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PJT Partners Inc. (PJT -1.13%)
Q1 2020 Earnings Call
Apr 28, 2020, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day and welcome to the PJT Partners Q1 2020 Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time I would like to turn the conference over to Sharon Pearson, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Sharon Pearson -- Head of Investor Relations

Thanks very much, Sandra and good morning and welcome to the PJT Partners first quarter 2020 earnings conference call. I am Sharon Pearson, Head of Investor Relations at PJT Partners and joining me today is Paul Taubman, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Helen Meates, our Chief Financial Officer.

Before I turn the call over to Paul, I want to point out that during the course of this conference call, we may make a number of forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties, and there are important factors that could cause actual outcomes to differ materially from those indicated in these statements. We believe that these factors are described in the Risk Factors section contained in PJT Partners 2019 Form 10-K, which is available on our website at pjtpartners.com.

I want to remind you that the company assumes no duty to update any forward-looking statements and also the presentation we make today contains non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe are meaningful in evaluating the company's performance. For detailed disclosures on these non-GAAP metrics and their GAAP reconciliations, you should refer to the financial data contained within the press release we issued this morning, also available on our website. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Paul.

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning and thank you all for joining us today. We hope all of you who are listening in are doing well under the circumstances because you all can imagine we are conducting this call remotely. Sharon, Helen, and I are all calling in from different locations. So please forgive us in advance if we experience any technical glitches.

It is nearly impossible to convey the extent to which the world has changed since our last earnings report in early February. The enormity of this health crisis and the severity of its economic impact continues to unfold in real time. The loss of life and livelihood is hard to fathom and yet in this darkness we have seen extraordinary heroism from healthcare professionals as well as untold number of essential workers across industries. On behalf of our entire firm, I would like to express our collective gratitude to all those who are serving on the frontlines. And in our own small way we have tried to do our part. At the outset we identified those non-employee support staff who would be most economically impacted by the closing of our offices and work to make sure that they continued to receive paychecks. We donated all of the N95 masks we had to local hospitals, we had previous procured these masks as part of our business continuity plan. We are donating more than $2 million from the firm and its partners to COVID related causes with $1 million of that amount coming from the firm. And consistent with our firm's civic focus, we have restructured our summer internship programs to ensure that our interns devote meaningful time to community service.

Since this crisis began, our firm has remained fully operational and client centric with almost all of our employees working remotely. Our firms insights, expertise, and collaborative approach to problem solving have never been more differentiated or more highly valued by clients as Managements and Boards seek advice on how to best prepare for an uncertain future. From the outset, we have been focused on a variety of employee initiatives to support our colleagues health, wellbeing, and safety. We have stepped up an already high level of communication and engagement in order to maintain a differentiated culture even in the absence of physical presence. Our ongoing commitment to partnership and teamwork has been an essential element in enabling our firm to navigate these challenging times.

Turning to our financial results, these first quarter results reflect our significant momentum heading into 2020. Revenues grew 56%, adjusted pre-tax income grew 160%, and adjusted earnings per share grew 154% compared to a year ago. Turning to each of our businesses in a bit more detail, in restructuring, our restructuring revenues rose significantly in the first quarter versus a year ago and more modestly on a sequential basis. Since the onset of the economic shutdown resulting from the pandemic we've experienced a dramatic increase in restructuring activity. This significant uplift in activity has continued into the second quarter. And while our first quarter restructuring results do not reflect this increased level of activity, we do however expect our financial results to reflect this elevated activity over time.

In this volatile environment the level of cross divisional collaboration has never been greater. Clients are turning to us for advice on a wide array of liability management and liquidity issues arising from the crisis. Combining the expertise of our restructuring team with the capabilities of our capital markets advisors as well as the industry expertise and relationships of our advisory bankers is a difference maker for clients. I have often spoken about the benefits of having three highly synergistic and complementary businesses all working together to better serve clients. Our leading restructuring practice has always been a critical differentiator for the firm now more than ever before.

