Stride, Inc. (LRN) on Q4 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen good afternoon. My name is Abby and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Stride, Inc. Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2022 Earnings Conference Call. Todayâs conference is being recorded. Thank you. And I will now turn the conference over to Tim Casey, Vice President of Investor Relations. Mr. Casey, you may begin.
Tim Casey: Thank you and good afternoon. Welcome to Strideâs fourth quarter and year end earnings call for fiscal year 2022. With me on todayâs call are James Rhyu, Chief Executive Officer; and Donna Blackman, Chief Financial Officer. As a reminder, todayâs conference call and webcast are accompanied by a presentation that can be found on the Stride Investor Relations website. Please be advised that todayâs discussion of our financial results may include certain non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of these measures is provided in the earnings release issued this afternoon and can also be found on our Investor Relations website. In addition to historical information, this call may also involve forward-looking statements. The companyâs actual results could differ materially from any forward-looking statements due to several important factors as described in the companyâs latest SEC filings. These statements are made on the basis of our views and assumptions regarding future events and business performance at the time we make them and the company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made during this call. Following our prepared remarks, we will answer any questions you may have. I will now turn the call over to James. James?
James Rhyu: Thank you, Tim and good afternoon everyone. On the heels of completing another tough school year for many, we are already in the throes of what is shaping up to be the third school year with a heightened sense of uncertainty. This is in the backdrop of broader macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges. And the COVID pandemic is not yet in our rearview mirror. All while we have entered into a period of economic uncertainty that we have not seen for over a decade. And inflation is pacing at its highest rate in over 40 years. Employment remains strong and the labor market is extremely tight. We also faced the dilemmas of gun violence, extreme environmental hazards and the ongoing politicism of education. And yet, I see increasing opportunities for companies like ours. The solutions set we can provide happens to cater to the uncertain world we live in. Our broad set of offerings provide practical alternatives for our younger generation to gain the skills and tools to succeed in light without the burden of increasing college debt. So we believe we are in a unique moment in our history to help shape an evolving education landscape and invest behind that evolution to build new end markets for our products and services that may not have been available to us pre-pandemic. And in order to do that, we have an amazing team of employees and partners here at Stride that believe in our mission and want to invest in our future. I am incredibly grateful to all of these folks, who work tirelessly on behalf of the customers and students we serve. Now some highlights from this past year. We continue to see strong demand as demonstrated by our enrollment accounts this year. In fact, while we began the year 3% below prior yearâs enrollment levels, we ended the year almost 2% higher. We saw particular strength in both in-year acquisition and in-year retention. In fact, we have now seen improving in-year retention trends for 5 straight years. Awareness for the programs we manage, are clearly dramatically higher than pre-pandemic. That translates into high satisfaction, lower churn and better conversion. Meanwhile, the skills taught in our career learning programs continue to be in high-demand from both students and employers. 89% of employers say they are more likely to hire high school graduates if students have learned real-world skills. Our career programs effectively and efficiently deliver those very skills to our students. The data continues to demonstrate that our approach to core education remains the right strategy and we are seeing the results. This year, we topped $320 million in revenue in our middle and high school business, up over 60% from last year as we supported more than 40,000 students. We also continue to see success with our adult learning business. We finished the year with an annual run-rate of revenue over $100 million and we exited the year seeing growth rates well above 20%. I also previously mentioned the reset of our K-12 curriculum earlier this year. And I gave an update last quarter on the improved satisfaction we have seen in those programs as a result. I am pleased to tell you that Stride recently won the 2022 EdTech Breakthrough Award for Courseware Solution Provider of the Year for this new curriculum, obviously, a great tribute to the incredible teams behind this and all of the innovation here at Stride. Now, for this current fiscal year, itâs important to remember that we still have the majority of the season in front of us. So, itâs too early for us to provide formal guidance. However, there are a few things I want to highlight for this year. Our General Education business continues to pace well ahead of pre-pandemic levels. We believe the underlying demand for virtual education remains robust even as the impact from the pandemic has lessened and students have returned to in-person classrooms. For the upcoming year, we opened a new program in West Virginia, and across all of our programs, we are seeing