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Date

Nov. 6, 2025 at 7:26 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Peter Anevski
  • President — Michael Sturmer
  • Chief Financial Officer — Mark Livingston
  • Investor Relations — James Hart

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Takeaways

  • Revenue -- $1.263 billion to $1.278 billion full-year guidance, reflecting 8.2%-9.5% growth.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- Adjusted EBITDA projected at $216 million to $220 million for the year.
  • Net income -- Expected full-year range is $58.5 million to $61.5 million.
  • Third quarter revenue growth -- Third quarter revenue grew 9% on an as-reported basis, or 23% when excluding the impact of a large former client in the year-ago period.
  • Gross margin -- 23% for the quarter.
  • Adjusted EBITDA margin -- 17.5% adjusted for the quarter.
  • Operating cash flow -- Greater than $50 million generated in the quarter, totaling $156 million over nine months.
  • Fourth quarter revenue guidance -- $292.7 million to $307.7 million, or negative 1.9% to positive 3.1% growth (but 11.5%-17.2% growth excluding the departed client).
  • Client retention -- Nearly 100% retention of existing clients and covered lives for 2026.
  • New clients and covered lives -- Over 80 new client logos and approximately 900,000 new covered lives added during the most recent selling season.
  • Client diversification -- New wins span consumer goods, health care, financial services, education, tech, business services, and Taft–Hartley groups.
  • Expanded services adoption -- Nearly 30% of clients expanded their benefits package for 2026; more than 2.7 million members will access new services, an increase of 1.2 million.
  • Supplemental plan launch -- Announced first-of-its-kind supplemental plan for fertility/family building, targeting small and midsized businesses, available in next year's selling season.
  • Global platform expansion -- Newly launched Progyny Global integrates family building, pregnancy, postpartum, and menopause services for multinational employers.
  • Share repurchase authorization -- New $200 million share repurchase program authorized with immediate availability.
  • Working capital -- $412 million as of September 30, including $345 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities.
  • CapEx -- $4.7 million in the quarter, up $2.9 million year over year; incremental CapEx for projects expected to total approximately $15 million higher than fiscal 2024 (period ended Dec. 31, 2024).
  • Debt position -- No borrowings under the $200 million revolving credit facility; no debt outstanding.
  • Utilization rate guidance -- Full-year range narrowed to 1.05%-1.06% for fiscal 2025 (period ending Dec. 31, 2025), below the 1.07% level reported for fiscal 2024 (period ended Dec. 31, 2024).
  • ART cycles per unique utilizer guidance -- Assumed at 0.91-0.92 for fiscal 2025.
  • Fourth quarter EPS guidance -- $0.14-$0.17 per share GAAP; $0.37-$0.40 adjusted EPS, both based on approximately 91 million fully diluted shares.
  • Full year EPS guidance -- $0.65-$0.68 per diluted share GAAP; $1.79-$1.82 adjusted EPS, both based on approximately 90 million fully diluted shares.

Summary

Progyny (PGNY 0.20%) reported that both revenue and profitability for the third quarter outperformed the high end of internal guidance, leading to the third consecutive upward revision of annual forecasts. The company emphasized that the transition of a large client has now fully lapped, allowing core growth metrics to more accurately reflect performance across the diversified client base. Nearly 100% client retention and adoption of expanded services underscore management's assertion of market leadership. Management announced the launch of a new supplemental plan aimed at small and midsized employers, and confirmed the expansion of Progyny Global for multinational clients. The Board has authorized a $200 million share repurchase program citing cash generation and balance sheet strength.

  • Management said, "the most recent raise, we have now increased the midpoint of our revenue guidance by more than $70 million, above the midpoint of our original range for this year," establishing upward revision momentum.
  • Cash generation enabled a record $156 million in operating cash flow over the first 9 months of the year.
  • Progyny projects that more than 2.7 million members will have access to new services in 2026, with an incremental increase of 1.2 million members versus 2025, demonstrating tangible platform expansion.
  • No client reduced their level of benefits in a material way for 2026, according to prepared remarks.

