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DATE

Tuesday, May 5, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Timothy Danker
  • Chief Financial Officer — Ryan Clement

TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue -- $431 million, up 6% year over year, reflecting growth in Senior and Healthcare Services segments.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $45 million, representing 18% year-over-year growth; result includes a $14 million positive commissions receivable adjustment.
  • Senior Segment Revenue -- $183 million, up 8% year over year, primarily driven by 4% growth in approved Medicare Advantage policies and a positive estimate change in commissions receivable.
  • Senior Segment Adjusted EBITDA -- $59 million, inclusive of the $14 million adjustment; normalized EBITDA margin remained at 26%.
  • Healthcare Services Revenue -- $199 million, up 5% year over year; driven by an 11% increase in SelectRx members, reaching nearly 117,000.
  • Healthcare Services Adjusted EBITDA -- $5 million, with sequential improvement despite the Inflation Reduction Act reducing top-line revenue.
  • Life Insurance Segment -- Revenue of $48 million, up 4% year over year; Final Expense commissions climbed more than 8% with high margins, partially offset by headwinds in Term Life.
  • Guidance Reaffirmation -- Management reaffirmed full-year revenue guidance of $1.61 billion to $1.71 billion, and adjusted EBITDA guidance of $90 million to $100 million.
  • Medicare Advantage Commissions Receivable -- Balance stood at nearly $1 billion, with a recapture rate of over 33% over the past two years.
  • Marketing Efficiency -- Senior segment reduced marketing spend per approved policy by 14% compared to two years prior.
  • SelectRx Prescriptions Shipped -- Increased 64% over two years; SelectRx membership rose 55% over the same period.
  • Revenue to CAC Multiple -- Global metric reached 6.7x.
  • Olathe Distribution Facility Efficiency -- Realized 30%+ efficiency gains on shipped prescriptions compared to legacy sites, using less than half of available facility space.
  • SelectQuote Local Initiative -- New franchise-based community insurance platform launched, expected to strategically extend addressable market with minimal near-term revenue impact.
  • PBM Reimbursement Environment -- CEO Danker stated, "the environment from a reimbursement rate is stable, and we're happy to have secured a multi-year agreement with our largest PBM partner."
  • Inflation Reduction Act Impact -- $13 million in refunds from drug manufacturers was booked as a cost-of-goods offset during the quarter.

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RISKS

  • CFO Clement noted that "approval rates this OEP were materially higher than in previous years," and added, "it's possible some of this increase may reflect approval timing and volume that was pulled forward from 4Q, contributing to the outsized strength this quarter."
  • Management cautioned there could be "some elevated disruption again this next year as carriers try to get to those target margin goals" in the Medicare Advantage market.
  • Ryan Clement said, "we want to continue to monitor whether some of this goodness may be timing related, impacting our fourth quarter approved policy levels."

SUMMARY

SelectQuote, Inc. (SLQT +51.20%) reported higher year-over-year revenue, margin expansion in the Senior division, and improved operating leverage in Healthcare Services. Management launched the SelectQuote Local franchise initiative to expand reach and emphasized positive cash flow outlook into fiscal 2027. A favorable $14 million adjustment to Medicare Advantage commissions receivable boosted reported EBITDA, but executives expressed caution about the sustainability of certain quarterly approval rates. Long-term contracts and efficiency gains at the Olathe facility are expected to enable further margin improvement and scalable growth.

