Alight Q4 2025 Earnings Call - New CEO Prioritizes Execution and AI After $803M Goodwill Hit, Suspends Dividend for Buybacks and Deleveraging
Summary
Rohit Verma, 30 working days into the job, framed Alight’s problems as an execution issue not a market one. Q4 and full-year 2025 showed soft renewals, margin pressure and a large non-cash goodwill impairment, while management pivots capital away from the dividend toward debt paydown and opportunistic buybacks and earmarks $100 million of 2026 investment to fix operations and accelerate AI-enabled user experience work.
The near term looks bumpy by design: management expects Q1 2026 revenue to be down high-single-digits and adjusted EBITDA margin to compress 500-750 basis points as the company front-loads sales, account management and UX investments. Liquidity and free cash flow provide cover, but the impairment, weaker renewals and a cautious AI adoption cycle among clients make execution the gating item for any recovery.
Key Takeaways
- New CEO Rohit Verma said Alight’s core issue is execution, not strategy, after 30 working days of client and employee meetings.
- Full-year 2025 revenue was $2.3 billion with adjusted EBITDA of $561 million and adjusted EBITDA margin of ~24.8%, down from $594 million and 25.2% in 2024.
- Q4 2025 revenue was $653 million; recurring revenue $607 million (down 1.6% YoY) and project revenue $46 million (down 27% YoY).
- Q4 adjusted gross profit was $272 million, down 9.3% YoY, with gross margin contracting ~240 basis points; Q4 adjusted EBITDA was $178 million (27.3% margin) vs $217 million (31.9%) prior year.
- Management took a non-cash goodwill impairment of $803 million in Q4 2025, leaving $83 million of goodwill on the balance sheet.
- Free cash flow was $250 million for 2025; cash and equivalents ended the year at $273 million plus a $330 million undrawn revolver, giving meaningful near-term liquidity.
- Alight will reallocate capital: the board and management suspended the quarterly dividend and will prioritize deleveraging and opportunistic share repurchases; $216 million of buyback authorization remains.
- Management plans to deploy roughly $100 million of capital in 2026 toward product innovation, partner expansion and UX — management calls this planned CapEx, not a one-off — and said portions will recur as programs continue.
- Compensation increases in Q4 reduced adjusted EBITDA by approximately $45 million; the company expects a portion of higher comp to be recurring as it adds sales and account management capacity.
- Revenue under contract starting 2026 is roughly 5% lower versus prior, and management said 2026 renewal cohort is 30%-40% lighter than 2025, explaining expected near-term revenue weakness.
- Guidance posture: Rohit declined to give full-year 2026 guidance while early in his tenure, but said Q1 2026 revenue is expected to be down high-single-digits and adjusted EBITDA margin to be down 500-750 basis points YoY due to investments.
- Alight piloted Conversational AI with two large clients during annual enrollment and reported a material reduction in channel jumping; management sees AI use cases in UX, system configuration, file handling and call centers.
- Management expects most meaningful productivity and margin benefits from AI to come in 2027 and beyond, because a usable knowledge layer must be built first; clients show mixed appetite and caution on AI adoption.
- The 2026 TRA payment is estimated at $156 million and relates to 2024 tax filings and the Strata divestiture; tax reform (One Big Beautiful Bill) reduces expected TRA burdens in 2027-2028.
- Interim CFO Greg Giometti walked through the financials; management is searching for a full-time CFO and signaled more definitive investor metrics will follow once the leadership team is settled.
Full Transcript
Moderator/Operator, Alight: Good morning, and welcome to Alight’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Following the prepared remarks, we will open the call for questions. Instructions will be provided at that time. There is a presentation accompanying today’s presentation available on Alight Investor Relations website. I will now read the safe harbor statement. Today’s discussion includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. These statements reflect management’s current views and expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. Factors that may cause such differences are described in today’s earnings release and in Alight’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including in the Risk Factors section of its most recent annual report on Form 10-K.
