Neil Johnston
Analyst · JPMorgan
Thank you, Michelle, and good afternoon, everyone. We were 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, fee revenue declined 3% in the Americas, grew 3% in EMEA and grew 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 service 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 a particular strength in midsized office and industrial leasing which grew in each of our subregions for the first time since the fourth quarter of 2022.
In EMEA, we transacted on a large deal in Germany, which accounted for roughly 1/3 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 of the 10% in the quarter.
In APAC, India continues to see healthy growth supported by durable megatrends in global outsourcing and data centers. 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 pickup in pipeline conversion early in the quarter, particularly in office transactions, as interest rates were relatively stable and bid as spreads narrowed.
In EMEA, buyer and 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 reversal of trends 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 the contract change. And in EMEA, Services revenue declined 9% as we continue to reposition our services 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 reacceleration 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. As 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 1 month SOFR plus 4.00% to 1-month term SOFR plus 3.75%. 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 higher 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.