  • Executives reiterated intent to "take all necessary action to maintain our listing on the New York Stock Exchange" and highlighted ongoing evaluation of capital markets and M&A options to address the equity value disconnect.
  • The company confirmed operational progress on a new pharmacy management system that will facilitate scaling efficiencies as production shifts towards the Olathe facility.
  • Positive recapture rates exceeding 33% for the past two Medicare Advantage cycles led to management's confidence in commissions receivable as a future cash source.
  • Final Expense life insurance continues to produce growth and cash flow, while Term Life faces headwinds amid evolving consumer media preferences.
  • Carrier marketing spend was described as consistent with earlier projections, with no additional changes expected until annual planning completes in the summer.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • OEP: Open Enrollment Period in Medicare Advantage, during which policyholders may make changes to coverage.
  • AEP: Annual Enrollment Period for Medicare Advantage plans.
  • PBM: Pharmacy Benefit Manager, an intermediary negotiating drug prices and reimbursements between pharmacies, insurers, and manufacturers.
  • SelectRx: SelectQuote's proprietary pharmacy services platform.
  • Revenue to CAC Multiple: Ratio of total revenue generated per customer relative to acquisition cost, used as a measure of sales efficiency.
  • Final Expense: A type of life insurance policy focused on covering end-of-life expenses.
  • LTV: Lifetime Value, an accounting metric estimating total value from a customer over time.
  • SEP: Special Enrollment Period, a Medicare window for coverage changes outside regular annual periods.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Timothy Danker: Thank you, Matt, and appreciate everyone joining us this morning. We're pleased to report another quarter of strong financial results across each of our segments. We reaffirm our outlook for fiscal 2026 and continue to execute our goal to drive profitability and cash flow. We're especially proud of the results given the headwinds our industry has faced over the past year plus. This is a testament to our people and strategy. SelectQuote continued to advance our goal to expand cash flow, and the company is very well positioned to accelerate that effort in fiscal 2027. To summarize, SelectQuote generated $431 million in revenue, driven by solid results across each of our segments.

Adjusted EBITDA totaled $45 million, growth of 18% year-over-year. In Senior, we grew revenue by 8% year-over-year to $183 million. Growth was driven by healthier OEP, strong agent productivity and customer retention, as well as a positive change to our commissions receivables that Ryan will detail. As we have mentioned before, we firmly believe the SelectQuote's strategy and our agents make the difference. This now marks 4 consecutive years of strong operating performance in Senior, despite widely varying Medicare Advantage backdrops each year. To say it lightly, we're very proud of the results and our differentiated model. Senior adjusted EBITDA totaled $59 million, which includes the positive $14 million adjustment I just mentioned.

It is important to note that the adjustment reaffirms the value of the commissions receivable on our balance sheet and the approximate $1 billion in assets we expect to receive in the quarters and years ahead. When we offer bespoke advice to American seniors and do so year-in and year-out, they get the best care, and we and our carrier partners benefit through strong retention. That said, excluding and normalizing the adjustment for comparison purposes, SelectQuote's model once again drove strong Senior margins of 26% and a Medicare Advantage backdrop that was mixed this season. Turning to Healthcare Services, revenue grew 5% compared to a year ago, totaling $199 million.

Our revenue and profitability in SelectRx was impacted by both carrier-specific actions on reimbursement, which we detailed earlier this year, and the implementation of the Inflation Reduction Act. Ryan will provide detail on that impact shortly. Those headwinds notwithstanding, our adjusted EBITDA improved sequentially to $5 million, and we maintain our view that Healthcare Services will be a significant driver of profitable cash flow growth in fiscal 2027 and beyond. Overall, including our Life Insurance segment, we expect to exit fiscal 2026 on very strong footing in spite of what was a challenging environment. Looking ahead to 2027, we are encouraged by increasing visibility within the Medicare Advantage ecosystem.

We're excited about SelectQuote's ability to compound cash flow growth in the near future and see significant value for shareholders as a result, especially at what we believe is a wildly dislocated valuation for our company. To that end, let me be clear that we will take all necessary action to maintain our listing on the New York Stock Exchange. We remain confident our stock will continue to be traded on the NYSE for years to come. Lastly, I'd like to take a minute to highlight a new and important initiative called SelectQuote Local. As you know, we have longed and proud of our company's ability to help underserved Americans.

SelectQuote Local is a natural extension of our model and allows local community healthcare and life insurance participants to leverage our information and market advantages to help more people in need. The business offers our leading marketing, technology, products and customer service platform through a franchise model with local sales and service. Put another way, we're offering local providers the information engine of SelectQuote on a fee-based arrangement, and we can do so with minimal capital investment. Similar to the expansion of our revenue to CAC metric with the growth of Healthcare Services, we see SelectQuote Local as another extension of how our model can help more Americans with the same scale dollar of investment.

