Chegg, Inc. (CHGG) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Greetings. And welcome to Chegg, Inc. First Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Tracey Ford, Vice President of Investor Relations for Chegg. Thank you. You may begin. Tracey Ford: Good afternoon. Thank you for joining Chegg’s first quarter 2021 conference call. On today’s call are Dan Rosensweig, Co-Chairperson and CEO; and Andy Brown, Chief Financial Officer. A copy of our earnings press release along with our investor presentation is available on our Investor Relations website investor.chegg.com. A replay of this call will also be available on our website. We routinely post information on our website and intend to make important announcements on our media center website at chegg.com/mediacenter. We encourage you to make use of these resources. Before we begin, I would like to point out that during the course of this call, we will make forward-looking statements regarding future events, including the future financial and operating performance of the company. These forward-looking statements are subject to material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. We caution you to consider the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statement. In particular, we refer you to the cautionary language included in today’s earnings release and the risk factors described in Chegg’s annual report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 22, 2021, as well as our other filings with the SEC. Any forward-looking statements that we make today are based on assumptions that we believe to be reasonable as of this date. We undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events. During this call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measure. Our GAAP results and GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation can be found in our earnings press release and the investor slide deck found in our IR website investor.chegg.com. We also recommend you review the investor data sheet, which is also posted in our IR website. Now, I will turn the call over to Dan. Dan Rosensweig: Thank you, Tracey, and welcome everyone to Chegg’s Q1 2021 earnings call. Even as COVID is receding in the United States, we know many are still dealing with real challenges. So we hope all of you and your families are healthy and well. And despite the ongoing global uncertainty, Chegg has had a tremendous start to the year. I want to thank our team for their focus and execution to deliver on our student-first mission to ensure learners around the world have the support and the resources they need. Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Jeff Silber with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Jeff Silber: Thank you so much. The beginning of your prepared remarks, Dan, you talked about the significant international growth. I just was wondering if we can get little bit more color, where are you seeing the growth? And how should we think about that going forward? Thanks. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, thank you for asking. And look, we are seeing great growth everywhere to be honest with you, obviously domestically, it's stronger than even we would have imagined. Internationally, we're seeing similar levels of growth, just some are off larger bases and some are off smaller bases. So in the English speaking countries, particularly Canada, Australia, we're seeing what you'd expect us to see and then there are the surprises that are just keep doing really well, like turkey or Asia. So it's not limited. It's - if you have a country that is large enough subset of your students are learning stem and speak English, they are we're discovering Chegg in significant ways. And that will benefit our growth for years to come. And it validates as I did put it, my prepared remarks that what we built really as a global learning tool. There's more for us to do. We're really just at the beginning, we have a lot more investment in the infrastructure to do, but it's an exciting time for growth. Jeff Silber: All right, thanks so much. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jason Celino with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Jason Celino: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe just one clarification on Mathway, because I think, Andy, you mentioned that contributed 12 points to growth in the quarter. You know, if I annualize this, it's roughly a $48 million run rate. I think when you acquired it, it was closer like a $20 million run rate. So for the run rates more than double in less than a year since you acquired it, is this fair to think the sub base also followed trends to this magnitude? Thank you. Andy Brown: Well, yeah, and what we talked about in the prepared remarks was that it was approximately 12% of the growth. So it's not $12 million. I just want to be clear with that, but the important fact here is that when we acquire businesses, they typically accelerate under our management, you know, and it's not just our management's, the brand, is all of the things that Chegg brings to an acquired company. And if you can kind of replay back what we said, about a year ago, when we acquired Mathway, we said it was 9%, we saw, you know, they contributed 9% of the subscribers, and now it's 12%. So it is accelerating the way we would expect. And truth be told, it's done much better than we'd originally expected. And it's contributing really nice. A, to subscribers, as I just mentioned, but likewise, with revenue. So yeah, we're super happy with the acquisition of Mathway. Jason Celino: Thank you. Dan Rosensweig: And you should also just remember numerically, that Mathway in 995 sub versus 1495, project study and 1995 project study pack. And so - but, you know, as Andy points out, it seeing acceleration beyond any of our expectations, frankly, the whole businesses. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Josh Baer with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Josh Baer: Thanks. Just on that point on the top point contribution that was on subscribers, right. Just want to make sure not on subscription - not on services revenue? Andy Brown: Exactly. That was on subscribers, when you looked at the revenue - when you look at our subscriber growth 12 points that that was attributable to Mathway. That is correct. Josh Baer: Right. And then to count as a subscriber for Mathway, is that paid subscribers? Andy Brown: Anytime we talk about a subscriber on any one of our products, that means somebody has paid for a subscription. That is correct. Josh Baer: Okay, perfect. Thank you. I wanted to ask, just get your update on bundle adoption and ARPU uplift, I guess with Mathway and Thinkful, and some of the other revenue lines and services, sometimes it's hard to unpack. So just checking in on what you're seeing for new subscribers, existing subscribers, if there's any big differences in rolling that out, domestically versus internationally and like underlying everything. You know, how is ARPU uplift tracking? Dan Rosensweig: Okay. This is Dan, I'll try my best there was a lot in that question. Josh Baer: No, no… Dan Rosensweig: The good news is all of the answers will be positive because everything is frankly positive. So if we were and we don't, to break out each of the services business, you would see that the ARPU for Chegg study and Chegg study pack are in fact up. That was the desired goal because a larger percentage of Chegg study, Chegg study pack customers that are new to us are opting for Chegg study pack, which is great. So this is you know, it's really just a little - it's a year old since we've launched it. So we're seeing higher take rate domestically, we're seeing higher take rate and similar take rates, surprisingly, in a positive way to us. Internationally, we're seeing engagement, similarly, domestically and internationally, and we're seeing the same types of ramp for renewals. So what I would say is across the board, it's a very big win for what our expectations were and is obviously already contributing, but we’ll contribute significantly in the out years because remember, we're only really marketing this to new customers, which means our existing customers, they could upgrade but we're not really trying to do that. So they're staying where they are. And that means next year in the year after a higher percentage of our base that will be renewing will be renewing at the 1995 number versus the 1495 number. So this is a long term plan to give students more value, more overwhelming value for their money. They're opting for it at a higher clip and they're engaging and renewing at it at a really strong rate. It's so far really good. Josh Baer: Great, thank you for the question. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Ryan MacDonald with Needham and Company. Please proceed with your question. Ryan MacDonald: Thanks for taking my questions. Congrats on a nice quarter. Andy, I guess the questions for you here. Can you talk us - walk us through some of the assumptions on the full year, updated full year guide. Obviously a very strong Q1, but perhaps not all of that being flowing through to the updated full year outlook. Is there something one time there on the record material side or perhaps conservatism around, you know, retention rates as camp - students go back to campus, can you just walk us through those assumptions. Thanks. Andy Brown: Yeah. Well, thanks for the question. Yeah. So real simply, it's super early. And I think as you are aware, we now updated our - increased our guidance twice, since giving really early guidance in November, so it's super early. And there are some things that are happening, you know, as we're - there's certain what I call uncertainties that we want to - we don't want get ahead of our skis. Things like, you know, like, as we lap through COVID, as we lap through some of the account sharings, we're lapping Mathway. And so that's what's gone into the thought and once again, not a significant change from what we've seen - how we've done things in the past. And so you know, and on top of that, if you think about this, you know, at the high end of our guidance range, we're almost two x where we were two years ago. So on a much bigger base. So all of those went into consideration. And we believe it's a strong guide up. Dan Rosensweig: And if I could just add, answer one of the questions that that you asked, you know, there's a lot of people that I think are confusing whether Chegg is a back to work, back to not work, we're neither of those things. We - as long as students are in school, they want, they need and they're using Chegg, it doesn't matter the geography, physical location. So we have looked at all of the data, if you were back at school, and in classroom, if you were back to school, and in classroom, some time, but not the rest or if you were at home, your conversion levels, your engagement levels, your renewal levels, are almost identical. So we are not affected by whether schools teach online or offline or teach hybrid, the only thing that could affect us, which isn't the case, is if there was no school, and it happened, it's not what's happening. That is not what happened. It's not what's happening. And so as we come to an end of COVID, it's not going to affect us negatively at all. And a lot of people have, you know, have said here had a lot to do with COVID. The reason it had to do with COVID was two things, one internationally, students around the world discovered us for the first time and as they went back to campus, in effect their growth rates or their engagement or their renewals in any negative way. So that's great. Second, is in the US, we've been working on account sharing efforts. And those account sharing efforts were benefited from the fact that students left campus and couldn't proximity shares, sit next to somebody in share. But as you know, we have done a lot of work to block all those things. So as students went back to school, and they lived in pods, or they went to classrooms and most of their pods were people in the same class. So we saw only the positive impact of what we've done in account sharing. So you know, we are not a COVID case in any way in terms of going back or staying home. If you're in school, you want Chegg. And it's - and we have the numbers that back that up. Ryan MacDonald: And that strong usage and retention data certainly shows up in our work as well. Congrats again. Thanks. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah. Thanks. Ryan MacDonald: Thank you, great quarter for us. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Doug Anmuth with JPMorgan. Pleased proceed with your question. Doug Anmuth: Thanks for taking the questions. Andy you mentioned to through regards to the guidance, some of the uncertainties, just as you're lapping COVID and then account sharing and Mathway. We just hope you can talk a little bit more on account sharing. I think in your comments Dan you just talks about how it's helping customer acquisition and increased LTV. Can you just talk about you know, add a little bit more color on that and then if there's any next steps, kind of following those, the multi factor authentication, implementation in just - you know, I guess how you think about lapping account sharing or what the timing is of that? Thanks. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, I'll start Doug. So it's very difficult to know where we are, you know, people have asked what inning are you in? And our answer is, I think it's more like cricket, which is the game never ends. That we are going to be working on account sharing, we're going to be working on account fraud, we're going to be working on all of the things that anybody who has a cyber business needs to do. But what we know is its impact is positive. And it's forever in that as that base gets bigger, since they already knew Chegg, our renewal rates are going up, because they already knew it, and they wanted it. So that helps everything from subscriber growth to revenue to LTV. And so it's just been very, very positive. It's, it's difficult to know, like how to value it in terms of, you know, lapping or not lapping, I think what we're seeing is continued outstanding growth. And just to go back to something that Andy pointed out earlier, we've grown 100% in two years. And we're still seeing our growth rates are going to be what we expected them to be two years ago on top of a much smaller base, that is a result of doing better, providing even more value, adding the bundle, growing internationally and account sharing, how much we ascribe to each one is difficult to do. But overall, it is clearly working. Doug Anmuth: Okay. And maybe Andy just a follow up. Just on 2Q, its looks like - just from a sequential perspective, Chegg services is up some, required materials is down sequentially. Is that, you know, basically what you pointed out in terms of the 1Q benefit of more sales in the quarter. Can you just clarify that? Andy Brown: Yeah. Well, that's exactly Doug. When we do it - when we do a sale, we recognize the revenue immediately. When we do a rental, we recognize it over the period of the semester, which is basically call it five months for sake of argument. And so we got much more - a much larger contribution in Q1 as a result of that. And we're getting a less of a contribution because there was less - there were less rentals during this rush period. So that's exactly. Doug Anmuth: And any idea why it skewed more towards sales maybe than you expect? Andy Brown: Well, it can vary semester by semester, right? Some that can be the pricing some of the - what the habits that students have. But this semester, we just saw it and kind of right in the middle of Russia where we saw more and more sales. And we're ambivalent one way or another, what we want to do is service the student, and whatever the student wants we were willing to service them with. And, you know, like I said, as a result, we saw a bigger contribution in Q1 from required materials - will be – its slightly less than Q2, but either way, kind of washes itself out over this course of the semester, which is two quarters. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, Doug, if I would just to add one small point to that. I do think it's because students are home and it's harder for them to find a place to ship them back, because they didn't want to go out for COVID. So just buying the book and not having to ship it back was probably easier for them. But as Andy points out financially, we're sort of agnostic over time. Doug Anmuth: Yeah. Great, thank you. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Brian Peterson with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question. Brian Peterson: Hi, thanks for taking the question. And congrats on the strong results. So maybe a higher level one for me, you know, just understanding the success that you've had both domestically and internationally. I'm curious, you know, your appetite to really hit the gas on sales and marketing investments. Just think about the balance between growth and profitability, especially given the success you've had, you know, especially in international markets? Thanks. A - Dan Rosensweig Yeah, it's Dan, you know, as Andy is a controller of the first strings, I'll add some color to this. But we have - you know, look, I've been around a long time, I just turned 60. And I've never really seeing with the exception of maybe Google search of business like this one. Meaning its growth rates, its gross margins, its EBITDA margins, its ratio of EBITDA margins to free cash flow. We are not trying to manage to any particular number except growth. So when we see an opportunity to invest, we do it. We're not holding back anything. We're not concerned about those things. It's just - it's a model that yields incredible profitability, and at scale, it even gets better. And, you know, I'm not even sure anybody else in Ed Tech is profitable, and look how profitable we are in total, let alone any direct to consumer subscription company. So, you know, it's not like - it's not like we're holding back, putting money down. If we - you know, most of our investment and we've upped that investment significantly is in content, because content ultimately is what attracts and keeps the student. So we will continue to invest in the quality of content and the integrity of that content in the modalities of that content and the volume of that content and the language of that content. And honestly, that is the single greatest investment that we can make on behalf of the students, our investors, us. And it also happens to have just a great ROI. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Sheldon with William Blair. Please proceed with your question. Stephen Sheldon: Hi, thanks. On international, can you talk more about how international subs are finding your platform? I think most are finding it - finding it through SEO efforts. But have you started to notice or track against any positive word of mouth referral dynamics in international markets? And is that something that could pick up here over the next couple of years similar to what you've seen, nevertheless, four to five in US markets? Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, great question. And the answer is yes. And yes. So what do I mean by that? Which is, of the investments we've been making for years is SEO. And as I mentioned, in the response to the previous question, which has also been, which is, you know, to put the gas down on it, the answer is we have, and we can, and we will, and it really comes down to content. So you're right. Overwhelmingly people discover us through SEO. We're blessed in that we have 59 million questions and answers in our database of which we own the answers to all of those. And it's growing at about 17 million new ones, which come directly from students that have already paid us, which means that question then gets indexed into search, and more students from that same class, discover us. So that's actually one interesting version of word of mouth. But you're right, when we look at how we grow, first we grow through search, then it starts to happen on a per campus basis. And most of that is the morality of word of mouth, which is roommate says the roommate or friend says to friend, then what happens is they go home and during the holidays, and then they whatever their holiday is, and then they tell the rest of the people in their community. And then we start to grow in other places. So it's a lot like how the original Facebook was grown campus by campus. And we're planting seeds in every campus through search, and then it does blossom. And we do see it because we do track not only by the country, we do track by the school and by the subject in the school. So we've seen that already start to happen. Stephen Sheldon: Great, thank you. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Alex Fuhrman with Craig-Hallum Capital Group. Please proceed with your question. Alex Fuhrman: Great, thanks very much for taking my question. You know, now that international is becoming such a bigger part of the business and you have so many more students in your subscriber base. I'm curious if you could talk a little bit about how they compare to your US students in terms of demographics, or how long they're staying with Chegg or their proclivity to password share or anything else do you think would be relevant will be very helpful. Thanks. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, I, as we mentioned in the prepared remarks and an answer to one of the other questions, here's what we're seeing that's just really, really great, which is we're seeing - we're seeing take rates to the bundle being similar US, non-US, we're seeing engagement in CS, and engagement in CSP, looking the same globally and internationally. And then we are seeing renewal rates. So in each of those areas, we're beginning, you know, we're beginning to see the growth that we would have expected maybe just a little bit earlier than we expected it. But all the signs are that what we have built, at least for the English speaking stem audience that we're currently working with, is as a global product. They're using the same textbooks, by the way, for the most part all through the world. There's five publishers, which essentially control most of the curriculum and content that is taught, and whether it's in Africa or whether it's in New Jersey. Alex Fuhrman: That's right. Thank you very much. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Eric Martinuzzi with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Eric Martinuzzi: Yeah, I was curious on the headcount where we finished out headcount for the company at the end of March. And then what's you’re targeting for year end? And then follow up to that. I assume we're going to be adding heads just curious to know, what areas where are the growth investments in human capital taking place at Chegg? Andy Brown: Yeah, so I'll take a stab at the first one there, first thing is we don't actually give out formally headcount information. We did exit the year with full time and part time employees that were on a payroll of approximately 1900 employees. And, you know, lead about 50% of those employees are overseas. So as far as adding headcount, are we hiring? The answer is absolutely yes, we are hiring. We're hiring into many positions across the company, particularly in technical positions. And we would anticipate that our headcount as we exit this year, is likely - is going to be - is likely to be higher. You want to add anything on that Dan or not? Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, I think look in the categories, I think you can guess what they are, which is we're investing across the board, but it's always in content, content matching, search, AI, machine learning, data science, those are the areas, what is our objective? Our objective is, how do we get all 59 million pieces of content to be discovered by the person that wants to discover them faster than they otherwise would have. And as we get deeper and deeper and deeper into the next chapter of the user experience, which will be personalization, you know, we'll start programming for students in advance before they even know what it is they're coming to look for. So it's always around things that have to do with improving the user experience and the quality, the good news is, the rest of the business is able to scale with the amount of employees that we have. And that's why our margins keep getting better. Eric Martinuzzi: Just specificity on the number that 1900 at the end of December of 2020. Andy, is there a target number? Or is there a plan number that's been discussed that it grows 10%, 15%? Andy Brown: We discussed that internally. We don't discuss it externally. So yes, do we have a headcount plan internally? The answer is absolutely yes. They're clearly targeted areas where we can continue to grow our company, whether it's, you know, technical, whether it's in content development, whatever it may be. But as far as discussing that externally, the answer is no. But yeah, we do have an internal plan. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Mike Grondahl with Northland Securities. Please proceed with your question. Mike Grondahl: Hey, thanks, guys. Just on the password sharing. Was there anything new or incremental that was sort of launched or kind of put forth during the quarter? Dan Rosensweig: I wouldn't say that there was anything new in terms of - you know, we laid out for you all what we've been doing for a year and a half and the quarters that we're doing it in the launch stage. But what happens is use technology and use data science and use AI to improve upon it. So you know, every day we learn more about what the wrong behavior looks like, and we're able to continue to eliminate it in advance. So I would say that incrementally, there's - I mean, it's incremental every hour of every day, because as we learn more, that's the beauty of technology and machine learning. We use that to our advantage. And as we grow internationally, we apply that same thing internationally. So I don't believe we had some significantly, big new launch just a lot better at the launches that we did last August and last October. Mike Grondahl: Great, thank you. Dan Rosensweig: Yeah. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Brett Knoblauch with Berenberg Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Brett Knoblauch: Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question. I want to focus a bit more on the skills opportunity in your prepared remarks, you talked a good bit about it. Can you maybe just provide a little more color on your approach? Is this going to be maybe an offshoot to the Chegg platform, you know, keep that direct to student model? Is this something to make thinkful bigger in terms of expanding the thinkful content? Or, you know, would it be likely to pursue kind of an opportunity - opportunistic acquisition in this space to really expand into the skills market a bit more? Dan Rosensweig: Yeah, a very - you know, all these questions have been thoughtful. This one, I think the answer is going to be all of the above. Which means we - when we enter market, the goal is to win. And when we see something like the skills market, which we believe over time will be larger than the academic support market, which you can see how fast the academic sport market is growing and how we continue to capture market share and expand, expand our TAM and grow internationally. So, you know, for us, we prefer and we focus on direct model. And in the direct model, you know, thankful to direct model, we do have a partner with ASU and we might have other partners, but overwhelmingly we like to go directly to the person who needs to pay, because they value it the most, they completed the highest as the most employable. And so we focused a great deal on that. Now, what - you know, what is our strategy, you know, without giving too much away, and we've talked about most of this before, which is we want to continue to expand the content categories, to the ones that are the fastest growing segments of the market, we'd like the people that go through our platform to become employable in three to six months with little or no debt in a tech enabled job, or a better tech enabled job. And we intend to differentiate on not just the quality of the curriculum. But I think for us more uniquely on two things, one, we have the ability to do a lower price than anybody and still make money, because of going direct and because of leverage we have at our scale. And then second, is our support, our ability to support the student through the process. So everything we've invested in for 11 years, in terms of a support platform for academic study applies directly to what people are doing through the faithful platform. And so we've already begun to enable all of the classes now with instant direct Q&A. From there, we're building databases, similar to Chegg study, and then we keep the live Q&A in it. And