Industry glossary

  • Taft–Hartley groups: Collectively bargained multiemployer health funds, typically covering union employees, administered jointly by labor and management representatives.
  • ART cycles: Assisted Reproductive Technology treatment regimens involving in vitro fertilization or related fertility procedures, counted per unique patient.
  • smART cycles: Progyny's proprietary cycle-based benefit design for fertility treatments, offering bundled services instead of traditional dollar-based caps.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Pete Anevski, CEO of Progyny; Michael Sturmer, President; and Mark Livingston, CFO. We will begin with some prepared remarks before we open the call for your questions. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that our comments and responses to your questions today reflect management's views as of today only and will include statements related to our financial outlook for both the fourth quarter and full year 2025 and the assumptions and drivers underlying such guidance, our anticipated number of clients and covered lives for both 2025 and 2026.

The demand for our solutions, anticipated employment levels of our clients and the industries that we serve, our expected utilization rates and mix, the potential benefits of our solution; our ability to acquire new clients and retain and upsell existing clients, our market opportunity and our business strategy, plans, goals and expectations concerning our market position, future operations and other financial and operating information, which are forward-looking statements under the federal securities law. Actual results may differ materially from those contained in or implied by these forward-looking statements due to risks and uncertainties associated with our business as well as other important factors.

For a discussion of the material risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other important factors that could impact our actual results, please refer to our SEC filings and today's press release, both of which can be found on our Investor Relations website. Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events. During the call, we will also refer to non-GAAP financial measures such as adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin on incremental revenue.

More information about these non-GAAP financial measures, including reconciliations with the most comparable GAAP measures are available in the press release, which is available at investors.progyny.com. I would now like to turn the call over to Pete.

Peter Anevski: Thanks, Jamie, and thanks, everyone, for joining us. We're excited to report that Progyny had a very strong third quarter with revenue and profitability that exceeded the high end of our guidance ranges. Member engagement continues to be healthy, consistent with what we've seen throughout the past year. Following the consistent strength of our results, we're pleased to be in a position to once again for the third consecutive quarter, raise our full year guidance. With the most recent raise, we have now increased the midpoint of our revenue guidance by more than $70 million, above the midpoint of our original range for this year. We're equally pleased with the results of our latest selling season.

In any given year, our season reflects multiple priorities, the acquisition of new logos and lives, the retention of existing clients and the deepening of our relationships with existing clients through the expansion of their benefits with us for their employees. This year's selling season once again demonstrated our position as the leader in the market and how our value proposition aligns with both employers and their members. It starts with the consistent expansion of our base, including over 80 new logos and approximately 900,000 lives this season.

As we told you last quarter, although our pipeline initially built slower than we would have liked, largely attributable to the macroeconomic uncertainty earlier in the year, we are particularly pleased with this result in the face of historically high macro medical cost inflation. We created a large influx of new opportunities throughout the spring and summer, which once again validates how family building and women's health remain a top priority for employers and their members. As the season entered its final stages, we saw that a select number of employers, including some large ones, weren't able to accelerate their decision-making process fast enough to offset their later entry into pipeline.

These companies instead become part of our traditional pipeline of not nows, setting us up well for next year's selling season. Our wins this year represent a broad cross-section of industries, including consumer goods, health care, financial services, education, tech, business services and Taft–Hartley groups. In fact, this latest cohort continues the ongoing diversification of our member base, which is increasingly spread across dozens of sectors with no one area of the U.S. economy dominating the base. We continue to see a broad distribution by client size with our newest logos contributing anywhere from 1,000 to over 100,000 lives.

