AECOM (ACM) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good morning, and welcome to the AECOM First Quarter 2021 Conference Call. I would like to inform all participants this call is being recorded at the request of AECOM. This broadcast is copyrighted property of AECOM. Any rebroadcast of this information in whole or part without the prior written permission of AECOM is prohibited. As a reminder, AECOM is also simulcasting this presentation with slides at the Investors section at www.aecom.com . I would like to turn the call over to Will Gabrielski, Senior Vice President, Finance, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Will Gabrielski: Thank you, operator. I would like to direct your attention to the safe harbor statement on Page 1 of today's presentation. Today's discussion contains forward-looking statements about future business and financial expectations. Actual results may differ significantly from those projected in today's forward-looking statements due to various risks and uncertainties, including the risks described in our periodic reports filed with the SEC. Except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update our forward-looking statements. We use certain non-GAAP financial measures in our presentation. The appropriate GAAP financial reconciliations are incorporated into our presentation where available, which is posted on our Web site. As a reminder, we sold the Management Services business last January and sold our Power and Civil Construction businesses in October of 2020 and January of 2021, respectively. These businesses are classified as discontinued operations in our financial statements. Today's comments will focus on the continuing operations of the Professional Services business, unless otherwise noted. Today's references to margins and adjusted operating margins reflect segment level performance for the Americas and International segment. We will also refer to net service revenue, or NSR, which is defined as revenue excluding subcontractor and other direct costs. Our discussions of NSR growth rates will adjust for two fewer available working days in this year's first quarter as compared to the prior year period. Our discussion of margins will be on an NSR basis unless otherwise noted. On today's call, Troy Rudd, our Chief Executive Officer, will begin with a review of our strategy and key accomplishments. Lara Poloni, our President, will discuss key operational priorities. And Gaurav Kapoor, our CFO, will review our financial performance and outlook in greater detail. We will conclude with a question-and-answer session. With that, I will turn the call over to Troy. Troy? Troy Rudd: Thank you, Will, and thank you all for joining us today. I'd like to begin by first acknowledging and thanking our 47,000 professionals who have contributed to a great start for the year and are the key reason for our success and trajectory. I'm proud of how our employees have responded over the past year and continue to focus on the health and safety of their families, clients and communities. We have built a track record of consistently exceeding our expectations over the past two years, and our first quarter performance continues this momentum. This is a direct result of the commitment of our teams to leverage the strength of our platform and delivered amid an uncertain backdrop. Lara Poloni: Thanks, Troy. Please turn to the next slide. As Troy detailed, we are focused on driving growth and profitability through our simplified operating structure, greater collaboration across the enterprise and deeper engagement with our clients. We are in an enviable position from which to execute. We maintain a leading position in many of our key markets, and our client satisfaction scores reflect the market's acknowledgment of these strengths. In fact, our leading position was affirmed last week with our number one ranking by Fortune as the World's Most Admired Company in our industry, which is a great testament to the value our people bring to their clients and communities every day. These strengths will serve us well as the funding environment across our markets improve. And with the US rejoining the Paris Climate accord and committing to invest to build back stronger, we are energized by the opportunities ahead. To best position us for growth, we recently announced two key strategic hires with the additions of Jennifer Aument and Drew Jeter to further strengthen our already strong leadership team. We are confident that with our established market leadership in these key practices, both Jennifer and Drew will hit the ground running. As we look ahead, we have tremendous opportunities to leverage our competitive advantages, more holistically advise our clients and to gain greater share in the marketplace. A great example of this is the market share gains we have made in the UK. In particular, we have been selected for key positions on the $800 million SCAPE framework, which is the UK's leading public sector procurement authority. Following several years of delivering for our clients, we successfully gained positions on multiple lots that significantly increased our exposure to this framework. The stated priorities of this framework is to generate substantial social value through infrastructure, such as designing new bridges, adding electricity charging points to car parks or new hospital refurbishments and school extensions. In addition, we have gained framework positions for Network Rail, Highways England and Transport for London that each have similar priorities on advancing infrastructure to benefit communities. These are precisely the sort of projects where our expertise can be best brought to bear, and our focus on ESG directly aligns with our clients' top most priorities. Gaurav Kapoor: Thanks, Lara. Please