Grand Canyon Education LOPE Earnings Transcript

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Date

Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at 4:30 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Brian E. Mueller
  • Chief Financial Officer — Daniel E. Bachus

Takeaways

  • Service revenue -- $308.1 million, up 5.3% as compared to $292.6 million, influenced by a 7.1% increase in partner university enrollments; partially offset by one less day of ground traditional revenue at GCU of $900,000 and a decrease in revenue per student due to contract modifications and tuition mix.
  • Operating income and margin -- $108.1 million and 35.1%, respectively, up from $100 million and 34.2% in the prior year, aided by higher revenue and contract changes, partially offset by increased investment in partner initiatives.
  • Net income -- $86.7 million with GAAP diluted EPS of $3.14 and non-GAAP diluted EPS of $3.21, which is $0.02 above consensus estimates.
  • Online enrollment growth -- 8.7%, exceeding Grand Canyon University's long-term objectives; new online starts rose in the mid-single digits, in line with expectations.
  • Hybrid enrollment growth -- 16.6% increase overall; 18.7% increase when excluding closed sites and those in teach-out; hybrid new starts benefited from advanced standing students and new online prerequisite courses.
  • Traditional campus enrollment -- New enrollments rose in the high single digits, but total traditional campus enrollment declined slightly due to last year’s lower new enrollments from FAFSA site issues and higher summer graduations.
  • Share repurchase activity -- 605,730 shares repurchased during 2025 for approximately $100 million, plus 352,051 shares repurchased since year-end; $284.6 million remains under current authorization.
  • Unrestricted cash and investments -- $300.1 million as of year-end.
  • CapEx -- $7.6 million in 2025, or 2.5% of service revenue; expected to rise to $30 million-$35 million in 2026.
  • 2026 guidance -- Revenue midpoint in line with consensus; EPS midpoint above consensus due to lower projected share count; expects mid- to high-single digit online enrollment growth and high single-digit new ground enrollments growth at midpoint.
  • Hybrid pillar capacity -- 14 hybrid locations are at or near capacity, which is expected to slow hybrid enrollment growth as more locations reach limits.
  • Revenue impact from contract and teach-out -- $4.2 million expected reduction in 2026 revenue from contract changes and partner site teach-out, but anticipated positive effect on operating income as phased-out locations were loss-making.
  • Marketing spend -- Increased digital and social media investment for ground campus recruitment shifted from counselor salaries; marketing as a percentage of revenue projected to remain flat year over year.
  • Effective tax rate -- 22.4% for 2025, below the 22.8% guidance, driven by lower state income tax; full-year 2026 tax rate estimated at 24.3%.
  • Corporate partnerships -- Roughly one-third of online enrollments stem from direct employer relationships, with growth anticipated as corporate channels expand into new fields.

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Risks

  • Chief Financial Officer Daniel E. Bachus cited an expected $4.2 million revenue reduction in 2026 due to a contract modification and the teach-out of one partner’s three locations, even as these changes are projected to improve margins since the sites in teach-out incurred "significant losses."
  • Bachus noted that "Online revenue per student will be flat to slightly down year over year due to the mix shift of programs with slightly lower net tuition rates," indicating ongoing pressure on per-student revenue.
  • Bachus stated, "We also continue to absorb significant increases in technology services and benefit costs," with margin pressure expected in the first six months of the year.
  • Bachus highlighted "increasing graduations and a continued decline in re-entries" as factors that will pressure total online enrollment growth.

Summary

Grand Canyon Education (NASDAQ:LOPE) reported strong year-over-year growth in online and hybrid enrollments, with service revenue driven by robust university partner performance and targeted expansion initiatives. The company’s 2026 outlook projects continued online and ground campus enrollment gains, margin improvement in the second half, and ongoing share buybacks, while guidance incorporates the financial effect of contract revisions and site transitions. Management underscores the scalability and flexibility of its business model and highlights increasing adoption of digital and artificial intelligence tools across academic and operational functions. The call detailed strategic investments in digital recruitment, the expansion of hybrid and workforce development programs, and the impact of regulatory changes, providing transparency on the evolving risk landscape.

  • Mueller said, "The graduation rate of students who successfully enter the ABSN programs is in the mid-eighties, and the first-time pass rate on NCLEX exams is approximately 90%," indicating successful outcomes in healthcare program expansions.
  • Bachus clarified that regulatory changes related to loan caps are expected to have "little to no impact" on bachelor’s programs, citing tuition levels below relevant thresholds.
  • Bachus confirmed that, outside a single master's in counseling group "there was one category that failed for GCU. It is the Master's of Counseling category." a preliminary accountability metric, "all the programs at all of our partners passed" relevant early regulatory evaluations.
  • Mueller reported that registrations for traditional ground campus for fall 2026 are "significantly ahead of last year" as a result of revised marketing and recruitment strategies.
  • Management stated that future hybrid growth is constrained as 14 locations reach capacity and 22 locations will see no new enrollments this fall, but regulatory approval for expansion is being sought.

