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In This Article:
Participants
Scott Adelson; President, Chief Executive Officer; Houlihan Lokey Inc
J. Lindsey Alley; Chief Financial Officer; Houlihan Lokey Inc
Brennan Hawken; Analyst; UBS Securities LLC
James Yaro; Analyst; Goldman Sachs
Michael Brown; Analyst; Wells Fargo
Ken Worthington; Analyst; JPMorgan
Devin Ryan; Analyst; Citizens JMP
Brendan O'Brien; Analyst; Wolfe Research
Ryan Kenny; Analyst; Morgan Stanley
James Mitchell; Analyst; Seaport Global Securities LLC
Presentation
Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Houlihan Lokey's third quarter fiscal year 2025 earnings conference call. (Operator Instructions). Please note that this conference call is being recorded today, 28 January 2025. I will now turn the call over to the company.
Thank you, operator and hello, everyone. By now, everyone should have access to our third quarter fiscal year 2025 earnings release, which can be found on the Houlihan Lokey website at www.hl.com in the investor relations section.
Before we begin our formal remarks, we need to remind everyone that the discussion today will include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements which are usually identified by use of words such as will, expect, anticipate, should or other similar phrases are not guarantees of future performance.
These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from what we expect. And therefore, you should exercise caution when interpreting and relying upon them.
We refer all of you to our recent SEC filings for a more detailed discussion of the risks that could impact our future operating results and financial condition. We encourage investors to review our regulatory filings including the Form 10-Q for the quarter ended 31 December 2024 when it is filed with the SEC.
During today's call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures which we believe can be useful in evaluating the company's financial performance. These measures should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for our financial results prepared in accordance with the GAAP.
A reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is available in our earnings release and our investor presentation the hl.com website. Hosting the call today, we have Scott Adelson, Houlihan Lokey's Chief Executive Officer and Lindsey Alley, Chief Financial Officer. They will provide some opening remarks and then we will open the call to questions. With that, I'll turn the call over to Scott.
Scott Adelson
Thank you, Christopher. Welcome everyone to our third quarter fiscal 2025 earnings call. We ended the quarter with revenues of $634 million and adjusted earnings per share of a $1.64. Revenues were up 24% and adjusted earnings per share were up 34% compared to the same period last year.
We are all pleased with our results for the quarter as well as with our performance year-to-date and we have entered our last fiscal quarter with continued momentum across all three of our business lines. Corporate finance and financial valuation advisory continue to benefit from improvements in the M&A and financing markets while financial restructuring had another solid quarter as it continues to benefit from record leverage and persistently higher interest rates.
We remain optimistic about the balance of this fiscal year as we believe the markets will continue to improve, given a stronger macro environment. Interest rates and inflation appear stable and the results of the US election have improved confidence.
Looking at each of our segments, corporate finance produced $422 million of revenue for the quarter representing a 36% increase over last year's third quarter. Key metrics for our corporate finance business including close rates, time to close transactions, new business generation and transaction volume continued to improve when compared with the same period last year.
Growth in our corporate finance business is widespread occurring across geographies, industries and driven by both strategic and private equity clients.
Financial restructuring produced $131 million of revenue for the third quarter, a 2% increase versus the same period last year. During the quarter, we continue to generate enough new business to maintain our backlog and provide us with continued confidence that this restructuring market will remain elevated for longer than we anticipated a year ago.
Financial and valuation advisory produced $82 million of revenue for the third quarter, a 14% increase versus the third quarter last year. An important result of the improving M&A climate. FDA saw strength across both its cyclical and non-cyclical businesses and many of the same factors affecting the optimism for our corporate finance business are present in our FDA business as well.
Regarding acquisitions, we closed our acquisition of Waller Helms in early December and our new partners are off to a strong start contributing to our results. We added 17 new Managing Directors in the quarter, 14 through acquisitions and three through individual hires.
As we look beyond our fiscal fourth quarter, our outlook for fiscal 2026 is positive. Improving M&A market sentiment, an increase in private equity activity and continued strength in our restructuring business are all encouraging indicators for continued growth. With that, I will turn the call over to Lindsay.
J. Lindsey Alley
Thank you, Scott. Revenues in corporate finance were $422 million for the quarter, up 36% compared to the same quarter last year. We closed 170 transactions this quarter, up from 117 in the same period last year. But our average transaction fee modestly decreased as a result of transaction mix.