SelectQuote Local won't be a meaningful revenue driver in the near term, but strategically, it broadens our reach and addressable market. Now let's flip to Slide 4, and let's take a look at the KPIs from our very strong quarter. We've shown these before, primarily for our Senior business, but we've also included additional detail on SelectRx. Starting with Senior on the left, we drove another strong quarter measured by agent productivity and OEP. Agent service and productivity are an evergreen goal of ours, but I'd remind you that this is all the more impressive considering the very strong compares in the previous 2 years.

Specifically, we drove a 1% improvement in policies per agent over this timeframe despite historically wide swings in the environment from one season to the next. Moving down the page, we saw even better results on marketing efficiency, spending 14% less per approved policy compared to 2 years ago. Ryan will speak to elevated approval rates this season, but even excluding that unique impact, we saw a strong return on marketing spend beyond just policy booking. Senior engagement was high across the full range of our channels. We're underscoring our Senior division efficiency performance here, because we oftentimes find investors and analysts overlook the progress we've made on cash conversion in this segment.

Moving to the right side of the page, we highlight the significant progress we've made with onboarding of SelectRx members. As you can see, we have driven a 64% increase in prescriptions shipped compared to 2 years ago relative to a commensurate 55% increase in SelectRx members. Progressive maturity and onboarding of our membership, combined with the improved operating efficiency of our Olathe, Kansas distribution facility has driven significant leverage on a relatively fixed cost base. As a result, SelectQuote generated a global revenue to CAC multiple of 6.7x. Only SelectQuote offers this unique combination of capabilities to help patients in multiple ways.

This increases the value we bring to consumers and drives additional profitability with each senior we engage with. For products and services that are inherently recurring, especially when done at our level of care, the cash flow streams from our customers drive very compelling returns on invested capital. As we've noted, there is a wide disconnect between the value we see in our platform and cash flow streams and the valuation of common equity. Take one simple example. Our Medicare Advantage commissions receivable balance at the end of fiscal third quarter totaled nearly $1 billion, which compares to our market cap of under $200 million today.

We have fielded questions about the LTV assumptions in our commissions accounting going all the way back to our IPO, but I'd simply note that SelectQuote has just operated in 2 of the most disruptive Medicare Advantage environments on record. Over those 2 years, we had a recapture rate of over 33%, and we're able to recognize a favorable adjustment to our receivables. The point being, we have visibility and conviction in our balance sheet asset and multiple capital markets transactions would suggest others analyzing the business closely share that conviction. Before I hand the call over to Ryan, we're very proud of the great progress we've made over the past 4 years, both operationally and on our capital structure.

We continue to prioritize cash flow generation and will deliver significant year-over-year improvement in operating cash flow in fiscal '26. We expect to build upon that meaningful cash flow improvement in fiscal '27 and beyond with a stated goal to delever our balance sheet in the years to come. I'll end my comments by underscoring our commitment to remedying the disconnect in our equity value and see a very compelling opportunity in SelectQuote for investors in the future. With that, let me turn the call over to Ryan to review our third quarter. Ryan?

Ryan Clement: Thanks, Tim. I'll pick it up on Slide 5 with a summary of our consolidated financial results. As Tim noted, SelectQuote had a strong quarter with revenue growth of 6% year-over-year, totaling $431 million. The growth was driven by both our Senior and Healthcare Services businesses, reflecting a strong OEP and continued demand for SelectRx. Adjusted EBITDA of $45 million was aided by the positive change in estimate to our commissions receivable that Tim noted. Excluding the favorable adjustment, our consolidated EBITDA margin for fiscal 3Q would have been 7%, which is a strong result for an OEP quarter. Overall, given the volatile backdrop, we are proud of the progress we continue to make on profitability and cash flow generation.

The fiscal third quarter was strong operationally, and we are very well positioned to end fiscal 2026 on a positive note and carry momentum into 2027. Let me begin the segment overview on Slide 6 with a summary of our Senior business. As Tim noted, Senior revenue grew 8% compared to last year, totaling $183 million on 4% growth in approved MA policies and the positive change in estimate. Let's detail those 2 drivers, starting with approved policies. While growth in approved policies was strong, it's important to note that approval rates this OEP were materially higher than in previous years.