Industry glossary

  • ABSN: Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing, an intensive nursing degree program targeting students with prior college coursework or degrees.
  • Teach-out: The process of phasing out academic programs or campus locations while allowing currently enrolled students to complete their studies.
  • NCLEX: National Council Licensure Examination, a standardized exam nursing graduates must pass to become licensed.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Brian E. Mueller: Good afternoon. Thank you for joining Grand Canyon Education, Inc.'s fourth quarter 2025 conference call. Grand Canyon Education, Inc. had another strong quarter, producing online enrollment growth of 8.7% and hybrid growth, excluding the closed sites and those in teach-out, of 18.7%. Grand Canyon Education, Inc., Grand Canyon University, and now 19 additional partners have produced remarkably consistent positive results over the last seventeen years in spite of significant changes in the macro environments of education and the workplace. Most significantly, GCU has gone from the brink of bankruptcy to now being the largest private university in America.

In addition to over 107,000 students studying online, GCU now has 25,000 students in an on-campus environment and has more students living in university-owned housing on its campus than any other university in the country. Recently, Grand Canyon Education, Inc. and its partners have built 47 hybrid campuses throughout the country to address severe shortages in the healthcare fields. More recently, Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has assisted GCU in building a workforce development center to produce professionals in the rapidly growing construction and manufacturing fields where there are also severe shortages.

The growth and success that has taken place is because Grand Canyon Education, Inc. and its partners have built a model that is extremely flexible, is able to respond with great speed, and has used advanced technologies to produce tremendous scale. The current dissatisfaction with higher education is because faculty governance models at many universities are very inflexible, move very slowly, and cannot scale to meet demands. There is a lot of talk about how AI will produce winners and losers by industry type. The real discussion should be about winners and losers within industries. Higher education as an industry will continue to exist.

Institutions that are flexible, fast, and that can scale will be able to use AI to flourish to even greater levels in the next ten years. Higher education will be more important than ever if it can educate the next generation of workers to use AI in three important ways. One, to use AI products to increase levels of human productivity. Two, to quickly allow workers whose jobs have been eliminated to re-career. And three, educate a generation of workers for jobs that do not exist today but will exist in the near future. It is important that universities do not just teach AI, but are able to model it in the way they run their business.

Grand Canyon Education, Inc. and GCU have dozens of AI products and products in development across 10 colleges, over 350 academic programs, and across every operational area. Students are learning with increased levels of excellence and efficiency. Scores currently produced by students in exit and licensure exams, in the areas of healthcare, education, accounting, etc., are reaching all-time highs while scaling to huge numbers. This is especially important for GCU since it has rapidly expanded into academic areas requiring licensure. Programmatic areas like nursing, education, social work, counseling, etc., will benefit from AI implementation, but employment in those areas will always require higher education and licensure.

Project work produced by business, engineering, and technology students are at increasing levels of sophistication. GCU's innovation center is producing new student businesses that are thriving. To succeed in the future, universities must produce those real-world opportunities for students, and they must graduate in less time, for less money, and for lower debt levels. Our AI products are making curriculum more targeted, faculty more effective and efficient, and allowing operators to produce greater levels of student support. I believe AI will make our current advantages even greater, which makes me even more confident we will continue to meet or exceed our long-term. With that, I would like to review the fourth quarter results.

First, the online campus at Grand Canyon University. New starts were up in the mid-single digits in 2025, which was in line with our expectations, and total enrollment growth was 8.7%, which significantly exceeds GCU's long-term objectives. In the past, I have highlighted four reasons for the growth. They include continuing to roll out 20-plus new programs on an annual basis, working with over 5,500 employers directly to address workforce shortages, strong retention levels, and holding the line on tuition to maintain GCU's competitive pricing position. New start comps are extremely challenging in 2026.

New starts were up in the teens in 2025 compared to 2024 due primarily to the success of programs such as the prerequisite nursing and teacher education. Although we believe those programs have a lot of runway to continue growing, the year-over-year percentage growth is slowing due to large numbers. But we are rolling out some new programs in the second quarter of this year that we are very excited about that we believe will allow us to continue to grow total enrollment at or slightly above our long-term objectives. Second, the GCU ground campus for traditional students.

New traditional campus enrollments were up in the high single digits and total traditional campus enrollments were down slightly year over year in fall 2025 while total GCU ground enrollment was flat year over year. The slight decline year over year in total traditional enrollment was in line with our expectations given last year's decline in new enrollments caused primarily by the FAFSA site issues and the higher-than-expected summer graduations. Spring new and total enrollments were in line with our expectations. Spring new enrollments is a small percentage of overall new enrollments as they are mostly made up of transfers or students that defer a semester.

And total enrollment is impacted by the growing number of students that are graduating in less than four years. We believe GCU will continue to experience new student growth on the ground because of its significant advantages, including very low price point, very low average debt levels, percentage of students completing in less than four years, the relevancy of GCU's academic programs to a fast-changing and modern economy, and having the twentieth-ranked campus in the country. As we move forward, there are three trends that are impacting traditional college campuses throughout the country. One, the number of high school graduates on an annual basis continues to decline.

