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2U Reports Results for Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2023

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LANHAM, Md., Feb. 12, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — 2U, Inc. (Nasdaq: TWOU), a leading online education platform company, today reported financial and operating results for the quarter and full-year ended December 31, 2023.

“I am proud to lead 2U through the next chapter of its journey,” said Paul Lalljie, Chief Executive Officer of 2U. “We finished the year with strong performance, particularly in our executive education business, and a new organizational structure designed to enhance transparency and alignment across the company. We are resetting and enhancing our operations with renewed financial discipline. Looking ahead, we believe this renewed focus, along with our market-proven offerings, robust partner network, and scalable technology and services, will allow us to take advantage of increasing demand for high-quality online education and continue to deliver on our mission.”

“Our immediate focus in 2024 is to strengthen the fundamentals of our business in order to extend our debt maturities and restore a healthy balance sheet,” added Matthew Norden, Chief Financial Officer of 2U. “The measures we have already implemented are good first steps to enhancing our operational efficiency and improving our adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow, but we are not done. We are undergoing a comprehensive review of our business to streamline and consolidate costs, implement rigorous criteria for new programs, and optimize staffing levels in key functional areas while maintaining the quality of our offerings to partners and students. We are approaching the future with new financial discipline, providing us with the foundation to actively manage our upcoming maturities and build a scalable business.”

Results for Fourth Quarter 2023 compared to Fourth Quarter 2022

Revenue increased 8% to $255.7 millionDegree Program Segment revenue increased 19% to $163.5 millionAlternative Credential Segment revenue decreased 7% to $92.2 millionNet loss was $42.4 million, or $0.52 per share, and includes non-cash impairment charges of $62.8 million

Non-GAAP Results for Fourth Quarter 2023 compared to Fourth Quarter 2022

Adjusted EBITDA increased 54% to $90.2 million; a margin of 35%Adjusted net income was $49.5 million, or $0.48 per share

Results for Full-Year 2023 compared to Full-Year 2022

Revenue decreased 2% to $946.0 millionDegree Program Segment revenue decreased 2% to $561.0 millionAlternative Credential Segment revenue decreased 2% to $384.9 millionNet loss was $317.6 million, or $3.93 per share, and includes non-cash impairment charges of $196.9 million

Non-GAAP Results for Full-Year 2023 compared to Full-Year 2022

Adjusted EBITDA increased 37% to $170.8 million; a margin of 18%Adjusted net income was $15.4 million, or $0.19 per share

Discussion of 2023 Results

Revenue for the quarter totaled $255.7 million, an 8% increase from $236.0 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. Revenue from the Degree Program Segment increased $26.4 million, or 19%, and included $54.6 million of revenue recognized from the mutually negotiated exit of certain degree programs, also referred to as portfolio management activities. Revenue from the Alternative Credential Segment decreased $6.7 million, or 7%, primarily due to lower enrollments in coding boot camp offerings, partially offset by 8% growth in FCE enrollments in executive education offerings.

Revenue for the year totaled $946.0 million, a 2% decrease from $963.1 million in 2022. Revenue from the Degree Program Segment decreased $10.6 million, or 2%, and included $88.0 million of revenue recognized from portfolio management activities. Revenue from the Alternative Credential Segment decreased $6.6 million, or 2%, primarily due to lower enrollments in coding boot camp offerings, partially offset by 8% growth in FCE enrollments in executive education offerings.

Costs and expenses for the quarter totaled $278.2 million, a 21% increase from $230.6 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. Fourth quarter costs and expenses included $62.8 million of non-cash impairment charges to goodwill for which the company did not have a corresponding expense in the fourth quarter of 2022. The remaining change in costs and expenses, a decrease of $15.2 million, was primarily driven by a $27.2 million decrease in personnel and personnel-related expense and a $4.6 million decrease in depreciation and amortization expense. These decreases were partially offset by a $9.6 million increase in restructuring charges, primarily driven by changes to the company’s organizational structure, a $4.0 million increase in paid marketing costs, and a $3.1 million increase in transaction and integration expense.

Costs and expenses for the year totaled $1.17 billion, a 4% decrease from $1.22 billion in 2022. This $49.5 million decrease in costs and expenses includes a $58.6 million increase in non-cash impairment charges to goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets. The remaining change in costs and expenses, a decrease of $108.1 million, was primarily driven by a $66.6 million decrease in personnel and personnel-related expense, a $25.5 million decrease in paid marketing costs, a $12.8 million decrease in depreciation and amortization expense, and an $11.5 million decrease in lease and facility expense.

Liquidity and Cash Flow

As of December 31, 2023, the company’s cash, cash equivalents, and restricted cash totaled $73.4 million, a decrease of $109.2 million from $182.6 million as of December 31, 2022. As of December 31, 2023, the company’s total debt was $904.7 million, including borrowings of $40.0 million under the company’s revolving credit facility.

In January 2024, the company entered into a receivables factoring transaction with Morgan Stanley Senior Funding (“Morgan Stanley”) whereby Morgan Stanley has committed to purchase up to $86.2 million of receivables owing to the company related to portfolio management activities at a purchase rate of 88%.

