Mala Murthy
Analyst · Barclays. Please go ahead
Thank you, Chuck. Good afternoon, everyone. Second quarter consolidated revenue of $642 million decreased 2% year-over-year. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA was $89.5 million, which was above the high end of our guidance range and up 24% year-over-year, representing a margin of 13.9%. Consolidated net loss per share in the second quarter was $4.92, compared to a net loss per share of $0.40 in the second quarter of 2023. Net loss per share in the second quarter included a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $4.64 per share, amortization of acquired intangibles of $0.38 per share, and stock-based compensation expense of $0.25 per share. The goodwill impairment testing was triggered by the decline in Teladoc Health share price, with the impairment amount impacted by a higher discount rate and lower forecasted cash lows, and particularly the impact of challenges at BetterHelp. Second quarter free cash flow was $60.9 million, compared to $64.6 million in the second quarter of 2023, excluding a non-recurring, non-income tax refund in the prior year quarter, free cash flow was up approximately 25%. We ended the quarter with $1.2 billion in cash and equivalents on the balance sheet. Turning to our segment results, Integrated Care segment revenue increased 5% year-over-year to $377 million in the second quarter. Chronic Care was a key contributor to this year-over-year revenue growth. We ended the quarter with Chronic Care Program Enrollment of $1.17 million, up 9% year-over-year, and up 5% sequentially. The largest drivers of Chronic Care Enrollment growth versus the prior year period were our Diabetes Prevention & Weight Management programs, followed by Hypertension. As an example of the continued success we are seeing with our land and expand strategy, we recently upgraded the fully insured population at a large regional Blues plan from our Diabetes Management Solution to Diabetes Plus, and expanded it to all fully insured members, while also securing a hunting license for our newly launched advanced weight management solution for their self-insured population. In addition to enrollment growth, we also saw a benefit in the quarter from performance-based revenue in our Chronic Care programs, where we are earning fees for successfully delivering on outcomes. While these types of arrangements currently represent a smaller portion of our business, we believe that our ability to deliver positive results in value-based arrangements will remain an important lever going forward. International was also an important contributor with strong revenue growth in the quarter driven by our B2B business, while we are also seeing success in leveraging our hospital and health systems offerings to unlock new public health system opportunities. U.S. Integrated Care segment membership at the end of the quarter was 92.4 million members, increasing by 8% year-over-year and up by a by approximately 600,000 members sequentially in line with our guidance range. Average Integrated Care revenue per U.S. member of $1.36 decreased by $0.05 versus the prior year second quarter. This is driven by mix as we have onboarded a significant number of new members within our general medical product and typically they contribute less material to our average revenue per member. As we have said, based on our land and expand strategy, we see significant runway to cross sell additional higher revenue products over time, including our Chronic Care services. Second quarter Integrated Care adjusted EBITDA was $64 million, a 69% increase over the second quarter of 2023. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 17% was well above our guidance range of 12% to 14% and represented growth of approximately 640 basis points versus the second quarter of 2023. Three factors helped to contribute to the upside versus the guidance range in the quarter. The first was the performance-based revenue in our Chronic Care programs. The second factor was adjustments to compensation accruals in line with current year performance, including lower than expected performance in our BetterHelp business. And the third part is related to timing, as certain marketing and other operating expenses were pushed into the second half of the year. In aggregate, these three factors accounted for over 300 basis points of benefit to year-over-year margin expansion. Turning to the BetterHelp segment, revenue was $265 million in the second quarter, down 9% versus the prior year period and slightly below our guidance range of down 4% to 8%. Revenue was down 1.5% versus the first quarter of 2024, as average paid users declined by 1.9% sequentially. With average revenue per user generally stable and churn in the first half of 2024 improving versus the second half of 2023. The decline in revenue and users versus the first quarter was a result of fewer user additions to the platform. We've talked about how a variety of factors influence the revenue yield on advertising spend, including cost of media, the overall health of the consumer, and dynamics within the advertising channels themselves. In the first quarter, we saw challenging customer acquisition costs through early Q1, which caused us to pull back on our advertising dollars in the quarter in keeping with our goals to balance growth and margin. Although we entered the second quarter with lower paid users, creating headwinds to our top-line performance, we did see signs of advertising costs stabilizing at Q1 levels in the first few weeks. However, we saw a further deterioration from those levels in May, with that trend continuing into June. To help put this in context, we saw a double-digit percentage increase in customer acquisition costs in May versus what we had seen