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Strategic Education, Inc. (STRA)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q3 2025 delivered a quality beat: adjusted diluted EPS rose to $1.64, up 41% YoY, driven by a 39% increase in adjusted operating income and 400 bps adjusted margin expansion on constant currency; ETS grew revenue 46% YoY while USHE margins improved significantly .
  • Versus S&P Global consensus, STRA posted a material EPS beat and a revenue beat in Q3; Q2 showed an EPS beat with a slight revenue miss, and Q1 was a clean beat on both EPS and revenue (see Estimates Context)*.
  • Strategic levers: employer-affiliated enrollment hit a record 32.7% of USHE enrollment; healthcare now 49% of USHE enrollment; ETS’ Sophia revenue +42% YoY and Workforce Edge at 80 corporate agreements .
  • ANZ remains pressured by Australian regulatory limits on international students; domestic enrollment is improving and international caps are guided to increase 3% in 2026, supporting a path back to new student growth in 2026 .
  • Capital allocation: consistent $0.60 dividend, ~429k shares repurchased ($34m) in Q3 and $94m YTD, with $134m remaining authorization; productivity program targeting ~$100m OpEx savings by end-2027 is a medium-term margin catalyst .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • ETS surged: revenue +45.6% YoY to $38.3m and operating income +48% to $16.0m; Sophia revenue +42% to $17.8m; ETS margin held at ~41.7% despite a 44% expense increase .
  • USHE margin inflection: revenue +2.6% YoY to $213.1m; operating income nearly doubled to $22.9m; operating margin expanded 520 bps YoY to 10.7% on lower drops, higher seats per student, and less discounting .
  • Management confidence and structural levers: “We are very anchored on our notional model… nothing… leads me to believe that we won’t be able to hit the targets” and a company-wide productivity initiative targeting “upwards of $100 million” OpEx savings by end-2027 .

What Went Wrong

  • ANZ headwinds: revenue -4.7% YoY to $68.6m and operating income down to $12.5m, driven by lower international enrollment and FX; operating margin slipped to 18.2% (constant currency revenue -2.3%) .
  • RN-to-BSN softness: Capella’s RN-to-BSN program (post-licensure) saw “a little softness” through 2025, despite strong employer-affiliated enrollment .
  • Bad debt expense ticked up: consolidated bad debt expense rose to 4.7% of revenue vs 4.5% a year ago .

Financial Results

Consolidated Performance (GAAP and Adjusted)

MetricQ1 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025
Revenue ($USD Millions)$303.6 $321.5 $319.9
Diluted EPS (GAAP) ($)$1.24 $1.37 $1.15
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($)$1.30 $1.52 $1.63
Adjusted Diluted EPS (Constant Currency) ($)$1.29 $1.54 $1.64
Operating Margin (GAAP) (%)13.1% 14.2% 11.6%
Adjusted Operating Margin (Constant Currency) (%)13.6% 15.2% 16.1%
Adjusted EBITDA ($USD Millions)$60.0 $68.3 $69.6

Actuals vs Consensus (S&P Global)*

MetricQ1 2025Q2 2025Q3 2025
Primary EPS – Actual ($)1.301.521.63
Primary EPS – Consensus Mean ($)0.961.431.30
EPS Surprise ($)+0.34+0.09+0.33
Revenue – Actual ($USD Millions)303.6321.5319.9
Revenue – Consensus Mean ($USD Millions)300.7322.8314.7
Revenue Surprise ($USD Millions)+2.9-1.3+5.2
EBITDA – Actual ($USD Millions)52.960.563.3
EBITDA – Consensus Mean ($USD Millions)48.764.561.1
EBITDA Surprise ($USD Millions)+4.2-4.0+2.2
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*

Segment Breakdown (Q3)

SegmentQ3 2024 Revenue ($USD Millions)Q3 2025 Revenue ($USD Millions)YoY (%)Q3 2024 Op Inc ($USD Millions)Q3 2025 Op Inc ($USD Millions)YoY (%)
U.S. Higher Education (USHE)$207.7 $213.1 +2.6% $11.4 $22.9 +100%+
Australia/New Zealand (ANZ)$71.9 $68.6 -4.7% $14.8 $12.5 -15.5%
Education Technology Services (ETS)$26.3 $38.3 +45.6% $10.8 $16.0 +48.1%

KPIs and Operating Drivers

KPIQ3 2024Q3 2025Notes
USHE Total Enrollment86,533 85,640 Slight decline YoY
Employer-Affiliated Enrollment (% of USHE)29.8% 32.7% Record high
USHE Healthcare (% of USHE)46% 49% Healthcare total enrollment +7% YoY
FlexPath (% of USHE)24% 24% Stable
Sophia Learning Revenue ($USD Millions)$12.5 $17.8 +42% YoY
ETS Operating Margin (%)41.0% 41.7% Slightly higher YoY
Workforce Edge Corporate Agreements80 ~3.87m employees covered
ANZ Total Enrollment19,205 18,808 -2.1% YoY
Bad Debt (% of Revenue)4.5% 4.7% Slight uptick
Cash + Securities ($USD Millions)$182.6 9/30/25

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Dividend per shareQ4 2025 payment (Dec 8)$0.60 (ongoing quarterly) $0.60 declared for Dec 8, 2025 Maintained
Share Repurchase Authorization RemainingThrough YE 2025$134 million remaining at Q3-end New update
Productivity Initiative (OpEx savings)Through YE 2027Targeting ~$100 million savings by end-2027; ~$30 million run-rate already executed New quantified plan
ANZ International Caps2026Australian gov’t guidance for +3% cap increase in 2026 Raised capacity outlook
Company Targets (Notional Model)2026Investor Day notional frameworkReaffirmed alignment with notional framework Reaffirmed