turn to the next slide. Our first quarter financial performance exceeded our expectations in every key financial metric, including a new high for the first quarter margins, strong EBITDA growth and double digit EPS growth. Importantly, to capitalize on this performance, we accelerated our repurchase plans, which is underpinning our increased adjusted EPS guidance and was driven by our best first quarter free cash flow since 2018. While pockets of uncertainty remain in several of our markets, I am proud of our team's proven abilities to deliver. Looking forward, we will continue to benefit from our substantial backlog position, including record contracted backlog. In addition, with a highly variable cost structure and continued strong cash flow trends, we are confident in our ability to deliver value. Please turn to the next slide. In the Americas, NSR declined by 1% on an organic basis. Backlog in the Americas increased by 9%, including 15% growth in contracted backlog. Our Construction Management backlog declined sequentially but our design backlog grew and affords us strong visibility. Although decisions on a few larger pursuits in the Construction Management business has slowed in the near term, our sizable backlog will continue to provide visibility for the next several years. The Americas segment had a 17.5% adjusted operating margin for the quarter, an 80 basis points improvement from the prior year. Americas margin performance demonstrates an ingrained culture of continuous improvement even as we continue to deliver industry leading margins. Please turn to the next slide. Turning to the International segment. Our NSR declined by 3% on an organic basis. Contracted backlog increased by 6% and is at record levels, reflecting our successful efforts to gain market share and win key position on large frameworks. Notably, our adjusted operating margin in our International business was 7%, a 230 basis point improvement from the prior year and a 440 basis point improvement since the beginning of fiscal 2019. We are proud of the progress the teams have made to operate more efficiently while successfully positioning for growth. And we reaffirm our confidence to achieve double digit international margins. Please turn to the next slide. Turning to cash flow, liquidity and capital allocation. As we shared on last quarter's earnings call, we made it a key priority to drive greater consistency in our cash flow phasing. In the first quarter over the past two fiscal years, we have experienced negative free cash flow of approximately $230 million on average. With free cash flow use of $14 million in the quarter, we are pleased to see our efforts quickly translating to results. Accordingly, we are reaffirming our $425 million to $625 million free cash flow guidance for the full year. As a reminder, at the midpoint, this reflects 75% unlevered free cash flow conversion of EBITDA, which is our long term forecasted conversion rate on a normalized basis, reflective of highly cash generative nature of our business. We continue to drive a strong balance sheet and financial position with gross leverage under 3 times, which is consistent with our long term target. Reflecting our strong balance sheet and business prospects, last night, we announced an amendment and extension of our credit facilities. This reduced our borrowing cost and furthered our commitment to achieving certain ESG objectives creating a cost of capital that is consistent with the high quality nature of our business. Since September, we have completed $630 million of repurchases, which reduced our diluted share count by nearly 9%. And with strong cash generation expected in the remaining three quarters of the year and our ongoing conviction that share repurchases offer the highest return on our capital, we will continue to execute repurchases throughout the year. Please turn to the next slide. This robust start to the year provides confidence in raising our outlook for the full year. We are increasing our adjusted EPS guidance to between $2.60 and $2.80 and now expect to deliver 26% growth at the midpoint of our new range. This increase reflects the benefits of our accelerated repurchase activity as well as lower expected interest expense due to our credit amendment. This guidance contemplates a fully diluted share count of 151 million shares, which only incorporates our repurchases to date. With that, operator, we are ready for questions. Operator: Your first question comes from Sean Eastman with KeyBanc Capital. SeanEastman: I just wanted to get some more color on the advisory and program management growth strategy that you guys introduced this quarter. How would you characterize the growth opportunity here and how would you characterize the benefit to the client of having AECOM get involved earlier and sort of stick around longer? TroyRudd: First, just in a word, I would characterize the growth opportunity as extraordinary. So when we think about the opportunity to help our clients, they've got large infrastructure investments and programs that will be rolled out over the course of the next year. And we believe that those will go on for, frankly, for decades. And also with of all the decarbonization agenda or decarbonization ambitions that our clients have, we also, again, see that similar opportunity. There's large capital investments that will be made that would last perhaps for a decade. And we see ourselves being perfectly positioned, given our technical ability to support them. And also, this may be lost but we actually are a global leader in program management already. So it's not like we're starting from zero. If you look at the ENR rankings, we sit at the top of that group. So we already have a great base and experience upon which we can fulfill those ambitions. That was the reason