MI
MAXIMUS, INC. (MMS)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- MMS delivered a strong Q3 FY25 with organic growth and margin expansion: revenue $1.35B (+2.5% YoY), GAAP EPS $1.86, adjusted EPS $2.16; adjusted EBITDA margin rose to 14.7% from 13.1% YoY . Versus S&P Global consensus, MMS posted a material beat on EPS ($2.16 vs $1.535) and topped revenue ($1.35B vs $1.316B)*.
- Management raised full-year guidance for the third consecutive quarter: FY25 revenue to $5.375–$5.475B, adjusted EBITDA margin to ~13%, and adjusted EPS to $7.35–$7.55; free cash flow (FCF) raised to $370–$390M .
- Cash flow headwinds are transient: Q3 FCF outflow (-$198M) was driven by payment delays on two large programs; collections exceeded $300M in July on a major federal program and $224M of state unbilled AR moved to billed; management expects strong Q4 FCF and DSO normalization .
- Stock reaction catalysts: sizable EPS/margin beat, third guidance raise, visibility on cash collections/FCF, and structurally higher Federal segment margin (Q3 18.1%) driven by sustained clinical volumes; early FY26 color signals flattish revenue scenarios but margin at high end of the 10–13% range and lower interest expense tailwind .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Federal strength: U.S. Federal Services revenue +11.4% YoY to $761.2M; segment margin reached 18.1% (new high), reflecting elevated clinical volumes and operating leverage .
- Profitability and guidance: Adjusted EBITDA margin 14.7% and adjusted EPS $2.16 both improved YoY; FY25 adjusted EPS raised to $7.35–$7.55 and adjusted EBITDA margin to ~13% .
- Strategic positioning and defense traction: Achieved CMMC Level 2 certification (Aug 19) and won a $77M U.S. Air Force cybersecurity/cloud contract; management emphasized expanding defense/national security pipeline and “purpose-built” delivery model (AI-enabled) .
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What Went Wrong
- U.S. Services normalization: Revenue fell 6.9% YoY to $439.8M and margin declined to 10.2% as last year’s Medicaid unwinding tailwind lapped; full-year segment margin now ~10.5% (down from ~11%) .
- Working capital and FCF: Q3 operating cash outflow (-$183M) and FCF (-$198M) driven by payment delays on two programs; DSO peaked at 96 days (vs 73 in Q2) .
- Book-to-bill optics: TTM book-to-bill remained 0.8x amid timing of rebids (sensitive to BPO contract cycles), though management argues on-contract growth supports resilience and the sales pipeline rose to $44.7B (63% new work) .
Financial Results
Overall performance vs prior periods and estimates
Consensus vs actuals (Q3 2025)
- Values with an asterisk were retrieved from S&P Global (GetEstimates).*
Segment breakdown
Key operating and balance sheet KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Another record breaking quarter... adjusted diluted earnings per share reached $2.16... revenue of $1.35 billion is growth of 4.3% on an organic basis.” — Bruce Caswell, CEO .
- “This quarter's adjusted EBITDA margin is noticeably above the high end of our target range... thanks to our ability to gain operating leverage on incremental volumes.” — David Mutryn, CFO .
- “Book-to-bill... must be interpreted in the full context of contract timing, backlog dynamics and overall financial performance... revenue has grown 4.3% and adjusted EBITDA 15% [since FY24], underscoring on-contract growth.” — Bruce Caswell .
- “We made meaningful progress and collected more than $300 million related to this major U.S. Federal program in July... $224 million moving from unbilled AR to billed AR... anticipate collecting this balance in the fourth quarter.” — David Mutryn .
- “The [OBDBA] work requirements and enhanced eligibility... could lift U.S. Services from mid single digit to high single digit... potentially into low double digit with SNAP/UI opportunities” — Bruce Caswell .
Q&A Highlights
- OBDBA impact and timing: Management expects the bulk of uplift in FY27 given regulatory timelines; some states may move earlier, but guidance prudently assumes later ramp .
- Competitive positioning: Emphasized conflict-free status and scale advantages (e.g., enrollment broker presence in ~23 states), creating barriers to entry for Medicaid-related work .
- Defense focus: Defense and defense health are rising priorities; CMMC Level 2 achieved quickly; Air Force win evidences “right to win” in adjacencies .
- FY26 outlook: Revenue scenarios roughly in line or slightly below FY25, with margin near the high end of 10–13%; interest expense could be $20–$25M lower, adding ~$0.30 EPS tailwind .
- DOGE impacts: Pricing/scope changes to date are small—less than 0.5% of FY25 revenue; focus shifting to efficiency and performance-based models .
Estimates Context
- Q3 FY25 results beat Wall Street consensus (S&P Global): EPS $2.16 vs $1.535; revenue $1.348B vs $1.316B*. Implication: upward estimate revisions likely for FY25 EPS and margin trajectory given guidance raise and visible Q4 cash collections .
- Values with an asterisk were retrieved from S&P Global (GetEstimates).*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Quality beat with margin expansion: Adjusted EBITDA margin 14.7% and adjusted EPS $2.16 demonstrate operating leverage on elevated federal clinical volumes; guidance lifted across revenue, EPS, and FCF .
- Cash flow inflection near term: Q3 DSO spike is temporary; July collections >$300M and state contract billing shift support strong Q4 FCF and net leverage trending below 2x by year-end .
- Federal structurally stronger: U.S. Federal Services margin tracking ~15% for FY25 (above prior 12.5–13% view), underpinning earnings durability into FY26 even under flattish revenue scenarios .
- U.S. Services to reaccelerate later: Medicaid/SNAP policy changes (OBDBA) likely to lift engagement volumes; management frames the bigger impact in FY27, with optionality for earlier state moves .
- Defense/National Security optionality: CMMC Level 2 and initial USAF win broaden addressable market; emerging pipeline could contribute in FY26 and more meaningfully in FY27 .
- Capital returns: Dividend maintained at $0.30/share; ~$65.8M remains under repurchase authorization, providing opportunistic buyback capacity as liquidity normalizes .
- Risk checks: Procurement/budget headwinds remain watch items, but current financial impact small; book-to-bill optics affected by timing, while pipeline rose to $44.7B (63% new work) .
Notes:
- All financial and operational figures are sourced from the Q3 FY25 press release/8-K and earnings call, and prior quarters’ materials as cited.
- Consensus estimates marked with an asterisk were retrieved via S&P Global (GetEstimates).*