Operator
Operator
Good day. And welcome to the Exponent First Quarter and Fiscal Year 2021 Earnings Call. Today’s conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Whitney Kukulka. Please go ahead, ma’am.
Exponent, Inc. (EXPO)
Q1 2021 Earnings Call· Fri, Apr 30, 2021
$66.95
+1.16%
Same-Day
+0.38%
1 Week
-0.26%
1 Month
-8.63%
vs S&P
-9.80%
Operator
Operator
Good day. And welcome to the Exponent First Quarter and Fiscal Year 2021 Earnings Call. Today’s conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Whitney Kukulka. Please go ahead, ma’am.
Whitney Kukulka
Management
Thank you, Operator. Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for joining us on Exponent’s first quarter of fiscal year 2021 financial results conference call. Please note that this call will be simultaneously webcast on the Investor Relations section of the company’s corporate website at www.exponent.com/investors. This conference call is the property of Exponent and any taping or other reproduction is expressly prohibited without prior written consent. Joining me on the call today are Dr. Catherine Corrigan, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Rich Schlenker, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we start, I would like to remind you that the following discussion contains forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, Exponent’s market opportunities and future financial results that involves risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed here. Additional information that could cause actual results to differ from forward-looking statements can be found in Exponent’s periodic SEC filings, including those factors discussed under the caption Risk Factor in Exponent’s most recent Form 10-Q. The forward-looking statements and risks in this conference call are based on current expectations as of today and Exponent assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new developments or otherwise. And now, I will turn the call over to Dr. Catherine Corrigan, Chief Executive Officer. Catherine?
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Thank you, Whitney, and thank you everyone for joining us today. I will start off by reviewing our first quarter 2021 business performance. Rich, will then provide a more detailed review of our financial results and outlook, and we will then open the call for questions. Our business continued to gain momentum, driving strong quarterly results, which exceeded our prior expectations. In the first quarter, net revenues grew 10% and EBITDA margin increased 400 basis points from the prior year period. These results were bolstered by increased activity in human participant studies and litigation projects, as pandemic-related restrictions were eased and vaccinations became more widely available. Exponent is winning new assignments daily, and at the same time, is gradually reengaging on projects that were paused due to Coronavirus restrictions and court closures. The pandemic has altered many aspects of our lives, but one trend that has not abated is the growing complexity of our world. Exponent continues to leverage its expertise to understand and enhance human machine interactions for technologies, including wearables, medical devices and advanced vehicles. Exponent advises industry and governments on their most pressing engineering and scientific challenges as society continues to raise expectations for safety, health, sustainability and reliability. These long-term trends that existed prior to the pandemic are now only strengthening, driving increased demand for our services. Exponent continued its work related to physiological monitoring through wearable technology platforms for the U.S. Army and Navy, and expanded the engagement to include a coordinated effort in the Department of Defense. Exponent is uniquely positioned to advise clients as they leverage technology to improve human health and enhance human performance. On the reactive side, we saw improvement in demand for Exponent’s support in litigation matters. As restrictions lift, there is more confidence in court cases proceeding and we…
Rich Schlenker
Management
Thank you, Catherine, and good afternoon, everyone. Let me start by saying all comparisons will be on a year-over-year basis unless otherwise noted. For the first quarter of 2021, total revenues and revenues before reimbursements or net revenues as I will refer to them from here on, increased 10% to $116.5 million and $109.6 million, respectively, as compared to the first quarter of 2020. The divestiture of our German entity, which closed in April of 2020 was 1 -- was a 1% headwind in the first quarter. Net income for the first quarter increased $30.8 million or -- increased to $30.8 million or $0.58 per diluted share, as compared to $26.3 million or $0.49 per diluted share. Exponent recognized a tax benefit from share based awards of $8.8 million or $0.16 per share in the first quarter of 2021, which is the same as the one year ago period. As a reminder, most of the stock awards are granted annually in March as part of our compensation program and released four years later. As such, it is primarily a first quarter event for us. The tax benefit for -- from share-based awards is determined based on the change in the value between grant date and the issuance date. EBITDA for the quarter increased 27% to $31.8 million, producing a margin of 29% of net revenues, which is an increase of 400 basis points as compared to the first quarter of 2020. Billable hours in the first quarter were 356,000, an increase of 2% year-over-year. The German entity accounted for approximately 3% of billable hours and 1% of revenue in the first quarter of 2020. Utilization in the first quarter was 75.7%, up from 71.4% in the same quarter of 2020. Utilization in the quarter was ahead of our prior expectations,…
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Thank you, Rich. For more than 50 years, Exponent has been called upon to advise clients on the causes of failures, as well as how to produce safer, healthier, more sustainable, and more reliable products and processes. As our clients’ needs evolve and increase in complexity, our team of engineers and scientists positions itself ahead of the curve, utilizing deep knowledge and multi-disciplinary capabilities to deliver unique solutions. With strong market drivers and a world-class team, Exponent is primed to deliver long-term growth. Operator, we are now ready for questions.
