BRP Group, Inc.

Q1 2022 Earnings Conference Call

5/10/2022

spk05: Greetings and welcome to the BRP Group Inc. first quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a list-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star then zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host Bonnie Bishop, Executive Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
spk01: Thank you, Operator. Welcome to the BRP Group's first quarter 2022 earnings call. Today's call is being recorded. First quarter 2022 financial results, supplemental information, and Form 10-Q were issued earlier this afternoon and are available on the company's website at ir.baldwinriskpartners.com. Please note that remarks made today may include forward-looking statements which are based on the expectations, estimates, and projections of management as of today, including certain expectations related to COVID-19 and other matters. Forward-looking statements are subject to various assumptions, risks, and uncertainties, and a variety of factors that are difficult to predict and which may cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated by such statements. For a more detailed discussion of those factors, please refer to the company's earnings release for this quarter and to our most recent SEC filings, including our most recent Form 10-Q, all of which are available on the BRP website. During the call today, the company may also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures. For a reconciliation of these measures to the most closely comparable GAAP measures, please refer to the company's earnings announcement and supplemental information. both of which have been posted on the company's website at ir.baldwinriskpartners.com and can be found in the company's SEC filings. I will now hand the call over to Trevor Baldwin, Chief Executive Officer of BRP Group.
spk06: Thank you, Bonnie, and good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our first quarter of 2022 earnings call. I will share brief remarks, followed by Brad, who will cover select financial and business highlights from the quarter, and then Brad, Chris, and I will take questions. I want to start by thanking the amazing colleagues and partners at BRP. Q1 was a record quarter with broad-based performance across our business, highlighted by organic growth of 16%, the highest first quarter organic growth rate we have achieved since our IPO, supported by double-digit organic growth across all four segments and total revenue growth of 59%. We generated these results while investing significantly in the people and technology that we expect will drive accelerating innovation, growth, and profitability through 2022 and beyond. To highlight the growth and transformation we have achieved in recent years, in the first quarter of 2022 alone, we delivered more than 175% of the revenue we generated as a firm for all of 2019, the year we went public. Adjusted EBITDA for this quarter was more than 150% greater than the adjusted EBITDA we earned in all of 2019. The MGA of the future demonstrated strong growth of 42% during the quarter. We continue to execute multifamily, now with over 1 million renter's policies and master certificates in force, while also making continued progress in new products with our de novo homeowner's product now live in six states. On April 29th, We closed on the Westwood Insurance Agency transaction, a strategic partnership we announced in the first quarter. Westwood represents our largest partnership to date and more than doubles our Main Street segment by adding embedded distribution and a team dedicated to serving new home buyers across America through our relationships with many of the top home builders across the country. Separately, through our MGA the Future platform, we entered into a program administrator agreement with QBE the seller of Westwood, to assume operation of QV's roughly $200 million builder-sourced homeowner's book of business. This agreement fast-tracks MGA the future's homeowner's growth with a preferred, outperforming book of business. In summary, we believe BRP is now one of the industry's leading tech-enabled personal lines brokerage and MGA businesses as measured in aggregate by policies in force, revenue, profitability, and loss ratio performance. Looking to 2022, our reputation as a destination employer is also being validated on the organic hiring front. During the quarter, organic hiring continued to accelerate, evidenced by our welcoming of more than 370 new colleagues. Our total headcount now stands at over 3,300, up from over 2,800 at the end of 2021 when including new colleagues from Westwood. On the partnership front, We have added approximately $82 million of annualized revenue against our 2022 goal of $100 to $150 million of acquired revenue. Our partnership team continues to pursue partnerships that closely align with BRP's culture, enhance our go-to-market capabilities, and elevate our reputation as the premier home for our industry's top professionals. On that topic, we are excited to announce the addition of Rich Tallow as our Chief Marketing Officer Rich brings over 20 years of insurance industry experience, most recently as the Executive Vice President, Marketing and Communications for Chubb, where he deployed world-class marketing and communications programs. Rich will lead our marketing and communications strategy across the firm, delivering programs designed to drive profitable growth and long-term recognition for BRP. There has certainly been some volatility in the world and broader financial markets since our last call took place in early March. Against this backdrop, we are fortunate to be in the enviable position of having a growing and diversified business and an extremely resilient industry. And while we are now currently prepared for a recessionary economic environment later this year, the strength of our franchise and underlying performance of our business has informed our increased outlook for 2022 organic growth, which Brad will detail. With that, I will now turn the call over to Brad.
