Chegg, Inc. (CHGG) on Q3 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Greetings. Welcome to the Chegg, Inc. Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. . Please note, this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to your host, Tracey Ford, Vice President of Investor Relations and ESG for Chegg. Thank you. You may begin. Tracey Ford: Good afternoon. Thank you for joining Chegg's Third 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/media center. 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 statements. 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 measures. Our GAAP results and GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations can be found in our earnings press release and the investor slide deck found on our IR website, investor.chegg.com. We also recommend you review the investor data sheet, which is also posted on our IR website. Now I will turn the call over to Dan. Daniel Rosensweig: Thank you, Tracey, and welcome, everyone, to Chegg's Q3 2021 Earnings Call. Over the last 1.5 years, we experienced extraordinary growth and in the midst of a strong year, had a solid third quarter. However, in late September, it became clear to us that the education industry is experiencing a slowdown that we believe is temporary. This industry-wide dynamic was unanticipated and is a direct result of the COVID-19 pandemic, a combination of variants, increased employment opportunities and compensation, along with fatigue, have all led to significantly fewer enrollments than expected this semester. And those students who have enrolled are taking fewer and less rigorous classes and are receiving less graded assignments. We believe this is a post-pandemic impact that will affect this school year but is not sustainable for higher education long-term. Learning sites and apps, both free and paid in the U.S. and Canada, have experienced significantly reduced traffic since the fall semester began. Despite these trends, our team continues to execute at a very high level. In fact, Chegg has experienced year-over-year increases in retention and adoption of Chegg Study Pack, which has positively impacted our ARPU by 5% in Q3. In the rest of the world, we continue to see very robust subscription and revenue growth. While still early, international is clearly becoming a meaningful part of our business, and we have already exceeded our target of 1 million international subscribers. We believe that, in time, international will be larger for us than the U.S. This is why we are investing in key areas such as localization of content and language as well as our e-commerce and pricing platform. These infrastructure investments will allow us to take local currency and offer both variable and local pricing, and we believe these capabilities will help increase penetration in large untapped markets where pricing is a major variable for success. We should be ready to leverage these investments by the fall of 2022. At a global level, students are increasingly turning to the Internet and Chegg to improve their learning and outcomes. Domestically, personalization, expanding beyond the textbook to courses and supporting additional non-STEM subjects, remain our focus to increase our domestic TAM. Chegg is uniquely positioned to personalize each student's learning journey and bring them additional services because we have so many subscribers so much data and such relevant content. Therefore, we have the ability to personalize and expand the value we offer to existing customers and create new value for our new customers. A great example of this is our investment in Uversity, which is off to a very strong start. Although early and not yet live for students, we have already received over 20,000 pieces of content in STEM and non-STEM subjects from faculty at over 700 schools, including many of the most prestigious schools in the world who will help students learn while earning more for themselves. This offering has been so popular with faculty that we have already paid over $4 million to educators. We are excited for the future of Uversity, which is building stronger relationships with institutions and professors, and we are grateful for the passion these educators from around the world are showing to furthering education and support for students through Chegg. The degree-based pathway will continue to be very large in the United States, and we expect that it will grow again after the pandemic. But one of the lessons we see is just how much technology influences and empowers the world. Therefore, we are increasing our investment in digital skills training, which is important to an increasing percentage of the population around the world. Within this space, one of the key trends is more employers providing skilling, reskilling and upskilling to their current employee base and using this benefit to attract new employees. That is why we are excited to announce our new partnership with Guild, which we'll launch next year. Guild is a leader in serving large corporations where the employers offering to pay for the employees undergraduate degrees as well as provide skilling and upskilling curriculum. Thinkful courses will be offered to employees at relevant companies through the Guild platform, creating a new opportunity for domestic growth. As we look ahead, we remain strong believers in the growth of online education support and skill services around the world. As we manage through this moment in time, we will remain focused on building long-term value for both learners and our shareholders. The last two years have created a situation nobody could have anticipated and have clearly temporarily affected the higher education industry. But what is also clear is that more people are going to learn more things, especially online, and that will only create more opportunity for Chegg. We remain the market leader with a beloved brand, a strong moat and our services continue to help millions of learners all around the world as students rely on us to learn their course material and better understand concepts, which improves their outcomes. We are in a great position to come out of this temporary slowdown stronger than ever and take advantage of the opportunities before