Note: STRA did not issue explicit revenue/EBITDA/EPS formal guidance ranges this quarter in filings or on the call .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q1 2025)Previous Mentions (Q2 2025)Current Period (Q3 2025)Trend
Employer Partnerships & Workforce Edge78 agreements; strong ramp; Best Buy expansion; Sophia-first pathway ahead of plan 80 agreements; onboarding large employer; strong revenue from new partner 80 agreements; ETS operating income now ~1/3 of consolidated; strong employer-affiliated enrollment Strengthening
ETS Growth (Sophia, margins)Sophia subs +37%; ETS margin 40.3%; investing to scale ETS rev +50%, margin ~41%; significant contributor ETS rev +46%, margin 41.7%; Sophia rev +42% Sustained high growth
USHE Enrollment/MarginSlight enrollment up; revenue +0.8%; margin 13.6%; persistence stable Enrollment -0.8%; rev -0.5%; margin +40 bps Enrollment -1%; rev +2.6%; op margin +520 bps; revenue/student tailwinds Improving margin
ANZ Regulatory EnvironmentTransfer verification rule impacts international; domestic marketing ramp Domestic mix increasing; anniversary declines in early 2026 Caps to rise 3% in 2026; domestic enrollment improving; new student growth expected in 2026 Gradual improvement outlook
Productivity/AI-driven OpExAdjusted OpEx up ~2.9% Q1; planned investments Disciplined OpEx; margin expansion Company-wide initiative targeting ~$100m OpEx savings by 2027 Accelerating cost actions
Regulatory (U.S.)Watching “One Big Beautiful Bill”; limited expected adverse impact Employer tuition assistance cap increase seen positive; indexing to inflation No incremental U.S. regulatory negatives flagged; limited shutdown exposure Neutral-to-positive
Healthcare ProgramsHealthcare ~50% of USHE; strong demand Healthcare total enrollment +8% YoY Healthcare total enrollment +7% YoY; RN-to-BSN softness Mixed: portfolio strong, RN-to-BSN softer

Management Commentary

  • “We continue to advance our efforts to leverage technology, resulting in operating expense growth of less than 1%, operating income growth of 39%, and a 400 basis point margin expansion… Adjusted earnings were $1.64 compared to $1.16 from the prior year, an increase of 41%.”
  • “Our expectation is that we'll probably be able to save upwards of $100 million in operating expenses by the end of 2027.”
  • “Employer-affiliated enrollment… increased approximately 8% from the prior year and now represents 33% of all U.S. higher education enrollment, an increase of 290 basis points from the prior year.”
  • “We are encouraged by… recent guidance from the Australian government that our international caps will increase 3% in 2026.”
  • “We are very anchored on our notional model… nothing… leads me to believe that we won't be able to hit the targets that we laid out at our investor day.”

Q&A Highlights

  • USHE revenue per student strength and margin drivers: CFO cited fewer drops, higher seats per student, and lower discounts; management flagged aggressive productivity initiative with six AI/technology categories touching all parts of the organization .
  • Strayer vs Capella: Capella stronger; Strayer pressured by non-affiliated students; marketing dollars proving more efficient at Capella; USHE team optimizing for overall division growth .
  • ANZ trajectory: International transfer verification headwinds; expectation for new student growth beginning 1H 2026; total enrollment growth by end-2026 is a stretch but plausible; international caps up 3% in 2026 .
  • RN-to-BSN program: softness throughout 2025 noted; advantage from employer-affiliated enrollment .
  • Government shutdown exposure: negligible; limited direct military student presence and major clients (CVS, Best Buy, Dollar General) not materially impacted .

Estimates Context

  • Q3 2025: EPS beat ($1.63 actual vs $1.30 consensus) and revenue beat ($319.9m vs $314.7m consensus); EBITDA beat ($63.3m vs $61.1m consensus)*.
  • Q2 2025: EPS beat ($1.52 vs $1.43 consensus), slight revenue miss ($321.5m vs $322.8m), EBITDA miss ($60.5m vs $64.5m)*.
  • Q1 2025: Clean beats on EPS ($1.30 vs $0.96) and revenue ($303.6m vs $300.7m), EBITDA beat ($52.9m vs $48.7m).
    Values retrieved from S&P Global.

Implication: Street likely revises higher on ETS and USHE margin trajectory; ANZ remains a modeling headwind near-term given FX and international constraints, but 2026 domestic/new student growth and cap increase may ameliorate.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Quality beat driven by ETS scale and USHE margin expansion; adjusted EPS up 41% YoY with strong execution and productivity levers—positioning for continued margin improvement .
  • ETS remains the growth engine (Sophia +42% revenue, ETS +46% revenue); Workforce Edge at 80 agreements broadens funnel; expect ETS mix of operating income to keep rising .
  • USHE resilience: employer-affiliated enrollment at record levels and higher revenue/student offset enrollment softness; ongoing optimization between Strayer and Capella should support mid-single-digit growth trajectory over time .
  • ANZ is a 2026 story: domestic strength and regulatory relief (cap +3%) underpin a path to new student growth; near-term FX and international limits keep pressure on margins .
  • Cost program is a valuation catalyst: ~$100m targeted OpEx savings by 2027, with ~$30m already in motion; expect further operating leverage as initiatives scale .
  • Capital returns: consistent dividend and active buybacks ($94m YTD; $134m authorization left) provide downside support and signal confidence .
  • Trading setup: near-term upside bias tied to sustained ETS momentum and USHE margin gains; watch RN-to-BSN softness and ANZ regulatory cadence; any incremental employer partnership wins or AI-driven cost savings disclosures could be stock-positive .