Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. (BWMN) Q3 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. (NASDAQ:BWMN) Q3 2022 Earnings Conference Call November 11, 2022 9:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Gary Bowman – Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Bruce Labovitz – Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Alexander Rygiel – B. Riley

Brent Thielman – D.A. Davidson

Operator

Good morning. My name is Nadia and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Bowman Consulting Group Third Quarter 2022 Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]

Thank you. Please note that many of the comments made today are considered forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. As described in the Company’s filings with the SEC, these statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause future results to differ from those expressed, and the Company is not obligated to publicly update or revise these forward-looking statements. In addition, on today’s call, the Company will discuss certain non-GAAP financial information such as adjusted EBITDA and net service billing.

You can find this information together with the reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP information, the Company’s earnings press release and 8-K filed with the SEC and on the Company’s investor website at investors.bowman.com.

Management will deliver prepared remarks, after which they will be taking live questions from public research analysts. Throughout the call, attendees on the webcast may post questions for management to answer on the call or in subsequent communications, but there will be no live Q&A from the webcast attendees. Replays of the call will be available on the Company’s investor website.

Mr. Bowman, you may begin your prepared remarks.

Gary Bowman

Thank you, Nadia. Good morning and welcome, everyone to the Bowman Consulting Group third quarter 2022 earnings call. I am Gary Bowman, Chairman and CEO of Bowman. I am joined this morning by Bruce Labovitz, our Chief Financial Officer.

I want to start by thanking everybody at Bowman for your continued commitment to delivering exceptional solutions to our customers and for yet another record quarter to our shareholders. We’ve added many new employees through acquisitions this quarter and I am pleased to have all of you as part of the Bowman team.

Also recognize that today is Veterans Day, I would like to – I had a special thank to many Bowman employees who also served as Veterans. Given the strength of the quarter, and the momentum we are experiencing so far in the fourth quarter, there continued to be an apparent disconnect between the behavior of our clients as reflected by the key performance indicators in our business and the recessionary concerns we hear in the media.

While we’ve adopted what we consider to be a cautious and defensive approach to managing the size of internal investments and our risk in specific growth initiatives, our pace of new orders and high utilization rates gives us confidence that we will again see growth in 2023. At the time of the IPO, we talked about our five year strategic growth initiative, which included a 12% organic compound growth rate target and an aggressive acquisition program which when combined with the results at a five-fold growth trajectory from a $100 million of net revenue in 2020 to $500 million of net revenue in 2025.

Nearly two years in, it was a $200 million plus runrate by the end of Q3 we are ahead of plans. Since our last conference call in August our M&A and integration teams were a bit busy. We closed on three new acquisitions with additional opportunities currently at various stages in the pipeline.

Anchor Engineering added marine and waterfront ports and harbor engineering skills to our portfolio of services, while also adding underwater survey. SEI demonstrates our continued commitment to expanding our energy transition and solar infrastructure engineering practice to support finance the complex energy infrastructure requirements.

And then in Spatial Acuity reflects our belief in the value of leveraging certain geospatial data collection and reality capture technologies that are in high demand by our customers, while also enabling efficient growth. Each of these acquisitions bring the unique value proposition to Bowman. They all provide a meaningful base of business from which we intend to cross-sell our services and grow revenue.

Now let me turn the call over to Bruce who will discuss our financial results in detail and I’ll return to talk a bit about our markets before taking your questions. Bruce?

Bruce Labovitz

Great. Thank you, Gary. We are pleased to be here today discussing another record quarter. When I refer to the quarter I mean the three months ended September 30, 2022 and when I refer to last year, I mean the period ended September 30, 2021. Throughout my presentation, I will refer to certain non-GAAP financial information such as EBITDA and net service billing which we also refer to as net revenue.

You can find this information together with reconciliations to the most direct comparable GAAP information in yesterday’s earnings release and in our 10-Q, which we will be filing on Monday, since the SEC is closed today in honor of Veterans Day.

