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Consumer Defensive - Education & Training Services - NYSE - US
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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2017 - Q4
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Executives

Joan Walter - Senior Director-Investor & Media Relations Lisa Wardell - President and CEO Patrick Unzicker - Treasurer, Chief Accounting Officer & VP.

Analysts

Peter Appert - Piper Jaffray Jeff Silber - BMO Capital Markets Steve Farley - Farley Capital Jeff Mueller - Robert W. Baird Corey Greendale - First Analysis Scott Scher - LMJ Capital Steve Farley - Farley Capital.

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to the Adtalem Fourth Quarter and year-end Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Ms. Joan Walter.

Thank you. you may go ahead..

Joan Walter

Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. With me today from Adtalem’s leadership team are Lisa Wardell, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Patrick Unzicker, our Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer.

I'd like to remind you that this conference call contains forward-looking statements with respect to the future performance and financial condition of Adtalem Global Education that involve risks and uncertainties. Various factors could cause actual results to be materially different from any future results expressed or implied.

These factors are discussed under Risk Factors and elsewhere in our quarterly reports in Form 10-K for fiscal 2016 filed with the SEC and available on our website at www.adtalem.com. Adtalem disclaims any obligation to update any forward-looking statements made during the call.

During today's call, we may refer to non-GAAP financial measures, which are intended to supplement, though not substitute for our most directly comparable GAAP measures.

Our press release, which contains the financial and other quantitative information to be discussed today, as well as a reconciliation of non-GAAP to GAAP measures, is also available on our website. Telephone and webcast replays of today's call are available until, September 17.

To access the replay, please refer to today's release for more information. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Lisa..

Lisa Wardell

Thank you, Joan. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on today's call. Our fourth quarter results kept of a successful year for our organization, as we deliver tangible gains in the four priorities we laid out at the beginning of the fiscal year. I am pleased with our team’s ability to-date and delivering on an ambitious agenda.

Our transformation is well underway, as reflected in our highly focused on our student-centric culture, our new corporate name and our improving financial performance. We generated improved results for the year, included solid gains in earnings, and return on invested capital.

The operating leverage in our model has continue to improve and we remain solidly profitable allowing us strategically invest profitable to drive organic growth.

Our fiscal 2017 performance reflect our continued progress in diversifying our revenue profile to attractive in demand programs globally, strengthening our program offerings and service to students and improving operating efficiencies. We appreciate all of you who attended our Investor Day in May as well as those who are able to join via webcast.

We received positive and constructive feedback. Our leaders were able to convey the renewed energy and strong sense of accountability across our origination as well as the specific strategies we are pursuing to serve our students to marketize education and enhance our growth potential.

We're bringing much needed innovation to the education process and we're taking the right steps to leverage our scale to strengthen our programs and drive synergies in program delivery, marketing and operating excellence.

Overall, we've entered fiscal year 2018 with notable momentum as we focus on achieving our primary goal which is to empower our students and fill our societies' workforce skill gap. In fact, our new corporate name which literally means to empower in Latin marks a new era for our organization.

Adtalem is rapidly transitioning into a leaner, more focused enterprise. We also continue to strategically manage our capital allocation with the objective of balancing our investment initiatives with our commitment to delivering direct returns to our shareholders.

In the year ahead we remain intent on returning our organization to enrollment growth and driving profitable returns by being laser focused on our four core priorities.

First and most important, we're continuing to faster our heightened culture of student centric focus and academic excellence across each of our institution, we measure success by student persistence, completion and placements, we firmly believe that superior student outcomes will drive long-term success.

Our investments are aimed at making our graduates stronger job candidates, more qualified residency candidates and expert professionals in their chosen fields.

A key part of this effort involves greater emphasis on partnering with corporations, hospitals, government agencies and professional organizations to design education programs aimed at teaching new skills to employees. These organizations understand the need to adapt to changes in technologies, business processes and customer preferences.

We're focused on helping them to do that while creating employment opportunities for our students. As we deepen and expand these private player relationship, we will have the flexibility to further reduce our exposure to Title IV funding.

In fiscal 2017, we achieved our goal or limiting the revenue that our institutions derived from federal funding to 85% or lower a promise that only Adtalem has made. Second, we're continuing to focus on returning to organic revenue growth, increasing operating income and EPS to unlock our value to our holders.

Our transition to active portfolio management will continue in the year ahead as we focus on further elevating accountability across all operating units and improving our return on invested capital. We are setting clear financial performance criteria for each of our institutions and measuring performance against those goals.

Third, we're continuing to move forward and leveraging our organizational synergies and broadening efficiency initiatives across our enterprise. These initiatives are intended to be ongoing and are centered on driving bet practices across our organization.

In fiscal 2017, we established a centralized innovation function aimed at driving product development across our schools and companies. Our team is working to develop payroll solutions that enable our institutions and companies to better serve the specific needs of their students.

And fourth, we remain committed to working directly with a range of stakeholders, including the administration in Congress to implement regulatory initiatives to strengthen our industry. We believe Adtalem can serve an authentic board for our students in addressing the issues of access, affordability, quality and innovation.

