Computer Task Group, Incorporated
Q1 2019 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the CTG Quarterly Investor Call. At this time, all lines are in listen-only mode. Later we will conduct a question-and-answer session, and instructions will be given at that time. [Operator Instructions] And as a reminder, we're recording today. I would now like to turn the conference over to Jim Culligan, CTG's Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
  • Jim Culligan:
    Thank you, Art, and good morning everyone. With me on today's call are Filip Gyde, CTG's President and Chief Executive Officer; and John Laubacker, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I want to mention that statements during the course of this conference call that state the company's or management's intentions, hopes, beliefs, expectations, and predictions for the future are forward-looking statements. It's important to note that the company's actual results could differ materially from those projected. These forward-looking statements are based on information as of today, Thursday, April 18, 2019. The company assumes no obligation to update these statements based on information from and after the date of this conference call. Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to differ from those made in the forward-looking statements is contained in today's earnings release as well as in the company's SEC filings. Also, the company's press release and management statements during the call include discussions of certain adjusted non-GAAP measures and financial information. These financial measures and a reconciliation of GAAP and non-GAAP results are provided in both today's press release and the related Form 8-K. With that, I will turn the call over to Filip for his opening remarks.
  • Filip Gyde:
    Thank you, Jim. Good morning to everyone joining us on the phone and webcast. It is my pleasure to host today's call. Let me begin with where I've been focused and my initial observations, since assuming the role of CEO on March 1. I have been actively meeting with our various teams and numerous employees across the organization. And I could not be more pleased and encouraged by the shared energy and optimism that I have observed. Throughout the quarter, I've also been proactively engaging with a large number of CTG clients and partners and the feedback has been extremely positive. Collectively these interactions have further reinforced my excitement and confidence in the opportunity to build upon our recent momentum and increasingly position CTG as a premier global solutions provider. To reiterate, CTG's core strategic objectives continue to be
  • John Laubacker:
    Thank you, Filip. Good morning to all of you joining us on today's conference call. As reported in this morning's press release, consolidated revenue in the first quarter was $97.2 million compared with $93.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2018 and $82.7 million in the first quarter of 2018. Currency translation had a negative $3.1 million impact on revenue in the first quarter. Billable days in the first quarter were 63 compared with 64 days in both the fourth quarter of 2018 and the year ago first quarter. Solutions revenue in the first quarter of 2019 was $33.4 million, which was an increase of 14% compared with $29.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2018. Year-over-year solutions revenue increased 34%, reflecting continued strength and momentum in our European and healthcare operations and contributions from our acquisitions in France and Luxembourg. Staffing revenue in the first quarter was $63.8 million, the same as $63.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2018. Staffing revenue did increase 10.5% year-over-year driven primarily by incremental new business at large existing clients as well as a contribution from the previously mentioned acquisitions. Revenue from IBM in the first quarter was $21 million, or 21.6% of total revenue, compared with $20.1 million, or 21.5% of total revenue in the fourth quarter of 2018 and $18.9 million, or 22.8% of total revenue in last year's first quarter. No other client represented more than 10% of revenue during the first quarter of 2019. Direct costs as a percentage of revenue were 81.8% in the first quarter of 2019, compared with 81% in the fourth quarter of 2018 and 80.9% of revenue in the year ago quarter. Company's direct costs as a percent of revenue increased in the 2019 first quarter as compared with the 2018 first quarter primarily due to lower utilization of billable resources in our energy vertical market and in certain areas of our European operations, where utilization by comparison was very high in last year's first quarter. GAAP net income in the first quarter of 2019 was $632,000 or $0.05 per diluted share and included $0.4 million in acquisition-related expenses. Non-GAAP net income was $0.06 per share. GAAP net loss in the fourth quarter of 2018 was $5.3 million, or $0.39 per share, which included $0.06 per share in acquisition-related and severance expenses and $0.36 per share in tax-related items. GAAP net income in the year ago quarter was $414,000 or $0.03 per diluted share, which included $0.03 per share in acquisition-related expenses. The effective income tax rate in the first quarter