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CoreCivic, Inc. (CXW)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q4 delivered solid operational execution with 75.5% occupancy (highest since Q1’20) and tight cost control; GAAP EPS was $0.17 and adjusted EPS $0.16, while adjusted EBITDA was $74.2M .
  • Results beat average analyst estimates on multiple metrics: adjusted EPS by $0.06, normalized FFO/share by $0.05, and adjusted EBITDA by $7.9M, despite headwinds from the South Texas Family Residential Center (STX) termination and California City lease expiration .
  • Management introduced FY2025 guidance (EPS $0.48–$0.61; FFO/share $1.37–$1.50; EBITDA $281–$293M) that excludes new wins but embeds $0.40/share drag from STX/California City; Q1 seasonality to reduce per‑share earnings by ~4% vs Q4 .
  • Strategic setup improved materially post U.S. administration change and passage of the Laken Riley Act; CXW proposed up to 28,000 ICE beds and sees potential $200–$275M incremental EBITDA from activating ~15,000 idle/leased beds, a possible medium‑term earnings catalyst .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • Cost normalization and occupancy gains: “financial results exceeded our internal forecast and analyst estimates, helped by tight cost discipline and higher occupancy,” with Q4 occupancy at 75.5% (post‑COVID high) .
    • State/local momentum: State revenue +6.4% YoY; local revenue +26% YoY; added new Montana contract in Jan-25 and continued wins with Wyoming, Harris County (TX), Hinds County (MS) .
    • Policy tailwinds and pipeline: New administration priorities and the Laken Riley Act could require substantial detention capacity; CXW has proposals for 28,000 ICE beds and is pre‑investing $40–$45M to accelerate activations .
  • What Went Wrong

    • Mix headwind from contract/lease terminations: Q4 adjusted EBITDA down YoY to $74.2M due to STX termination and California City lease expiration, together reducing facility NOI by $22.8M YoY .
    • Margin compression: Safety & Community operating margin was 23.6% vs 24.4% LY (portfolio mix impact from loss of higher‑margin STX) .
    • Federal revenue down YoY due to STX: ICE revenue fell to $120.3M from $153.5M, though ex‑STX, ICE revenue rose ~5% YoY; Properties revenue also lower on California City roll‑off .

Financial Results

Headline metrics vs prior periods and estimates

MetricQ4 2023Q3 2024Q4 2024
Revenue ($M)$491.2 $491.6 $479.3
GAAP Diluted EPS ($)$0.23 $0.19 $0.17
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($)$0.23 $0.20 $0.16
Adjusted EBITDA ($M)$90.0 $83.3 $74.2
Operating Margin % (Safety+Community)24.4% 24.9% 23.6%

Estimate surprise (as disclosed by management)

MetricQ4 2024 ReportedVs Avg Analyst Estimate
Adjusted EPS ($)$0.16 +$0.06
Normalized FFO/share ($)$0.39 +$0.05
Adjusted EBITDA ($M)$74.2 +$7.9

Note: S&P Global consensus detail (revenue/EPS levels) was unavailable at query time; estimate comparisons above reflect management’s “average analyst estimate” disclosures . S&P Global consensus values were not retrievable due to rate limits.

Segment revenue (Q4)

Segment Revenue ($M)Q4 2023Q4 2024
Safety$448.7 $444.5
Community$30.5 $30.3
Properties$12.0 $4.5
Total$491.2 $479.3

Key performance indicators

KPIQ4 2023Q3 2024Q4 2024
Occupancy – Safety & Community (combined)74.0% 75.2% 75.5%
Occupancy – Safety74.7% 75.7% 76.0%
Occupancy – Community63.7% 66.7% 68.8%
ICE Detention Population (range)n/a36k–38k (Q3) 38k–40k (Q4); 39,263 on 1/25/25
ICE Revenue ($M)$153.5 n/a$120.3
Net Debt / Adj. EBITDA (TTM)n/a2.2x (9/30/24) 2.3x (12/31/24)
Liquidity ($M)n/a$365 (9/30/24) $364 (12/31/24)

Non-GAAP notes: Adjusted EPS excludes special items, including a $0.01/share gain on sale in Q4; Adjusted EBITDA excludes gains on sale and other special items .

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Diluted EPS ($)FY 2025n/a0.48–0.61 New
FFO/share ($)FY 2025n/a1.37–1.50 New
EBITDA ($M)FY 2025n/a281–293 New
AFFO ($M)FY 2025n/a148.5–165.5 New
Normalized tax rateFY 2025n/a25–30%; lower in Q1 New
G&A ($M)FY 2025n/a145–150 New
Maintenance capex ($M)FY 2025n/a60–65 (real estate + other total) New
Other capex ($M)FY 2025n/a6–7 New
Activation capex ($M)FY 2025n/a40–45 (potential idle facility activations/transport) New
Leverage target (Net Debt/Adj. EBITDA)FY 2025n/a2.25x–2.75x (may exceed temporarily if activating) New
SeasonalityQ1 2025n/a~4% per‑share decline vs Q4; higher utilities/unemployment taxes New
Mix headwind embeddedFY 2025n/a−$0.40/share vs 2024 from STX/California City roll‑offs New