spk07: Thanks, Trevor, and good afternoon to everyone joining us today. For the first quarter, we generated revenue growth of 59% to $243 million. We generated organic growth in the first quarter of 16% with all four segments hitting double-digit organic growth for the quarter. We recorded GAAP net income for the first quarter of $45 million, or income of $0.39 per fully diluted share. Adjusted net income for the first quarter of 2022, which excludes share-based compensation, amortization, and other one-time expenses, was $58 million, or $0.50 per fully diluted share. A table reconciling GAAP net income to adjusted net income can be found in our earnings release and our 10-Q filed with the SEC. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter of 2022 rose 37% to $73 million compared to $53 million in the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 30% for the first quarter of 2022 compared to 35% in the prior year period. As a reminder, our adjusted EBITDA margins are seasonal in nature with Q1 being the strongest quarter. The seasonality does shift year over year as a result of partnerships completed during the prior year which was the primary driver of the margin decrease from Q1 2021 to Q1 2022, as well as an acceleration of certain planned investments into our technology teams and Main Street business in preparation for the transaction closing and integration of the Westwood business into BRP. Our quarterly earnings supplement, available on our IR website, now includes organic growth by segment for the quarter. As a reminder, we are focused on long-term, sustainable double-digit growth as evidenced by our last two years' organic growth of 16% and 22%. We do not run the business to achieve specific quarterly results, which can vary, sometimes significantly, quarter to quarter. On the capital front, we expanded the capacity of our revolving credit facility from $475 million to $600 million, increased our total net leverage ratio covenant to seven times, and extended the maturity date to April 1, 2027. This gives us an additional margin of safety and leaves us well-positioned to execute on M&A and achieve our goal of $100 to $150 million in acquired revenue in 2022. As you heard from us last quarter, we believe our share price today represents the largest gap between actual and intrinsic value that has existed since our IPO, and as such currently do not have an appetite to raise common equity in the near term. We will continue to look at debt and preferred equity options, if attractive, as we did in Q1, and plan to responsibly manage our leverage down through cash flow, growth, and margin expansion. Also, we think it is worth mentioning, based on dialogue with data providers and ETFs, that a major data provider mistakenly underreported our public float by approximately 27 million shares for two months between late February and April of this year. And the flow through to index fund rebalancing and funds that track certain indices may have created significant selling of BRP stock as a result. A few items regarding expectations for Q2 and the full year 2022. First, for the second quarter of 2022, given the strong performance across our business, we expect to generate organic growth in the high teens. Additionally, because of changes to the seasonality of our business as a result of 2021 partnership activity and the closing of Westwood, we will provide some additional color beyond what we would normally provide for our historical pro forma revenue and initial Q2 projections. Including the Westwood Partnership, as of 3-31 pro forma LTM revenue is approximately $835 million. Currently, we expect revenue for Q2 2022 to be approximately $220 million, and for adjusted EBITDA margins for the second quarter to be 100 to 150 basis points higher than the 17% in the second quarter of 21. For the full year of 2022, on the back of significant investments made in the business last year and into 2022, and despite what we believe may be a recessionary economic environment later this year, we are increasing our expectations for organic growth for the full year to mid to high teens, We have begun deploying the nearly $50 million investment we mentioned on our last earnings call with a concentration in our MGA of the future and Main Street businesses, primarily in key colleague additions and technology development. These investments create new products and teams that should be contributors to 2022 organic growth and important catalysts for 2023 organic growth. Despite this large investment in new teams and solutions as seen in Q1, We still expect an additional 50 to 100 basis point increase in the adjusted EBITDA margin for the full year, above last year's 20%, consistent with the expectation we had on our last call in March. In summary, we are excited about our record first quarter 2022 results and the momentum we have carried into Q2. I echo Trevor's thank you to our colleagues who have been the driving force in propelling us to new heights and positioning us for continued strong performance. With that, I thank you for your time and will now open up the call for Q&A. Operator?
spk05: Thank you. At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the keys. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. And the first question will come from Elise Greenspan with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
spk08: Hi, thanks. Good evening. My first question, you guys mentioned some acceleration of your tech spend, I think, that was reflected in the first quarter margin. Can you give us a sense? I mean, I think that's embedded, right, with just the seasonality and the margin walk for the year. But can you just give us a sense of how much was actually accelerated in the first quarter?
