Roberto Simon
Analyst · William Blair
Thank you, Melissa, good morning, everyone. I will begin with quarterly results on slide number nine. For the first quarter of 2017 our total revenue was $331.3 million, a 14% increase over the prior year period. Non-GAAP adjusted net income was $64.5 million or $1.49 per diluted share, up 16% from $1.28 for the same period last year. I'm pleased to report that both of these numbers are over the high end of our guidance range. This represents another quarter of a strong organic revenue and adjusted net income growth across all our businesses. In addition, we experienced tailwinds in FX rates from fuel prices, which also contributed to the solid performance. Before we get into the segment level details, I want to pause for a moment on slide 10 to discuss our top-line results for the full year. We are excited with our 2017 performance, and would like to note that revenue growth was 23% compare to 2016, with about 13% of that coming from the benefits of higher fuel prices, positive FX rates and acquisitions. All our core businesses contributed to these robust results, including our Fleet segment, Health and Employee Benefit segment and our International Travel business. This is a result of the strong execution, which I have been highlighting throughout the year. Now, on to the segment results, beginning with the slide 11. The Fleet Solutions segment achieved $219.8 million in revenues, an increase of 14% compared to prior year. Both payment processing revenue and late fee revenue increase 17% versus last year. Payment processing transactions increased 9% when compared to Q4, last year. Finally, our average domestic fuel price in Q4 was $2.68 versus $2.30. We see a number of positive trends across the fleet segment. First, we saw solid organic transaction growth. Second, same-store sales were positive at 1.6%. And third, we continue to maintain low attrition rates. EFS posted a very solid quarter again, with fleet revenue up 11% over last year. We saw solid growth in both volumes and transactions year-over-year. Integration and platform consolidation continue to run smoothly, and we have achieved our targeted run rate synergies of $25 million much earlier than we originally planned. Finally, in the Fleet segment we had $11.6 million in additional revenue over last year and approximately $3 million when compared to our guidance due to higher fuel prices. Both numbers are net of the spread impact in Europe. In Travel and Corporate Solutions, on slide number 12, revenue for the fourth quarter increased 13% due to volume growth, higher international settlement fees and the acquisition of AOC. Total purchase volume, which excludes acquisitions reached $7.4 billion. This equates to 17% organic growth, which is coming from all geographies. AOC revenue for the quarter was $6.7 million, which was in line with our expectations we gave at the beginning of the year. We have very positive trends in revenue diversification with close to 30% growth outside of the U.S. Travel business led by Europe and Brazil. The net interchange rate in the fourth quarter was 53 basis points, which was up 2 basis points compared to Q3 due to the seasonal decline in Travel volumes at the end of the year. This was in line with expectations we gave at the beginning of the year. Moving on to slide 13, for Health and Employee Benefit Solutions segment, revenue for the fourth quarter increased 14%. The U.S. Healthcare business again grew more than 20% for the ninth consecutive quarter. This is our long-term growth expectations for the business, impart due to the fast on-boarding of Bank of America. New business added during the most recent opened enrollment period is solid and the pipeline remains strong. We continue to believe that the fundamentals are in place for a high-teens growth trajectory in the long-term. As expected, we did see a slowdown in our Brazilian Benefits business after a remarkable growth over the last two year. For the quarter, revenue was down 8%. Even with the result in the quarter, revenue growth for the full year was 51%. Moving down to income statements on a slide number 14, for the fourth quarter total company operating expenses on a GAAP basis were $264.1 million. Salary expense for the company was a $101.7 million, up from $79.5 million. There is a number of items driving this increase. First, the acquisition of AOC added more than 150 people. Second, we continue to invest in high growth areas. Third, we brought certain technology functions back in-house, which are offset in service fees. And finally, based on our strong results we are increasing our variable compensation for the full year. I am pleased to report that during the fourth quarter credit loss on a consolidated basis total $13.2 million, which is in line with the prior year. In the Fleet segment, credit loss was 10.8 basis points of the spend volume, which is significantly lower than last year and much better than our guidance for the quarter. The actions we have taken over the past few quarters have dramatically reduced our fraud related losses. For the quarter, fraud represented 3.3 basis points down from the pick of nearly 13 basis points in Q2. On top of the investments we have made in peopled and improved processes, our new real-time software is fully operational. Although we had a onetime operational write-off this quarter in our factoring business, our Fleet portfolio remains in very good shape. Excluding fraud Fleet credit losses declined to 7.5 basis points, which is the lowest Q4 since we became a public company. Now on to slide 15 to discuss tax, due to the Tax Reform Act in December our GAAP tax rate this quarter ended up negative 44%. It goes without saying this tax is now representative of our ongoing operations. The change in the rate was driven by our long time tax benefit of more than $50 million as a result of the re-measurement of our deferred tax liabilities and the transition tax on certain and repatriated earnings of foreign subsidiaries. Our non-GAAP adjusted net income tax rates, which excludes these items and other ANI adjustments was 36% compared to 37% a year ago. I will now be discussing our balance sheet on a slide 16. We ended the quarter with $500 million in cash, up from $191 million at the end of last year. The majority of the increase is timing related at our bank. At year end we had a total balance of $2.1 billion on the revolving line of credit, term loans and notes. Our leverage ratio, as defined in our credit agreement it stands at approximately 3.7 times, down from 4.5 times at the end of last year, this is better than we anticipated. We have been very active around our debt over the past several quarters. We completed the pricing of both our Term A and Term B loans back in July, which reduced our spreads by 50 and 75 basis points respectively. This led to the reduction in overall financing interest costs in Q4 compare to last year. In January 2018, we completed another re-pricing of our Term B loan reducing the spread another 50 basis points. Based on the yearend levels, this will save the company approximately $6 million in 2018. Finally, during the quarter, we enter into new interest rate swaps covering $500 million of finance in debt, which is intended to fix the interest rate for the next five years at a weighted average of 221 basis points. With these swaps in place, we now have only $400 million of financing debt at floating rates. Before we move to our guidance, I would like to spend a minute addressing two additional topics. The revenue recognition is standards, and a change to our reporting that we are planning to make in Q1. Moving to slide 17, I would like to discuss the new standards for reporting revenue that take effect beginning in 2018. The impact to it are not material. We have two areas, where we will have to reclassify revenues and expenses. First, rebates paid to certain partners which historically have been netted in revenue will be shown as an expense going forward. Second, network fees we pay to Master Card and Visa, which historically have been shown as an expanse will be reclassified to contra revenue. The net impact of these changes is expected to be an increase to revenue of about $20 million in 2018, although they vary by segments. Most of these changes will impact the net interchange rates that we report each quarter. There is no impact to earnings. We are also planning changes to the presentation of our income statement beginning with the first quarter earnings release in 2018. We will be moving to a more traditional income statement view similar to how our peers quarterly report, including cost of sales and SG&A expenses. We are not making any changes to the way our revenues presented, but we will be making changes to some cost allocations within our current segments. Now, let's look at our guidance on slide 18. Note, that these expectations reflect our views as of today and are made on a non-GAAP basis with respect to adjusted net income. Before we get into the numbers, I want to give you some puts and takes that should be considered when modeling 2018. First and most important, the guidance is within the long-term target of 10% to 15% growth in revenue and 15% to 20% growth in earnings, even when you exclude the benefits of fuel prices and lower taxes. In the Fleet segment, we expect to maintain the strong transaction growth rates we have seen recently and expect Chevron portfolio to come to our platform during the second half of the year. We also look forward to continue making progress in our international fleet businesses, including Europe and Asia. We will continue to benefit from higher fuel prices. In the Travel and Corporate Payment segment, revenues expected to return to historical rates growth, fueled by strong volume growth from our travel, corporate payments and the AOC acquisition. The net interchange rate will come down marginally, compared to this year mainly due to volume growth and mix. Regarding the Health and Employee Benefit segment, over the long-term we expect our U.S. Healthcare business to grow revenue in the high-teens. We had a very rapid conversion of the Bank of America portfolio, which pull forward some revenue into 2017 that we expected in 2018 and we have one customer bringing some back office services in-house. So for this year we expect revenue growth in the low to mid double-digits. In the Brazil Benefits business we have seen two years of outsize revenue performance, with 100% revenue growth in 2016 and over 50% revenue growth in 2017. Looking forward, we are expecting growth to normalize and we anticipate capitalizing on the investments we have made over the past two years. On the financing side, interest rates continued to rise and we are anticipating LIBOR to increase approximately 75 basis points on average for the year. As I mentioned before, this increase will only impact our $400 million in floating rate financing debt. In addition, we have approximately $1.3 billion in the deposits with different maturity dates, which will delay the impact of the higher rates. Finally, the tax act is highly complex and we continue to assess the impact of the various changes to our business. The company expects its 2018 adjusted net income tax rate for the full year to be between 25% and 27%. The assumed reduction in the tax rate is adding $0.90 to $1.10 per share to our EPS guidance. For the full year, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.40 billion to $1.44 billion and adjusted net income in the range of $315 million to $332 million. On an EPS basis, we expect adjusted net income to be $7.30 to $7.70 per diluted share. For the first quarter we expect revenue to be in the range of $333 million to $343 million and adjusted net income to be in the range of $72 million to $75 million or $1.66 to $1.74 per diluted share. We assume that domestic fuel prices will average $2.70 in the first quarter and $2.65 per gallon for the full year. These assumptions for the U.S. is based on the applicable NYMEX future price from this week. This guidance is based on exchange rates at the end of January. We assume that our fleet credit loss will be between 12 and 17 basis points for the first quarter and between 11 and 16 basis points for the full year. This includes 2 to 4 basis points related to fraud. Finally we're assuming that there will be approximately 43 million shares outstanding. And now, we are opening the line for questions.