Conduent (NASDAQ:CNDT) reported first-quarter financial results on Monday. The transcript from the company's first-quarter earnings call has been provided below.

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Summary

Conduent Inc reported a Q1 2026 adjusted EBITDA margin of 6.8%, a significant improvement over the previous year, with plans to reduce $100 million in costs over the next 18 months.

The company signed $114 million in new business for Q1, with both commercial and government segments showing year-over-year growth, and a strong pipeline valued at $3.5 billion.

Revenue for Q1 2026 was $723 million, down 3.7% from the previous year, primarily due to declines in the commercial segment, while government and transportation segments posted growth.

Conduent is focusing on AI initiatives for fraud detection, call center efficiency, and human capital solutions, aiming to use AI to enhance service delivery and reduce costs.

The company anticipates 2026 revenue between $2.8 and $2.9 billion with adjusted EBITDA of $160 to $190 million, and expects flat to positive revenue growth in 2027 with improved cash generation.

Conduent plans to divest certain assets with expected proceeds exceeding $200 million, which will provide financial flexibility for debt reduction, stock buybacks, or reinvestment.

Management emphasizes the importance of innovation and client relationships, particularly in the commercial sector, to drive future growth and improve pipeline conversion rates.

Full Transcript

OPERATOR

Greetings and welcome to the Conduent first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance, please press STAR zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce Joshua Overholt, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Joshua Overholt (Vice President of Investor Relations)

Thank you, operator. And thank you everyone for joining us today to discuss Conduent's first quarter 2026 earnings. I am joined today by Harsha Agadi, our CEO and Giles Goodburn, our CFO. We hope you have had a chance to review our press release issued earlier today. This call is being webcast and a copy of the slides used during this call as well as the press release was filed with the SEC this afternoon on Form 8-K. This information as well as the detailed financial metrics package are available on the investor Relations section of the Conduent website. During this call, we may make statements that are forward looking. These forward looking statements reflect management's current beliefs, assumptions and expectations and are subject to a number of factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those statements. Information concerning these factors is included in Conduent's annual report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC. We do not intend to update these forward looking statements as a result of new information or future events or developments except as required by law. This information presented today includes non GAAP financial results financial measures. Because these measures are not calculated in accordance with US GAAP, they should be viewed in addition to and not as a substitute for the company's reported results. For more information regarding definitions of our non GAAP measures, including and how we use them, as well as the limitations to their usefulness for comparative purposes, please see our press release. And now I'd like to turn the call over to Harsha.