While we are encouraged by these strong carrier approval rates, we will continue to monitor as it's possible some of this increase may reflect approval timing and volume that was pulled forward from 4Q, contributing to the outsized strength this quarter. Shifting to the positive adjustment, the majority of the $14 million increase in receivables was due to a change in our estimate of expected renewals driven by additional anticipated renewals from our policyholders as we continue to gain visibility to retention through this most recent renewal event. Having now operated through 15 Medicare seasons, we are proud to say we still have customers from our earliest cohorts.

As a reminder, our LTV accounting assumes 10 renewal years and also assumes a 15% constraint. We think this is yet another indicator that our commissions receivables balance represents a large and perhaps not appropriately understood source of future cash flow to the business. Moving to adjusted EBITDA, Senior generated $59 million, including a favorable $14 million adjustment to our commissions receivable. Excluding that adjustment, the Senior segment produced an EBITDA margin of 26%. We have now maintained profitability of at least 25% during the AEP and OEP seasons for each of the last 4 consecutive years. Over that timeframe, the SelectQuote Senior business has averaged EBITDA margins of over 25% on a full year basis.

Moving to Slide 7, our Healthcare Services business performed in line with our expectations against the pressures Tim mentioned. As we forecasted, membership growth in the quarter was strong at 11%, but moderated compared to the recent past. To be clear, demand remains very strong, but we continue to focus on driving further improvement in segment profitability. Our nearly 117,000 members drove revenue of $199 million for the fiscal third quarter. Let me take a moment to speak through the dynamic that changed booked revenue sequentially. The Inflation Reduction Act went into effect on January 1 of this year and set maximum fair prices for 10 higher-priced drugs.

Essentially, all of the sequential drop in revenue was driven by that specific price change in the quarter. It's important to note that while the IRA drove a notable change to our top line, the actual impact to EBITDA was in the low single-digit millions and was fully accounted for in our original forecast. To that point, moving down the page, we drove adjusted EBITDA of $5 million despite the headwinds mentioned. As we noted last quarter, we see significant profit and cash flow in our base of SelectRx members. We are driving profit improvement through the seasoning and higher utilization of our membership base.

Additionally, we continue to grow more and more optimistic about the cost efficiency of our Olathe distribution facility, which came online in April of 2025. At this time, less than 20% of our prescriptions shipped from that facility, but we are already recognizing 30% plus efficiency gains on those shipments relative to our 2 legacy locations. We have been investing in the development of a proprietary pharmacy management system to support all of our locations, and we are in the testing phase at this point. Upon successful completion of our testing, the new pharmacy management system will allow us to fulfill many more SelectRx members through the Olathe facility in the quarters to come.

We currently use less than half of the facility space and run only 1 shift in that facility. So there's ample room to scale into this highly efficient operation. Flipping to Life Insurance on Slide 8, the business remains steady with cross currents between our 2 main products, Final Expense and Term Life. Final Expense continues to be a tailwind for the business with commissions up more than 8% year-over-year at highly attractive margins. We continue to see strong demand for this product and believe it will be a consistent growth driver well into the future.

Strength in Final Expense was partially offset by Term Life, which remains a competitive market as consumers are shifting where and how they consume media. Overall, Life revenue grew 4% to $48 million and generated adjusted EBITDA of $6 million. While small, it's worth noting that the Life business generates sufficient cash flow similar to our Healthcare Services segment. In summary, our Life division remains a steady contributor of profitability and cash flow. Finally, on Slide 9, we are reaffirming our revenue range of $1.61 billion to $1.71 billion and adjusted EBITDA range of $90 million to $100 million. Despite realizing a positive adjustment this quarter, we believe it is prudent to maintain our guidance ranges at this time.