Now let me review each of our segments beginning with Medical and Healthcare, which is our largest contributor to revenue and earnings. Chamberlain delivered solid financial and operating results during the fourth quarter and full year and remains our best performing institution.

The management Chamberlain’s expanding program offerings remains strong and the institution continues to benefit from a growing alumni base which now exceeds 40,000 healthcare professionals, as well as a strong partnership network, which includes more than 1,500 clinical partners.

Chamberlain remains well positioned to benefit from growing demand for nurses, and the expanding roles they play in the healthcare industry. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects demand for 3.2 million nurses by 2024, a 16% increase from the 2014 census as more than 1 million nurses reach with retirement age in the next 10 to 15 years.

The DLF continues to rank nursing as the second largest growth after patient through 2024 following the first ranked personal care aid. As we laid out during our Investor Day, we plan to fully pursue this supply demand imbalance in nursing and the broader healthcare industry by investing in new programs in markets where we see the most demand.

Chamberlain currently operates 20 campuses and 14 states and plans to open a new campus in New Orleans in fiscal year 2019. Longer term we are also exploring potential campus geographies, that include the North Eastern DLF, an additional campus in Texas and a second location in California.

Chamberlain is also continuing to explore international expansion opportunities via a business-to-business model in partnership with leading healthcare institution.

The institutions strong reputation is attracting interest from quality global partners, seeking to fund healthcare education in markets where there are substantial supply demand imbalances.

Chamberlain will be launching two post-licensure degree offerings in the country [indiscernible] in fiscal 2018 via an agreement brokered by the World Health Organization. While this venture is small, it provides a cost-efficient way to expand Chamberlain’s brand globally.

Following the establishment of Chamberlain University in May and the launch of our new college of Health Professions, Chamberlain has move forward in admitting students to the Master of Public Health or MPH degree program.

As a reminder, the launch of Chamberlain University marks the beginning of Chamberlain having two colleges, nursing and health professions under one Chamberlain brand. This structure allows us to expand Chamberlain’s academic offerings and to build on the success of our pre-and post-licensure nursing degree program.

The MPH program is just the beginning and it’s a major step in broadening the institution's role in providing health and wellness education and improving healthcare policy. Chamberlain continues to research and develop other program offerings under the college of health professions.

Chamberlain serves a diverse student population and its pre-licensure BSN program and enrolled twice as many minority students as the average U.S. nursing school. Many of these students come from challenged socio-economic background, so it's particularly gratifying to see so many graduates of Chamberlain working in healthcare and making a difference.

While medical and veterinary schools hope that new students' enrollment decline for the May semester, new student inquiries for September are increasing as a result of our refocused marketing and enrollment efforts, we anticipate that new in total enrollments in September semester will return to growth in the high single-digit range.

Ross Med, Ross Vet and AUC consistently graduate talented physicians and veterinarians, these institutions are well positioned to take advantage of the significant supply demand imbalance across the industry as demand for U.S. medical schools continues to far outstrip supply. Over the past decade, U.S.

seats have grown just over 18% while applicants for those seats have risen approximately 26%. As a result, during our Investor Day our medical school are directly addressing the supply demand imbalance and they're achieving test pathways and residency obtainments that are largely in line with their U.S. based counterpart.

Moreover, many of our graduates go on to practice primary care and serving low income areas and Ross Med as an example served a significantly higher percentage of underrepresented students than its U.S. based counterpart.

In our professional education segment, we've recently announced a new group president Mehul Patel who brings a wealth of operational and M&A experience in the global professional education market.

Mehul is formally the President of Apollo Global, the international education conglomerate within Apollo Education Group where he oversaw a network of businesses across six continents. He will report directly to me and will be responsible for the growth and strategy of Becker and ACAMS globally.

Becker remains an attractive business with an established brand serving high demand professions spanning the accounting medical and financial services field.

The Becker team remains focused on growing revenues domestically and internationally through its core test franchise as well as through the expansion of its continuing professional education program. In Becker core accounting market, two thirds of CPA firm partners are now over the age of 56 with significant numbers retiring by 2022.

Becker is well positioned to take advantage of this opportunity with all of the top accounting firms turning to Becker and 90% of the top CPA exam scores using Becker to prepare for the CPA exam.

In fiscal 2017, membership in ACAM grew significantly as the association deepened its relationship among large multi-national banks and drove increased participation in the certification program, webinars and conferences.

At the year ahead, ACAMS will continue to focus on expanding its presence in Europe and Asia including partnering with financial institutions and government that are focused on improving their anti-money laundering capabilities. ACAMS' market opportunity exceeds $2 billion globally with 70% of the addressable market outside the U.S.

where ACAMS only has a 1% share. In addition, ACAMS currently derived approximately 60% of its revenue from the U.S. but only has a 5% market penetration domestically.

Our technology and business segment which is comprised of Adtalem Brazil Institution remains well positioned to grow organically overtime as well as through strategic acquisitions despite near term political and economic challenges facing the country. Adtalem Brazil currently serves over 110,000 students through 380 programs in 23 campus locations.