spk06: Yeah. Good evening, Elise. Brad, you want to take that one?
spk07: Yeah. Hey, good evening, Elise. We did make a decision late in the first quarter to accelerate certain investments in both talent and technology. really to prepare for the QBE program administration agreement and to be able to flip live on that agreement in conjunction with the closing of the Westwood transaction. We are confident these investments will contribute to both in-year growth and margin with a full payback in 2022, which is why we've kept our full-year margin EBITDA guidance flat to what we communicated in March.
spk06: So at least basically that would bridge you up to about a 32% EBITDA margin. And while it was margin degradation in quarter, it's because we hadn't flipped the program administrator agreement on yet. But as that goes live, it fully earns into productivity effective basically immediately.
spk08: Okay. And then you guys mentioned, you know, being prepared for recession. You also kind of, you know, raised your guide, you know, and gave, you know, gave a pretty positive view for the second quarter. So, can you just give us a sense of how you think the recession can impact your businesses? And I guess, you know, as you think about that, would you still be thinking we can get into recession and you could, you know, still see, you know, double-digit organic growth throughout all of your businesses?
spk06: Yeah, great question, Lee. So based on some kind of early signs we're seeing, conversations we're having with certain clients that are beginning to see and feel some slight waning in consumer demand, we expect that economic activity is going to pull back in the back half of the year. Despite that, and as a result of the investments we've been making, Certainly in the habitational side of our business, we believe we're going to see accelerating growth through the balance of the year as evidenced by the increased outlook on organic growth. We expect we'll see broad-based, double-digit organic growth across our business despite this. I think we'll certainly see pockets where there's an impact relative to underlying client exposure units, but suspect that that'll be broadly overcome by rate and some of what we're seeing relative to increases in payroll expenses at client accounts, increased values, et cetera. We're spending time ensuring that our teams are prepared to provide thoughtful advice to our clients during that type of an environment. Our experience would suggest that when we enter into kind of economic pullbacks, clients tend to be more open-minded to having conversations with new insurance consultants and providers, and we tend to take share in those types of markets. So we feel really good about our positioning, similar to how we were able to perform through 2020 during that pullback. We feel like we'll be able to serve as a true beacon of stability and be able to provide fantastic advice and backstop for our clients.
spk08: And then, thanks, Trevor. And then just one last one, you know, any update to the full year M&A outlook and anything you can tell us on the pipeline?
spk06: Yeah, you know, a few things. One, I'll just, you know, provide a couple data points. Optus and partners, you know, published some data recently, announced M&A transactions in the brokerage space were down somewhat meaningfully in Q1. the lowest first quarter announced transaction rate since 2016. Not overly surprising considering the amount of M&A that got pulled into last year, but considering kind of the broader economic environment, the volatility that we're seeing, and we're being very thoughtful about how we deploy capital. We've always had and will continue to have a very high bar or the type of transaction that is going to be accretive into our business over both the near and long term. And as a result of those broader conditions, you know, I would expect us to be, you know, probably on the lower end of our expected range from an M&A perspective.
spk08: Okay. Thanks, Trevor.
spk05: The next question will come from Greg Peters from Raymond James. Please go ahead.
spk03: Hey, good afternoon, everyone. I probably like to follow up on Elisa's question regarding the potential for a more challenging macro environment. Can you give us some context about your middle market business in terms of exposure to industries? And then maybe also include some comments about certainly how the positive rate environment seems to be a nice tailwind for that business too.
spk06: Yeah, happy to do that, Greg. So when you look at our middle market business broadly, we're overly exposed to higher growth industries and higher growth geographies. As you think about the largest areas of focus, it's Real estate, it's technology, it's healthcare, it's construction, particularly with a focus on infrastructure. And so while there's pockets of those industry sectors that could feel some weakness, as we kind of look across our client base, we feel very well positioned. Additionally, as I mentioned earlier, you know, our experience would suggest, and I In an environment where there's more economic volatility or pullback, we tend to take share because clients tend to be a bit more open-minded about having a conversation, entertaining a new prospective service provider. And as we've talked about in the past, our go-to-market approach, the way in which we take a highly consultative process to engage with those prospective clients enables us a win rate that far exceeds the industry. So this is the type of environment where not only is our client base somewhat defensible relative to industry broadly, but our business is set up to really take share nicely.