Last night, we released results for another consecutive quarter of record gross revenue, net service billing and adjusted EBITDA. We continue to deliver exceptional organic and acquisitive growth in the third quarter of 2022 and year-to-date. When you normalize the acquisitions closed during the quarter and in the fourth quarter, we are pacing at a net service billing rate of over $265 million annually.

Based on acquisitions closed since our last call, and order trends we’ve been experiencing so far in the fourth quarter, we raised guidance for the year and concurrently introduced net service revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance for 2023, which we believe suggests as Gary indicated rational optimism about next year.

Gross revenue for the quarter increased $31.5 million or 79% to $71.2 million. Year-over-year organic gross revenue growth was 23%. Net service billing for the quarter increased $29.2 million or 82% to $64.9 million. Year-over-year organic growth for net revenue was 25%.

Net income for the quarter was $3.4 million or $0.26 per share basic and $0.25 per share diluted. This is an 8.5 fold increase over the prior quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter increased $5.2 million or 118% to $9.6 million as compared to Q3 2021. This represents an adjusted EBITDA margin net of 14.8%, which is up 240 basis points as compared to Q3 2021.

Turning to the year, gross revenue for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 increased $78.1 million or 72% to $186.1 million. Year-over-year organic growth of gross revenue was 28%. Net revenue for the nine months increased 71.9 million or 70% to $169 million. Year-over-year organic growth for net revenue was 31%.

Net income for the year was $4.5 million or $0.36 per share basic and $0.34 per share diluted. This is a four-fold increase over the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA for the year increased $11.9 million or 94% to $24.6 million. This represents an adjusted EBITDA margin net of 14.6% which is up 150 basis points compared to last year.

Based on relatively unchanged utilization rates, and a 23% growth in our core non-acquisition headcount, we estimate that approximately 92% of the organic gross to net revenue is the result of increased work suggesting roughly 8% of the growth – of the organic growth is due to inflation – rate inflation.

Gross margin for the quarter was 52%, as compared to 51% last year. Overhead for the quarter was roughly 49% of net revenue, as compared to 52% in the prior year. We believe this 300 basis points improvement demonstrates our thesis regarding the operating leverage we can achieve through the efficiencies of scale.

The distribution of gross revenue for the quarter was roughly 63% building infrastructure, 19% transportation, 12% power and utilities, and 6% other emerging markets, which includes water resources, mining and other energy transition services.

Given market uncertainty around certain aspects of the building infrastructure market, we again dug a little deeper into the distribution of revenue to give as much transparency to the market as possible. To that end, for sale residential related services represented approximately 11% of total gross revenue for the quarter.

Again turning to the year, the distribution of gross revenue for the nine months ended September 30, 2022 was roughly 68% building infrastructure, 14% transportation, 13% power and utilities and 5% other emerging markets. For sale residential related services represented approximately 12% of total gross revenue year-to-date.

As we discussed last call, while for sale residential services are a meaningful component of our overall business, we do not consider it to be over weighted with respect to its potential impact on future results. During the year, we have reduced building infrastructure from 74% to 63% of gross revenue, while increasing transportation from 8% to 19% and emerging markets from 4% to 6%.

While power and utilities has grown nominally, it has declined marginally as a percentage of gross revenue. We hope to reverse that trend over the next few quarters. Our balance sheet remains strong with $23 million in cash as of September 30, net debt of approximately $19 million and a net leverage ratio well below one.

Our debt is a combination of fixed rate seller financing notes from acquisitions and capital leases. We have no balance sheet outstanding – we have no balance excuse me, outstanding under our BOA revolver.

With our existing debt, we have no meaningful exposure to escalating interest rate carry due to rate increases. Before changes in working capital, we generated nearly $24 million from operating activities with just over $12 million from operating activities after changes in working capital. The change in working capital is again principally the result of increased accounts receivable because of our rapid organic and acquired growth.

Our backlog as of September 30th was $230 million. This is a nine month increase of $63 million or 38%, as compared to December 31, 2021 and an increase of $91 million or 65% as compared to September 30, 2021. Backlog is comprised of roughly 51% building infrastructure, 33% transportation, 13% power and utilities and 3% other emerging markets.

