Chad Abraham
Analyst · JMP Securities. Your line is open
Good morning, everyone. Deb Schoneman, our President and Tim Carter, our CFO and I would like to thank you for joining our first quarter 2020 call. We hope you and your families are staying healthy and safe. We will go through our prepared remarks and then open up the call for questions. First, let me start by thanking all of my employee partners. I continue to be impressed by your hard work, perseverance and determination during these unprecedented times. Your continued display of incredible partnership with one another and dedication to our clients is remarkable. Deb, Tim and I were with you at the end of January, discussing record 2019 results and our optimism for 2020 as all of our businesses started the year strong. But as we entered March, it became increasingly apparent that the impact of COVID-19 would change our world. On March 11, the World Health Organization characterized the COVID-19 outbreak as a global pandemic. The rising uncertainty wreaked havoc in the equity and fixed income markets, and the volatility and the speed of change was historic and unprecedented. The human toll this pandemic has inflicted in terms of lives and economic hardship is staggering. It is difficult to overstate how profound the world has changed in the last 8 weeks. We are doing our part in response to COVID-19 while continuing to focus on the needs of our stakeholders. Our first and top priority continues to be the health and well-being of our employees. We shifted to a remote working environment, with over 90% of our employees working from home, and have expanded certain employee benefits for those impacted by COVID-19. For our clients, we are focused on delivering the best guidance in service. We are in constant communication with our clients, sharing best practices, discussing the impact of this environment on their strategic initiatives, evaluating current and future capital needs and finding liquidity in rapidly changing markets. Our technology infrastructure has been resilient, supporting our remote workforce and this surge in activity. For our shareholders, we are prudently managing capital and costs. We entered this crisis with a strong balance sheet and ample liquidity, and we are taking actions to reduce costs, maintain liquidity and preserve capital to ensure we remain in this position as we believe this strength will be our advantage in this current environment and beyond. For our communities, we established a special employee giving campaign with a corporate match program. Contributions will support local food banks in each of our major markets. Let me provide some overall comments on our financial results before turning to our corporate investment banking businesses. For the first quarter of 2020, we generated $245 million of adjusted net revenues. This quarter marks the first quarter with Sandler on our platform and they performed very well. Our financial services business has a broad range of [indiscernible] which allows for more consistent performance across varying market cycles. It is worth noting, as we go through these difficult times, how the legacy Sandler team performed during the last crisis. Sandler was the most active financial advisor in recapitalizing banks and restructuring their balance sheets. In addition, we have already seen significant referrals and closed a healthcare M&A deal in April that was referred by our financial services team. As I noted at the outset of the call, the year began with solid performances through February and as extreme volatility struck in March, our investment banking businesses slowed appreciably, while our brokerage businesses delivered strong revenues. The breadth of the Sandler financial services group and deep expertise with banks contributed to our strong fixed income revenues in the quarter. On the equity side, the expanded platform we built last year in terms of account coverage and execution capabilities through our acquisition of Weeden was a significant driver of the impressive Q1 performance this business delivered. From where we sit today, the timing and path to recovery from COVID-19 and its related effects remain unclear, and we expect some of our businesses to be impacted meaningfully for the remainder of the year. Turning now to advisory services, we generated $111 million of revenues for the first quarter of 2020, down from a very strong fourth quarter of 2019 and in line with the year ago quarter, which included a couple of large fees. Our healthcare team was the largest contributor in the quarter, followed by the financial services group and a solid contribution from the consumer team. We advised on 57 transactions with an aggregate value of $7.6 billion. Activity in the market, both announced and completed deal values, were down approximately 30% sequentially. We expect M&A revenues to decline in the second quarter as companies evaluate the changing and uncertain environment and transactions take longer and become more difficult to close. Turning now to corporate financing, which includes both equity and debt capital raising for our corporate clients. Corporate financing activity generated revenues of $25 million for the first quarter of 2020, led by our healthcare team. Revenues in the quarter declined compared to a strong fourth quarter and increased compared to the prior year quarter as the result of more book run deals. The heightened volatility in March shut down equity capital raising activity. Our corporate financing activity has started out strong in the second quarter as we have already completed several equity financings in the healthcare space. Debt financing has also started to show signs of improvement and we are excited about our prospects, especially in the financial services sector to assist clients raising debt to manage through this challenging environment. Let me finish with some updates on our strategic initiatives and headcount for investment banking. As we discussed before, our partnership with Sandler is off to a great start with wide collaboration across business areas. We believe we are a destination of choice for talented professionals and high-quality franchises looking to grow their businesses. During the quarter, we hired three investment banking managing directors to our diversified industrials and services group. We ended the quarter with 128 investment banking managing directors, and our platform represents one of the broadest in the middle market. This headcount includes our largest class of MD promotes. Developing our own talent is the most sustainable and profitable growth, and we remain focused on building from within. Lastly, in February, we announced our plan to acquire The Valence Group, a premier international investment bank specializing in the chemicals, materials and related sectors. The Valence Group consists of 29 professionals with offices in New York and London. The acquisition, which closed in April, strengthens our presence in Europe, another strategic priority, while adding another industry-leading advisory practice to our platform. We believe that the acquisitions of Sandler, Weeden and Valence have collectively strengthened our platform by adding scale and diversification, broadening our industry verticals and expanding our product capabilities. Working through the current environment and its challenges has reinforced for us the importance of each of these attributes. As we look ahead, we are mindful of the volatility and challenges in our markets and for our clients. Despite a difficult operating environment in the near term, our long-term strategy of building enduring market-leading franchises has not changed. Deep sector expertise built on multi-decade relationships is more important than ever in this environment. Within the middle market, we have one of the broadest and deepest footprints. For example, Refinitiv rankings of mid-market M&A at financial advisors show that for the first quarter of 2020, we were ranked number one based on the number of announced deals in the U.S. While near term, we expect our M&A revenues to decline, reflecting the overall market environment, we are starting to see some activity in restructuring and balance sheet advisory, and we anticipate a continued ramp in corporate equity and debt new issues. However, we don’t expect this ramp in activity will fully offset the impact to our M&A business. We believe the diversification and scale of our businesses will be resilient and position us for success over the longer term. Now I will turn the call over to Deb to discuss our public finance and brokerage businesses.