Joaquin Castrillo
Analyst · William Blair. Pardon me Mr. Napoli. Your line is open
Thank you, Mac, and good afternoon, everyone. Turning to Slide 8, you will see the consolidated first quarter results for EVERTEC. Total revenue for the first quarter was $139.5 million, up 14% compared to the prior year of $121.9 million COVID-impacted results. Current quarter results reflected strong consumer demand positively impacting all our transactional revenue in Puerto Rico, while also benefiting from our double-digit growth in Lat Am driven by our recent implementations. Additionally, we benefited from onetime revenue related to hardware and software sales in the Dominican Republic of approximately $1 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $68.9 million, an increase of 22% from $56.3 million in the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 49.4%, and this represents a 320 basis point increase compared to the prior year. The increase in margin primarily reflects the higher payment revenue in both Puerto Rico and Latin America while also controlling costs. Adjusted net income for the quarter was $45 million, an increase of 34% as compared to the prior year, primarily reflecting the higher adjusted EBITDA and lower cash interest expense. This was partially offset by increased operating depreciation and amortization driven by capital expenditures in the prior year as was key projects that went into production last year. Our adjusted effective tax rate in the quarter was 14.7%, reflecting some discrete tax items that impacted the quarter. And we now expect our tax rate for the full year to range from 13% to 14%, depending on the mix of business. Adjusted EPS was $0.62 for the quarter, an increase of 35% compared to the prior year. Moving on to Slide 9. I'll now cover our segment results, starting with Merchant Acquiring. In the first quarter, Merchant Acquiring net revenue increased 23% year-over-year to approximately $30.9 million driven by the impact of increased sales volume. Results benefited from higher sales volume as well as higher spread, in part driven by a higher average ticket, which was up 15%. March results contributed almost 60% of the year-over-year revenue increase as we lap the full lockdown the last two weeks of March last year. The results also benefited from new stimulus, such as the $600 approved toward the end of the prior year that were distributed in Puerto Rico starting in February, as well as positive impact from increased EBT funds that began to be distributed in March and that will run throughout the second quarter. We also benefited from a mix shift to higher-margin businesses, such as restaurants and retail, as well as some continued card mix shift from credit to debit and from international to local cards. Lastly, we also benefited from the expanded relationship with FirstBank for a portion of the month of March. Adjusted EBITDA for the segment was $15.5 million, up 38%. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 50.3%, up approximately 540 basis points as compared to last year, reflecting the impact of the higher average ticket and higher spreads as we continue to drive higher revenues with less transactions. On Slide 10, you will see the results for the Payment Services, Puerto Rico and the Caribbean segment. Revenue for the segment in the first quarter was $36.3 million, up approximately 21%, with a similar monthly pattern of the merchant segment in the first two months of the quarter and then over 33% growth in March as compared to last year. The revenue growth was primarily due to higher ATH Movil and ATH Movil Business transactions, contributing an incremental $2.5 million in the quarter, largely driven by ATH Movil Business. We also saw growth in POS transactions, which was the first positive quarter since the pandemic started and driven by the month of March when compared to prior year, which was negatively impacted by the lockdown. Additionally, we benefited from intersegment revenue for transactional processing and risk monitoring in Puerto Rico for Latin America. Adjusted EBITDA for the segment was $20.8 million, up 29% as compared to last year. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 57.4%, up 360 basis points as compared to last year, primarily due to higher revenue and the impact from the pandemic to last year's margin given the negative impact to revenues in a segment with a high percentage of fixed costs. On Slide 11, you will see the results for our Payment Services Lat Am segment. Revenue for the segment in the first quarter was $25 million, up approximately 16% as compared to last year. This increase was driven by implementation such as Santander Chile as well as increased revenue from PlacetoPay. Adjusted EBITDA for the segment was $10 million, and adjusted EBITDA margin was 40.1%, up approximately 200 basis points as compared to last year, driven by higher revenue and the benefit of balance sheet remeasurement in nonfunctional currencies of approximately $0.2 million. This Lat Am margin is currently benefiting from established minimums in the Santander contract with low transaction levels. And we would expect margins to move toward mid- to high 30s as transactions increase over time. On Slide 12, you will find the results for the Business Solutions segment. Business Solutions revenue for the first quarter was up approximately 8% to $60.6 million. The revenue increase in the quarter benefited from approximately $1 million in onetime revenue for hardware and software sales in the Dominican Republic. We are also benefiting from the shift to digital channels as the higher volume of online users continues to drive growth over prior year as well as an increase in service volumes. Additionally, we benefited from new services that began in 2020 for Popular and the Department of Education. For the quarter, adjusted EBITDA was $29.6 million and adjusted EBITDA margin was 48.9%, down approximately 20 basis points