NYSE:BFAM Bright Horizons Family Solutions Q2 2024 Earnings Report $129.03 -2.47 (-1.88%) Closing price 05/28/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$131.52 +2.49 (+1.93%) As of 05/28/2025 07:08 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. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Bright Horizons Family Solutions EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.88Consensus EPS $0.73Beat/MissBeat by +$0.15One Year Ago EPS$0.54Bright Horizons Family Solutions Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$670.10 millionExpected Revenue$666.17 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$3.93 millionYoY Revenue Growth+11.10%Bright Horizons Family Solutions Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date8/1/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, August 1, 2024Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsBright Horizons Family Solutions' Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, August 7, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 31, 2025 at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Bright Horizons Family Solutions Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrAugust 1, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:01Greetings, and welcome to Bright Horizons Family Solutions Second Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference 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, Mr. Operator00:00:30Michael Flanagan, Vice President, Investor Relations. Thank you, Mr. Flanagan. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:38Thank you, Renju, and welcome to Bright Horizons' 2nd quarter earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call is being web cast and a recording will be available under the Investor Relations section of our website brighthorizons.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 statement 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, our 2023 Form 10 ks and other SEC filings. Any 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. Speaker 100:01:25We also refer today to non GAAP financial measures, which are detailed and reconciled to their GAAP counterparts in our earnings release, which is available under the IR section of our website at investors. Brighthorizons.com. Joining me on today's call is our Chief Executive Officer, Steven Kramer and our Chief Financial Officer, Elizabeth Boland. Steven will start by reviewing our results and provide an update on the business. Elizabeth will follow with a more detailed review of the numbers before we open it up to your questions. Speaker 100:01:51With that, let me turn the call over to Stephen. Speaker 200:01:54Thanks Mike and welcome to everyone who has joined the call. I am really pleased with our performance in the second quarter and first half of twenty twenty four. Revenue growth remains strong in both full service and backup care and adjusted EPS growth of nearly 40% outpaced our expectations through better operational efficiency across all three of our segments. With the outperformance in the first half of the year and continued progress expected for the remainder of the year, we are raising our full year guidance on both the top and bottom line. So to get into some of the specifics on the 2nd quarter. Speaker 200:02:30Revenue increased 11% to $670,000,000 with adjusted EBITDA up 25% $103,000,000 and adjusted EPS growing 38% to $0.88 per share. In our full service childcare segment, revenue increased 11% in the 2nd quarter to 507000000 dollars We opened 7 centers in the quarter including new client centers for Walmart, Hormel Foods, United Health Services and the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Enrollment in centers open for more than 1 year increased at a mid singledigitrateinq2andaverageoccupancy percentage stepped up to the mid-60s. The U. S. Speaker 200:03:14Continues to see strong performance with mid single digit enrollment growth driven by high single digit growth in our younger age groups and mid single digit growth in the preschool age group. Outside the U. S, enrollment increased at a low single digit rate. The Netherlands and Australia continue to have higher than average occupancy levels and as a result more limited expansion in enrollment. Specifically on our UK business, after a challenging couple of years, the first half of twenty twenty four has been marked by steadier enrollment gains, increased permanent staff and reduced reliance on third party agencies along with moderating inflation. Speaker 200:04:01The initiatives we've put in place over the last 18 months have significantly improved the efficiency of labor, delivering center operating improvements more quickly than we anticipated. Although the UK will continue to be a headwind to our overall full service profitability in the coming quarters, the progress we have seen this year gives me confidence that our strategy is working and our UK team will continue to progress towards recovery to pre pandemic performance levels. Let me now turn to backup care, which delivered another strong quarter growing revenue 15% to $136,000,000 In addition to solid utilization across our various use types, we also continue to expand our client base with Q2 launches including Honeywell and the Georgia Institute of Technology. Use growth in our traditional care network remains solid underpinned by continued expansion of the number of client employees utilizing their backup care benefit. Center based care remains the predominant care type and continues to grow faster than in home even as center occupancy continues to grow. Speaker 200:05:14Encouragingly, we started off the opportunity in the backup care segment as we work to leverage our technology and marketing investments and innovative care types to best serve our clients and their employees. Our education advisory business grew to $26,000,000 increasing 2.5% over the prior year, in line with our expectations for the quarter, but well below the longer term growth opportunity we see for this segment. We continue to add new clients to the portfolio, notably launching Global Foundries and International Paper. While growth in participants remains challenging, the team is working diligently on product and packaging as well as marketing with the goal of driving greater client adoption and client employee participation in 2025 beyond. Before I wrap up, I want to congratulate and celebrate the recent graduation of nearly 400 Bright Horizons employees in our Horizon's teacher degree program. Speaker 200:06:25I had the honor of speaking at this year's commencement and I want to applaud this tremendous accomplishment for educators. It takes a significant amount of time, effort and commitment to earn a CBA, AA and BA while working as an early childhood educator in a Bright Horizons center. With more than 80% of our centers having an enrolled learner, this program is truly a win win win. Our teachers advance their education and grow their careers with us. The families we serve benefit from the highest quality care and education and Bright Horizons develops an even more qualified and engaged workforce. Speaker 200:07:07In closing, I'm pleased with our strong first half of twenty twenty four. We have executed well against the goals we set for the year and are set up well to increase our guidance. Specifically, we now expect revenue growth for the year of approximately 11%, a range of $2,650,000,000 to $2,700,000,000 and adjusted EPS in the range of $3.30 to $3.40 per share. With that, I'll turn the call over to Elizabeth, who will dive into the quarterly numbers and share more details around our outlook. Speaker 300:07:44Thank you, Stephen. To recap the second quarter, overall revenue increased 11% to $670,000,000 adjusted operating income of $69,000,000 or 10% of revenue increased 52% over 2Q of 2023, while adjusted EBITDA of $103,000,000 or 15% of revenue increased 25% over the prior year. We ended the quarter with 10 32 centers adding 9 sorry, 7 new and closing 19 centers in the 2nd quarter. To break this down a bit further, full service revenue of $507,000,000 was up 11% in Q2 at the high end of our expectations on increased enrollment and tuition pricing. As mentioned, enrollment in our centers opened for more than 1 year increased mid single digits across the portfolio. Speaker 300:08:39Occupancy levels averaged in the mid-60s for Q2, stepping up sequentially given the traditional enrollment seasonality. U. S. Enrollment was also up mid single digits, while enrollment outside the U. S. Speaker 300:08:52Increased in the low single digits over the prior year. In the center cohorts that we've previously discussed, we also continue to show improvement over the prior year period. In Q2, our top performing cohort defined as above 70% occupancy improved from 43% of our centers in 2Q of 2023 to 51% in 2Q of 20 24. And our bottom cohort of centers, those under 40% occupied now represents 10% of centers as compared to 14% in the prior year. Adjusted operating income of $33,000,000 in the full service segment increased to $20,000,000 over the prior year. Speaker 300:09:35Higher enrollment, tuition increases and improved operating leverage more than offset the $9,000,000 reduction in support that we received from the ARPA government funding program in 2Q of 2023. While the UK full service business continues to be a headwind to the overall segment profitability, we have seen good progress in reducing the losses with improved staffing, the continued enrollment gains and the rationalization of our center portfolio that we have discussed on prior calls. Turning to backup care, revenue grew 15% in the 2nd quarter to $136,000,000 ahead of our expectations of 10% to 12% growth on stronger overall use. Adjusted operating income of $32,000,000 in Q2 of 2024 or 23% of revenue was also ahead of our expectations on operating leverage from the higher utilization. Lastly, our Educational Advisory segment reported $26,000,000 of revenue and delivered operating margin of 18%. Speaker 300:10:41Operating margins contracted in Q2 and the first half of twenty twenty four over the prior year due to the investments that we are making in the team and the product suite. Interest expense of $12,000,000 in Q2 of 2024 reflects lower average borrowings offset by higher overall net rates on our outstanding debt as compared to Q2 of 2023. The structural effective tax rate on adjusted net income was 27.8%, just a touch lower than the prior year. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, we generated 110,000,000 dollars in cash from operations in the 2nd quarter and $226,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty four compared to $180,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty three. We made fixed asset investments of $23,000,000 in the second quarter $42,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty four compared to $40,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty three. Speaker 300:11:40We ended the quarter with $140,000,000 of cash and reduced our leverage ratio to 2.2 times net debt to adjusted EBITDA. And now moving on to the 2024 outlook. As Stephen previewed, we are increasing our 2024 full year guidance for revenue to a range of $2,650,000,000 to 2,700,000,000 dollars and adjusted EPS to a range of $3.30 to $3.40 a share. This increase in both revenue and EPS broadly reflects the flow through of our better than expected performance in the first half of the year and continued strength anticipated in the backup segment for the key summer season. In terms of our updated segment growth outlook for the year, we now expect full service revenue to grow roughly 10% to 12%, backup care to grow 12% to 14% and head advisory to be relatively flat compared to the prior year. Speaker 300:12:37As we look specifically to Q3, our outlook is for total top line growth in the range of 9% to 11%. This reflects full service growth of 9% to 11%, backup growth of 11% to 13% and net advisory to be relatively flat. In terms of earnings, we expect Q3 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $1.04 to $1.09 per share. So with that, Ranju, we are ready to go to Q and A. Operator00:13:10Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer The first question comes from the line of George Tong with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:13:44Hi, thanks. Good afternoon. You increased your full year guidance and mentioned some drivers of that increase, including the 2Q outperformance and strength in backup. Can you elaborate on some of the surprises to the upside that you saw in the quarter? And what your assumptions are around occupancy rates that you're baking into the guide? Speaker 300:14:08Sure. So let me just make a note, occupancy 2H. So in the Q2, the performance was, as you say, higher than our expectations and it really comes down to both the full service and backup segments. We did call out some of the particulars in the UK, which we would identify as being earlier than expected realization of some of the cost savings that we have been pursuing, particularly as it relates to the use of agency staff and having more of a permanent staff component to the labor in the U. K. Speaker 300:14:49That coupled with the steady enrollment gains has allowed us to essentially sooner than expected be realizing some improvement in the operating performance there. And that coupled with the higher use in backup and the mix of use in the backup business also drove a little bit better EBIT performance even on the sort of modest revenue outperformance. As we look out to the rest of the year, we saw mid single digits enrollment growth in full service. We would expect that to broadly continue over the rest of the year. The full service business has a step down and a seasonality Full service is such that there's a bit of a step down in the enrollment absolutely in the quarter, but in terms of the gains year over year, it would sustain in that mid single digits range we would expect. Speaker 300:15:43And from a backup standpoint, we are as we outlined, we ticked up the revenue guide given the strength of the way that the summer started on use. Speaker 400:15:53Great. That's very helpful. And just the point on occupancy rates, what percentages are you assuming for the rest of the year and exiting into next year? Speaker 300:16:03Yes. So we are at this point, we would be looking at with the mid single digits growth compared to where we ended last year. We'd be in the low 60s to mid-60s utilization for the full year. Speaker 400:16:19Very helpful. Thank you. Speaker 300:16:23Thank you. Operator00:16:24Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Manav Patnaik with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:16:31Yes, thank you. Elizabeth, just on the backup guidance of 11% to 13%, can you just talk about the you talked about July looking pretty strong. Just talk about the visibility you have in the Q3, at least for that number. And 11% to 13% sounds right, but I think it's a tough comp as well. So just any color there? Speaker 300:16:52Yes. As you say, we had revenue growth, I think, in the Q3 last year that was almost 30%. And so we do have a pretty tough comp. It was 25%, I think, in the second half. But overall, it is a challenging comp, but pretty strong sequential growth that we're expecting. Speaker 300:17:12And as you ask about how much visibility we have, obviously, we've just seen the July results coming in and have seen very solid use so far in the quarter, which is what gives us the conviction around that kind of a revenue guide and a bit of flow through on the earnings that we would see in the Q3, hence the sort of the modest uptick to the earnings guide there. Speaker 500:17:39Okay, got it. And then just like you kind of helped us with the quarterly cadence on the revenue growth by segment, could you just help us with the margin expectations for Q3 and the full year? Speaker 300:17:52Yes. So maybe just continuing with backup. The backup business improves as the year goes into the Q3. The seasonal not only is the revenue at a seasonal peak in Q3, but so is the earnings it tapers some of the Q4. But in the second half, third quarter certainly, but second half, we would expect backup to be in the low 30s. Speaker 300:18:16There's a couple of factors for that. Obviously, the use performance and the operating leverage that we get from that takes us to the higher end of the range. And we've also as we've taken the overhead cadence to a more ratable view for the year, there's been a little bit of a headwind in overhead for backup in the first half and then there's a little bit of a tailwind that gives us a couple of 100 basis points of tailwind that puts that margin a few points over 30% is what we would be looking at. The full service business steps down as mentioned seasonally. We have the enrollment term with children, the older children graduating and going to elementary school and sort of backfilling that through the year. Speaker 300:19:04So there's a natural step down from where we reported this quarter in the 6.5% range. We would see that step down naturally because of the seasonality. And then the converse effect of that of a bit more overhead being captured in full service in the second half than was in the first half puts about it's about 50 to 75 basis points a quarter. And so the swing from Q2 to Q3 explains about 100, 125 or so basis points of shift there from the first from Q2 to Q3 and then we see that in a similar range ending having a lowtomidsingledigits for the second half for the year, sorry, ending the year in that low to mid single digits range. They're not headed by any Operator00:20:11Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Andrew Steinerman with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:18Hi, Elizabeth. What is the current percentage wage inflation year over year of the Bright Horizons teachers and staff? And do you feel like the percentage tuition increases will be ahead of wage increases on a going forward basis? Speaker 300:20:36Yes. So we are what we're seeing for wage inflation is roughly in the 4% range. And it's something that has been a little bit candidly a little bit firmer. Inflation has persisted a bit in that wage environment. We're seeing a better labor supply environment that's been improving, but we've still seen some strength in the wage inflation. Speaker 300:21:01So 4% is what we are seeing sort of broadly average. We have been able to price ahead of that by about 100 basis points on average. That's been our experience this year. And I think as much as we have the visibility, it's early to be guiding for 25. But broadly speaking, we would think we would be able to sustain that kind of 100 basis point gap, but it's a bit early to be predicting specifically whether it would be what rate that would be at, but we're seeing that pricing power. Speaker 600:21:34That's great. Could I just ask a quick follow-up on that? You said labor supply of teachers and staff seems to be improving. Is that because maybe other centers are closing, not Bright Horizon Centers, but other centers are closing kind of post ARPA? Or do you feel like there might be more new entry into early childhood education or less pull away from childhood education to other industries? Speaker 600:22:00What's driving the labor supply? Speaker 200:22:03Yes. So I think there's a few things at work here. I think first, I think we are just candidly getting better at getting an even greater share of those who are available and interested in the field. And that comes in 2 flavors. The first is folks who are already in the field and attracting them away from their current employee. Speaker 200:22:23And then secondly, again because of our education program and the wages that we offer, being able to incent people to come into the field and ultimately be growing our own. So going out, hiring for attitude, training for skill and using our programs in that way. So I would say it's that combination that really has been helpful for us in particular to be able to attract more educators to brighter horizons. Speaker 300:22:51Thanks, Stephen. Thanks, Andrew. Operator00:22:56Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Jeff Meuler with Baird. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:23:02Yes. Thank you. Good afternoon. Can you talk maybe through some of the things you're doing from an initiative perspective to better capture, I guess, the seasonal summer demand? I know Stephen Katz is a part of it, but your CAGR over the last 3 years looks like it's pretty incredible for Q3. Speaker 700:23:22And then just beyond the tough comp, any other rate limiting factors we should consider? I don't know where you're at in terms of capacity constraints or anything else. Thank you. Speaker 200:23:35Yes. So I would say that first, the summer is certainly increasing in terms of the peak through each of the years at this point. And so we're really excited about the different use types that we have. But certainly in the summer, we're seeing a lot of use in centers and we're seeing a lot of use in camps. And I think that we have been very thoughtful about how to get ahead of that demand, that increasing demand to make sure that we're able to fulfill in that way. Speaker 200:24:08So I would say in terms of rate limiting steps, I feel really good that we have a lot of good personalized outreach campaigns going on within our client bases. And at the same time, making sure that we're doing that in a way that is reflective of the increasing amount of supply that we're building to make sure that we can accommodate it. So overall, feel really good about the summer. We have some visibility obviously into July and sorry into August and are now looking very positively about what this summer should shape up to look like. Speaker 700:24:48Got it. Thank you. And then on full service, the enrollment step down that you saw seasonally at the beginning of this summer, does it look pretty similar in terms of order of magnitude to prior summers? And then as we think about back to school, are you assuming kind of like the historical average? Or is there any sort of benefit assumed because you have greater mix of younger children in the mix relative to the longer term trend? Speaker 300:25:18Yes. The trend does look fairly similar to historic patterns. We are slightly over weighted in infant toddler, but that has diminished as the preschool enrollment has been coming in. And so we're expecting to see, I think, a more it's coming back to the norm over time, but a pretty consistent view into the fall. I think what's positive about all of the steadiness of the enrollment gain over the last couple of years is that by enrolling children in all of the age groups, we do build a good supply of future preschoolers with the infant toddler enrollment that we have. Speaker 300:26:01And then we have space to take all the preschoolers we can market to and also from Steven's comment, be able to take backup care even as centers are getting more enrollment, we're able to take more backup care in centers as that demand persists. Speaker 200:26:17Thank Operator00:26:19you. Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Josh Chan with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:26:27Hi, good afternoon, Stephen and Elizabeth. Congrats on a good quarter. I guess on Hi. Hi. On the full service margin front, could you bridge us from last year's 3% to this year's 6.5% in terms of factors that are most helpful? Speaker 800:26:45Was it utilization? Was it the 100 basis points delta between Speaker 300:26:58Yes. I think the headline of the kind of leverage that is the opportunity that exists in full service is that enrollment is the it has the most momentum to driving that improving leverage. We did have the headwind from ARPA, obviously, that took down what we even realized. But with the average of mid single digits enrollment gain and the continued pricing power that those are the main drivers. I think the UK's improvement and the improving cost structure that goes along with that amplified the sort of amplified the benefit in the quarter in particular. Speaker 300:27:41But I'd say those are the primary drivers. Just as a small note, the overhead that we've talked about and after we get through this year, it will just be baked into the way that we look at it. But there is a little there's about 50 basis points to 75 basis points or so of benefit in Q3 that is related to how the overhead is spread between the segments in the first half of the year versus the second half. So there's more of a headwind for full service in the second half and it has this little bit of benefit of 50 bps to 75 bps in Q2. So that's the only that's the other thing I'd point out on that 6.5% or so that we reported. Speaker 800:28:23Okay. That's a good point. Yes, thank you for that. And then on the UK, what's the level of embedded profitability improvement now within the updated guidance that you just put out? Speaker 300:28:39Yes. So as a reminder, we talked about the challenge in the UK full service business in particular and last year that business lost around $30,000,000 and we had come into this year looking for frankly, I think we were not only looking for improvement, but expecting that improvement to be fairly back end weighted. We knew that the beginning part of the year would be part of the ramping in and realizing some of the benefits of the initiatives that have been underway. Some of those have come sooner than expected, but we did plan for improvement throughout the year. At this point, with this outperformance, the earlier outperformance of that, we'd probably be in the mid teens from 30,000,000 dollars to close to half that is what is assumed in the outlook for the rest of the year. Speaker 300:29:32So it's still a headwind, still it was over 200 basis points last quarter, probably 100 basis points to 200 basis points in the current quarter So it is still a headwind, but improving and we feel good about that progress. Speaker 800:29:50Great. Congrats again on the quarter. Thank you for your time. Speaker 200:29:54Thank you. Operator00:29:56Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Jeff Silber with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:30:04Thanks so much. Wanted to focus on the center closures. If I look over the past few quarters, it looks like you've been ramping up the number of centers that you're closing. I'm assuming that they're mostly in this lower occupancy cohort, if you could just confirm that. And I'm just wondering how they disperse geographically. Speaker 900:30:21And if you could just also tell us where you think you'll end up the number of centers that are going to be closed this year? Speaker 300:30:29Thanks. Yes. So we had started out the year looking at closing somewhere between 4050 centers and would say we're still in that range. We've closed about 30 so far in the first half. First quarter was a little bit more UK weighted, 2nd quarter is a little bit more U. Speaker 300:30:50S. Weighted. But broadly speaking of those closures about 40% are in the UK and 60% in the U. S. To answer your question about where are they in the cohorts, I think there is a mix of them in the lower lowest performing cohort, the under 40% occupied. Speaker 300:31:10But there still are a number, particularly those that we've circled up in the UK that were in that middle cohort because the economics of some of those centers, even some that were reasonably well enrolled or in that 40% to 70% enrolled still we're not economically feasible in terms of the overall occupancy that we could ever attain. Some of the centers in the UK are quite small and depend on a very high level of occupancy to be economically feasible. So we've been judicious about what we're closing and trying to look at where we can both combine and we call it rationalization in part because there are locations where we can combine families into nearby centers, or we're opportunistic because there's a lease action that allows us to exit a lower performing center and combine enrollment to make others more feasible. And it may not always be just the most underperforming from a utilization standpoint. Speaker 900:32:17That's really helpful. And if I could switch gears to some of the new center openings. I know it's a long sales cycle, but we're starting to see signs of a cooling labor market. And I'm just wondering how your conversations are going with potential new customers. Are they still really excited about potentially opening up new centers or Speaker 100:32:35do you see some of Speaker 900:32:36them holding back given what's going on in the labor market? Thanks. Speaker 200:32:41Yes, it's a great question. So I think look the conversation with prospective center clients continue to be strong. There continues to be good interest out there in terms of at least exploring, understanding that this is both a long sales cycle, but it also is reflective of long term decision making. Because again, once someone opens a center, they generally are opening that center with a long term commitment. So I would say that last quarter, for example, was a number of the openings were transitions. Speaker 200:33:17This quarter, a number of them were new builds. But in terms of the sort of texture of the pipeline, I would say we certainly are more heavily weighted towards transitions. So those are existing centers that are self operated, typically by healthcare organizations or universities. And so again, I think those conversations continue to be strong on the basis that they've been through a very difficult period of operations. By and large, they recognize that they may benefit from having an expert operator. Speaker 200:33:51And so rather than closing, which they are not minded to do, they are considering a 3rd party operator like ourselves. And we're very well positioned