Turning to strategic advisory. In strategic advisory revenues increased significantly in the quarter compared to the prior year reflecting increasing returns on our consistent and deliberate investment in the business. We entered 2020 with a strong backlog of announced but not yet closed transactions and we announced a number of significant transactions in the first quarter prior to the market dislocations. While there has been a dearth of announced transactions post COVID, our client dialogues have expanded in both depth and breadth and are increasingly focused on capital structure and liquidity, opportunistic M&A, sponsor related activity, shareholder engagement, and shareholder activism. As a result, their number of active client mandates has increased significantly.

We have always believed that in difficult times such as these the ability to deliver extraordinarily high quality advice from an integrated team of experienced bankers would increasingly serve as a point of differentiation for our firm. In today's environment more and more clients are gravitating toward us and our traction with key decision makers around the globe has never been greater. In the first quarter we added three partners bringing the total number of strategic advisory partners to 49 and consistent with prior updates we continued to be in active discussions with a broad group of highly talented senior bankers to join our platform. While our desire to expand our strategic advisory franchise with the highest quality individuals remains undiminished, it will be incrementally more challenging to successfully recruit and onboard individuals as long as we are in an entirely remote work environment. We expect the pace of recruiting to slow but not to stop until things return closer to normal.

Turning to PJT Park Hill. In PJT Park Hill revenues increased modestly in the quarter versus year ago levels. Looking forward, we expect many fund raisings to be delayed as a result of these market dislocations. Until there is greater market stability including increased clarity as to recalibrated asset values we do not expect the fund raising cycle to return to more normalized levels. In light of the significant delays in completing many of these fund raisings we expect PJT Park Hill's revenues to be down significantly in 2020.

Reviewing our capital priorities on our 2020 outlook. Before I turn it over to Helen I wanted to review all of that. We have the benefit of a balanced group of very attractive leading businesses that are all highly cash generative. We have always been conservatively capitalized and we ended the period debt free and with our largest first quarter cash balance since inception. We expect these cash balances to grow throughout the year and we expect to end 2020 in our strongest financial position ever. In light of the uncertain economic backdrop and the significant share repurchases we expected in the first quarter, we are unlikely to be very active with our repurchase program for the balance of the year.

Turning to our 2020 outlook, we have always said that we are built to grow in most any market environment. Four months into 2020 and we are not operating in most any environment rather we are operating in unprecedented times. Notwithstanding this extraordinary backdrop and the abrupt changes in market conditions since we last reported, we continued to expect our revenues to increase in 2020. However any sense of specificity beyond that is no longer appropriate given the historic uncertainties we are all facing. And with that I will now turn it over to Helen to review our financial results.

Helen T. Meates -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you Paul, good morning. Beginning with revenues, total revenues for the quarter were $200 million up 56% year-over-year. The breakdown of revenues, advisory revenues were $157 million up 50% year-over-year with significant increases in both strategic advisory and restructuring revenues. Placement revenues of $39 million, up 67% year-over-year, reflecting strong corporate private placement activity and an increase in some placement revenues.

Turning to expenses, consistent with prior quarters we have presented the expenses with certain non-GAAP adjustments and these adjustments are more fully described in our 8-K to suggested compensation expense. We accrued adjusted compensation expense at 65% of revenues for the first quarter compared with 64% in the first quarter of 2019. Given the highly uncertain macro-economic backdrop, we raised our accrual rate modestly and we will refresh this accrual at the end of the second quarter.

Turning to adjusted non-compensation expense. Total adjusted non-compensation expense was $31 million in the first quarter 2020, down slightly from the first quarter 2019 and down 7% from the fourth quarter 2019. As a percentage of revenues our non-compensation expense was 15.3% in the first quarter down from 24.2% in the first quarter 2019. We experienced a large decline in traveling related costs, down 24% year-over-year as a direct impact of COVID-19. Net reduction in travelling related was highly concentrated in the last few weeks of the quarter. We also had lower professional fees in the quarter. Offsetting these declines were higher occupancy costs related to the additional space we took on last year in London and the US as well as higher spend in communications and IT. In response to COVID-19, we made investments to enhance our remote computing infrastructure and we provided additional support to many of our employees to help them in their transition to working remotely