As mentioned earlier, 3Q results were aided by approval rates in Senior that were materially higher than previous years. While we are encouraged by this approval rate increase, we want to continue to monitor whether some of this goodness may be timing related, impacting our fourth quarter approved policy levels. To echo Tim's comment, the SelectQuote model is generating visible and strengthening cash profitability, and we are highly focused on closing the disconnect between our equity market value and the real value of those cash flows. With that, let me now turn the call back to the operator to take your questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Drew Sterrett from RBC Capital.

Andrew Sterrett: This is Drew Sterrett on for Ben Hendrix. You previously noted that PBM headwinds have continued for SelectRx. I mean for this quarter, it appears reimbursement came in a little ahead of our expectations. Do you have any additional commentary around this? And how should we think about the PMB (sic) [ PBM ] reimbursement environment going forward?

Timothy Danker: Yes, Drew, thanks for joining. This is Tim. I'll take the first part of the call and maybe have Ryan also speak to the IRA impact. But as far as the PBM reimbursement environment, it remains very stable. As we talked about earlier this year, we faced a challenge with the change in our reimbursement rate. We have successfully resolved that issue and have seen reimbursement rates normalize in the third quarter results. So, would categorize the environment from a reimbursement rate is stable, and we're happy to have secured a multi-year agreement with our largest PBM partner. Ryan, maybe you can elaborate a little bit more on the IRA dynamic Inflation Reduction Act that impacted revenue for the quarter.

Ryan Clement: Yes, happy to. As Tim noted and I mentioned on the call, the revenue sequentially declined and the biggest driver there or the driver is the Inflation Reduction Act, which when you look at it optically, revenue obviously dropping, but the bottom line impact, very different from what we see in the top line, top line is outsized. And the reason for that is we're receiving refunds from the drug manufacturers, and that's actually flowing through in the cost of goods line item. So for the quarter, we actually received $13 million in refunds. But again, there's a little bit of a geography change that's happening.

And certainly, optically, it looks like there's a sequential decline, but that's really driven by the IRA impacts, which were fully accounted for in our guidance.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of George Sutton from Craig-Hallum.

George Sutton: That's a new way to say, Craig-Hallum. So nice results. I wondered, Tim, if you could talk about, you mentioned in your prepared comments, you're positioned to accelerate the cash flow dynamics in 2027. Can you just give us a little picture of that?

Timothy Danker: Yes, I'd be happy to, George. And I appreciate you being on, George. As far as cash flow dynamic, we feel like we're making substantial progress year-over-year. I think it's a byproduct of the positive changes that we made in the capital structure and kind of cash interest obligations. Certainly, as you've seen the results for OEP, which I think we have highlighted is there's been a lot of change over the past 2 years around the environment. So we feel really good about the OEP results and the underlying efficiency that we're driving in our Senior distribution business, both from an agent productivity as well as from a marketing efficiency standpoint.

And clearly, we had a bounce back quarter in terms of SelectRx. And that's a big part of the story moving forward, really those 3 factors that would emphasize SelectRx is a significant opportunity for us to continue to improve the cash flow generation. So we highlighted the Olathe, Kansas or Metro, Kansas City facility and some of the things that we're doing there that are driving 30% plus efficiency relative to our legacy pharmacies, and we expect that to continue to compound as we exit fourth quarter this year into next year.

George Sutton: Great. You also mentioned increased visibility in the Medicare Advantage ecosystem. I wondered, you've got some fairly public comments from a large carrier about their plans, which don't necessarily align with the brokers. I'm curious where you're seeing this increased visibility? Can you give us a sense of the discussions that you're having with the carriers?

Timothy Danker: Yes, I'd be happy to. Great question, George. I think we are certainly seeing some positive developments relative to maybe a few quarters ago in the broader MA market recovery, if you will. But I think we would still caution at the pace of recovery. The things that we're seeing, I know that you and other analysts are covering from the payers that have reported is we're seeing some of the medical cost trends easing a bit, still expected -- forecasted to be up in high single-digit year-over-year, maybe coming in slightly favorable to that. But a reimbursement trend that's not fully sufficient to cover those costs. So that's a bit of a mixed story there, if you will.

