John Wasson
Analyst · Canaccord. Your line is now open
Thank you, Lynn, and thank you all for participating in today's call to review our second quarter earnings and discuss our business outlook. I'm pleased to report that this was another quarter of strong performance for ICF. First, we continue to build our position in high-growth markets, led in the second quarter by our work in digital transformation, public health and disaster management. Together, our growth markets, which also include utility consulting, as well as climate, environment and infrastructure services, now account for over 70% of our service revenue. Second, profitability continued to improve. Adjusted EBITDA to service revenue increased by 20 basis points year-on-year while we continued with our investments in people and technology to support future growth. Third, we ended the quarter with a 1.21 trailing 12-month book-to-bill ratio, strengthening our full year revenue visibility, and a record $8.7 billion new business pipeline, which we expect to result in considerable growth in contract awards in the second half of this year. Last, but certainly not least, in the second quarter we announced the definitive agreement to acquire SemanticBits, which was an exceptional strategic success for ICF and is a key factor in our increased full year revenue and margin guidance. We subsequently closed this transaction on July 13, 2022. Second quarter revenue growth was again led by federal government client work, which increased by 23.6% and reflected organic growth and the acquisition of Creative Systems and Consulting, which we completed at the end of 2021. The acquisition is performing well, in line with our expectations for mid-teens revenue growth, and we see significant opportunities for revenue synergies by bringing in Creative's substantial expertise in Salesforce and Microsoft platforms to our broad roster of civilian agency clients. The SemanticBits acquisition represented a step change in our digital transformation capabilities. As one of the industry's leading digital service and platform providers using open source, SemanticBit's expertise across 30 technology platforms using a fully agile approach complements our existing capabilities in this fast-growing market. Their demonstrated success in executing large health IT projects, together with ICF's deep domain expertise, will enable us to support larger, more complex projects across federal civilian agencies. We are seeing a lot of large open-source opportunities across our civilian space, and adding SemanticBits increases our potential win rates. At the same time, with the vast majority of its revenues derived from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, SemanticBits opens up a large new addressable market for us, giving ICF scale at CMS, an agency with substantial and growing budgets. With SemanticBits, our digital transformation business has an annual run rate of approximately $500 million. Additionally, as you can see by our revised guidance for the full year, this is a strongly accretive transaction for ICF on a non-GAAP EPS basis, with only 5.5 months of ownership. In addition to digital transformation, public health remained a robust growth market for ICF, with revenue increasing at a double-digit rate, on track for an annualized run rate of approximately $350 million. Of note is our recent win as 1 of 5 awardees of a new IDIQ by the National Cancer Institute's Division of Cancer, Epidemiology and Genetics Research. We will be competing for up to $320 million over 10 years to provide epidemiologic and clinical operation support for studies and other research activities to discover the causes of cancer and inform future prevention. The Department of Health and Human Services is our largest client by far, and the 11% increase they received as part of the 2022 budget provides substantial funds for programs that are squarely within our sweet spot, like this IDIQ we just won. Additionally, we are seeing an accelerated effort behind preparing for the next pandemic, both at the Centers for Disease Control and as part of the planned reorganization that would create the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, or ASPR, as a separate division that will be charged with the nation's response to health emergencies. ICF is well-positioned at both the CDC and legacy ASPR to assist in this phase of the post-pandemic response. Also, as we have discussed on past calls and our Investor Day this past May, ICF is well-positioned to gain new contracts relating to the Infrastructure and Jobs Act, or IIJA, where we've already been tasked under existing federal agency contracts to provide a range of services, including technical assistance, assistance to states and communication and management support for IIJA programs. This tasking today is valued in excess of $12 million. Our federal government pipeline was at a record $5.9 billion at the end of the second quarter, and the backlog of pending awards in the federal government is significant, so we expect to see considerable growth in contract awards in the second half of this year. We also saw strong growth year-on-year of 9.5% in our revenues from state and local government clients, led by our disaster management work. Late last year, the Department of Housing and Urban Development announced more than $2 billion in CDBG-DR/mitigation funding for disasters occurring during the 2020/21 cycles. Of the grant recipients for that cycle, ICF won work on more than half the awards to support those recoveries in the second quarter, including in Iowa, Colorado, New Jersey, Alaska, Kentucky and Michigan, either through