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

Thank you, Josh. I want to welcome all our investors, analysts and colleagues around the world to the call. I am confident you will be encouraged by what you will hear as we discuss Conduent's first quarter results and the steps we've taken to improve the pace and discipline of our execution. I want to say good morning, good afternoon and good evening to our 48,000 Conduent colleagues across the globe. I have now been CEO for 115 days and continue to hear from our clients about all your efforts on their behalf. Thank you and we will keep working to enhance our client operations as I speak with our clients. They value a combination of our technological capabilities and the Human connection. Our employees demonstrate to make services seamless and predictable each and every time. Again, thank you and keep driving innovation for our clients. My commentary today will focus on three areas. First, I will give you an update on the priorities I laid out on the Q4 call. To be clear, the priorities remain unchanged. The five priorities are reduce our cost structure, convert pipeline to growth, optimize the portfolio, increase speed and accountability and enforce financial discipline. Second, I will provide an update on our AI initiatives in both public sector and commercial. Finally, I will share some details on deals won in the quarter that in aggregate exceed $100 million. In the Q4 earnings call, I had highlighted five priorities for Conduit in Q1 we executed well on reducing our cost structure. We reported adjusted ebitda margins of 6.8%, a marked improvement to last year. In addition, we have initiated a detailed review of our cost structure, engaging two external advisors and through this work identified significant potential opportunities. Our initial assessment is that we can reduce $100 million of cost in the next 18 months. This, ladies and gentlemen is just the beginning. As I highlighted in the Q4 earnings call, I believe that Conduent should have EBITDA margins north of 10%. Our pipeline continues to grow at a robust pace and with the changes we have made in commercial leadership and improvements we have made in our go to market strategy, we should see an improvement in pipeline conversion in the back half of the year. Our go to market strategy now across the company is focused on five approaches. The first is cross selling to our existing clients. Second is the restructuring of our sales incentives. Third is large account defense. Fourth is winning new logos and fifth is the establishment of a deal desk as relates to commercial. The go to market changes include a much narrower focus on the healthcare and financial services sectors, meaningful relationships with CEOs across the commercial landscape and an increased focus on innovative solutions solving client pain points in public sector. We have reengaged in the federal space to focus on health and human services as well as other target agencies. This aligns with the current administration's focus on greater efficiencies and as they deliver cost effective services for the citizens of the United States. We believe we are well positioned to compete for these opportunities for portfolio optimization. I continue to be confident that we can achieve improvements in margins and efficiency of our business as we focus our business and prioritize investment in growth segments. As you will see in a later slide, we believe proceeds from identified divestitures in 2026 should be north of 200 million. Regarding speed and accountability, first we simplified our leadership team. Second, we have developed new processes to make quicker decisions resulting in speed of implementation post contract signing. This should allow us to reduce working capital and generate revenues and ultimately cash flow from more quickly. And my final priority is to enforce financial discipline which is evidenced by not only the 6.8% adjusted EBITDA margins in Q1, but also increased rigor on capital expenditures and cash management which helped deliver a $50 million improvement in operating cash flows year over year. I want to give a little more color today on our AI initiatives past, present and future. At Conduent we deliver end to end business process solutions using technology with our deep domain expertise which positions us to use AI as a differentiator. On this slide we have laid out three use cases we have developed AI against. As we look at the examples here across the top it shows problems we solve with AI. First is fraud and risk management. Initially we deployed machine learning models for payment fraud detection. We currently have deployed GenAI plus rules based AI to improve account takeover detection and we're also expanding into other fraud vectors to manage risk. In the future we believe we can take these AI solutions and scale them into other forms of fraud prevention. In customer and citizen interaction, we initially implemented IVR for routing and cell service as well as chatbots and analytics to drive improvements in cost and service. We have now added GenAI Assistant Agent Assist to reduce handle time. We have also expanded Connie, our very own branded Gen AI chatbot, to power a personalized benefits experience in the human capital solutions space. In the future we're working to deploy other agentic AI solutions driving more autonomous conversational experiences. As we move to the third column, we see a combination of workforce and productivity enhancing solutions including AI assisted coding and further scaling of these tools in the future. I want to be clear, Conduent has not been standing still as it relates to AI. We are implementing AI as appropriate in solutions and we are using AI to improve our own cost structure. In conclusion, I want to highlight our sales wins for Q1. As a company we had 114 million in sales wins. These wins highlight our capabilities and our deep client relationships. Commercial segment signed more than $48 million of new business in Q1, including significant contracts with three long standing healthcare clients demonstrating Conduent's continued strength in this sector. In the public sector segment, we signed more than $66 million in new business in Q1. This was driven by a large deal in the government Medicaid claims for $23 million in new business. Now I will hand it over to Giles for the detailed financial review thanks Harsha.

Giles Goodburn (Chief Financial Officer)

