The Top 5 Analyst Questions From Maximus’s Q1 Earnings Call

Maximus delivered first-quarter results that were met with a positive market reaction, despite a year-on-year revenue decline. Management attributed performance to improved operational efficiency and the growing impact of technology investments, especially in automation and artificial intelligence. CEO Bruce L. Caswell emphasized that technology-enabled solutions have enhanced execution across the company’s government services portfolio. CFO David W. Mutryn highlighted that increased efficiency led to higher profitability, as seen in the sequential step-up in margins, even as the business faced difficult comparisons due to last year’s temporary surges in disaster and clinical work.
Is now the time to buy MMS? Find out in our full research report (it’s free).
Maximus (MMS) Q1 CY2026 Highlights:
-
Revenue: $1.31 billion vs analyst estimates of $1.32 billion (4.1% year-on-year decline, 0.9% miss)
-
Adjusted EPS: $2.07 vs analyst estimates of $1.97 (5.3% beat)
-
Adjusted EBITDA: $188 million vs analyst estimates of $177.4 million (14.4% margin, 6% beat)
-
The company reconfirmed its revenue guidance for the full year of $5.28 billion at the midpoint
-
Management raised its full-year Adjusted EPS guidance to $8.40 at the midpoint, a 2.4% increase
-
Operating Margin: 11.4%, in line with the same quarter last year
-
Market Capitalization: $3.12 billion
While we enjoy listening to the management’s commentary, our favorite part of earnings calls are the analyst questions. Those are unscripted and can often highlight topics that management teams would rather avoid or topics where the answer is complicated. Here is what has caught our attention.
Our Top 5 Analyst Questions From Maximus’s Q1 Earnings Call
-
Will Gilday (CJS Securities) asked about elevated days sales outstanding (DSO) and buyback capacity given cash flow lumpiness. CFO David W. Mutryn explained DSO was impacted by a federal client’s complex invoicing requirements but expects collections to improve by Q4.
-
Will Gilday (CJS Securities) inquired about expanding SNAP solutions. CEO Bruce L. Caswell described the Accuracy Assistant tool as the core offering, emphasizing integration with BPO services and AI-driven document processing.
-
Will Gilday (CJS Securities) pressed for details on state revenue declines and the path to growth. Mutryn cited specific state program volume declines but expressed confidence that H.R. 1–related activity will drive sequential improvement by Q4.
-
Will Gilday (CJS Securities) sought clarity on margin improvement in federal versus state segments. Caswell explained federal contracts are more amenable to automation, while state contracts face regulatory and system integration hurdles limiting near-term gains.
-
Will Gilday (CJS Securities) asked about the VBA contract timeline. Caswell said the rebid timeline is not yet public, but the current contract runs through December 2026 and extensions are possible depending on agency needs.