spk03: Thanks. A couple small detail questions, but I was wondering if and I don't want to get too hung up on a quarter's results, but if you could talk to us about the variances in free cash flow in the first quarter versus last year, or maybe, you know, maybe don't get caught up in as much detail, but talk to us about your outlook for free cash flow for 2022. Yeah.
spk07: Hey, Greg, good evening. So the decrease you're seeing year over year was largely the result of the organic investment in talent technology that we've been speaking about over the prior quarters as well as the acceleration I mentioned to Elise in her previous question on margin in order for us to get online and ready to serve the program administration agreement in conjunction with the closing of Westwood. We do expect that trend to reverse in the back half of this year. as our investment initiatives contribute to growth and margin in the back half, as well as free cash flow.
spk03: Makes sense. With the Westwood acquisition, that's going to go all into Main Street. Is that correct? And as a follow-on to just, you know, because that was a big transaction for you, can you give us an update on where you are in terms of debt to EBITDA, and I know, just remind us of where your longer-term targets are.
spk06: Yeah. Hey, Greg. Happy to take that one. The Westwood partnership or transaction closed at the end of April. We could not be more excited about that. As we've shared in the past, it really accelerates our strategic roadmap on the embedded homeowner side of our business, and so we're thrilled to welcome Alan and the entire Westwood team to the BRP family. From a balance sheet perspective, we're in the mid-fives from a debt to EBITDA perspective. As we've mentioned in the past, we expect and plan to de-lever the balance sheet responsibly through a combination of growth in the business, margin expansion, and the free cash flow generation that the business continues to generate over the course of the coming years.
spk03: Got it. Just is it just a clarification for the for the Westwood? I know you're you're happy about that, but that's going to all I should assume that that acquired revenue all follows into the Main Street business, correct?
spk06: Or most of the acquired revenue all will flow into the Main Street segment, correct? Now, the MGA separately has a program administrator agreement with QBE, but that is separate from the Westwood transaction.
spk03: Does that go into specialty or does that stay in Main Street?
spk06: That goes into specialty.
spk03: Got it. Thank you very much for the answers.
spk06: Thanks, Greg.
spk04: The next question will be from Weston Bloomer from UBS.
spk05: Please go ahead.
spk10: Hi, good evening. My first question is on the Westwood acquisition. Can you just help us frame the economic sensitivity of that business? Maybe just how it performed during 2020 during COVID or How should we think about that $82 million of acquired revenue as it flows through the model before it hits organic? Thank you.
spk06: Yeah. Hey, Wes. So happy to talk about that. One, the Westwood business has a multi-decade history of significant stability throughout economic environments. And in fact, as you look at the product mix inside that business today, more than 80% of their policies in force or homeowners policies. And when you think about a homeowners policy, that is not generally an optional purchase. It's something that is oftentimes put in place when you buy a home. It's required in order to get a mortgage. And oftentimes the premium payments are escrowed as a part of that mortgage payment. And so the stability in the existing book of business is very strong. In the current environment, you've also got a positive rate impact to that renewal trail that is an additional tailwind. And while you may see new home starts could slow down as a result of increasing mortgage costs, that we would expect to have a de minimis impact on the overall growth trajectory of the business as a result of how that flows in relative to renewal revenue and rate to drive ultimate growth. Based on conversations we've had with home builders and others in that supply chain and value chain, if many of the home builders quit taking new home orders today, they'd need to continue building homes for at least another six months just to chew through the existing contracted demand that they have. So we feel good about not only how that businesses positioned to perform throughout economic cycles, but in particular, feel good about the defensive nature of the revenue streams and the type of increasing interest rate environment that we're headed into.
spk10: Got it. Thank you. And then my next is on the investments that you're making in the business. I know you had around 12 million remaining on your 30 million program from 21 and You'd announced the $50 million program. Is there a way to quantify kind of where those numbers stand, one cue to date? I know it was accelerated, but curious if you have those numbers.
spk06: Yeah, so we haven't provided specific disclosure, Weston. What I can tell you is we're on track and slightly ahead in the areas where we accelerated. And you can think about it being kind of broadly pro rata across the year relative to impact. And so as you think about, as an example, the combination of the 50 and the 12, you think about prior year pro forma EBITDA margin of 37 compared to this year's 30, the acceleration of certain investments in order to position us to catch the QVE program administrator agreement bridging up to 32, and the balance of that annualized number bridges you to the 37.