as they make those decisions to capitalize on it given our strong leadership position. Speaker 900:34:06All right. That was very helpful. Thanks so much for the color. Speaker 300:34:10Thank you. Operator00:34:12Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:34:20Hey, this is Carlo Alonso on for Stephanie Moore. I guess on the U. K. Business, I guess in terms of pricing conversations that you're having there, I know you're seeing some better enrollment. If you could just elaborate a little bit more on there. Speaker 1000:34:39And I guess if you could what's the average occupancy rate that you have in that geography? Speaker 300:34:50Yes, I think if I caught the question right, the average occupancy in the UK is a little bit lower than the overall average. Our overall average is in the low 60s to mid 60s. Actually in the second quarter, it's in the mid-60s, but for the year would be, low to mid-60s. The UK is, as I say, a little bit lower than that on average, by a couple of points. So not dramatically different. Speaker 300:35:18The centers tend to be a little bit smaller on average. So the numbers of children that go along with that utilization is somewhat different. From a pricing standpoint, it's actually very similar to the overall averages where we've been able to see price increases, Although the decisions are made locally and very individually for centers on average, we've done about a 5% increase in the UK as well. We certainly have seen there from a wage standpoint, a similar dynamic to the U. S. Speaker 300:35:50Where we have seen wages escalating faster than price in the past couple of years and been catching up on that with the pricing decisions we've made recently. But the I think the market there has been more challenged on the labor side and we were more reliant on agency staff. So our labor costs were a bit higher because of the composition of the labor, and now that's coming more into a right sized structure. Speaker 1000:36:20Thank you. That's all for me. Speaker 300:36:23Thank you. Operator00:36:26Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:36:38Thank you. Maybe just following up on the topic of price increases. I guess, when do you start communicating next year's price increases to clients? Is it just January 1, they get the bill or do you discuss that sort of ahead of time? And also with regard to camp, do you typically raise camp prices by similar percentage to the school increases? Speaker 200:37:10Yes. So Tony, a large number of our price increases go into effect in January. And we tend to like to give families, call it 60 days notice ahead of when that price increase is going to happen. I do think it's important to recognize that as children age up, right, their actual out of pocket tuition fee goes down. That's across the industry, right? Speaker 200:37:37As the child ages up and the ratios expand, we do see a natural decrease. So while we do provide them the insight on the increase, call it 60 days ahead, they're also recognizing in many cases as their child ages up, a lower actual out of pocket expense associated with our service. So I would say 60 days is the standard. In terms of camps, again, we operate under the brand of Stephen Katz. And the Stephen Katz camp generally is during the summer, although we are offering more schools out type break camps as well. Speaker 200:38:20That is typically only aligned with backup care. For our summer camp, again, typically those decisions happen annually and they happen ahead of when the season actually starts. So it's not really about communication as much as the price is shared when individual retail families are interested in the service. Speaker 300:38:42And the only thing I'd add to that on the client question is we typically are going through an annual budget conversation with clients who are sponsoring a center and they are participating with us on what the relative support that they want to provide for a center. So we will outline what we see as the price increase that's necessary given the cost environment and particularly the labor environment and the expected enrollment in the center and what that translates to in terms of their subsidy. And then the client can make a decision about if they want to support more or cost share more with the families. And so how that price is affecting the families is ultimately a joint decision that we are making with the clients. And so that's more than the 60 days ahead of time because that budget cycle tends to if it's on a calendar basis, it would be going on anywhere from now until the late fall. Speaker 1100:39:42Yes, understood. And then Elizabeth, in the prior six quarters, you closed a net of 37 centers, but your capacity had stayed at 120,000. And this quarter, you closed 12 centers net, but lowered capacity by 5,000. And so I was wondering if they were particularly large centers that were closed this quarter or was this just rounding and a function of that? Thanks. Speaker 100:40:12Just rounding Tony. Yes. Speaker 1100:40:14Okay. Thank you. Speaker 100:40:15The closing centers capacity has been as you would imagine on a net basis, slowly shrinking with those closures and we just rounded down to 115. Speaker 300:40:27Okay. Thank you. Thanks. Operator00:40:31Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Faiza Alwy with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:40:37Yes. Hi. Thank you. I wanted to follow-up on the question around full service margins. And I was wondering if you could share with us like how the U. Speaker 1200:40:48S. Centers are performing from a margin perspective. And secondly, any color you can provide around margins for the various cohorts? I think at one point you had talked about the cohorts that are above 70% enrolled are at margins that are in line with pre COVID levels or near. So give us just some color on how things have trended, just focusing on the U. Speaker 1200:41:20S. Business in particular? Speaker 300:41:24Sure. So we don't break out the margins specifically by geography, but I think having outlined that the full service margins are experiencing a headwind from the UK business in the range of 100 to 200 basis points. I think that gives you some insight into the U. S. Performance being better than the UK by some measure. Speaker 300:41:50And I think other than the general size of our other international businesses, both the Netherlands and Australia are they're relatively smaller components of full service. And so they don't have a fully leveraged or rationalized overhead structure for the size of those businesses as we continue to scale. And so in that way, the U. S. Full service business is at the front end of the overall margins and probably best to just correlate it with the UK headwind to get some sense of that. Speaker 300:42:27I think as we look ahead to the rest of the year and our we have this step down of performance to low single digits compared to the first half of the year. But overall, we would be from a cohort standpoint, as you say, the top performing centers, those that are over 70% occupied are effectively back to where we were operating in the pre COVID era. Those centers obviously that group of centers continues to evolve and change. So some centers that have been in the mid cohort and have improved their enrollment during the top cohort. Now there there's an ever changing mix of centers that are in each of these cohorts. Speaker 300:43:13And so the performance isn't static, but that top performing group is effectively back. And then the middle cohort, which is those that are 40% to 70% occupied, They're making good progress. Obviously, if the overall average is in the low 60s to mid-60s enrollment, that mid cohort would be a bit behind that. But we would still see them exiting 24 in a mid single digits plus EBIT margin range. And so the headwind in full service is really primarily attributable to those that are in the lowest performing cohort and continuing to get progress on getting those getting enrollment and having more centers come into the middle group and rationalizing the portfolio where we don't see a path forward will help us continue to make progress back to that high single to 10% operating margin in full service over time. Speaker 1200:44:24Great. Thank you. Very helpful. And then I just wanted to follow-up on backup. You alluded to mix of business that maybe helped margins this quarter. Speaker 1200:44:34So just remind us about the mix and sort of what might be some of the factors there in backup? Speaker 300:44:42Yes. The primary reference there is the amount of use that we're able to serve in centers and in our own control providers versus in home care. And so that mix has continued to migrate away from in home back to really the levels that we had seen pre COVID, which would be something like a third of the use being in home and 2 thirds not being in home. And so that improving mix has driven that just relatively lower provider fee mix, which is the sort of cost of delivery. Speaker 1200:45:25Great. Thank you so much. Speaker 200:45:30Okay. Thank you very much for joining the call this evening. I hope everyone has a wonderful rest of the summer. Speaker 300:45:37Thanks everyone. Operator00:45:39Thank you. This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways Q2 results outperformed expectations: revenue rose 11% to $670 M, adjusted EBITDA increased 25% to $103 M and adjusted EPS climbed 38% to $0.88, prompting a full-year revenue guide raise to $2.65–2.70 B and adjusted EPS to $3.30–3.40. Full service childcare revenue grew 11% to $507 M, powered by mid-single-digit enrollment growth in the U.S. (particularly in infant/toddler) and low-single-digit gains internationally, lifting occupancy to the mid-60s despite continued UK headwinds. Backup care revenue jumped 15% to $136 M on strong utilization and new client launches (e.g., Honeywell, Georgia Tech), with center-based care growth outpacing in-home and segment margins exceeding 30%. Education advisory revenue increased 2.5% to $26 M, in line with guidance but below its long-term potential, as the business invests in product enhancements and marketing to boost client adoption and participation in 2025. Bright Horizons celebrated the graduation of nearly 400 employees from its teacher degree program, enhancing workforce quality, educator careers and centre operations through internal talent development. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallBright Horizons Family Solutions Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Bright Horizons Family Solutions Earnings HeadlinesStock Of The Day: Is Bright Horizons Breaking Out?May 28 at 2:54 PM | benzinga.comInsider Sell: Stephen Kramer Sells Shares of Bright Horizons Family Solutions Inc (BFAM)May 23, 2025 | gurufocus.comTrump’s treachery Trump’s Final Reset Inside the shocking plot to re-engineer America’s financial system…and why you need to move your money now.May 29, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)New Research Reveals Summer is a Break for Everyone but ParentsMay 21, 2025 | businesswire.comZacks Industry Outlook Highlights Cintas, APi Group and Bright Horizons Family SolutionsMay 9, 2025 | uk.finance.yahoo.comBright Horizons Family Solutions Inc. Beat Analyst Estimates: See What The Consensus Is Forecasting For This YearMay 9, 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 Bullish NVIDIA Market Set to Surge 50% Ahead of Q1 EarningsAdvance Auto Parts: Did Earnings Defuse Tariff Concerns?Booz Allen Hamilton Earnings: 3 Bullish Signals for BAH StockAdvance Auto Parts Jumps on Surprise Earnings BeatAlibaba's Earnings Just Changed Everything for the StockCisco Stock Eyes New Highs in 2025 on AI, Earnings, UpgradesSymbotic Gets Big Earnings Lift: Is the Stock Investable Again? 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:01Greetings, and welcome to Bright Horizons Family Solutions Second Quarter 20 24 Earnings Conference 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, Mr. Operator00:00:30Michael Flanagan, Vice President, Investor Relations. Thank you, Mr. Flanagan. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:38Thank you, Renju, and welcome to Bright Horizons' 2nd quarter earnings call. Before we begin, please note that today's call is being web cast and a recording will be available under the Investor Relations section of our website brighthorizons.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 statement 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, our 2023 Form 10 ks and other SEC filings. Any 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. Speaker 100:01:25We also refer today to non GAAP financial measures, which are detailed and reconciled to their GAAP counterparts in our earnings release, which is available under the IR section of our website at investors. Brighthorizons.com. Joining me on today's call is our Chief Executive Officer, Steven Kramer and our Chief Financial Officer, Elizabeth Boland. Steven will start by reviewing our results and provide an update on the business. Elizabeth will follow with a more detailed review of the numbers before we open it up to your questions. Speaker 100:01:51With that, let me turn the call over to Stephen. Speaker 200:01:54Thanks Mike and welcome to everyone who has joined the call. I am really pleased with our performance in the second quarter and first half of twenty twenty four. Revenue growth remains strong in both full service and backup care and adjusted EPS growth of nearly 40% outpaced our expectations through better operational efficiency across all three of our segments. With the outperformance in the first half of the year and continued progress expected for the remainder of the year, we are raising our full year guidance on both the top and bottom line. So to get into some of the specifics on the 2nd quarter. Speaker 200:02:30Revenue increased 11% to $670,000,000 with adjusted EBITDA up 25% $103,000,000 and adjusted EPS growing 38% to $0.88 per share. In our full service childcare segment, revenue increased 11% in the 2nd quarter to 507000000 dollars We opened 7 centers in the quarter including new client centers for Walmart, Hormel Foods, United Health Services and the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Enrollment in centers open for more than 1 year increased at a mid singledigitrateinq2andaverageoccupancy percentage stepped up to the mid-60s. The U. S. Speaker 200:03:14Continues to see strong performance with mid single digit enrollment growth driven by high single digit growth in our younger age groups and mid single digit growth in the preschool age group. Outside the U. S, enrollment increased at a low single digit rate. The Netherlands and Australia continue to have higher than average occupancy levels and as a result more limited expansion in enrollment. Specifically on our UK business, after a challenging couple of years, the first half of twenty twenty four has been marked by steadier enrollment gains, increased permanent staff and reduced reliance on third party agencies along with moderating inflation. Speaker 200:04:01The initiatives we've put in place over the last 18 months have significantly improved the efficiency of labor, delivering center operating improvements more quickly than we anticipated. Although the UK will continue to be a headwind to our overall full service profitability in the coming quarters, the progress we have seen this year gives me confidence that our strategy is working and our UK team will continue to progress towards recovery to pre pandemic performance levels. Let me now turn to backup care, which delivered another strong quarter growing revenue 15% to $136,000,000 In addition to solid utilization across our various use types, we also continue to expand our client base with Q2 launches including Honeywell and the Georgia Institute of Technology. Use growth in our traditional care network remains solid underpinned by continued expansion of the number of client employees utilizing their backup care benefit. Center based care remains the predominant care type and continues to grow faster than in home even as center occupancy continues to grow. Speaker 200:05:14Encouragingly, we started off the opportunity in the backup care segment as we work to leverage our technology and marketing investments and innovative care types to best serve our clients and their employees. Our education advisory business grew to $26,000,000 increasing 2.5% over the prior year, in line with our expectations for the quarter, but well below the longer term growth opportunity we see for this segment. We continue to add new clients to the portfolio, notably launching Global Foundries and International Paper. While growth in participants remains challenging, the team is working diligently on product and packaging as well as marketing with the goal of driving greater client adoption and client employee participation in 2025 beyond. Before I wrap up, I want to congratulate and celebrate the recent graduation of nearly 400 Bright Horizons employees in our Horizon's teacher degree program. Speaker 200:06:25I had the honor of speaking at this year's commencement and I want to applaud this tremendous accomplishment for educators. It takes a significant amount of time, effort and commitment to earn a CBA, AA and BA while working as an early childhood educator in a Bright Horizons center. With more than 80% of our centers having an enrolled learner, this program is truly a win win win. Our teachers advance their education and grow their careers with us. The families we serve benefit from the highest quality care and education and Bright Horizons develops an even more qualified and engaged workforce. Speaker 200:07:07In closing, I'm pleased with our strong first half of twenty twenty four. We have executed well against the goals we set for the year and are set up well to increase our guidance. Specifically, we now expect revenue growth for the year of approximately 11%, a range of $2,650,000,000 to $2,700,000,000 and adjusted EPS in the range of $3.30 to $3.40 per share. With that, I'll turn the call over to Elizabeth, who will dive into the quarterly numbers and share more details around our outlook. Speaker 300:07:44Thank you, Stephen. To recap the second quarter, overall revenue increased 11% to $670,000,000 adjusted operating income of $69,000,000 or 10% of revenue increased 52% over 2Q of 2023, while adjusted EBITDA of $103,000,000 or 15% of revenue increased 25% over the prior year. We ended the quarter with 10 32 centers adding 9 sorry, 7 new and closing 19 centers in the 2nd quarter. To break this down a bit further, full service revenue of $507,000,000 was up 11% in Q2 at the high end of our expectations on increased enrollment and tuition pricing. As mentioned, enrollment in our centers opened for more than 1 year increased mid single digits across the portfolio. Speaker 300:08:39Occupancy levels averaged in the mid-60s for Q2, stepping up sequentially given the traditional enrollment seasonality. U. S. Enrollment was also up mid single digits, while enrollment outside the U. S. Speaker 300:08:52Increased in the low single digits over the prior year. In the center cohorts that we've previously discussed, we also continue to show improvement over the prior year period. In Q2, our top performing cohort defined as above 70% occupancy improved from 43% of our centers in 2Q of 2023 to 51% in 2Q of 20 24. And our bottom cohort of centers, those under 40% occupied now represents 10% of centers as compared to 14% in the prior year. Adjusted operating income of $33,000,000 in the full service segment increased to $20,000,000 over the prior year. Speaker 300:09:35Higher enrollment, tuition increases and improved operating leverage more than offset the $9,000,000 reduction in support that we received from the ARPA government funding program in 2Q of 2023. While the UK full service business continues to be a headwind to the overall segment profitability, we have seen good progress in reducing the losses with improved staffing, the continued enrollment gains and the rationalization of our center portfolio that we have discussed on prior calls. Turning to backup care, revenue grew 15% in the 2nd quarter to $136,000,000 ahead of our expectations of 10% to 12% growth on stronger overall use. Adjusted operating income of $32,000,000 in Q2 of 2024 or 23% of revenue was also ahead of our expectations on operating leverage from the higher utilization. Lastly, our Educational Advisory segment reported $26,000,000 of revenue and delivered operating margin of 18%. Speaker 300:10:41Operating margins contracted in Q2 and the first half of twenty twenty four over the prior year due to the investments that we are making in the team and the product suite. Interest expense of $12,000,000 in Q2 of 2024 reflects lower average borrowings offset by higher overall net rates on our outstanding debt as compared to Q2 of 2023. The structural effective tax rate on adjusted net income was 27.8%, just a touch lower than the prior year. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, we generated 110,000,000 dollars in cash from operations in the 2nd quarter and $226,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty four compared to $180,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty three. We made fixed asset investments of $23,000,000 in the second quarter $42,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty four compared to $40,000,000 for the first half of twenty twenty three. Speaker 300:11:40We ended the quarter with $140,000,000 of cash and reduced our leverage ratio to 2.2 times net debt to adjusted EBITDA. And now moving on to the 2024 outlook. As Stephen previewed, we are increasing our 2024 full year guidance for revenue to a range of $2,650,000,000 to 2,700,000,000 dollars and adjusted EPS to a range of $3.30 to $3.40 a share. This increase in both revenue and EPS broadly reflects the flow through of our better than expected performance in the first half of the year and continued strength anticipated in the backup segment for the key summer season. In terms of our updated segment growth outlook for the year, we now expect full service revenue to grow roughly 10% to 12%, backup care to grow 12% to 14% and head advisory to be relatively flat compared to the prior year. Speaker 300:12:37As we look specifically to Q3, our outlook is for total top line growth in the range of 9% to 11%. This reflects full service growth of 9% to 11%, backup growth of 11% to 13% and net advisory to be relatively flat. In terms of earnings, we expect Q3 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $1.04 to $1.09 per share. So with that, Ranju, we are ready to go to Q and A. Operator00:13:10Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer The first question comes from the line of George Tong with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:13:44Hi, thanks. Good afternoon. You increased your full year guidance and mentioned some drivers of that increase, including the 2Q outperformance and strength in backup. Can you elaborate on some of the surprises to the upside that you saw in the quarter? And what your assumptions are around occupancy rates that you're baking into the guide? Speaker 300:14:08Sure. So let me just make a note, occupancy 2H. So in the Q2, the performance was, as you say, higher than our expectations and it really comes down to both the full service and backup segments. We did call out some of the particulars in the UK, which we would identify as being earlier than expected realization of some of the cost savings that we have been pursuing, particularly as it relates to the use of agency staff and having more of a permanent staff component to the labor in the U. K. Speaker 300:14:49That coupled with the steady enrollment gains has allowed us to essentially sooner than expected be realizing some improvement in the operating performance there. And that coupled with the higher use in backup and the mix of use in the backup business also drove a little bit better EBIT performance even on the sort of modest revenue outperformance. As we look out to the rest of the year, we saw mid single digits enrollment growth in full service. We would expect that to broadly continue over the rest of the year. The full service business has a step down and a seasonality Full service is such that there's a bit of a step down in the enrollment absolutely in the quarter, but in terms of the gains year over year, it would sustain in that mid single digits range we would expect. Speaker 300:15:43And from a backup standpoint, we are as we outlined, we ticked up the revenue guide given the strength of the way that the summer started on use. Speaker 400:15:53Great. That's very helpful. And just the point on occupancy rates, what percentages are you assuming for the rest of the year and exiting into next year? Speaker 300:16:03Yes. So we are at this point, we would be looking at with the mid single digits growth compared to where we ended last year. We'd be in the low 60s to mid-60s utilization for the full year. Speaker 400:16:19Very helpful. Thank you. Speaker 300:16:23Thank you. Operator00:16:24Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Manav Patnaik with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:16:31Yes, thank you. Elizabeth, just on the backup guidance of 11% to 13%, can you just talk about the you talked about July looking pretty strong. Just talk about the visibility you have in the Q3, at least for that number. And 11% to 13% sounds right, but I think it's a tough comp as well. So just any color there? Speaker 300:16:52Yes. As you say, we had revenue growth, I think, in the Q3 last year that was almost 30%. And so we do have a pretty tough comp. It was 25%, I think, in the second half. But overall, it is a challenging comp, but pretty strong sequential growth that we're expecting. Speaker 300:17:12And as you ask about how much visibility we have, obviously, we've just seen the July results coming in and have seen very solid use so far in the quarter, which is what gives us the conviction around that kind of a revenue guide and a bit of flow through on the earnings that we would see in the Q3, hence the sort of the modest uptick to the earnings guide there. Speaker 500:17:39Okay, got it. And then just like you kind of helped us with the quarterly cadence on the revenue growth by segment, could you just help us with the margin expectations for Q3 and the full year? Speaker 300:17:52Yes. So maybe just continuing with backup. The backup business improves as the year goes into the Q3. The seasonal not only is the revenue at a seasonal peak in Q3, but so is the earnings it tapers some of the Q4. But in the second half, third quarter certainly, but second half, we would expect backup to be in the low 30s. Speaker 300:18:16There's a couple of factors for that. Obviously, the use performance and the operating leverage that we get from that takes us to the higher end of the range. And we've also as we've taken the overhead cadence to a more ratable view for the year, there's been a little bit of a headwind in overhead for backup in the first half and then there's a little bit of a tailwind that gives us a couple of 100 basis points of tailwind that puts that margin a few points over 30% is what we would be looking at. The full service business steps down as mentioned seasonally. We have the enrollment term with children, the older children graduating and going to elementary school and sort of backfilling that through the year. Speaker 300:19:04So there's a natural step down from where we reported this quarter in the 6.5% range. We would see that step down naturally because of the seasonality. And then the converse effect of that of a bit more overhead being captured in full service in the second half than was in the first half puts about it's about 50 to 75 basis points a quarter. And so the swing from Q2 to Q3 explains about 100, 125 or so basis points of shift there from the first from Q2 to Q3 and then we see that in a similar range ending having a lowtomidsingledigits for the second half for the year, sorry, ending the year in that low to mid single digits range. They're not headed by any Operator00:20:11Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Andrew Steinerman with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:18Hi, Elizabeth. What is the current percentage wage inflation year over year of the Bright Horizons teachers and staff? And do you feel like the percentage tuition increases will be ahead of wage increases on a going forward basis? Speaker 300:20:36Yes. So we are what we're seeing for wage inflation is roughly in the 4% range. And it's something that has been a little bit candidly a little bit firmer. Inflation has persisted a bit in that wage environment. We're seeing a better labor supply environment that's been improving, but we've still seen some strength in the wage inflation. Speaker 300:21:01So 4% is what we are seeing sort of broadly average. We have been able to price ahead of that by about 100 basis points on average. That's been our experience this year. And I think as much as we have the visibility, it's early to be guiding for 25. But broadly speaking, we would think we would be able to sustain that kind of 100 basis point gap, but it's a bit early to be predicting specifically whether it would be what rate that would be at, but we're seeing that pricing power. Speaker 600:21:34That's great. Could I just ask a quick follow-up on that? You said labor supply of teachers and staff seems to be improving. Is that because maybe other centers are closing, not Bright Horizon Centers, but other centers are closing kind of post ARPA? Or do you feel like there might be more new entry into early childhood education or less pull away from childhood education to other industries? Speaker 600:22:00What's driving the labor supply? Speaker 200:22:03Yes. So I think there's a few things at work here. I think first, I think we are just candidly getting better at getting an even greater share of those who are available and interested in the field. And that comes in 2 flavors. The first is folks who are already in the field and attracting them away from their current employee. Speaker 200:22:23And then secondly, again because of our education program and the wages that we offer, being able to incent people to come into the field and ultimately be growing our own. So going out, hiring for attitude, training for skill and using our programs in that way. So I would say it's that combination that really has been helpful for us in particular to be able to attract more educators to brighter horizons. Speaker 300:22:51Thanks, Stephen. Thanks, Andrew. Operator00:22:56Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Jeff Meuler with Baird. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:23:02Yes. Thank you. Good afternoon. Can you talk maybe through some of the things you're doing from an initiative perspective to better capture, I guess, the seasonal summer demand? I know Stephen Katz is a part of it, but your CAGR over the last 3 years looks like it's pretty incredible for Q3. Speaker 700:23:22And then just beyond the tough comp, any other rate limiting factors we should consider? I don't know where you're at in terms of capacity constraints or anything else. Thank you. Speaker 200:23:35Yes. So I would say that first, the summer is certainly increasing in terms of the peak through each of the years at this point. And so we're really excited about the different use types that we have. But certainly in the summer, we're seeing a lot of use in centers and we're seeing a lot of use in camps. And I think that we have been very thoughtful about how to get ahead of that demand, that increasing demand to make sure that we're able to fulfill in that way. Speaker 200:24:08So I would say in terms of rate limiting steps, I feel really good that we have a lot of good personalized outreach campaigns going on within our client bases. And at the same time, making sure that we're doing that in a way that is reflective of the increasing amount of supply that we're building to make sure that we can accommodate it. So overall, feel really good about the summer. We have some visibility obviously into July and sorry into August and are now looking very positively about what this summer should shape up to look like. Speaker 700:24:48Got it. Thank you. And then on full service, the enrollment step down that you saw seasonally at the beginning of this summer, does it look pretty similar in terms of order of magnitude to prior summers? And then as we think about back to school, are you assuming kind of like the historical average? Or is there any sort of benefit assumed because you have greater mix of younger children in the mix relative to the longer term trend? Speaker 300:25:18Yes. The trend does look fairly similar to historic patterns. We are slightly over weighted in infant toddler, but that has diminished as the preschool enrollment has been coming in. And so we're expecting to see, I think, a more it's coming back to the norm over time, but a pretty consistent view into the fall. I think what's positive about all of the steadiness of the enrollment gain over the last couple of years is that by enrolling children in all of the age groups, we do build a good supply of future preschoolers with the infant toddler enrollment that we have. Speaker 300:26:01And then we have space to take all the preschoolers we can market to and also from Steven's comment, be able to take backup care even as centers are getting more enrollment, we're able to take more backup care in centers as that demand persists. Speaker 200:26:17Thank Operator00:26:19you. Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Josh Chan with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:26:27Hi, good afternoon, Stephen and Elizabeth. Congrats on a good quarter. I guess on Hi. Hi. On the full service margin front, could you bridge us from last year's 3% to this year's 6.5% in terms of factors that are most helpful? Speaker 800:26:45Was it utilization? Was it the 100 basis points delta between Speaker 300:26:58Yes. I think the headline of the kind of leverage that is the opportunity that exists in full service is that enrollment is the it has the most momentum to driving that improving leverage. We did have the headwind from ARPA, obviously, that took down what we even realized. But with the average of mid single digits enrollment gain and the continued pricing power that those are the main drivers. I think the UK's improvement and the improving cost structure that goes along with that amplified the sort of amplified the benefit in the quarter in particular. Speaker 300:27:41But I'd say those are the primary drivers. Just as a small note, the overhead that we've talked about and after we get through this year, it will just be baked into the way that we look at it. But there is a little there's about 50 basis points to 75 basis points or so of benefit in Q3 that is related to how the overhead is spread between the segments in the first half of the year versus the second half. So there's more of a headwind for full service in the second half and it has this little bit of benefit of 50 bps to 75 bps in Q2. So that's the only that's the other thing I'd point out on that 6.5% or so that we reported. Speaker 800:28:23Okay. That's a good point. Yes, thank you for that. And then on the UK, what's the level of embedded profitability improvement now within the updated guidance that you just put out? Speaker 300:28:39Yes. So as a reminder, we talked about the challenge in the UK full service business in particular and last year that business lost around $30,000,000 and we had come into this year looking for frankly, I think we were not only looking for improvement, but expecting that improvement to be fairly back end weighted. We knew that the beginning part of the year would be part of the ramping in and realizing some of the benefits of the initiatives that have been underway. Some of those have come sooner than expected, but we did plan for improvement throughout the year. At this point, with this outperformance, the earlier outperformance of that, we'd probably be in the mid teens from 30,000,000 dollars to close to half that is what is assumed in the outlook for the rest of the year. Speaker 300:29:32So it's still a headwind, still it was over 200 basis points last quarter, probably 100 basis points to 200 basis points in the current quarter So it is still a headwind, but improving and we feel good about that progress. Speaker 800:29:50Great. Congrats again on the quarter. Thank you for your time. Speaker 200:29:54Thank you. Operator00:29:56Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Jeff Silber with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:30:04Thanks so much. Wanted to focus on the center closures. If I look over the past few quarters, it looks like you've been ramping up the number of centers that you're closing. I'm assuming that they're mostly in this lower occupancy cohort, if you could just confirm that. And I'm just wondering how they disperse geographically. Speaker 900:30:21And if you could just also tell us where you think you'll end up the number of centers that are going to be closed this year? Speaker 300:30:29Thanks. Yes. So we had started out the year looking at closing somewhere between 4050 centers and would say we're still in that range. We've closed about 30 so far in the first half. First quarter was a little bit more UK weighted, 2nd quarter is a little bit more U. Speaker 300:30:50S. Weighted. But broadly speaking of those closures about 40% are in the UK and 60% in the U. S. To answer your question about where are they in the cohorts, I think there is a mix of them in the lower lowest performing cohort, the under 40% occupied. Speaker 300:31:10But there still are a number, particularly those that we've circled up in the UK that were in that middle cohort because the economics of some of those centers, even some that were reasonably well enrolled or in that 40% to 70% enrolled still we're not economically feasible in terms of the overall occupancy that we could ever attain. Some of the centers in the UK are quite small and depend on a very high level of occupancy to be economically feasible. So we've been judicious about what we're closing and trying to look at where we can both combine and we call it rationalization in part because there are locations where we can combine families into nearby centers, or we're opportunistic because there's a lease action that allows us to exit a lower performing center and combine enrollment to make others more feasible. And it may not always be just the most underperforming from a utilization standpoint. Speaker 900:32:17That's really helpful. And if I could switch gears to some of the new center openings. I know it's a long sales cycle, but we're starting to see signs of a cooling labor market. And I'm just wondering how your conversations are going with potential new customers. Are they still really excited about potentially opening up new centers or Speaker 100:32:35do you see some of Speaker 900:32:36them holding back given what's going on in the labor market? Thanks. Speaker 200:32:41Yes, it's a great question. So I think look the conversation with prospective center clients continue to be strong. There continues to be good interest out there in terms of at least exploring, understanding that this is both a long sales cycle, but it also is reflective of long term decision making. Because again, once someone opens a center, they generally are opening that center with a long term commitment. So I would say that last quarter, for example, was a number of the openings were transitions. Speaker 200:33:17This quarter, a number of them were new builds. But in terms of the sort of texture of the pipeline, I