In general, we expect roughly 80% of our backlog to turn into revenue within a 12-month period. As Gary mentioned, we are increasing and narrowing our fiscal 2022 guidance for net service billing to a range of $230 million to $234 million with adjusted EBITDA in the range of $33 million to $35 million.

This is our fourth beat and raise of 2022 guidance since introducing our outlook last November. The increase from previously issued guidance is the result of both recent acquisitions and expected continuation of organic growth.

We are also introducing fiscal 2023 guidance for net revenue of $270 million to $290 million and adjusted EBITDA in a range of $42 million to $48 million. This represents an adjusted EBITDA net margin of approximately 16%. Growth next year is a result of existing revenues, projections from discussions with clients and expected growth.

Keep in mind, our guidance only includes acquisitions that have been completed as of the day the guidance is issued. Future acquisitions could have an accretive impact to our forecast.

Finally, yesterday after earnings released in connection with a regularly scheduled meeting, our Board Meeting authorized a stock repurchase plan of up to $10 million. The program is to be used as deemed reasonable from time to time to address market inefficiencies with respect to our stock.

Our top priority for capital allocation remains investment in strategic growth, both acquired and organic. We are confident that we have sufficient cash on hand, cash flow from operations and access to debt to meet all potential demands for capital. While we have no current intentions to execute a structured equity offering, we will continue to use our equity as a component of consideration in acquisitions.

I wish to thank everyone for being on the call and I’ll turn the call back over to Gary.

Gary Bowman

Okay. Thanks, Bruce. Now I want to take a moment to address our positioning relative to the general economy and the state of our markets and our plans for capital allocation including mergers and acquisitions.

As I did last call, I’ll start with the macro environment for our industry markets and our customers. Bottom-line is the demand for infrastructure investment in the built environment remains strong overall. Signals from our clients suggest most sectors in markets continue to experience an imbalance between the demand for our work and our industry’s capacity to meet that demand.

In the residential market, that includes mixed use for rent and for-sale housing, demand from homebuilders for developable and billable lots remained strong on the directly or through third-party developers. Housing stock continues to remain low from a historical perspective relative to demand and builder balance sheets are as healthy as they’ve ever been.

Builders and developers of for-sale multifamily and mixed-use projects are adapting their models for the current demand climate and we have every indication they will remain active in their inventory creation efforts to be positioned to benefit when conditions reach equilibrium and revert to a more normalized supply and demand dynamic.

As Bruce mentioned, revenues from our for-sale residential clients represented just 11% of our revenue in Q3 and 12% year-to-date. Overall, we are beginning to realize our goal of deconcentrating building infrastructure within our revenue base.

Transportation and traffic engineering continues to grow and provide an opportunity for capturing incremental market share as it increases in concentration within our revenue mix.

As our transportation traffic team grows through acquisition and hiring, so too does the size of the opportunity set for which we compete. Through acquisitions, we have both expanded and deepened our transportation credentials, which has resulted in an enhanced competitive position nationally with DOTs, municipalities, private roadway developers, commercial operators and other transportation authorities.

We’ve made several announcements recently regarding new projects for a range of transportation and traffic services. We are beginning to experience the early benefits of the transportation infrastructure bill and we foresee a healthy uptick in transportation assignments in 2023 and extending into 2024.

Demand for power and utility services continues to expand and evolve in the longer-term larger and larger scale projects with increasingly larger contract values to compete for. Recent extreme weather events have served to reinforce the need for times of fortification and resilience initiatives we support for public quasi/public and private utilities to ensure uninterrupted provisioning of critical electric gas and water resources to the customers.

Our undergrounding work continues to expand rapidly with existing and new clients and our work with energy efficiencies in high demand. Reports from Florida after the recent hurricane suggests kind of electric and undergrounding work we’ve been doing with Pike Electric and Florida Power & Light had a profoundly positive effect on minimizing dangerous and life setting long-term served constructions.

Our other markets, which we refer to as other emerging markets include water and wastewater resources, mining, marine infrastructure and energy transition, we’re pleased with each of their contributions to our results. In particular, the work we’re doing for solar and wind producers and alterative battery storage operators has a great potential for future growth.