of 2019 was 33.3%, compared with 449% in the fourth quarter of 2018 and 21.7% in the year ago quarter. The effective tax rate for the fourth quarter of 2018 reflected a reserve for the U.S. deferred tax assets costs related to the GILTI provisions of the 2017 Tax Act and non-deductible acquisition related costs in CTG's foreign operations. CTG's total headcount at the end of the first quarter was approximately 4,350, compared with 4,150 at the end of the fourth quarter of 2018 and 3,650 at the end of the year ago first quarter. The year-over-year increase in headcount reflects a combination of the Tech-IT acquisition in February 2019, organic growth in Europe and expansion of staffing services provided to our largest client primarily in last year's second quarter. Approximately 91% of our first quarter 2019 headcount was billable. Turning to our balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the first quarter were $13.1 million and we had $13.3 million of outstanding long-term debt. Capital expenditures in the first quarter of 2019 were $111,000 compared with $371,000 in the fourth quarter of 2018. In addition we used $8.5 million net of the cash acquired for the purchase of Tech-IT in February 2019. We also adopted as required the new leasing accounting standard that requires leases to be recorded on our balance sheet. As part of that adoption, we recorded approximately $12.7 million of leased assets and the offsetting lease liabilities on our balance sheet as of the end of the 2019 first quarter. Turning to our guidance. As announced last quarter, beginning in 2019 the company will only provide annual guidance. As such and based upon the momentum we observed during the quarter, we are reaffirming our previous guidance for the full year 2019. This includes our continued expectation for revenue to range from $380 million to $410 million and for GAAP net income to range from $0.20 to $0.30 per diluted share. Excluded certain anticipated acquisition related expenses associated with our previously completed transactions, non-GAAP net income for the full year is anticipated to range from $0.30 to $0.40 per diluted share. As outlined on today's call we are highly focused on driving profitable and sustainable growth. We are pleased with the positive momentum generated across the business during the first quarter. We are also committed to making investments to grow our solutions business and remaining selective in our pursuit of new prospective staffing engagements. As we increase our emphasis on CTG's solutions business going forward, we are confident that we will achieve meaningful improvement in our operating results throughout 2019. Moreover we are also continuing to actively evaluate refinements to our overall strategy in order to further accelerate our anticipated top and bottom line growth. With that, we now like to open the call to questions. Art, can you please manage that for us?
  • Operator:
    [Operator Instructions] We have a question from Vincent Colicchio with Barrington Research. Please go ahead.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    Filip per your focus on increasing staffing margins going forward, I'm wondering are there any changes to incentive compensation at the sales level and the management level to stimulate that?
  • Filip Gyde:
    Good morning, Vince. I believe that our compensation policies have been and continue to be in the right direction. We've been focusing our sales and management on profitability, on increased profitability and that is giving us already some meaningful progress.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    Okay. And I'm curious the new wins in the quarter for Application Advantage and for EIM let's call it, were those margins in line with what you've seen in recent quarters for those services?
  • Filip Gyde:
    Yes. Those margins are exactly in line with what we've seen and also with what we want to have for those kind of projects.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    And how should we model the quarters going forward? It sounds like incremental improvement as we go sequentially. Is that right?
  • Filip Gyde:
    Well, we are well-positioned, Vince in the different businesses where we are in. And we see broadly speaking that our profitability and the returns of our investments should come to us in the sequence as we go through 2019.
  • John Laubacker:
    Vince this is John. I'd like to add to that that we would expect normal seasonality in Q3 that we have seen in the past not just from our European operations, but our staffing operation in the U.S. There is traditionally a larger amount of holiday time that happens during Q3. So, last year, we saw a little bit bigger impact than we had in the past of actual reduction in revenue in Q3. Given that -- the time that was taken off, I would anticipate a similar trend this year. Europe is a bigger part of our overall business. So, that's really part of what we're thinking.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    And the Application Advantage service in healthcare it's my understanding that that involves managing legacy software. With the growth of cloud, correct me if I'm wrong, but any way -- with the growth of cloud is that a growing business? Or what does the growth look like for that market?