would say we certainly are more heavily weighted towards transitions. So those are existing centers that are self operated, typically by healthcare organizations or universities. And so again, I think those conversations continue to be strong on the basis that they've been through a very difficult period of operations. By and large, they recognize that they may benefit from having an expert operator. Speaker 200:33:51And so rather than closing, which they are not minded to do, they are considering a 3rd party operator like ourselves. And we're very well positioned as they make those decisions to capitalize on it given our strong leadership position. Speaker 900:34:06All right. That was very helpful. Thanks so much for the color. Speaker 300:34:10Thank you. Operator00:34:12Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Stephanie Moore with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:34:20Hey, this is Carlo Alonso on for Stephanie Moore. I guess on the U. K. Business, I guess in terms of pricing conversations that you're having there, I know you're seeing some better enrollment. If you could just elaborate a little bit more on there. Speaker 1000:34:39And I guess if you could what's the average occupancy rate that you have in that geography? Speaker 300:34:50Yes, I think if I caught the question right, the average occupancy in the UK is a little bit lower than the overall average. Our overall average is in the low 60s to mid 60s. Actually in the second quarter, it's in the mid-60s, but for the year would be, low to mid-60s. The UK is, as I say, a little bit lower than that on average, by a couple of points. So not dramatically different. Speaker 300:35:18The centers tend to be a little bit smaller on average. So the numbers of children that go along with that utilization is somewhat different. From a pricing standpoint, it's actually very similar to the overall averages where we've been able to see price increases, Although the decisions are made locally and very individually for centers on average, we've done about a 5% increase in the UK as well. We certainly have seen there from a wage standpoint, a similar dynamic to the U. S. Speaker 300:35:50Where we have seen wages escalating faster than price in the past couple of years and been catching up on that with the pricing decisions we've made recently. But the I think the market there has been more challenged on the labor side and we were more reliant on agency staff. So our labor costs were a bit higher because of the composition of the labor, and now that's coming more into a right sized structure. Speaker 1000:36:20Thank you. That's all for me. Speaker 300:36:23Thank you. Operator00:36:26Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Toni Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:36:38Thank you. Maybe just following up on the topic of price increases. I guess, when do you start communicating next year's price increases to clients? Is it just January 1, they get the bill or do you discuss that sort of ahead of time? And also with regard to camp, do you typically raise camp prices by similar percentage to the school increases? Speaker 200:37:10Yes. So Tony, a large number of our price increases go into effect in January. And we tend to like to give families, call it 60 days notice ahead of when that price increase is going to happen. I do think it's important to recognize that as children age up, right, their actual out of pocket tuition fee goes down. That's across the industry, right? Speaker 200:37:37As the child ages up and the ratios expand, we do see a natural decrease. So while we do provide them the insight on the increase, call it 60 days ahead, they're also recognizing in many cases as their child ages up, a lower actual out of pocket expense associated with our service. So I would say 60 days is the standard. In terms of camps, again, we operate under the brand of Stephen Katz. And the Stephen Katz camp generally is during the summer, although we are offering more schools out type break camps as well. Speaker 200:38:20That is typically only aligned with backup care. For our summer camp, again, typically those decisions happen annually and they happen ahead of when the season actually starts. So it's not really about communication as much as the price is shared when individual retail families are interested in the service. Speaker 300:38:42And the only thing I'd add to that on the client question is we typically are going through an annual budget conversation with clients who are sponsoring a center and they are participating with us on what the relative support that they want to provide for a center. So we will outline what we see as the price increase that's necessary given the cost environment and particularly the labor environment and the expected enrollment in the center and what that translates to in terms of their subsidy. And then the client can make a decision about if they want to support more or cost share more with the families. And so how that price is affecting the families is ultimately a joint decision that we are making with the clients. And so that's more than the 60 days ahead of time because that budget cycle tends to if it's on a calendar basis, it would be going on anywhere from now until the late fall. Speaker 1100:39:42Yes, understood. And then Elizabeth, in the prior six quarters, you closed a net of 37 centers, but your capacity had stayed at 120,000. And this quarter, you closed 12 centers net, but lowered capacity by 5,000. And so I was wondering if they were particularly large centers that were closed this quarter or was this just rounding and a function of that? Thanks. Speaker 100:40:12Just rounding Tony. Yes. Speaker 1100:40:14Okay. Thank you. Speaker 100:40:15The closing centers capacity has been as you would imagine on a net basis, slowly shrinking with those closures and we just rounded down to 115. Speaker 300:40:27Okay. Thank you. Thanks. Operator00:40:31Thank you. Next question comes from the line of Faiza Alwy with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:40:37Yes. Hi. Thank you. I wanted to follow-up on the question around full service margins. And I was wondering if you could share with us like how the U. Speaker 1200:40:48S. Centers are performing from a margin perspective. And secondly, any color you can provide around margins for the various cohorts? I think at one point you had talked about the cohorts that are above 70% enrolled are at margins that are in line with pre COVID levels or near. So give us just some color on how things have trended, just focusing on the U. Speaker 1200:41:20S. Business in particular? Speaker 300:41:24Sure. So we don't break out the margins specifically by geography, but I think having outlined that the full service margins are experiencing a headwind from the UK business in the range of 100 to 200 basis points. I think that gives you some insight into the U. S. Performance being better than the UK by some measure. Speaker 300:41:50And I think other than the general size of our other international businesses, both the Netherlands and Australia are they're relatively smaller components of full service. And so they don't have a fully leveraged or rationalized overhead structure for the size of those businesses as we continue to scale. And so in that way, the U. S. Full service business is at the front end of the overall margins and probably best to just correlate it with the UK headwind to get some sense of that. Speaker 300:42:27I think as we look ahead to the rest of the year and our we have this step down of performance to low single digits compared to the first half of the year. But overall, we would be from a cohort standpoint, as you say, the top performing centers, those that are over 70% occupied are effectively back to where we were operating in the pre COVID era. Those centers obviously that group of centers continues to evolve and change. So some centers that have been in the mid cohort and have improved their enrollment during the top cohort. Now there there's an ever changing mix of centers that are in each of these cohorts. Speaker 300:43:13And so the performance isn't static, but that top performing group is effectively back. And then the middle cohort, which is those that are 40% to 70% occupied, They're making good progress. Obviously, if the overall average is in the low 60s to mid-60s enrollment, that mid cohort would be a bit behind that. But we would still see them exiting 24 in a mid single digits plus EBIT margin range. And so the headwind in full service is really primarily attributable to those that are in the lowest performing cohort and continuing to get progress on getting those getting enrollment and having more centers come into the middle group and rationalizing the portfolio where we don't see a path forward will help us continue to make progress back to that high single to 10% operating margin in full service over time. Speaker 1200:44:24Great. Thank you. Very helpful. And then I just wanted to follow-up on backup. You alluded to mix of business that maybe helped margins this quarter. Speaker 1200:44:34So just remind us about the mix and sort of what might be some of the factors there in backup? Speaker 300:44:42Yes. The primary reference there is the amount of use that we're able to serve in centers and in our own control providers versus in home care. And so that mix has continued to migrate away from in home back to really the levels that we had seen pre COVID, which would be something like a third of the use being in home and 2 thirds not being in home. And so that improving mix has driven that just relatively lower provider fee mix, which is the sort of cost of delivery. Speaker 1200:45:25Great. Thank you so much. Speaker 200:45:30Okay. Thank you very much for joining the call this evening. I hope everyone has a wonderful rest of the summer. Speaker 300:45:37Thanks everyone. Operator00:45:39Thank you. This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by