KEY POINTS
  • 2U missed on earnings, revenue and 2024 revenue guidance, sending its stock price tumbling to 34 cents.
  • The company warned that there is doubt about its ability to continue as a "going concern" if it can't raise money or lower its debt.
  • Several analysts have discontinued coverage in recent months.

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Chip Paucek, co-founder and former CEO of 2U, appears at the company's headquarters in Lanham, Maryland on Nov. 17, 2021. The company's chief financial officer, Paul Lalljie, replaced Paucek as CEO in November 2023.

When 2U went public a decade ago, the company was out to prove it could make a splash in the notoriously difficult $550 billion U.S. higher education market.

For a while, it was on to something. The stock price ballooned from $13 at 2U's 2014 IPO to a high of $98.58 four years later as demand increased for the company's online education offerings. At its peak, 2U had a market cap of more than $5 billion and growth rates comparable to high-flying cloud software companies. Revenue climbed 44% in 2018.

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