The company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required by law. In addition, during today’s call, the company may reference certain non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in the earnings release available on the company’s website. I will now turn the call over to Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer of Alight. Please go ahead.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Good morning, and welcome to Alight’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. Joining me today is Greg Giometti, our Interim Chief Financial Officer. This is my first earnings call as Alight CEO, and I’m pleased to have this opportunity to speak with you so early in my tenure. I joined Alight at the start of the year, and over the past 30 working days, have focused on meeting with our colleagues and clients and diving into our operations. I’m extremely pleased with the very warm welcome from our colleagues, as well as the support I have received from the board and the connections I’ve already created with our clients. I’d like to take this moment to share why I chose to join Alight, and over the last 6 weeks, have only strengthened my conviction in the opportunity ahead of our business. Alight has strong underlying DNA.
Our scale, client relationships, domain expertise, and operational footprint provide a significant competitive advantage and leadership position in the marketplace. We serve a wide spectrum of employers, including the majority of the Fortune 100. We offer essential and unmatched benefit solutions via a platform that offers extensive flexibility to accommodate a wide range of client needs, from straightforward to the most complex plans in the market. Our mid-sized clients benefit from simpler platforms, and we also provide specialty solutions, such as leaves administration, to meet our clients where they are. Our vast data lake creates a proprietary advantage that enables predictive end-to-end orchestration when implementing AI, which will allow us to transform employee experiences into proactive life journeys, driving better outcomes for employers, employees, and their families. Our top-tier partner network allows us to provide participants a holistic experience, putting us at the center of the benefits ecosystem.
More than 30 million people and dependents rely on us in their most important moments: when someone is sick and needs access to their insurance, when someone is looking to start a family and wants to better understand their health and wealth benefits, or when someone is disabled and needs to understand their leave options. At the end of the day, it is about delivering a frictionless experience with empathy and care that delivers a compelling outcome. The ability to provide benefits is a fundamental offering for most organizations. Yet regulatory requirements and rising costs make it challenging for organizations to do this on their own. Most employers do not have the in-house expertise, scale, or technology required to manage the complexity effectively, making the outsourced administration of health, wealth, and leaves an essential purchase.
We believe our products and solutions are needed regardless of external economic cycles, and when we execute well, we create sticky relationships with predictable revenue. Our expertise across the benefits administration landscape and our ability to provide effective plan solutions to a wide variety of employee groups is a competitive advantage. The strength of our solutions and our organizational expertise lead us to believe that the market opportunity in front of us is substantial. Not only do we see opportunity in the broader market, we believe there is meaningful white space within our existing client base. With deep penetration among large and mid-sized employers, we have a solid foundation from which to expand our relationships and grow market share over time. That said, we have work to do.
In 2025, we did not meet our internal financial targets, and new bookings and renewals did not meet our expectations, leading us to miss our forecast to the market. During my first six weeks at the company, I’ve connected with more than 35 clients, and it is clear to me that clients want to continue working with us as we play a critical role in helping them manage increasingly complex health, wealth, and leaves programs. They’re also clear in their requests that we bring simplicity to their participants and management by providing cutting-edge solutions. Our clients expect flawless service delivery and continued innovation in products that create better outcomes. The attractiveness of our market, our coveted position, and the clarity of the asks from our clients enable us to be clear-eyed about our priorities going forward.
As a result, our immediate focus is driving service and operational excellence across our unmatched portfolio of benefit solutions, innovating products enabled by AI to create a cutting-edge user experience, real value, and actionable insights for clients and participants, while building relationships that result in enduring, trusted partnerships with clients, participants, and partners. These priorities are all things within our control, which give me great confidence in our ability to improve, as does some of our recent progress. For example, during the fourth quarter, we piloted Conversational AI with two of our largest clients during the recent Annual Enrollment cycle. We are very encouraged by the results, where we saw a significant reduction in channel jumping, which is when a user moves from digital enrollment to calling the call center. This high reduction rate is indicative of the improved efficiency and participant efficacy experienced with the Conversational AI product.
Before I turn the call over to Greg, I want to provide some details on our 2025 financial performance. We generated $2.3 billion in revenue, with adjusted EBITDA of $561 million, and an adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 25%. With that said, I would reiterate that we believe there is significant opportunity to improve our performance moving forward. Our adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter was impacted by an increase in compensation expense, driven by our commitment to invest in the business with a focus on promoting service quality, strengthening relationships, and positioning the business for growth. Importantly, the business generated $250 million of free cash flow in 2025, which enabled us to maintain a strong liquidity position and positions us well as we head into 2026.