Consistent with many past years, our third fiscal quarter was our strongest quarter year-to-date in corporate finance. Financial restructuring revenues were $131 million for the quarter, a 2% increase versus the same period last year. We closed 41 transactions this quarter compared to 30 in the same quarter last year. But our average transaction fee on closed deals decreased again as a result of transaction mix.
For financial evaluation advisory, revenues were $82 million for the quarter, a 14% increase from the same period last year. We had 1,005 fee events during the quarter compared to 926 in the same period last year.
Turning to expenses, our adjusted compensation expenses were $390 million for the quarter versus $314 million for the same quarter last year. Our only adjustment was $13 million for deferred retention payments related to certain acquisitions.
Our adjusted compensation expense ratio for the third quarter in both fiscal 2025 and fiscal 2024 was 61.5%. We expect to maintain our long-term target of 61.5% for this ratio.
Our adjusted non compensation expenses increased slightly to $83 million for the quarter compared to $82 million for the same period last year. This resulted in an adjusted non compensation expense ratio of 13.1% for the quarter compared to 16.1% for the same period last year.
On a per employee basis, our adjusted non compensation expense was $31,000 for this quarter consistent with the same quarter last year. For the quarter, we adjusted out of non-compensation expenses $4.1 million and non-cash acquisition related amortization and $4.7 million in integration and acquisition related costs. This included transaction costs associated with our acquisitions of Waller Helms and Prytania solutions as well as a real estate impairment charge associated with Waller Helms.
We also had an adjustment of $3.6 million pertaining to professional fees associated with streamlining our global organizational structure also referred to as Project Solo.
Our adjusted other income and expense produced income of approximately $9 million versus income of approximately $6 million in the same period last year. The improvement in this category was primarily due to an increase in interest income.
Our adjusted effective tax rate for the quarter was 33.3% compared to 30.3% for the same quarter last year. The increase in our adjusted effective tax rate was primarily resolved with timing issues. We expect our adjusted effective tax rate for the full fiscal year to settle between 31% and 32%.
Turning to the balance sheet, as of quarter end, we had approximately $903 million of unrestricted cash and equivalents and investment securities. We did not repurchase any shares during the quarter. As would be expected this time of year, a significant portion of the unrestricted cash will be used to pay our cash bonuses in May for fiscal year 2025. And with that operator, we can open the line for questions.
Question and Answer Session
Operator
(Operator Instructions)
Brennan Hawken, UBS.
Brennan Hawken
Good afternoon, Scott, Lindsey. How are you?
Scott Adelson
Hey, Brandon.
Brennan Hawken
It sounds like from your comments and your tone here in the prepared remarks that we've seen continued strengthening in the corporate finance environment. Is there a period or a historical context that you could point to, to help us think about how we should be refining and thinking about the potential for revenue growth in that business moving forward?
Scott Adelson
Yes, I think it is very much following what we had anticipated, which was just going to occur, which is really just this data, the progress of things improving and at the same time seeing a strong restructuring environment are certainly elevated. And that is the same thing we see today. And that really nothing has changed from last three quarters and at least to date, that has been a correct way to think about it.
J. Lindsey Alley
Yes. I mean, I'm not sure you need to change your thinking reading that. I'd say if you go back to Q1, on a consolidated basis, we grew roughly 23%, 24%. In Q2, we grew roughly 23%. In Q3, we grew roughly 24%. I mean, there is a -- yet there is not an acceleration. It is just a continuation of improvements versus the same quarters last year.
Brennan Hawken
Got it. Thanks for that. And then when we think about the typical seasonality that you see in corporate finance, normally the back half of your fiscal year's strongest and we haven't really seen that sort of typical cycle here recently. But is it normally fair to think about the March quarter being in a similar ballpark to the December quarter, is there upside? Is it a little slower because you don't have the year? How would you think about those dynamics? I would think it would be pretty constructive, given how you said that the confidence is improving on the back of the recent election, but just wanted to flesh that out a bit.
J. Lindsey Alley
Yes. Look, I think without getting into the March quarter, I will say -- fiscal '24 had pretty reasonable seasonality to the business. We were roughly 46% first half year, 54% second half of the year. That's if you look back over 5-, 6-, 7 years, that's pretty good average, right?
There's no reason to believe we're not going to be kind of in that same sort of seasonality that we've seen in this year as well. Now, obviously that I think all things, things can change as macroeconomic pressures, but we do seem to be seeing the same seasonality this year that we saw last year and in previous years. And so that's not a bad -- that historical is not a bad proxy.