Operator
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Tobey Sommer, Truist Securities.
Tobey Sommer
Analyst
Thank you. My first question has to do with the potential for global supply chain reconfigurations post-pandemic, what you’re hearing from customers and to the extent you are actively helping some achieve this kind of goal or expect to? Thanks.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Yeah. Thanks, Tobey. So this is an area of concern across a number of our industries that we operate in, right? If you think about the automotive side, if you think about the consumer electronics side in particular and there is -- the opportunity for us that we’ve been seeing vis-à-vis consumer electronics in particular really relates to our presence in Asia and our ability to be on the ground for our clients in understanding what some of these supply chain impacts are, when our clients in the U.S. are in a situation where they really can’t have their folks traveling as much. So we are seeing, to some extent some demand drivers around being able to advise clients with respect to qualification of suppliers to the extent that they are reorienting. We are able to help them vis-à-vis understanding the quality implications on their product, some of the related data implications vis-à-vis their products, the likelihood of failure in terms of monitoring and auditing types of things. And so that’s primarily the area that we are seeing this is going to be around the consumer electronics and consumer products area. Our teams in Asia are being called in to advise clients with regard to some of those impacts, primarily around consumer electronics.
Tobey Sommer
Analyst
Thank you for that. And what’s the environment like for recruiting, you did mention that you’re active expect to be for the balance of the year. Has it changed as a result of the pandemic and the relative attractiveness of Exponent as an employer?
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Yeah. So we’re very focused on the recruiting side right now and we really pivoted, of course, during the pandemic. We’ve been able to really take advantage of the virtual space from the standpoint of the way that we are sourcing candidates. We gain these candidates through a variety of channels. One of those is our university recruiting channel and we have been able in the virtual environment to reach a much broader spectrum of these candidates, a higher level of diversity of these candidates, because of the way we can run these sort of virtual events as opposed to have to being -- having to be in person on campus. And so what we’re seeing now is we’re accelerating our recruiting process, is that we have got -- we have been able to achieve a healthy pipeline of candidates and it’s been interesting because -- look, people are attending in this environment there. They have been in the pandemic. They are sort of reexamining their lives. They may be looking for new opportunities and I think we are seeing more of that in terms of being able to capture folks who are maybe getting loose in the saddle from our competitors as well. We’ve tried to accelerate our senior recruiting. This is using the networks of our very senior leaders in a variety of spaces, whether that be environmental, whether that be on the health sciences side and we’ve been able to take advantage of some of the disruption, if you will, with folks wanting to sort of make changes and so we’re very focused on keeping our finger on the pulse of the various sources of candidates. And so we’re confident as we accelerate our activity through the second quarter and into the third quarter and fourth quarter that we’re going to be able to get ourselves accelerating that headcount growth, which of course, we had moderated to some extent in 2020, because of our focus on profitability and being able to maintain the very exceptional talent that we have. So we’ve got a very positive outlook on recruiting and we’re finding -- it’s as competitive as ever. These folks have lots of opportunity. But we are seeing that they are viewing Exponent as one of their top choices.