that we're making the investment, bringing people on board. We were really happy to have Drew Jeter join us as a recognized leader in the industry and is taking over our leadership of global program management. So again, we see this as a very sizable business in the future, and I don't think it will grow in terms of percent. We think this has the opportunity to grow in terms of multiples of the business that we do today. And along that point, just maybe to help make this a little more real about what this means in terms of our clients and how we would help them. Lara, if you wouldn't mind, maybe I could ask you just to give the example of what we're doing for the NEOM project in Saudi Arabia. LaraPoloni: Yes, to Troy's point, we're very excited about, this is our most significant growth opportunity looking forward. And in the case of NEOM, many of you know, these are the new bigger cities of the future in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. And we assisted the kingdom with a lot of front end support. It wasn't just project controls and systems for traditional program management offering that many others talk about. There was a lot of front end advisory support to help them scope the project, consider the sort of technology that would be required and really the approval of the permitting and regulatory issues and those sorts of services at the beginning. And then, of course, that involves a program management support, contract admin. And then all of the technical and environmental support that we are very strongly poised to deliver. And in more recent times, that role expanded to include all of the very complex backbone utilities and transport infrastructure. So that evolution from early front end advisory support to the more traditional place that we play for our clients and bringing the full weight of global multidisciplinary teams that a client like that expects from AECOM, and all performed in a fully digital environment. So it's a very comprehensive opportunity for us and one that we're very excited about, and we've got a great pipeline and we really look forward to sharing more of the detail on that at our upcoming virtual Investor Day. So thanks for the question, Sean. TroyRudd: And Sean, maybe just a simple way to think about this is what we're talking about is not delivering projects. This program management is delivering outcomes for clients. And a simple way to think about it would be, again, in terms of an Olympic Games. Instead of delivering a venue, which you might do in terms of the design or the construction of it, we're actually -- would be involved as program managers and delivering the games, so delivering the outcome of a successful Olympic Games. So that's a difference. We look at what our people are already doing. And the large change that's going to go on in the world and we see this, again, as Lara said, our most substantial growth opportunity. SeanEastman: And my second 1 is just on the margins. Clearly, a stronger than expected start to the year. But the full year margin guidance is intact. So I'm just wondering how you'd characterize that. I mean, is this just kind of prudent conservatism early in the fiscal year, or is there something maybe unsustainable, from a cost perspective, helping the first quarter results? TroyRudd: So Sean, in terms of our margins for the year, we believe, first of all, these are sustainable. There's no temporary items that we believe are built into the margins that would cause us to back away from our ambitions for the year. I would describe this as us being prudent. We are still in an uncertain environment in fiscal '21, and I certainly don't want to make any projections or predictions that would be aggressive in this environment. So we're sticking to our 13.2% for the year. Certainly, our 13.1% in the first quarter, we were very pleased by and it certainly gives us more confidence in achieving the full year result. The other point I'll make about within those margins and this is difficult to see, but we've continued to invest in business development and we've invested more in this year that run to those margins that we have in the prior period. And again, we've done that because we have conviction about the opportunities in the marketplace, and we see the opportunity to position for things that are going to be come into market in the second half of '21 and into fiscal '22. Operator: Your next question comes from Michael Feniger with Bank of America. MichaelFeniger: Just following up on that. The margins are impressive. But there is a view, Troy, that AECOM is cost cutting its way to growth with another quarter of organic decline. One of your peers reported today saying has visibility to grow in fiscal year 2022. I'm not asking you right now for a '22 outlook. But based on what you're seeing on a state level, customer level, some of the initiatives, do you see momentum for organic growth to really return to AECOM in 2022 and that your growth is going to be more driven outside of just being able to cost cut? TroyRudd: The simple answer is absolutely yes. We do see growth into '22. And let me give a little bit of color on that, and certainly in terms of our margins. So we have reduced costs in the organization and we've created efficiency in the organization and that absolutely has benefited our margins. But today what we're doing is we're driving efficiency in how we actually deliver the work and we run the business. And so again, I view that as being sustainable. And as I already made the point, we're not cutting our investment in business development nor cutting our investment in the future in achieving those margins. And I'll say it, we believe that those are sustainable margins and we still have room to improve. And I'll certainly share more of that when we