Operating in the middle and premium segments of the market our institutions have excellent reputation and produce well educated graduates serving globally in fields such as business, law, and diplomacy.

Adtalem Brazil continues to achieve healthy persistence levels but new enrollment growth remains challenged due to continued macroeconomic pressure and related uncertainty with regard to the next phase of the CS program.

However, Adtalem Brazil has been allocated an increased in the number of [indiscernible] contracts and we're capturing our fair share because of our academic outcome. We're continuing to adjust to current market conditions through tighter cost control as we seek to better align our expense structure with enrollment and revenue trend.

We are also evaluating avenues to better integrate a range of functions spanning admissions, HR, IT, and legal. These efforts help to offset some of the revenue weakness in fiscal 2017 and supported strong and positive cash flow from our Brazil operation.

In addition to cost management, we are continuing to refine and expand our program offerings within growing sectors where there is notable demand for degrees and skills training. We are also pursuing the online market where the government recently streamlined the approval process for educational providers who have learning centers in place.

All told, we have 220 learning centers and expect to expand our footprint in fiscal 2018. These censuses are used for both test preparation and access to our online programs.

Overall the long-term outlook for our Brazil schools remains positive, given our solid reputation and the projected growth of the Brazilian population versus the current low growth enrollment ratio nationwide. We remain well positioned to take advantage of this opportunity to our presence in the country’s urban centers. In our traditional U.S.

Postsecondary segment during the fourth quarter, DeVry University continued to rollout the rollout of its Tech Path curriculum and related marketing program.

In conjunction with the Tech Path approach, the school has continued to focus on introducing stackable programs that are aligned with key growth areas, where there are notable supply demand imbalances including engineering and information sciences, health sciences and business and technology.

The school is seeing a promising response to its DeVry works initiative which has led to an expanded number of opportunities to partner with corporations to create tailored continuing education program focused on strengthening employee skills and supporting improved productivity.

Enrollment in the July session was down, but we expect some improvement in fiscal 2018, given increased interest resulting from our Tech Path DeVry work and program strategy. In the mean time, we continue to carefully monitor costs with the goal of covering nearly lost revenue going forward.

Carrington enrollment performance was below our expectations during the quarter. Our return to enrollment growth at Carrington remains a he high priority and we are working closely with them to address the issue.

We are moving with urgency to differentiate the school, improve the effectiveness of the marketing spend and introduce shorter, stackable programs in high demand areas. Though underperforming on enrollment, Carrington continues to deliver quality instruction and strong student outcome.

Carrington has good standing with this institutional on programmatic and creditors, solid test scores and strong graduate employment overall.

Celebrating its 50 anniversary this year, Carrington currently has 21 campuses located in eight states, we're continuing to seek approval to expand our registered nursing programs at select locations while pursuing opportunities in the allied health market where we can help students whose schools have closed.

We also remain focused on reducing costs and driving our operating efficiencies at Carrington. These efforts should support operating leverage as enrollments return to growth. Now before providing my closing remarks, I would like to turn the call over to Patrick for the financial review. .

Patrick Unzicker

Thanks Lisa and good afternoon everyone. We are pleased to report fourth quarter and full year results in line with our expectations. As Lisa noted, fiscal 2017 was the year of considerable progress for us.

Not the least of which was our success in driving further operating efficiencies across our enterprise which is reflected in our solid operating profitability and cash flows. The underlying economics of our organization have improved, and will continue to improve as we execute our plan.

In turn, we've strategically deployed our capital toward select investments and our program offerings, infrastructure and marketing resources while further strengthening our balance sheet and returning value to our owners through our share repurchase program.

Our transition to a portfolio management approach will support improved financial performance and operating leverage overtime as we continue to follow a more disciplined, measurable and transparent operating strategy at each of our schools.

As we noted at our Investor Day in May, we have a heightened focus on increasing our operating margin and ROIC, return on invested capital. At the same time, we remain centered on restarting organic revenue growth. We believe improved processes we put in place combined with the leadership changes we've made in fiscal 2017 will support these goals.

We're optimistic that we can begin to show enrollment growth later this year as we build our momentum and take full advantage of our exposure to multiple in-demand sectors spanning healthcare, professional education and technology. Now turning to the fourth quarter. Total Adtalem revenue was down 4.3% year over year at $451 million.

Growth at Chamberlain, Adtalem Brazil and our professional education segment was offset by declines at DeVry University in Carrington and prior weakness in enrollment at our medical schools. Total costs excluding special items in the fourth quarter were $386 million decreasing 7.4% from last year.

During the quarter, we again reduced costs at our home office with overhead spending decreasing almost 10% year over year excluding special items. Through our continued focus on improving our operating effectiveness we also reduced costs at DeVry University, Carrington, Chamberlain and at our Medical and Veterinary schools.

Total pretax special items in the fourth quarter amounted to almost $12 million primarily from restructuring at DeVry University and our home office. Operating income for the fourth quarter increased nearly 20% to $65 million excluding special items as compared to last year.