Brennan Hawken
Great. Thanks a lot. Appreciate it.
J. Lindsey Alley
Thanks, Brendan.
Operator
James Yaro, Goldman Sachs.
James Yaro
Good afternoon and thanks for taking my questions. Starting with restructuring. So restructuring continues to surprise the upside. Maybe you could just comment on the likelihood that could actually grow in calendar 2025, especially given that rates appear to remain higher for longer and the long end steeping we've seen recently.
Scott Adelson
Yeah, I mean, look, we've been saying for a while and actually the prepared remarks that it is performing better than we would have thought of a year ago and it continues to be elevated. Interest rates remain elevated and we expect that to continue. What that nets for actual numbers, depends on an awful lot of factors that are kind of beyond our ability to completely predict.
James Yaro
Okay, that's very clear. So we're now entering another year of I think, as you describe it sort of a steadily improving but clearly it's not snapping back M&A environment. And so that probably has some negative ramifications on smaller competitors given the deal environment has been somewhat weak for a number of years now.
So if activity continues to improve at this slow and steady pace, how does that impact your hiring and acquiring backdrop? Does that mean that you should be able to continue to potentially do more deals and I guess your outlook for you know, acquisitions and hiring for the next 12 months, let's say.
Scott Adelson
Yeah, I mean, I think a couple of weeks closely again, things are improving, right? I don't want that to get lost in that statement. But we have kind of good markets and bad, I would say. Continue to find opportunities to both acquire talent and companies. And I think that we are a believer that virtually regardless of markets that that will continue.
J. Lindsey Alley
Yeah, and I would say James, look, I think from a market share gain standpoint, I'm not sure the market's any different than it's been. Our sense is that middle market investment banking firms are performing okay. You know, not just who I am. And we'll know better after some of our peers go, who focus on the middle market.
But our sense is, in the markets where we perform, people are performing pretty well, the markets are coming back. And we do expect to take market share, but not any different than sort of previous M&A recession that we just came through.
James Yaro
Great. That's very clear. Thank you.
Operator
Michael Brown, Wells Fargo.
Michael Brown
Great. Good afternoon, Scott and Lindsay. Wanted to ask a little bit more about the M&A outlook here. And as we have the administration change here, I tend to think that the deregulation, less deal scrutiny will be a positive for the large cap sponsor or -- not sponsor -- large cap strategic M&A activity. But what are kind of the potential knock-on impacts here for the small mid market portion of the market for M&A activity?
And then I guess, tariffs of course, add some uncertainty here when we start to think about some of the international M&A activity and things like cross border. I'd be interested to hear about how that could impact your business or is again, is it the size of deals you focus on some of the more than the other? Thank.
Scott Adelson
Yeah, happy to. So a couple of things. On just the overall environment, people being more receptive to M&A I think is just overall helpful. Just people's mindsets thinking about it more is helpful regardless of size. Obviously, we have not been as negatively impacted by regulatory environment as some of our brethren that are focused on large cap transactions. Having said that, it does just create a dampening on the market overall.
The return of far overused term, but the animal instincts of everybody wanting to get back to doing deals is something that -- it is certainly noticeable. When you take a look at whether it be tariffs or threats of tariffs or any other elements of the landscape that I think everybody expect to change from what they have been. I think there will obviously be a number of winners in that and there will be some losers and I think one of the benefits we have is in the diversity across industries, across geographies, we really get the benefit of that portfolio effect when those changes occur.
Michael Brown
Okay, great. And then just switch gears, Lindsay, the adjusted non-comp expense has been in that low $80 million range. Any comment on or maybe guidance for the non-comp expense for next quarter, like what's the right range we should think about?
J. Lindsey Alley
Yeah, look, I have been saying sort of high single digits. I think this quarter, we had some timing benefits and a couple other things went our way. I still expect that sort of same high single digit growth applying to Q4. So really Q4 this year versus Q4 last year, I just think we had some benefits this quarter that brought it down a little bit from what I had suggested maybe in that last quarter. So I'm still back on that same thing.
Michael Brown
Okay, great. Thank you both.
Operator
Ken Worthington, JPMorgan.
Ken Worthington
Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to talk about the deal environment from the perspective of Houlihan as an acquirer. Your stock is near the highs. The funding environment is quite good. Is now a good time for Houlihan to be a buyer. And what sort of feedback are you getting from potential targets and partners and given all the puts and takes, is it reasonable to think that Houlihan will be more or less or similarly active in calendar '25 versus what you were in '24?