Tobey Sommer
Analyst
Thanks. And then from an expense perspective, you mentioned real estate in your prepared remarks and sort of ramping travel expenses, is there a -- on a net basis, any kind of cost difference that you see in the business exiting -- hopefully, exiting the pandemic versus pre-pandemic levels?
Rich Schlenker
Management
Yeah. Look, I think, at this point in time, we think that from a facility standpoint, the profile is going to be similar to what we were doing before. I mean, Exponent has been able to pretty much year-in, year-out, squeeze a little bit of better margin out of building critical mass in our locations. And we expect to be able to continue to do that as we look forward over the next several years. But that’s a path that we were on being able to share space better, collaborate more, do those types of things. When it comes to the -- do I expect that we’re going to see some lower level of travel expense? I think we will see some in that area as certain conferences or meetings moved to a virtual environment. What we’re working through at this time is, is there going to be a net cost savings or are those expenses going to be shifted into other forms that are marketing and recruiting expense that allow us to continue to be more effective in that area. So I think that we’re still evolving those areas. We definitely think there are some places where less travel will be more efficient and actually more effective for our business. But we think that we also need to invest in other forms of communication that can also enhance our position in the marketplace.
Tobey Sommer
Analyst
And last question from me, as courts’ throughput kind of slowed last year, we weren’t sure whether all projects would sort of be deferred and/or maybe parties would settle. What’s your perspective now on the degree to which some of those projects kind of went away or really just accumulated in, for lack of a better word, some sort of backlog?
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Yeah. Yeah. Thanks, Tobey. I’ve been spending a fair bit of time engaged with our clients on the litigation side, both the outside counsel, as well as the in-house folks, who make a lot of the decisions around, how they handle their litigation portfolios. And I will tell you, they have not changed their posture around wanting to fight the battles on the merits of the case. They’re really making their decisions based on the merits. I’m finding we didn’t really see waves of settlements when things started to decline in terms of the macroeconomic impact. Of course, you get a settlement, you get settlements here and there. And at the end of the day, the vast majority of these matters do settle, but what tends to happen is they get fully worked up, full expert reports, depositions, you’re almost to the courthouse steps before those settlements tend to happen. And we really have seen that our clients are just as committed to their cases as they have been whether you’re on the plaintiff side or you are on the defendant’s side. They’ve -- there has been a willingness for them to weighted it out, is what I’ve seen and just kind of push the dates. But what we see now is the dates are becoming real. The reality of bringing a jury in for an in-person trial in even the summer or the fall of this year is very real and that is pushing demand back toward us for things like the preparation of expert reports and doing these deep analyses and preparing for depositions. And so, that’s been a part of the driver really here for the activity in the quarter, where we continue to see this improvement in matters that are being brought back to life if you will.
Tobey Sommer
Analyst
Thank you very much.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
You’re welcome.
Operator
Operator
Our next question comes from Andrew Nicholas, William Blair.
Andrew Nicholas
Analyst
Hi. Good afternoon.
Rich Schlenker
Management
Hi, Andrew.
Andrew Nicholas
Analyst
I was hoping you could speak to the outperformance that you saw in the quarter relative to your guidance, where in particular you saw upside? And then somewhat relatedly, when you look at that outperformance, is there any way to describe how much of it was a function of maybe pent-up demand flowing into the pipeline versus what might otherwise be described as more a normal course of business, I realize that that’s maybe a difficult thing to obtain? But just curious if you have any thoughts on pent up versus normal course? Thanks.