spk10: Got it. And my last one also on the margin, if I just do rough math on the employee, on the hires that you made in the quarter and take a look at total commissions and employee comp and then it looks like there's like a 10% Delta between those two numbers, which implies higher wage inflation. So just kind of curious how you're baking wage inflation into your forward projections and what impact that had in the quarter versus the investments you made.
spk06: Yeah. So it's, I would not, say that it's a direct result of wage inflation. What you're seeing is that we've brought on a tremendous amount of new professionals that have not yet become productive revenue generators inside the system. And so as we've talked about in the past, depending on the business, that can be as fast as 90 days or as long as three years. And typically more on the two to three year side. And so as these people come on, it takes a couple of years for them to earn into productivity where you would see that comp and benefits ratio normalized. If you think about how we're positioned relative to wage inflation, roughly half of our compensation is variable in nature tied to the top-line revenue of the business. And as you think about our workforce and the amount of people that we've hired in, on an organic basis over the past couple of years relative to our total population who have come in at market, we feel like we're significantly better positioned than many of our peers across the industry because of kind of the relative recency with which their comp has been set as they came into our system.
spk10: Got it. Thank you. Appreciate the call.
spk06: Yep. Thanks, Weston.
spk05: The next question will be from Yaron Kinnar from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
spk11: Thank you, and good afternoon. First question, just going back to a potential recessionary environment, how do you see that impacting the acquisition pipeline?
spk06: So, Yaron, it's a good question. You know, right now, what we would tell you is that we've have a pretty meaningful pipeline of opportunities, and we're just being particularly thoughtful about what makes sense in the relative timing. I think, you know, what we know is that the private market tends to lag the public market by six to 12 months relative to kind of pricing resetting. And so oftentimes as that's occurring, you see a slowdown. as people have to kind of re-rationalize where pricing is relative to what maybe the market was commanding previously. With all that being said, this industry is incredibly resilient. It has a history of outperforming through economic downturns over the course of both the most recent two examples of that in 2020 and 2008. And as a result of that, investor demand has continued to grow, and there's 50 capitalized buyers in our space right now. And so I would not sit here and prognosticate that we're going to see any material or precipitous drop-off in relative valuation. I do think that there will become a growing filter around quality. And that's the approach we've always taken.
spk11: And with that in mind, I guess looking at the five and a half times adjusted EBITDA ratio that you have and the seven times that covenant, I guess how willing would you be to stretch a bit further for attractive acquisitions in the near term?
spk06: We would not look to go above six times. Okay. Thank you.
spk04: The next question will be from Mike Phillips from Morgan Stanley.
spk05: Please go ahead.
spk12: Hi. This is actually a small dabble on Mike Phillips. I think most of my questions have already been asked. I guess just one, you know, high-level question. Just wondering what management views of the current P&C pricing environment is like. You know, any potential for inflationary pressures on lost cost trends to, like, stall deceleration of pricing or maybe perhaps cause some reacceleration? Just curious what you guys are seeing there.
spk06: Yeah, Mike, I think there is a likelihood that that's going to occur. I mean, you know, you're certainly seeing that in personal auto. I expect we'll see a growing trend in homeowners there. And I think there's aspects of that that are going to begin flowing into traditional commercial. insurance product lines as well. You know, I know there's been some recent discussion around the impact of social inflation as the court systems turn back on. So I think, you know, while I wouldn't sit here and tell you that I've got 100% conviction that inflation is going to reverse the kind of the slow rate ebb that we have seen, I think there is a meaningful chance that that could occur over the course of the next 12 months.
spk04: Great. Thank you. That was the only question.
spk06: Thanks, Mike.
spk05: And the next question is from Pablo Singson with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
spk02: Hi. So on the MGA, I was wondering if you could offer some perspective on how the different business lines contributed to growth this quarter. Specifically, are the newer lines like flood and homeowners already in the numbers? And then, any commentary on specialty XMSI where I think organic was in the mid-single digits? Thanks.
spk06: Yeah. Hey, Pablo. I'll give you a few high-level remarks and ask Chris to provide some more specifics. I mean, broadly, what I would tell you is that the organic growth at the MGA is accelerating. And, you know, when you look at year-over-year organic growth for the first quarter, And the comps that we were going after, it's been really terrific performance, particularly with master kind of turning on for the first time in the first quarter of 2021. You know, we reached a fantastic milestone with over a million HO4 and master policy certs in force. And we're very encouraged by the progress that we're seeing on the homeowner's side. which has begun contributing to results and we believe will be contributing meaningfully to results in the second quarter as a result of the success we're having rolling it out across multiple states. But, Chris, you want to provide some more commentary there?