Some of the changes to the stars rating changes, we think is a positive tailwind if the payers can manage the enhanced focus on the clinical factors. And then you're seeing the payers' margin improvement recovery happening. I think when you put all that into the blender, if you will, we think there will be a continued discipline in the market for plan year 2027. We believe that there's some potential reemergence to targeted growth for plan year 2028. So we're anticipating that there could be some elevated disruption again this next year as carriers try to get to those target margin goals. But we have performed very well over the past 2 years.

We certainly take the position that SelectQuote has been in this business for 15 years. Many members of this exec team have been in Medicare for 20 years. And we know these cycles don't last forever. We continue to have an optimistic outlook, I would say, cautious optimism.

George Sutton: Lastly for me, if I could. Both you and Ryan were pretty adamant about wanting to remedy the disconnect of your equity. And I'm just curious how broad you're thinking there. Obviously, execution is one factor, but I'm curious outside of that, how broadly you're thinking in terms of things like segment sale or monetizing receivables or other M&A. Just curious on that side?

Timothy Danker: Yes. Fair question, George. I mean we definitely plan to remedy it, and we made the public comments about ensuring that this company will be listed on the New York Stock Exchange. But beyond that, which we will certainly accomplish, we continue to evaluate a series of options. And I think we've been on record as a company that continues to evaluate various capital markets transactions, securitization, obviously, we've accomplished one. We think the positive development of how we've worked through the past 2 years on the renewal side and this positive change in estimate gives us more conviction, even increased conviction around our back book receivables, that's certainly an option.

And there's other M&A, we certainly believe that -- and we've said this before, there's -- the market is at the point where consolidation might make sense. We think there'll be a small handful of sophisticated and capability-rich players, and SelectQuote will certainly be one of those. We think the strength, the diversification, the durability of our business creates an option set for us that's quite wide.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Steven Couche from Jefferies.

Steven Couche: I'm on for Dave. Maybe we can start on SelectRx. Do you still expect to exit the year at the $40 million to $50 million EBITDA run rate that you had previously messaged?

Timothy Danker: Hello, Steven, I appreciate you joining, and I'm happy to answer that. I think we are highly confident that in the very near term, this business will be at a $40 million to $50 million EBITDA run rate business. We continue to gain operational efficiencies like we've commented on in our Kansas City facility, and we expect that to continue to compound as we exit 4Q and enter fiscal '27.

Steven Couche: Okay. Great. And then I actually wanted to ask about Kansas City and how you think about taking volumes out of the other 2 facilities, I believe they're in Indy and Pittsburgh and moving them into Kansas City. And I mean, does it create some sort of stranded costs or decremental margins in the other 2 facilities when you move into Kansas City?

Timothy Danker: Yes. I can take that one. As far as getting volume in, we are -- we've been very open that we've been working on kind of a new pharmacy management systems and things like that. And in order to really take more volume in, we are really close, but we're working on getting that done. We've sent our first patients through that process, it's gone very, very well. So pretty soon, we will be kind of moving more patients over. It doesn't -- actually, that should help the margins in the other facilities, because it should take a little bit of a burden off of some of the later night shifts and things that we have to do.

So again, that cost savings that Ryan was talking about is very real. So we feel like that will just enhance margins even more as we run more volume through there.

Steven Couche: Okay. And then maybe 1 or 2 on Senior. So the $14 million positive change of estimate, did I hear you correctly when it sounded like those -- that better performance was on recent policies. I don't know if it was this most recent AEP or maybe the one before that. And I guess the underlying question is how much of that $14 million should we think about folding into the underlying EBITDA run rate?

Timothy Danker: Yes. So I think with respect to -- obviously, the guide, we've kind of set that out, there is $90 million to $100 million, we weren't adjusting it. With respect to the positive tail adjustment, that's really -- we've been through another renewal event. We're sitting looking at our book of business, looking at persistency, making adjustments based off our expectations. And so through this enhanced visibility, it became clear that we would expect to collect more than what we currently have on the balance sheet, which led to the change in estimate.