get to our Investor Day, virtual Investor Day on the 16th. When I look at this year, again, we said that this year was going to be challenged, and we expected our revenue to be around flat for the year. When we look at the first quarter with tough comps. Last year, those are pre-COVID periods. So in terms of where we think we are, I believe that we are holding our own and gaining market share in some challenging markets. We are investing in growth in the future and I don't see that growth coming in fiscal '22. I see this year continuing to be flat. But I do view there being substantial upside as we move into '22, so growth in '22 and beyond. And again, we'll share more of those ambitions in detail when we get to our Investor Day. In terms of the backlog in the pipeline, we are seeing some growth in our backlog. But I think more importantly, if I talk about our pipeline and particularly in our design business in the Americas, we are seeing the pipeline start to get back to pre COVID levels, which is indicating our clients are gearing up to let out work in the second half of the year and in fiscal 2022, which again leads us to believe there is a significant opportunity to grow into '22 and beyond. MichaelFeniger: And just on -- you kind of touched on some of the funding initiatives. I mean, we saw the FAST Act was extended. We just saw the COVID Relief package, I think, spending $40 billion to transportation markets. But like outside of the big bang infrastructure package, obviously, that would be the home run. Outside of that, what signposts are you looking for that can be a catalyst outside of that big infrastructure package? So there's a new EPA chief there. There's PFAS regulations in the headlines. Any catalyst that we should be monitoring that would maybe drive momentum outside of the whole infrastructure package in the environmental and water type areas that we should be keeping an eye on? TroyRudd: Well, actually, you kind of did my job for me in listing all those. But when we look at -- again, so what we're looking towards is we're looking predominantly levels of federal funding and we are seeing levels of federal funding improving. And I'm not thinking about what might come or what President Biden has announced in his agenda, that would be kind of upside for the future. We haven't built our plans around that. We also look at our state and local governments and what has been difficult for them has been funding levels. Funds have been devoted to fighting the pandemic. But we've actually started to see a return of funding to those customers. And a lot of the funding doesn't come through the federal budget. A lot of it comes through user fees and it comes through other measures. So we're seeing, because people are returning a little bit towards normal, we're seeing funding start to build up within our state and local government clients. And there's no doubt that if there's a package that is passed, the stimulus package is passed, it will help our state and local government clients. But again, we're seeing the kind of the green shoots around funding as people are returning to work and businesses started to head in the right direction so some growth in the economy here in the US. Worldwide, it's a little bit different. We've actually seen some governments already step up to the plate and provide levels of funding for infrastructure programs. And so we've seen that building in Australia and New Zealand. We see that certainly building in Canada. And as Lara has pointed out in her previous points is that in the UK, we are very confident we've been taking significant market share. So even while the funding has been building in that market. We're confident that we're positioning ourselves through our framework wins to grow based on what will be available in the future in that market. LaraPoloni: And if I could just add a couple of just very quick points. I mean, I think infrastructure is obviously the main area of exponential growth. And even in the quarter, we did see growth in Australia because that pipeline continues to be very strong for us. We've secured all the major infrastructure projects. We had growth in Asia, again, on the back of some strong infrastructure programs. But the other exponential growth play that we've talked about previously, we're feeling pretty bullish about extending our market leadership in the PFAS space, which you mentioned. We think that's a $100 billion plus opportunity over time. And we have market leadership and then we're very excited about the above and beyond, which exists, which is really our lease area in terms of the disruptive technology where we have a pilot. We're having to commercialize that later this year. That's another example. And then of course, the program management, which is the 3 to 4 times growth opportunity. So there's just a few examples of very big sort of exponential growth play, but I think we can absolutely signpost along the way over the next few quarters and a couple of years. Operator: And your next question comes from Andy Kaplowitz with Citigroup. AndrewKaplowitz: Troy or Gaur, is there a better way to frame the pace of operating improvement and cost takeout that you're in the middle of? Because obviously, it seems to have accelerated in the first couple of quarters that you've been CEO, Troy. For instance, your sales are down sequentially on an NSR basis but both segments recorded margin up 50 basis points sequentially. So can you give us a read on how much additional stream line you’ve won since you took over as CEO and what that means for AECOM’s progression toward that 15% longer term margin goal? TroyRudd: Andy, what I'm going to do is, I just want to make a headline comment on it, and then I'll pass it over to Gaur to give some more of the details. But in terms of the