competitive procurements or extensions of existing contracts. Additionally, we continued to see government at all levels ramping up spending on mitigation, and ICF is now working on mitigation efforts for 30-plus clients in 14 states. We do have a unique set of strengths in understanding the complexity of mitigation projects across multiple federal programs, including successfully managing applications and then orchestrating execution to meet environmental, regulatory and legislative requirements to bring such projects to fruition. These capabilities give ICF a competitive advantage, which we expect to become more important as the IIJA funds flow through state and local agencies. As expected, revenues from international government clients were lower year-on-year due to the completion of a short-term project with significant pass-through revenues that drove exceptional growth in this client category in 2021. Excluding that project, revenues were similar to the year ago second quarter levels, even though our work for the European Union has not fully recovered from pandemic impacts. In addition to contract modification and add-ons to our existing international public sector work, ICF continued to win multiyear framework contracts in this market, including two large recompetes with the European Commission, one to provide consulting support on technical projects throughout member states; the other to promote and market EU agricultural products in countries outside the EU. Also, we have a strong active pipeline for international public sector clients comprised of opportunities to leverage ICF's capabilities, both our technical areas of subject matter expertise, as well as our cost-cutting competencies in training and technical assistance, program implementation, communications and event management. Moving to our commercial client category. Similar to the first quarter, lower year-on-year revenue comparisons continued to reflect the softness in commercial marketing services and the exceptional growth we had in commercial energy in last year's first half, which has made for difficult comparisons this year. We continue to closely manage commercial marketing services as they work to recover from pandemic-related impacts on key verticals. Second quarter revenues accounted for less than 7% of our total revenues and were stable on a sequential basis, an early indication that the business may be bottoming out. We've also had some preliminary conversations with a couple of clients in the hospitality sector recently about potential increases in support for their loyalty programs if business travel demonstrates a stable improvement in the second half of this year. Lastly, our aviation consulting business continues to perform very well, growing at a double-digit rate. Of course, the major long-term growth area within our commercial business is energy markets, which accounted for 62% of second quarter commercial revenues. Second quarter trends in energy were almost identical to those of the first quarter. Energy markets were up about 1% after having increased 11.4% in the similar period last year. Energy efficiency work was up the same 1.3% that it was in the first quarter. And energy markets advisory revenue increased at a mid-single-digit rate. The early year-on-year decline was in our environmental and infrastructure work where the timing of projects can impact quarter-to-quarter revenues. We expect higher year-on-year comparisons in the second half of this year. As also discussed last quarter, the energy market pipeline remains strong for ICF core services and energy efficiency program implementation, beneficial electrification, utility marketing services and advisory consulting. Our utility programs and service practice has a pipeline in excess of $1 billion, and we see expansion opportunities in new states, including Connecticut, Oregon, Colorado and the District of Columbia as regulators and legislators set aggressive new goals. For beneficial electrification, our pipeline is now more than triple our pipeline in 2021, and the pipeline for our energy advisory business is the strongest it's been in the past 3 years. Similarly, we're seeing increased demand for our climate services. In this area, we serve federal, state and local government and commercial clients, and each of these client categories is growing. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently selected ICF as an awardee under the new multiple award Environmental, Analytical, Research, Technical and Hybrid or otherwise known as EARTH Support Services blanket purchase agreement to provide a broad range of environmental consulting services to the office of Air and Radiation. This five year BPA has a ceiling value of $5.7 billion across five awardees, with $700 million of the award allocated to professional services. And of course, we're pleased to hear that the Congress appears much closer to passing climate-related legislation as part of the Inflation Reduction Act, which will provide ICF with opportunities across our government and commercial client set. To sum up, in the first half of 2022, we have continued to build our capabilities in the key growth markets we have identified, and we are approaching the many opportunities in front of us with increased scale, deep domain expertise and substantial experience in executing on large and complex projects. This, combined with our record pipeline of over $9 billion as of July 31 and a trailing 12-monthbook-to-bill at 1.21 at the end of Q2, all support our expectation for significant growth in 2022 and beyond. Now I'll turn the call over to Barry Broadus, our CFO, for a financial review.