Turning to adjusted pre-tax income. We reported adjusted pre-tax income of $39 million for the first quarter, up significantly compared with $15 million last year and our adjusted pre-tax margin was 19.7% for the first quarter compared with 11.8% for the same period last year. Provision for taxes, as with prior quarters, we have presented our results as if all partnership units had been converted to shares and that all of our income was tax at a corporate tax rate. We've also annualized the benefit relating to the delivery of vested shares during the first quarter. Our resulting effective tax rate for the full year is expected to be 26% which is the rate we applied in the first quarter.

Our adjusted if-converted earnings were $0.71 per share for the first quarter, up significantly compared with $0.28 per share in the first quarter of last year. On the share count, for the quarter our weighted average share count was 40.9 million shares. During the first quarter we repurchased the equivalent of approximately 1 million shares through a combination of open market repurchases, exchanges, and net share settlements of employee tax obligations. We repurchased approximately 540,000 shares in the open market which included 325,000 shares from Corsair. We are currently in receipt of exchange notices for approximately 177,000 partnership units and as we have done in the past, we will exchange these units for cash.

On the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with a $113 million in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments and $208 million in net working capital. We have no debt outstanding and our full line of credit is available to us. And as Paul referenced earlier, we expect to end the year with our strongest cash position ever. Finally, the Board has approved a dividend of $0.05 per share. The dividend will be paid on June 17, 2020 to Class A common shareholders of record as of June 3rd. And with that we will now take your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you very much. We will now take our first question from David Ryan, JP Securities. Please go ahead.

David Ryan -- JP Securities -- Analyst

Great, good morning everyone. It's Devin Ryan with JMP. How are you guys?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We are fine Devin. Nice to hear your voice.

David Ryan -- JP Securities -- Analyst

Yes, you as well. I guess the first question on restructuring, and PJT clearly has leading if not the leading restructuring practice and so I think that business clearly will provide some balance in this environment. So just if you can Paul maybe try to give us some more context on how the restructuring business performed in the prior cycle, the company wasn't public but any context in terms of how the business performed, how it scaled, did it double or more in revenues or anything you can give perspective around that? And then how we should be thinking about maybe the handoff here between restructuring and M&A advisory, I appreciate M&A advisory is not going away but to the extent we see some decline in activity relative to what was expected but restructuring is accelerating and how to think about the two dynamics there on revenues? And then just the last piece of the question just around restructuring being kind of a longer tailed business toward closing, are you seeing any evidence that the cycle could be different and revenues could come in more quickly, so just some context there would be helpful?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Okay, well there's a lot in that question, so let me let me try and answer it to the best of my abilities. And then please feel free to follow up so we can make sure that we're getting at all of your questions. The reality is in the last economic downturn there was a tremendous uptick in restructuring activity but I don't really pay much mind to what the predecessor business looked like at that time because we're entirely different firm today. We have nearly 50 very senior strategic advisory partners who are working hand in glove with our restructuring team and are really the arms and legs and the front end and the relationship managers providing industry expertise and real capital markets input alongside their restructuring brethren. So I think about it as we have 65 or so liability management and restructuring partners who are engaging with clients which is certainly not something that happened previously and clearly the entire world is open to us today in a way that it was a decade or more ago.

So what I'm seeing is a couple of things, one, every client from the largest to the most financially secure to smaller companies now needs to think about capital structure and liquidity. It's a core strategic imperative to make sure that you have the appropriate capitalization, that you have adequate liquidity, and since no one really knows what the shape of the curve is going to be and how long until we start crawling back to normal and what's going to be the pace of the recovery and the like it causes a whole series of strategic conversation to occur that heretofore did not occur. And we are I believe uniquely positioned to have that because we built out not only a very robust strategic advisory business, we built out a very strong, leading edge capital markets advisory business, and then we have a leading restructuring business.