  • Filip Gyde:
    Well, with the growth of cloud, we are positioning ourselves to also be able to offer cloud services and moving our clients to cloud to mixed cloud or hybrid cloud situation. So, in that transition, of course, managing the legacy application is a big part. So that -- when we take over legacy applications, take over the maintenance, the management of that that enables our clients to focus on their cloud initiatives, on their new application initiatives. So, that's how we're helping our clients focus on their core initiatives.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    And then you had mentioned that there's a lot of opportunity to help healthcare organizations manage data better with your EIM offering. Is there a good pipeline for those opportunities today? How does that look?
  • Filip Gyde:
    There's a growing pipeline, Vince, because we see that a number of the providers are still a little bit hesitant to move to value-based care, but it is a trend that is increasing. And we expect in the near-term future that those providers will direct their spending to value-based care.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    Okay. Thanks. I'll go in the queue. Thank you for answering my questions.
  • John Laubacker:
    Thanks Vince.
  • Filip Gyde:
    Thanks Vince.
  • Operator:
    Next we have on the line of Zach Cummins of B. Riley FBR. You're open.
  • Zach Cummins:
    Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Can you talk a little bit more around the gross margin during the quarter? A little bit of a mention of some of the lower utilization rates, but can you talk about really some of the drivers of the lower gross margin? And can we expect that to normalize here in the next couple of quarters?
  • John Laubacker:
    Hey Zach, good morning. This is John. I would expect that to normalize a little bit in the coming quarters. We had really very high utilization throughout our European operations in the first quarter of 2018 last year much higher than I think we would traditionally see at that point in time. And so when we saw utilization that was a little bit lower this year in the first quarter, it wasn't necessarily that it was real negative or poor. It just was -- the comparison was something that was much lower. In the energy business we simply had a couple of our more significant clients take a breath or a pause at the start of 2019. We had some ongoing projects. We had some new projects scheduled. And those projects were slow to ramp-up. And so instead of ramping up in early January they ramped up in late February or in early March and so there was a bit of a pause at the beginning of the year.
  • Zach Cummins:
    Understood, that's helpful. And then in terms of the staffing business when you're looking for I guess higher quality type of revenue to pursue can you talk about some of the staffing engagements that may be you're actually turning away or no longer pursuing in order to improve the mix within that business?
  • Filip Gyde:
    Well Zach, we're focusing on staffing engagements that are more in the IT or the professional staffing where we see that they are more also aligned with the type of solutions we offer to the market, so we can strengthen the staffing from our solutions and the other way around. And frankly just focusing being more selective on the higher value and higher margins staffing business. So we're not going for simply volume or scale. We're going for margin and yes just being more selective.
  • Zach Cummins:
    Understood. And then final question for me, I know it's probably hard to really speculate on this. But just given that Europe's becoming an increasingly bigger portion of your business, can you talk about Brexit? While there hasn't been any final resolution, can you talk about some of the potential fallout or impacts to your European operations when this all becomes finalized?
  • Filip Gyde:
    That's a good way of putting the question when this all gets finalized if this all gets finalized because it's been -- well it's kind of almost a sulk story. But seriously our business in U.K. is relatively small. So any impact in Britain would be relatively minor, but we are continuing to assess the potential impact on Western Europe and especially Belgium because Belgium is a significant trading partner with U.K. We're vigilant. But at this moment, it's impossible to say where this is going to go to.
  • Zach Cummins:
    Understood. That’s helpful. Well, thanks again for taking my questions and best of luck in the coming quarters.
  • Filip Gyde:
    Thanks, Zach.
  • Operator:
    Next, we have the line of Kelly Pan with Pantheon Capital. Please go ahead.