The company expects that if it does not amend or refinance its term loan, or raise capital to reduce its debt in the short term, and in the event the obligations under its term loan accelerate or come due within twelve months from the date of its financial statement issuance in accordance with its current terms, there is substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern. The company’s financial statements will be included in the company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023. 

Business Highlights

Transitioned to a new organizational structure with an executive leading each of the company’s business segments. Andrew Hermalyn has been appointed President of the Degree Program Segment, and Aaron McCullough has been appointed President of the Alternative Credential Segment.Announced new offerings under our flexible degree partnership model:The University of Birmingham – seven new online master’s degrees across in-demand fields including data science, digital media, and marketing;The University of Surrey – fifteen online master’s degrees to be launched over three years, plus more than 15 professional certificate programs in the fields of technology, business, healthcare, communications technologies, and sustainability.Added 98 new edX courses from 41 unique institutions.Added new edX members including the University of Birmingham, Howard University, and Avado.

Forward-Looking Guidance

As of February 12, 2024, the company is initiating its first quarter and full-year 2024 guidance as follows:

First quarter 2024

Revenue to range from $195 million to $198 millionNet loss to range from $60 million to $55 millionAdjusted EBITDA to range from $10 million to $12 million

Full-year 2024

Revenue to range from $805 million to $815 millionNet loss to range from $90 million to $85 millionAdjusted EBITDA to range from $120 million to $125 million

The company is undergoing a comprehensive performance improvement exercise, the potential results of which are not reflected in the guidance above. This effort aims to improve our profitability through cost control and contribution margin improvement across both segments, optimize our operating model, ensure staffing levels align with business priorities across functional areas, and deleverage our balance sheet. In addition, guidance assumes the following: (i) no new portfolio management activities in 2024 and (ii) revenue from 2023 portfolio management activities of $10 million in the first quarter of 2024 and $15 million in full-year 2024.

For full-year 2024, we anticipate approximately $45 million in capital expenditures and weighted average shares outstanding of 85 million.

Non-GAAP Measures

To provide investors and others with additional information regarding 2U’s results, the company has disclosed the following non-GAAP financial measures: adjusted EBITDA (loss), adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted free cash flow, adjusted unlevered free cash flow, adjusted net income (loss), and adjusted net income (loss) per share. The company has provided a reconciliation of each non-GAAP financial measure used in this earnings release to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. The company defines adjusted EBITDA (loss) as net income or net loss, as applicable, before net interest income (expense), other income (expense), net, taxes, depreciation and amortization expense, transaction costs, integration costs, restructuring-related costs, stockholder activism costs, certain litigation-related costs, consisting of fees for certain non-ordinary course litigation and other proceedings, impairment charges, debt modification expense and loss on debt extinguishment, and stock-based compensation expense. The company defines adjusted EBITDA margin as adjusted EBITDA divided by revenue. The company defines adjusted free cash flow as net cash provided by (used in) operating activities, less capital expenditures, payments to university clients, and certain non-ordinary cash payments. The company defines adjusted unlevered free cash flow as adjusted free cash flow less cash interest payments on debt. The company defines adjusted net income (loss) as net income or net loss, as applicable, before other income (expense), net, acquisition-related gains or losses, deferred revenue fair value adjustments, transaction costs, integration costs, restructuring-related costs, stockholder activism costs, certain litigation-related costs, consisting of fees for certain non-ordinary course litigation and other proceedings, impairment charges, debt modification expense and loss on debt extinguishment, and stock-based compensation expense. Adjusted net income (loss) per share is calculated as adjusted net income (loss) divided by diluted weighted-average shares of common stock outstanding for periods that result in adjusted net income, and basic weighted-average shares outstanding for periods that result in an adjusted net loss. Some of the adjustments described above may not be applicable in any given reporting period and may vary from period to period.

The company’s management uses these non-GAAP financial measures to understand and compare operating results across accounting periods, to understand cash that is generated by or available for operational expenses and investment in the business after capital expenditures, for internal budgeting and forecasting purposes, for short- and long-term operating plans, and to evaluate the company’s financial performance. Management believes these non-GAAP financial measures reflect the company’s ongoing business in a manner that allows for meaningful period-to-period comparisons and analysis of trends in the company’s business as they exclude expenses that are not reflective of ongoing operating results. Management also believes that these non-GAAP financial measures provide useful information to investors and others in understanding and evaluating the company’s operating results and prospects in the same manner as management and in comparing financial results across accounting periods and to those of peer companies.

The use of adjusted EBITDA (loss), adjusted free cash flow, adjusted unlevered free cash flow, adjusted net income (loss), and adjusted net income (loss) per share measures has certain limitations, as they do not reflect all items of income and expense that affect the company’s operations. The company compensates for these limitations by reconciling the non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP financial measures should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or in isolation from, measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. Further, these non-GAAP measures may differ from the non-GAAP information used by other companies, including peer companies, and therefore comparability may be limited. Management encourages investors and others to review the company’s financial information in its entirety and not rely on a single financial measure.

