Maximus Inc.

MMS
Investment Thesis · Updated May 29, 2026 · Coverage 2026-Q2
Free primer — Business model and recent catalysts as thesis context (steps 1 & 3 of 21). The full investment thesis, moat analysis, scenario analysis, and institutional/insider activity are available via the full research tier.

Business Model


source: coverage-next-full ticker: MMS step: "01" title: Business Overview — Maximus Inc. created: 2026-05-29

Step 01: Business Overview

Company Narrative

Maximus Inc. is the dominant independent provider of health and human services (HHS) program administration in the United States. Founded in 1975, the company has built a 50-year track record delivering government-mandated social programs — Medicaid, Medicare, unemployment insurance, ACA enrollment, veterans' evaluations, child support, and workforce development — on behalf of federal, state, and local agencies.

The core value proposition is straightforward: government agencies have large, complex programs with variable caseloads and staffing requirements that are difficult to manage in-house. Maximus provides the technology infrastructure, trained workforce, compliance frameworks, and operational expertise to administer these programs at scale — typically at lower cost than government direct administration.

Business Model

Maximus earns revenue through three primary contract structures:

  1. Cost-Plus / Time & Materials: Government reimburses Maximus's costs plus a fee. Lower margin but predictable. Common in federal contracts where scope is uncertain.
  2. Fixed-Price / Firm-Fixed-Price: Maximus receives a fixed payment per deliverable or per period. Higher risk but higher potential margin if operations are efficient. Incentivizes Maximus to improve processes.
  3. Performance-Based: Payments tied to outcomes (e.g., successful job placements in welfare-to-work programs, enrollment rates). Growing share of contracts as governments seek accountability.

The model generates highly recurring, multi-year revenue. Average contract lengths run 3–7 years with renewal options. Switching costs for governments are high — re-procurement is expensive, disruptive, and politically risky. Maximus retains the majority of its contracts upon re-compete.

Segment Overview

US Federal Services (~60% of Revenue, ~$3.2B FY2024)

The largest and fastest-growing segment following the January 2022 acquisition of Veterans Evaluation Services (VES) for approximately $1.5 billion. Key programs:

  • VES (Veterans Evaluation Services): Conducts disability and pension examinations for veterans on behalf of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). High-volume, standardized exams across a nationwide network of clinicians. Largest single program by revenue within the federal segment.
  • CMS Medicare Appeals (MAXIMUS Federal Services): Administers the Medicare appeals process — Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC) role — providing independent review of Medicare coverage and payment decisions.
  • CMS Medicaid & CHIP Operations: Federal oversight and data support for state Medicaid programs.
  • Other Federal: DoD, DHS, Social Security Administration, and other HHS-adjacent agencies.
US Services (~30% of Revenue, ~$1.6B FY2024)

State and local government program administration — the historical core of the business:

  • Medicaid Eligibility & Enrollment: Call centers, eligibility determination, renewal processing. The Medicaid continuous enrollment unwinding (April 2023 – present) created a significant redetermination revenue tailwind as states processed 90M+ eligibility reviews.
  • ACA Marketplace Enrollment Assistance: Federally-funded navigator programs and state marketplace support.
  • Unemployment Insurance: Contact center and eligibility administration for state workforce agencies. COVID-era UI surge (FY2020–FY2021) was non-recurring; volumes have normalized.
  • Workforce Development: Welfare-to-work, job training, employment services.
  • Child Support: Locate, establish, and enforce child support orders for state agencies.
Outside the US (~10% of Revenue, ~$450M FY2024)

Operations primarily in the United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada:

  • UK: Employment and welfare-to-work programs (Work Programme successors), disability assessments (PIP — Personal Independence Payment), employment support services.
  • Australia: Employment services under the Australian Government's Workforce Australia program.
  • Canada: Smaller-scale health and employment program administration.