Net income excluding special items was $51 million during the fourth quarter which resulted in earnings per share excluding special items of $0.78 up 20% from $0.65 in the year ago quarter. Our effective tax rate excluding special items was 19.7% for the fourth quarter compared to 23.8% in the year ago quarter.

Now let's review our segment performance. Starting with Medical and Healthcare, revenue of $193 million was flat in the fourth quarter. Segment operating income, excluding special items, increased by 12% over the prior year to $43 million. Chamberlain revenue grew 2.4% for the quarter.

In July, new student enrollment grew 16.5% and total students grew 6%. Looking to fiscal year 2018, we expect mid-single new student enrollment growth at Chamberlain. Revenue at our medical and veterinary schools decreased 3% during the fourth quarter primarily due to declining enrollment at our Ross Medical school.

In May, new student enrollment decreased 14% and total students decreased 6% in line with our expectation. We expect medical and veterinary enrollments for the September 2017 semester to grow in the high single-digit range.

Turning to our professional education segment, revenue increased nearly 27% to $40 million in the quarter driven by the acquisition of ACAMS which performed in line with our expectations.

The segment's operating income excluding special items decreased 17% over the prior year to $11 million during the quarter, as a result of revenue declines from the Becker CPA review. In our technology and business segment, revenue of $83 million increased 11% in the quarter primarily driven by the benefit in currency.

Without his currency effect, revenue would have grown nearly 2% in the fourth quarter. The segment's operating income increased 29% to $19 million during the quarter. And finally, in our U.S. Traditional Postsecondary segment, revenue of $136 million was down 21% in the quarter as a result of declining enrollments at DeVry University in Carrington.

Segment operating loss excluding special items narrowed the $900,000 in the quarter compared to a loss of $1.2 million last year. Revenue at DeVry University declined 23% to a $104 million during the quarter driven by continued enrollment declines. In July under graduate new student enrollments decreased 11% while total students declined 22%.

We continue to reposition DeVry University to become a leaner, more profitable institution. In the fourth quarter excluding special items, we recovered 99.5% of expenses for every dollar of lost revenue for a total reduction in costs of $31 million. For the full fiscal year, we recovered 95.6% of expenses at the school.

Carrington revenue declined 15% during the quarter, new students declined 18% and total students declined by 17%. For the first quarter of fiscal 2018 we expect total Adtalem revenue to be down 4% to 5% year-over-year.

Continued revenue growth particularly at Chamberlain, at Adtalem Brazil and professional education, will be offset the declining revenue at DeVry University in Carrington.

First quarter fiscal 2018 operating costs before special items are expected to decline 4% to 5% versus the prior year, as a result of cost reduction at DeVry University Carrington and home office offset somewhat by increases at Chamberlain in Adtalem Brazil.

We expect to incur additional restructuring charges as we continue to right size operations to better align with enrollment levels. For the full 2018 fiscal year, revenue is expected to be flat to down 1% compared to the prior year and earnings before special items, are expected to grow in the low single-digit range as compared to the prior year.

Given the evolution of our portfolio and the sizable, seasonal contributions from Vector and Adtalem Brazil in our third and fourth quarter, our earnings performance will be weighted to the second half of the year. The effective income tax rate for fiscal year 2018 is expected to be in the range of 21% to 22% before special items.

Now turning to our balance sheet and financial position, cash flow from operations for the fiscal year 2017 was $228 million in line with the prior year. Our cash and cash equivalents were $242 million at June 30, 2017 while outstanding bank borrowings were $125 million leaving us with great optionality with respect to our balance sheet.

Our net accounts receivable was $173 million, an increase of 7% from the prior year primarily because of the timing of receipts at Adtalem Brazil. We closed the year with bad debt as a percentage of revenue at 2.2% compared to 1.9% in fiscal 2016. Capital spending for fiscal 2017 was $49 million compared to $69 million in the prior year.

We're targeting capital spending for fiscal year 2018 to be in the $65 million to $70 million range primarily driven by investments in our medical and healthcare and technology and business segments for new campus at Chamberlain and to enhance exam quality.

During the fourth quarter of fiscal 2017, we've returned $80 million to our owners through repurchasing approximately 483,000 shares at an average purchase price of $37.17. This represented a 27% increase in the amount capital return to our owners as compared to the third quarter of fiscal 2017.

The pace of repurchases is supported by our belief that intrinsic value of Adtalem shares is meaningfully higher than our current market valuation. Now let me turn the call over to Lisa. .

Lisa Wardell

Thanks, Patrick. In summary, fiscal 2017 was a transformational year for Adtalem Global Education. We laid out an ambitious agenda at outside of the year and our team delivered on that agenda.

We've entered a new era as a lean and more focused organization, united and pursuing our goal of empowering our students and taking the necessary step to return our organization to our enrollment growth. Our value proposition remains strong and our programs are aligned with high growth factor where we see considerable supply demand and balances.

In the fiscal 2018, we remain well positioned to deliver ongoing progress and executing our strategy while further improving our cash generation and our ability to reward our fellow owners through our share repurchase program. .

