In This Article:
Child care and education company Bright Horizons (NYSE:BFAM) met Wall Street’s revenue expectations in Q4 CY2024, with sales up 9.5% year on year to $674.1 million. On the other hand, the company’s full-year revenue guidance of $2.88 billion at the midpoint came in 0.5% below analysts’ estimates. Its non-GAAP profit of $0.98 per share was 8% above analysts’ consensus estimates.
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Bright Horizons (BFAM) Q4 CY2024 Highlights:
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Revenue: $674.1 million vs analyst estimates of $670.9 million (9.5% year-on-year growth, in line)
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Adjusted EPS: $0.98 vs analyst estimates of $0.91 (8% beat)
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Adjusted EBITDA: $110.7 million vs analyst estimates of $106.4 million (16.4% margin, 4% beat)
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Management’s revenue guidance for the upcoming financial year 2025 is $2.88 billion at the midpoint, missing analyst estimates by 0.5% and implying 7% growth (vs 11.1% in FY2024)
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Adjusted EPS guidance for the upcoming financial year 2025 is $4.05 at the midpoint, beating analyst estimates by 1.4%
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Operating Margin: 7.2%, up from 4.6% in the same quarter last year
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Free Cash Flow Margin: 13.4%, up from 10.5% in the same quarter last year
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Market Capitalization: $6.88 billion
Company Overview
Founded in 1986, Bright Horizons (NYSE:BFAM) is a global provider of child care, early education, and workforce support solutions.
Education Services
A whole industry has emerged to address the problem of rising education costs, offering consumers alternatives to traditional education paths such as four-year colleges. These alternative paths, which may include online courses or flexible schedules, make education more accessible to those with work or child-rearing obligations. However, some have run into issues around the value of the degrees and certifications they provide and whether customers are getting a good deal. Those who don’t prove their value could struggle to retain students, or even worse, invite the heavy hand of regulation.
Sales Growth
A company’s long-term sales performance can indicate its overall quality. Any business can put up a good quarter or two, but many enduring ones grow for years. Unfortunately, Bright Horizons’s 5.4% annualized revenue growth over the last five years was sluggish. This fell short of our benchmark for the consumer discretionary sector and is a tough starting point for our analysis.
Long-term growth is the most important, but within consumer discretionary, product cycles are short and revenue can be hit-driven due to rapidly changing trends and consumer preferences. Bright Horizons’s annualized revenue growth of 15.3% over the last two years is above its five-year trend, suggesting some bright spots.