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HealthEquity's Net Income Soars as It Continues to Execute

HealthEquity (NASDAQ: HQY) reported its fiscal third-quarter results on Tuesday, Dec. 4. The provider of health savings accounts (HSAs) produced double-digit growth in membership, custodial assets, revenue, and net income. The increased scale lead to margin expansion and outsized growth in earnings per share, and the broad-based prosperity allowed management to favorably change its guidance for the year.

HealthEquity Q3 results: The raw numbers

Metric

Q3 2018

Q3 2017

Change (YOY)

Revenue

$70.5 million

$56.8 million

24%

Net income

$15.7 million

$10.5 million

50%

Earnings per share

$0.25

$0.17

47%

Data source: HealthEquity.

What happened with HealthEquity this quarter?

  • HSA membership expanded 22% to 3.7 million.

  • Custodial assets under management, which is the total amount of money that is held in its member's accounts, grew 27% to $7.1 billion.

  • The 24% revenue growth was driven by a 9% uptick in service revenue, 43% jump in custodial revenue, and 18% growth in interchange revenue.

  • Investment assets grew 53% to $1.5 billion.

  • The increased scale help lift gross margin to 65% during the period, a 600 basis point increase over the same period last year.

  • Operating expenses grew 38% to $26.8 million.

  • Adjusted earnings grew 58% to $0.28 per share. That was ahead of the $0.25 that Wall Street was expecting.

  • Cash balance at quarter end was $330 million. The company remains debt free.

Word HSA written on a paper near wad of bills
Word HSA written on a paper near wad of bills

Image source: Getty Images.

What management had to say

CEO Jon Kessler stated that the company was riding a wave of momentum as it headed into the fourth quarter. He was particularly proud of the company's ability to grow its pool of investment assets so strongly during the period:

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By adding more than $1.5 billion in additional custodial assets since the end of our third quarter last year, our growth continues well ahead of the market, allowing us to raise guidance for fiscal year 2019. Importantly, with custodial investment assets growing by 53% over the third quarter end last year, we are delivering on our promise to help our HSA members connect health and wealth and put them on the fast track to retirement readiness."

On the conference call with investors, HealthEquity's Founder and Vice Chair Dr. Steven Neeleman had some exciting partnership news to share with investors:

During Q3, the team reached key milestones in our strategy to connect health and wealth by launching partnerships with two leaders in the employer-sponsored retirement plan business, Nationwide, and Vanguard. In each case, HealthEquity is working with these partners to create a truly unique and differentiated offering for employers, their advisors, and ultimately for consumers.

Looking ahead

The strong quarterly performance enabled management to favorably tweak its full-year guidance:

  • Revenue is now expected to land between $281 million and $285 million. That is a $2 million bump at the bottom end of management's previous outlook.

  • Net income is expected to land between $66 million and $70 million, or $1.03 to $1.09 per share.

  • Non-GAAP net income is expected to land between $68 million and $72 million, or $1.06 to $1.13 per share. That represents a small increase from its prior range of $1.05 to $1.11 in non-GAAP EPS.

While HealthEquity's results and guidance were very strong in absolute terms, Wall Street was expecting $284.3 million in sales and $1.12 in non-GAAP EPS for the full year. HealthEquity's stock took a double-digit beating in response since the midpoint of its guidance was a bit below the consensus forecast among the analyst community.

Investors who can look past the short-term price movement have a lot of positive takeaways from this report. Membership and custodial assets continue to grow at a nice clip. Management is successfully translating the increased scale into higher profits. What's more, the new partnership deals with Vanguard and Nationwide should help to round out the company's product offering and could be a great catalyst for attracting new business down the road.

In total, HealthEquity's business looks as strong as ever. While its stock still can't be called classically "cheap", this Fool thinks that the sudden discount makes right now a great time for growth-focused investors to get in.

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Brian Feroldi owns shares of HealthEquity. The Motley Fool owns shares of HealthEquity. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.