as compared to last year. The adjusted EBITDA margin decrease was primarily driven by the mix of revenue, which included lower-margin hardware and software sales as well as costs related to the new services. Moving on to Slide 13, you will see a summary of Corporate and Other. Our first quarter adjusted EBITDA was a negative $7.1 million, an increase of 5% compared to prior year. Our adjusted EBITDA as a percentage of total revenue was 5.1%, unfavorable by approximately 50 basis points as compared to prior year primarily due to the high revenues in the quarter. Moving on to our cash flow overview on Slide 14. Our beginning cash balance was approximately $221 million, including restricted cash of approximately $18 million. Net cash provided by operating activities was approximately $35 million, nearly $1 million increase compared to prior year. Capital expenditures were approximately $17 million, in part driven by higher obsolescence spend as we accelerate some projects as well as continuous focus on innovation. Regarding capital expenditures for the full year, we now anticipate approximately $50 million to $55 million of CapEx. We also recorded approximately $15 million for the extension and expansion of our relationship with FirstBank, including the acquisition of the merchant contracts. We also purchased debt securities in the amount of $3 million in response to a new regulatory requirement in Costa Rica directly related to our settlement services in the country and which require we provide these securities as collateral through the Central Bank. We paid approximately $21 million in long-term debt payments, which included approximately $17 million related to an excess cash flow feature in our credit agreement. We also paid $9 million in withholding taxes on share-based compensation and $1 million of other debt paydowns, which resulted in a total net debt decrease of approximately $31 million. We paid cash dividends of $4 million and repurchased approximately 383,000 shares of common stock at an average price of $37.26 for a total of approximately $14 million. We have approximately $86 million available for future use under the company's share repurchase program. Lastly, we had approximately $3 million of benefit on cash in foreign currency, resulting in our ending cash balance as of March 31 of $175 million. And this included approximately $19 million of restricted cash. Additionally, we recently announced another $0.05 dividend to be paid on June 4, 2021, to shareholders of record of May 3, 2021. Moving on to Slide 15, you will find a summary of our debt as of March 31, 2021. Our quarter ending net debt position was approximately $323 million comprised of approximately $156 million of unrestricted cash and approximately $479 million of total short-term borrowings and long-term debt. Our weighted average interest rate was 4.5%. Our net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA was approximately 1.7 times. As of March 31, total liquidity was approximately $273 million. This balance excludes restricted cash and includes the available borrowing capacity under our revolver. Moving to Slide 16, I will now provide you with an update on our 2021 outlook as well as some comments on Q2. Given our Q1 results and additional visibility, we now expect revenue to be in the range of $543 million to $552 million, representing growth of 6% to 8%. Our adjusted earnings per share outlook of $2.25 to $2.32 represents a range of 9% to 12% as compared to the adjusted earnings per share in 2020 of $2.07. On a GAAP basis, earnings per share is anticipated to be between $1.70 to $1.77. We had a strong Q1 and expect to see a similar level of revenue in Q2 given the tailwinds from stimulus programs. The benefits from the new contract that Mac mentioned were already considered in the guidance range, as we previously provided. Regarding the back half of the year, we continued to anticipate revenues to be flat to down given the strong performance in last year's second half, driven by high levels of stimulus funds as well as benefits from COVID-related services and the impact of onetime revenues, such as the Department of Education project and other projects that we completed in the prior year. We now believe adjusted EBITDA margins will be in a range of 47% to 47.5%. We continue to expect some headwinds from the normalization of the average ticket and the high-margin benefit of the Department of Education contract last year as well as a negative impact from foreign currency remeasurement, which was favorable by over $4 million in the second half of last year. As I mentioned previously, our non-GAAP effective tax rate was higher in Q1. And we now anticipate the full year rate to be in a range of 13% to 14% based on the mix of business and net discrete tax items that impacted Q1. This guidance also includes the benefit of the share repurchases in Q1. One other item of note are related to our quarter that I want to make you aware of. In addition to finding our 10-Q, we will also be filing a Shelf registration or S-3 that relates to Popular's shares of EVERTEC. While we don't have any knowledge of Popular's intent to sell EVERTEC shares at this time, this is a required filing on our stockholder agreement with Popular. In summary, we are excited about the impressive results in Q1, which led us to raise our guidance, and we are on track with our plans for 2021. We look forward to hopefully seeing you in person at our upcoming conferences later in the year. Finally, I want to share with you the news that Kay is retiring from EVERTEC next month. I've been working closely with Kay over the past six years and can attest to the significant contributions Kay has brought to this leadership team, which go well beyond Investor Relations. I am a huge fan of Kay and everything she does and will miss her dearly. Thank you for everything, Kay, and the best of luck in this new chapter. Mac, do you want to say some words?