streamlining changes that we've made, for the most part, we have made those. If you look at our results for the quarter, again, you see that we have very little restructuring plan for the year. We put most of this behind us. Our results are, I believe to be very clean. So we've taken the actions to restructure the business. And now as we move forward, we've really ingrained in our culture a focus on efficiency and continuing to deliver and focus on the work we're bidding and how we deliver against those margin targets. So we've kind of taken the actions in the past. And we certainly have a little bit of work that we'll do in the future, which Gaur will give you little details on. But I view this as kind of changing the culture in terms of our efficiency and running the business and delivery. It's not a significant action undertaking we have to take on to move from here. GauravKapoor: Just adding on to that. Troy is absolutely right. Simply put, this is the annualized benefit of restructuring that we performed last year. And that's why you see such a symmetry between our GAAP and adjusted results. We have minimal restructuring going forward. But consistent with the messaging, right, being in the upper echelon of margin delivery in our industry, we're not satisfied with that. Our goal, our vision, is to achieve 15% margins, which we will provide more detail during our upcoming virtual Investor Relation Day next week. And if you were to say, well, what exactly is changing in the current year? Why are we ahead, maybe a little bit ahead in Q1? I think it really has to go towards the new organizational structure that Troy put in place as well. We have really created a dynamic environment that is allowing us to leverage best practices in terms of cost structuring globally and executing on as quickly as possible because we no longer have the multiple layers as we had in the past. AndrewKaplowitz: And then you did mention the decline in your construction management backlog but still got visibility. So could you tell us how you're thinking about the growth of that business? I know you've had several years or you have several years of backlog coverage. But how does that business factor into your growth assumptions for flat this year and return to growth in '22? GauravKapoor: Well, again, just in terms of our Construction Management business, again, it represents about 10% of the profit and the NSR of our business overall. And again, we see the environment that the Construction Management business in has been challenging. There is no question that their decisions on projects being delayed and even some of the work being delayed on some of our existing projects. So I view that as we're going to be burning off some backlog during the course of this year. The great thing about that business is we certainly have multiple years, more than three years of backlog. And when we look at the pipeline of the opportunities, the actual pipeline of opportunities and the things that we've been pursuing, that isn't really shrinking. So I think the story around Construction Management is more about delays on decisions and projects and maybe some changes in scope. But we don't see kind of a long term decline in the opportunities for that business. Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Wittmann with Baird. AndrewWittmann: I guess most of my questions have been asked and answered, but I thought there maybe a couple of technical questions would be helpful for us to all understand. And Gaur, starting with you. What's the expected annualized interest rate savings from the renegotiated credit facility that you guys announced last night? GauravKapoor: Andy, we expect for 2021, it will be $2 million to $3 million. But on a full run rate basis, it will be $4 million to $5 million. AndrewWittmann: And then just in terms of the cash flows here, obviously, it looks like you guys are trying to smooth out the seasonality and that's great. I assume that part of that is the sale of receivables. But how are you doing it in terms of managing the other parts of the working capital, in terms of DSO collections and the payables? What's the process that you're using to get better, I don't know, smoother quarter to quarter variations in cash flows? And what's the customer experience of that? Is it burning the customers? Is it burning your employees? How does it work to do that just mechanically? GauravKapoor: As I mentioned during our fourth quarter year end call last year, a key priority for us from a cash flow standpoint was not to have the seasonality as we had previously experienced. And there are some key contributors to that. One is it's a simple byproduct of us becoming a true professional services organization, which is lower risk, higher margin profile aided by more predictability in our cash flow because of the disposal of our at risk businesses. We're no longer burdened by those huge variations of large construction projects. And a key change we made in the current year is we've aligned our operational incentives to align with our cash flow phasing instead of just being an annual target. And in terms of the specifics, you really have to look at how we are transforming our organization operationally and the finance transformation we're going through. This allows us to utilize shared services, where again, we leverage best practices on invoicing, billing and collections across the board globally, where instead of having these services being provided in various geographies, you're in a center of best practices and leveraging it globally. Operator: Your next question comes from Jamie Cook with Credit Suisse. JamieCook: I guess just two follow up questions, one on the cash flow. I appreciate how you helped us figure out how you're doing better sort of seasonality with