So I suspect that what you're going to see here is, this is the first wave and the first wave is all of the sudden with markets seizing up and with many businesses effectively shut down, liquidity issues come to the fore. And you're dealing with those companies first and foremost, because they have an immediate need to address these issues, otherwise they literally will run out of cash. Then you have other companies who stand on higher ground but are unsure as to how high the water level is rising to. And they're looking at their own capitalization and they're asking themselves whether they need to effect certain liability management actions to give themselves more runway. And then I think you're going to have a third wave where depending upon how quick the snapback is, we may be in reduced economic environment with lower consumer spend, lower business spend for an extended period of time. And if that's the case, you will see certain companies who today are standing on very firm footing needing to address these issues going forward. So I think there's just a very long cycle of activity here and we're going to do everything we can to serve our clients and make sure that we're able to be forward leaning and having those conversations and being there to provide that advice to our client base.

David Ryan -- JP Securities -- Analyst

Okay, I appreciate that color. And I'm also curious, I mean, these moments, it is important they are in terms of just the backdrop they do to your point, Paul, maybe create situations where having many capabilities around advice become more important. And so I'm just curious in terms of the conversations you're having today, it sounds like you're still quite active just in advising clients or are you seeing more companies that you maybe haven't worked with before, request to speak or how are you interacting with maybe firms that you haven't interacted with before, kind of since the pandemic started and is there more interest from firms to talk to you just given the holistic type of advice that you provide?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, and again there's a lot in that question too. I think, this has been a shock to the system to virtually every company. And the fact that we are singularly focused on giving advice that we've been operational the entire time that we're not distracted by our own issues about capital allocation, balance sheet lending or other businesses has enabled us to be laser focused on clients. And in a world where we're operating 100% outward facing and clients are trying to make sense of the world, not surprisingly we're getting more traction with more clients. And then there are more clients who now recognize that they've got issues to deal with that heretofore they've not had to confront. And all of a sudden, I think advice is seen less as a commodity and more as a differentiating factor. So, our number of mandates and our number of dialogues are up considerably.

Now, the reality is there may not be much to do in the way of actual transactions or to monetize that, but we're fine with that because we've always thought about building our business for the long-term. And the more clients that we can engage with and the more dialogues that we can have, we are confident that we're going to show very well. So we view that as a good thing and inevitably that will lead to good things. And then I think the last point I would make is, as we're all trying to adjust to a world in which we're working exclusively remotely, I will say that I think all of us find that we're probably working harder and spending more time engaging with clients because we don't have all of these other distractions. We're not traveling, we're not spending all this time coordinating meetings, we're just getting on phone calls, video conferences, exchanging messages with clients. And I think we're able to spend a lot more time for every minute of every hour and every hour of every day engaging with clients without any wasted time. So I think it's also enabled us to be far more intense and far more efficient.

David Ryan -- JP Securities -- Analyst

Okay, great. And then just last one for me, appreciate the outlook commentary and just the update there, and I appreciate that it's difficult to be overly specific, especially just given the uncertainty in the environment. So I guess, just trying to get at, you still expect revenues to be up year-over-year and so I guess, what level of -- or maybe there is another way, what could change that, here we're evolving pretty quickly in the backdrop and so what would it take to kind of change that view that revenues actually grow year-over-year?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I think I would start by saying we see the environment as it is today. So this is where we sit with four months of the year done and dusted, eight months to go. We obviously have a lot of our business in CamberView and then restructuring has a heavy retainer bed to it. So we have a lot of visibility. We have a strong backlog of announced and not yet closed transactions where while nothing is guaranteed in this world, we would certainly have heightened visibility on that. And we've experienced what has been an incredibly difficult six weeks. So I don't make that comment lightly. But at the end of the day, we're dealing with such uncertain times.

When I step way back, I feel that our restructuring business this year is moving upward in to the right. Our strategic advisory business in 2020 is moving upward and to the right. We have a strong CamberView business and the Park Hill business, however, will be directly impacted this year as transactions get pushed out. And when I look at the totality of that, that is what we expect is for consolidated revenues to grow for the year. And I just don't want to try and put too fine a point on it in a world where we gave more specific guidance at the beginning of the year, but that was in more normal times. I think I've tried to underpin it and let's just see how the year develops.