Guidance excludes any impact from new contract awards; management expects to revise as contracts are signed .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q2 & Q3 2024)Current Period (Q4 2024)Trend
Federal detention demand / ICEQ2/Q3: ICE issued RFIs/RFP (Chicago, Harlingen, Salt Lake, West Coast; NJ recompete); budgeting at 41.5k funded beds; potential to 50k; STX dollars reallocated .New admin prioritized detention; Laken Riley Act implies 60–110k additional beds; CXW proposed 28k beds; policy reversal allows DOJ/USMS direct contracts .Strengthening
U.S. Marshals ServiceQ3: USMS population could rise with policy shifts; reversal of EO on private contracts anticipated .Expect increased USMS demand (10k+ beds over several years); direct contracting tool restored .Strengthening
Idle facility activation & capexQ2/Q3: Building activation plans; some capex to prep facilities; activation 4–6 months; start-up costs noted .$40–$45M 2025 activation/transport capex; startup $4–6k/bed; positive EBITDA at ~50–65% occupancy .Strengthening
Staffing/labor normalizationQ2/Q3: Normalization continued; reduction in temp incentives and registry nursing .Staffing near pre‑pandemic, further cost normalization; supports quicker activations .Stable/positive
State/local contractsQ2: Montana/Wyoming/Counties wins; Saguaro near full . Q3: Continued state momentum .State +6.4% YoY; local +26% YoY; new Montana award (Jan-25) and additional transfers .Strengthening
ATD/ISAP (alternatives to detention)Q2/Q3: New RFI; possible multi‑vendor approach; tech‑agnostic strategy .Focus on detention in near‑term; ATD could evolve later; little near‑term emphasis from admin .Mixed/neutral

Management Commentary

  • “We are anticipating significant growth opportunities… over the next several years… particularly our key federal partners, ICE and the U.S. Marshals Service.”
  • “Occupancy for the quarter was 75.5%, marking our highest… since the first quarter of 2020.”
  • “Adjusted EPS during the fourth quarter was $0.16, exceeding average analyst estimates by $0.06… normalized FFO/share… by $0.05… adjusted EBITDA… by $7.9 million.”
  • “We expect new contracts to require the activation of one or more of our idle facilities… startup expenses $4,000 to $6,000 per bed… positive EBITDA at approximately 50% to 65% occupancy.”
  • “We’ve given ICE a proposal to do 28,000 beds… we could generate incremental EBITDA of $200 million to $275 million” if 15k idle/leased beds activated .

Q&A Highlights

  • Scale of demand and proposal: CXW proposed up to 28k beds to ICE; management suggests total federal need could be 150k–200k beds when combining enforcement and Laken Riley Act requirements (budget dependent) .
  • Earnings power: Activating ~15k idle/leased beds could add ~$750–$800M revenue and $200–$275M EBITDA at historical federal margins .
  • South Texas (Dilley) reactivation: Discussions ongoing; potential faster re‑open due to recent deactivation and retained staffing; possible emergency contracting pathway .
  • Contract structure and risk: Expect fixed payments/minimums in future ICE deals to cover fixed costs; similar to historical contracts .
  • Activation timing/costs: Typical 4–6 months; CXW front‑loading low‑cost prep to compress timelines; startup burden may weigh near‑term guidance before benefits accrue (more favorable in 2026) .

Estimates Context

  • S&P Global consensus detail for Q4’24 was unavailable at query time; however, management disclosed Q4 beats versus average analyst estimates: adjusted EPS +$0.06; normalized FFO/share +$0.05; adjusted EBITDA +$7.9M .
  • Given the policy/capacity catalysts, estimate revisions likely to trend higher on 2H’25–2026 if new federal contracts are awarded; near‑term margin could be pressured by startup expenses before stabilization (guidance currently excludes new awards) .

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Core earnings resilient: Despite STX/California City roll‑offs, CXW beat on adjusted EPS/FFO/EBITDA via occupancy gains and cost normalization; operating leverage to further occupancy remains significant .
  • Federal super‑cycle potential: New administration and Laken Riley Act create a rare multi‑year capacity upcycle; CXW’s 28k‑bed proposal and 13k+ idle owned beds position it for outsized wins .
  • Activation math: Each 15k beds activated could drive $200–$275M EBITDA post‑ramp; but expect 4–6 month start‑up costs and capex ($4–6k/bed; $2.5–$5k/bed for reactivation capex) to modestly pressure near‑term margins .
  • 2025 guide is a base case: Excludes any new awards; embeds -$0.40/share impact from 2024 closures and typical Q1 seasonal dip; watch for upward revisions as awards materialize .
  • State/local ballast: Continued momentum with Montana/Wyoming and counties adds diversification and supports occupancy while federal pipeline develops .
  • Balance sheet and buybacks: 2.3x net debt/EBITDA and $364M liquidity provide flexibility; repurchases remain opportunistic, balanced against activation and potential M&A .
  • Trading lens: Stock likely to trade on contracting headlines (ICE/USMS awards), indications on timing/funding, and evidence of accelerated activations—near‑term startup spend vs. medium‑term EBITDA expansion is the key narrative .

Additional supporting data and disclosures can be found in CoreCivic’s Q4’24 press release and Form 8‑K exhibits, and the earnings call transcript .