With that, I’ll turn the call over to Greg to walk through the financials in more detail.
Greg Giometti, Interim Chief Financial Officer, Alight: Thanks, Rohit, and good morning, everyone. I’ll walk you through our fourth quarter and full year 2025 results. Turning to our fourth quarter results, we continue to think about revenue mix across two categories: recurring, renewable business and non-recurring, project-based work. Revenue for the fourth quarter was $653 million. Recurring revenue of $607 million was down 1.6% compared with the prior year period. Project revenue of $46 million was down 27%. Fourth quarter adjusted gross profit was $272 million, down 9.3% from the prior year period, reflecting an adjusted gross profit margin decline of 240 basis points. Adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was $178 million, as compared to $217 million in the prior year period.
Fourth quarter 2025 Adjusted EBITDA margin was 27.3%, compared to 31.9% in the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA during the fourth quarter of 2025 was adversely impacted by increased compensation expense, which we believe is critical to executing on our priorities. This impacted Adjusted EBITDA by approximately $45 million. Excluding this, Adjusted EBITDA would have been within our previously communicated guidance range. Adjusted net income in the fourth quarter was $96 million, with Adjusted EPS of $0.18, compared to $127 million of adjusted net income and Adjusted EPS of $0.24 in the fourth quarter of 2024. Looking at the full year, total revenue was approximately $2.3 billion. Recurring revenue of approximately $2.1 billion was down 2.2% compared to the prior year period.
Project revenue of $154 million was down 22%. Adjusted gross profit for the full year was $883 million, compared to adjusted gross profit of $942 million in 2024. Full year adjusted gross profit margin decreased 100 basis points compared to 2024. Full year adjusted EBITDA was $561 million, with adjusted EBITDA margin of 24.8%, compared to adjusted EBITDA of $594 million, with adjusted EBITDA margin of 25.2% in 2024. Adjusted net income for the full year was $266 million, with adjusted EPS of $0.50, compared to $313 million of adjusted net income and adjusted EPS of $0.57 in 2024.
In the fourth quarter of 2025, we recognized a non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $803 million. We have remaining goodwill of $83 million on the balance sheet. Turning to capital and liquidity, we ended the year with $273 million in cash and equivalents, in addition to a $330 million fully undrawn revolving credit facility, and free cash flow for the year was $250 million, providing us with significant financial flexibility. With this, we are well positioned to fund our 2026 TRA payment, which is estimated to be $156 million. Importantly, as a result of tax reform related to the One Big Beautiful Bill, we do not expect to make a significant TRA payment in 2027 or 2028, which meaningfully increases our flexibility around capital allocation.
After reviewing our capital allocation priorities with the board, the company has decided to reallocate capital in favor of higher return priorities, including investing in the long-term growth of the business, deleveraging, and opportunistic share repurchases, which will replace future dividend payments. With that, I’ll turn the call back to Rohit.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Thanks, Greg. Let me build on that and provide some more detail on our capital allocation. With the support of the board, we’re thinking more holistically about capital allocation. Our goal is to create the best return for our cash deployed. The current structure locks us into dividend and takes away the flexibility to be more thoughtful on our capital allocation.... With our strong cash flow and anticipated TRA deferral, we believe it makes sense to take this opportunity to return value to our shareholders through a combination of reducing the company’s leverage and through the opportunistic repurchase of stock, rather than continuing our quarterly dividend at this time. Our existing repurchase plan has a remaining buyback authorization of $216 million, giving us the ability to reengage our repurchase activities in the near term.
At the current levels, we believe our stock is undervalued and that repurposing our capital allocation towards debt reduction and share repurchases is a more efficient and effective use of capital. As I shared with you earlier, we are disappointed with our 2025 results. While we are focused on embracing a disciplined execution plan, we do believe the weakness experienced in 2025 will spill into 2026, and our performance improvement hinges on the successful execution of our priorities over the next 9-12 months. We will keep you up to date on our progress. We view 2026 as a launching pad for our performance inflection as we focus on positioning Alight for sustainable long-term growth. We enter 2026 with strong liquidity and a solid cash position and a portfolio of strong client relationships.