us. And through it all, we remain focused on our long-term mission of putting students first in everything that we do. And with that, I'll turn it over to Andy. Andy? Andrew Brown: Thanks, Dan, and good afternoon, everyone. As Dan mentioned earlier, we had a good Q3. Most of our financial and business metrics came in at or above our expected ranges despite industry headwinds in our North American markets that emerged late in the quarter. As a result, we are reducing our guidance for Q4 and full year 2021. In addition, given the timing and nature of these uncertainties and the fact that the school year is seasonal, we will provide our initial full year 2022 guidance in February, when we will have additional data to better inform our forecast. We believe in the long-term opportunity. And as such, we will continue to invest in our tech and engineering capabilities, the personalization of our platform and the breadth, depth and delivery of our content. As the leader in the category that continues to grow, we believe these investments will put us in an even stronger position. Looking specifically at the third quarter, total revenue came in at $172 million driven by a 23% year-over-year increase in Chegg Services. This was offset by a decrease in Required Materials, which was impacted by low enrollment and the nationwide worker shortages that created longer lead times. Gross margin came in at the high end of our forecast at 61% as our higher-margin Chegg Services revenue contributed more to total revenue than we expected, resulted in an adjusted EBITDA of $46 million, increasing 45% year-over-year. We ended the quarter with approximately $2.6 billion of cash and investments. And as such, we are navigating the current environment from a position of strength. We will use our balance sheet to create shareholder value, which includes buying back securities during times of value dislocation. And to that end, we announced today that we have increased our securities buyback program by $500 million. In addition, we believe the combination of our balance sheet and cash flows put us in the pole position to acquire assets should they become available at the right price. Moving on to guidance. For Q4, we now expect total revenue between $194 million and $196 million, with Chegg Services revenue between $175 million and $177 million, gross margin between 70% and 71% and adjusted EBITDA between $67 million and $69 million. As a result, for full year 2021, we now expect total revenue between $762 million and $764 million, with Chegg Services revenue between $657 million and $659 million, gross margin between 65% and 66% and adjusted EBITDA between $255 million and $257 million. In closing, we had a solid third quarter. And while we are navigating this temporary industry slowdown, we are more excited than ever about the opportunities ahead of us and the future of our business. We have a great brand with students, an incredible business model with a strong balance sheet. We are executing well, and we are increasing investments to expand our services and capture growth opportunities. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for your questions. Operator: . Our first question is from Jeff Silber of BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Jeffrey Silber : Thank you so much. I appreciate the color you gave in the prepared remarks, but if you can just give us a little bit more color, what exactly happened between the last time we heard from you and when we're hearing from you today to cause such a shortfall? Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. So kids/students didn't go back to school. So you're seeing people not go back to the workforce. And you're seeing community colleges -- look, if you look at Pearson and many of the other companies that have reported, they have been saying that enrollment is significantly down. The reality is when you look at it, it's down three years in a row. Normally, during a recession, which was last year, enrollment goes up. But because it was COVID, it didn't. Students didn't go physically to schools, schools weren't ready, online schools weren't prepared. So enrollment went down last year. Nobody could have anticipated just the robust nature of the low-end economy where our kind of students, community college students, 4-year students and schools that most of you don't know about, chose to go earn an income or stay home with their child versus go back to school this semester. And it was completely unanticipated and it will come back. But the reality is that's a large part of our student base or students that need the most help. And they just didn't come back to school. It became clear to us in mid-September towards the end of September, that they just weren't going. And then our research shows that if those that did go, 16% of them are taking pass/fail. Significant percentages of them are not taking their required classes, they're taking easier classes. Professors are assigning less. And on average, they're taking fewer courses. Obviously, this is not sustainable. This is a post-COVID hangover of mental exhaustion, an opportunity to earn more money, a reassessing of their lives, not unlike what you hear going on in the corporate workplace. It just all came together at one time. We didn't see it happening, and it happened. And the good news is through that, we've been executing really, really well. So the numbers that were in control over like renewal rates are improving; cancellation rates, declining; conversion rates, up; take rates of Chegg Study Pack of $19.95 versus $14.95, up; the renewal numbers there, up. Outside of North America, which is Canada and the U.S., subscription growth is up and great. So this is really something that happened in Canada and the U.S., and they're acting identically. And if you look at any of the external traffic numbers and reports that you could from any free or paid sites, you'll see they're even all down more than we are. So weirdly enough, we're gaining market share. This is a situation that we did not anticipate. It is what it is, and we're dealing with it, but at least we're executing within it really, really well. I mean this is a company who sees growth, has great profit, has great