Joan Walter

Thanks, Lisa. I'd now ask the operator to open the call for Question-and-Answer Session. .

Operator

At this time, we'll be conducting the Question-and-Answer Session. [Operator Instructions]. Our first comes from Peter Appert of Piper Jaffray. Please proceed with your question..

Peter Appert

Thanks, good afternoon. I think either Pat or Lisa said that your expectation was a return to enrollment growth later this year which is a bit more optimistic I guess than I had in my model.

So, number one, I am wondering about your confidence in that statement and number two, if you could just give us some more color in terms of granularity on how you get there, is it all because of the nursing and medical? Just more color on the drivers of return to positive enrollment growth, please..

Lisa Wardell

Got it.

Yes, and so for all of Adtalem, really it is primarily as we look at the medical and healthcare segment, we see there from the results this time with Chamberlain and then also in medical and veterinary where while we had talked about the operational changes we put in place that are certainly being quite effective, we had guided to and in fact discussed on our last call that as we would not see all of those results in May but as we go into the September session we're very confident in those enrollment increases and that's what's driving our confidence overall..

Peter Appert

No expectation I assume that DVU is back to flat enrollment or flat starts by the end of the year..

Lisa Wardell

Yes, we do have an expectation that DVU enrollment is going to stabilize and flatten out by the end of fiscal 2018 absolutely..

Peter Appert

And is there any -- do you see enough in terms of current trends and demand for new programmatic offerings to give us any additional color on how you get there?.

Lisa Wardell

Yes, sure. Sorry, I thought you were focused on medical healthcare.

A couple of things, I think the first is around our programs as they relate to Tech Path in general we have quite a few programs now that are in the Tech Path and related to the DeVry work increases that we've seen in terms of the partnerships and private pay employers that are coming in and we're seeing demand in those particular programs and segments.

So, as we have been talking I guess for a couple of calls now around the program stack, we have two in place that are showing positive results and four more in the works around the stacks and then for Tech Path as we discussed last time we're seeing the new student enrollments and the percentages in those program upticks in a way that gives us confidence for the back half of the year which is consistent.

We knew that it would take some time for those changes to go. And as you recall that was really January where we launched in full effect both of those things both Tech Path, DeVry Tech value proposition as well as the newly engaged DeVry work and so that's what gives us confidence for the remainder of the year..

Peter Appert

Right. And then on Brazil the profit's up substantially flattish revenue is pretty impressive thinking about 2018 and obviously suggested that enrollments are going to continue to be a headwind. Is there enough on the cost side to get you to continued positive earnings performance given in the context of flattish or down revenues..

Patrick Unzicker

Yes, there is Peter.

The team in Brazil has done an excellent job in managing through complete difficult geopolitical and economic challenging economic times in Brazil and really reposition the cost structure for a couple of reasons one, to certainly improve profitability, but two, to allow us to be more competitive on the pricing end and while we do expect some headwinds to continue albeit diminishing in Brazil as the economy starts to improve, we're projecting and expecting improved year over year profitability in Brazil and in the current fiscal year FY 2018 over to 2017.

.

Peter Appert

Last thing, just your thoughts on the pace of buyback activity in fiscal 2018?.

Patrick Unzicker

We are very confident in our ability to deliver; our plan s continues to grow earnings as we did in 2017 and we do feel that that our market has undervalued us and our true price is not yet reflected in the market and we do see there as an opportunity as we return our capital to shareholders. .

Peter Appert

Does that suggest that, that you buy more in 2018 than you did in 2017?.

Lisa Wardell

Yes, I’ll jump in. What I would add is, we have real confidence that as you can tell I think from the enrollment answers there in our FY 2018 plan.

The good news as you know is that we have an authorization now for the larger -- the $300 million buyback while we do have that over the three-year period we have the ability to be more aggressive and increase that in FY 2018. .

Operator

Our next question comes from Jeff Silber of BMO Capital Markets. Pleased proceed with your question. .

Jeff Silber

Thanks so much. I notice it's probably going to be in the K, I am not sure where that’s being filed. But is it possible to breakout the acquisition impact in the quarter or at least give us kind of some semblance of whatever are the organic revenue change was and also similar on the operating profit side? Thanks. .

Patrick Unzicker

Yes, certainly Jeff. For the quarter -- for the fourth quarter the impact of acquisition contributed about $16 million of incremental revenue, so about 3.3 percentage points in growth on a year-over-year basis.

And from an operating income perspective contributed about $4 million of incremental [indiscernible] in the quarter or about 6.8 percentage points in growth. .

Jeff Silber

Thank you, you are prepared for that question, I appreciated.

And is that all in the professional education sector is that all [indiscernible]?.

Patrick Unzicker

Yes. .

Jeff Silber

Okay alright, fantastic. I know there has been -- I guess there is some noise out of Brazil with some more potential changes in fee of contract. Can you kind of give us an overview of what’s going on there and what the potential impact on your business is going to be? Thanks. .

Patrick Unzicker

Sure, so the Brazilian government has reallocated their contract, they continue to focus on areas that are underserved within Brazil, so we aligned well with our heavy presence in the North East.

