Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. (NYSE:FIS) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. (NYSE:FIS) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript May 6, 2024

Fidelity National Information Services, Inc. beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $1.33, expectations were $0.963. FIS 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. Thank you for standing by and welcome to the FIS First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. Please note there will be no Q&A following the speakers’ prepared remarks. I would now like to hand the call over to George Mihalos, Senior Vice President and Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

George Mihalos: Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for the FIS first quarter 2024 earnings conference call. This call is being webcasted. Today’s news release, corresponding presentation and webcast are all available on our website at fisglobal.com. On the call with me today are Stephanie Ferris, our CEO and President; and James Kehoe, our CFO. Stephanie will begin the call with a strategic and operational update, followed by James, who will review our financials. Turning to Slide 3. Today’s remarks will contain forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties as described in the press release and other filings with the SEC. The Company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law.

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Please refer to the safe harbor language. Also, throughout this conference call, we will be presenting non-GAAP information, including adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net earnings, adjusted net earnings per share and free cash flow. These are important financial performance measures for the Company, but are not financial measures as defined by GAAP. Reconciliation of our non-GAAP information to the GAAP financial information is presented in our earnings release. And with that, I’ll turn it over to Stephanie.

Stephanie Ferris: Thank you, George, and thank you, everyone for joining us this afternoon. I’m pleased to report that 2024 is off to a very strong start. We are outperforming on our financial commitments to shareholders, experiencing solid new sales momentum and leveraging our strong capital position to aggressively return capital to shareholders while also investing for growth. The decisive actions we took in 2023 through our Future Forward strategy are resonating across the enterprise and improving operational and financial outcomes. This is the fifth consecutive quarter where we’ve exceeded our financial outlook with broad-based outperformance across revenue, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EPS. While still early, we are confident in achieving our 2024 outlook for revenue and adjusted EBITDA, and we are meaningfully raising our EPS outlook to reflect a sustainable lower tax rate and a higher EMI contribution from our Worldpay stake.

Momentum is building across our new sales pipeline, as our solutions continue to resonate with clients. We saw strong new sales growth in the first quarter with good demand across digital banking, payments and risk compliance solutions. We expect the strong new sales activity to continue over the remainder of the year. Moving on to capital allocation. We are once again increasing our share repurchase target for the year by $500 million. We now expect to repurchase a total of $4 billion in 2024. During the quarter, we returned $1.6 billion to shareholders, including $1.4 billion through repurchases, and we [indiscernible] highly synergistic tuck-in M&A opportunities to [further strengthen] our business. Before turning it over for an in-depth discussion on our first quarter financial performance and updated 2024 outlook, I’d like to remind everyone that tomorrow we will be hosting an Investor Day, where we will be showcasing our corporate strategy, providing segment deep dives and introducing medium term financial targets.

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Q&A Session

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We hope you can join us in-person in New York City or via the webcast. And with that, I’ll turn it over to James. James?

James Kehoe: Thank you, Stephanie, and hello, everyone. We are very pleased with our performance in the first quarter and our successful cash management and tax initiatives have allowed us to meaningfully raise our full-year EPS outlook. On a continuing operations basis, adjusted revenue growth accelerated to 3% compared to flat in the fourth quarter of 2023. The adjusted EBITDA margin expanded by 200 basis points year-over-year, primarily reflecting cost optimization initiatives, which boosted margins in the Banking segment. Adjusted EPS from continuing operations was $1.10 in the quarter, up 53% compared to the prior year, and up 24% on a normalized basis. On a total company basis, including one-month of discontinued operations, revenue was $2.9 billion with adjusted EPS of $1.33.