The second way to see how our solutions are resonating is our near 100% renewal of existing clients in covered lives for 2026. This extends the long track record of success we've maintained since our first year in market. In our opinion, this is the strongest testament to our market leadership and value proposition. This strength and continued execution is also highlighted in the expansion of benefits where nearly 30% of our clients have chosen to add to their solution in some way for 2026. And this includes clients consolidating their benefits with Progyny away from our competitors. Historically, this meant more smART cycles, adding Rx or expanding the coverage for areas like donor tissue or storage.

While those all still occur, we can deliver for our clients and their members an expanded suite of services, including end-to-end reproductive health support for both their domestic and international populations as well as benefit and lead navigation. Equally important, not one client has reduced their benefit in any meaningful way next year. Our newest services in pregnancy postpartum, menopause and benefit and lead navigation continue to resonate particularly well with the clients. Although we're in just our second year in market with these programs, we've seen an incredible positive response.

Between the uptake from existing clients as well as our newest logos, more than 2.7 million members will have access to one or more of these newest services in 2026. That's an incremental 1.2 million members versus this year. Taken together, these data points build a complete picture of Progyny's market leadership and the continued demand for our services, and it's what inspires us to continue to expand both the services and segments of employers that have access to Progyny's benefits. A few weeks ago, the White House announced its focus on expanding access to fertility care. We view this as a significant step forward for the country and a strong positive for us.

It's also an affirmation of the work we have accomplished over the last 10 years. The administration expressed its enthusiastic support for supplemental plans to address the small and midsized market. To date, those employers have had limited choices in adding family building care with cost predictability to their benefits, which has forced their employees into the same one-size-fits-all dollar-based plan designs that our model has long proven to be ineffective and inefficient use of resources. In the past, we've referenced that we've been developing a product for small and midsized companies to address the more than 50 million covered lives within these businesses in the U.S.

This is in addition to the 100 million-plus lives that we're already addressing today through large self-insured federal government and Taft–Hartley populations. We're pleased to announce the first of its kind supplemental plan for fertility and family building, which will be in our product portfolio in next year's selling season. In addition to this expansion, we have also broadened the platform through our newly launched Progyny Global offering. This provides multinational employers with a continuum of integrated services, including family building, pregnancy, postpartum and menopause across their full populations. Progyny's platform was purposely built for global markets and delivers member support tailored to their local environment.

This marries together the capabilities we acquired last year with what we had created in-house and produced a better, more comprehensive offer that's second to none in the market. Given the results we've achieved this past year, coupled with generating more than $50 million in operating cash flow this quarter, which brings the total operating cash flow to a record $156 million over the first 9 months of the year, we believe our stock is significantly undervalued. Accordingly, with our solid cash position and the overall strength of our balance sheet, we're pleased to return value to our investors through the announcement of a new share repurchase program for up to $200 million.

Mark will describe this program in more detail, along with our higher expectations for the year. Hopefully, my remarks today help you understand why we're happy with our performance thus far in 2025 and why we're even more excited for the year ahead. With the momentum we've built, we are well positioned to continue our growth trajectory into the next year and beyond and look forward to keeping you updated on our progress. With that, let me now turn the call over to Mark.

Mark Livingston: Thank you, Pete, and good afternoon, everyone. Before I begin, I'd like to first highlight that we're introducing a new format for my prepared remarks. We're aware that many of you routinely have multiple companies reporting at the same time as us, and we recognize how this divides your time and focus. Our prepared remarks have traditionally included commentary on the drivers to our recent results.

To make it easier and faster for you to understand those drivers at your own pace, the 8-K we filed this evening includes a set of summary slides providing highlights of the quarter as well as some of the longer-term trends that we believe are important in understanding the health and direction of the business. We've also posted that material to the IR section of our website. Rather than duplicate that content here in my remarks, I'll instead focus more on the key takeaways and important trends. Our hope is that this will not only create more time for Q&A, but also give you some time back by shortening the call.