In addition, with all the transportation infrastructure spending being planned today, an area of focus for us is to expand our mining support business, the unrestricted copper mining include aggregates and other fuel components. I am sure you’ll hear more about that from us over the next few quarters.

So overall, while it be inactive to say there are not some pockets of weakness, those two areas are softening we are experienced are being more than offset by what continues to be an increasing demand for infrastructure engineering.

Turning to labor, the high degree of overlap of our skillsets required between the markets we serve is deliberate and affords us an opportunity to leverage and optimize our labor force to maximize our utilization. This remains a fundamental tenet of our M&A program. We continue to be engaged with and invested in substantial employee retention and recruiting efforts.

And yes, labor is tight, but it’s manageable our increased investment in employee engagement is paying dividends. We have reduced voluntary turnover and increased our hiring rate with the talented professionals we pursue. Being a public company has had a very positive influence on our ability to attract and retain employees.

Bookings of what we refer to as sales continue to grow along with revenue as evidenced by a book-to-burn ratio that’s significantly above 1. This can be seen in our backlog growth. It’s also important to note that our book-to-burn ratio is exclusive of backlog added through acquisition.

Our M&A pipeline remains active with deals of varying sizes, all valued inside our target valuation range. Year-to-date, we’ve acquired over $50 million of annualized net revenue at an average multiple of under 6x 2022 adjusted EBITDA estimates.

We expect to close on a few more acquisitions by year-end that will be similar in size to our recent deals. We may not hit our $75 million target that we laid out at the beginning of the year. But we’ll probably end up somewhere in the low $60 million area. And as a result, we’re very happy with this year’s acquisition program.

When looking back to the acquisitions we closed in 2021. We’ve generated a 24% annualized growth rate for net revenue from those acquisitions alone at an average multiple of roughly 5.5x that represents an improvement of approximately 1 turn of purchase price multiple.

Now I will take a moment to focus on our commitment to geospatial technology and help to find reality capture. Reality Capture involves the use of advanced technologies such as high-definition 360 degree camera and three-dimensional laser scanners to collect existing or as built conditions for use during design, construction and operations.

What is often referred to as geospatial tools or photographical technology is used to enhance the speed and accuracy of data collection for selling commercial infrastructure to support the progress measurement and project control.

The technological advancements in geospatial applications for engineering and construction present a tremendous opportunity for leveraging this technology to extend the utilization of our human capital. We’re very excited about this line of business and expect to cover it more in future calls.

In closing, we are pleased to continue to deliver on our commitments to our shareholders. I’m proud of the work we’ve done and I look forward to continuing our work into 2023. I wish everyone a happy and healthy Thanksgiving Holiday Season.

Now I’m going to turn the call back to the operator for Q&A session.

Question-And-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And our first question today goes to Alex Rygiel of B. Riley. Alex, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Alexander Rygiel

Thank you. Good morning, gentlemen. Gary and Bruce, a very, very nice quarter.

Bruce Labovitz

Thank you, Alex.

Alexander Rygiel

Couple quick questions here, couple quick questions. First, organic growth has been fantastic, 25% in the current quarter. Can you talk about some of the reasons why Bowman is taking share?

Gary Bowman

Alex, they contributed to our organic growth is the synergies with our acquisitions. I can’t measure that. But I would guess maybe one-third of that organic growth is from synergistic opportunities we’ve been realizing.

Bruce Labovitz

I think the scale that we’re creating as we grow the national footprint and we grow the size of labor and the configuration of the workforce that we have and the adaptability of – and the ability of multiple pockets of labor to cover for other pockets had allowed us to be nimble and very responsive to opportunities and not be constrained in any way by geographic limitations. And that’s really afforded this ability to go after stealing market share from other providers.

Alexander Rygiel

Very helpful. And then, you talked a little bit about – and thank you for the metrics on what is driving organic growth being kind of volume versus price mix. That’s very, very helpful.

As it relates to price and in theory as it relates to a tight labor market and labor inflation, clearly, that price is obviously driven by increased cost of labor. So maybe can you address, number one, whether or not your pricing program is keeping up with the rise in labor rates?