regards to your cash flow. But given the success that you've had in the first quarter relative to the past two years. Is it fair to assume you see sort of the mid- to high end of your free cash flow guidance is more achievable just because of where we're starting the year off, I guess, is my first question? And then my second question just relates to Troy, it sounds like the portfolio that you have in place after getting run as some of the assets, the construction at risk business, the Management Services. I'm just wondering if you look at your portfolio, is there anything else that potentially isn't core to AECOM, or are there holes in your portfolio that could help you achieve some of your longer term goals quicker with the balance sheet where it is? TroyRudd: Gaur, why don't you take the cash flow question and I'll take the second one? GauravKapoor: So Jamie, in regards to a cash range, we hit our cash guidance year in a row and we expect current year to be no different. We feel very confident in the guidance we have provided and expect better than historical phasing, consistent with our performance in Q1. TroyRudd: And to your question, Jamie, just on the overall business, I guess, first of all, is I think it's important to make the point that we've been making for a while, which is we're going to constantly evaluate our portfolio of businesses and make sure that we're in the businesses that we believe have the highest returns and the highest growth potential. So that's just going to be part of our DNA and our culture. We'll continue to do that. In terms of, as you said, holes in the portfolio, at the moment, I don't see any significant holes in our portfolio. And to the extent that we do see that there are some opportunities to add some capability, we are going to do that but I have no intention of doing that through M&A. There are other means that we can do that, that I think are easier for us to digest and have a lower cost associated with them. But we certainly have opportunities to grow some capabilities, we will do that. But we anticipate doing that and invest in those capabilities through our margins, not doing M&A. Operator: Your next question comes from Mike Dudas of Vertical Research. MikeDudas: The part of your business development investment, Troy, going forward, certainly, I guess would be in expanding or accelerating your best practice centers, your high value added centers that AECOM has. How has that been progressing? And is that an area where you could see significant help, especially when you're targeting some of the margin potential in the international design business going forward? TroyRudd: Mike, so that is important to us. We had set some pretty ambitious objectives of improving the work that was going through our design centers. Through the pandemic, we've actually modified our thinking around that, that it doesn't have to be design centers. We can actually set up kind of regional design centers. The interesting thing about the pandemic, we've figured out is that with everyone working remotely, you can actually connect your teams and have everybody working around their kitchen table quite well. So it means that we can create sort of centers of excellence virtually or even regionally, and that's something we've learned through this process. But more importantly, we're continuing to invest in what I'm going to refer to as digital, which is having some of the work that we've done in the past be replaced by script or code. And given our people are freeing up the time of our people to do things that are more innovative or focus on their clients and the project of growth opportunities. So I'm going to talk more about that on the 16th but that absolutely is a focus of it, and we refer to that as changing the way that our work is delivered. Operator: Your next question comes from Steven Fisher with UBS. StevenFisher: You mentioned that Americas design customers are gearing us to award more work in the second half. Do you have any sense from your conversations with them about what has to happen to give them the confidence to release those projects? And in what areas do you think you'll most likely see those project releases? TroyRudd: Yes. I think, again, it's difficult to pinpoint something, every client conversation is a little bit different. But generally, it's through the conversations. It's, again, driven by sources of funding and the sources of the funding that is becoming available or the confidence around it becoming available is improving. And in terms of the areas or the opportunities that we're seeing, we certainly are seeing the opportunities in transportation, in water and also in environment. Again, as I said, our Construction Management business is certainly challenged at the moment and the pipeline is still robust. But we're not seeing the pipeline or the pipeline growing in the same way that we are in the design business. And certainly, in those end markets, transportation, water and environment. StevenFisher: And then just curiosity as we're thinking about margin improvement from here. How important is increased projects, so activity to your plans and how would you characterize the work you're actually turning away at this point? Is it more regions or types of customers or services? TroyRudd: So I wouldn't say that we're turning away work at this point. However, I would say we've set return targets for the work that we do, and so we certainly have a process by which we evaluate the returns on a project. And so there might be projects that don't meet our hurdles in terms of returns and there are some other measures that we use to make sure that we're appropriately managing the risk associated with the work that we do. But again, there's no trends in terms of us turning away work. We're just thoughtful in