exiting the first quarter. In line with our strategy to constantly optimize for return on advertising spends, we made the decision to pull back during the second quarter to ensure the appropriate level of return for marginal dollar spend. This led to fewer gross additions and a lower paid user count, which drove the revenue decline in the quarter. We believe higher customer acquisition costs in the U.S. are being driven by several factors. First, we are seeing customer acquisition costs pressure broadly across many of our advertising channels, which suggest some broader macro weakening of the consumer. Next, BetterHelp growth is dependent on our ability to efficiently deploy marketing dollars to acquire new customers. Our scale makes us the largest advertiser of virtual mental health. And while our spending is diversified across various channels, there is only so much incremental ad spend we can drive in a short period of time without further inflating our customer acquisition costs. At our scale, and at these elevated levels of customer acquisition costs, we are making a conscious decision not to chase inefficient customer acquisition to points below an appropriate return. So this balanced approach and focus on driving ROI and margin is going to come at a lower overall rate of top line growth as long as customer acquisition costs in our key advertising channels remain elevated. As we have noted, BetterHelp is a business in transition. We are undertaking several strategic pivots to address these challenges and expand our addressable market. As Chuck had discussed, we are actively working on bringing the BetterHelp value proposition to the insurance market. In addition, we are also moving forward with further international expansion beyond our current footprint with a focus on certain non-English speaking markets. Consistent with our prior commentary, we have seen much healthier customer acquisition costs in non-US markets, which is translating to strong international revenue growth at BetterHelp. BetterHelp adjusted EBITDA was $25 million in the second quarter, representing a 26% year-over-year decline. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 9.6% was just above the midpoint of our guidance range of 9% to 10% and decreased 210 basis points versus a prior year quarter. As we faced higher than expected customer acquisition costs, we made the deliberate decision to moderate advertising spend in certain channels during the quarter, which allowed us to meet our adjusted EBITDA margin target and was consistent with our focus on managing the business to an appropriate return on ad spend. Now, let me turn to guidance. For Integrated Care, we continue to expect 2024 revenue growth in the low to mid-single digits. We are narrowing our range for adjusted EBITDA margin expansion, which we now expect to be up 150 to 200 basis points. Our guidance reflects the first half performance offset by a slower ramp in Chronic Care Enrollment, primarily related to client driven delays in the launch of certain member populations, which will likely lead to Chronic Care Enrollment being relatively flat on a sequential basis in the third quarter. We are raising the lower end of our U.S. Integrated Care member guidance range and now expect 92.5 million to 94 million members at year end. For the third quarter, we expect Integrated Care revenue to be down 1% to up 2%, and adjusted EBITDA margin between 14.5% and 16%. U.S. Integrated Care members are expected to be in the range of 92.5 to 93.5 million members. We note that the deceleration in year-over-year revenue growth in the third quarter is due in part to a tougher comp due to the realization of performance guarantees in the third quarter of 2023, which added approximately 100 basis points of growth and adjusted EBITDA margin in the prior year period, as well as impacts from lower Chronic Care Enrollment. For BetterHelp, customer acquisition costs have continued to trend higher over the past few quarters, and there is limited visibility on the near term path, which as we have discussed, could be further affected by the unknown impact of the upcoming presidential election on ad pricing. Based on actions we are taking as we actively manage the business for an appropriate return on ad spend, while at the same time positioning the business and brand for long-term success, this is leading to an atypically wide range of potential outcomes. Therefore, we are choosing to not provide segment revenue or adjusted EBITDA guidance for the third quarter, and we are withdrawing our full year guidance for both metrics in our BetterHelp segment at this time. We recognize the challenge this presents from a modeling standpoint. Therefore, to provide a baseline, we note that if customer acquisition costs continue at current levels, we would expect second half 2024 revenue to decline in the low double digits. Consistent with our decision to not provide guidance for the BetterHelp segment, we are therefore not providing guidance for the consolidated company, revenue, adjusted EBITDA, net loss per share, or free cash flow for the third quarter or full year 2024. We continue to make progress executing against our cost-saving productivity initiatives, and we remain on track to deliver $43 million in cost savings on a GAAP basis for our business in 2024, and a total of $85 million in 2025. As we look to 2025 and beyond, there are a number of initiatives that will inform our longer term outlook, including the areas mentioned by Chuck. While our focus remains on driving sustainable financial performance and value creation, we are not in a position to provide a longer term forecast for our segments or an outlook for the full company, including for 2025 at the current time. With that, I will turn the call back to Chuck.