Conference Call Information

What:

2U’s fourth quarter and full-year 2023 financial results conference call

When:

Monday, February 12, 2024

Time:

4:30 p.m. ET

Live Call:

(888) 330-2446

Conference ID #:

1153388

Webcast:

investor.2U.com

About 2U, Inc. (Nasdaq: TWOU)

2U is a global leader in online education. Guided by its founding mission to eliminate the back row in higher education, 2U has spent 15 years advancing the technology and innovation to deliver world-class learning outcomes at scale. Through its global online learning platform edX, 2U connects more than 83 million people with thousands of affordable, career-relevant learning opportunities in partnership with 260 of the world’s leading universities, institutions, and industry experts. From free courses to full degrees, 2U is creating a better future for all through the power of high-quality online education. Learn more at 2U.com.

Cautionary Language Concerning Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements regarding 2U, Inc.’s future business expectations, which are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements other than statements of historical facts contained in this press release, including statements regarding future results of operations and financial position of 2U, including financial targets, business strategy, and plans and objectives for future operations, are forward-looking statements. 2U has based these forward-looking statements largely on its estimates of its financial results and its current expectations and projections about future events and financial trends that it believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy, short-term and long-term business operations and objectives, and financial needs as of the date of this press release. The company undertakes no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from the results predicted, including, but not limited to:

trends in the higher education market and the market for online education, and expectations for growth in those markets;the company’s ability to maintain minimum recurring revenues or other financial ratios through the maturity date of its amended term loan facilities;the acceptance, adoption and growth of online learning by colleges and universities, faculty, students, employers, accreditors and state and federal licensing bodies;the impact of competition on the company’s industry and innovations by competitors;the company’s ability to comply with evolving regulations and legal obligations related to data privacy, data protection and information security;the company’s expectations about the potential benefits of its cloud-based software-as-a-service technology and technology-enabled services to university clients and students;the company’s dependence on third parties to provide certain technological services or components used in its platform;the company’s expectations about the predictability, visibility and recurring nature of its business model;the company’s ability to meet the anticipated launch dates of its offerings;the company’s ability to acquire new clients and expand its offerings with existing university clients;the company’s ability to successfully integrate the operations of its acquisitions, including the edX acquisition, to achieve the expected benefits of its acquisitions and manage, expand and grow the combined company;the company’s ability to refinance its indebtedness on attractive terms, if at all, to better align with its focus on profitability and address impending maturities;the company’s ability to service its substantial indebtedness and comply with the covenants and conversion obligations contained in the indentures governing its 2.25% convertible senior notes due 2025 and 4.50% convertible senior notes due 2030 and the credit agreement governing its revolving credit facility; the company’s ability to implement its platform strategy and achieve the expected benefits; the company’s ability to generate sufficient future operating cash flows from recent acquisitions to ensure related goodwill is not impaired;the company’s ability to execute its growth strategy, including internationally and growing its enterprise business;the company’s ability to continue to recruit prospective students for its offerings;the company’s ability to maintain or increase student retention rates in its degree programs;the company’s ability to attract, hire and retain senior management and other key personnel;the company’s expectations about the scalability of its cloud-based platform;potential changes in laws, regulations or guidance applicable to the company or its university clients;the company’s expectations regarding the amount of time its cash balances and other available financial resources will be sufficient to fund its operations;the impact and cost of stockholder activism;the potential negative impact of the significant decline in the market price of the company’s common stock, including the impairment of goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets;the expected impact of our 2022 Strategic Realignment Plan, or similar performance improvement initiatives, and the estimated savings and amounts expected to be incurred in connection therewith;the impact of any natural disasters or public health emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic;the company’s expectations regarding the effect of the capped call transactions and regarding actions of the option counterparties and/or their respective affiliates; andother factors beyond the company’s control.

These and other potential risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ from the results predicted are more fully detailed under the heading “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, and other SEC filings. Moreover, 2U operates in a very competitive and rapidly changing environment. New risks emerge from time to time. It is not possible for 2U management to predict all risks, nor can 2U assess the impact of all factors on its business or the extent to which any factor, or combination of factors, may cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statements 2U may make. In light of these risks, uncertainties and assumptions, the forward-looking events and circumstances discussed in this press release may not occur and actual results could differ materially and adversely from those anticipated.

Investor Relations Contact: investorinfo@2U.com

Media Contact: media@2U.com

 

2U, Inc.

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets

(in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

December 31,
2023

December 31,
2022

(unaudited)

Assets

Current assets

Cash and cash equivalents

$           60,689

$         167,518

Restricted cash

12,710

15,060

Accounts receivable, net

115,944

62,826

Other receivables, net

28,293

33,813

Prepaid expenses and other assets

33,828

43,090

Total current assets

251,464

322,307

Other receivables, net, non-current

12,507

14,788

Property and equipment, net

40,233

45,855

Right-of-use assets

63,986

72,361

Goodwill

651,498

734,620

Intangible assets, net

371,198

549,755

Other assets, non-current

68,797

71,173

Total assets

$      1,459,683

$      1,810,859

Liabilities and stockholders’ equity

Current liabilities

Accounts payable and accrued expenses

$         103,378

$         110,020

Deferred revenue

81,949

90,161

Lease liability

15,158

13,909

Accrued restructuring liability

14,506

6,692

Other current liabilities

44,348

58,210

Total current liabilities

259,339

278,992

Long-term debt

896,514

928,564

Deferred tax liabilities, net

323

282

Lease liability, non-current

83,297

99,709

Other liabilities, non-current

1,165

1,796

Total liabilities

1,240,638

1,309,343

Stockholders’ equity

Preferred stock, $0.001 par value, 5,000,000 shares authorized, none issued

Common stock, $0.001 par value, 200,000,000 shares authorized, 82,260,619 shares issued

and outstanding as of December 31, 2023; 78,334,666 shares issued and outstanding as of