stronger lead and application volumes than last year. In our career learning business, we continue to see robust demand. We have opened a new career learning program in Georgia and we believe that there are significant opportunities for continued growth in our existing programs. We expect that this business will have strong enrollment growth in fiscal year â23. Our overall cohort of pre-registered students is the largest ever, surpassing last year on a lower starting enrollment number. Another data point indicating the strong student and family satisfaction for these programs and the teacher shortage remains. Stride is in a unique position to be able to mitigate the impact, because we can often leverage our nationwide scale to support students across the country. We also began hiring earlier this year to ensure we can support all of the student programs. Inflation is real and we are not immune to its impact. We had a somewhat muted impact this past year given a large percentage of our costs were locked in, but we will feel some of the pressure in the upcoming year. And the funding environment while continuing to be relatively positive will largely lag the magnitude of inflation we are seeing. We are also beginning to introduce new products and services into the market and we believe these new offerings will allow us to provide online educational options to a broader group of learners. You have probably heard me mention a few of these products over the past year, including a suite of teacher professional development offerings, a career platform for high school students and a K-12 tutoring platform. All of these products build on our existing assets and allow us to quickly enter new and large markets, where we have a distinct competitive advantage or position. Our teacher professional development service looks like they are going to be engaged by one of the five largest school districts for this fall. Our career learning platform will be piloted with a handful of new and existing district clients, including another top 10 of the largest school districts in the country. And I have previously mentioned that while the teacher shortage is acute, we are going to try and find ways to use this to our advantage. In fact, we have launched a teacher shortage product into the market that enables us to leverage our scale teacher model to help districts with their shortages and we just won a multimillion dollar engagement. I expect more traffic here to come in the coming months and we will build on our wins and learn to also sell fast. The efforts to seed the market with these products that leverage our core capabilities is part of our overall strategy to reach to larger end markets for our offerings. Our goals are to continue to grow into this fiscal year, but also to begin the expansion of our end markets and take advantage of the tumultuous environment we live in to reach more customers with our products and services. The long-term trends in education particularly online and digital solutions for K-12, remains strong. The past few years have taught us that while uncertainty remains, I believe opportunity for us is also significant. Our long-range targets remain unchanged and the options in front of us to achieve those targets continue to grow. Iâd now like to turn it over to Donna Blackman, Strideâs new CFO. I know Tim Medina is joining his summary in retirement and he left us with the most important legacy he possibly could, a transition to a new CFO that has been seamless. Donna has already proved she is more than capable of the task and has become an invaluable partner to me in a short time. She will help me guide this company to some exciting new opportunities. Thank you. And Iâll hand the call over to Donna. Donna?
Donna Blackman: Thank you, James and good afternoon everyone. I want to start off by thanking James and the entire Stride Board for this incredible opportunity to serve as Strideâs CFO. I have always recognized the power of education to change lives. So when the opportunity was presented to me, I knew it was the right choice for me, both personally and professionally. I believe that Strideâs focus on career learning, coupled with our investments in new innovative products across both General Education and Career Learning will allow us to accelerate our impact on a wider range of learners nationwide. The company has grown tremendously over my 2 years here as Chief Accounting Officer and I believe Stride is on an incredible trajectory. I am excited to help drive the next chapter of growth. Now, letâs turn to our reported results. Revenue for the full fiscal year 2022 was $1.690 billion, an increase of 9.8% over the prior fiscal year. Adjusted operating income was $188.2 million up 16.6% and capital expenditures was $67.6 million, an increase of $15.3 million as we invested in new products and services to drive future growth. In each case, these results met or beat the expectations we provided in our guidance last quarter. We are incredibly proud of our results this year as we grew even as learners return to in-person education options last fall. For the year, General Education revenue decreased slightly to $1.270 billion or 0.5% due to lower enrollments partially offset by higher revenue per enrollment. Gen Ed enrollment finished the year at 143,200, down 8.6% from last year. However, this was an improvement over the beginning of the year, driven by the strong in-year acquisition we have talked about previously. Revenue per enrollment increased 9.7% to $8,104. Given what we know today about state budgets and policies, we expect revenue per enrollment to improve next year, but not by as much as it did this year. Career learning