Beginning in February 2024, our 45% interest in Worldpay is reported on the EMI line of the income statement. Moving now to our balance sheet and cash flow metrics. After paying down debt with the Worldpay proceeds, our total debt at the end of the quarter was $11.2 billion with a leverage ratio of 2.7x. We repurchased approximately $1.4 billion of shares resulting in over $1.6 billion of capital return to shareholders during the first quarter. Additionally, we are once again increasing our share repurchase target for the year by $500 million to $4 billion in total. We will deploy this incremental $500 million over the course of the fourth quarter of 2024, benefiting 2025 EPS. On a continuing operations basis, we generated free cash flow of $95 million in the first quarter with a free cash flow conversion rate of 18%.

Free cash flow was negatively impacted by a number of factors which are temporary in nature, including the delay of prior year tax payments through the first quarter of 2024, and the timing of TSA reimbursements from Worldpay. Overall, these temporary items amounted to $195 million or 36 points of negative impact. Adjusting for these items, free cash flow conversion would have been approximately 54% compared to 40% in the first quarter of 2023. Importantly, these temporary items were already factored into our full-year cash conversion target of 85% to 90%, and we are confident that we will achieve this target. Turning now to our segment results on Slide 8. Adjusted revenue growth was 3% in line with our expectations and recurring revenue growth was a steady 5%, broadly in line with the trends we saw during 2023.

One quick note on backlog. While we will continue to provide backlog data in our quarterly 10-Q filings, we will no longer be focusing on backlog during our earnings presentation. As you already know, backlog does not appropriately capture underlying growth from existing clients such as account and transaction growth. Last quarter, we provided you with increased disclosure around our recurring and non-recurring revenue streams within the Banking segment. And building on that transparency, we have now added a schedule in the appendix, highlighting the resiliency of our recurring revenue growth across a multi-year period. Compared to backlog, recurring revenue growth is a more meaningful predictor of sustainable future revenue growth, and we will be increasingly focused on this measure as a key indicator of the underlying strength of the business.

Moving on to segment performance. Banking adjusted revenue growth was at the high-end of our outlook range and accelerated to 2% in the quarter compared to flat in the fourth quarter of 2023. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded by an impressive 350 basis points, primarily driven by cost initiatives and favorable revenue mix. Banking recurring revenue grew a healthy 4%, representing continued steady growth. Other non-recurring revenue grew 9% with strong year-over-year growth in license fee revenue more than offsetting declines in pandemic-related revenue. Professional services revenue declined 14%, reflecting a difficult year-over-year comparison in project revenue related to a large client. Turning now to Capital Markets. Adjusted revenue growth was 6%, an improvement from 1% growth in the fourth quarter led by strong recurring revenue growth.

Excluding the impact from acquisitions, adjusted revenue increased 5%. Adjusted EBITDA margin contracted 80 basis points during the quarter, primarily reflecting less favorable revenue mix and for the year, we continue to expect modest margin expansion. Capital Markets recurring revenue grew by a strong 9% in the quarter, whereas other non-recurring revenue was flat and professional services declined 4%. Turning now to our full-year outlook on Slide 9. Our first quarter operational performance gives us great confidence in meeting our full-year outlook. However, given that it is so early in the year, for now, we are reiterating our full-year outlook for revenue and adjusted EBITDA. We are raising our full-year adjusted EPS outlook by $0.22 to $4.88 to $4.98 as we drive broad base favorability across taxes, interest expense, depreciation and EMI.

Let’s walk through the key changes on Slide 10. We continue to project total reported revenue of $10.1 billion to $10.15 billion with adjusted revenue growth of 4% to 4.5%. We expect the Banking segment to grow between 3% to 3.5% and we anticipate capital markets revenue growth of 6.5% to 7%. We continue to forecast year-over-year margin expansion of 20 basis points to 40 basis points for the full-year, implying an expected moderation in the margin expansion relative to the first quarter’s 200 basis points. Over the past few months, we’ve been very focused on optimizing our cash management, taxes and capital structure, and these initiatives are driving $0.22 of favorability compared to our original EPS guidance. We are now in a position to reduce our tax rate projection to around 14.5% from over 17% previously.

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