David Ryan -- JP Securities -- Analyst

Yes, appreciate it very much, Paul. And thanks for taking the questions. I'll get back in the queue.

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Devin.

Operator

Thank you very much. We will now take our last question from Sumeet Mody from Piper Sandler Research [Phonetic].

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

Alright, great, thank you very much. Can you talk a little bit more about the appetite levels between strategic and sponsor M&A activity on either the targeted or acquired sides of conversations you're having for that?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

On the -- I'm sorry, on the strategic advisory side, was sort of strategic conversations are being had?

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

Yeah...

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I think it's -- sorry, go ahead.

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

Oh, no, no, I was just going to say, just both on the strategic and the sponsor side, and if there's any differences kind of today in this environment that's maybe January and February, just kind of contrasting?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think with respect to sponsors, we've always had a different view of the world than maybe others, which is there's been all this talk about dry powder being an accelerant to M&A activity. And I think you've heard us consistently be somewhat dismissive of that view that is often espoused. And the reason for that is if you look back empirically, sponsors tend to be very much attuned to valuations. And therefore, we didn't see that in a bull market with high valuations, sponsors were going to take activity levels to even higher levels. What we have always believed and I think it's starting to prove out is that all of that dry powder is a very helpful and healthy shock absorber in the system, which is as valuations are pressured, that all of a sudden sponsors will start to step into some of that void and deploy capital. And we're starting to see some of that.

But in the very near-term, in order to have sponsor activity, you need a few things. You need motivated sellers, you need attractive valuations for buyers, and very importantly, you need confidence that if you're making an investment that with that money, the company's capital structure will be sufficiently righted that it won't need to go back to the well. When you try and triangulate all of those things that universe is not that large today because there's so much uncertainty in the world. I suspect that as the full extent of the economic damage to some of these companies is better known and there is a more sober assessment of what these companies need to either survive or get to the next level, there's a new evaluation paradigm, a new equilibrium. You'll see increasing levels of sponsor activity. So we're having many of those conversations. Unclear how many of them get affected in the very near-term, but I suspect that over time you'll see increasing momentum in that regard.

And with respect to M&A, I'll give you just a couple of thoughts. This global health crisis, this economic shutdown, these are going to have very far reaching, long lasting effects. And there are going to be lots of scars and there are going to be certain industries that are going to come out of this severely compromised. There are going to be other industries that are going to come out of this strengthened and then there are going to be others who will just be a lot of navigating to get to safer and higher ground. And I suspect that what you're going to see here is across the board, companies are going to ask themselves, do they have the right capital structure, do they have enough of a rainy day fund, do they have enough of a buffer or a cushion. And I suspect that the conclusion on average will be that most companies will try and take some leverage out of the system. And the way you do that is you either raise equity or you delever by selling assets. And I suspect you'll see both and I think that latter point will be a meaningful catalyst to M&A activity.

And then I suspect that there'll be a lot of companies who recognize that the world is consolidating for a variety of reasons that we've talked about consistently. And they will conclude that having been set back these number of years is no longer realistic for them to spend the money and the dollars to create the necessary scale and they will probably be more willing to be consolidated by others, and I think that will probably increase the level of M&A activity over time.

I think on the other dimension here is the geopolitical dimension and I suspect that increasingly, US companies are going to want to rethink their supply chain and where their suppliers are domiciled. And I suspect that countries around the globe are going to take a more expansive view of what industries or what companies are important from a national security perspective and that may reduce some cross-border activities. I think there's going to be a changing nature and face of activity. Some of these conversations are starting to occur but I think the reality is that for most companies, they're just trying to understand what does the new paradigm look like, what does it mean for their company, is their capital structure the appropriate capital structure, what do they need to do operationally, how do they embrace their employees, how do they start to think about the inevitable reopening of the economy? And over time, more of the conversations that I've just talked about will probably move to the fore. I think they're more in the background today, but they will over time as the ground ceases to shift as dramatically as it has and starts to stabilize. I suspect you'll see more of those dialogues move to the front of the line. I hope that's helpful.