We intend for this to be our approach going forward. We certainly greatly value the feedback of our investors and analysts, so please let us know your thoughts. Moving on to the key takeaways for the quarter. As shown in the press release and the accompanying slides, our results this quarter reflect the continuation of several long-term trends. First, we continue to see good revenue growth, 9% on an as-reported basis in the quarter or 23% when excluding the impact of a large former client in the year ago period. I'll remind you that the transition of care agreement pertaining to this large client ended as of June 30, 2025.

So our results for the third quarter and second half of the year do not include any contribution from them. Second, member engagement this quarter, which is we measure in the utilization rate as well as in ART cycles per unique utilizer was consistent with or slightly better than what was reflected in our guidance. Accordingly, revenue exceeded the top end of our guidance by more than $8 million. The engagement we're seeing reflects that members are continuing to pursue care and services they need in order to fill in order to meet their family building and overall health goals. Third, we continue to achieve healthy levels of profitability through a 23% gross margin and a 17.5% adjusted EBITDA margin.

We've accomplished this while we've continued to invest to expand our product platform and to integrate the acquisitions that were completed over the last year or so. I'll also highlight that this quarter's results include a $2 million reduction to expenses related to the employee retention credit program, which we received during the quarter. Fourth, through disciplined, prudent management of the business, we continue to achieve a high conversion rate of adjusted EBITDA to cash. In the third quarter, we generated more than $50 million in operating cash flow, which contributed to a record $156 million over the first 9 months of 2025, an increase of $29 million over the comparable period in 2024.

Third quarter CapEx was $4.7 million, a $2.9 million increase over the prior year period and reflects the previously disclosed investments enhancing member experience and integrating our recent acquisitions. We continue to expect that the incremental CapEx for those projects will be approximately $15 million over our 2024 spend levels. As of September 30, we had total working capital of approximately $412 million, which includes $345 million in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities. There are no borrowings against our $200 million revolving credit facility and no debt of any kind, and we have no planned use for the facility at this time.

With our balance sheet strength and solid cash position, we're pleased to be in a position to return meaningful value to our shareholders through our latest share repurchase program. The Board has authorized up to $200 million in open market and facilitated purchases, and this is immediately available for us to use. While this is a sizable program, we're also maintaining our ability to continue investing in our business for future growth across our other long-standing capital priorities. I'll remind you, those priorities include product expansions, new distribution channels and select acquisitions. Turning now to our expectations for the fourth quarter and the year.

As the fourth quarter begins, we continued to see that member engagement is consistent with recent periods. With the unexpected variability we experienced at certain times in 2024, the assumptions we're making today reflect the potential for further variability in activity and treatments, particularly at the low end of our ranges. To be clear, this is the same approach we've taken throughout the past year. As you can see in today's press release, we have narrowed our assumption for full year utilization to 1.05% at the low end and 1.06% at the high end. This is still lower than the 1.07% we saw in 2024.

In terms of consumption, given the current pacing of member activity, we've maintained our assumptions for full year ART cycles per unique of 0.91 at the low end of the range and 0.92 at the high end. With these assumptions, we're projecting between $292.7 million to $307.7 million in fourth quarter revenue, reflecting growth of negative 1.9% to positive 3.1%. As the transition of care with a large client concluded on June 30, there's no contribution from that client in the second half of this year. If we exclude the $35.9 million in revenue from that client in the year ago quarter, our fourth quarter guidance reflects growth of 11.5% to 17.2%.

On profitability, we expect between $45.3 million to $49.3 million in adjusted EBITDA in the quarter, along with net income of $12.5 million to $15.5 million. This equates to $0.14 to $0.17 of earnings per share or $0.37 and $0.40 of adjusted EPS on the basis of approximately 91 million fully diluted shares. As usual, our expectations for the fourth quarter profitability reflect the ramp-up in hiring ahead of our newest client launches on January 1, in addition to the previously disclosed increased spend this year to expand the features of our platform and integrate our recent mergers.

