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INSPERITY, INC. (NSP)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 missed EPS and slightly missed revenue versus S&P Global consensus as elevated healthcare costs pressured margins; adjusted EPS was $(0.20) vs $0.22 consensus and revenue was $1.623B vs $1.632B consensus (benefits cost trend ~9% YoY) . EPS, revenue estimates from S&P Global: see asterisk note.
- Management announced a multi‑year UnitedHealthcare extension through 2028 with expected 2026 cost savings and a lower large-claim pooling level ($500K), positioning for margin recovery next year .
- Operating discipline continued (OpEx -4% YoY), but gross profit fell 15% on healthcare utilization, pharmacy costs, and large-claim frequency; adjusted EBITDA was $10M in Q3 .
- FY25 outlook was reduced: adjusted EPS to $0.84–$1.47 (from $1.81–$2.51) and adjusted EBITDA to $119–$153M (from $170–$205M); Q4 adjusted EPS guided to $(0.79)–$(0.16) .
- Potential stock catalysts: (1) tangible 2026 margin inflection from UHC contract and pricing actions; (2) HRScale rollout with Workday targeting mid‑market; (3) continued operating cost control .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Strategic health plan reset: UHC extension through 2028 with cost reductions, growth incentives, and reduced pooling level to $500K starting Jan 1, 2026 (expect ~2% favorable impact on gross benefits cost) .
- Operating discipline: Q3 operating expenses fell 4% YoY to $220M (Workday spend $11M vs $19M prior-year quarter) .
- HRScale rollout underway; co‑marketing/co‑selling with Workday; strong booked HR360 sales (up 45% YoY) and largest account in history slated to upgrade to HRScale, validating pricing power and demand .
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What Went Wrong
- Gross profit pressure: Q3 gross profit fell 15% YoY to $195M due to higher-than-expected benefits costs (inpatient, outpatient, pharmacy, and large-claim frequency) .
- Benefits cost trend surprised to the upside: ~9.1% YoY in Q3; management noted industry-wide drivers including specialty drugs and elevated utilization .
- FY25 guidance cut materially: adjusted EPS to $0.84–$1.47 and adjusted EBITDA to $119–$153M vs prior $1.81–$2.51 and $170–$205M, reflecting persistent healthcare cost headwinds .
Financial Results
Estimates vs. Actuals (S&P Global)
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are actively working to position Insperity for sustainable profitability at normal historical levels… including through the new contract with UnitedHealthcare… and the official rollout of HRScale” — Paul J. Sarvadi, CEO .
- “The combination of cost savings from [UHC] contract and other plan design changes… are expected to have a favorable impact of about 2% of our gross benefits costs [in 2026]… [and] lowering our pooling level… to $500,000” — Jim Allison, CFO .
- “In Q3, our booked HR360 sales were… 45% greater than [last year]… We sold our largest account in history… scheduled to… upgrade to HRScale” — Paul J. Sarvadi .
- “Nearly all of [the 2025 earnings] shortfall is related to the benefits area… We believe that 2026 represents an opportunity to recover a majority of the… shortfall” — Management Q&A .
Q&A Highlights
- 2026 earnings recovery: Management expects to recover a majority of the 2025 shortfall next year, anchored by pricing, plan design, and UHC contract savings .
- Pricing and retention: Higher pricing is being implemented; retention remains ~99%/month, and sales momentum/January pipeline expected to offset any churn of lower-profit clients .
- Risk pooling lowered: Pooling level reduced to $500K in 2026 to mitigate large-claim severity; management emphasized better carrier alignment and predictability .
- HRScale economics: Premium pricing validated; phased beta/early‑adopter discounts; internal cost capitalization now eligible; 2026 OpEx impact ~$15M lower than 2025 for HRScale .
- Industry healthcare dynamics: Elevated utilization, specialty drugs, and AI-enabled coding/documentation cited as drivers of higher insurer loss ratios and employer costs .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 miss vs S&P Global consensus: Adjusted/Primary EPS $(0.20)* vs $0.22*; Revenue $1.623B vs $1.632B*; primary delta from higher-than-expected healthcare costs (utilization/pharmacy/large claims) .
- Revisions likely: FY25 EPS and EBITDA ranges were cut; Street models should incorporate persistent elevated benefits trend (~9%) through Q4 and 2026 offset from UHC savings (~2% gross benefits cost), pricing lift, and lower pooling level .
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Elevated healthcare costs remain the core headwind; 2025 is reset lower, but structural actions (UHC contract, pooling reduction, plan design and pricing) support a 2026 margin rebound .
- HRScale presents a credible new growth driver with premium pricing and strong enterprise/mid‑market interest; early execution milestones de‑risk the program .
- Operating discipline is intact (OpEx down YoY); continued cost control plus AI-enabled efficiencies can enhance operating leverage as gross margin normalizes .
- Mix management and pricing should improve unit economics; retention remains strong, and sales efficiency is up despite a smaller salesforce .
- FY25 guide now embeds a conservative posture; watch Q4 benefit trend trajectory, January conversion pipeline, and early 2026 HRScale client adds for inflection signals .
- Dividend remains intact ($0.60 quarterly declared in May); balance sheet liquidity includes $280M available on revolver and adjusted cash of $120M at Q3 .
- Risk factors: persistence of industry healthcare inflation, macro/SMB hiring softness, and HRScale commercialization pace.
Additional Press Releases During the Period
- Updated HR solutions portfolio (HR360, HRCore, HRScale) announced July 31, 2025, outlining strategy and expanded addressable market .
- Contractor Management powered by Wingspan announced July 22, 2025, broadening product portfolio .