Two, the percent of high school graduates choosing the four- or five-year baccalaureate path continues to go down, while the number of students choosing shorter certificate or trade programs is going up. Three, the number of high school graduates choosing a baccalaureate path but doing it fully online also continues to go up. We are in a very strong position given these trends. We have a high-quality affordable offering on a GCU ground campus, but have even greater program choices for students that want to go fully online or to move back and forth between ground and online.

As we discussed on last year's earnings call, we have made some changes to our marketing and recruitment strategy for GCU's traditional campus, which accelerated some spend into 2025 and 2026. Although it is still very early in the cycle, those changes to date are producing positive results, as registrations for fall 2026 remain significantly ahead of last year. Even with the macro trends I discussed earlier and the tougher year-over-year comps, we believe we can grow new enrollments significantly year over year, which could get residential students back to growth. Third, Grand Canyon Education, Inc.'s hybrid campus had an increase in enrollment year over year of 16.6% in the fourth quarter.

Excluding the closed sites and those that are on teach-out, enrollment increased 18.7% year over year. There were no hybrid campus new starts in the fourth quarter, but we did have a higher-than-expected number of new students starting in the fall. There are two main reasons for this continued growth. Number one, almost all of our active ABSN partners have responded to the younger students interested in ABSN programs by admitting advanced standing students or are in the process of making that change. Students with partially completed degrees have not accumulated a great deal of debt and are very interested in nursing careers but did not have an efficient way to earn the prerequisite science coursework.

GCU created the science courses and some other gen ed courses that could be delivered online in eight weeks. Students can access these courses from anywhere in the world. There are start opportunities almost every week. These courses have been made very affordable, are taught by experienced faculty, class sizes are low, and there is a tremendous amount of academic support, including an artificial intelligence project, which provides students 24/7 access to tutoring. Since implementing these courses, we have already enrolled 2,536 students. In the 2025 term, 66% of all matriculated hybrid students at non-GCU sites took at least one of these courses and of these students, they took five courses on average.

We have a waterfall report that allows us to know how students are progressing through their prereqs courses and when they will be eligible to start at one of our ABSN sites. The graduation rate of students who successfully enter the ABSN programs is in the mid-eighties, and the first-time pass rate on NCLEX exams is approximately 90%. Nearly all our partners have responded positively to the change needed to serve the advanced standing students. Our goal is still to have 80 locations with our partners with 40 locations being GCU. In 2025, we opened up a total of five additional sites, including a second location in the Boston area in the fall, another site in New York City,

Operator: and three GCU sites in 2025.

Brian E. Mueller: One in Albuquerque, New Mexico, which was opened in 2025, one in Lake Mary, Florida near Orlando, which was opened in 2025, and one in Englewood, Colorado, south of Denver, which was opened in the third quarter. The addition of GCU's three new site openings brought the ABSN location total to 11. It is likely that we will only open one additional site in 2026 in the Miami, Florida area. A couple of sites that were planned to open in 2026 are more likely to open in early 2027. As we have discussed previously, we are being more selective on new site openings with a focus on the scalability of the market.

We are also expanding our programmatic offerings with our hybrid partners by adding a graduate nursing program with seven specializations with Northeastern University, which started this past fall. A hybrid occupational therapy bridge-to-master's program to the already successful St. Kate's occupational therapy assistant hybrid program will begin in 2026. An online health science degree with Utica University and GCU launched a BS in occupational therapy assistance program and a speech language pathology program in 2025 at its Phoenix West Valley location. GCU also plans to add a BS in medical laboratory sciences program in 2026. Adding additional programs at our hybrid locations is an important component to our business plan.

We anticipate this momentum will continue although with the lower number of new site openings and more of our locations getting to capacity, hybrid enrollment growth will slow a bit while the profitability of this pillar will continue to improve. Fourth, Center for Workforce Development at Grand Canyon University. GCU now has four programs in the Center for Workforce Development, which include the electricians pre-apprenticeship program, the CNC machinist pathway program, the manufacturing specialist intensive pathway, the construction general pathway, and we will be rolling out a fifth program, the manufacturing general pathway, in fall 2026. Programs are all built in partnership with companies that are experiencing labor shortages in that area and are excited about hiring GCU's graduates.

These programs are either one semester or two semesters. 212 students successfully completed the electrician's pre-apprenticeship program in 02/24–25, including 11 in the Austin, Texas hybrid location. 33 students completed the manufacturing CNC machinist pathway programs in the 02/24–25 fiscal year. These students attend school for twenty hours a week and then work in the facility as a paid employee for twenty hours. At the end of the semester, they receive a manufacturing certificate and become eligible for employment here in the fast-growing manufacturing industry. Students in GCU's growing engineering college are getting experience in this manufacturing facility, which is adding to their engineering education.

