
Earnings results often indicate what direction a company will take in the months ahead. With Q4 behind us, let’s have a look at Bright Horizons (NYSE: BFAM) and its peers.
The Consumer Discretionary sector, by definition, is made up of companies selling non-essential goods and services. When economic conditions deteriorate or tastes shift, consumers can easily cut back or eliminate these purchases. For long-term investors with five-year holding periods, this creates a structural challenge: the sector is inherently hit-driven, with low switching costs and fickle customers. As a result, only a handful of companies can reliably grow demand and compound earnings over long periods, which is why our bar is high and High Quality ratings are rare. Education services companies provide postsecondary instruction, professional certifications, test preparation, and corporate training, both online and in-person. Tailwinds include lifelong-learning demand driven by rapid technological change, employer-sponsored upskilling programs, and growing acceptance of online credentials. Headwinds are substantial: heavy regulatory oversight—particularly around student-loan eligibility and enrollment practices—can abruptly alter business models. Reputational risk from scrutiny over student outcomes and debt burdens constrains marketing strategies. Competition from free or low-cost digital alternatives (MOOCs, employer-built academies) pressures pricing.
The 7 consumer discretionary - education services stocks we track reported a strong Q4. As a group, revenues beat analysts’ consensus estimates by 2.2% while next quarter’s revenue guidance was 8.5% above.
Thankfully, share prices of the companies have been resilient as they are up 6.5% on average since the latest earnings results.
Weakest Q4: Bright Horizons (NYSE: BFAM)
Founded in 1986, Bright Horizons (NYSE: BFAM) is a global provider of child care, early education, and workforce support solutions.
Bright Horizons reported revenues of $733.7 million, up 8.8% year on year. This print exceeded analysts’ expectations by 1%. Despite the top-line beat, it was still a slower quarter for the company with a significant miss of analysts’ adjusted operating income estimates and full-year revenue guidance slightly missing analysts’ expectations.

Unsurprisingly, the stock is down 5.8% since reporting and currently trades at $77.07.
Read our full report on Bright Horizons here, it’s free.
Best Q4: Lincoln Educational (NASDAQ: LINC)
Established in 1946, Lincoln Educational (NASDAQ: LINC) is a provider of specialized technical training in the United States, offering career-oriented programs to provide practical skills required in the workforce.
Lincoln Educational reported revenues of $142.9 million, up 19.7% year on year, outperforming analysts’ expectations by 6.9%. The business had an exceptional quarter with full-year revenue guidance exceeding analysts’ expectations and an impressive beat of analysts’ revenue estimates.

Lincoln Educational scored the biggest analyst estimates beat and highest full-year guidance raise among its peers. The market seems happy with the results as the stock is up 27.7% since reporting. It currently trades at $38.30.
Is now the time to buy Lincoln Educational? Access our full analysis of the earnings results here, it’s free.
Strategic Education (NASDAQ: STRA)
Formed through the merger of Strayer Education and Capella Education in 2018, Strategic Education (NASDAQ: STRA) is a career-focused higher education provider.
Strategic Education reported revenues of $323.2 million, up 3.8% year on year. This result was in line with analysts’ expectations. It was a very strong quarter as it also recorded a beat of analysts’ EPS estimates and an impressive beat of analysts’ adjusted operating income estimates.
Strategic Education had the slowest revenue growth among its peers. The stock is up 3.3% since reporting and currently trades at $80.99.
Read our full, actionable report on Strategic Education here, it’s free.
Grand Canyon Education (NASDAQ: LOPE)
Founded in 1949, Grand Canyon Education (NASDAQ: LOPE) is an educational services provider known for its operation at Grand Canyon University.
Grand Canyon Education reported revenues of $308.1 million, up 5.3% year on year. This print met analysts’ expectations. Overall, it was a strong quarter as it also produced EPS guidance for next quarter exceeding analysts’ expectations and revenue guidance for next quarter exceeding analysts’ expectations.
Grand Canyon Education had the weakest performance against analyst estimates among its peers. The stock is down 1.8% since reporting and currently trades at $164.73.
Read our full, actionable report on Grand Canyon Education here, it’s free.
Market Update
Late in 2025 into early 2026, there was hand wringing around artificial intelligence. For software companies, the fear was that AI would erode pricing power and compress margins as new tools made it easier to replicate what once required expensive enterprise platforms. Crypto investors had their own version of the same anxiety: if AI agents could trade, allocate capital, and manage wallets autonomously, what exactly was the long-term value of today’s crypto infrastructure?
These concerns triggered a noticeable rotation away from these sectors and into safer havens. But markets rarely dwell on one narrative for long. Spring 2026 came, and the focus shifted abruptly from technological disruption to geopolitical risk. The US’ conflict with Iran became the dominant driver of market psychology, and when geopolitics takes center stage, the script changes quickly. Investors stop debating growth rates and start worrying about oil supply, inflation, and global stability.
Want to invest in winners with rock-solid fundamentals? Check out our Strong Momentum Stocks and add them to your watchlist. These companies are poised for growth regardless of the political or macroeconomic climate.
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