So I think it's less about any specific cohort and more broadly as we assess the book of business, it became clear that it made sense to go ahead and make this adjustment. But again, at this time, we're not modifying the guidance. I want to see how Q4 develops. And obviously, we've talked about the approval rates. And so just seeing how that develops, but we're very pleased with the overall business results as well as the way the book is holding up.

Steven Couche: Okay. Great. And maybe I can sneak in one more here. So when we think about the LTV calculation, obviously, this last AEP was extremely disruptive, probably max disruption. And so when we think about moving forward the LTV calculation, do we just need the industry-wide enrollment disruption to be less and that would theoretically benefit the LTV calculation? Or are there other variables at play where just if the environment just stabilizes, that wouldn't necessarily result in the LTV also stabilizing or improving?

Timothy Danker: Yes. So I would say there are many factors that impact the LTV, it's customer retention, carrier mix, payment structures. Obviously, we have been through 2 disruptive seasons, and that does put some pressure on persistency. We're incredibly pleased with the 34% recapture rate. We've done phenomenally well navigating the season. And I think it's worth calling out that when we do help someone with a new policy that may have a plan term, we're actually putting that policy on the books at a very low cost. All that being said, I think clearly, strong performance and the ability to navigate through a range of Medicare seasons.

Your question around stability, if we do see increased stability within the system, that would be a tailwind to lifetime values. And so again, I think that's what we're hoping for in the future, but clearly been able to navigate 4 very different Medicare seasons.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Michael Kupinski from NOBLE Capital Markets.

Michael Kupinski: Congratulations on your quarter. Tough to kind of go a little bit later in asking questions. Most of my questions have been answered. I was just wondering in terms of the marketing spend by national carriers, have you seen any changes there? And then also just in trends on your Senior, I know that you've kind of touched around this. Just wondering if you can just kind of give us your thoughts in terms of the back half of the year and how that's trending, particularly? And I know you touched on all of this in terms of submission volumes, approval rates and average revenue.

But just wondering if you can kind of give us your thoughts in terms of how things are trending as we kind of look into the next quarter?

Timothy Danker: Yes, Michael, thanks for joining. Just to clarify, your first question is regarding kind of a carrier marketing investment. I just want to clarify before I respond.

Michael Kupinski: Yes, the carrier marketing spend.

Timothy Danker: Yes. Thank you, Michael. So the short answer to that, Michael, is no additional updates beyond what we shared on our second quarter call regarding strategic marketing investment other than to say what we had projected is what we're experiencing. So we're certainly in line there. Carriers will go through their annual planning cycles with us this summer, and we'll expect to have a clearer picture when we provide our fiscal '27 guide. But I think if you look at how we navigated this OEP, we obviously had to absorb some of the aforementioned $20 million impact, a material amount of that came through in our fiscal 3Q, and we were able to still drive, we believe, outsized results.

So we think this is all certainly manageable. I think the second part of your question was additional detail on how the back half of the year is going. And I would say that, again, we just went through our second biggest quarter in OEP, we think, with flying colors, and we're really proud of the results and the efficiency and how that also builds towards oFur commissions receivable as well as 4 straight years of 25% plus full year EBITDA margins, we're quite proud of that. We now enter into the SEP period, and we are seeing -- honestly, SEP period looks a lot like last year. No substantial changes for us year-over-year.

We do believe that our year-round model and the viability of our economics, inclusive of the quieter SEP periods is very unique amongst other direct-to-consumer players in our category. We're really able to make the quieter periods work economically and also enhanced by this unique asset we have called SelectRx and how our enterprise economics work even when the heartbeat might be a little slower during SEP. So everything is kind of in line, while early, and expect to finish the year strong.

Operator: At this time, there are no further questions. I will now hand the conference over to CEO, Tim Danker, for closing remarks.

Timothy Danker: Yes. Thank you all again for your time, and we appreciate your support of SelectQuote. As Ryan and I have both noted, the SelectQuote model continues to drive consistent and reliable value to our customers and insurance carrier partners. We know the underlying cash flows for our services are real and significant, and we look forward to convincing more and more investors of that value in our equity in the months and years ahead. We appreciate your time. Have a great day.

Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you all for attending. You may now disconnect.