I started out talking about the relevant programs and creative delivery models that Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has implemented with its 20 partner institutions. In the seven-plus years since Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has become a service provider, it has helped partners accomplish the following. In that time, Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has helped Grand Canyon University graduate 215,851 students. 58,497 in education, including 27,527 first-time teachers at a time when teacher shortages have created a national crisis. 55,963 in nursing and healthcare professions, including 3,723 pre-licensure nurses, at a time when there is a huge shortage of nurses.

44,976 in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, including thousands in counseling and social work, where there are also huge shortages. The College of Business has become one of the largest business schools in America and produced 37,834 graduates. The College of Science, Engineering, and Technology has grown by 220% and provided 9,512 graduates. The Doctoral College, Honors College, and College of Theology also continue to grow. In addition, Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has helped its other partner institutions graduate over 15,000 pre-licensure nurses and occupational therapist assistants.

The numbers that I have just cited have all happened in the past seven years, since the GCU–Grand Canyon Education, Inc. transaction and since Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has become an education services provider. This is a great example of a futuristic educational model that is flexible, moves very fast, and is capable of great scale. All of this has occurred while Grand Canyon Education, Inc. paid $619,000,000 in federal and state taxes while state universities and community colleges continue to pull money out of the tax system. Grand Canyon Education, Inc. has helped produce over 230,000 graduates while pouring millions of dollars into the system.

Service revenue was $308,100,000 for the February ’25 quarter, an increase of $15,500,000, or 5.3%, as compared to $292,600,000 for 2024.

The increase year over year in service revenue was primarily due to an increase in university partner enrollments of 7.1%, including an increase in GCU online enrollments of 8.7% and university partner enrollments at the off-campus classroom and laboratory sites of 16.6%, partially offset by one less day of ground traditional revenue at GCU of $900,000 in the quarter as a result of the shift of one day of revenue from the fourth quarter to the third quarter as compared to last year's fall start date, and a decrease in revenue per student year over year primarily due to contract modifications with some of our university partners in which our revenue share percentage was reduced in exchange for us no longer reimbursing the partner for certain faculty costs, had the effect of reducing revenue per student, and a slight decline year over year in the revenue per student for online students due to the continued mix shift to students that have a slightly lower net tuition rate.

Operating income and operating margin for the three months ended December 2025 was $108,100,000 and 35.1%, respectively, as compared to $100,000,000 and 34.2%, respectively, for the same period in 2024. Net income was $86,700,000 for 2025. GAAP diluted income per share for the three months ended 12/31/2025 is $3.14. As adjusted, non-GAAP diluted income per share for the three months ended 12/31/2025 is $3.21, which is $0.02 above consensus estimates. With that, I would like to turn it over to Daniel E. Bachus, our CFO, to give a little more color on our February quarter, talk about changes in the income statements, balance sheet, and other items as well as to discuss the 2026 guidance. Thanks, Brian.

Included in our Form 8-K filed with the SEC, we have included non-GAAP net income and non-GAAP diluted income per share for the three months ended 12/31/2025 and 2024. We believe the non-GAAP financial information allows investors to develop a more meaningful understanding of the company's performance over time. As adjusted, non-GAAP diluted income per share for the three months ended 12/31/2025 and 2024 is $3.21 and $2.95, respectively. Service revenue was higher than our expectations in 2025 primarily due to higher-than-expected enrollments and revenue per student, partially offset by the impact of the government shutdown.

The fourth quarter operating margin was positively impacted on a year-over-year basis by the higher revenue and the contract modifications, partially offset by additional spend for 2026 partner initiatives. Our effective tax rate for 2025 was 22.4% compared to 21.2% in 2024 and our guidance of 22.8%. The lower-than-expected effective tax rate is primarily due to state income tax. We repurchased 605,730 shares of our common stock in 2025 at a cost of approximately $100,000,000. And another 352,051 shares were repurchased since 12/31/2025. We have $284,600,000 remaining available as of today under our share repurchase authorization. The board and the company intend to continue using a significant portion of its cash flow from operations to repurchase its shares.

Turning to the balance sheet and cash flows. Total unrestricted cash and cash equivalents and investments as of 12/31/2025 were $300,100,000. Grand Canyon Education, Inc. CapEx in 2025, including CapEx for new off-campus classroom and laboratory sites, was approximately $7,600,000, or 2.5% of service revenue. We anticipate CapEx for 2026 will be between $30,000,000 and $35,000,000.

Daniel E. Bachus: Last, I would like to provide color on the guidance we have provided in our 8-K filed today. As a reminder, the guidance that we have provided in the outlook of our 8-K filed today is GAAP net income and diluted income per share with components to adjust the GAAP amounts to non-GAAP as adjusted net income and non-GAAP as adjusted diluted income per share. February financial performance significantly exceeded our original estimates, beating the midpoint of the non-GAAP as adjusted diluted net income per share guidance we put out at this time last year by $0.46.

In putting together our guidance for this year, I am amazed with how consistent our assumptions are to what we predicted at this time last year. Our comps are no doubt more challenging, but as Brian discussed, the trends remain strong in all three pillars. Consistent with prior years, we have provided ranges for revenue, operating margin, and earnings per share for each of the four quarters of 2026. We do this because our financial results are seasonal, and the start and end dates of our partner's semesters change year to year. As you have probably noticed, the midpoint of the EPS guidance is above consensus estimates, primarily due to a lower projected share count.