Please note that our assumptions do not consider the impacts of the repurchase program we announced today given the unpredictability of the underlying timing of its execution. With our strong results over the first 9 months of the year, we're pleased to raise our full year guidance. We now project revenue of between $1.263 billion to $1.278 billion, reflecting growth of between 8.2% to 9.5%. If we exclude the revenue from the client under the transition of care agreement from both years, our full year revenue growth is projected to be 17.8% to 19.2%. We also expect between $216 million to $220 million in adjusted EBITDA with net income of between $58.5 million to $61.5 million.

This equates to $0.65 and $0.68 earnings per diluted share and $1.79 and $1.82 of adjusted EPS on the basis of approximately 90 million fully diluted shares. With that, we'd like to now open up the call for questions. Operator, can you please provide the instructions?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] And the first question today is coming from Jailendra Singh with Truist Securities.

Jailendra Singh: Congrats on a strong quarter. My first question is around the 900,000 new covered lives. It might be slightly below your 1 million goal, but it is definitely higher than broader investor expectations. How should we think about these results in light of your messaging around lives running lower year-over-year for the last couple of earnings call? Did win rates you guys pick up in the last couple of months or you were trying to message this potential 100,000 shortfall? And does your messaging on the last earnings call that lives coming at a higher revenue attach than prior year still hold true?

Michael Sturmer: This is Michael. Thanks for the question. So first off, we're very pleased with the team's execution on this year's sales year -- this year's successful sales year. especially in light of there were a few headwinds during the season that the team had to overcome and execute well against. First, starting with the late developing pipeline, which was a new development for us as well as relatively high macro health care inflation, right? All those component parts do influence employers' decisions. But again, I think the team executed really well against that to get us to the $900,000 sales year this year.

Relative to the 100,000 delta, remember, that's also a relatively small number of clients that would -- on a decision basis, really roughly a handful as well as the 100,000 is relatively small against what will be the broader roughly $7 million base. Last thing I would say on that front is, while we always have some small opportunities remaining post November, we do have a larger volume this year of those deals, probably as a result of that slower developing pipeline this year and therefore, decision-making extending a little bit further. That said, we're not counting on those deals closing this year. It would be nice if they do.

But either way, whether they close or not, it will contribute to a strong start to the pipeline next year. Pete, would you add anything?

Peter Anevski: No, but I'll take the second part of that question, which is the revenue value of the $900,000. The easiest way to think about it is given mix of clients, industries, benefit design, et cetera, it's pretty proportionate to what the $1.1 million added last year is the way to think about it.

Michael Sturmer: Yes. I think we had said -- just finishing that off. I think we said on the previous call, we expected the -- even though the early commitments were of relatively higher value, we expected that to normalize by this time, and that's what happened.

Jailendra Singh: That's helpful. And then a quick follow-up on -- there is some confusion around the current administration's focus on improving the affordability of the cash pay market for fertility medications and what this means for your Progyny Rx business. And I completely understand the value employers see in keeping medical and pharmacy together. But just curious, if prices do come down in the cash pay market, what that means for your business? Could that result in employers looking for some pricing concession? Just give us some flavor how you think about the impact for your business.

Peter Anevski: Sure. So I'll give you some context around the announcement. So the announcement is around what already exists across manufacturers in terms of patient assistance programs for those that don't have coverage. The announcement from [indiscernible] is no different. They've had for years, certainly longer than we've been around cash pricing and the cash assistance program, patient assistance program for those that don't have coverage. And the announcement is simply just deepening a little bit the discount around those. A large portion of people won't qualify for those. Some will. There will be an income exclusion as part of that. But either way, these have been around for a long time.

So I don't expect there to be an impact on covered benefits and/or what manufacturers have in terms of pricing for covered benefits. These are separate cash assistance programs for those that don't have coverage.

Operator: Your next question is coming from Brian Tanquilut from Jefferies.

Brian Tanquilut: Congrats on the quarter. Maybe just to follow up on the question on the selling season. I mean, just curious what those discussions were this quarter? And then what are you seeing in terms of your current employer clients in terms of layoffs and how that's impacting your view on utilization going forward?