continues to have strong growth, reaching $412.9 million in revenue for the year, up more than 60% in the middle and high school line of revenue. Enrollments for the year were 41,900, up 41.6% from last year. Revenue per enrollment was $7,640, up 13.8%. Career learning middle school and high school revenues came in at $321.4 million. We believe this business will continue to see strong growth in fiscal year â23 as we open new programs and expand our awareness efforts. We also expect revenue per enrollment to grow in line with General Education. Adult learning finished the year with $91.5 million in revenue, up from $55.8 million last year. In the fourth quarter, adult learning posted a 32% increase in revenue, another indication of the strong organic growth we are seeing in this business. We finished the year with gross margin of 35.4%, up 60 basis points compared to last year. We were able to mitigate inflationary pressures this year, and we still believe we are on track to achieve a long-term gross margins of 36% to 39%, we outlined in our fiscal 2025 target. For the year, selling, general and administrative expenses were $439.8 million, up 3.6% from fiscal 2021. The increase in SG&A was driven primarily by the annualization of expenses for debt learning, partially mitigated by a decrease in stock-based compensation expense. Stock-based compensation expense was $18.6 million, down significantly year-over-year due to the timing of stock-based grants tied to our Career Learning business. We currently expect stock-based compensation expense to increase marginally in fiscal 2023. Adjusted operating income for the year was $188.2 million, up $26.8 million from last year and exceeding the guidance we issued last quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the year was $273.1 million. Profitability was driven by continued Career Learning enrollment growth, increases in revenue per enrollment and improving gross margin. Interest expense totaled $8.3 million. We expect similar interest expense for fiscal 2023. Our full year tax rate was 27.2% and in line with the guidance we provided last quarter. For fiscal 2023, we expect our tax rate will be in line with what we saw this year. Diluted earnings this year totaled $2.52, up $0.81 from fiscal 2021. Capital expenditures for fiscal â22 totaled $67.6 million, up $15.3 million from last fiscal year. We continue to invest behind organic growth as we position ourselves for incremental long-term growth in large addressable markets. Free cash flow defined as cash from operations less CapEx, totaled $139.3 million. This is an increase of $57.4 million from last year. reflecting the strength of our core business. Finally, we ended the year with cash and cash equivalents of $389.4 million. We believe that our strong free cash generation and cash position provide financial flexibility to both reinvest organically and our businesses and to pursue strategic disciplined acquisitions. Now I want to turn to fiscal year 2023 to provide some high-level commentary on the upcoming year. I know investors are eager to get more information on our fall enrollment. However, it is still much too early to predict our fiscal year 2023 enrollment. Therefore, as is the case each year, we will refrain from providing guidance and to report our first quarter fiscal 2023 results in October. Nevertheless, we do have some insights into the year. As James said, we believe we will continue to grow in fiscal 2023. This growth will be driven by continued strength in our Career Learning enrollments and revenue per pupil increases. However, there are headwinds as inflationary pressures, a tight labor market and ongoing supply chain issues continue to impact our business. We expect some inflationary impact to both instructional costs and SG&A in fiscal year â23. While some of the pressure will be offset by increased funding and continuing efficiency efforts we made the decision to fully fund salary increases for teachers and employees to ensure consistency and remain competitive in the labor market. This will result in a tightening of our margins in the short-term. However, we believe this is the right decision for our students and employees and will benefit us over the longer-term. We strongly believe in the long-term growth in demand for online education options, both for our full-time programs and General Education and Career Learning and the other new products we have been investing behind. We talked about these investments over the past year as fiscal 2023 will be the first year these products are introduced into the market. Itâs important to note that many of these first deals will be pilot programs at a few select districts. Therefore, we expect revenues will be minimal as we are taking a deliberate approach at launch to ensure long-term success. However, we will incur additional marketing and sales costs for these products, and we anticipate these investments will be largely mitigated by our ongoing efficiency efforts. We want to make these investments now to ensure the long-term success of these new products and weâre confident these opportunities will expand our mission impact and addressable market. To summarize, fiscal 2022 was another strong financial year for Stride. And we anticipate continuing to build off the momentum in career and adult learning and beginning to execute on our new product and services in fiscal 2023. This is an exciting time for Stride and I cannot be more proud of the Stride employees who contribute so much to the success of the company. Thank you all for your time. I look forward to speaking with you more in the future. Now Iâll turn it over to the operator for Q&A. Operator?
