Cushman & Wakefield plc (NYSE:CWK) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

Page 1 of 3

Cushman & Wakefield plc (NYSE:CWK) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript April 29, 2024

Cushman & Wakefield plc misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $ EPS, expectations were $-0.02. CWK isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).

Operator: Good day, and welcome to the Cushman & Wakefield First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Megan McGrath, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Megan McGrath: Thank you, and welcome to Cushman & Wakefield’s first quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Earlier today, we issued a press release announcing our financial results for the period. This release, along with today’s presentation, can be found on our Investor Relations website at ir.cushmanwakefield.com. Please turn to the page in our presentation labeled Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Statements. Today’s presentation contains forward-looking statements based on our current forecasts and estimates of future events. These statements should be considered estimates only, and actual results may differ materially. During today’s call, we will refer to non-GAAP financial measures as outlined by SEC guidelines. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, definitions of non-GAAP financial measures, and other related information are found within the financial tables of our earnings release in the appendix of today’s presentation.

Also, please note that throughout the presentation, comparisons and growth rates are to the comparable periods of 2023, and in local currency, unless otherwise stated. And with that, I’d like to turn the call over to our CEO, Michelle MacKay.

Michelle MacKay: Thank you, Megan. In 2023, we spoke with you frequently about positioning ourselves in a thoughtful way for the recovery. And as you can see from our performance, the actions that we took in support of these words created strong first quarter results. Since the last time that we spoke, our teams have seized market opportunities, and we continue to strengthen our balance sheet, including our first optional prepayment of debt, as well as successfully repricing our 2030 term loan, reducing our annual cash interest costs. We reported another quarter of global leasing growth, and some meaningful improvements in capital markets. We’ve had a couple of key wins in our services businesses in the last month alone as we continue to step away from less accretive services transactions.

And importantly, we achieved these results, while maintaining cost discipline, leading to an improvement of more than 100 basis points in adjusted EBITDA margin. Looking at the big picture, the year is generally progressing in line with expectations. On our last earnings call, I said that we are expecting a moderate initial reduction in rate sometime late in the year. Our view from the onset has been that the Fed was lightly turning cautious this year, and our strategy and budgeting decisions were made in accordance with that view. Our outlook and optimism for the recovery are strong, and we continue to position our business in a thoughtful way for this next stage in the cycle. Given the recent increase in rate volatility, I would like to take a couple of minutes to share our thoughts on how we view the relationship between the Fed rate cuts in our business, because overall we view the Fed rate cuts as an accelerator of certain parts of the business, but not the only avenue for transactional improvements.

Our first quarter results provide some insights into these dynamics, illustrating what occurs when there’s rate stability, economic optimism, a solid pipeline of deals, and strong teams armed with a clearly defined strategy. We expect that leasing, which is a particular strength of ours, will continue to benefit from global economic resiliency as we move through the cycle, and our diverse platform allows us to capture pockets of strength across regions and asset classes, as we have positioned ourselves to do for the past several quarters. During the quarter, we saw continued solid growth in leasing across our global platform, with revenues up 5% for the second quarter in a row. And on the capital market side of the business, activity in Q1 reflected transactions closing in the early part of the quarter when there was more optimism over our potential first rate cut from the Fed.

Although the recent uptick in rate volatility will mostly likely cause a pause in transaction volumes in Q2, the improvement that we experienced in Q1 gives us more confidence that global investment sales pipelines are solid, and investors are ready to engage when the time is ripe. I’m pleased with our first quarter performance and the way in which our teams continue to execute and find opportunities across our segments and geographies. The clarity that the reset strategy has given management is already paying dividends in a more cohesive and connected approach to the way that we are operating the company in interacting with our clients. With that, I’ll turn the call over to Neil.

An impressive commercial building showcasing the real estate services of the company.

Neil Johnston: Thank you, Michelle, and good afternoon, everyone. We are pleased with our first quarter results which exceeded our expectations and guidance, with fee revenue of $1.5 billion, flat with the prior year, and adjusted EBITDA of $78 million, up 29% versus prior year. Our adjusted EBITDA margin, of 5.2%, grew 117 basis points as we benefited from higher leasing revenue, as well as the cost-savings actions taken during 2023. Adjusted earnings per share for the quarter was breakeven, an improvement from the $0.04 loss a year ago. By segment, free revenue declined 3% in the Americas, [33%] (ph) in EMEA, and through 8% in APAC. We saw margin expansion in both the Americas and EMEA due to strong leasing growth, and our 2023 cost actions, while margins in APAC contracted slightly due primarily to mix.