December 31, 2022

83

78

Additional paid-in capital

1,741,657

1,700,855

Accumulated deficit

(1,497,579)

(1,179,972)

Accumulated other comprehensive loss

(25,116)

(19,445)

Total stockholders’ equity

219,045

501,516

Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity

$      1,459,683

$      1,810,859

 

2U, Inc.

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Loss

(in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

Three Months Ended

December 31,

Year Ended

December 31,

2023

2022

2023

2022

(unaudited)

(unaudited)

(unaudited)

Revenue

$         255,661

$         236,049

$         945,953

$         963,080

Costs and expenses

Curriculum and teaching

30,219

32,953

129,304

129,886

Servicing and support

27,120

35,002

128,298

147,797

Technology and content development

40,607

49,823

176,218

190,472

Marketing and sales

79,816

80,504

372,129

422,147

General and administrative

23,972

28,272

132,680

159,418

Restructuring charges

13,674

4,067

36,256

33,239

Impairment charges

62,754

196,871

138,291

Total costs and expenses

278,162

230,621

1,171,756

1,221,250

(Loss) income from operations

(22,501)

5,428

(225,803)

(258,170)

Interest income

862

398

1,961

1,165

Interest expense

(19,533)

(18,525)

(74,573)

(62,234)

Debt modification expense and loss on debt extinguishment

(16,735)

Other (expense) income, net

(52)

427

(803)

(3,815)

Loss before income taxes

(41,224)

(12,272)

(315,953)

(323,054)

Income tax (expense) benefit

(1,224)

429

(1,654)

903

Net loss

$          (42,448)

$          (11,843)

$       (317,607)

$       (322,151)

Net loss per share, basic and diluted

$              (0.52)

$              (0.15)

$              (3.93)

$              (4.17)

Weighted-average shares of common stock outstanding, basic and diluted

82,140,194

78,261,601

80,891,146

77,327,850

Other comprehensive loss (income)

Foreign currency translation adjustments, net of tax of $0 for all periods presented

1,448

2,448

(5,671)

(3,534)

Comprehensive loss

$          (41,000)

$            (9,395)

$       (323,278)

$       (325,685)

 

2U, Inc.

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

(in thousands)

Year Ended

December 31,

2023

2022

2021

(unaudited)

Cash flows from operating activities

Net loss

$           (317,607)

$           (322,151)

$           (194,766)

Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash (used in) provided by operating activities:

Non-cash interest expense

13,652

19,835

25,403

Depreciation and amortization expense

115,322

128,153

108,448

Stock-based compensation expense

39,688

80,220

97,766

Non-cash lease expense

17,404

21,020

18,933

Restructuring

866

9,555

5,014

Impairment charges

196,871

138,291

Provision for credit losses

10,017

8,610

8,036

Loss on debt extinguishment

12,123

1,101

Gain on sale of investment

(27,762)

Other

965

5,443

2,515

Changes in operating assets and liabilities, net of assets and liabilities acquired:

Accounts receivable, net

(58,972)

(3,041)

(31,756)

Other receivables, net

2,980

(517)

(27,001)

Prepaid expenses and other assets

13,504

4,833

(7,636)

Accounts payable and accrued expenses

(436)

(42,735)

21,212

Deferred revenue

(8,657)

5,326

9,388

Other liabilities, net

(41,151)

(41,915)

(26,969)

Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities

(3,431)

10,927

(18,074)

Cash flows from investing activities

Purchase of a business, net of cash acquired

5,010

(761,118)

Additions of amortizable intangible assets

(44,010)

(62,445)

(60,546)

Purchases of property and equipment

(6,021)

(11,755)

(9,788)

Purchase of investments

(1,000)

Proceeds from investments

38,818

Advances made to university clients

(310)

Advances repaid by university clients

200

200

200

Other

(50)

Net cash used in investing activities

(49,831)

(69,350)

(793,434)

Cash flows from financing activities

Proceeds from debt

329,223

696

569,477

Payments on debt

(375,283)

(7,181)

(4,334)

Prepayment premium on extinguishment of senior secured term loan facility

(5,666)

Payment of debt issuance costs

(4,411)

(11,575)

Tax withholding payments associated with settlement of restricted stock units

(1,093)

(2,850)

(18,780)

Proceeds from exercise of stock options

110

1,128

6,489

Proceeds from employee stock purchase plan share purchases

2,102

1,282

3,583

Net cash (used in) provided by financing activities

(55,018)

(6,925)

544,860

Effect of exchange rate changes on cash

(899)

(1,983)

(2,309)

Net decrease in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash

(109,179)

(67,331)

(268,957)

Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash, beginning of period

182,578

249,909

518,866

Cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash, end of period

$               73,399

$             182,578

$             249,909

 

2U, Inc.

Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures – Adjusted EBITDA

(unaudited)

The following table presents a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA to net loss for each of the periods indicated.

Three Months Ended

December 31,

Year Ended

December 31,

2023

2022

2023

2022

(in thousands, except share and per share amounts)

Revenue

$      255,661

$      236,049

$      945,953

$      963,080

Net loss

$      (42,448)

$      (11,843)

$    (317,607)

$    (322,151)

Stock-based compensation expense

3,702

17,480

39,688

80,220

Other expense (income), net

52

(427)

803

3,815

Amortization of acquired intangible assets

7,688

10,901

34,225

53,417

Income tax benefit on amortization of acquired intangible assets

(19)

(1)

(76)

(1,202)

Impairment charges

62,754

196,871

138,291

Debt modification expense and loss on debt extinguishment

16,735

Restructuring charges

13,674

4,067

36,256

33,239

Other*

4,079

(1,677)

8,462

3,348

  Adjusted net income (loss)

49,482

18,500

15,357

(11,023)

Net interest expense

18,671

18,127

72,612

61,069

Income tax expense (benefit)

1,243

(428)

1,730

299

Depreciation and amortization expense

20,788

22,182

81,097

74,736

  Adjusted EBITDA

$        90,184

$        58,381

$      170,796

$      125,081

Adjusted EBITDA margin

35 %

25 %

18 %

13 %

Net loss per share, basic and diluted

$          (0.52)

$          (0.15)

$          (3.93)

$          (4.17)

Adjusted net income (loss) per share, basic

$            0.60

$            0.24

$            0.19

$          (0.14)

Adjusted net income (loss) per share, diluted**

$            0.48

$            0.23

$            0.19

$          (0.14)

Weighted-average shares of common stock outstanding, basic

82,140,194

78,261,601

80,891,146

77,327,850

Weighted-average shares of common stock outstanding, diluted

112,909,097

78,921,457

82,331,052

77,327,850

*

Includes (i) transaction and integration expense of $3.3 million and $0.2 million for the three months ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $3.6 million and $3.6 million for the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively and (ii) litigation-related expense (recoveries) of $0.8 million and $(1.9) million for the three months ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $4.9 million and $(0.3) million for the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively.

**

For the purposes of calculating adjusted net income per share on a diluted basis, interest expense associated with the company’s convertible notes of $5.0 million has been added back to adjusted net income for the three months ended December 31, 2023.  For all other periods presented, no such adjustment was made as the result would be anti-dilutive.

 

2U, Inc.

Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures – Adjusted EBITDA by Segment

(unaudited)

The following table presents a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA (loss) to net income (loss) by segment for each of the periods indicated.

Degree Program Segment

Alternative Credential Segment

Consolidated

Three Months Ended

December 31,

Three Months Ended

December 31,

Three Months Ended

December 31,

2023

2022

2023

2022

2023

2022

(in thousands)

Revenue

$   163,466

$   137,109

$     92,195

$     98,940

$   255,661

$   236,049

Net income (loss)

$     38,120

$     15,093

$    (80,568)

$    (26,936)

$    (42,448)

$    (11,843)

Adjustments:

Stock-based compensation expense

2,180

9,754

1,522

7,726

3,702

17,480

Other expense (income), net

2

(806)

50

379

52

(427)

Net interest expense (income)

18,778

18,197

(107)

(70)

18,671

18,127

Income tax expense (benefit)

100

132

1,124

(561)

1,224

(429)

Depreciation and amortization expense

14,777

16,506

13,699

16,577

28,476

33,083

Impairment charges

62,754

62,754

Restructuring charges

12,701

3,292

973

775

13,674

4,067

Other

4,079

(1,705)

28

4,079

(1,677)

Total adjustments

52,617

45,370

80,015

24,854

132,632

70,224

Total adjusted EBITDA (loss)

$     90,737

$     60,463

$         (553)

$      (2,082)

$     90,184

$     58,381

Adjusted EBITDA margin

56 %

44 %

(1) %

(2) %

35 %

25 %

 

2U, Inc.

Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures – Adjusted EBITDA by Segment

(unaudited)

The following table presents a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA (loss) to net loss by segment for each of the periods indicated.