So as a result, our share of the overall fee of contract for this upcoming or current enrollment period increased from 2.7% a year ago to 3.3% in this current period. So pretty meaningful increase for us which we think will help stem some of the overall economic challenges and headwinds that we have in new student enrollment [growth of] [ph] results.

.

Lisa Wardell

Yes, and the only thing I would add to that is, we are mindful that we also need to focus on the diversification there as you will recall [indiscernible] the test prep centers, the 220 centers that we have throughout the geographically throughout Brazil allow us to expand the reach of [indiscernible] with online programs et cetera and really make sure that we are diversifying, at the same time as obviously keeping and gaining fee as share.

.

Jeff Silber

Okay and again just to clarify, your percentage share did go up or did the overall revenues or contribution that you get from fee after that go down?.

Patrick Unzicker

That went down as a result of the diversification. As we grow in the [indiscernible] but that went down just because the other parts of the business is growing faster. .

Jeff Silber

Okay great and forgive me, I know you said this in your beginning remarks, can you just remind us in terms of new schools for Chamberlain what’s on the horizons for the next year or so?.

Patrick Unzicker

Sure. So, we're currently operating 20 campuses today. Our net campus opening pending approval is expected to be in New Orleans in early fiscal 2019. And then from there, we're looking another 4 to 5 over the next two years likely Texas, California and South East. .

Jeff Silber

Hey fantastic.

And do you have state approval to operate in those states?.

Patrick Unzicker

Pending approval, but yeah. .

Lisa Wardell

Just going to add, this will be the fourth location in Texas and the second in California. So, the state approvals yes. .

Operator

Our next question comes from Steve Farley of Farley Capital. Please proceed with your question..

Stephen Farley

Yes.

Could you please give us an update on the family nurse practitioner program?.

Patrick Unzicker

Sure Steve, so we are very pleased with our enrollment performance for July with new student enrollments being up 16.5% and a large driver of that growth was the continued marketplace interest for our S&P programs. .

Stephen Farley

Okay. And a year ago you attributed the fact that new enrollment at Chamberlain have gone negative to the fact that you've capped the family nurse practitioner program, because you didn't have the clinical experiences for the people lined up.

But when did you -- tell us about the kind of the, is it fully uncapped now, or when did that happen and tell us about that?.

Patrick Unzicker

Sure, so we had moderated enrollment growth or a self-imposed cap to ensure that we had adequate and quality clinical experience for our students as they entered into that portion of the program. So, we worked very hard during the kind of fall in early winter of 2016 and that allowed us to start to increase that cap as we moved into calendar 2017.

So, we started to see that in our enrollment results in January and March and obviously continuing here through July. .

Stephen Farley

So, if we look at the fourth quarter of 2016, when you say you capped it, does that mean you took students in the S&P program but only so many or you took zero?.

Patrick Unzicker

We limited the numbers, so we were still accepting new students but we had lowered the amount relative to what we had been to ensure that we had the right amount of clinical for them. .

Stephen Farley

Okay. And where does that stands today in the core you just released.

To what extent was the S&P program new enrollment to what extent was that capped in the June 2017 quarter?.

Patrick Unzicker

There was no cap. .

Stephen Farley

Okay.

and was there a cap in the March quarter?.

Patrick Unzicker

No, we lifted the cap in January 2017. .

Stephen Farley

Got you. Thank you. .

Operator

Our next question comes Alex Paris of Barrington Research. Please proceed with your question..

Unidentified Analyst

Good afternoon this is Chris [indiscernible] sitting in for Alex. I have a question.

This past July, the closure of dev boot camp just curious what your are thoughts on the overall competitive environment within this niche and whether you see this as -- or whether you're seeing this as an opportunity to take market share and how you see enrollments growing within cording over 2018?.

Patrick Unzicker

We understand it is a very competitive environment. We did like others look and evaluate potential partnerships acquisition targets. We feel that our right to win in tech is with our associates and bachelor's degree and certificate programs and that where our focus will be with DeVry University on a go forward basis..

Unidentified Analyst

Okay. And then you had mentioned the B2B model with healthcare institutions with Chamberlain.

How does this play into the growth outlook for it? I guess how much is it contributing to your outlook and how big of a portion could it be may be over the next five years?.

Patrick Unzicker

Sure. So, our B2B, the healthcare development group within Chamberlain continues to be a great outreach to large healthcare providers that help them solve their workforce skills gaps and to help individuals who have their RN guess their BSN degree as well as help further educate their workforce through master's and doctoral programs.

One of the statistics that we had shared at Investor Day was for our most recent, or back at least in May that healthcare development group accounted for about 70% of the new student enrollments in our RN to BSN class with a very meaningful way for us to help serve the workforce skills gap with our large healthcare providers..

Lisa Wardell

Yeah, another thing I would add is if you then look at our master's degree student 33% of those students are alumni of the RN to BSN program. So, the business of it can really help through the funnel of not only the RN to BSN but further degrees..