Competitive Position

Maximus is the largest pure-play government HHS outsourcing company. Its positioning is distinct from:

  • IT-heavy govcon firms (Leidos, SAIC, Booz Allen): Maximus is operational/BPO-first, not IT project delivery
  • Diversified outsourcers (Accenture Federal, Conduent): Maximus's HHS specialization is deeper
  • Healthcare administrators (Molina, Centene): Maximus administers but doesn't bear insurance risk

Key Programs (Revenue Concentration)

Program Agency Approximate Revenue Contract Type
Veterans disability exams (VES) VA ~$800M+ Cost-Plus
Medicare appeals (QIC) CMS ~$300-400M Fixed-Price
Medicaid eligibility (multiple states) State HHS ~$500M+ Varies
UK employment/disability DWP ~$250M Performance
ACA marketplace/navigator CMS/States ~$150M Fixed-Price

Growth Drivers (FY2024–FY2026)

  1. Medicaid redetermination: Peaked ~FY2024 but created new enrollment management relationships
  2. VES organic growth: VA disability claims backlog remains elevated; exam volumes growing
  3. Technology/AI integration: Maximus investing in AI-enhanced service delivery to improve margins
  4. Federal expansion: New agency relationships beyond CMS and VA
  5. International (selective): UK and Australia program wins

Segment Revenue MixFY2024E

  • US Federal Services60% of rev
  • US Services30% of rev
  • Outside the US10% of rev

Top Competitors

  • LeidosLDOS
  • Booz AllenBAH
  • ConduentCNDT

Recent Catalysts


source: coverage-next-full ticker: MMS step: "12" title: Catalysts — Near-Term & Long-Term Value Drivers created: 2026-05-29

Step 12: Catalysts

Near-Term Catalysts (6–18 Months)

1. Deleveraging Milestone — Net Debt Below 2.0x EBITDA

Timeline: Achieved FY2024; target 1.5x by FY2026 Impact: Unlocks capital return flexibility — dividend growth or accelerated buybacks. Management has signaled capital allocation shift once below target leverage. Could re-rate the stock 1–2 multiple turns as the leveraged-govcon discount narrows.

2. DOGE Risk Clarity / Federal Contract Continuation

Timeline: FY2025 (ongoing) Impact: As DOGE cuts have so far targeted grant programs and administrative staff rather than large outsourced program administration, continued contract continuation would remove the sentiment overhang that has weighed on govcon multiples. Each quarter without major cancellations is a positive catalyst.

3. VA Disability Exam Volume Data

Timeline: Quarterly VES revenue tracking Impact: If VES volumes continue growing (VA disability claim backlog still large), investor concerns about VA insourcing are misplaced. Strong VES revenue in Q1/Q2 FY2025 would validate the federal thesis.

4. New State Contract Awards (Medicaid Offset)

Timeline: FY2025 state procurement cycle Impact: As Medicaid redetermination revenue rolls off, new state contract wins in workforce, child support, or Medicaid eligibility would demonstrate that US Services can grow through the transition. A large new state win ($100M+ TCV) would be a positive catalyst.

5. AI-Efficiency Announcement / Margin Guidance Raise

Timeline: FY2025 Investor Day Impact: If Maximus announces concrete evidence that AI/automation investments are yielding measurable efficiency gains (e.g., "20% reduction in average handle time in Medicaid contact centers"), consensus operating margin estimates of ~9–9.5% could move to 10%+ — a meaningful EPS revision.

6. Q4 FY2024 / Q1 FY2025 Earnings Beats

Timeline: Upcoming Impact: The company's consistent beat-and-raise culture creates asymmetric upside in each earnings event. A positive surprise on either US Federal or margin guidance would move the stock.

Long-Term Catalysts (2–5 Years)

1. AI-Enabled Margin Expansion to 10–11%

Government program administration is ripe for AI automation:

  • Eligibility determination (rules-based, automatable)
  • Document processing (AI OCR and extraction)
  • First-call resolution in contact centers (AI triage)
  • Veterans exam scheduling optimization

If Maximus achieves operating margins of 10–11% vs. current ~9%, that represents ~$50–100M of incremental annual earnings — at 15x earnings = $750M–$1.5B of additional value.

2. New Federal Program Expansion

The federal government regularly launches new programs requiring administration infrastructure. Opportunities include:

  • CMS price negotiation support (IRA implementation)
  • SSA workload reduction initiatives
  • DoD health benefit administration expansion
  • VA new benefit programs (PACT Act implementation)
3. International Expansion (UK, Australia, New Zealand)

The international segment (~10% of revenue) has underperformed growth expectations. New UK programme contracts (post-COVID employment programs) and Australian government outsourcing growth could add $100–200M in incremental revenue.

