Neil Johnston
Analyst · Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead
Thank you, Michelle, and good afternoon, everyone. Second quarter trends demonstrated continued strength in our leasing business and highlights the work we've done to drive improved profitability and cash flow. While fee revenue of $1.6 billion for the second quarter was down 2% versus prior year and adjusted EBITDA of $139 million was down 4%, adjusted EBITDA on a year-to-date basis has grown 6%, and adjusted EPS of $0.20 is $0.02 higher than last year for the six-month period. Our adjusted EBITDA margin for the second quarter increased sequentially to 8.8%, taking the margin for the first six months to 7%, up 44 basis points of a prior year, as cost savings and operational efficiencies offset the impact of inflation and lower revenue. Taking a look at our services line results, our leasing business continues to perform well, growing 2% in the quarter. The growth in Q2 was again largely global in nature, with Americas leasing up 2%, APAC leasing up 7%, and EMEA leasing flat. In the Americas, we continue to see solid performance in mid-sized leasing deals, which demonstrates the breadth of stabilization in the leasing market. Industrial, office, and retail leasing all grew in the quarter. In EMEA, we experienced growth in Central and Eastern Europe, while Germany underperformed. APAC saw particular strength in India and Japan. Our capital markets fee revenue declined 14%. Facing a strong second quarter last year, which was our highest quarter of capital markets revenue for the year, America's capital markets revenue declined 19%, but grew 19% sequentially, showing increased momentum. Revenues in the quarter increased in industrial and retail, while the office and multifamily sectors saw declines. EMEA and APAC continue to show strength up 7% and 19% respectively. Turning to services, revenue was flat versus the prior year, adjusting for the previously discussed contract change, or down 2% as reported. Our APAC services business remained strong, achieving second quarter growth of 9%, once again driven by strong project management performance, particularly in India and Australia. While EMEA services revenues declined in the quarter, we did see services margins grow, setting a solid foundation for profitable growth. In the Americas, services revenue was flat for the quarter, excluding the contract change, or down 3% as reported. Facility services grew 2%, property management revenues were flat, while project development services declined as office clients deferred expansion plans. We expect to see improvements in this business line as office leasing activity accelerates. In our GOS business, we are pleased with some very large wins that we've signed this year, including the global mandate for Standard Chartered Bank. Retail and multifamily transactional volumes have impacted our Greystone joint venture, which experienced a $6 million year-over-year decline in equity income contribution. We expect Greystone earnings to remain pressured in the short term, but to benefit from a transactional market recovery and multifamily when it occurs. Today we announced the divestiture of a small non-core services business. This business has historically contributed $120 million to $140 million in annual revenue at mid-teens margins. We sold the business for a transaction value of $165 million and will receive gross cash proceeds of approximately $130 million at close, which is expected to occur during the third quarter. We plan to use the proceeds for strategic growth investments and debt paydown, consistent with our long-term capital allocation strategy. Shifting to cash flow and the balance sheet, we continue to make considerable progress on free cash flow conversion. Free cash flow for the quarter was $10 million versus a $27 million use of cash in the second quarter of 2023. Our first half cash flow usage of $126 million compares favorably to 2023, improving by over $130 million, driven by our ongoing efforts around working capital efficiencies. During the quarter, we repaid $45 million of term loan debt due in 2025, reducing the outstanding balance to $98 million. We also repriced an additional $1 billion of Term Loan B due in 2030 later in the quarter, lowering the applicable interest rate by 35 basis points. Year-to-date, we've repriced $2 billion in term loans and paid down $100 million in debt, all of which is expected to reduce our annual cash interest expense by approximately $14 million. Finally, moving to our full year outlook. On the revenue side, we continue to expect leasing revenue growth in the low to mid-single-digit range and improving capital markets revenue growth in the second half of the year. In services, we expect flat organic revenue growth, returning to mid-single-digit organic growth during 2025. On the cost side, we expect inflation and higher incentive compensation to be mostly offset by our cost efficiency measures for the full year. In the third quarter, we expect expenses to be roughly $25 million to $30 million higher than last year, primarily due to a resetting of incentive compensation, which had been reduced in last year's third quarter. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Michelle.