2026 Q1 and Q2 Earnings Calls Reveal Contradictions on Macroeconomic Impact, TDS Growth, and Revenue Outlook
Generado por agente de IAAinvest Earnings Call Digest
martes, 9 de septiembre de 2025, 9:13 pm ET2 min de lectura
SKIL--
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: None provided
Financials Results
- Revenue: $128.8M, down 2.6% YOY
- EPS: $0.92 adjusted EPS, up from $0.87 prior year; GAAP EPS $(2.78) vs $(4.84) prior year
Guidance:
- FY2026 revenue guidance cut to $510M–$530M due to continued softness in Global Knowledge and federal spending.
- FY2026 adjusted EBITDA reiterated at $112M–$118M.
- FY2026 free cash flow reiterated at $13M–$18M.
- Guidance reduction largely isolated to Global Knowledge; TDS Enterprise viewed as stable with modest seasonality.
- Management prioritizing profitability, cash generation, and ongoing transformation investments.
Business Commentary:
- Revenue Impact and Economic Uncertainty:
- Skillsoft's
total revenuein the second quarter was$128.8 million, down2.6%year-over-year. The decline was primarily due to economic uncertainty extending Q1 headwinds into Q2, impacting discretionary customer spending, particularly in live learning offerings.
Global Knowledge Revenue Decline:
Global Knowledge revenuein the second quarter was$27.6 million, down approximately9.6%year-over-year.The decline was attributed to softer demand, lower discretionary spending in North America, and geopolitical instability in the Middle East.
Profitability and Expense Reduction:
- Despite lower revenue, the company maintained consistent profitability with an
adjusted EBITDAof$28.3 million, flat compared to the previous year. This was achieved through successful expense reduction, operational improvement initiatives, and resource allocation executed to date, resulting in
$45 millionin expense reductions.Transformation and Enterprise Growth:
- The TDS Enterprise Solutions segment experienced a fourth consecutive quarter of revenue growth, representing more than
90%of the TDS segment. - This growth was attributed to the ongoing transformation, including a dual business unit structure and significant shifts in critical resources.
Sentiment Analysis:
- Management lowered full-year revenue outlook but maintained profitability and cash targets: “we are updating our full-year revenue guidance… Despite a lower revenue base, we delivered consistent profitability and improved adjusted EBITDA margins… we are maintaining our full-year expectations for adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow.”
Q&A:
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): Which sectors or regions most impacted the softer live learning environment?
Response: Public sector weakness in North America and Middle East drove declines in live learning; Europe bookings improved, giving confidence in recovery.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): Why is the weakness macro-driven versus competitive?
Response: European public sector bookings are strengthening and peers show similar declines in live learning, indicating macro pressure rather than competitive losses.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): Does the ~$17M revenue guide-down fully reflect risks, and how was it derived?
Response: Guide embeds heavier back-half seasonality (65% of bookings) with H1 down ~$7M and H2 down ~$13M at the low end; largely tied to Global Knowledge.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): PathPATH-- back to growth—macro vs. controllable elements?
Response: TDS Enterprise has grown four straight quarters; GK de-risked; macro delays timeline by ~3–6 months, but management expects to recoup roughly a quarter over 12–18 months.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): How did dollar retention and the non-enterprise portion of TDS perform?
Response: TDS DRR was ~99%; North American federal headwinds reduced DRR by ~4 pts; B2C (sub-10% of TDS) declined double digits.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): Is Q2 or Q3 the trough?
Response: Trough primarily modeled in Global Knowledge in the back half; TDS expected to remain stable with roughly 50/50 seasonality.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): Can profitability be sustained if demand softens further?
Response: Yes—management is continuously improving efficiency and aligning the cost model to the current trajectory.
- Question from Ken Wong (Oppenheimer): Were cost improvements variable or fixed?
Response: Mostly from prior fixed cost reductions; minimal impact from variable cost changes.
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