Evan Russo
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
Hey, Richard. It’s Evan. Let me start with that. I think the way you think about it, as you pointed out, non-comp this year was obviously at a lower level. And this reflects the lower T&E and business development as well as some other discipline on costs that we had through the course of the pandemic and really heightened when we saw the slowdown at the beginning of this year, but a large driver of the decline in non-comp this year truly came from lower T&E. Offsetting that, as you mentioned, was the continued focus we have on technology, which was up year-over-year. And we expect that to continue to grow as we continue to invest in technology for some of the reasons that Ken just mentioned before, but also areas that we think are super, super important to us. So I think as you think about non-comp for the coming year, I think you are starting with a lower T&E base. If I kind of look out, hard to predict where that goes. But certainly Q1, probably Q2 was going to be at a much more diminished level, probably similar to where we were at the end of 2020. I guess all hope is that where the economy goes back to normal and the environment goes back to a more normalized pace as we get into the latter half of 2020 to 2021, and so it starts to creep back up more towards normalized levels. But I think the way we think about it is you’re starting from a lower point, you’re certainly getting some cost savings associated with T&E. Every quarter, it does grow a little bit, and it’s hard to predict where it’s going to be going forward. Longer term, I would say it’s going to ramp, but probably a little more slowly. And ultimately, if you kind of think out beyond 2021, we expect that there’ll probably be some additional benefits in T&E to persist, probably maxes out at somewhere of 70%, maybe 80% of pre-COVID levels. So we simply developed new ways to engage with our clients, new ways to execute transactions. We’ve learned that a lot of efficiencies to be gotten from things that we are constantly traveling for, we can do now by video, which is more efficient for clients as well as for the transaction themselves. Ultimately, we hope that – client interaction is critical for our business. It’s a hallmark of who we are at Lazard. And we’re going to continue to get back on the road to meet face-to-face with clients. It’s probably just the pace and the frequency you’re going to change, which will create some efficiency. So I think longer term, I think there’s certainly benefits on the non-comp side. In the shorter term, there is definitely benefits from lower travel in the first half of this year and probably drifts back up as you get towards the second half of the year and technology investments is going to continue to remain a focus for us. We are focusing on efficiencies to create a better work environment for our people, creating better remote tools, continuing to invest, as Ken said before, in the infrastructure, the edge, the creation of edge in our business and, of course, security. And look, I leave you with it. It’s important to remember, and I don’t think we can stress this enough that we think done right, technology investment is going to lead to an enormous competitive advantage and ultimately should lead to long-term value creation. So I think it’s going to continue to focus. We are going to continue to reinvest some of the savings of T&E into that. But hopefully, we will be somewhere in the lower part of our range, maybe towards the middle end of our range as we get through the year.