Degree Program Segment

Alternative Credential Segment

Consolidated

Year Ended

December 31,

Year Ended

December 31,

Year Ended

December 31,

2023

2022

2023

2022

2023

2022

(in thousands)

Revenue

$   561,044

$   571,608

$   384,909

$   391,472

$   945,953

$   963,080

Net income (loss)

$        3,934

$    (10,797)

$ (321,541)

$ (311,354)

$ (317,607)

$ (322,151)

Adjustments:

Stock-based compensation expense

23,382

44,378

16,306

35,842

39,688

80,220

Other (income) expense, net

(1,398)

882

2,201

2,933

803

3,815

Net interest expense (income)

73,041

61,341

(429)

(272)

72,612

61,069

Income tax expense (benefit)

415

5

1,239

(908)

1,654

(903)

Depreciation and amortization expense

57,029

57,779

58,293

70,374

115,322

128,153

Impairment charges

196,871

138,291

196,871

138,291

Debt modification expense and loss on debt extinguishment

16,735

16,735

Restructuring charges

33,127

24,528

3,129

8,711

36,256

33,239

Other

8,434

2,611

28

737

8,462

3,348

Total adjustments

210,765

191,524

277,638

255,708

488,403

447,232

Total adjusted EBITDA (loss)

$   214,699

$   180,727

$    (43,903)

$    (55,646)

$   170,796

$   125,081

Adjusted EBITDA margin

38 %

32 %

(11) %

(14) %

18 %

13 %

 

2U, Inc.

Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures – Adjusted Free Cash Flow and Adjusted Unlevered Free Cash Flow

(unaudited)

The following table presents a reconciliation of adjusted unlevered free cash flow to net cash (used in) provided by operating activities for each of the twelve-month

periods indicated.

Trailing Twelve Months Ended

December 31,

2023

September 30,

2023

June 30,

2023

March 31,

2023

(in thousands)

Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities

$            (3,431)

$            (5,149)

$          (16,536)

$           38,472

Additions of amortizable intangible assets

(44,010)

(44,733)

(50,619)

(55,544)

Purchases of property and equipment

(6,021)

(7,313)

(8,640)

(11,210)

Payments to university clients

1,050

1,050

3,550

6,425

Non-ordinary cash payments*

36,653

34,618

36,101

32,282

Adjusted free cash flow

(15,759)

(21,527)

(36,144)

10,425

Cash interest payments on debt

61,194

53,473

47,802

48,118

Adjusted unlevered free cash flow

$           45,435

$           31,946

$           11,658

$           58,543

*

Includes transaction, integration, restructuring-related, stockholder activism, and litigation-related expense.

 

2U, Inc.

Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Measures

(unaudited)

The following table presents a reconciliation of adjusted EBITDA guidance to net loss guidance, at the midpoint of the ranges

provided by the company, for the periods indicated.

Three Months Ending

March 31, 2024

Year Ending

December 31, 2024

(in millions)

Net loss

$                 (57.5)

$                 (87.5)

Stock-based compensation expense

12.0

30.0

Amortization of acquired intangible assets

8.0

32.5

Restructuring charges

3.0

12.0

Other

5.5

7.5

  Adjusted net income

(29.0)

(5.5)

Net interest expense

20.0

70.0

Depreciation and amortization expense

20.0

58.0

  Adjusted EBITDA

$                   11.0

$                122.5

 

2U, Inc.

Key Financial Performance Metrics

(unaudited)

Full Course Equivalent Enrollments

Degree Program Segment

The following table presents FCE enrollments and average revenue per FCE enrollment in the company’s Degree Program Segment for the last eight quarters.

Q4 ’23

Q3 ’23

Q2 ’23

Q1 ’23

Q4 ’22

Q3 ’22

Q2 ’22

Q1 ’22

Degree Program Segment FCE enrollments

43,309

45,284

50,490

55,491

53,631

57,092

60,303

62,609

Degree Program Segment average revenue per FCE enrollment*

$  3,774

$  3,039

$  2,367

$  2,532

$  2,557

$  2,404

$  2,373

$  2,462

*

Average revenue per FCE enrollment includes revenue from portfolio management activities.

 

Alternative Credential Segment*

The following table presents FCE enrollments and average revenue per FCE enrollment in the company’s Alternative Credential Segment for the last eight quarters.

Q4 ’23

Q3 ’23

Q2 ’23

Q1 ’23

Q4 ’22

Q3 ’22

Q2 ’22

Q1 ’22

Alternative Credential Segment FCE enrollments

24,499

25,318

25,840

21,990

24,236

23,128

23,443

22,664

Alternative Credential Segment average revenue per FCE enrollment

$  3,500

$  3,428

$  3,591

$  4,193

$  3,840

$  3,850

$  3,891

$  4,012

*

FCE enrollments and average revenue per FCE enrollment exclude the impact of enrollments in edX offerings and the related revenue of $6.4 million and $5.9 million for the three months ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $27.4 million and $27.2 million for the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively.

 

 

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SOURCE 2U, Inc.

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CLARION SAFETY SYSTEMS IMPLEMENTS ISO 7010 SYMBOL UPDATE FOR NO ACCESS FOR UNAUTHORIZED PERSONS

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Clarion Safety Systems has implemented a sweeping change to designs containing the No Access symbol as reflected by the recent ISO 7010 standards updates

MILFORD, Pa., April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Clarion Safety Systems, a leading manufacturer of safety labels, signs, and tags, has updated its safety communication offerings to include the newly registered ISO 7010 symbol for No Access for Unauthorized Persons. This update ensures that facility owners and equipment manufacturers have access to the most current, science based designs for restricting access to hazardous areas.