Operator: Thank you. And we will take our first question from Jeff Silber with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Jeff Silber: Thank you so much. I just wanted to clarify a few things you said in your prepared remarks, and forgive me if I misheard you. James, I think you said something about the overhaul cohort being larger than ever. Are you talking about the total cohort, which would be general and education and the Career Learning? Or was it just specifically just Career Learning? And what time period are we talking Were we talking about currently fiscal â23?
James Rhyu: Yes. So Iâm referring to the total overall cohort, meaning both Gen ED and Career and that cohort was the ending fiscal â22 cohort that is eligible to reregister for fiscal â22.
Jeff Silber: Okay. I appreciate you clarifying that, thank you. And then I think you also used the terms tightening of margins. in the short-term. What does that mean exactly? Should we expect the margin percentage to go down? Should we just expect it to be flattish or just not as up as weâve previously seen. Again, if you can just tell us what you meant by that.
James Rhyu: Yes, I think weâre probably not ready to give specific guidance on margins. I think the comment is that â and weâre seeing this obviously across all industries. Inflation is still both impacting us and somewhat uncertainty to its degree of impact. And at the same time, I think as Don indicated, we are doing things to offset the impact of inflation, i.e., really trying to drive efficiency. And so I think in the short-term, we do think that we could see some marginal impact of inflation, not ready to quantify right now But clearly, inflation when two-thirds of our cost base is compensation related and in the tight labor markets and everybody knows itâs going on in the country, obviously, itâs going to have some impact on us.
Jeff Silber: Okay. Fair enough. If I could just sneak in one more. In Slide 10 of your presentation, you show your fiscal â25 financial outlook and you compare it the results that you just incurred for fiscal â22. If I look at the General Education revenue line, youâre already above the low end of your long-term target, which is great. But Iâm just curious why do you think youâre going to be flattish? Would it be down over the next 3 years? If not, why not increase the low end of that target? Thanks.
James Rhyu: Yes. So itâs a great point, Jeff. And I think we put these out whatever 2 November to go and we sort of want to keep them where they are for now, given just a lot of uncertainty that we see in the marketplace where clearly, our objective is to continue growing in both General Education and Career Learning. And on our current trajectory, we think that weâre going to clearly be within the range that we indicated here. The fact that weâre already in the range, and I think weâre going to trend better over time means that we will continue to be in the range. And at the appropriate moment, we will obviously update this. But I think for now, just given all the uncertainty in the market today, we just want to be sort of extra caution.
Jeff Silber: Got it. I understand. I will get back in the queue. Thanks so much.
Operator: We will take our next question from Stephen Sheldon with William Blair. Your line is open.
Stephen Sheldon: Hi, thanks. Congrats on the results and on the new role, Donna. Wanted to ask about the teacher hiring commentary, and I think you said that youâre kind of hiring earlier than normal to the anticipated demand. Any rough sense in how much your teacher capacity at this point is up relative to last year? And maybe some more detail on where youâre having some success on the recruiting side? Are you still recruiting in the same channels as you have historically? Or are you kind of widening where youâre recruiting from?
James Rhyu: Yes. Stephen. I think â so what I would say is that the way that we onboard and higher teachers is â it has multiple facets to first, and I think probably most important is at the end of each sort of year each full year, weâre looking to recontract with our existing group of teachers. Now â that in the previous few years because of, I think, greater uncertainty around how our enrollments are going to play out, that created some real stress on our system, particularly in the first year of COVID, when we saw the spike happening and had spike happened at a time that was fairly sort of, Iâll say, late in the hiring season, and we had a lot of catching up to do. The second year, still some level of certainty and the teacher shortage sort of, Iâd say, helped exacerbate some of the difficulties. This year, we had a strong, I think, teacher base to make offers to, and we started earlier in towards â in terms of our higher practice the general channel that we use are still largely the same. I wonât get too much about all the channels that we use around teacher hiring, but they are largely the same. Obviously, we use third parties and things like that to help us. But weâve been much more successful this season than we have in the past. And I think itâs a great correct of team, but itâs also, I think, just a credit to the overall culture weâre trying to build on the satisfaction that weâre trying to drive within not just the students and customers that we serve within the overall teacher community we serve. And we think that we have ongoing opportunities with, as you hear, the teachers sort of more broadly across the U.S., they want more options. And I think that â and this is in no way, shape or form, intended to be disparaging to any other opportunities that teacher would have. But I think we do offer some different in opportunity for teachers who may want a different type of environment, a different type of flexibility than where the current team can offer them. And so I think sort of the long-term trend for us, while the teacher shortage may still continue to be acute over the next several years, is that in our position, I think we have some real nice opportunities to take advantage of the marketplace and teacher hire.