As we've done in the past, we're reporting both GAAP and non GAAP numbers. The reconciliations are in our filings and in the appendix of the presentation. Let's discuss our key sales Metrics on slide 6 and 7. We signed $114 million of new business ACV in the quarter up 5% versus Q1 2025 and the sixth consecutive quarter of year over year growth driven by our commercial and government segments both of which increased year over year. Our trailing four quarter ACV metric is up almost 5% versus this time last year with the government segment up 60% in this metric versus Q1 2025 and our commercial segment reversing a declining trend which we anticipate will continue in Q2 where we continue to see strong demand from our existing client base. Q1ARR for the quarter was softer than we would have liked. However Commercial posted a strong year over year increase while the government segment which is influenced by mix and timing of deals was heavily weighted towards non recurring revenue this quarter. Importantly, in the quarter we renewed a government health care client for up to fourteen years inclusive of additional NRR revenue to implement our market leading SaaS and cloud based Medicaid claims and financial management solutions. While this is a multi year implementation, we classify implementations as non recurring revenue. Notably in the quarter we completed the implementation and went live with this same fully integrated market leading solution with another of our large government state health care clients. Other key notable wins in the quarter included new capability and add on work for existing healthcare clients in our commercial segment and add on work related to the HR1 Working Families Tax credit legislation for existing clients in the government segment. Within the quarter we signed 3 new logos and 14 new capabilities. Our qualified ACV pipeline remains strong at three and a half billion which is up 10% year over year. The strength here is driven by our government segment which is up 27% year over year and we are making progress with our commercial segment pipeline which is 25% stronger than it was last quarter. Let's turn to Slide 8 and review our Q1 2026 P&L metrics. Revenue for the quarter was $723 million compared to $751 million in Q1 2025 down 3.7%. Consistent with last quarter, revenue grew in two of our three segments. Our government segment grew 4.6% and our transportation segment grew 2.3%. Both are sequentially higher than Q4 2025 adjusted EBITDA for Q1 2026 was 49 million as compared to 37 million in Q1 2025 and our adjusted EBITDA margin of 6.8% is up 190 basis points year over year and up 30 basis points sequentially. The quarter benefited from a few discrete items which contributed approximately 64 basis points to the quarter. Let's turn to Slide 9 and review the segment results. Q1 2026 Commercial segment revenue was $361 million, down 10.2% as compared to Q1 2025. The continuation of volume declines in one of our largest commercial clients drove approximately 36% of this revenue decline. The remainder was attributed to lost business, partially offset with new business wins. Commercial adjusted EBITDA was 43 million, an increase of 3 million year over year and the adjusted EBITDA margin of 11.9% was up 190 basis points year over year. Our cost efficiency programs and stronger operational performance in our BPAs and integrated digital solutions offerings drove the year over year increase. Government segment revenue for the quarter was up 4.6% at 226 million. The drivers here were new business and higher volumes in our government healthcare segment and price increases across several clients in the government portfolio. Adjusted EBITDA was 59 million with adjusted EBITDA margin of 26.1%, up 850 basis points year over year. The revenue drivers as well as our AI initiatives and efficiency programs drove the significant improvement here. This includes one of the discrete items I mentioned earlier which contributed 150 basis points to the government quarter. Transportation segment revenue was 136 million for the quarter, an increase of 2.3% while while adjusted EBITDA was negative 4 million for the quarter, new business, higher volumes and FX drove the stronger revenue versus Q1 2025 year over year. Adjusted EBITDA decline was driven by additional post implementation expense isolated to one of our transportation contracts. Unallocated costs for 49 million for Q1 2026, an increase of 4.3% versus Q1 2025, the continued progress with our cost efficiency programs in the corporate functions and a reduction in 2025 variable compensation. One of the discrete items I mentioned earlier partially offset the recovery of legal costs benefiting the prior year period. Let's turn to slide 10 and discuss the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended Q1 2026 with approximately $251 million of cash on the balance sheet and negative adjusted free cash flow of 15 million, a significant improvement versus Q1 2025. Our net leverage ratio remained at 2.8 turns this quarter and our capital expenditure for the quarter was 2.2% of revenue. With Q1 typically the low point of the year turning to Slide 11, you will see our guide for 2026 and initial expectations for 2027. Our revenue guide for 2026 is a range of 2.8 to 2.9 billion. We anticipate both our government and transportation segments will post positive revenue growth in 2026 with the deterioration isolated to the commercial segment. Our adjusted EBITDA guide is between 160 million and 190 million. The drivers here are the continuation of artificial intelligence and our cost efficiency programs, price increases and stronger operational performance across the portfolio. The quarterly cadence of adjusted EBITDA for 2026 begins with a strong start to Q1, followed by a softer Q2 and then similar margins to Q1 in the second half of the year. Looking out to 2027, we anticipate flat to positive revenue growth, adjusted ebitda of between $190 million and $220 million with positive cash generation. That concludes the Financial Review of Q1 2026 and I'll now hand it back to Harsha. Harsha.