Unidentified Analyst

That's very helpful. Thank you for the color and I have one last quick question if you are able to provide it.

Within your 2018 guidance would you be able to share generally your cost saving initiatives that are planned perhaps in comparison to this past year?.

Patrick Unzicker

In terms of outlook we focused on obviously the revenue and then the resulting expected earnings growth, so there is some implied cost reductions in the guidance, you can just do the math in between those numbers, that’s all that we'll provide right now..

Unidentified Analyst

Okay. Thank you..

Operator

Our next question comes from Jeff Mueller, Robert W. Baird. Please proceed your question..

Jeff Mueller

Yeah, thank you and thanks for the acquisition contribution number.

Just given the FX impact as well, can you just give us the year over year organic constant currency revenue change percentage?.

Patrick Unzicker

Sure. So, on a -- well it's got another way, FX on year over year basis for the quarter contributed about $7 million of incremental revenue or 1.5%..

Jeff Mueller

Okay, got it. And then any comments on Chamberlain RPS, just the impact of mix versus discounting..

Patrick Unzicker

Yeah, it's primarily driven by a mix we've had an increasing mix of our post-licensor programs with growing F&P and again those students generally take obviously a lower course load compared to the pre-licenser.

Similarly, a nice growth in our RN to BSN program, those students have a lower course load as well as generally come in through our healthcare development specialist channel for those who would be at a somewhat lower price than our broader student population..

Jeff Mueller

Okay. And then the medical and healthcare margins were really nice in the quarter and I think there was a comment about taking cost out both at medical international and at Chamberlain just would appreciate any additional color of what you're doing to improve the efficiency of those organizations..

Patrick Unzicker

Sure.

We've seen an opportunity if we look across our portfolio in general be more efficient both from the effectiveness of our marketing as well as specifically within our medical schools, we did have a management team and group that serves the medical schools and we have since realigned the functions of that team and put those within our respective medical and veterinary schools and that’s driven some significant cost savings that we’re start to saw in the fourth quarter and obviously will continue to get the benefit of that as we move through FY 2018.

.

Lisa Wardell

Yeah and the only thing I would add there is, we are at the same kind of fall, we also added a Chief Marketing Officer from our Brazil group, so not new to Adtalem but new to that role and that has created some efficiencies as it relates to digital marketing, agency spend et cetera, so it's actually sort of a good mix of operational efficiencies through cost management, but it has made us more effective as it relates to recruiting and some of that you mentioned Chamberlain has also since the Chamberlain particularly as it relates to the digital marketing piece we just have experts that are doing that at the CMO level that has been -- we have been able to leverage in those schools.

.

Jeff Mueller

Okay.

And then just finally, when you give guidance for earnings to grow low single-digit can we just be clear, are you talking adjusted EPS and I am asking because I think the tax rates going up next year and also is there a share repurchase assumption in the guidance if that’s an adjusted EPS figure?.

Patrick Unzicker

Sure, so in referring adjusted EPS, so the EPS excluding any special charges in terms of restructuring that would occur next year and then with respect to our share repurchase quite the best way to model that and again there is some opportunities to be more aggressive, that is not reflected in our current outlook.

But if you were to look at the run rate over the past couple of quarters, will be more representative of what’s implied in that guidance, with some opportunity on the upside there..

Operator

Our next question comes from Corey Greendale of First Analysis. Please proceed with your question. .

Corey Greendale

The three questions are, with the Tech Path getting traction, could you give us an idea of what you are assuming for revenue curve did in at DeVry University in the guidance? Second question is, with DA conducted its anniversary, what rate is that throwing out now and what’s implied to the guidance for the professional education growth in fiscal 2018.

Then the third question is Lisa I think in your script you said that the organization is becoming more focused and leaner and just thinking about that in the context of M&A if that has implications so how are you thinking about M&A, if you can just give us you latest thinking on that front and thank you. .

Lisa Wardell

Got it okay. I will take the last question first as it relates to M&A.

What I would say is from our perspective we recognized that we have some really healthy verticals as it relates to medical healthcare and professional education that have really healthy margins there and we expect our M&A opportunities going forward to be very disciplined as it relates to making sure that we are either maintaining or improving those verticals as we think about acquisitions there.

Seamless technology in business, right now obviously primarily comprised or comprised of Brazil.

But in terms of the operating teams the management, and how that team is being able to be nimble and really look at cost efficiencies as we move through a kind of the initial stages of the acquisitions and kind of that acquisitive mode that they've been in Brazil, we would expect to be able to replicate that elsewhere as it relates to technology and business assets that will add to be accretive to our margins and our operating income margin..

Patrick Unzicker

With respect to ACAMS, as we move into FY '18, based on our visibility, what we seeing today and again, feel very confident the management team at ACAM and their ability to demonstrate continue to really serve in underserved markets both in the United States as well as increasingly abroad.

Not unreasonable for ACAMS' top-line to grow in the mid to high-30% range year-over-year. And then as it relates to the first part of your question which we'll answer last, was the impact on the DeVry University undergraduate revenue for students as a result of the change in our Tech Path pricing.

