Ware Grove
Analyst · CJS Securities. Please go ahead with your question
Thank you, Jerry, and good morning, everyone. Of course, the big news today is the announcement that we have reached a definitive agreement to acquire Marcum with revenue of approximately $1.2 billion. This transaction is a major step forward for CBIZ. In a moment, Chris Spurio, President of our Financial Services division, along with Jerry and I will review highlights of this transaction. But first, let me make a few brief comments on the second quarter and year-to-date numbers we released this morning. Second quarter and year-to-date results include approximately $6.7 million of costs associated with diligence and other professional fees related to the Marcum transaction. Those costs and other acquisition-related costs have been eliminated to present adjusted earnings per share. You will see those costs outlined in the schedules included in the release that reconcile GAAP, EPS to adjusted EPS. There are a number of items included in the second quarter this year that resulted in an unusual year-over-year comparisons. We do not provide guidance on a quarterly basis, but because of those items, we expected the quarter this year to be relatively flat compared to second quarter a year ago. Let me unpack the highlights. A year ago, in 2023, we did a considerable number of employee retention tax credit filings for strategically important CBIZ clients. Second quarter this year, we generated $2.6 million less of nonrecurring project revenue net in connection with those filings. This activity was highly profitable with the majority dropping to the bottom line. The lower level of this non-recurring tax project work presents the second quarter headwind this year impacting adjusted earnings per share by $0.04 per share. In addition, we have talked about our intentional migration from client relationships that do not meet minimum thresholds of profitability. In 2023, late in the year, we made intentional decisions to resign or exit certain client relationships. Of course, over time, replacing those marginal, profitable clients is a very positive move. But in the short run, we may experience temporary shortfalls until new or attractive business ramps up and this impacted quarterly revenue by approximately $2.3 million this year compared to last year. As Jerry mentioned, there was an incident where six CBIZ personnel within our Property & Casualty insurance Southeast region, left CBIZ and joined a competitor. This incident involved a loss of client relationships that would have otherwise generated revenue planned in 2024. There is litigation underway addressing the breach of restrictive covenants. We are not at liberty to comment on further details, but I can share with you that the second quarter revenue was impacted by approximately $2.5 million with an earnings per share impact of approximately $0.03 per share. At the end of the first quarter, I commented that our self-insured health benefits program was incurring higher than normal claims cost. This tends to be somewhat unpredictable and this higher level of claims cost has continued into the second quarter with an incremental $0.02 per share impact in the second quarter and then a year-to-date impact of $0.05 per share. And finally, as we are achieving higher growth rates in recent years for our Benefits and Insurance business, we increased client service staffing levels in the second half last year to support our growth. As a result, comparisons to the first half this year are headwinds and impact earnings per share by approximately $0.02 per share and impact year-to-date results by $0.03 per share. Same unit revenue in the second quarter was up by 2.8%, with acquisitions contributing an additional 2.6% growth compared with last year. For the six months this year, same-unit revenue grew by 4.4%, with acquisitions contributing another 2.7% to revenue growth this year compared with last year. Within Financial Services, for the second quarter, total revenue was up 6.3% and same unit revenue for the second quarter was up 3.0%. For the six months, total revenue within Financial Services was up 7.5% and same unit revenue for the six months was up 4.1%. Within Benefits and Insurance, for the second quarter, total revenue was up 1.6%, impacted by the property and casual incident that I referenced earlier, same-unit revenue was up 0.7%. Absent the impact of the second quarter incident, same-unit revenue would have grown approximately 3.8%. For the six months, same unit revenue grew by 4.2%. And absent the P&C incident, same-unit growth for the six months would have been 5.7%. During the first half of 2024, we completed three acquisitions: EBK, CompuData and EIIA. We are extremely pleased to have these people and those teams on board this year. They are performing in line with our expectations. Now, turning to the cash flow and the balance sheet. On June 30, 2024, the balance outstanding on the $600 million unsecured facility was $381 million with about $210 million of unused capacity. With leverage of approximately 1.7 times, adjusted EBITDA, this provides plenty of cash flow. For the upcoming Marcum acquisition, we have financing commitments in place. And in a moment, I will share details of the -- the financing plan for the market acquisition. In first half of this year, we used approximately $68 million for acquisitions, including earn-out payments on previously closed transactions. For earn-out payments, we expect to use approximately $16.6 million over the remainder of this year, approximately $40.2 million next year in 2025, approximately $15.9 million 2026 and then another $7.5 million in 2027. Since the end of 2019, we have closed 23 acquisitions and we have deployed approximately $457 million of capital for acquisition purposes, including the earn-out payments over that time. Beyond using capital for acquisitions, we have the flexibility and the desire to use capital for share repurchases. Because the Marcum transaction has been under consideration for most of this year, we have not been actively repurchasing shares to date in 2024. Since the end of 2019, we have repurchased approximately 9.4 million shares in the open market, and that represents slightly more than 17% of the shares outstanding compared to the end of 2019. Approximately $342 million of capital has been used towards this open market repurchase activity over that time period. Days sales outstanding on June 30 was 95 days compared with 94 days a year ago. Bad debt expense for the first half was 14 basis points of revenue compared to 9 basis points a year ago. Depreciation and amortization expense for the second quarter was $9.5 million compared with $9.2 million last year. Year-to-date, depreciation and amortization is $19 million compared with $17.8 million last year. For the full year, we expect depreciation and amortization of approximately $37.6 million this year, compared with approximately $36.3 million last year. For those of you who want to highlight the amortization expense, which is primarily driven by the amortization of intangible assets, derived from the acquisitions, for the first half amortization expense was $12 million, and for the full year, this may be approximately $24 million. Capital spending for the first half this year was $7 million, and for the full year, we're expecting capital spending within our normal range of approximately $12 million to $14 million. The effective tax rate for the six months this year was 26.9%, slightly lower than 27.6% from a year ago. For the full year, we continue to project a tax rate of approximately 28%. We expect the Marcum transaction to close in the fourth quarter this year. When the transaction closes, this will give us an opportunity to talk in more detail about guidance for 2025, at that time. Looking at the core business, we saw a number of nonrecurring items impact second quarter and first half growth. We think second half results will reflect stronger year-over-year growth. The property and casualty that I described earlier, is expected to have an impact on full year results. We are projecting a full year 2024 adjusted earnings per share impact of approximately $0.06 per share from this lost business. This leads us to reduce full year earnings per share growth from 12% to 14% to 10% to 12% over the $2.41 reported for 2023, which is essentially reflects property and casualty driven reduction of $0.06 per share. Absent this impact, the balance of the business is performing well and is in line with our expectations. So considering this property and casualty related adjustment and excluding any future impact of the Marcum transaction, I can recap full year guidance for 2024 as follows. We expect total revenue to increase within a range of 7% to 9% for the year. GAAP reported earnings per share, is expected to increase within a range of 6% to 8% over the $2.39 reported for 2023. On an adjusted basis, we expect 2024 adjusted earnings per share to increase within a range of 10% to 12% over the adjusted earnings per share of $2.41 that was reported in 2023. The effective tax rate for the full year this year is expected at approximately 28%. This rate could be impacted either up or down by a number of unpredictable factors. And lastly, the fully diluted weighted average share count is expected within a range of 50 million to 50.5 million shares, for the full year in 2024. So with those comments, let's turn our attention and discussion to the Marcum acquisition announcement. Jerry, I'll turn it back over to you.