We are being methodical in our approach, with a focus on a small set of key operating priorities, and expect to deploy more than $100 million of capital to strengthen the foundations of the business and position Alight for long-term growth. First, we are focused on delivering service and operational excellence. That includes investing in our client-facing teams by adding sales and account management professionals to increase coverage across our client base. Second, we are advancing product innovation by creating a world-class user experience, using AI as an enabler to simplify user interactions and improve insight for both clients and participants. Alight’s deep and highly differentiated data lake is enriched by decades of domain expertise and scale, and we are uniquely positioned to deliver more personalized, predictive, and outcome-driven experiences that set us apart in the market.
Likewise, we plan to more broadly deploy AI internally to assist with routine tasks so that our professionals can focus on providing the thoughtful expertise our clients and their employees expect. Driving innovation in our solutions from the top down is another critical priority for us. To that effect, we recently announced that Karen Frost will lead our health and navigation solution, and Kevin Curry will lead our REAP solution. We intend to announce a leader for our wealth solution shortly. We believe these additions will effectively align our solution strategy and heighten our ability to deliver a high-quality benefits experience for our clients. Third, we are focused on strengthening our existing relationships while adding to our client base.
We have proven our ability to provide operating efficiency, consistency, reliability, and execution across the complex benefits landscape, and we will leverage this success to expand our relationships with current and new clients and establish partner collaborations that allow us to serve at the front door to a holistic benefit experience. I am confident that we are at the forefront of implementing the right strategy to return the business to long-term growth, but this will take some time. Given that we missed guidance targets several times in 2025, I don’t think it’s prudent for me to provide full year guidance when I’m just 30 working days into my role. What I can say is that we expect first quarter 2026 revenue to be down by high single-digit % range.
Likewise, we anticipate that our planned investments in sales, account management, and user experience will create short-term adjusted EBITDA margin pressure, resulting in a decline of 500-750 basis points as compared to last year’s first quarter. We view these investments as critical to executing on our stated priorities and meeting the expectations of our stakeholders. While our business has faced challenges, the attractive market dynamics, our strong leadership position, and clear direction from our clients gives us a very achievable roadmap for driving margin expansion and growth in the midterm. Our strong cash flow provides us the financial flexibility to invest $100 million to drive product innovation, partner expansion, and an enhanced experience for our clients and their employees. Our recent service and innovation successes leave us confident that we can further expand our already enviable market position.
I’m energized by what I’ve seen so far and certain that we’re putting the right strategy in place. I believe we can put the business back on a path to sustained, profitable growth with the expertise and focus of our teams. With that, let me open the call for questions.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: Thank you. We will 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 if you would like 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. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. The first question is from Peter Christensen from Citi. Please go ahead.
Peter Christensen, Analyst, Citi: Thank you. Good morning. Welcome, Rohit. Thanks for the question here.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Good morning, Peter.
Peter Christensen, Analyst, Citi: So the messaging that on the scale, the partner ecosystem, the mission-critical platform capability, this has been quite consistent with the prior execution teams here. But there’s been a real gap between this sentiment in the asset value of the company and the core financial performance. It has been regular misses on client retention, pipeline conversion, and any stability to growth. Recognize that you’ve been in the role for 30 days, but I was just curious. I had three questions. I’m just curious, what have been some of the drivers in some of the financial underperformance in recent periods? Second question, you know, your experience previously CEO at Crawford, what do you bring to the table in terms of being able to turn around a company?
Just curious on that perspective. And then final, I understand this is yet another transition year for the company. How should we think about measuring any milestones in the next 12 months? Thank you. I appreciate it.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Thank you, Peter. A great set of questions. So, let me start from the top, right? What do I think are the drivers for the financial underperformance? You know, first and foremost, I had a hypothesis when I was coming into the organization, and that hypothesis was, as you stated, like, we’re in a great industry, we’ve been here for a long time, our brand is well-recognized, we’ve got an enviable client base, and we have a service that if we execute well, it should be sticky. 30 days in, I have only strengthened that conviction, right? Which is that those things are absolutely correct. Obviously, while coming in, I also knew that financially we had not performed to the expectations of the organization as well as that of the street, and that also I have seen.
I would say the biggest challenge for us has been on driving operational excellence, which to me is an execution piece, right? So this is not a change in the strategic direction of the company. This is a change in the execution of the company. So the biggest piece that we need to tighten is around execution. It’s execution around operational excellence, it’s execution around client management and relationship management, it’s execution around technology, and it’s execution around continuing to innovate our products and services. So that, to me, are the three biggest pieces, right, that we have to push on. That leads me into my experience as a CEO at Crawford. When I joined Crawford, right, we had not grown for 10 years.