We're anticipating that undergraduate revenue for students at DeVry University to be roughly flattish year-over-year FY '18 to '17. And the reason being is that our Tech Path pricing puts us in a much more competitive price relative to our competitors but in terms of how we were utilizing our scholarship and grants, we're reallocating that.

So, we're not expecting to see a big negative revenue per student result at Tech Path. .

Lisa Wardell

Right, but I think at the same time it gives us efficiencies as it relates to the larger class sizes and lower kind of facilities and faculty costs as we're able to drive that model. .

Operator

The next question comes from Scott Scher of LMJ Capital. Please proceed with your question..

Scott Scher

Yes. You've mentioned something about a B2B program for Chamberlain and you said you're exploring that internationally and then you mentioned the [indiscernible] and your Analyst Day was just month or two ago and I don't recall you mentioning that.

Is that something new and can you just expand on that please?.

Lisa Wardell

Yeah. And let me just say the B2B, what we called ACS that program was in Chamberlain is not new and I may have used similar semantics in the script.

The [indiscernible] thing is relatively doing again that was really inbound partnership called some of the World Health Organization and its allowing us to really be able to -- we have now couple of programs there where we are able to deliver programs online and with scale for those particular areas that will really help us determine how we'll be able to scale some of our particularly graduate -- program in a way that we can learn from that.

So, it's a smaller opportunity but allows us the learnings to be able to scale and take that more broadly. And in fact, we've already looked at some other opportunities where we think that will be something that we'll do at Chamberlain going forward. .

Operator

Our next question comes from Steve Farley of Farley Capital. Please proceed with your question..

Stephen Farley

Hi. I'm curious, so tied together at least your comments on possible orders and acquisitions with Pat's discussion of share repurchase.

I think when most people would look at the history of the company's acquisitions, the one that stands out is really a wonderful thing is Chamberlain where you bought a small thing, it was one campus and thanks to Susan Groenwald she's built that thing, this thing that’s got 20 campuses with a huge online business at a $0.5 billion making lots of money.

I think we'd all love to see get you do that again and again and again. Unfortunately, there have been acquisitions where you've bought a big thing that hasn't done so well whether we're talking about Carrington is I think close to $300 million was spent on that it's a loser thus far.

ACAMS got long way to go, you've spent $330 million on it and yet is not making a whole lot of money. And then in contrast to that you've got your stock that sells at probably roughly 11 times after tax earnings.

And so just tell us about when you think about acquisitions what kind of multiples you'd be willing to pay and where the share repurchase compared to that? I mean if you see something….

Lisa Wardell

Yeah, I think I got the question Steve.

Yeah, so here is what I would say and to reiterate what I said just a few minutes ago which is we recognize and in fact have the ability because of the program that our board has authorized or approved that we can be more aggressive as it relates to share repurchase and that is something that we as a management team and the board consider as we move into FY 2018 primarily because as you're saying and as we all recognize where the stock is trading is not where we think the intrinsic value lies nor does it demonstrate what we think that we are or what we know we're going to be able to do in FY 2018.

So, but as you also know we can do that in parallel with acquisitions that make sense.

And what I would say about the acquisition piece is as you know timing is everything, I am not in a place where I would say that ACAMS we have not had the time to see that and I am fully confident that that we were right and that our owners are going to get to that point with us as we move through FY 2018 and we see just frankly the exponential growth that can come from ACAMS in that model which is as we know really suffers service model very, very low CapEx and very in a market that can grow in a way that I think deserves to be in this portfolio.

So, we'll see and time will tell. As we move forward with acquisition rather than talk about a multiple what I would say is I would have said before which is we don't want degradation of the margins that we have in the verticals such as medical and healthcare where obviously Chamberlain is quite the contributor you're exactly right.

We want to be accretive as it relates to those margins and those results and we recognize that that takes a disciplined approach to M&A going forward and fortunately or unfortunately I can only talk about going forward, but I can assure you that that's how we view whether we're going to be acquisitive or not and I think the fact that we were not in FY 2017 post ACAMS as we got our house in order so to speak and transformed this organization and how it operates should demonstrate that that's the case..

Stephen Farley

So just a follow up, Pat at the Investor Day you mentioned the possibility of the company putting some permanent debt on the balance sheet which of course could augment the share repurchase significantly, where are you on that?.

Patrick Unzicker

It still remains very valuable option and we’re continuing to ride forward opportunities and it continues to be a very good market in terms of from the overall cut up market..

Stephen Farley

I mean like the Investor Day was three months ago, I assume it doesn’t take that long to figure out how to you guys have a pristine balance sheet, you got net cash, what’s the hurdle?.

Patrick Unzicker

There is -- as we move forward we are making progress and I'll just leave it at that. I can't obviously go beyond that. Thank you. .

Stephen Farley

Okay. Thank you. .

Lisa Wardell

Okay we’d like to thank everyone for your questions and remind you that our next results call is scheduled for November 2, when we announce our fiscal 2018 first quarter results. Thank you for your continued support at Adtalem..

Operator

This concludes today’s conference, you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day..

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