Peter Anevski: Sure. I'll do the second part first, and I'll let Michael answer the first part. We're not seeing anything relative to anything of size or meaning with respect to layoffs. The layoffs that have been announced are small relative to those companies and small in general. So there haven't been any widespread. I'll bring you back to the beginning of -- I think it was 2023 when there was a series of announcements that were then really what I call back then rightsizing versus reductions in workforce -- I'm sorry, I think it's '22, but versus reductions in workforce.

Collectively back then, even though there was a series of announcements across all tech companies, and again, they weren't all in our portfolio, there's only roughly collectively 150,000 lives sort of identified back then. So we're not seeing or hearing anything from our clients. that we believe you'll notice in terms of impact relative to layoffs is sort of the short answer.

Michael Sturmer: Yes. And then to the other part of the question, as for discussions in the market, similar that they've been in other years, right? Employers always want to understand and focus on really 3 areas: member experience, quality and outcomes and cost control. Those remain the same. Certainly, this year, cost control remained in that top 3 category. And all 3 fit well into our value proposition, whether that's exhibited by, I should say, whether that's the, again, the strong sales season or in particular, the near 100% retention of our existing clients where those things are even more visible to them on a year-over-year basis.

Brian Tanquilut: Got it. And then maybe, Mark, just a quick follow-up. As I think about gross profit margin being what it is. Is there any specific call out there? How should we think about modeling that going forward?

Michael Sturmer: Yes. Look, I think we've continued to expand our gross profits year after year. We've made some investments. I think importantly, here as you look at Q4, we always model that down. in part of my prepared comments addressed that we're building that staff as we enter into the next year. But look, we try to keep that fairly consistent from a profitability standpoint, leveraging those teams as we grow.

Operator: Your next question is coming from Michael Cherny from Leerink Partners.

Michael Cherny: Really nice job on the quarter and the selling season. Maybe if I can just follow up on the drug pricing question. Right now, in terms of what you see as cash prices in the market, how do they compare roughly to the net prices you offer clients?

Peter Anevski: They vary based on drug. Obviously, cash pricing is cheaper across the board, but they vary and sort of getting into that detail, I'm not sure how that helps. But at the end of the day, I think the more important point is that they have been around for a long time and haven't been a catalyst around pricing for coverage to date nor even a conversation relative to what's out there and clients are aware that they're out there, but they understand that patient assistant programs exist where you don't have coverage. And so it's probably the best way I can answer it. The best color I can give you around it.

Michael Cherny: No, that's completely fine. And then just maybe one more question, at least for me, and I'm just thinking about the selling season. In terms of the upsell potential, as you think about the -- I think the 1.2 million incremental lives on the new products, how does that evolve now in terms of ongoing upsell, i.e., is this something where you have the ability now because of new products to essentially open up a longer selling season window, kind of upsells over the course of the year?

How should we think about that in terms of the relationships, both your existing customers, but also as you continue to work towards that pipeline of customers that didn't get to the finish line?

Michael Sturmer: Yes. Thanks for the question. This is Michael. So yes, we meet with our clients quarterly. Part of that is obviously going through what they've already purchased and how those services are performing as well as where their priorities are and opportunities to expand. So certainly, the teams have more products and services to talk with clients about and where their costs may be -- where we maybe have opportunity to impact their costs or impact and provide services in areas that they're strategically going. And we do have those conversations throughout the year.

Operator: Your next question is coming from Scott Schoenhaus from KeyBanc.

Scott Schoenhaus: On the quarter and the strong selling season. So I guess I wanted to dive more into the selling season commentary from last quarter. You said the mix less lives last quarter, developed later, but there was higher utilization. Just wondering -- and you said that trend has normalized and from the additional lives that we've seen now added. Just wondering how you obtain or sort of manage those -- that pool? Are you looking at claims data? Are you looking at demographic issues? How much data is a new employer or a potential new client giving you in front of the selling season to be able to understand the cohort of employees and the utilization profile.