The midpoint of the revenue and operating income guidance are generally in line with consensus estimates. Revenue will be slightly impacted in 2026 due to the modification of the contract for one university partner, effective 01/01/2026, in which we will no longer be reimbursing the partner for their faculty costs and due to the teach-out of one partner's three locations. As I will discuss in a minute, this slightly lowers revenue in 2026, but both of these changes are long-term positive for the company and will positively impact margins in 2026.

The year-over-year changes in the start and end dates of the semesters for GCU's ground traditional campus move $1,000,000 in revenue from Q2 to the first quarter and $8,300,000 in revenue from the third quarter to the fourth quarter in comparison to last year. The change between the third quarter and the fourth quarter is more significant this year than in past years, as GCU's fall semester for its ground traditional campus begins and ends six days later this year than last year. We anticipate that new online enrollments will be up year over year in the mid- to high-single digits during 2026.

As Brian discussed, new enrollment growth in 2025 was up in the teens over the prior year, and thus mid-single digit growth in the first two quarters would be strong growth. We do anticipate total online enrollment growth continuing to be pressured by increasing graduations and a continued decline in re-entries, which is students returning to school after a break due to the high retention rates. The high end of guidance assumes total enrollment growth will end 2026 up in the high single digits year over year, whereas the low end assumes a mid-single digit year-over-year growth rate.

And thus, the midpoint of our range assumes a year-over-year growth rate that is near the high end of our stated long-term objective of 5% to 7% annual growth. The revenue range assumes that GCU ground enrollment will be 21,900 in the spring, will range from 8,500 to 8,800 in the summer, and be between 24,900 and 25,600 in the fall. The high end of the range assumes a low-teens new start year-over-year growth rate for the ground campus while the low end of the range assumes mid-single digits new start growth. Thus, the midpoint assumes a high single-digit increase in new ground enrollments year over year.

As we are currently well ahead of last year in registrations, this estimate may prove to be conservative, but we believe it is prudent given where we are at in the recent recruitment cycle. The reported ground number continues to include GCU Hybrid, which continues to grow, and professional study students, which we expect to be flat on a year-over-year basis. Total ground enrollment continues to be impacted by the lower fall 2024 new start and the growing number of graduates year over year as a significant number of ground traditional students continue to graduate in less than four years.

The new and total enrollment growth rate for the hybrid pillar is predicted to grow on a year-over-year basis in the high single digits to mid-teens during each of the four quarters of 2026. As has been discussed previously, the hybrid growth rate is being impacted by the fact that we now have 14 locations that are at or near capacity, and thus we will have little to no growth year over year in total enrollments at those locations.

And from a new enrollment perspective, 22 locations will not have year-over-year growth in new enrollments on a year-over-year basis in the fall, as although eight locations are not at state authorized capacity, we started the maximum number of students allowed during 2025. We remain hopeful that some of these locations will get local regulatory approval to grow in the future as they currently have waitlists, and we still have a lot of opportunity at the other locations. We will be opening one new location in 2026 in fall 2026 but should be opening a number of locations in early 2027.

Revenue growth rates for the hybrid pillar will be impacted by changes made to the contract of one university partner that beginning in January 2026 is no longer being reimbursed for faculty costs, and both enrollments and revenue will be impacted by the teach-out of one partner's three locations in 2026. We estimate that these changes will reduce revenue by $4,200,000 in 2026 but will positively impact operating income as the three locations that will be in teach-out were incurring significant losses. Excluding these impacts, we anticipate a slight increase in revenue per student year over year primarily due to the hybrid pillar growing at a faster rate than online or ground.

Online revenue per student will be flat to slightly down year over year due to the mix shift of programs with slightly lower net tuition rates. Revenue per student is also negatively impacted in the first half of the year by the slight decline year over year in ground traditional students. On the expense side, we continue to make investments to support our university partners' growth goals, but do anticipate margin expansion in 2026.

As has been previously discussed, the online programs primarily that lead to licensure in which GCU is growing at an accelerated rate either cost us more to service than the traditional online programs or are at lower net tuition rates, which is putting some pressure on margin. We also continue to absorb significant increases in technology services and benefit costs. We will also have some pressure on margins in the first six months of the year as ground traditional enrollment is down year over year and in the third quarter as the GCU traditional campus start and end date moves back this year.

As it relates to the hybrid pillar, we will incur additional cost for the new hybrid locations that have opened in the last year, or will open in 2026 or early 2027. We are experiencing increased site-level profitability due to the increasing enrollments. So to summarize, at midpoint, our revenue guidance would be slightly above consensus estimates if not for the contract modification and teach-out. We are hopeful given current registrations that ground enrollment exceeds the midpoint. We should see slightly lower margins in 2026 but are optimistic that margins will expand in the second half, especially if revenue is in the top half of our revenue range.