The refined symbol design has been updated to reflect the official ISO 7010 symbol reference number P080 to align with the latest International Organization for Standardization registration. The primary modification involves the placement of the red prohibition slash, which now overlaps the human figure rather than being positioned below it. This design shift is the result of rigorous comprehension testing conducted by ISO technical committees. The testing confirmed that placing the slash over the figure improves the speed and accuracy of a viewer’s recognition, which is critical for preventing unauthorized entry and reducing workplace accidents.

“Maintaining alignment with the latest ANSI and ISO standards is a fundamental part of our mission to help our customers communicate safety information effectively,” says Angela Lambert, the Chair of ANSI Z535.1 and Director of Standards Compliance at Clarion Safety Systems, “Our active leadership within the standards community allows us to implement these research based refinements as soon as they are ratified. This ensures our clients are using the most intuitive visual language available to protect their personnel and decrease liability exposure.”

Clarion Safety team members are deeply involved in the development of these standards, holding positions within the ANSI Z535 Committee, the U.S. Technical Advisory Group to ISO/TC 145, and the U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 283. This expertise is built into the updated No Access symbol collection, which is available in a variety of durable materials engineered for industrial environments.

The updated symbols are produced in a variety of formats for labels and signs, using long lasting materials rated for ultraviolet light, water, and chemical resistance. To support a seamless transition for its customers, Clarion Safety is offering complimentary consults for those interested in learning more about the changes and updated product libraries across the site.

These updated designs are essential for meeting the requirements of ISO 3864-2 and are encouraged under the ANSI Z535.4 standards. By adopting the current ISO 7010 registered symbols, organizations can improve hazard recognition among a multilingual workforce and maintain compliance with global safety expectations.

To learn more about other ISO and ANSI updates or to request a consultation regarding your safety labeling program, visit the Clarion Safety online Resource Center.

Contact Clarion Safety to learn more about the company’s industry experts and opportunities for collaboration on media and educational projects.

ABOUT CLARION SAFETY SYSTEMS
Clarion Safety Systems, LLC, is the leading designer and manufacturer of visual safety solutions that help customers in more than 180 industries worldwide to make their products and premises safer. Clarion Safety offers a full range of standard and custom products including machinery safety labels, environmental and facility safety signs, pipe and valve identification markings, lockout/tagout products, and safety-grade photoluminescent egress path-marking escape systems. The company also provides custom-printed industrial nameplates, labels, and metal identification solutions through its affiliated business, McLoone Metal Graphics, as well as turnkey machine safety and compliance solutions through  its affiliated businesses, Machine Safety Specialists and Arrow Industrial Solutions. Founded in 1990, Clarion Safety continues to play a leading role in the development and writing of international and national standards for safety signs, labels, and markings. It is headquartered at 190 Old Milford Road in Milford, PA, 18337, and online at http://www.clarionsafety.com.

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SOURCE Clarion Safety Systems

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Palantir and AIP Specialist Firm, Vanyar, Launches

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Founded by enterprise technology leaders, Vanyar addresses a persistent gap between adopting platforms like Palantir and delivering measurable operational impact.

SYDNEY, April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Vanyar launches today as a specialist firm focussed on Palantir Foundry and AIP. Its launch comes at a critical time in the market when enterprise AI transformation programmes are becoming slower, more complex and increasingly difficult to deliver. These initiatives, which often involve platforms like Palantir, continue to fall short for many companies wanting to get ahead.

Founded by seasoned enterprise technology experts, Vanyar provides top-tier advisory, build, AI agent development, and 24/7 platform support services to organisations across APAC and the Middle East, with their sights set on future global expansion. Led by a team of experts with decades of enterprise experience and deep Palantir expertise, the company offers a compelling value proposition for modern companies.

With the accelerated adoption of AI and rising demand for data-led insights, Vanyar’s timely launch meets demand for Palantir expertise head-on. Global system integrators are racing to build Palantir practices, investing in onboarding thousands of certified professionals. Yet, while the Palantir ecosystem is growing fast, very few specialist partners are focused on enabling organisations outside of government and defence to unlock value from the platform quickly and efficiently.

Uriah Jacobs, Co-Founder and CEO of Vanyar, said of the launch, “Over many years of building enterprise technology businesses, the same fundamental problem keeps emerging. Organisations know platforms like Palantir are powerful, but they struggle to successfully implement these initiatives and deliver real-world, tangible outcomes.

The large consultancies are expensive and slow. Palantir’s own services team is focused on their biggest accounts. There is a clear gap for a specialist firm that moves fast, keeps teams small, and delivers measurable results in mere weeks. That’s why Vanyar exists.”

Vanyar’s services span the full Palantir lifecycle: advisory and strategy to assess platform fit, Foundry ontology design and data pipeline engineering, AI agent development on AIP, 24/7 platform operations, and hands-on training bootcamps. The firm’s engagement model is designed for speed, with a typical path from discovery to delivery production in just weeks.

“The technology behind Palantir is extraordinary, but it takes real enterprise experience to make it work inside a large organisation,” said Rahul Garg, Co-Founder of Vanyar.

“We have built and scaled high velocity tech-services businesses before. We know what great service delivery looks like. Every person at Vanyar is here because they can ship production solutions, not because they look good on a bench sheet.”