Peter Anevski: Sure. So we've been -- the same way we've been doing it for years. It's everything from the plan design, the products purchased and the industry that they're in and obviously, the lives that, that client represents, right? And so when you roll all that up, we have enough experience and more data than anybody across all these industries to have really good predictability around their revenue contribution, right? And the way it's been working out for us for years is that the pool becomes predictable. There's variability always within individual clients.

But as a pool, when you roll it all up based on expectations for each of those clients, again, by plan design, et cetera, and size and industry and roll that up, there's a pool expectation, which is where our earlier comments were driven from as well as our comments.

Scott Schoenhaus: Helpful. And then as a follow-up, when you think about -- I'm not asking for guidance for next year, but typically, you wait for your first month of utilization to get a better sense of revenue, provide guidance. But given the choppiness we've seen over the last several years, and we're seeing a tremendous rebound in utilization this year, how are you strategically thinking about guidance going forward?

Peter Anevski: Here is -- I think that what you guys call the choppiness, I call a small amount of variability. I do appreciate that in any given year, variability, plus or minus 5% can impact year-over-year results and can impact a growth rate. But overall, it doesn't impact materially the overall financial results position or trends, et cetera, right? That said, we have been -- we have increased and taken into account in the guidance ranges that we've been giving out all year long and expect to continue to do that, factoring in that variability that we've seen in -- over the last couple of years when we put out guidance and that we don't expect that to change.

Operator: Your next question is coming from Dev Weerasuriya from Bank of America.

Nisala Devanath Weerasuriya: Maybe I'll follow up on Scott's question here. I guess I'm thinking about it in kind of the ART cycles per female utilizer that's typically trended up through the quarters. If I just back out the large client contribution this quarter, it seems like revenue is still slightly down quarter-over-quarter versus historically typically trending up. I guess how are you seeing -- but it seems like utilization is firming up a bit. So I'm trying to think about how we should think about this into the next couple of quarters because the 4Q guide still considers ART cycles per utilizer kind of below prior years. What are your expectations? How did 3Q trend versus expectations?

And are you seeing anything on the ground that gives you confidence that this -- at cycles for utilizer will get back to historical ranges in the coming years?

Peter Anevski: Yes. So I'll make a couple of comments relative to what you just said. There is seasonality in Q4. And in general, the base book of business does go down a little bit in Q4 versus Q3, mostly because of the holidays. There's 2 big holidays, obviously. There's Thanksgiving and then there's also the Christmas season, if you will, that does impact just capacity in clinics in terms of them being open to use that time to do a lot of cleaning, et cetera, right, plus people make decisions relative to deferring outside of those weeks for exactly that reason. They don't want to be going through treatment through the holidays, right?

In the past, where you've seen, and I'll take last year as an example, sequential increase versus decrease, that was more a phenomenon of cycles per utilizer returning -- trending back up towards normal versus seeing a decline for the first time where we normally see sequential increases throughout the quarters. If you look at prior years, there's always a little bit of noise relative to what's reported versus what impacts Q3 to Q4 sequentially, right? At the end of the day, I don't look at $6 million in the sequential revenue as a negative trend. I look at it just sort of what we're seeing right now.

But as Mark said and we said in our prepared remarks, we don't see any weakness, if you will, relative to utilization or care consumption versus Q3, but factored in the normal seasonality that happens in Q4. So that's the best I can answer that type of question.

Nisala Devanath Weerasuriya: Got it. That's helpful. And then just one other quick one. I think Rx revenue growth is still trending below medical. And I think it was attributed to a mix impact last quarter. Was that the same this quarter? And then how should we think about when those 2 maybe converge, I think, as previously expected?

James Hart: Yes. Look, I think one of the things you have to remember, there are a variety of factors that will -- that factor into each line so that they don't perfectly converge. There are timing differences. There are treatment and program mixes. So there are certain treatment journeys that carry less amount of drugs than others. So minor variations in treatment mix. Pricing is also an impact. We've talked over the years about how we have been managing cost control tightly for our clients and in some cases, absorbing some of the manufacturer increases on the Rx side where there is not that case on the medical side. So they can vary a bit.