  • Kelly Pan:
    Hi, yes, that's Kelly Pan from Pantheon Capital. I wanted to know how much of the growth is organic. And I wanted to also know if you could disclose how much of the revenue during the quarter was from SOFT Corporation and from your Tech-IT?
  • John Laubacker:
    Hi Kelly, this is John. We haven't disclosed specific numbers for the revenue from the acquisitions that we've done. Last year, when we acquired SOFT COMPANY, we had estimated at that point in time that revenue was about $30 million annually. And Filip and I are very pleased with the progress they have made. And our estimations at that time had been pretty consistent that how we thought they would join the company and go along. Tech-IT was closer to a $20 million U.S. annual run rate. And again I think our expectations in Q1 were met there. So while we don't disclose specifics, we're pretty comfortable that the original estimations are holding reasonably accurately. As far as organic growth, there was very nice organic growth in the U.S. We have not done an acquisition there. That percentage itself was about 10%. Again, we don't necessarily disclose directly what the organic growth would be in Europe. But even considering the two acquisitions they had double-digit organic growth as well in Q1 year-over-year.
  • Kelly Pan:
    Okay. So if I take that year's 2018 revenue of $358.8 million, I should subtract $30 million from it to get what organic growth was relative to 2017 of $301 million?
  • John Laubacker:
    SOFT COMPANY came on in February 15, so middle of February of 2018. So it's not quite a full year.
  • Kelly Pan:
    Okay. So -- but I'm in the ballpark, if I just take that percentage down a bit?
  • John Laubacker:
    Yes.
  • Kelly Pan:
    So, if I -- $320 million. So, it looks like about 6% or 7% organic growth?
  • John Laubacker:
    I actually think it's a little bit higher than that, higher single digits.
  • Kelly Pan:
    I see. Okay. Thank you.
  • John Laubacker:
    Thanks, Kelly.
  • Filip Gyde:
    Thanks.
  • Operator:
    And we have a follow-up from Vincent Colicchio with Barrington Research.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    Yeah, John, just some basic questions for you, well, or Filip. The solutions and staffing pipeline, did they grow sequentially?
  • Filip Gyde:
    Well, our pipelines are growing in all areas. That's the good part or the good side of the story. Solutions with the acquisition of Tech-IT, we see that our broadening service portfolio is giving us, well, tremendous increase in our pipeline there. And now, we're able to deliver end-to-end solutions to our clients, not only in Luxembourg, but also in Belgium, also in France. And in our Health Solutions business, we also see a lot of traction and growth like we saw at the end of the year. So, I think our investments in that area -- in those areas are starting to show meaningful returns.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    And John, just one housekeeping. So, you mentioned capital spending. What was the capital spending, including capitalized software development? Was there any that type of investment?
  • John Laubacker:
    There was very little capitalized software. It was only $111,000 in the first quarter in total capital. And it just -- there's no pattern to that. It just was a very modest quarter as far as capital equipment expenditures.
  • Vincent Colicchio:
    Okay. Thank you.
  • John Laubacker:
    Thanks, Vince.
  • Operator:
    And speakers, no one else is in queue. Please go ahead with any closing remarks.
  • Filip Gyde:
    Okay. Thank you, operator. In closing, I want to reiterate my confidence in CTG's dedicated team and the foundation we have in place to drive, both sustainable and profitable growth. I'm also encouraged by the progress and positive momentum we have generated in the recent quarters. Going forward, we remain highly committed to disciplined execution of our strategy, which I will continue to closely evaluate and refine over the coming quarters. In support of accelerating the transformation of CTG into a more solutions-centric company, the entire team is actively focused on growing solutions revenue, expanding our solutions offerings and leveraging the synergies from our acquisitions in Europe. I'm excited to be leading our highly capable teams as we work together to pursue the next level of growth and realize CTG's full potential. Thank you again for joining today's call and for your support of CTG. We look forward to reporting our continued progress next quarter.
  • Operator:
    And ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude your conference for today. Thank you for your participation and thank you for using the AT&T Executive Teleconference Service. You may now disconnect.