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

Yes, that's really helpful. Thanks for all that color, Paul. And I just wanted to pivot over to restructuring for a moment if I could. Notice the partner count hasn't changed much since 2016, it's kind of the last time we saw a spike in the energy sector. I just wanted to ask, with the scope of today's dislocations being a little bit wider, have you had any issues keeping up with the demand in this environment? Was the team kind of able to kind of cater to all the clients? How should we think about capacity there and how you deal with that?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, as I said before, and I do mean this, I view us as having 65 restructuring partners because at the end of the day, capital structure, liquidity, balance sheet, those are strategic issues. And those dialogues are happening from the biggest companies down to the smallest. So we've increased our number of partners in restructuring. We've increased the headcount in restructuring. But most of the increase has come about as we have created this capital markets advisory capability that really sets between strategic advisory and restructuring. And many and now most, and ultimately all of our strategic advisory partners are quite experienced as it relates to liability management issues, capital structure issues, capital raising and are intimately involved in these transactions. So whereas we might have had nearly half of our restructuring assignments that were cross staffed, I don't have the exact numbers, but I'm quite confident that today it's far more than half and its heading toward nearly 100%.

And the issue with capacity is just making sure that you're focused on the right companies with the right relationship and the right economics, because clearly you can find yourself spending a lot of time on situations that don't amount too much. So, it's really no different than any other business. You always have to be very disciplined, very focused and making sure that you're spending your time wisely, but we're quite confident that we have the capabilities and the resources to deal with a restructuring environment that turns out to be much larger and that persist for a much longer period of time.

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

Alright, thanks. And just one last one for me, thanks for the color on the hiring expectations and for that pace to maybe slow a little bit through this quarantine but I just wanted to follow up and I know it's still early days, but through the last crisis we had kind of a unique opportunity for some of that high performing talent at the bulge bracket and boutique competitors kind of ship moving around. Just wondering if you guys expect to see those same opportunities this cycle, maybe after the quarantine starts to be lifted, that's what they'll be looking out for?

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Look, we have maintained for a long time that the caliber of individual who is prepared to leave a bulge bracket firm to come to a firm like ours has grown over time. And the reason for that is this business model is far more accepted and embedded in the thinking of corporations around the globe today than it was five or 10 years ago. So the proof of concept exists in a way today that it did not 10 years ago. And I've always maintained that the caliber of individual that is prepared to come to a firm like ours is dramatically greater today than the talent on average that was available leaving big firms 10 years ago. And therefore, this crisis doesn't change that. And I suspect that over time, there will be a continuing steady flow of talent that moves because increasingly that's where clients want their talented bankers to reside in smaller advisory focused firms, where advice is the main event and we intend to continue to grow in that regard.

I was making the point, which is in a world that is entirely remote, it is more difficult to have individuals really get a feel for our firm. But it's all Zoom calls and the like than it is spending a few hours together in a social environment and meeting far more people rather than doing it remotely and the ability of on boarding individuals is greater. And we're still going to hire because there are individuals who are known to us and we know quite well and have expressed a strong interest in joining. So we're going to continue to add individuals. But I need to be realistic and let everyone know that all else equal the degree of difficulty in getting individuals fully vetted by the partners and having those individuals completely confident that they understand what it's like to work at our firm has to be more difficult in a completely remote environment. So in the near-term, I suspect it slows, but that in no way should be viewed as an indicator about what our longer term objectives or aspirations are.

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

Got it. Great, thanks for taking my questions, Paul.

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Great. Well thank you all for listening in today and we wish that all of you stay safe and that the next time we get together, we are experiencing the healing process in our country and the world. And we thank you for your time and support and look forward to speaking to you in our next earnings report. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 60 minutes

Call participants:

Sharon Pearson -- Head of Investor Relations

Paul J. Taubman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Helen T. Meates -- Chief Financial Officer

David Ryan -- JP Securities -- Analyst

Sumeet Mody -- Piper Sandler Research -- Analyst

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