And number two, how sticky is that during sort of recessionary periods kind of like, what we’re seeing in kind of other end-markets?

Bruce Labovitz

Yes. So I think the first thing to kind of point out is labor in our industry isn’t like a commodity traded daily with fluctuation in pricing that is ongoing. It’s a relatively fixed with incrementally increasing costs. But it doesn’t move on a curve on prices relative to interest rates.

So there is a creep certainly that’s occurred. And then there is a likewise creep in rate. We think we have kept up and with rate inflation, meaning, sort of the cost of labor and an opportunity to charge clients. They are not always directly connected. Sometimes it is – sometimes you’re a little bit ahead of labor because you can feel the constraint in the market and take advantage of it. Sometimes you’re behind labor because labor has – understands the constraint in the market.

We’re seeing a settling of that dynamic and I think inflation in the marketplace seems to have sort of settled a little bit. And likewise with the two parts of our business, the cost of labor and the opportunity with that, I think we’re finding that to settle in a little bit. But they move together.

And if we – our clients are quick enough to know that if they sense that the labor market cost is coming down, rates will either lead or follow that but they don’t necessarily cross. So you don’t see one dive particularly below the other to where you have an imbalance that causes loss.

Alexander Rygiel

And then lastly, as your revenue mix shifts here a little bit, clearly, from a couple of years ago, but even kind of moving forward in some of these newer markets that you’re getting into, how do you think your profit margin might be impacted by that shift?

Bruce Labovitz

So we – fundamentally, our premise is that it’s more about scale than it is about distribution of revenue between markets. I don’t know that we’re ever going to get to a point where one is going to be so — take over so dominantly over another. And when you look at our gross margins, there’s points here and there, but there’s not tens of points here and there.

So I think the bigger thing you may see as we shift the distribution is the percentage of gross to net. We would find probably expands a little bit as transportation becomes a bigger part of our business. It’s just sort of a dynamic and characteristic of that market to us. Gary, you have anything you want to add?

Gary Bowman

I think you’ve all covered and covered well.

Bruce Labovitz

Thank you.

Gary Bowman

I am doing a good job.

Bruce Labovitz

So, I don’t know that that mix – some of the things that – we could see a couple of points from technology becoming more pervasive in some of the work that we do. And that, Gary, I think we focused a little bit on geospatial because it does provide some opportunity for leverage on time spent.

But fundamentally, we are a people business. And the people do the work and the multipliers are generally sort of consistent. The bigger – one of the other efficiencies you get is when you get larger, longer-term contracts. That’s not necessarily a mix within the markets, but a mix of how the revenue is constituted.

Alexander Rygiel

Very helpful. Thank you very much. Good luck.

Bruce Labovitz

Thanks, Alex.

Gary Bowman

Thanks, Alex.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question goes to Brent Thielman of D.A. Davidson. Brent, Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Brent Thielman

Hey, great. Thanks. Congrats on a great quarter.

Gary Bowman

Thanks, Brent. Good to see you come back.

Brent Thielman

I guess, the first question, the outlook in the 2023 suggests sort of around 140 basis point improvement in EBITDA margin over 2022. Is that simply reflective of your ability to better leverage your SG&A? Are you assuming improving terms on bookings and new contracts?

I know your cost and labor is rising and I imagine you’re leveraging that to some degree. But maybe you could just talk around that increase in margin in the next year.

Bruce Labovitz

Yes. Principally, Brent, I would say it comes from the realization – realizing scale of SG&A over a much bigger top line. We’ve spent a lot of time and energy and money in the last 1.5 years building an infrastructure to support the size that we – to over-support with the size that we had grown too because we had to build the infrastructure around going public and dealing with M&A and integration, all that.

We believe we’re going to start to realize some of the leveraged benefit of that over the next year. I don’t think that it’s overly weighted with a spread between fees and labor and increase in gross margin. We do think that our – as I said – there is a little bit of margin to be had from, I think, some of the technology channels that we are building. But principally, I would say, it’s about overhead scale.