And again, when I was there, what I realized was it was, again, in a market that was strong. It had an 80-year legacy, it had the expertise, but again, the execution was what was missing. So, I’ve had several experiences of turning around execution, and turning around execution is a cultural change, a change in leadership philosophy, a leadership rhythm. It’s being clear-eyed about what the priorities are and staying focused on what the priorities are continuously and consistently. And that is the experience that I had before, and I’ve done that 2 or 3 times, you know, once as a CEO, before that as more of an operating leader, and that is the experience that I’m going to bring here and drive that execution.
In terms of measuring, I want to make sure that... You know, first, let me start by saying that the investor community is a very important stakeholder for us. So I want to make sure that what I’m giving you is something that is very clear, very definitive, and something that I can consistently report on. So that’s the reason why I want to hold back. I’m 30 days in, as you know, while Greg is doing a great job as our Interim CFO, I’m in the process of appointing a full-time CEO. I want to make sure that appointment is done and we collectively put our heads together on what are the things that we need to come back to the investor community with, that we can share with you consistently and continuously, so that you can measure how we’re doing against our progress.
Peter Christensen, Analyst, Citi: Thank you. Good color.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Thank you. I look forward to meeting with you soon.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: The next question is from Scott Schoenhaus, from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Scott Schoenhaus, Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets: Thanks, Jean. Welcome, Rohit. I guess maybe you can dive deeper into the first quarter guidance, all the moving parts, renewals, pipeline, pricing. Just walk us through what you’re seeing at the start of the year here, Rohit, how you think you can manage this throughout the year, how we should expect the cadence, both in the near term, without providing distinct guidance, and then the longer-term targets of, you know, approaching mid-single digit revenue growth at 30% adjusted EBITDA margins. You know, can you recommit to that target? Thanks.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Scott, thank you so much for your question. I think what I would say to you is that, as I mentioned before, right, that we did not execute well in 2025, specifically on our renewals, and that’s why I said that the financial underperformance of 2025 is expected to spill into, 2026. There is a whole bunch of data that I’m analyzing with the team, and right now, that is the reason why I’m projecting to be high single digits lower on the, on the revenue, as well as about a 500-750 basis points lower on the, on the margin. Because we had a less than stellar renewal season last year, I would say that, you know, typically, we want to target our renewals at the mid- to high 90s.
We were significantly below that number. I think we had given you guys last year a Revenue Under Contract, which was about $2.1 billion. Our Revenue Under Contract starting 2026 is about 5% down. So, and then the level of volatility that we’ve seen in the project revenue, right now I’m just not comfortable in giving any more things just because I don’t want to put something out there and then have to track back. Given I’m 30 days in, there’s a lot of work that I’m doing right now with the team, and I can assure you, like I said to Peter, that the investment community is a very important stakeholder for us.
As I get a more full-time CFO in place, as I get a better handle on all of the moving pieces, I will be coming back to you with something very definitive.
Scott Schoenhaus, Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets: Great. I guess this is a more of a sort of thematic AI industry question here, but are you seeing clients, you know, not renewing?
... partly because they’re testing their own AI bots and their own products, themselves, their own applications internally themselves, using these AI platforms? Thanks.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Scott, Scott, I’m so glad you asked that question because, you know, that gets asked to me all the time. Look, I, I think I mentioned that, I have, I have met 35-40 clients, so far. Our client base typically tends to be in, on the upper end of middle market, right, and then all the way up to the Fortune 100. The level of complexity that you have in those plans, right, whether it is in terms of the, in terms of the various grandfathered plans that they have, whether it’s in terms of the unions that they have, that it’s really not possible to do this in-house, by coding AI to, to do this work, right?
If we were talking about a company that has 100 people or 200 people or maybe even 1,000 people, I think the conversation is a little bit different than, than the scale at which we’re talking about. I would tell you that I would put clients in three categories. There are clients that already have the governance structure in place in their organizations for AI. They’re very open to putting AI in. In fact, I will tell you that there was a large client that I spoke to just a couple of weeks ago who said: I don’t want to enable any AI because we ourselves are trying to figure out how to manage AI because of all the security and privacy risks that it opens up.