Taking a look at our service lines, effective January 1, we have renamed the property, facilities, and project management service line to services. This change is in name only, and had no impact on the composition of our services lines or our historical results. Beginning with brokerage, our leasing business continued to experience stabilizing trends we reported in the fourth quarter with 5% revenue growth. The growth in Q1 was again global in nature, with Americas leasing up 1%, EMEA leasing up 30%, and APAC leasing up 10%. In the Americas, we saw particular strength in mid-sized office and industrial leasing, which grew in each of our sub-regions for the first time since the first quarter of 2022. In EMEA, we transacted on a large deal in Germany, which accounted for roughly a third of the leasing growth in that region.

The remaining growth came from strength in all of our major asset classes, with office, industrial, and retail, each up over 10% in the quarter. In APAC, India continues to see healthy growth supported by durable mega-trends in global outsourcing and datacenters. Our capital markets revenue declined 1%, a meaningful sequential improvement over the 32% year-over-year decline reported in the fourth quarter of last year. Americas cap markets revenue was down 7%, while EMEA and APAC revenues were up 12% and 52%, respectively. In the Americas, we experienced a pick up in pipeline conversion early in the quarter, particularly in office transactions as interest rates were relatively stable and [bid] (ph) as spreads narrowed. In EMEA, high-end seller expectations on pricing and values are realigning, particularly in prime assets in better locations.

And in APAC, office and industrial sales were strong, most notably in Australia, where we’ve made some recent growth investments. We’re encouraged by these results, but acknowledge that the recent increase in interest rate volatility is likely to cause a short-term reverse of trends over in the second quarter as the market adjusts. Ultimately, however, our first quarter results provide us increased confidence that transactions will return to the market in greater volume when rate stability is achieved. Turning to services, revenue was down 3% or flat with prior year adjusting for the previously discussed contract change. In the Americas, services revenue declined 5% or 1% excluding contract change. And in EMEA, services revenue declined 9% as we continue to reposition our service portfolio for profitable growth.

In APAC, our services business was strong, up 7% driven by solid growth in project management and facilities management. Overall, we are pleased with the momentum we are seeing in services. We have recently had some notable new business wins and our new business pipeline is strong. As we’ve previously discussed, while our focus on margin and accretive growth is resulting in some near-term revenue headwinds, we expect to see a re-acceleration of growth in the second-half of this year and a return to at least a mid single-digit growth rate in 2025. Turning to cash flow, free cash flow for the quarter was a use of $136 million. This compared favorably to the first quarter of 2023, where free cash flow was a use of $231 million. A first quarter use of cash is in line with historical working capital trends, including the annual payment of U.S. bonuses and reflects typical seasonal patterns in our business.

We continued our progress on strengthening the balance sheet. During the quarter, we repaid $50 million of Term Loan B due in 2025, reducing the outstanding balance to $143 million. In addition, subsequent to quarter end, we repriced $1 billion of Term Loan B due 2030, reducing the applicable interest rate by 25 basis points from one month SOFR plus 400 to one month term SOFR plus 375. The net impact of these actions is expected to reduce annual cash interest expense by roughly $6 million. Finally, moving to our outlook, we continue to expect the sustained growth in capital markets is most likely to begin sometime in the second-half of this year, contingent upon a more conducive interest rate environment. We expect the leasing market to be relatively stable for the year and for our services business to grow at a similar rate to 2023.

On the cost side, we continue to expect cost increases driven by normal inflation and high incentive comp as we focus on positioning the company for market growth. However, we do expect our cost efficiency initiatives to mostly offset these cost headwinds within the year. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Michelle.

Michelle MacKay: Thanks, Neil. Over the past quarter, we’ve witnessed an incredible commitment and loyalty to us from our clients, lenders, investors, and our people. We promise to all of our constituencies that we will continue to push ourselves to evolve at a rapid fire pace, never content and never settling. Now, I’ll turn the call over to the operator for your questions. Operator?

See also 15 Best Patchouli Perfumes That Smell Seriously Luxurious and 14 Strongest Military Forces in the Middle East.

Q&A Session

Follow Cushman & Wakefield Plc (NYSE:CWK)

Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. The first question comes from Anthony Paolone with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Anthony Paolone: Thanks. Good afternoon. The first question is, just looking at the first quarter margin, I know it’s a seasonally slow quarter and don’t want to make too much of it, but as we think about 2024, should we think about that 100 or so basis points of margin expansion as being the right order of magnitude if the businesses hit the brackets you put around them?