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

Thank you, Giles. As you have heard today, Conduent is well on its way to improving margins, rightsizing the portfolio and increasing the growth rate. We are repositioning the company to be a growth company with double digit EBITDA margins and sustainable free cash flow. We will do this through disciplined management and prudent investment in AI and other tools to enhance productivity and customer experience. I want to let you know that our Investor Day will be on September 23, 2026 in New York City. I look forward to seeing you there. I am looking forward to a strong finish to 2026 and a strong start in 2027 with all our initiatives in place. Thank you, operator. Please open the call for questions.

OPERATOR

Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press Star One on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. In the interest of time we ask, the participants limit themselves to one question and one follow up. One moment, please. While we poll for questions, Our first question is from Michael Kopinski with Noble Capital Markets.

Michael Kopinski (Analyst)

Thank you. And thank you for taking the question. Good afternoon. On the last call, you mentioned the competitive moat. Yeah, thank you. On the last call, you mentioned competitive moat and high growth as important elements for deciding fixed sell or grow businesses. And how are you weighing the impact of AI on the moat around software compared to the growth of the growth rate of the industry?

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

Sure. So the answer might vary between commercial versus government versus transportation. On the government side, just so you're aware, the contracts are generally longer and much more lasting and sticky. And so to me, as technology changes, as long as we are adept and using state of the art technology, which by the way, some of the state governments are appreciating it, our recent implementation in some states have been, we've gotten kudos. I think we will continue to see a lot of sticky business on the government side. On the transportation side, the growth may not be at the same pace, but as urban development increases the and urban density, I think there is ample opportunity there. On the commercial side, if you don't innovate, you will not survive. And therefore we are focused on our internal AI experiments. We are no longer building things. We are either borrowing or partnering with AI driven companies to do experiments quickly where we increase reliability of the answer consistency of the service and not to mention it lowers our own cost. So to us we've started to take a very innovative approach. Another way to look at this is small firms that have high grade technology may not have a blue chip customer list. If we partner with them, they might help us to further our own implementation. At the same time we can share in the customer, therefore bringing a total solution for that customer. So to me, I think, you know, on the government side there is a fair amount of a moat. On the commercial side, technology is what's going to kind of really protect us.

Michael Kopinski (Analyst)

Thanks for that color. You highlighted a sizable qualified pipeline. What are you seeing in terms of conversion rates and sales cycle duration, particularly in the government transportation side? And additionally, could you talk about the average lead time of getting services online?

Giles Goodburn (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, hi Mike, it's Giles here. So from a government and transportation standpoint, I wouldn't say there's any real change in our win rates. It does vary as far as RFPs coming on and when some of those RFPs actually get signed due to, I would say some uncertainty at the federal administration level, which does cause some contracts that we're engaged on pushing out to the right but not necessarily going away, we're still winning our fair share, which is important. Similar, similar goes for the transportation segment. As far as cycles to actually signing to or sales cycles to revenue, clearly it's a lot quicker in a Lot of the commercial spaces to ramp from sign to revenue. We see a little bit of that in the government space on some of the more traditional BPO type activities. But generally I'd say there's a longer cycle from signed to revenue generation. As we think about the process that the state and federal clients have to go through to get to a sign from a signed contract to revenue on

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

our books, there is a additional piece. I think today's senior leadership team in the company is directly interfacing with a lot of CEOs as opposed to just the Chief Procurement Officer or the head of hr. And what is happening with that is instead of us actually responding to an rfp, which we are, but now we're getting inbound calls. So recently I got a request from a CEO of a $5 billion company wanting an urgent project done using our data analytics capabilities and our digital capabilities. So what is happening is the conversations are now going at a much higher decibel and at a much higher level. So the whole chemistry is changing. One other thing, if implementation is taking seven months, six months, eight months, we have now KPIs coming in place is CEO. I'm actually going to track how can we reduce implementation time by 30 days, 60 days, and therefore start having revenue traction even earlier than estimated. So, you know, this is a organization that needs to move fast. If you look at my priorities, I think pace of play is very, very important to us right now. Great. Thanks for taking my questions. Appreciate it. Thank you for your question. Thanks guys.