Due to the leverage in our business model, full-year margins will be up year over year. We are estimating that interest income will decline year over year in 2026 due to declining cash balances due to more aggressive stock buybacks and a declining interest rate environment. We believe the effective tax rate for the April 2026 quarter will be 23.4%, 24.9%, 24.9%, and 24.3%, with a full-year tax rate of 24.3%.

The effective tax rate continues to be impacted by higher state taxes as we continue to add sites in states outside of Arizona, which have higher state tax rates and other factors, including an estimated decrease year over year in the excess tax benefit deduction due to a decline in our stock price. These estimates do not assume a contribution in lieu of state income taxes, but if one is made, that will increase G&A expense in the third quarter and decrease the effective tax rate in the second half of the year. Our weighted average shares guidance takes into account the significant amount of stock we repurchased in the last few months.

We anticipate continuing to use our excess cash to repurchase shares as the board believes the stock is materially undervalued based on the metrics it uses to evaluate this, including the ratio of enterprise value to adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow yield in comparison to other S&P 500 companies. I will now turn the call over to the operator so that we can answer questions.

Operator: Thank you. And as a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press 11 again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. One moment for our first question. Our first question will come from the line of Alex Paris from Barrington Research. Your line is open.

Brian E. Mueller: Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. First question related to fourth quarter results.

Daniel E. Bachus: Revenue of $308,100,000 was above our estimate and consensus.

Brian E. Mueller: Up 5.3% year over year. You had talked or kind of telegraphed

Daniel E. Bachus: some impact from the government shutdown on military tuition assistance of about $3,000,000. Is that where it landed? Was that the impact, about $3,000,000, or is it different than that? I think it was a little bit lower than that, but that is still probably a fairly good estimate. It probably was in the, you know, $2.5 to $3,000,000 range.

Operator: Got it.

Daniel E. Bachus: And then on operating income and operating margin in the fourth quarter, at the low end of the guided range, but still within the range. I just wonder what additional color you could provide there. Yeah. Brian can expand on it a little bit, but we did make some significant investments primarily related to the ground campus in the fourth quarter, kind of the end of the third quarter and all of the fourth quarter. Yeah. You know, we

Brian E. Mueller: if you look at what we have done to grow this ground campus from 900 students to 25,000 students, there was a heavy investment in people that work in high schools all over the country. And that is a pretty typical way that universities go about recruiting students into their on-campus college. We did not spend nearly as much on advertising, especially in the social media areas, as we have done from an online standpoint. We experimented in the fall, in September and October, spending a significant amount of money and got great results.

You know, students are watching our videos, and they are watching our videos to completion, and they are making a decision that they are interested apart from somebody's impact in their high school. And they are raising their hand, and the conversion rate of those students into registrations is up significantly over where it was at the same time last year. And so we have a we absolutely believe that we are that the

Daniel E. Bachus: awareness levels

Brian E. Mueller: of the value proposition that this ground campus offers is hugely under it is just not known to the level that it should be. We are going to make a major investment, another investment, and it will not be material in terms of its impact upon the financials, but in the growth of our Honors College. Our Honors College at the ground campus has really taken off. It is up to three students now. The average incoming GPAs are above 4.0 from a weighted perspective, which is higher than most Honors Colleges in the country.

And so we are forming a council, we are rebuilding a building, and we are going to make a huge effort to recruit the very best high school students throughout the country to come to our Honors College in Phoenix, Arizona. And a lot of the experience they are going to have is tied to the incredible economic boom that is happening in Arizona. We are getting those students involved in internships in their sophomore year at very significant companies. Many of them are getting hired by those companies.

And so the brand of the institution and leading with the excellence of that Honors College and having everything draft behind that is something that we are working with our partners on because we think that we have the capability of growing our ground campus from 25,000 to 50,000 students.

Daniel E. Bachus: We believe that the value

Brian E. Mueller: is there. And so we invested some additional dollars in January and February, and we expect that we are going to get the same return. And so, as the hybrid campus is accelerating now, both in terms of enrollment growth, revenue growth, and margin expansion and profitability, we are expecting something similar to happen with the ground campus. And we think we are onto something, and we will see. But, you know, it is a long time, and we have got to be, you know, we have got

Operator: until

Brian E. Mueller: August that we see the whites of their eyes in the classroom. But right now, we are excited both about the quantity of registrations and the quality of those students and how many of them want to be housed. And so that was probably more than you wanted, but I hope that helps a little

Daniel E. Bachus: No. It helps a lot, and I appreciate you spending a lot of time on it. So you did talk about this on the third quarter, you know, the experiment that you were conducting. You did forecast that you might spend more in January and February. Are you going to continue to spend more there? And then you also mentioned on the Q3 call that it is not a significant impact on the P&L because it is really just shifting dollars from salaries of high school reps to marketing.

Brian E. Mueller: Yeah. You know, it is interesting because we have got the other process. It is very unique to us. It is what we call Discover GCU. We will probably bring north of 13,000 to 14,000 very highly qualified high school graduates to GCU to visit. And so connecting with students via social media with extremely engaging, informative videos, having them raise their hand, and then getting them qualified to come and visit the campus, I think, is a process improvement that will move money from counselor salaries to this other area, and it could reinvigorate this thing from a ground campus standpoint.