Stephen Sheldon: Got it. Thatâs helpful. And then just a follow-up on the adult learning side, really nice sequential step-up in revenue there. So, we would love to get some more detail on whatâs driving that growth and the puts and takes between the different assets in there? And then I guess how are you thinking about the potential growth in that business as you think about the next few years?
James Rhyu: Yes. I mean, listen, I mean generically speaking, we have two pillars of our adult learning. We have sort of the technology skills side, and then we have the Allied Healthcare skill side. And both experienced nice growth heading into the end of this past year. And I know you have to be a little bit careful because the accounting mess up the first half of the year. So, our actual reported growth is much higher than actual organic growth just because of the way the year-over-year accounting work. But I think in the back half of the year where you saw true organic growth, I think Donna mentioned, you saw that 30% type of growth trajectory, and we are seeing strength in both the technology skills training as well as the Allied Healthcare skills training. We see â and in every cycle, this normally does happen. You see other providers will talk about this, is that in periods of recession, people tend to want to get re-skilled. I think we are seeing some nice demand because of that cyclicality within the economy. And I think we are going to continue to see strong demand for both of those verticals. And what we saw earlier this year when unemployment was, I think north of 8 million, a good 25% of those in those two areas, healthcare and technology. So, I think we are well positioned within areas of the marketplace that have ongoing strong demand and people want to be filled in those areas and they see career trajectories in those areas. So, I think we are pretty well positioned, and we are actually looking to expand. We are going to try to expand our footprint in terms of types of offerings in Allied Healthcare, for example, we have certificates in the Allied Healthcare sphere. There is about 60 certificates that could be offered. And so you will see us sort of expanding our footprint a little bit over time. And I think as Donna mentioned, we are always on the high for good acquisitions at the balance sheet to do that if they present themselves.
Stephen Sheldon: Great. Thank you.
Operator: We will take our next question from Greg Parrish with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Greg Parrish: Hi. Good evening. Thanks for taking my question. Congrats on the very strong results. I just want to unpack the revenue per enrollment, and you both talked about it a little bit, but I guess we are going to be up, but not at the same magnitude as inflation. And I guess does that roll forward to 2024 then? I mean the right way to think about it is maybe we will have 2 years sort of above the sort of long-term framework that you have, but below current inflation?
James Rhyu: Yes. So, yes, this was a little bit tricky for a number of reasons that I will try to unpack a little bit for you here. But revenue per enrollment, obviously, had a number of factors that play into it, one of which is the overall funding environment, the other of which is obviously mix. There is a third element for our business that is essentially yield or capture element, meaning of every 100 students that you educate ensuring that you capture the high yield across those hundred that has to do with the way states, different states get their sort of reporting for funding. And so there is also the sort of yield opposed to it. And we focus on improving across all three, meaning that we are obviously out there trying to convince policymakers to ensure that funding in our program keeps pace with at least inflation and certainly with other funding mechanisms. We are always optimizing our mix, but we are looking to take advantage of growth â long-term growth trajectory that may in the short-term mix. And obviously, within the yield component we are doing everything we can to improve engagement, which generally leads to higher yield. In the funding environment, particularly, we have consistently seen over many, many years that funding for our programs on average continue to increase at a couple of percent a year. Again, mix and other things will change that dynamic in the actual reported per people revenue amount. What we see for this coming fiscal year, fiscal year â23, is that the overall funding environment continues to be strong, consistent with prior years, i.e., a couple percent, which does lag, obviously, inflation. Now, itâs our belief that over time will catch up. However, there is a big caveat to that, which is it is at the discretion of each state and subject to the funding in each state as sort of a tax base flow. And so as if we enter into a prolonged recession, and if those state tax bases become under pressure, we still believe that legislators will allocate disproportionate amounts of funding to education, but it could put some pressure on the funding environment going to 2024. So, thatâs why itâs hard to tell really without understanding where the tax revenues will come in for this coming year and sort of we are going to enter into any prolonged type of recession. But absent sort of those negative pressures, we do believe that there will be some lag, but a catch-up because our programs educate hit just like any other, and we should, I think rightfully as funding for education generally will climb with inflation that we will also be a best to share of that. And we hope that the legislators will see it that way and obviously, we will fund it that way.