EBITDA, has great cash flow, has growth vectors outside the U.S. The deal with Guild is strong. This is just something that came and we didn't see it and didn't really notice it until not -- we noticed it, we wouldn't have known it until end of September. Jeffrey Silber : Okay. That's fair, and I do understand it. Let me play devil's advocate here and look out longer term. Demographics continue to decline. Students and parents are asking why they should pay this much for college education. We're not getting the funding from the federal government that you might have thought. Why don't you think this would continue for the next year or so? Daniel Rosensweig: Well, I don't think this -- I think what's happening -- what you've described, I think, is accurate. But that's not what's happening now. What's happening now is just millions of students just didn't go back. I mean just even in community colleges alone. The bigger issue and the bigger opportunity, frankly, for Chegg, is we've said all along that we're building a very large platform for high school, college and near graduates that we see growth vectors outside the U.S. on the businesses that we have. The deal with Guild is a really great growth opportunity over the next several years to use their sales force and to reposition our skills business into that space and some of the biggest employers in the world like Walmart and Target and Chipotle. In the U.S., the plan has always been that we are going to expand the amount of content that we have to expand the TAM to non-STEM users and expand the number of services outside of academic support to the audiences that we have. So this just happened probably two years earlier than our plan anticipated, and we do think it's going to come back. My guess is it won't come back in the earliest until next fall because remember, the school year is not the calendar year. So we'll have a January similar to what we're seeing now in terms of enrollment. But we have so much to grow and so much to do that I think if you're seeing us simply as academic support to the current U.S. college market, then we haven't done the right job of articulating just how big we think the opportunity is to bring more and different things to students. Jeffrey Silber: Thanks. Really appreciate the color. I’ll get back in the queue. Thank you. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes, great question. Appreciated. Operator: Our next question is from Stephen Sheldon of William Blair. Please proceed with your questions. Stephen Sheldon: Thanks. I guess I just wanted to ask if you think -- kind of thinking about the biggest unknowns that you see as we think about the setup for 2022 that's keeping you from providing guidance at this point. It would be more about the second half of the year enrollment trends for next fall? Or how big of a range outcome do you think there could be as we think about the upcoming spring semester? Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. I'll let Andy give more color on that in a second. But we debated it. It's -- they really just -- we don't know what's going to happen next August and September. And just the opportunity to wait so -- I mean we were the weird company that gave full year guidance when no one else gave even quarterly guidance during COVID because we could see what the trends were then. Here, this is a trend that really didn't become visible to us until about 30 days ago. And even though things are getting stronger as the quarter gets on, we just don't know how it plays out in the second half of next year. And so we think we have time to listen and learn and research and do surveys and being better positioned to give numbers that we feel comfortable in giving. We just feel like there's no reason to give them now when it's just too big of an unknown. We don't know what happens to the economy after the Christmas season and supply chain issues get resolved, just too many things out of our control. If they were in our control, we give it. Stephen Sheldon: Got it. And then maybe just a follow-up. I guess, what types of trends have you seen in international markets? I would assume you're still seeing strong growth there. And I know you're not providing guidance, but could international become a big enough growth driver in 2022 to maybe offset some of the weakness or continued uncertainty that you're seeing on the U.S. side? Daniel Rosensweig: Well, over time, the answer is 100% yes. It's hard to know in '22 because we really don't know what the U.S. trends and Canada trends are going to be. If you took the international subscriber growth, so international subscriber growth, not Canada and the U.S., been great. Take rate of the bundle, been great. Conversion, renewal increases, all have been super strong. So we know what we have is very valuable. As we've said on previous calls, but it's worth reminding, so I really appreciate the question. There's a lot of technology that we've been working on to build. We did not expect our international business to be this big this soon. We just announced on this call that we've beaten our goal of $1 million through Q3 instead of waiting for the year. And so we -- what we're building now is the ability to price differently in large countries. We see tremendous traffic in some of the biggest countries in the world outside of China, where we don't intend to be, where our conversion isn't what we'd like it to be and that's because the local pricing isn't good enough. So we have a lot of things to build. So I don't know that '22 is the year that, that -- certainly, it's offsetting it, but how much it offsets it, I don't know. But I do imagine '23, '24, '25 that international will just be a -- it's meaningful now, it will be very meaningful then. Stephen Sheldon: Got it. Thank you. Operator: Our next question is from Doug Anmuth of JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Douglas Anmuth: Thanks for taking the questions. Dan, I know you talked a little bit about this, but just in terms of trying to understand, I guess, where you thought expectations were kind of what you were thinking for enrollment as you're heading into the semester and where you think they've actually come in for the fall semester? And then how does that impact your thinking about duration of this effect? I mean it sounds like January semester look similar because you're kind of pointing to August, September of '22 a little bit and saying kind of not know exactly what would happen then. And then just separately, any updated thoughts around the Pearson situation and any potential time line or anything else to point out there? Thanks. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. No, great questions, Doug. Thank you. I would say the duration is -- we just frankly don't know. We're 30 days into seeing this, and it's not that it's 30 days to 60 days or 90 days. It's just this semester. It could be limited to this semester. We could see a whole bunch of people come back in January that just took all the money that they could for the Christmas holidays because Starbucks is tripling their salaries. And even though, again, we don't have enough people in the workforce, the kinds of people that come to Chegg are self-starters, self-motivators. That's why they go to school. That's why they get Chegg. So they're obviously in hindsight, the kinds of people that would go capitalized on the income because most of them are working 30 hours a week or more, anyway, so good for them. And I'm happy for them, to be honest with you, not so happy for us today. So who knows what will happen in January because community colleges are not like 4-year schools that start on the semesters. Community colleges, you can go whenever you want to go, the semester starts whenever you go. So we could see an uptick in January. We just don't know enough to predict that because we really don't know what's going to happen with the economy, supply chain, government stimulus, all the things out of our control. So what we're focused on right now, Doug, is just executing at a very high level against the opportunity that has presented itself. For the long-term, we feel really good. We feel really good about international subscriber growth. We feel really good about the deal we just announced with Guild. We feel really good about the personalization efforts that we launched this fall. The take rate has been very high. We already see of those that are using it that they engage more. The goal of the personalization efforts is to help those that are already using us to find more things we have that they haven't used that would help them. But also to become a channel, a conduit to things that we don't yet have that we will be adding to the Chegg network so that they can find that as well. That should keep them longer and allow us to create more value and have different prices over time and attract new people. These are all things that we still firmly absolutely believe in and this is just an enrollment issue. So I just -- I can't pick the timing and we don't want to be wrong more than once, right? This was already a big surprise to us. So we're not in a hurry to make a bigger mistake. And so we just decided the business will execute. We're doing really well within our expectations, and we will just know more by the time we come out in February. As to the question over Pearson, it's a very straightforward copyright infringement case. We feel extraordinarily good about our position. We have yet to respond. We'll respond by the date. For those people who are not as familiar with it as you are, Doug, in terms of what it is, the issue for us with this particular publisher is, it’s like I said, it's a straightforward copyright infringement case. But the parts that should worry investors don't really affect the Pearson case as much, which is we don't have a deal with them. We haven't had a deal with them since May, that what we had in May was half of what it was a year ago. That was really just for the questions that were in their textbooks. But I think you're seeing textbooks are becoming much less an important part of higher education. They're becoming -- they've been insignificant for Chegg's business. In fact, our quote-unquote sort of within the range guidance here is because textbooks are down. Chegg Services actually did extraordinarily well during the quarter. And that is really the core of our business. And then we have something like nearly 70 million questions in our database, of which Pearson is a key percentage, maybe 2%. So it's not significant to us. We can't predict the outcome, but we feel very good about our position, and we'll be responding shortly and you'll all see it. So it's unrelated to what we're seeing now. Douglas Anmuth: Thank you. Operator: Our next question is from Brian Peterson of Raymond James. Please proceed with your question. Brian Peterson: Hi, thanks for taking the question. So Dan, I wanted to follow up on maybe a prior question, but just the idea of enrollment kind of being down over the last few years. And look more broadly like in-person, everything is kind of down. So I'm just curious, as you think about your content and your partnerships in thinking about maybe hybrid education models, are there new partnerships or areas that you need to work on to kind of see how this new kind of hybrid learning model evolves over time? Just curious to get your thoughts on that. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. It's a really excellent question. Students have told us -- 75% or more students told us they were for a hybrid environment. That's up from like 25% a year ago. So I think the same way employees would tell us they like a hybrid environment, which is management comes to the office, but they don't. In the case of students, I think that they -- most students want the benefit of both. Some students can't afford to do both. They just want to do online. They have families. They -- remember the average age of a college student is 25 years old. And so it's a real situation for them where access really depends on whether or not they have to come in person or not. So I absolutely do believe that, that is the trend. We have been building towards that trend. It's why we've said in the past that we're focused on support services for community colleges and for online universities. And actually, it was doing incredibly well, which is one of the reasons we were hit so badly right now because it's community