And you have to remember that, you know, in terms of revenue per student, ground campus is huge because of the impact of housing and board and other fees associated with being on the campus. And so

Daniel E. Bachus: to answer the question about going forward, we will continue to spend. You know, at some point, the spend will transition from ’26 to ’27. We are projecting that marketing as a percentage of revenue will be fairly flat year over year. So although we will continue to spend, our hope is that our spend is very effective, and thus, you will not see a significant increase in marketing cost as a percentage of revenue.

Brian E. Mueller: The interesting thing is that the January and February spend is probably still 90% students who are seniors and have not made a decision where they are going to college. Students are increasingly putting that decision off because the, you know, leverage has flipped. Either they know that the supply and demand is different, and they can put off making that decision because they are kind of in the driver's seat more so than they have been in previous decades. But that is kind of playing into our favor, because January, February spend is not probably 10% for February, and still 90% for 2026. And so

Operator: we will see how it plays out. Great. Thanks. And then,

Daniel E. Bachus: so what does that do to the high school enrollment counselor count?

Brian E. Mueller: Orders of magnitude, you know, where were you and

Daniel E. Bachus: where are you now? You know, given the

Brian E. Mueller: We are probably down 10. Probably we are down 10% from a counselor standpoint where we were the previous year.

Operator: Okay. Great.

Brian E. Mueller: That is great color on the ground campus.

Daniel E. Bachus: And it sounds like those investments are paying off in terms of higher, significantly higher applications for the fall.

Brian E. Mueller: Yeah. Go ahead.

Daniel E. Bachus: I was just going to say, are there any offsets? Do we have any are we expecting an increasing number of graduates, like overall, you have been experiencing?

Brian E. Mueller: Yeah. I mean, that will continue. It will continue as it is. I mean, we

at every graduation now for our ground campus, I ask how many of you have graduated in less than four years, and the majority of the hands go up. And then I ask how many parents in the audience are happy that their students graduated in less than four years, and a roar goes up in the audience. And so we have to do a better job of making sure that people know that. The bet we are making is that we can grow to 50,000 students because of that, or partially because of that. And so we are giving up a fourth year of revenue in some circumstances in some

Daniel E. Bachus: ways, but

Brian E. Mueller: we think we will make up for it in increased enrollment on the front end. Great. Thanks. And then my last question is just

Daniel E. Bachus: thought I would ask to get an update on corporate programs in general. I know you have 5,500 employers that you work with, and I believe roughly a third of GCU starts come as a result of working directly with these companies and organizations. How does that work, or what sort of color can you share with us about the process within these corporate relationships? Adding new corporations, adding new are there is there discounting that goes on as a result

Brian E. Mueller: There is a yes. There is a little bit of discounting that goes on with that, and that is why you have seen revenue per student from an online standpoint go down some. But that activity is not even close to reaching its pinnacle. That activity is continuing. We are signing agreements with school districts all over the country, and it continues on a daily basis. Schools are really stuck with having a shortage of teachers, counselors, and social workers, and there is nobody. Even in some states we are producing more teachers than their in-state institutions are producing.

And so that continues in a very robust way, but we are applying that principle to healthcare areas, and to social work areas, and to counseling areas. Now we are just getting started in counseling and social work, but there is a huge shortage of those people in this country, and companies, organizations are very interested in taking their people that are operating at lower levels, putting them in programs, and getting them baccalaureate and master's degrees so they can operate at higher levels. And so the success we have had in the education and nursing area, we are now applying to counseling and to social work. We are applying it in terms of military bases in the cybersecurity area.

And we are developing a really strong relationship with the Taiwanese chip manufacturing company, which is exploding here in Arizona. They want every electrical or mechanical engineer that we can produce, but they are growing so fast that they need technicians. And we have developed a program that they are ecstatic about. I was out there and went through the whole process of walking through their fab. They have got one fab up. They are building five more fabs.

They have only been in operation for a year, and they have already been told because of the shift to producing chips for AI that they are expected to do 2x what they were expected to do when they started, which was just a year ago. And so we are working them at on a multitude of levels

Daniel E. Bachus: The

Brian E. Mueller: people they are sending over from Taiwan need to go back periodically to get up to speed with what is going on there, and their spouses are staying here, so we are getting their spouses involved in education programs so they have something to do while they are gone. But it is the technicians that we are producing that they are very excited about. And so, yes, we are continuing to work directly with corporations all over the country. Will we move from a third of our starts to maybe 50% of our starts over the next five years?

We will be moving in that direction, because it is a very, very high-quality way to provide higher education that is very specifically targeted to what organizations need. And as I tell our people all the time, we are in the business of helping people grow individually, and we are in the business of helping organizations grow. And if we stay focused on doing those two things, AI is going to do nothing but enhance our potential in higher education versus people fearing that because all of this data and information is available to people, they will not need higher education.