Greg Parrish: Okay. Great. Thatâs very helpful color. And then just sort of sticking with sort of macro and recession since you are talking about it, can you talk about the Career Learning businesses, I guess both of them? And I mean we havenât really â these are sort of newer assets to you. We havenât really seen how these perform, and thatâs a little bit different funding dynamics. How would you expect them to perform in a recession? Do you think they hold up as well as Gen Ed, so what are the differences? What are the puts and takes there?
James Rhyu: Yes. So, I think I am actually going to talk about three things. I know you mentioned sort of the two, correct. And I referenced earlier on the adult side, the Allied Healthcare and the technology career pillars. And I do think that particularly in the verticals in which we operate, they will hold up well in the recession. I think in previous recessions, we sort of see particularly healthcare and technology, hold up pretty well. I am not going to certainly speak for other providers, but I think just sort of generally the markets you see generically people talk about getting re-skilled in recessionary times. And I think that, that holds up if we head into another recession, prolonged session here, I would expect that to hold up. I will talk about also the third pillar, which is our high school career program. And in fact, I may be the most bullish about our high school career programs because long-term, recession or not high school kids need to get skilled while in high school. And we, I think have actually seen now tipping points where we see employers increasingly over the past year or so get on the bandwagon of opening their doors to high school graduates, increasingly looking for high school graduates with skill sets and also increasingly looking to allow for skills to be hot, trained and ladder up while in employment. And I think that goes really well for the trajectory of our high school programs, which is really looking to enable those kids being to get on that first on that lateral employer. And I think itâs really going to be an employer-driven kit, if you will, in the marketplace. And I think that a combination of factors, but the tight labor markets over the past couple of years, I think is really opened their eyes and everybody agrees that student debt crisis is unsustainable. So, you have these confluence of factors. And I think that we play really well into that confluence of factors, and I think you are going to see that not just in the current programs that we have had over the past few years, which has been very successful, is that we will be launching additional programs and platforms. I mentioned in my comments, we have got a new career platform that we are going to pilot here in the fall with very large school district, one of the top 10 school districts in the country. And I think we are going to get great traction with that as well over the coming years. So, I think all three of those elements, if you will, or colors of our current strategy do bode well to do well if there is a prolonged recession or if they are not.
Greg Parrish: Great. And I will just sneak one more in here, if I can. I just want to ask about M&A. You have sort of a bit of a war chest built up, and you are investing internally pretty aggressively here. I guess from the external aspect, I guess I will ask in two ways, sort of what are you seeing in terms of valuations? Have they come down enough? Is there still sort of a disconnect? And then sort of the second aspect is sort of whatâs your plan? Are you still sort of digesting the acquisitions that you made over the last couple of years, or are you ready and able to attack the market when you see an opportunity?
James Rhyu: Yes. So, I will address the second piece of that first and come back to valuations. But I think we are ready and able right now to do a deal if we see one attractive in the marketplace. So, I think that we are always on the hunt. I think we want to retain a level of discipline and diligence around how we do them. I think the past couple of the metrics and have actually performed very well. And in that model, we would continue to look for deals of that ilk, and we are always looking. But goes into the first part of your question on valuation. Clearly, at least from what we see valuation expectations effects have come down. However, we were looking at â I was talking to third-party a couple of weeks ago about an asset that was in the market. It was actually a career-related asset. The valuation expectations were in and around 10x revenue. They were marginally profitable assets. And the process busted and their valuation expectations have come down and we have somebody over there. But they have come down to about 5x to 7x growth, which frankly, is not a price point that I think that Donna and I are willing to pay. So, while I do think they have started to come down, I am not sure that in the types of assets that we have seen, they have come down far enough for them to make financial sense to us. So, there will have to be an overwhelming strategic opportunity to overcome what I think are still some elevated prices in the marketplace today, but we will still continue to look. I just â I want to be careful we will be â continue to be very disciplined about how we look, but we will still be active in our search.
Greg Parrish: Great. Thanks and congrats again.
James Rhyu: Thank you.
Operator: And there are no further questions at this time. So, ladies and gentlemen, this concludes todayâs conference call, and we thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.