Evolent Health, Inc. (EVH) Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 revenue was $444.3M, below consensus ($459.4M*) and down year-over-year, while adjusted EBITDA was $37.5M, ahead of guidance and above consensus ($35.9M*) as management “exceeded our EBITDA targets” and raised full-year profitability outlook .
- Full-year 2025 guidance was revised: revenue lowered to $1.85B–$1.88B (from $2.06B–$2.11B) on go‑live timing, while adjusted EBITDA was raised to $140M–$165M (from $135M–$165M), reflecting strong execution and conservative reserving amid oncology trends .
- Four new revenue agreements brought YTD signings to 11; notably, Evolent named Aetna as its national partner in Florida MA (250K lives), with launch targeted for Q1 2026 and intent to expand to additional states—supporting a path to 2026 revenues “in excess of $2.5B” .
- Management highlighted accelerating pipeline, contract protections, and AI-driven operational improvements (11% review efficiency, targeting 80% auto-approvals), positioning EVH as a countercyclical cost-and-quality partner as CMS streamlines prior authorization (WISER model) .
- Near-term stock catalysts: revenue guide cut vs EBITDA raise, explicit Aetna disclosure and 2026 revenue trajectory, oncology trend commentary and contract protections; working capital actions and DSO normalization expected to drive ~$40M operating cash flow April–December .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Evolent exceeded our EBITDA targets for the second quarter and raised our profitability outlook for the full year,” with adjusted EBITDA margin of 8.5% vs 8.0% YoY .
- Pipeline acceleration: “we would expect to exceed our historical growth rates for 2026,” supported by four new agreements in Q2 and 11 YTD signings; CFO sees a path to 2026 revenues “in excess of $2.5B” .
- AI progress: integrated Auth Intelligence, improving review efficiency by ~11% QoQ; targeting 80% auto-approval of authorization volume in 24 months and exiting 2025 with ~$20M annualized EBITDA run-rate improvement .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line softness vs plan: Q2 revenue ($444.3M) was $11M below the midpoint, driven by a $4.6M negative prior-year revenue update and a go‑live delay for a Performance Suite market; Q1's $55M gross revenue switched to net in Q2, muting the reported step-up .
- GAAP loss widened: net loss of $(51.1)M (loss margin −11.5%) vs $(6.4)M in Q2 2024, reflecting higher interest expense and preferred dividends/accretion .
- Full-year revenue guidance cut to $1.85B–$1.88B on updated go‑live timing; working capital variability required actions to normalize DSO (received $24M catch‑up in July) and resulted in optional non‑dilutive capital access via Ares commitments .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L and EPS (GAAP and Adjusted)
Notes: EVH cites adjusted metrics and reconciliations in the releases/8‑K.
Actual vs Consensus (Q2 2025)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Segment/KPI Snapshot
Guidance Changes
Drivers: Revised revenue reflects updated go‑live timing for Performance Suite launches; EBITDA range raised on strong execution and conservative reserving in oncology .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “We continue to see a rapidly accelerating pipeline… we would expect to exceed our historical growth rates for 2026.” Also, “we remain confident in achieving the near-term AI and automation targets exiting 2025” .
- CEO on Aetna: “We’re honored to be partnering… set up for it to be the first of multiple states… launch together in Q1 2026” .
- CFO: “Q2 adjusted EBITDA of $37.5M was in the top half of our range… oncology trend ~10.5%… we are maintaining a conservative approach to reserving” .
- CFO on pipeline visibility: “We see a clear path to delivering 2026 revenues in excess of $2.5B” and “all prospective Performance Suite deals are under our new risk model” .
- Regulatory stance: “CMS… commitments for streamlining prior authorization… and the WISER model… encapsulates the moment that faces the industry,” aligning with EVH’s roadmap .
Q&A Highlights
- Aetna partnership: 250K MA lives in Florida, disciplined “slow down to speed up” approach to data exchange to enable faster state expansion; margin ramp consistent with 10% Performance Suite target in first two years .
- Contracting & protections: Weighted pipeline >$1B; all Performance Suite deals include corridors, standardized data flows, liability limits—trading some upside for more protection amid industry volatility .
- Payer mix outlook: Medicare (~25% of Q2 revenue) stabilizing with favorable 2026 rate notice; Medicaid (~45%) policy impacts not meaningful until 2027; ACA (~20%) likely 2026 headwinds on subsidies .
- Oncology trend guidance: 1H 2025 ~10.5%; 2H guide assumes ~12% trend at midpoint, including potential benefits rush in exchanges .
- Working capital: Q2 collection slowdown; $24M catch‑up post‑quarter; amended payment terms expected to normalize DSO and support ~$40M CFO Apr–Dec .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 results vs S&P Global consensus: revenue $444.3M vs $459.4M* (miss), adjusted EBITDA $37.5M vs $35.9M* (beat), adjusted/primary EPS $(0.10) vs $0.081* (miss). 10 EPS estimates, 14 revenue estimates .
- Implications: Street likely lowers FY revenue trajectory to reflect go‑live timing, while raising EBITDA confidence within the $140M–$165M range given execution, reserve conservatism, and AI/efficiency tailwinds .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- The narrative pivoted from top-line timing to profitability resilience: despite lower revenue, EVH delivered an EBITDA beat and raised FY EBITDA guidance—supported by oncology trends below forecast and disciplined reserving .
- Strategic disclosure (Aetna) and pipeline (> $1B weighted) underpin management’s path to ≥$2.5B in 2026 revenues; watch additional state launches and specialty expansions .
- Enhanced contract protections (corridors, data standards, liability limits) de-risk Performance Suite variability; upside moderated but quality-of-earnings improving .
- Regulatory momentum on prior authorization (CMS/WISER) favors EVH’s interoperable, AI-enabled model; expect share gains from in‑house and legacy vendors unable to meet new requirements .
- Near-term trading lens: revenue guide cut is a headline negative; EBITDA raise and Aetna naming are positives. Monitor Q3 deliverables (rev/EBITDA within range) and pipeline conversion pace .
- Cash conversion should improve with DSO normalization (~$40M CFO April–December); optional non‑dilutive financing provides flexibility around 2025 notes and growth .
- Risk watch: ACA exchanges into 2026 (possible headwinds), elevated specialty trends, and execution on AI/automation scale-up; contract protections mitigate downside but reduce historical upside variability .