So you have a second category of clients who are still figuring out how do they actively manage what AI is doing and what other controls they have in place, and they’re cautious about that. And then you have a third, where, you know, they have put the infrastructure in place on AI. They want something with it, but they’re still waiting to see what’s the best way to deploy AI and where it’s gonna have the, you know, biggest impact. In fact, I think I heard one of the large bank CEOs just a couple of days quote that, from their perspective, AI is not delivering what they had expected AI to deliver. So, look, there’s a lot of promise. I’m a computer engineer by education myself. I studied AI, you know, 30 years ago in college.
Obviously, AI today is very different than what it was at that time. But what I can tell you is that we have not seen a meaningful or any kind of disruption right now from an AI perspective, neither in terms of the employee base that we have. You know, we have, as I said before, we have about over 30 million participants on our system. We have not seen any major change in the number of employees. Now, I would also tell you that several of our large employees have had very public restructuring, but also several of our large clients have had new acquisitions. So we have not seen a meaningful change in the number of employees on the platform.
Scott Schoenhaus, Analyst, KeyBanc Capital Markets: Thank you.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Hope that helps.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one. The next question is from Kevin McVey from UBS. Please go ahead. Kevin, your line is open. We will move on. The next question is from Peter Heckmann from D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.
Peter Heckmann, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Hey, good morning, everyone. And, Rohit, congrats on the new role. I think it’s good to have you at the firm and look forward to working with you. I think the termination of the dividend program right off the bat was the right decision. And you know, as we look into some of the initiatives here that we’ve just talked about, the additional comp in the fourth quarter of 2025 and then the $100 million of incremental investment spend in certain areas, I guess, what portion of both of those do you view as recurring versus one time? And in terms of the $100 million recurring, would you expect that to be front-end loaded in 2026?
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Great question, Peter. Thank you so much, and I look forward to meeting you as well. Peter, the way I would think about it is that the $100 million is not an additional investment. It is the CapEx that we have planned for this year. It’s the capital investment we’ve planned for this year. You know, do I expect it to repeat it? I expect some part of it to repeat, right? Because a lot of these things that we’re trying to do aren’t gonna be done in one year. But as I had answered to Peter from Citi before, that this has been an execution journey for us, or this will be an execution journey for us, and a large part of that depends on us doing...
bringing about changes in our processes, bringing about changes in our systems, and modernizing those things to really meet the needs and asks of our clients. As far as the nature of the compensation, I do expect that to be recurring. And the reason I say that is because we are adding more horsepower from a sales management perspective. I want to make sure that individuals are incentivized for driving execution. And because I want execution to be the way we do business, I expect that part of the expense to be recurring.
Peter Heckmann, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Okay, great. I’m glad I clarified that. I must have misheard, kind of, rushing through the press release here. Second question-
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: No, no. No problem.
Peter Heckmann, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Great. Great. Just the second question. If I remember correctly, does 2026 represent a bit of a lighter renewal cohort versus the last two years?
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Yeah, you’re absolutely right. 2026 is definitely lower compared to 2025, particularly, and it’s lower by about forty-
Peter Heckmann, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Thirty percent.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: 30, 30%. 30%-40% compared to what it was last year.
Peter Heckmann, Analyst, D.A. Davidson: Okay, that’s helpful. I’ll get back in the queue. I appreciate it.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: The next question is from Ross Cole, from Needham and Company. Please go ahead.
Ross Cole, Analyst, Needham and Company: ... Hi, thank you for taking my question. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about the internal impact of AI and if you’re expecting to see any margin improvement related to that through 2026, or if that’s something that’s expected, you know, in the out years. Thank you.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Yeah, I would, I would say that, you know, right now, there is a lot of work that we need to do on technology within the organization, and, and I believe that, we’re making a lot of progress on that. So, I would say that, you know, I don’t see any near-term impact on productivity improvement purely from AI. I think there are a bunch of other things that we’re, that we’re doing that should continue to have productivity improvement. We are leveraging AI across, I would say, three parts within the organization. One is, which is also client-facing, one is on the user experience side, which obviously is gonna impact more the participants that we have from our clients. The second is in, in how we configure the system.