colleges and people who are either taking online or going to the 4-year schools that you haven't heard of that are working that were affected the most. Those are really the kind of new customers that Chegg has been working aggressively on getting. And I think that's one of the reasons that we were hit. Now we were hit less than other people in our space. But nonetheless, it's pretty significant. So yes, in terms of partnerships, if you take a look at the relationship with example with Guild, our relationship right now is with Thinkful and skills-based classes and boot camps and other things that corporations are doing. But most of the things like Guild and InStride, and companies like that, they are helping corporations pay for underground education. So these are also conduits for us to get to know these companies to be able to have these companies supply things like Chegg Study and Chegg Study Pack and Mathway and Writing to their employees. So I do think that there are new partnerships that will develop out of this. I think those are the kind of ones that we are currently looking at now. Brian Peterson: Thanks Dan. Operator: Our next question is from Ryan MacDonald of Needham & Company. Please proceed with your question. Ryan MacDonald: Thanks for taking my questions. Dan, I know obviously, this is an enrollment issue, but would love to hear some color on maybe the impact that account sharing could have played or even growing competition in this space? Obviously, earlier this year, Quizlet buying Slater, Coursera getting aggressive in expanding their platform by acquisition. Are you seeing any difference in sort of trends, whether it's around usage going to other platforms or maybe pricing pressure from some of the lower-cost offerings? I would love to hear about that. Thanks. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. Also great questions. And as you can imagine, when this started to reveal itself late in September, we took a look at all of that. So let me tell you what we have learned. What we have learned is that free sites or ones with premiums are not taking our traffic at all. So they are, in fact, down more than we are, and our audience is not leaving us to go to them. So I can tell you from our own internal research, we asked that question, as you imagine, we should, just like you asked it, and we're very satisfied with the answer that we're not losing customers to anybody else at this point in time. So I would say that just isn't the case. In terms of others getting more aggressive, they're all trying to copy our model. And as it's been explained to me when Chegg catches a cold, they're going to get pneumonia. So they're going to be in a more challenging situation than we're in, we believe, over this next period of time. And this was -- this kind of thing is inevitable. It happens in every industry, not for these reasons. I've never seen these reasons -- this combination of reasons before. But from a competitive standpoint, I think, as Andy mentioned in his prepared remarks, even though we're doing an aggressive stock or... Ryan MacDonald: Securities buyback. Daniel Rosensweig: Securities buyback, that's because we have debt, too, and the lawyers are on the call, and they make me say it the right way. We still believe that Chegg is the single best buy in the education space by far and look forward to owning more of it. Having said that, we still have an additional $2 billion on our balance sheet to be able to go grab some of these assets as their prices become much more in line with what they should be. So we're not thrilled about this situation for obvious reasons, but we're executing really well. The opportunity outside the U.S. is what we would be hoping and expected to be and we're executing well against what's currently available in the U.S., and we expect it to come back, but we're also in a stronger position from balance sheet, EBITDA, free cash flow. So we'll just continue to execute and look for these opportunities when they present themselves. Ryan MacDonald: Great. And just as a quick follow-up, you mentioned executing well internationally. As you talked about stepping up your localization efforts, but how should we think about maybe pace of country extension as you think about international versus, I think, you're focused on today? Thanks. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. You're breaking up a little bit, but I think I heard the question about how should we think about focusing on international? And what should you see from us. So what do we mean by localization? In the case of localization, every one of these things, we think, will expand the TAM and our growth rate for years to come, in some ways, similar to what it did in the U.S., which is think of international as three concentric circles. There's English-speaking STEM students, that's where all our growth is coming from now. And it doesn't matter what country you're in, if that's what you're doing, you're coming to Chegg. The second one are not as good of English-speaking students but also taking STEM. So from their localization is by putting the content in local language which is translation. Second, its allowing them to ask questions not just in English, but in their dialect, and then answering it not just in that dialect but in every dialect. So that every new question over time gets answered in multiple languages, so we don't have to redo it more than once. And then the third category, which Uversity is a big part of it in the U.S., but it's also global, is expanding beyond STEM, which is into other subjects where we're getting professor providing content. And that also, again, is just a huge, fun, interesting opportunity, which is the creator economy. We've already paid out over $4 million. We're in over 700 schools, which is pretty huge, considering there's only 4,500 in the U.S., and we have over 20,000 pieces of content. So localization, the last part of localization is being able to present in the local currency, which we're only able to do in, I think, two countries right now and then actually localize the price. So somebody on the last call asked a really good question to say, could you lower the prices in other countries? The answer is we will, we can't yet. And all of those things are things that we are aggressively working on now, which should be ready for the fall, sometime in the fall of next year. And so you can just imagine we're getting huge volumes of traffic from places like India, Mexico and Indonesia and other places that have large populations but really can't afford the price we're at. And so we're harnessing what's available to us in those countries at these price points, but we expect to get a lot more and a lot faster growth once we're able to do that. So that's what we mean by localization. Ryan MacDonald: Thanks. And I’ll get back in queue. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes, thank you for the questions. Operator: Our next question is from Brent Till of Jefferies. Please proceed with your question. Brent Thill: Dan, if you can just bring us back to September, was everything tracking kind of to what you had normally seen in normal seasonality and then it just didn't come through in the last couple of weeks? And I would assume, given the guide that obviously, October hasn't come back, any comment, has there been any rebound in October? Daniel Rosensweig: Well, yes, I mean, we've obviously completed October, so it's November 1, and I think Andy would kill me if I gave out numbers. But here's what I will tell you, that for July and the first part of August, we were ahead of our plan. So we had an aggressive plan. We felt very comfortable taking guidance up. The interesting thing is we're actually going to end up somewhere around the original guidance we put out last November, after all is said and done. So I just found that curious. But what generally happens is textbooks start earlier than homework because people get the textbooks. We have never been smart about the timing of textbooks. We've always been a week or two behind and we always say it's timing. So we really didn't think much of it early in -- late in August and early September when textbook season starts. And then it didn't come back. And that was the first canary in the coal mine that maybe this is a different kind of semester. So we started to look at all the trends of competitors, traffic trends, ourselves. We started looking at our funnels, internal funnels, and we were asking ourselves, is this timing? Is this something that we did wrong? Is there something along with systems? And the answer was no, we're actually executing. And if you just look at traffic alone, was probably 25% down in the month of September versus what our internal plan was. So that's what we saw. And that, of course, changed our perspective on the quarter. And as soon as we knew that, we, at the end of September, early October, communicated with the Board, let them know. The good news is we had a -- for Chegg Services, we had a really good Q3. We beat on every metric there. But textbooks is a 0-calorie business for us, which means it does not matter in our earnings, it does not matter in our numbers. We have predicted for years that textbooks were going to go away. They will continue to get smaller. We offer it literally as a service to the industry because we're certain if we got rid of it, publishers would raise their prices again. And that's not fair to the students. So we continue to offer it. But it should not be considered anything in terms of value that we're able to produce in terms of earnings or anything like that. And we said that years ago when we switched the model. So nothing has changed there except there's just fewer of them this semester because there's fewer students. That was the first sign. Then it really was just it never bounced to the numbers that we thought it was going to bounce to in September. October is stronger, but we still have November and December. And so it's difficult to know, but we just didn't -- what the guidance we put out is what our expectations are. And that's based on all the information we have right up until last week. Brent Thill: Okay. That's super helpful. So you're just -- is just -- this is not really competitive. This is more an industry headwind that that everyone's facing and it's tough to dock underneath that win that you're seeing in the industry right now? Daniel Rosensweig: I think that's exactly right. The first -- we're full of people who normally assume when something doesn't go well, we have to have done something wrong. That's the kind of personalities we have. We're paranoid that way. So we look at every single number, everything in the funnel, every competitor, called frankly every competitor. We're looking at a number of companies that we always look at. We saw the exact same trends but worse. And so this is what it is for the moment. It is unsustainable unless you're betting against their students ever going back to higher education. But it's three semesters in a row -- go ahead. I'm just going to finish -- go ahead. Brent Thill: A quick follow-up, Dan, on that is if -- just assuming that engine stays off in the short term, some of these new initiatives that you've been leaning into, are you going to lean harder into that? Or is your belief we're going to wait them evenly? When you think about skills-based learning, Uversity and the current onboarding, there's a lot of other initiatives you have underway. Everyone's asking, is there something you're going to do differently in terms of how you weigh into those? Daniel Rosensweig: I think that we are, again, a very fair question. We are leaning in very hard to all of them. We have been, we are. The core business is extraordinarily profitable. We are investing a great deal of money and personalization in Uversity in the international e-commerce platforms, localization content, all those platform issues, the relationship with Guild, expanding and tripling the amount of content that we offer. The work has been going on and is going on. The timing of the results takes time because we live in a world by semesters. We don't live in it by you offer at that day, and it's relevant that day. We really just got a plan by the semester. So we are leaning in hard like we've been leaning in hard in international, and it's paying off. There's a lot that we're doing that is going to pay off. And the domestic market will come back stronger at some point. And so we're -- for us, it is -- it's not business as usual because we've never seen anything like this, but it is the usual business of expanding our TAM, adding more content, creating greater value for the students, finding new channels of distribution and creating overwhelming value and seeing growth as a result of it. I mean the things that we just love about the business is conversion is up, renewals are better, take rate is really high, international growth is really high outside of North America, and their take rate for the bundle is really high. So the business will be a growth business as soon as we sort of clear this moment in time. You also have to remember, we grew 100% over 2 years. So combine that with this, and this is what we see. But it's absolutely not a competitive situation. You can look at the exact same numbers that we're looking at. Brent Thill: Great. Thank you. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. Really appreciate all these questions. Operator: Our next question is from Mike Grondahl of Northland Securities. Please proceed with your question. Michael Grondahl: Dan, have you broken out your subscribers from two-year colleges and four-year colleges lately, just so we could get a sense of that mix? Daniel Rosensweig: We break them out. We don't share them. But yes, we know 4-year colleges, 2-year colleges, online universities, U.S. college -- we actually know it by college, by university. And as our personalization efforts roll out, Mike, we now know it by courses. That's part of how we know that and surveys that people are not taking the more demanding courses right now, they're taking the easier courses. They're easing their way back into going to school. They are mentally exhausting. You've seen an increase in all the negative things and everybody flies, but particularly students. Mental health issues are just huge right now. But if you look at any external thing, anybody that's reported in the education space, any external numbers or is it a great article that was out this weekend that just talked about the fact that enrollment, particularly in community colleges and certain online schools, not all of them. And then 4-year colleges that are sort of on the friends they sort of service community colleges and their communities just are massively down, and they just -- nobody expected it. Michael Grondahl: Got it. Got it. I think I understand where more of the pressure is coming from sort of a 2-year in online and then more localized 4-year school. Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. And I think that's exactly right. And so if you look at all the colleges that you all know by name, they're really small. Like the top 25 or 50 colleges make up a couple of hundred thousand people out of 20 million. 10% of all students in this country go to just one singular community college system, the state of California. And you can imagine how far down that is. So this is -- it's a localized problem. It will end. It just didn't end now. Michael Grondahl: Got it. Okay. Operator: Our next question is from Josh Baer of Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Joshua Baer: Thanks for the questions. Dan, could you expand a little bit on the types of services and solutions outside of the academic study that you could provide to your students. I sort of mentioned it a couple of times just thinking about what types of solutions you could sell to your existing customer base over the years? Daniel Rosensweig: Yes, also a great question. So I don't want to be too specific for obviously, for competitive reasons and other things. But we've said many times, and it's one of the reasons we've launched Chegg Life, is there are areas that students depend on. So if we wanted to support the student, not the 180-degree that's just in academics, but the rest of the student, what do they need? They need adulting as they call it. They need financial help and information. They need mental health and information. They need soft skills. They need hard skills. They are getting none of this through the existing free education system called K-12 or free community college or 4-year schools. These are all things with our massive reach that we have the ability. And that's, again, part of the reason we're building the platform to be personalized. So the right student can find the right thing for them at the right moment. Over time, we'll know -- we obviously know what classes you're in. We'll know what majors you're in. We'll know the industry that you're likely to go into, we'll know whether or not you have a loan, whether you filled out a faster form. You could just imagine all the benefits that we can bring to students. And so we'll have the opportunity to do two things: bring them more things and charge them for it; and create Chegg into much more of a membership service rather than a subscription service, which is really based around the semesters, where we've done an extraordinarily excellent job of optimizing around that, and we continue to do so. But we see a reason for Chegg to be with you younger, with you older and with you longer over the course of the year than we see now. And so there's a lot of overwhelming value that we can bring from partners in terms of access to things, discount something, all things that you'll see over the next several years that Chegg will likely be bringing to the students. And so we just see the opportunity for Chegg is getting bigger. Had this moment in time not happen, we wouldn't have had to talk about all these additional things because the core business is so strong. And even with the situation we're in, the core business profitability, EBITDA, EBITDA margins, free cash flow, all extraordinarily strong as is the balance sheet. So this is not something that we expected or that we're enjoying for obvious reasons, but it is going to be us focusing on what we've been focusing on. Joshua Baer: Thank you. Operator: Our next question is from Jason Celino of KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question. Jason Celino: Great. Thanks for letting me ask my questions here. Maybe I'll be the person to ask about the Q4 guidance here. It looks like services growth is roughly flat