Rich Schlenker
Management
Yeah. Let me start off on this one. Look, I think, when we provided the guidance about the first quarter, at that time, clearly, we were in the process -- we had a number of human participant studies that clients had been coming to us, wanting to get ready to go when the restrictions came down and when vaccinations increased. We can all remember back to what January was like. It was not that long ago. We were all coming off a pretty devastating sort of time over the post-holidays. And but things really -- vaccinations we’re starting, we just didn’t know how quickly we would see the positive impacts of that. And it turns out that very quickly early in February those restrictions, the numbers started to go down and we were able to really let go and go full bore for the last eight weeks, nine weeks of the quarter on our human participant studies activity. So that was one area that really made a difference, I think, in that area. I’ve talked to the team, I would say maybe a third of the activity was some work that might have been done in an earlier quarter in late third quarter, early into fourth quarter, but the other two-thirds of it being activity that really wouldn’t have occurred until the first quarter at the earliest. So the majority of the work is work that’s new, that wouldn’t have been occurring until this time in the product life cycle and going from there. This is an area that we -- was probably, let’s call altogether 6% of -- 5% to 7% of our revenues in the quarter in total, just to give you a sense and there was some of it going on in January. It just accelerated really…
Andrew Nicholas
Analyst
Really helpful color. Thank you. Maybe with as a follow-up to that and with your answer as context or a precursor, I was hoping you could maybe walk us through in a little bit more detail how you’re thinking about the revenue cadence throughout the remainder of the year? If I look at the implied guide for the second half, it seems like you’re baking in consistent sequential step down through year end? And so I’m wondering, if there’s anything else to call out besides typical seasonality and vacations or it’s just maybe being a bit conservative given how much uncertainty there is in the world at large? Thank you.
Rich Schlenker
Management
Yeah. So I think it’s a lot of those factors. First of all, clearly, we have easier compares in Q2 and Q3 than we have in the fourth quarter. As I just mentioned a moment ago, the fourth quarter utilization was actually pretty strong. It was a good utilization quarter. We had seen a little bit of uptick in the headcount as well and we had a very strong rate realization in that period. Based on the mix of work, based on positive realizations on projects, the rate realization was definitely the strongest of the year. So we do view that Q4 is a very different comparison for us as we move forward to that. So we’re not expecting to see as larger -- we’re expecting to see a small rate realization when we get to the fourth quarter just because of the unusual strong rate last year in that period. We think utilization underlying might be a little bit stronger than it was last year in the fourth quarter, but we realize that vacations are going to be pressing on us at that period of time. And we’re taking that into account. That likely we’re going to see a few extra days less of productivity from people in the fourth quarter of this year and over the summer, as well as people are taking vacation and doing a little bit of catching up on that. And so that is why at this point in time and the uncertainties that are out there, we have accounted for that. You’re right, it is a low -- our expectation for year-over-year growth in the fourth quarter on the topline is low because of all of those factors, but it’s not because we don’t see the business getting back to a normal growth…
Andrew Nicholas
Analyst
Makes sense. Very helpful color. Thank you.
Operator
Operator
Our next question comes from Marc Riddick, Sidoti.
Marc Riddick
Analyst
Hi. Good afternoon.
Rich Schlenker
Management
Hi, Marc.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Hey, Marc.
Marc Riddick
Analyst
So I wanted to sort of piggyback on that and I really appreciated the way you kind of laid out how the cadence worked out around the recovery and positive performances that you saw, both on the litigation side and the user study portion. I was wondering if you could sort of take a similar dive at what you may be seeing, what the automated vehicles and some of those types of efforts, given the focus on what would may be coming as far as increased demand and production in that space?
