In addition, our pipeline of providers eager to modernize through digitization remains robust. Both Glenn and Dave joined me at the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference last month where we participated in over two dozen meetings with investors, customers, and key prospects. Their feedback was overwhelmingly positive, reinforcing Premier’s ability to harness our healthcare data to drive provider performance improvements and deliver real-world evidence that drives appropriate utilization of the most efficacious products at the right price for the right patients.
I remain confident in our team’s ability to deliver strong results and navigate the dynamic healthcare landscape effectively. With our strategic direction and talented leadership team, we are well positioned for continued success.
With that, I’ll now turn the call over to Glenn.
Glenn Coleman Premier, Inc. - Chief Administrative and Financial Officer
Thanks, Mike. Good morning, everyone. As a reminder, all results discussed during this call reflect continuing operations and do not reflect S2S Global, which was divested on October 1, 2024. I’m also pleased to report that we completed the sale of the network assets of Contigo Health in January of 2025, and we continue to work towards divesting the remaining assets before the end of this fiscal year. As such, actual results for the quarter include contributions from Contigo business. However, we are continuing to exclude the results in our guidance.
Now, turning to second quarter consolidated results. Our second quarter revenue and adjusted EBITDA were below our expectations. However, for the first six months of fiscal year 2025, we are on track with these metrics and ahead of our expectations for adjusted EPS. Net revenue of $240 million for the quarter decreased from the prior year period, driven by a decline in net administrative fees revenue in Supply Chain Services.
In addition, we experienced lower revenue in consulting services and an unfavorable product mix in applied sciences within the Performance Services segment. GAAP net loss from continuing operations of $46 million was mainly due to an impairment charge to goodwill of $127 million related to our data and technology business in the Performance Services segment. This was partially offset by profitability from continuing operations, which included an $18 million cash distribution from one of our minority investments.
Adjusted EBITDA was $50 million, translating to a margin of 20.8% and declined largely due to lower revenue. Adjusted earnings per share was $0.25, and excluding the impact of Contigo Health was $0.27 and in line with our expectations. Adjusted EPS benefited from a lower weighted average share count as a result of the share repurchases under our $1 billion authorization. As of January 2025, we repurchased over 29 million shares of Class A common stock for $600 million.
Turning to segment results, in our Supply Chain Services segment, lower net administrative fees revenue was driven by the expected increase in the aggregate blended fee share to the low 60% level in the quarter. However, gross administrative fees grew as existing members continued to increase penetration of contract spend and as we recruit and onboard new members.
The group of GPO members that were part of the August 2020 restructure represent approximately 70% of our total gross administrative fees. As of December 31, we’ve addressed members representing approximately 69% of this group’s fees, and we expect to address greater than 75% by the end of fiscal year 2025, with the majority of the remainder occurring in fiscal 2026.
In addition, we continue to expect our aggregate blended fee share to be in the low 60% range for the full fiscal year 2025 and that it will likely stabilize in the high 60s once we’ve completed the renewal process. To date, while the increase in our aggregate blended fee share has negatively impacted our year-over-year results, it has been less of a headwind versus our expectations, and as a result, is one of the reasons we’re increasing our revenue guidance for Supply Chain Services.
Also, we experienced growth in other supply chain services revenue, driven by new agreements in our supply chain co-management business where members continue to express interest in leveraging Premier’s expertise to help manage their end-to-end supply chain operations.
Moving to the Performance Services segment, the revenue decline of 19% was due to lower demand in consulting services and product mix in Applied Sciences. In addition, we’ve begun to see a gradual shift in member interest favoring SaaS subscription engagements versus license agreements.
To echo what Mike said, despite these current short-term headwinds and timing-related items, we remain confident in our long-term strategy and under Dave’s leadership, we plan to reinvigorate this business by recruiting new talent with a strong track record of delivering broad-based performance improvement at large health systems, refocusing our solutions and go-to-market strategy around key areas of differentiation, leveraging our performance improvement collaboratives more broadly in the market and extending our unique AI capabilities to new use cases while continuing to further penetrate the market in the areas we already serve.
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