OPERATOR

Our next question is from Gaussi Sri with Singular Research.

Gaussi Sri (Analyst)

Good afternoon, gentlemen. Can you hear me? On your FY26 revenue guidance, you know, it implies 150 to 250 step down. Can you help us understand how much of that step down is driven by the underlying organic volume, particularly in commercial. So just give a revenue base that actually looks like.

OPERATOR

Goshi, I'm sorry, we lost you there for a second. Can you repeat that please?

Gaussi Sri (Analyst)

So the revenue for 26 is around a step down of around 150 to 250. Can you help us understand how much of that is due to portfolio dispersals versus softness in the organic volume?

Giles Goodburn (Chief Financial Officer)

Yes, I think firstly, Goshi, it's important to reiterate that we're going to see, or we anticipate to see revenue growth in both the government segment and the transportation segment. So the deterioration in revenue, the reduced guide is really confined to the commercial space where it's a combination of softer volumes in some of our clients and then clients that we've lost over the last, I would say, 12 to 18 months.

Gaussi Sri (Analyst)

Okay. And then when you. And when are you with the portfolio optimization, would you be active? And you said you're actively marketing business in the sell bucket. Without getting into specifics, can you give us a sense of how many of that processes are still active right now and whether the scale of those proceeds have changed from the original framework that we discussed in the prior years?

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

Okay, Giles will answer it, and then I'll add a little. Go ahead.

Giles Goodburn (Chief Financial Officer)

Yeah, so we've got a couple that we're working on. I'd say proceeds are for those two, roughly what we thought we would get when we look back, sort of six to nine months. So no real change there. Just some complexity around some of the things that we got to get through with the buying entities. And then that's certainly how we think about it for 20, 26. And then beyond that, there are other things that we're considering in the portfolio as well. Yeah.

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

So what I would say is where we stand today, we are reasonably confident with our numbers and where we are in the process. So I'm pleased to say that I can say today our goal is to exceed 200 million in proceeds. In addition to that, we have received some inbounds on some other businesses. The interesting dilemma I face as CEO is some of these businesses are changing performance as we speak. It's getting better. So we're kind of rethinking carefully. Is business X for sale or not? I have to give credit to our broad team. They're moving quickly on changing the numbers. We have strong internal discipline on managing margins and managing revenue of individual businesses, and it's starting to make a difference. But having said that, we clearly have two businesses identified, marketed, as well as we are estimating the proceeds to be such as we have discussed earlier in the call.

Gaussi Sri (Analyst)

Thank you. I'll jump back in the queue.

OPERATOR

Thank you. Our next question is from Mark Riddick with Sidoti and Company.

Mark Riddick (Analyst)

Mark. Hey, Mark, how are you? Good afternoon. Very good, Michelle. Good. Very good. Thank you. I wanted to touch a little bit on the. Well, maybe we start with the potential $200 million in divestitures. Can you talk a little bit as far as prioritization of proceeds from that? And then we can sort of branch off into a couple of other things there.

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

Yeah, here's what I would say. My focus at the moment is obtaining the $200 million plus. So that is my singular focus. Now, what that does, as you know, is gives us optionality and optionality could be the following. It could be reducing some of our debt, it could be repurchasing some of our stock, it could be reinvesting some of it in our businesses. And I am very metric oriented and numbers oriented. So we're examining that and frankly we are discussing with some bondholders just to get their expert advice as to how to approach all of this once we get the money. So we are still thinking it through, but. But it's a nice problem to have once we get the money.