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Yeah. Thanks, Marc. The automotive area and advanced vehicles in particular are definitely an important driver for us right now. And this is actually -- it hits both the proactive, as well as the reactive side of the business. There has been an uptick sort of in the regulatory activity around advanced vehicles. We are seeing demand around sort of safety frameworks as the various manufacturers of advanced vehicles and automated vehicles are envisioning the actual deployment of these on the roadways. That’s really where Exponent comes in, when it gets sort of out of the lab and out of the test environment and you actually get into the realities of a 4,000 pound vehicle being driven by a computer at 70 miles per hour and what the safety implications of that are. So we’re seeing that kind of demand on the proactive side. And also around the electric vehicle piece, you’ve see all kinds of pledges recently. General Motors fleet is going to be electric by 2030 and others are rounding out…
Marc Riddick
Analyst
Right. Right.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
… similar sorts of pledge sorts of statements and so we are seeing that our battery expertise on the transportation side is in increasing demand. As the industry ramps up its manufacturing of batteries to meet the demands in the marketplace and to kind of meet the regulatory drivers that are pushing in that direction. There are all kinds of challenges. But I mean, if you remember back to the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 phone. All of those challenges came through when they ramped up manufacturing. And so there is opportunity that we’re seeing and there are engagements that we are seeing around quality and performance and reliability of those systems and also crash worthiness of those systems. Vehicle fires are a concern for both gas-powered vehicles, as well as electric vehicles, but the ways that you put them out and the safety implications are very different just because they’re different propulsion system. So we’re seeing it there. We’re seeing litigation work around advanced driver assistance systems. So this is not a fully automated vehicle, but this is the technology that’s being deployed in the fleet now, it’s been in the fleet, emergency braking, lane keeping kinds of technologies, adaptive cruise control…
Marc Riddick
Analyst
Right. Right.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
These are places where the litigation profiles are increasing. The plaintiff bar is very aggressive as they have always been around vehicle safety and so we have taken -- made investments to position ourselves ahead of the curve on this and are really developing the cutting edge testing capabilities around these systems and really digging into the data around limit performance on these systems. And so the automotive arena, both proactively and reactively is driving some of the existing demand that we’ve seen in this past quarter, but also we believe it’s going to continue through 2021 and beyond as these technologies continue to be get closer and closer to actual deployment and then once they’re deployed managing the challenges of their performance and failure analysis and things like that once they are out on the roads.
Marc Riddick
Analyst
Okay. That’s really helpful. Thank you. And then I was wondering from a regulatory standpoint, is there a general timeframe or framework that you tend to see for new technologies like this when it comes to I guess maybe on a state and local level involvement and sort of what type of -- is this the type of thing that you can sort of see coming in there, so you can prepare yourself for it and what type of jurisdictions might be sort of the first ones on your doorstep?
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Yeah. The regulatory environment is a key driver, right? And you hit the nail on the head when you mentioned, it’s not only at federal level, but there is a state and a local level, right? Because the -- it’s at the state level, where they have to -- states do licensing for advanced -- for human drivers, right? Well, how do you decide if you are a state -- if you’re at that state level, there are huge questions around how you determine if an automated vehicles should be quote-unquote licensed to be on the public roadways, right? And the pathway toward that is something that could be different state-by-state and so this is an area where Exponent can really help. And we would be aiming and have been assisting the industry more so than going after the states themselves necessarily as clients. But we are trying to really actualize getting the vehicle on the roadway and what that actually means in terms of what the vehicle needs to demonstrate. How do you demonstrate safety? How safe is safe enough is the real question that the whole community of manufacturers is really trying to answer and really trying to get ahead of the regulators, so that you can demonstrate to the regulators that you’ve got the best practices and that’s definitely an area of focus for us now.
Marc Riddick
Analyst
Okay. And then I just one more and I promise I’ll be done. Can you talk a little bit about the expansion of the wearables within DoD and sort of how that came to be and was there something that accelerated that pace or how should we think about that opportunity going forward? Thanks.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
Yeah. Yeah. So that’s an opportunity where the original work was -- we were doing it at the Army level, we were doing it at the Navy level. But now what’s happening is that, we are -- and it was focused really very exclusively on COVID-related proximity monitoring and contact tracing. And now what we’re seeing because of what we’ve been able to deliver in those engagements is more of a converged solution across -- as a joint program across the Department of Defense. We’re looking at that sensor data from the wearable from a variety of different angles in terms of the security of the data, the hardware itself, and the ability of the sensors to detect physiologic signs. The data flow and architecture are important issues here. The human factors issues associated with the display. How you manage all of those kinds of things and wanting to get all of that information onto the wearable device in a way that is robust and reliable and provides information about health and also readiness in the sense of the armed forces. And so it’s about taking it sort of out of the laboratory, out of the experimental sort of condition and being able to manage it operationally and sort of optimize that data flow to provide real insights into what the data are telling you. And so that’s really where the expansion has come through sort of a converged solution that goes across as a joint program in the Department of Defense.
Marc Riddick
Analyst
That’s great. Thank you very much.
Dr. Catherine Corrigan
Management
You’re welcome.
Operator
Operator
With no more questions in the queue, we will be ending the call. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today’s teleconference. You may now disconnect.