underperformers in the U. S. Speaker 300:35:18That we are looking at addressing in the same way that we've talked about rationalizing the portfolio in the U. K. So those are the 2 geographies where we're seeing the more outsized closures and that there's no particular we closed 11 this quarter. So there's a cadence that we're following against overall performance when the leases are up, what we can exit and the timing of all that for parents. Speaker 700:35:47Okay. That's really helpful. Thanks so much. Speaker 200:35:50Thanks, Jeff. Excellent. All right. Well, thank you all very much for your time. We appreciate it and look forward to seeing you soon. Speaker 300:35:58Thanks, everyone. Have a good night. Operator00:36:00This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by