Scott Adelson
So, we if anything have just gotten, I would say more organized and how we think about our acquisitions and at any point in time are in dialogue with an array of parties. When those hit, when somebody is interested in doing a transaction, markets are a portion of it, but again, these are people businesses and it has a lot more to do with the individuals than anything else quite honestly.
And so, everything you said is factual, but I don't know that that necessarily drives more or less deals. I think that our view is that there are opportunities out there and we will continue to go after them. The timing of them don't know when they will happen.
Ken Worthington
So let's try it in a fishing analogy. Do you have more lines in the water now, acknowledging you don't know if a fish is going to bite or not depends on, as you said, a lot of different factors? But it is there more dialogue happening now or is it just continuous?
Scott Adelson
Very good question. I would say, we have better sonar today than we did before in identifying where the fish are.
Ken Worthington
Perfect. Okay, I love the analogy. And then maybe in terms of client dialogue and corporate finance, I'm thinking about this from a geography perspective. Curious to hear if you're seeing engagement differ by region at all. I'll try it back to Trump and elections and so on. But are you getting different engagement and dialogue, North America versus Europe versus Asia? Like anything that strikes you as interesting or curious that's worth calling out.
Scott Adelson
It really is, as I said in my prepared comments, it really is across the board. There are pockets if you will that in a point in time do feel a little bit like they're picking up faster but each of those regions broadly defined is really seeing a pick up and both in, as we said, private equity and strategics, both. It is an all around pick up. There are pockets that are a little slower, moving a little faster, but when you look at them in those territories, it is fair to say it's picking up everywhere.
Ken Worthington
Okay, great. Thank you much.
J. Lindsey Alley
Thanks, Ken.
Operator
Devin Ryan, Citizens JMP.
Devin Ryan
Great. Hi Scott. Hey, Lisy. How are you?
Scott Adelson
Hey, Devin. Good.
Devin Ryan
Question on just deal size and the evolution there. In the presentation, one of the drivers of corporate finance growth you guys have highlighted is just increasing deal size and deal fees. And so let me just flush that out a bit more and really kind of get a sense of how much it is a concerted effort around winning larger deals versus, just how much is that natural progression of your private equity firms buying a company and then selling it a few years later at twice the size. So there's just that natural growth or, you know, is there anything else that the Houlihan Lokey is doing here to drive higher fees per deal.
Scott Adelson
Combination of all of the above that you mentioned. But I mean the simple answer is, we are squarely focused on the mid cap space. Period, right? Having said that, within that, we do continue to see year over year, just a steady increase in both deal size and for the most part the size as well correspondingly. And that is, I'm not going to say it's perfectly linear, but that has been directionally correct for a very long time and we don't really expect that to change.
J. Lindsey Alley
And slightly different answer for restructuring and FDA, but for corporate finance, which I think was the sort of focus of your question and Scott said it.
Devin Ryan
Got it. Thanks guys. And then just a follow up on the private capital financing efforts. Obviously some news of more hires there recently, you guys continue to invest. I love to just get an update on the optimism for that part of the business and expectations there over the next year. Thanks.
Scott Adelson
Yeah, I mean, I obviously that is an area that is a newer, hotter area. There's no that I've gotten has been for a while now. But I mean, we believe it's here to stay and really is -- as part of a greater set of capital solutions for sponsors. Just having a broader set of alternatives than they would have had five years ago on what to do with and how they run their businesses, and we think that we're well positioned to continue to take advantage of that.
Devin Ryan
All right, thanks so much. Appreciate it.
Operator
Brendan O'Brien, Wolfe Research.
Brendan O'Brien
Good afternoon and thanks for taking my questions. I guess to start, just to follow up on the capital markets business. One of the bold bracket banks announced that they're creating their own private capital solutions group that seems to be going after a similar TAM as you guys. I just wanted to get a sense as to whether you see increased competition in the space and whether that could pose a threat to the growth outlook for the business.
And also, if you could give some color on the size or type of companies that you're working with. I would imagine that competition for these types of services will be much further down, much lower, the further down market you move.
Scott Adelson
To answer your question the capital market side, there is not a business we're in that doesn't have competition. And so we understand that and our capital markets business is absolutely no different. We actually do think that the growth in private capital has been so significant that will obviously continue to be more players in the space. Obviously, there needs to be just given the growth in the ecosystem overall. We feel very good about our ability to continue to grow that business meaningfully in the year to come.