4. Dividend Growth Resumption (Capital Return Story)

Once net debt/EBITDA reaches 1.5x (~FY2026), management has signaled potential for:

  • Dividend increase to $1.50–2.00/share (34–79% increase)
  • Accelerated buyback authorization ($500M+)

This would convert MMS into a more prominent income and capital return story, attracting a new investor base.

5. M&A (Selective Capability Addition)

A bolt-on acquisition in health IT, data analytics, or AI for government services could:

  • Accelerate technology transformation
  • Add new federal/state relationships
  • Improve competitive positioning on large re-competes

At target leverage <1.5x and $400–450M annual FCF, Maximus could pursue a $300–500M acquisition without straining the balance sheet.

Key Risk Events (Negative Catalysts)

  • Large contract loss at re-compete (>$300M TCV): Would require significant guidance reduction
  • DOGE-driven cancellation of VES or Medicare appeals: Low probability but high impact
  • Medicaid block grant passage: Structural demand reduction for US Services
  • Major cybersecurity breach (repeat incident): Reputational/contractual damage
  • VA disability exam insourcing announcement: Specific to US Federal/VES

Bull Case

  • AI-driven efficiency gains reach 100bps of operating margin improvement by FY2027, pushing EPS toward $8–9 vs. consensus of ~$6.50. Combined with deleveraging-driven multiple re-rating from 12x to 15x P/E, the stock reaches $120–135 — implying 60–80% upside from ~$75.

  • DOGE anti-spending cuts are limited to truly discretionary programs, leaving Maximus's mandatory-program administration intact. Federal revenue continues growing 7–10% annually as VA claims remain elevated and CMS expands program administration needs, eliminating the primary investment risk discount.

  • New large federal contract wins in the $500M–$1B TCV range (a repeat of VES-scale growth) create another step-change in the federal revenue base, pushing total revenue toward $7B by FY2028 and establishing Maximus as the undisputed leader in federal HHS administration.

Bear Case

  • Medicaid block grant legislation passes by FY2026, reducing state Medicaid spending materially. US Services revenue declines 15–20% from peak, bringing segment revenue to ~$1.3B from ~$1.6B. Combined with redetermination roll-off, total company revenue growth stalls, and EPS stays near $5.50–6.00 through FY2027 with no re-rating catalyst.

  • The VA aggressively expands direct-hire clinical capacity under DOGE-inspired "bring it in-house" mandates, reducing VES exam volumes 20–30% over 3 years. VES revenue falls from ~$1B to ~$700M, creating a $75–100M EBIT headwind and reversing the US Federal growth narrative. The stock de-rates to 10x earnings — implying $55–60.

  • Accumulated DOGE-pressure and policy uncertainty causes federal contract award delays of 6–12 months across the pipeline, reducing FY2025 revenue below guidance, forcing a downward EPS revision, and triggering a broader govcon multiple compression. MMS falls to 9–10x P/E (~$55), where it finds fundamental value support but investor sentiment remains depressed for 12–18 months.

Moat Analysis

Narrow

Switching costs, incumbency advantage, and federal past-performance credentials create durable above-WACC returns for 5–10+ years.

Bull Case

DOGE risk is overstated for legally mandated programs, AI-driven margin expansion and sustained VES volume growth from the PACT Act could drive significant earnings upside.

Bear Case

Medicaid redetermination roll-off could cause absolute US Services revenue declines, and a major federal contract cancellation or margin disappointment would undermine the recovery thesis.

Top Institutional Holders

As of 2026-05 · Total institutional: 90%
  1. Vanguard Group10.5% · 6.5M sh
  2. BlackRock8.4% · 5.2M sh
  3. State Street / SSGA5% · 3.1M sh

Full Investment Thesis

The full research tier ($2.00) adds 7 dimensions that constitute the investment thesis proper.

Moat Analysis
Durable competitive advantages, switching costs, network effects, and moat trajectory.
Investment Thesis
Variant perception, key assumptions, what has to be true, and why the market may be wrong.
Bull / Base / Bear Scenarios
Three discrete scenarios with probability weights, catalysts, and price targets.
Risk Register
Macro, competitive, execution, and regulatory risks with materiality ratings.
Management Quality
Capital allocation track record, incentive alignment, and tenure analysis.
DCF Valuation
10-year DCF with sensitivity matrix across revenue growth and margin assumptions.
Institutional & Insider Activity
13F holder concentration, insider Form 4 transactions, net selling/buying trends, and ownership-structure context.
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