So today, what happens is when we onboard a new client or when we set up a client for annual enrollment, there’s a lot of manual work that happens in terms of taking the requirements from the clients, going through them, and then actually configuring them in the system. We are exploring using AI to actually configure the system. As I shared before, some of the clients that we work with have 150,000 employees, and multiple classes of employees. By classes, I mean, like, you know, you can have unionized, non-unionized, full-time, part-time, and all those require today a significant level of configuration that we believe can be managed with AI, and that’s something that we will be working on this year.
The third thing that I would say from an AI perspective is, we do a lot of file handling today. So what happens is a client sends us a file of their employees, and then we take that file, and then we send that over to, let’s say, a carrier. We could be sending that to a financial services provider. And we expect that there is a lot of opportunity there with AI, not just from the standpoint of efficiency, but also accuracy. The final thing that I would say is one of the most proven use cases of generative AI has been in call centers. We have a pretty large call center, and that’s also something that offers an opportunity for us.
But remember, for AI to be effective, the most important piece that you need is data, right? And we have tons of data, but that data has to be organized into a knowledge layer. And unless you organize into a knowledge layer, your ability to actually capitalize on that is very limited. So a big push for us in 2026 is to build that data and knowledge layer. Once we do that, we will be in a much better position to drive the efficiencies that come from AI, and that’s why I expect those to be more 2027 opportunities than 2026. So hope that helps, Ross. I know it was a rather elongated answer.
Ross Cole, Analyst, Needham and Company: No, that was very helpful. I appreciate that. Thank you.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one. The next question is from Kevin McVey from UBS. Please go ahead.
Kevin McVey, Analyst, UBS: Hey, can you hear me?
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Yep.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: Yes, we can.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Hi, Kevin.
Kevin McVey, Analyst, UBS: Oh, great. Hey, thank you so much, Rohit. Hey, and thank you for the time on the call. Hey, can you help us understand? Sounds like some of the renewals had slipped from a retention perspective. What was driving that? Because obviously, that kind of cascades into 2026 overall, but just maybe help us understand what drove some of that slippage. Was it just churn, you know, consolidation? Like, what was the main driver of that?
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Yeah, and I think the main driver actually comes through the... what I said in the asks or the, or the requests from the clients, right? Which is driving operational excellence, being more, being more modern, with our, with our user interface, making sure that the relationships that we’re building are, are deep and consistent. So those are the three things that the clients have been very clear about, and that’s what I’m attributing right now from a retention perspective as the reasons why we underperformed on that. And those are the three things that you heard from me, are very clear priorities that we’re working on right now.
Kevin McVey, Analyst, UBS: Got it. And then just, I think from a, the dividend perspective, makes sense. I think that was about $86 million, but, but maybe help us understand, like, why are we even paying a TRA in 2026? I mean, I think it’s $130 million, but, like, it’s a massive use of cash. I get the 2027, 2028, but is there no way to maybe manage that a little bit better, just given how much the dynamics of the business has changed?
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Kevin, first of all, I would love that if we didn’t have to, but I’ll let Greg explain the mechanics of why we’re doing this in 2026.
Greg Giometti, Interim Chief Financial Officer, Alight: Yeah. So the TRA payment in 2026 is for our 2024 tax returns, and so what it includes is the gain on the sale of Strata, and so that’s why the payment is so elevated.
Kevin McVey, Analyst, UBS: Sure.
Greg Giometti, Interim Chief Financial Officer, Alight: It’s really, it’s really around the divestiture transaction. There’s just a two-year lag in terms of when the payment actually goes out.
Kevin McVey, Analyst, UBS: Got it. I guess with the... I mean, because obviously, you had massive impairment charges, things like that, that doesn’t impact that calculation at all?
Greg Giometti, Interim Chief Financial Officer, Alight: No, because those kind of impact the 2025 tax year, which then will kind of roll into our 2027 and 2028 payments.
Kevin McVey, Analyst, UBS: Got it. Okay. Thank you.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the floor back over to management for closing comments.
Rohit Verma, Chief Executive Officer, Alight: Thank you, Sashi. Thank you all for joining. I appreciate your continued interest in Alight, and I look forward to updating you on our progress in the quarters ahead. Thank you, and God bless.
Moderator/Operator, Alight: This concludes today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.