That is just not going to happen if you are educating in the right ways and you are doing it specific to where the jobs are going to be. That is very, very helpful. Do you disclose what percentage of GCU total enrollment is employer-related?

Daniel E. Bachus: We do not. We do not. But as Brian said, I mean, you hit the numbers. You know, we were talking about the fact that about a third of our online enrollments come from that channel and that is growing. Great. Alright. Well, I think I had more than my fair share of time. I will yield to the next question.

Brian E. Mueller: Thanks for your questions. Sure thing.

Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Marc Silber from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.

Daniel E. Bachus: Thanks so much for squeezing me in. Alex really covered a lot of the operational questions. Maybe I can ask more big-picture stuff, and, you know, we get questions all the time about the regulatory environment, and I know we have got some changes coming up this summer in terms of loan caps, then eventually the earnings premium accountability calculation. Can you give us some color, you know, how that may or may not impact your company? Yeah. I mean, our expectation is it is going to have little to no impact. If you talk about loan caps, you know, the tuition levels, you know, the loan cap changes are primarily at the master's level and above.

GCU's tuition rates are well below those loan caps. And so would it potentially eat into some living expense money? Maybe. But I think the total cost of attendance generally at GCU is below the loan cap. So I think there will be very little impact of that. There are no material changes at the bachelor's level, which is where the majority of our programs are now, including the ABSN program. That is a bachelor's program. It is not a professional program. It has never been a professional program. And so there are, you know, no changes really from the funding perspective at the bachelor's level or no material changes that we see.

So I think there will be little to no change on that perspective. I know Brian could talk about this, but he is a proponent of these changes. You know, we have historically seen over-borrowing, especially at the master's level, for living expenses. These changes help universities help students manage their borrowing.

Brian E. Mueller: It is so different. The difference in how the administrations

Operator: view

Brian E. Mueller: this whole area is because we have said for a decade that the graduate students are different today. Fifty years ago, forty years ago, thirty years ago, students would graduate from college, and they would enter a master's or graduate degree program. And sometimes they would be married. Sometimes they would have children. But they were pursuing most of them were pursuing a career in education, in the academic world. And they needed help with living expenses in order to do that. That is not the case today. Most people that are pursuing master's degrees are people who are in the middle of a career. They want to enhance their capabilities in that career.

They want to do it while they are raising their family and building their career. And so they do not need living expense money. But if you are going to make it available to them, they are going to take it. And so we had this process in place called responsible borrowing where we would before they even started the program, say, listen. If you

Daniel E. Bachus: borrow the amount that is required for tuition,

Brian E. Mueller: etc., this will be your payments. If you borrow if you over-borrow, these will be your payments. And we actually were criticized by the previous administration for doing that. And our response to that was, you are looking at this as a it is almost a safety-net kind of a thing, and that is not how we view this thing. And it should not be viewed that way.

And so we were actually a proponent of lowering the maximum amount people can borrow so that we would get loans paid back, and we would get them paid back timely, and the you know, the Title IV program was once very, very profitable for this country because universities were responsible in the amount of money they were charging, students were responsible in the amount of money they were borrowing, and they were paying the loans back. What has happened in the last six, seven years has just been unfortunate. And we just need to get this thing back on track so that it is what it was intended to be originally.

Daniel E. Bachus: In terms of the second part of your question, Jeff, you know, we are watching that very closely. In the preliminary data that was put out, as I think you wrote a note on, there was one category that failed for GCU. It is the Master's of Counseling category. Looking through the data for all other universities, it appears that category failed for most, if not all, of the universities that provide that program to working adults.

So we will work, we are working with our partner and with the administration to try to better understand why generally people that get that master's degree, which interestingly is required for licensure, make an amount that is equal to or less than those that did not have that master's. You need the master's to be licensed in that area. So it seems like it is an anomaly that has to be further researched. We have some assumptions on why that could be, but we are doing some additional analysis on it. Other than that, all the programs at all of our partners passed, you know?

And so we have got some time to work on that one program group and we will continue to look at it. A lot of people get into graduate programs for lifestyle

Operator: changes.

Brian E. Mueller: And people that go into counseling many times want to hang their own shingle. They want to work two days a week instead of five or six days a week. And so they are willing to make less money to work two days a week to build their own business. And so they are getting out of the degree what they wanted. Not everything can be measured strictly in terms of dollars made, especially at the graduate level. And the thing that makes me frustrated with that thing is when you are talking about graduate students, you are talking about people who have gone through a baccalaureate program. They understand higher education up one side and down the other.

They are mature people. They are making a decision that is best for them in their life. And so kind of stay out of their way and let them do it. It is I understand that an 18-year-old whose nobody in their family has ever gone to college, this is really new. This is very different, and they need help in understanding. And so putting some boundaries around that, I understand that. But at the graduate level, it does not make any sense to me.

Daniel E. Bachus: I really appreciate the color. Thanks so much. Thank you. We have reached the end of our fourth quarter conference call. We appreciate your time and interest in Grand Canyon Education, Inc. If you still have questions please contact myself, Daniel E. Bachus. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

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