year-over-year. With the Q4 guidance, does it assume we see any change in trends from the September trends that you've been referencing? Thanks. Andrew Brown: Yes, Jason, this is Andy. I think Dan needs a little bit of a break here. But no, it -- we saw the trends, as Dan mentioned, in the middle of September through the end. And then obviously, we've gotten through October. The trends haven't materially changed, plus or minus. So we've incorporated those into our guidance. Yes, so that's basically what we're expecting through the end of the year. And as you can imagine, really the vast majority of our revenue comes from subscribers at the end of September through October, the vast majority of the subscribers are already on board. And it's much -- the next couple of months is more about renewals than it is new acquisitions. Jason Celino: Okay. And then if I could, maybe I'll sneak in a quick capital allocation strategy question. It sounds like you're leaning into the buyback. How should we think about capital allocation? Andrew Brown: Well, I mean, you nailed it. We're leaning into the buyback. Dan mentioned it earlier, we're going to use capital to buy companies, why not buy ourselves. We think we're an extraordinary value. So we're going to do both. One is the buyback, the securities buyback. The second thing, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we're always looking at opportunities to add to our portfolio, whether it be content, whether it be new services, whatever it may be. And we want to make sure we've got sufficient capital to be able to execute on those if they become available. And so it will be most likely a combination of both. Jason Celino: Perfect. Thank you. Andrew Brown: You bet. Operator: Our next question is from Alex Fuhrman of Craig-Hallum. Please proceed with your question. Alex Fuhrman: Great. Thanks very much for taking my question. Just to ask further on the enrollment declines that you're seeing this year. Is there anything materially different about the declines you're seeing this year compared to the decline you're seeing that we all saw nationwide last year? You mentioned your students, in particular, might be ones that really gravitate towards some of the employment opportunities that are coming out with that. Obviously, that wasn't the case last year when enrollments were declining. But are you seeing anything in particular about anything we could kind of keep our eyes on in terms of whether it's 2-year or 4-year state or private schools, anything about the makeup of the enrollment for this academic year that is materially different from what we saw last back of end year? Daniel Rosensweig: Yes. It's -- I don't know that I could articulate it in terms of last year, I can tell you what we see happening this year. I will say that last year, people didn't -- enrollment was down, but a lot of that had to do with international students because they weren't allowed back in the country. And so you have that, plus overwhelmingly, this is 2-year colleges and 4-year schools that act similar to 2-year colleges, which is people take a lot of classes there and because they're local. As we've said in the past, the average age of a student is 25. 26% of them already have a child, that 40% of them are working 30 hours a week or more, that's the group that we think is most dramatically affected. Of course, there's going to be issues with people who are going to the wealthy schools and the 4-year schools, all those kinds of schools or even the big football schools where we see all those people in the stand. But these are people that are of lower income that are working that don't have much support, highly immigrant-oriented 2-year schools and are hopefully and expectedly based on our surveys, capitalizing on the income that is available for them. These are not people that are taking sort of subsidies and doing nothing. That's a whole different conversations. These are people that are self-motivated but have been working and going to school and have chosen to capitalize on the income. And then there's a subset that are going just taking fewer classes either because they're working or just absolute fatigue. Alex Fuhrman: Okay. That makes a lot of sense. Thank you. Daniel Rosensweig: And by the way, we've researched these things, we've surveyed these things. We've looked at competitive data, we've spoken to competitive CEOs. We spent a lot of time preparing for this call, as you can imagine, because we knew you wouldn't have expected it because we didn't expect it. And -- but through it all, we are executing against the opportunity that is available domestically at this moment, and we're building lots of really big fun things for future growth, both domestically and outside the U.S. and our non-North American numbers are growing as fast as we would have hoped. Operator: We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call back over to Dan Rosensweig for closing remarks. Daniel Rosensweig: Well, we appreciate everybody dialing in. Obviously, there's a lot of work to be done here, and we will do that work. I couldn't be more proud of our team for executing through COVID. We experienced massive growth at the beginning of COVID, over 100% for two years. And so we were going to lap big numbers anyway. But on top of that, just the fact that so much has happened in the economy that is out of Chegg's control and higher education's control right now that we're being affected by it temporarily. We are in the best position with the best balance sheet. We feel like whatever we're experiencing, others are experiencing at work, and worse, worse, and we're still in a really great position for revenue growth and subscriber growth outside the U.S. and EBITDA growth and cash flow growth and we have $2 billion on the balance sheet. So we're in a really good position to deal with the situation. We just don't know how long it's going to be. And we will update you all in February. But I really appreciate you joining the call and asking all the questions so we get a chance to sort of articulate what we've seen. Thanks, everybody. Operator: This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a great 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.