Dan Hollenbach
Analyst · Brian Kinstlinger with Alliance Global Partners. You may proceed
Thank you, Beth, and good morning, everyone. First, I want to remind you that we completed the sale of our Light Industrial segment late in the first quarter. As a result, our financial results discussed today are from continuing operations, and except where noted, exclude operating results for the Light Industrial segment for this year and last year. For additional details on the sale transaction, please refer to our Form 8-K filed on March 24. Moving to our financial highlights from continuing operations, strong momentum continued into the second quarter, with total revenues up 29.1% to $74.1 million, compared to ’21. By segment, Real Estate grew 41%, and Professional increased 22%. We continue to see better efficiencies in submittals, and while wage rates began to level out during the quarter, they were up 9% Q-over-Q. In addition to year-over-year improvement, both segments saw sequential growth between Q1 and Q2. Real Estate revenues grew 15.7%, and Professional segment revenues increased 3.5%. The Professional segment 22 revenue growth over ‘21 was impacted by strong double-digit growth in finance and accounting, IT consulting, and managed services. We continue to see solid demand for digital transformation work and enterprise monetization products. As talent resources remain in high demand, our clients look for ways to enhance systems to automate processes and leverage less manual functions. Gross profit increased by 30.2% compared to the prior quarter, growing to $25.1 million, primarily due to revenue expansion and increased spread in both segments. As a percentage of revenue, total gross profit increased 30 basis points to 33.8%, compared to 33.5% in ’21. Operating leverage and selling, general and administrative costs, improved by 140 basis points to 26.9% of revenue, compared to 28.3% a year ago. SG&A dollars increased $3.6 million or 22.3%, which compared favorably to our revenue growth. Second quarter net income from continuing operations was $3.2 million or $0.30 per diluted share, compared to net income from continuing operations of $2.6 million or $0.25 per diluted share in the same quarter a year ago. As a reminder, last year's Q2 income included a pretax credit of $1.2 million associated with continued consideration recorded from an acquisition in 2019. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations for Q2 was $5.4 million or 7.3% of revenues, compared to $3.2 million or 5.6% of revenues in ‘21. Our Q2 effective tax rate was 23.6% for ’22, compared to 16% in last year's second quarter. Now turning to year-to-date results. Revenues for the first half were $142.6 million, up 33.1% from ’21, while gross profit was $48.5 million, up 36.7%. Although selling, general and administrative dollars increased 25.5%, they improved that the percentage of revenues resulted in a nice operating leverage of 170 basis points. Net income from continuing operations for the first six months was $5.2 million or $0.50 per diluted share, compared to $2.3 million or $0.23 per diluted share for the ‘21 period. A reminder, the prior period included a $1.2 million pre-tax contingent consideration credit. Adjusted EBITDA for the first half of ‘22 totaled $10.3 million or 7.2% of revenue, compared to the prior year of $6.7 million or 6.3% of revenue. Finally, the year-to-date effective tax rate was 22.7% for ‘22, compared to 16.2% in the year ago period. Turning to the company's IT investment roadmap. As we discussed last quarter, we expect significant productivity improvements and competitive advantages in our business when the IT platform upgrade assuming a modest 5% efficiency in order fulfillment. The projected payback theory for the roadmap is approximately three years. Future IT spend will represent incremental enhancements to improve systems, provide a more robust platform to grow and scale our business, and Beth will provide further updates from our go live launch in a few moments. Moving on to our financial position, the company’s balance sheet is strong, and we continue to maintain a prudently conservative liquidity position. At the end of the second quarter, our accounts receivables balance was $50.1 million, up 4% compared to year-end, while days sales outstanding, or DSO, improved by six days from year-end. And our working capital ratio strengthened to 2.45 from 1.95 at year-end. Net cash provided from operations was $1.2 million, a $3.6 million increase from ‘21. We utilized the proceeds of the sale of InStaff to pay down our debt, and our leverage ratio of funded debt to trailing 12 months EBITDA was 0.7x as of the June balance sheet date. Finally, the Board of Directors approved our 31st consecutive quarterly dividend at $0.15 per share, in support of our strategic initiatives. Our solid balance sheet position and deleverage efforts are expected to continue to provide ample flexibility to fund our operation, while investing for future growth, as well as returning value to our shareholder through tax dividends and stock appreciation. I will now turn the call back to Beth.