Mark Riddick (Analyst)

Okay, I appreciate the commentary there. Thank you. So maybe we could shift gears on as far as AI. You mentioned in a prior call, sort of ballpark where you felt you were as far as percentage of revenue. And maybe you could talk sort of a little bit about what you're seeing there and what you're doing, what your goals may be as to what's directly connected to AI or related.

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

I suppose, yeah, I don't think I will look at it as a percent of revenue yet. But here I will give you. First of all, when I look at AI, there are actually five layers that make up AI that most of us know. You start with the chip, the data center, the cloud, large language models, and eventually on top of that is app development. Three examples I can give you right away that we're using AI for. The first one is fraud detection, particularly in the government space, because we're making a lot of payments and we need to ensure we're not making the wrong payments. Now, interestingly, we have it working rather well and now we're going to actually start shifting that use case to our financial institutions as well. The second, on the call centers, or what you would also say multichannel contact centers, we have one real time translation. You can speak any language, it translates back and forth. Second is auto quality assurance. Third is training simulation where somebody who's answered the call, they're given a training lesson how to do better. And then finally we talked about Connie, our own gen AI Persona, our own brand that is actually involved in dealing with our human capital solutions. So look, AI is a solution to reducing cost, increasing accuracy. But one of the things I'm running into, rightly so, with a lot of the clients, and I'm talking to CEOs of large health care companies as well as large service companies. And they keep emphasizing for us the human connection of what you offer is as important as AI. So for us, balancing the two, you're only as good to the client as the last call you received. So executing well, consistently is very, very important. But I think as time goes by we will start assigning specifically use case and examples and savings because for us to get to double digit margins and sustain it's not just right sizing or right shoring the cost but also implementing AI very carefully in certain areas of our business. That's very meaningful to the client as well as to us.

Giles Goodburn (Chief Financial Officer)

Mark, just to give you some tangible impacts that has had over the last I would say six months for us in a couple of situations. One I talked a little bit about this last quarter is is the fraud detection where some of that fraud we in our P and L we've seen significant cost savings with the deployment of that AI capability which has really helped out in the government segment. Secondly is the Genai Agent assistant Connie which we've deployed in our human capital solutions business which which essentially helps clients employees make better health choices. As you go through the benefit enrollment program, we saw a considerably higher interaction rate between employees and Connie than we've ever had without Connie in prior years as we've been through that enrollment process. So two examples there where our AI investments are having significant impact not only on our P and L but for our clients as well.

Harsha Agadi (Chief Executive Officer)

Well, great. Thank you very much for that Giles. And maybe the last one for me. You touched on a couple of client verticals in prepared remarks and a couple of the questions already around federal as well as healthcare a little bit. Are there any other client verticals as far as in your, I GUESS it was 115 days in the chair that you've seen thus far that you either maybe have been surprised by or encouraged by? Are there any particular clients verticals that you think that stand out a little bit to you in the time that you've been there? Yeah, here's what I would say. I have dealt with some of the government clients and transportation and actually they've been very constructive and transparent of how we work together. So I'm very pleasantly surprised. What is also very interesting to me is the number of CEOs of our commercial clients who've made direct outreach to me looking for solutions. So this is what gives me the confidence that our sales pipeline is growing and is turning. We have new leadership in commercial. We have George who is running the operations, we have Kimberly who is running the entire sales side for commercial, both reporting to me directly. We have an internal rigor of a revenue call every week with all hands on deck. So we're actually starting to see the needle move. So to me I expected maybe more roadblocks on the revenue side and it's starting to look more and more positive. And I think we need to move at a very fast pace to embrace the opportunities in front of us. Here's the other thing. We're doing a lot of work in the United States. We should be looking at other English speaking democracies just to keep it simple, like a Canada, England or in Australia to start increasing the same levels of service we provide US Federal and US State governments.

Mark Riddick (Analyst)

Thank you very much.

Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company's SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants' and analysts' statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.