spk09: Yeah, sure. I would say for Q1, you know, home was relatively de minimis as far as adding to the results, which I think, you know, Trevor is indicating we expect to turn on in Q2. What we could say is, you know, even last week and early this week, Third day is now where home is 10% to 15% of new premiums sold throughout the MGA. So turning on well. We were six states live yesterday. I think we've turned two more on today for the non-QB home, right, the home product that we've been building out. And so that is kind of anecdotal evidence to us that it's starting to ramp up, and we would see that continue through Q2 and then into Q3 and Q4, especially given what's going on in the Florida market and having two admitted products that are on and we can now sell in Florida, we think we've probably timed that right in terms of entering the market at a time when there's a lot of pain and we would look for results to accelerate there.
spk02: Thanks for that. Second question is for Trevor. So in the past, he had offered the relative contributions to exposure and rate to growth in middle market. I was wondering if you could talk to those factors in the first quarter and how you expect them to trend through the balance of the year. And I guess the context of the question is that, you know, if you look at what the commercial underwrites have reported, rate has been going down slowly, but then exposure has been picking up. And I was wondering if we're seeing the same, and what do you think might unfold for the balance of the year?
spk06: Yeah, Pablo, great question. So the impact of rate and exposure on a combined basis to our results is 4% in the first quarter. What I would tell you anecdotally is that, you know, rate is becoming a, you know, slowing contributor to that and exposure is a growing contributor to that as a result, you know, primarily of the inflation that we're seeing in the economy. And I would expect that we will continue to see mid to low single digit tailwinds from the combined impact of rate and exposure to the balance of the year.
spk02: Got it. And then last for me, basically along the lines of a couple of questions that have been asked already, but as we're thinking about your financial position a year or two out, I was wondering if you could give us a sense of how quickly you expect to deliver from five and a half today. It seems like your financing program will cover partnerships this year, but it's less clear for 23 and beyond. Thank you.
spk06: Yeah, we expect to be able to continue to delever the business responsibly over the course of the next couple of years to our longer-term target range.
spk04: Got it. Thanks, Trevor.
spk06: Thanks, Pablo.
spk05: And again, if you have a question, please press star then 1. The next question is from Meyer Shields from KBW. Please go ahead.
spk13: Thanks. Trevor, if I can go to your earlier comments anticipating a slowdown. How should we think about the timing of some sort of GDP contraction and where it actually emerges in revenues?
spk06: So, I guess, Mayor, help me more specifically on the question. You're asking about the timing of pullback in GDP and what the direct corollary is to our revenue streams.
spk13: Yeah, because I'm thinking in the past, I guess we'd assume something like a three to six month lag between economic inflection and where it shows up on the broker revenues. But I don't know if you share that impression or how it looks with the BRP book.
spk06: Yeah. So, you know, historically, what I would say is that there is that lag as you see the pull through come in as premiums and policies are audited out. What I would tell you, though, as a result of 606 accounting, policies that you would begin to see that impact more immediately because you're in many cases recognizing the full annual revenue at the date of renewal on a policy and so as soon as you begin to see some of that GDP slowdown and your clients are coming and they're renewing programs with lower exposure units as a result of that you're going to see the direct flow through in that in real time. And I would expect we would see, as a result, a more real-time impact. As I'd articulated earlier, we expect that we will be able to fully grow through that impact as a result of both the client industry sectors that we spend a lot of time in and kind of how our business is broadly positioned to take share in that type of an environment.
spk13: Okay, that's very helpful. Thank you. Second question, in the past we've talked about the timing of potential M&A, and I was wondering if there was any update that you could provide as far as that.
spk06: You know, no specific updates, Mayor, other than, you know, I think I would expect us to continue to, you know, periodically announce new partnership opportunities somewhat ratably over the balance of the year.
spk04: Okay, perfect. Thank you.
spk06: Thanks, Mayor.
spk05: Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question and answer session. and I would like to turn the call back over to Trevor Baldwin for any closing remarks.
spk06: Thank you, and I want to thank everyone for joining us today. We look forward to speaking with you next quarter. I want to provide a particular shout-out and thank you to all of our colleagues for all of their hard work in serving our clients and helping us achieve these amazing results this quarter. Take care.
spk05: This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.
Disclaimer

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