Emma Giamartino
Analyst · JPMorgan
Thanks, Bob. Good morning, everyone. Our first quarter results exceeded expectations. Even without the pull forward of profits in our land development program, EPS beat our expectations by nearly 10%. In local currency, our Services segment delivered 27% operating profit growth. And as Bob mentioned, nearly 30% with the benefit of FX. Given this relatively large FX tailwind, I will reference growth rates in local currency, unless otherwise noted, to best reflect our operating performance. Advisory Services revenue saw continued strength in leasing and accelerated growth in sales. Leasing revenue grew 18% globally and 21% in the U.S. Industrial leasing grew 24% in the U.S., as occupiers continue to act ahead of tightening supply for first-generation big-box facilities. U.S. office leasing revenue increased by 15% with broad-based strength across gateway and non-gateway markets. Additionally, data center leasing revenue more than tripled from last year's first quarter. Outside the U.S., leasing revenue rose by double digits in Asia Pacific, led by Japan, while EMEA saw mid-single-digit growth. Global property sales revenue growth accelerated from Q4, rising 39%, led by the U.S. and Asia Pacific. U.S. property sales revenue increased 64% as all major property types delivered double-digit increases. Outside the U.S., growth was notably strong in Japan. Mortgage origination revenue increased 53%, fueled by strong volumes from debt funds and the GSEs. Our loan servicing portfolio grew 5% to more than $460 billion. Advisory SOP grew 35%, delivering strong operating leverage. Turning to the Building Operations & Experience segment. Revenue grew 16%. In addition to significant growth in our new critical infrastructure services line of business, which Bob described earlier, our local facilities management business continued to increase revenue at a mid-teens rate. In the Americas, revenue was up almost 30% as this region had 1 of its best start to a year. Enterprise Facilities Management revenue also grew by double digits, led by the technology, industrial and life sciences sectors. BOE's SOP increased 23%, with operating leverage driven by an amortization cost reclassification. Excluding this change, SOP growth was in line with revenue growth as expected. Turning to our Project Management segment. Revenue increased 11%, while pass-through costs rose 9%. Growth was underpinned by strong infrastructure activity. Among real estate projects, growth was driven by the technology sector and was broad-based, led by double-digit growth in Asia, the U.K. and the U.S. SOP grew 14%, reflecting operating leverage. In the Real Estate Investments segment, SOP exceeded our expectations, driven by earlier-than-anticipated data center land sale profits. We continue to have embedded gains of approximately $900 million that will be monetized over the coming years. In Investment Management, recurring asset management fees increased driven by higher net asset value. However, operating profit declined due to lower incentive fees and promote income. We raised $1.3 billion of new capital during the quarter and ended Q1 with more than $155 billion of AUM, in line with Q4's level. Now I'll discuss free cash flow and capital allocation. We produced $1.7 billion of free cash flow on a trailing 12-month basis, reflecting 78% conversion. As we've discussed previously, cash incentive compensation is paid out in the first quarter based on the prior year's performance. Due to the strong performance in 2025, free cash flow conversion was lower than the prior year's Q1. We expect to end in 2026 with free cash flow conversion around the high end of our 75% to 85% target range. We have repurchased nearly $540 million of shares year-to-date, reflecting our continued belief that our share price does not reflect the sustained long-term growth trajectory of our business. As Bob indicated, we now expect full year core EPS of $7.60 to $7.80, up from $7.30 to $7.60, previously. The increase is driven by our outperformance in the first quarter and early part of the second quarter, momentum in our infrastructure services-related businesses and strong pipelines across our company. We are increasing our outlook for advisory and BOE. Advisory is now expected to deliver high-teens SOP growth. We are expecting approximately 25% SOP growth for BOE, which includes high teens growth due to improved performance in the underlying business and the remainder due to the cost reclassification. There will be an offsetting increase to depreciation and amortization, resulting in a neutral impact to net income. Our SOP expectations for project management and REI remain unchanged. Our outlook assumes no material changes to the macroeconomic or interest rate environment. And in terms of seasonality, as a result of our first quarter outperformance, we expect to generate nearly 40% of EPS in the first half of the year, a higher percentage than we would typically achieve. With that, operator, we'll open the line for questions.