As we look at -- and I guess the last thing is that we aren't breaking out the revenue from our newer products into their own category. They do get accounted for in that fertility services line. And so you're seeing some revenue growth there with no associated pharmacy growth. So it isn't going to perfectly align, but they should grow in tandem over the long term.

Operator: Your next question is coming from David Larsen from BTIG.

David Larsen: Congratulations on the good quarter. Can you talk a little bit more about the supplemental product that you mentioned? It sounds like it's a sort of a cash-based solution maybe for more middle market accounts maybe that want to spend a little less money on the fertility benefit but want to start with something.

Peter Anevski: Yes. To start with, it's not a cash-based solution. It's a covered solution. But you're right, it does address small and middle market companies. think of everything from ASO, minimum premium and/or fully insured population, so however they're funded, but again, small and mid-market companies. And it provides a solution that's more predictable relative to expectations around cost that these smaller companies generally need in terms of understanding what their cost might be and adding this type of benefit. And -- but it is a robust solution that puts them into a position to compete with much larger companies having now what generally is offered to large -- through larger employers, a benefit offering that covers these needs.

David Larsen: That's great. And then can you talk about the year-over-year growth in number of clients expected for 2026 versus the number of lives growth expected in '26. And I guess what I'm getting at is, it looks like you're going to add maybe 55 clients in '26, which is a decline from 73 in '25, but maybe the number of lives are going to increase. Just any thoughts around that would be helpful.

Michael Sturmer: Early go-lives [indiscernible]

Peter Anevski: So part of the challenge whenever we do this -- we update all year long the number of clients that are live. When we talk about our sales season, many times more clients go-live earlier or go out, if you will, and/or might be off-cycle clients and they have already gone live, but they're included in what we describe as sales overall.

And so the way you're thinking about it is as of what we just reported today versus what we just announced in terms of overall number of companies and clients that we've added, but it includes a decent number, although not significant in terms of revenue contribution, no different than last year, no different than every year, where the -- you might have a number of clients usually really small and when they're not, we call it out, usually really small in terms of live contribution. Think of it in a way that says the majority of the lives contribution is starting next year.

Operator: Your next question is coming from Sarah James from Cantor Fitzgerald.

Unknown Analyst: This is Gaby on for Sarah. I wanted to double-click on the supplemental plans. As you get ready to roll those out for the 2026 selling season, should we think about that having impact on the expense line in 2026? Do you need to increase the sales force? Do you need to increase marketing efforts? And then do you expect them to be read through to the revenue and EBITDA line as soon as '27?

Peter Anevski: Yes. Although you're right, we will have to -- we've already been doing some of that, but we will have to add resources relative to go-to-market. It's not going to be noticeable in the way you're thinking about it where it's going to be significant and change the profitability profile within sales and marketing in a meaningful way is the way I would tell you to think about it.

Unknown Analyst: Okay. Great. And then any updates you can share on the global or international business and how that rollout has been?

Mark Livingston: Yes, we had -- we did some -- we had some nice adds this year on that with the enhanced benefit and global services and solution. And then as we said in the script, we're excited to now be able to pull really our full U.S. portfolio of services now international, and that will be available for sale next year as well. So good momentum and excited to continue that from a global basis.

Operator: Thank you. That does conclude our Q&A for today. And I'd now like to turn the floor back to James Hart.

James Hart: Thank you, Tom, and thank you, everyone, for joining us this evening. Please, as always, feel free to reach out to me for any further questions or clarifications you may need. We appreciate your time and attention. We know it's been a busy day. We look forward to reporting our next results in February.

Operator: Thank you. This does conclude today's conference call. You may disconnect at this time, and have a wonderful day. Thank you once again for your participation.