that helps people finish, and it helps people get jobs better, because they get rewarded for really understanding the concepts and then getting employed. And so that is our vision for it. Whether or not we go something other than direct to student, I think is just - is something we could determine over time. But it's not a priority for us. Brett Knoblauch: Understood. And if you had to rank, you know, over five years, the growth opportunity, where would this sit versus the international opportunity? Dan Rosensweig: Well, you know, I'm probably one of the few CEOs that truly gets to say, they're both huge. And I don't want to have to pick because I'm not going to pick, meaning we're going to invest in both, we are investing in both. And, you know, I think international will come faster than sales and be more profitable, significantly more profitable sooner than skills. But I think over time, when you look at how many people need to be upskilled or rescaled, or skilled, and you look at the cost of that, versus 1495 or 1995 a month, I think you see revenue opportunities that will be bigger. But I think if you rank them all, you would say domestic, international and skills, with skills over time potentially having the largest dollar TAM and international being - international support being as large if not larger than the US. Andy pointed that out before just do the physical number of people. And then - but the US still have a lot of growth ahead of it. I mean, we were very specific about saying that the US growth has not at all moderated yet. And I think people just underestimate how large this market is. And the growth that you don't see, because most people focus on the four year schools and all that kind of stuff is the growth of online not for profit schools is going through the roof. So those schools more than made up the losses of students that were unable to afford or attend community colleges, which I think was like half a million. So I mean, this is the future of online learning. It's just such a big opportunity for Chegg regardless of where it is in the world. Brett Knoblauch: Understood. Thanks so much. Appreciate it. Brett Knoblauch: Yeah, thank you. Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Brent Thill with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Unidentified Analyst: Hi, it's Avi on for Brent. Thanks for the question. And congrats on a great quarter. Given you guys got the 35% EBIT margin for the year, what are some of the key drivers of expanding margins? And where do you ultimately think the ceiling is? Do you foresee a 40% plus bottom line story in the future, given such strong unit economics? Thanks. Dan Rosensweig: Okay. So first thing is, and I get this question a lot that, you know, we're not at a steady state object, and we're not close to a steady state. We're continuing to grow and as you can see from our historical results, the significant leverage in the model, and how do we get that leverage? We talked about it a little bit in the prepared remarks, right. You've got 85% or more of our subscribers come on through unpaid sources. So we're not paying - we're not paying guts for marketing, we've got a content, now almost 60 million pieces of content that are all relevant across mostly irrelevant, relevant across the globe. So that allows us to scale and get leverage. And so there's a ton left on us. So we don't - we haven't set ourselves, we haven't set EBITDA margin targets, they're certainly higher than they are today, we just added another 100 bps to our guidance, that gets us 300 bps over what - where we were last year. And that was up 200 bps from the year before. So you can see that there's a lot of leverage in the model. And we're not founding it. We think that leverage continues for many, many years. Unidentified Analyst: Great, thanks. Operator: There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to hand the call back over to Dan Rosensweig for closing remarks. Dan Rosensweig: Thank you, everyone. Look, as you can see, the opportunity for Chegg is just enormous, and we are executing against it. But even while this is happening for us, and I think everybody, it's more important to recognize that well, we may be slowly recovering from the global pandemic here in the US. It continues to have a terrible impact in many regions of the world, especially in India, where we have so many employees that lived and work and are helping drive this incredible growth that you're seeing. So, you know, despite what they're dealing with, the team has continued to stay focused on our student first mission and have supported one another. And I really cannot be more grateful and proud of them. So I want to take a moment to send our thoughts, and well wishes to all our Chegg family in India and on behalf of Chegg management team and our board. We are one team now more than ever. Because of that I know that just as the world comes through this period in our history stronger than ever so well the Chegg team. And for our investors, you can tell we are fired up and excited about what's ahead of us. We just see enormous opportunities for continued growth, increased profitability, but more importantly for all of us here at Chegg the impact of millions of students lives around the world who are increasingly depending on Chegg to help them supplement what they learn or aren't able to learn in the classroom. So we're going to continue to execute, stay focused on our student first mission, and we really appreciate you all for joining the call. We're proud of our results and we look forward to talking to you again in a quarter. Thanks, everybody. Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time. And have a wonderful day.
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Chegg Inc. (CHGG) Price Target Adjusted by BMO Capital Analyst