Neil Johnston: Tony, I think the reason we gave guidance on the first quarter was because we did have the cost program that rolled into savings in 2024. So, in the first quarter, we had $20 million of savings, which did more than offset the cost increases we saw. So, if we look at that margin improvement, it was essentially half driven by those cost savings, and the other half driven by the improvement in up-leasing, the flow-through up-leasing. As we look now out for the rest of the year, as we said on our full-year outlook, we do expect the remaining cost actions to basically offset inflation and the cost increases. So, the margin expansion that we will get in the back-half of the year was tied primarily to operating leverage. So, as you think about the year, think about growth in leasing, what’s happening in capital markets services, and so that is sort of how we frame up margins over the year.

Anthony Paolone: Okay. So, that the first quarter seemed like you’d had a bit more of match in it, so to basically keep that in mind, is that kind of the takeaway?

Neil Johnston: That’s exactly right, yes. Yes, it all depends. It depends [technical difficulty] —

Anthony Paolone: Okay. And then, my second question is just in the services segment, I guess, you’re still looking for 2% to 3% growth in 2024 for the full-year. I’m wondering how much of that is speculative in terms of contracts that you still have yet to win versus where you put a high degree of visibility and that you’re just still waiting for things to commence. And I guess, along the same line, since you’ve been reworking that segment, do you think you’ll make more EBITDA in ’24 than you did in ’23?

Michelle MacKay: Hi, Tony, it’s Michelle. Just to start off with services, I’m really being excited about our positioning in services. And as we’ve said in prior quarters, we’re hyper-focused on accretive long-term growth in that business. So, as you know, we’ve been [planting] (ph) our strategy here, and expect to be back to our long-term growth rate in the mid-single digits in 2025. In the GOS business, and just to give you a little color on where we’re winning, what’s happening, we’re beginning to win business, and [marching] deals when it’s important to the clients that we’re balancing being globally scaled, but also having agility. And we’d had a couple of key wins this year. Some of them will play into revenue later in the year, and some of them will play into next year.

And then for the smaller clients, to your point around the more speculative, those can transact more quickly in the year. And honestly, those are great deals, those are critical clients for us, they’re higher margins, typically. And we treat them the way that we do by bringing our best practices from the entire Cushman brand to their experience. So, what we’re finding now is there’s a real shift, large or small, in the GOS business, in particular, to clients that really want to be giving you advice on areas such as ESG and workplace solutions, and you’ve got to be scaled to do it, and you’ve got to be agile to do it as well.

Anthony Paolone: Thank you.

Operator: The next question comes from Michael Griffin with Citi. Please go ahead.

Michael Griffin: Great, thanks. I wanted to talk first at — about the leasing business, particularly on office. It seems like what you’re seeing on the ground there is probably a little bit better than the negative headlines we’ve seen out there. I just want to get some clarity. Are the deals in your pipeline mainly geared toward that Class A trophy product, or was that increase indicative of all quality of office being leased, including B and C commodity product?

Michelle MacKay: So, I would say that in Q4 of last year, it was largely larger, leases being cut in higher-quality building. Now, we’re starting to see a mix in a combination of those same leases, that we’re starting to see a mix-in of smaller tenants, still in high-quality buildings [indiscernible] but smaller leases in the first quarter of this year.

Michael Griffin: Got you, that’s helpful. And then maybe just on the cost-savings initiatives, I think you still had some of that flowing into the first quarter. And you say you’re balancing those initiatives relative to other increased costs. But if we think that the capital markets business is going to improve materially in the back-half of the year, wouldn’t you want to be staffing up and then increasing headcount kind of in anticipation of that?

Neil Johnston: So, Michael, you’ve raised a great point, so that’s exactly right. Well, primarily, the majority of our cost savings are run rate savings that were incurred as we rolled out our cost savings program, last year. Essentially we have modernized new cost savings programs for 2024. Of course, we remain nimble. We always are looking for ways to become more efficient. But essentially, with $30 million of cost savings I referred to is primarily the result of the actions we took last year. As we look to the back-half of the year, we are very focused on growth and making sure that we are well-positioned, both on the advisory side, and then also on the services side as we grow that business in the back-half of the year. Great. That’s it for me. Thanks for the time.

Neil Johnston: Thank you.

Operator: The next question comes from Alex Kramm with the UBS. Please go ahead.

Alex Kramm: Yes. Hey, good evening, everyone. Just quickly, I guess, on the capital markets business, I mean, obviously, good stability in the first quarter, great to see, but your tone in the second quarter obviously a little bit more choppy. So, given that seasonally the second quarter is usually better, do you feel like this year could look a little bit worse maybe than the first quarter? Get any visibility specifically on 2Q would be great. And then, related to that, you seem as confident as you were a quarter ago about the second-half recovery. Obviously a lot of things have changed. So, maybe just wanted to make sure I heard that right, or if you do think there’s a higher level of uncertainty from here and if you’re reacting to that at all.

Page 1 of 3