terms of what we want to do to help our clients and making sure that it's going to be appropriately in terms of the turn and the risk that we're taking on. Operator: Your last question comes from Adam Thalhimer with Thompson, Davis. AdamThalhimer: I wanted to ask about the slower decision making because it sounds like through this call, it's a little more focused on your US Construction Management business. Is that right? TroyRudd: Yes, that is right. I mean, think about it as just in terms of the work that gets done. A lot of the work that we do in that business, it's commercial work, it's been aviation work and it's been sports and sports work. And again, it's just what we're seeing is that through the pandemic, some of those capital decisions are being rethought or again, they're being delayed. So it's not that there aren't those opportunities as we move out into the future, again, decisions around aviation projects. There certainly is a need for that, similar to a lot of infrastructure investments. But some of the decisions today, just in the environment to win, they're being delayed and they may be adjusted or changed. AdamThalhimer: And Troy, I would I would think you guys are in the sweet spot for this next US stimulus bill. Even if that hit state in local and not transportation specifically, how quickly could you benefit from that? TroyRudd: Well, it certainly, if there is -- first of all, we don't have that baked into our result. That's why we're anticipating, again, I'll say, a flat year in terms of revenue. There's no question that if there's those significant funds that are made available, either through another COVID relief package to support state and local governments, or through an infrastructure initiative or program from the Biden administration, there's a huge benefit to us and to our industry. But I don't see it being immediate. It will take a while when those programs are put in place where then the customers to actually put together the projects that they're looking to receive that investment. So it's probably certainly quarters, a number of quarters, before that you would see an impact on our business and it could even be a little bit longer than that. AdamThalhimer: So it kind of pushes you towards what you said earlier, which… TroyRudd: It does. It pushes us towards fiscal '22. Yes. Operator: I'd now like to turn the call back over to Troy Rudd for closing remarks. Troy Rudd: Great. Thank you, operator. Again, I want to thank our teams for their contributions to a strong start to the year. We're really pleased and we believe we're in an enviable position. We've built a strong foundation in the business. And I believe we have unrivaled technical expertise. We have, again, margins that are near the top or at the top of our industry. We've been able to grow profitability and more importantly, we're building backlog and opportunities and continue to have strong cash flow in the business. It positions us well for the future. So I look forward to discussing these trends in a little more detail and sharing more detail about our long term plans and targets at our virtual Investor Day next week. Thank you for your interest. Have a good day. Operator: This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.
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AECOM (NYSE: ACM) Sees Upward Trend in Consensus Price Target

  • The consensus price target for AECOM (NYSE: ACM) has increased to $128 from $123.5 in the previous quarter, indicating growing optimism among analysts.
  • Factors contributing to this positive outlook include AECOM's strong financial performance, strategic initiatives, and favorable industry trends.
  • Investors are advised to watch for AECOM's upcoming earnings reports and strategic announcements for further insights into its financial performance and future outlook.

AECOM (NYSE: ACM) is a global leader in professional infrastructure consulting services. The company provides a comprehensive suite of services, including planning, consulting, architectural and engineering design, construction and program management, and investment and development services. AECOM operates across various sectors such as transportation, water, government, facilities, environmental, and energy, making it a key player in the infrastructure industry.

The consensus price target for AECOM's stock has been on an upward trajectory over the past year. Last month, the average price target reached $128, up from $123.5 in the previous quarter and $108.29 a year ago. This increase suggests growing optimism among analysts about AECOM's future performance and its potential to deliver value to shareholders.

Several factors may have contributed to this positive outlook. AECOM's strong financial performance, including potential earnings and revenue growth, could have influenced analysts' price targets. Additionally, strategic initiatives such as expanding service offerings or entering new markets may enhance the company's growth prospects.

Industry trends also play a role in shaping analysts' views. Increased government spending on infrastructure projects could positively impact AECOM's business, contributing to the optimistic outlook. Furthermore, any recent acquisitions or partnerships that align with AECOM's growth strategy may have boosted analysts' confidence.

Investors should keep an eye on AECOM's upcoming earnings reports and strategic announcements. The company plans to release its fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2024 earnings results on November 18, 2024, followed by a conference call on November 19, 2024. These events will provide insights into the company's financial performance and future outlook, helping investors understand the potential drivers behind the changes in the consensus price target.