Analyst Adjusts Chegg Inc. (CHGG) Price Target

Jeffrey Silber of BMO Capital has recently adjusted the price target for Chegg Inc. (CHGG), setting it at $7, which is a notable change from its previous target. This adjustment was made on May 1, 2024, and suggests a potential upside of about 35.4% from the stock's price at the time of the announcement, which stood at $5.17. This new price target is a reflection of the analyst's updated view on the company's future performance and potential growth. For those interested in the detailed analysis behind this new target, the full report is available on TheFly.

Chegg has been through a rough patch recently, with its stock price experiencing a significant drop of 27.49% over the past four weeks. Despite this downturn, there are signs that the stock might be ready for a rebound. Currently, Chegg's stock is considered to be in technically oversold territory. This indicates that the intense selling pressure that has driven the stock's price down might be easing up, setting the stage for a potential recovery. This perspective is supported by the fact that Wall Street analysts have been revising their earnings estimates for Chegg upwards, suggesting a growing optimism about the company's financial outlook.

On a more granular level, Chegg's stock has shown some signs of recovery, with a recent increase of approximately 3.09% to $5.33. This uptick, albeit modest, is a positive sign against the backdrop of its recent performance. The stock has seen fluctuations, trading between a low of $4.96 and a high of $5.37 during the trading day. This volatility reflects the uncertain environment Chegg is navigating but also highlights the potential for recovery as indicated by the recent price movement.

Over the past year, Chegg's shares have seen a wide range of trading prices, from as high as $13.11 to as low as $4.96. This volatility underscores the challenges the company has faced, as well as the potential for significant price movements. With a current market capitalization of approximately $548.72 million and a trading volume of about 1.91 million shares, Chegg remains a notable player in its sector. The company's market position, combined with the recent adjustments in analyst expectations and the technical indicators of a potential turnaround, suggests that Chegg could be on the path to recovery, aligning with Jeffrey Silber's revised price target.

Chegg Shares Drop 13% on Weak Guidance

After releasing its Q3 results, Chegg (NYSE:CHGG) shares experienced a more than 13% decline intra-day today. Although the company reported an EPS of $0.18 and revenues of $157.9 million, surpassing the Street estimates of $0.17 and $152.18 million respectively, its outlook for Q4 appeared weak.

Subscription services, which formed 89% of the total net revenues, decreased by 4% year-over-year, reaching $139.9 million.

CEO Dan Rosensweig emphasized Chegg's potential, stating the company's vision to create a powerful, AI-driven personal learning assistant, aiming to serve more students efficiently and at a lower cost.

For the upcoming Q4/23, Chegg anticipates revenue to hover between $185 million and $187 million, with Subscription Services revenue projected between $164-$166 million.

Chegg Shares Drop 13% on Weak Guidance

After releasing its Q3 results, Chegg (NYSE:CHGG) shares experienced a more than 13% decline intra-day today. Although the company reported an EPS of $0.18 and revenues of $157.9 million, surpassing the Street estimates of $0.17 and $152.18 million respectively, its outlook for Q4 appeared weak.

Subscription services, which formed 89% of the total net revenues, decreased by 4% year-over-year, reaching $139.9 million.

CEO Dan Rosensweig emphasized Chegg's potential, stating the company's vision to create a powerful, AI-driven personal learning assistant, aiming to serve more students efficiently and at a lower cost.

For the upcoming Q4/23, Chegg anticipates revenue to hover between $185 million and $187 million, with Subscription Services revenue projected between $164-$166 million.

Chegg Stock Jumps 20% Following Q2 Earnings Report

Chegg (NYSE:CHGG) exceeded expectations for its second-quarter revenues and outlined its intentions to further expand into generative artificial intelligence. This move is aimed at directly competing with ChatGPT in the AI space. Chegg's stock surged by over 20% pre-market today.

Chegg's adjusted EPS stood at $0.28, coupled with a revenue of $182.9 million. These figures outperformed Street predictions of $0.29 EPS and $176.5 million in revenue. Notably, the company observed improvements in year-over-year customer acquisition and retention rates in the quarter, a trend that followed the launch of its initial generative AI experience in May.

Looking ahead to Q3, the company anticipates revenue between $151 million and $153 million, compared to the Street estimate of $152.4 million.

Chegg Shares Up 8% on Busuu Acquisition Announcement

Chegg, Inc. (NYSE:CHGG) shares closed more than 8% higher Tuesday, following the company’s announcement, according to which it is going to acquire Busuu, an online language learning platform targeting both students and professionals in the workplace.

The $436 million cash acquisition is expected to help diversify Chegg’s business model and provide it with a strong foundation of users internationally (90% of Busuu’s subscribers are outside of the U.S.).

The company also announced a proposed $300 million accelerated share repurchase transaction under the previously announced $1 billion securities repurchase program.

Chegg Shares Up 8% on Busuu Acquisition Announcement

Chegg, Inc. (NYSE:CHGG) shares closed more than 8% higher Tuesday, following the company’s announcement, according to which it is going to acquire Busuu, an online language learning platform targeting both students and professionals in the workplace.

The $436 million cash acquisition is expected to help diversify Chegg’s business model and provide it with a strong foundation of users internationally (90% of Busuu’s subscribers are outside of the U.S.).

The company also announced a proposed $300 million accelerated share repurchase transaction under the previously announced $1 billion securities repurchase program.