J. Lindsey Alley
And I'd say if the article you're referring to is Coleman, kind of creating capital solutions business. You know, we kind of look at the capital markets business very similar to our M&A business. We're going to have competition. That competition is likely going to come from other mid cap companies.
Coleman's Capital Solutions business is more likely going to compete with the ever [cores] of the world, the Molasses of the world, sort of our -- some of our publicly traded peers and yes, I'm sure they'll dip down into our business and we'll increase some sizes to dip into their business. But in general, I think we're staying on different playing fields and not just for M&A but probably our capital solutions business as well.
Brendan O'Brien
That's helpful color. And then for my follow up, I just wanted to touch on the restructuring outlook. There's been a significant divergence in traditional restructuring and liability management activity this cycle. However, historically speaking, anywhere from 15% to as high as I think, 35% of companies that undergo LME transaction end up filing chapter 11 within the next two years. How much does this dynamic inform your optimistic outlook for restructuring? And how do you expect the mix between traditional restructuring versus liability management to evolve over time.
Scott Adelson
Yeah, I mean, you are correct in the information that you stated and that obviously does factor in. But that's just a piece of it. And at the end of the day, it's just is, if you look at where interest rates are, if you -- the number of sick balance sheets out there as a result of rapidly increasing interest rates for a higher period of time than perhaps people would have anticipated or some would have hoped for, is really contributing to just more of those sick balance sheets needing to be taken care of.
And that manifests itself in various different ways, and as we look at it and we just look at the level of inquiry that we have, we continue to feel confident that we will be higher for longer.
Brendan O'Brien
Thank you for taking my questions.
Operator
Ryan Kenny, Morgan Stanley.
Ryan Kenny
Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to dig in a little bit more on your conversations with sponsor clients in the corporate finance business. Is that pick up also more gradual, like what you're seeing broad based across M&A or should we expect some more outsized momentum on the sponsor side?
Scott Adelson
Yeah, and certainly the level of sponsor activity has picked up. No doubt about it and it is -- they're both picked up materially. I do think you're correct. The sponsor activity and just the sponsor dialogue and sentiment does feel like it has picked up even more. And we're feeling good about where that's heading.
Ryan Kenny
Thank you.
Operator
Jim Mitchell, Seaport Global Securities.
James Mitchell
Hey, good afternoon. Scott, I think on the last call you talked about transaction velocity improving but not back to pre pandemic levels. It sounds like it got a little better this quarter. So are we getting much closer or getting back to more traditional velocity levels or are still aways away?
Scott Adelson
We're still, we're not there yet. I mean it is continuing to improve just as I said, but we're not there yet.
James Mitchell
And so what gets it there. It seems like financing is pretty wide open. What causing still this hesitation or slower reaction?
Scott Adelson
I don't want to be cavalier about it, but time, right? It just takes time.
James Mitchell
Are bid as spreads still wide relative to where in terms of expectation.
Scott Adelson
That's not really it. I mean, we've talked about before. It is still -- people are getting back in the water. They're not running into the water. And that to keep with our water-based examples. And because of that, over time, I think that you will just see that in history and say that will continue to speed up, but it just takes time.
James Mitchell
Right. Okay. And just one follow up on restructuring. Is the story here, higher for longer rates and everything else you've described this sort of keeps these elevated levels going but maybe incrementally tougher to grow or do you still feel like in the next couple of years, you can still see some decent upward trajectory and in revenues and restructuring?
J. Lindsey Alley
I think -- look, I think the former. I think it's -- as long as the M&A markets are robust, it's just hard to grow restructuring business, unless you start to see pressure on interest rates and in higher direct and higher versus pressure lower. I think we feel comfortable saying higher for longer. I don't think we're comfortable saying they're potentially in this market could be incremental growth.
Now, if the market changes, obviously, then you'll start to see pressure on M&A and you'll see some upward pressure on financial restructuring, but in this current market condition, assuming that it continues to get better, -- we love the fact that we're not seeing restructuring revenue decline.
We love the fact that they're holding where they are, and we think it's a kind of a heroic effort from the team to keep us flat in a increasing M&A environment.
James Mitchell
Yeah. Okay. Understood. Thanks for your color, Lindsay and Scott.
Operator
That concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to the company for any closing remarks.
Scott Adelson
I want to thank you all for participating in our third quarter fiscal 2025 earnings call. We look forward to updating everyone on our progress when we discuss our fourth quarter and full year results for fiscal 2025 this coming spring.
Operator
The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.