Brent Thielman

Okay. And when you think about this, call it, $50 million increase in revenue at the midpoint on the guidance, what kind of pull on existing resources, does this require? I mean how much more utilization can you extract from your existing workforce versus kind of the talent acquisition you’re going to have to go out and do to drive that?

Gary Bowman

Brent, it’s – we are being very successful in the talent recruiting market. So it’s – we are really not – everybody, is working hard and everybody is stretched. But we are not recognizing this by continuing to stretch our workforce more like we are successfully adding to our workforce.

Brent Thielman

Okay. Okay. And then, you generated a lot of free cash flow this quarter. I mean, the guidance suggests sort of a similar level of EBITDA into the fourth quarter. I mean, do you think you can see similar levels of cash conversion this quarter, Bruce?

Bruce Labovitz

Yes, I do. I think we are starting to hit that – the glide path of where the cash flow is coming through. We are focusing a lot on sort of the pre change in working capital. As we think about it because the organic growth rates that we’re producing are consuming a lot of cash almost as if we’re making acquisitions in ourselves on a regular basis.

But still, the bottom line of growth, if you look at the trend over the year, we’ve certainly seen that that improving. And I don’t know that it’s going to turn straight up, but it’s going to continue on a path of improvement.

Brent Thielman

Okay. And then on building infrastructure, Gary, I’m just curious what the backlog informed you about sort of where the underlying markets in that business are going. But hear a lot of discussion around the industry around large sort of industrial and non-residential facilities and projects being developed.

I am wondering if that’s becoming just a much more meaningful driver of the business now. Just be curious if you could dive into that business segment. What’s driving the growth right now?

Gary Bowman

And – my outlook on where that stands, it’s not driven so much just looking at the numbers. It’s been spending a lot of time in the past several months being out in the field, talking to people listening. Our share of building infrastructure, which is the commercial data centers, industrial distribution type facilities has increased as a share of our building infrastructure. We’re not seeing any softening in commercial markets, retail markets.

And so far, we’re not seeing softening in many of our residential markets. We are seeing some significant softening in some residential markets out West. So we – and we are – and everybody is aware of that sensitive to it. We’re moving work around. Bruce mentioned, I think Bruce in his comments that our staff is the talents of commercial markets and residential markets pretty easily, a fungible one to the other.

Bruce and I work together so much. We finish each other’s sentences. So we’re getting, we’re staying ahead of that. So far, we’re staying ahead of that. We are certainly sensitive to where that’s headed.

Brent Thielman

Okay. Sorry, just one more from me. It would seem to me that the buyback that’s been authorized is sort of a message and you can go out and buy our own stock right now at or maybe cheaper than where you’re finding acquisition targets. I guess how does that sort of inform your reasoning around doing deals in the near term and your capital allocation sort of priorities right now?

Bruce Labovitz

Yes. Brent, the program is more defensive than it is offensive. We are still committed to growing through acquisition and deploying capital into good acquisitions. We don’t — we’re not setting up a trading desk to be active in the market.

It’s really a message that says the Board understands that there’s volatility in the market, understands that the price of the stock as of the meeting yesterday was highly undervalued and that we want to send a message to our shareholders’ existing and prospective that we believe in the shares in the stock in the future of the stock and to the extent that there is an inefficiency in the market relative to valuation will be there.

But we are still very much focused on capital allocation in the ideal world to be around acquisitions that grow the – sort of have a future impact exponential potential value in terms of what they add to us.

So I don’t want – the message to get out that — the message to be that we turned our focus away from growth and toward market. But that we’re communicating the confidence we have and our willingness to allocate capital in the event that is needed or the right opportunity – we’re needed to step in.

Brent Thielman

Okay. All right. I appreciate it guys. Thank you.

Bruce Labovitz

Thanks. Brent.

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. Mr. Bowman, I turn the call back over to you.

Gary Bowman

Thanks, Nadia, and thanks everybody, for participating in our call this morning, especially thanks to our investors for the faith you continue to showing us and wish everybody, good morning. Thanks, everybody.

Operator

Thank you. This now concludes today’s conference call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.

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