Both founders bring proven track records of building and scaling specialist consulting businesses in the enterprise technology sector. Uriah Jacobs was the founding Managing Director APAC of Thirdera, which became the world’s largest pure-play ServiceNow consultancy and was acquired by Cognizant in 2024. He previously held senior roles at Cloud Sherpas (acquired by Accenture, 2015) and Accenture.

Rahul Garg co-founded CloudGo, a ServiceNow Elite Partner that was acquired by RGP in 2023 and is Singapore’s first ServiceNow Certified Master Architect. Together, the founders have a vision to solve complex problems with simple, data-led solutions.

About Vanyar: Vanyar is a Palantir Foundry and AIP specialist that helps organisations turn fragmented data into answers they can act on. Founded in 2025 and operating from Singapore, Australia, and the UAE, Vanyar provides advisory, build, AI agent development, platform operations, and training services. Visit vanyar.com.

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Wondershare Demonstrates AI-Powered Document Workflows with PDFelement at Microsoft AI Tour Hong Kong

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HONG KONG, April 23, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Wondershare, a global leader in digital productivity and creativity software, showcased its latest AI-powered solutions at the Microsoft AI Tour Hong Kong, highlighting how its flagship product, Wondershare PDFelement, integrates with Microsoft technologies to enable smarter, more secure, and more efficient document workflows for enterprises.

As Microsoft’s flagship global AI event, the Microsoft AI Tour brings together partners and industry leaders to explore how AI is transforming business operations. At the Hong Kong stop, Wondershare demonstrated its deep collaboration with Microsoft across key solution areas, showcasing how its product ecosystem aligns with Microsoft technologies to deliver integrated, end-to-end AI workflows.

At the center of the showcase was Wondershare PDFelement, an AI-powered, all-in-one PDF solution designed to streamline document-centric processes in enterprise environments. Through deep integration with the Microsoft ecosystem, PDFelement enables seamless interoperability with widely used applications such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, allowing users to convert PDFs into fully editable formats while preserving original layout and structure. With built-in Office plugins, users can also generate standardized PDFs directly within Microsoft applications. PDFelement further supports deployment in Microsoft Azure environments, enabling Single Sign-On (SSO) for streamlined access management, while maintaining compatibility with Microsoft Rights Management Services (RMS) to securely manage protected documents.

Beyond its ecosystem integration, PDFelement also introduces a suite of AI-powered capabilities to enhance productivity across document workflows. Smart Redact enables automatic detection and masking of over 70 types of sensitive data to support compliance requirements, while Professional AI Translation delivers accurate, industry-specific language output for cross-border collaboration. The Admin Console provides enterprise-grade centralized access and permission control, allowing IT teams to manage AI, cloud, and eSign features with real-time visibility into license usage. At the event, attendees can also experience a range of enhanced AI features, including AI Summarize, Chat with PDF, AI Translate, AI Detect and Rewrite, as well as AI Proofread, Voice, Explain, Grammar Check, and Mind Map Generation.

In addition to PDFelement, Wondershare also showcased how its broader product portfolio integrates with Microsoft technologies. EdrawMax offers full compatibility with Microsoft Visio through bidirectional .vsdx import and export, along with Office add-ins, OLE embedding, and data-driven diagram generation from Excel, while also featuring AI-powered capabilities such as the Edraw Agent, natural language-driven diagram generation, and text-to-diagram conversion across platforms. EdrawMind enables one-click conversion of mind maps into PowerPoint and supports intelligent analysis of Office documents to generate structured knowledge frameworks, alongside AI features including webpage summarization, node-based note generation, and AI-powered search. Filmora is optimized for the Windows AI PC ecosystem, leveraging on-device NPU acceleration for AI-powered video processing, supporting Windows on Arm, and enabling natural language interaction with RAG-based asset matching, while also incorporating AI Extend, AI Portrait, and Smart Cutout. Reelmate provides an AI-powered, agent-driven platform covering the full content production pipeline from generation to post-production for creating premium comic series.

Through live demonstrations, attendees were able to experience how Wondershare’s AI-powered solutions can be applied across real-world enterprise scenarios, from document processing and knowledge management to visual communication and content creation. The showcase attracted strong interest from professionals across industries such as finance, education, information technology, and telecommunications, particularly around capabilities related to document security, automation, and cross-language collaboration.

Wondershare’s participation in the Microsoft AI Tour Hong Kong highlights its continued commitment to advancing practical AI adoption through deep ecosystem integration. By combining AI capabilities with seamless compatibility across Microsoft technologies, Wondershare is helping enterprises build more secure, connected, and efficient workflows for the future.

About Wondershare:

Wondershare is a globally recognized software company founded in 2003, known for its innovative solutions in creativity and productivity. Driven by the mission “Creativity Simplified”, Wondershare offers a range of tools, including PDFelement for document management; EdrawMax, EdrawMind for diagraming, Filmora and SelfyzAI for video editing. With over 2 billion cumulative active users across all products and a presence in over 200 countries and regions, Wondershare empowers the next generation of creators with intuitive software and trendy creative resources, continually expanding the possibilities of creativity worldwide.

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SOURCE Wondershare Technology

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