NYSE:CWK Cushman & Wakefield Q1 2026 Earnings Report $12.73 -0.09 (-0.70%) As of 12:59 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Cushman & Wakefield EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.15Consensus EPS $0.13Beat/MissBeat by +$0.02One Year Ago EPS$0.09Cushman & Wakefield Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$2.54 billionExpected Revenue$1.54 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$993.86 millionYoY Revenue Growth+11.00%Cushman & Wakefield Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/6/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, May 7, 2026Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsCushman & Wakefield's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, August 4, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 9:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Cushman & Wakefield Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 7, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Delivered a strong quarter with 9% revenue growth to $2.5B, 15% adjusted EBITDA growth, and 67% adjusted EPS growth to $0.15, and management reaffirmed full-year adjusted EPS guidance of 15%–20%. Positive Sentiment: Leasing and capital markets were major drivers — leasing was the company's highest-ever Q1 revenue, up 17%, while capital markets grew 14% globally with notable strength in industrial and data center-related activity. Positive Sentiment: Balance sheet progress continues — the company announced a $100M redemption (part of ~$600M repaid since 2024), trailing-12-month free cash flow conversion is ~70%, and net leverage improved to 3.1x toward a 2x target by 2028. Negative Sentiment: Reporting changes disclosed in an April 8 8‑K remove several previously disclosed non‑GAAP metrics (including fee revenue breakdowns and adjusted EBITDA margin), and revenue will now be presented inclusive of gross contract costs, reducing consistency of prior comparability. Negative Sentiment: APAC profitability declined year-over-year due to tough comps (large Japan transactions a year ago) and a one‑time $3.5M joint-venture credit-loss provision in China, though management described underlying demand there as recovering. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCushman & Wakefield Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, welcome to the Cushman & Wakefield First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Megan McGrath, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Megan McGrathHead of Investor Relations at Cushman & Wakefield00:00:29Thank you. Welcome to Cushman & Wakefield's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Earlier today, we issued a press release announcing our financial results for the period. This release, along with today's presentation, can be found on our investor relations website at ir.cushmanwakefield.com. Please turn to the page in our presentation labeled Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Statements. Today's presentation contains forward-looking statements based on our current forecasts and estimates of future events. These statements should be considered estimates only. Actual results may differ materially. During today's call, we will refer to non-GAAP financial measures as outlined by SEC guidelines. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, definitions of non-GAAP financial measures, and other related information are found within the financial tables of our earnings release and the appendix of today's presentation. Megan McGrathHead of Investor Relations at Cushman & Wakefield00:01:21Before I pass the call over to Michelle, a quick reminder that on April 8, 2026, we filed an 8-K with the SEC outlining several changes to our reporting presentation effective January 1st of this year. To better align our reporting with industry peers, we will no longer report service line fee revenue along with the following non-GAAP measures, Adjusted EBITDA margin, segment operating expenses, and fee-based operating expenses. As a result, our discussion of revenue and associated growth rates will now be inclusive of gross contract costs. Further detail on these changes as well as 2 years of recasted historical financials can be found in the 8-K filed with the SEC, which is also available on our IR website. Lastly, comparisons discussed on today's call are against the first quarter of the prior year in local currency. Megan McGrathHead of Investor Relations at Cushman & Wakefield00:02:10With that, I'd like to turn the call over to our CEO, Michelle MacKay. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:02:14Thank you, Megan. Thank you everyone for joining us today. We delivered strong first quarter results demonstrating consistent execution of our strategy and measurable progress toward our long-term financial targets. We delivered 9% revenue growth exceeding our long-term guidance range. We generated mid-teens Adjusted EBITDA growth as operating leverage continued to build. We delivered 67% Adjusted EPS growth, reflecting both strong business performance and the structural improvements that we have steadily made to our balance sheet. These outcomes are deliberate. The product of a strategy designed for durability and growth. Supported by our solid first quarter performance and continued strength in our pipelines, we remain confident in our full year guidance of 15%-20% Adjusted EPS growth. I want to focus on the breadth of our growth, which is a key driver in our consistency of our performance. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:03:24In high growth asset classes, clients are shifting capital and demand towards specialized sectors, including logistics, life sciences, and AI related industries. AI is a structural tailwind for the business, supporting leasing activity across geographies and fueling growth in our data center related services. With 50 technical advisory data center projects underway in APAC now and expanding global mandates, this is a long duration opportunity that continues to scale. In capital markets, we delivered our 6th consecutive quarter of double-digit revenue growth, including 22% growth in the Americas with institutional client revenues up 32%. This reflects the compounding returns from our talent and platform investments and the increasing connectivity within our institutional franchise. In leasing, we achieved the highest first quarter revenue in company history, growing 17%. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:04:32Performance was broad-based across industries, deal sizes, and geographies with growth in 15 of our top 20 cities in the Americas. That breadth matters. It reinforces both the sustainability of the growth and our ability to consistently capture share. In services, revenue grew 7%, reflecting steady progress as clients increasingly consolidate toward providers that can deliver integrated multi-service capabilities at scale. Project Management growth of 15% driven by international performance underscores our ability to manage increasingly technical work streams for a growing global client base. Taken together, this is what consistency looks like. Diversified growth, scalable margins, and disciplined capital allocation. With that, I'll turn the call over to Neil to discuss the quarter in more detail. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:05:43Thank you, Michelle, and good morning, everyone. As a reminder, all comparisons are against 1st quarter of the prior year and in local currency. First quarter revenue was $2.5 billion, up 9%, fueled by broad strength across our service lines and continued positive momentum from our growth initiatives. Adjusted EBITDA grew 15% to $111 million as we drove operating leverage across our platform. Adjusted EPS of $0.15 was up 67% as we benefited from the strength of our core business and the capital structure improvements we have made. Continuing our balance sheet transformation, earlier this week, we announced our decision to redeem $100 million of the $650 million outstanding on our 2028 notes. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:06:31Once completed, this will mark approximately $600 million in total debt repayments since the start of 2024 and further progress towards our target of reaching 2 times net leverage in 2028. Taking a look at our revenue performance by service line for the quarter. Leasing grew 17% in the quarter, with Americas leasing up 19%. Our leasing growth in the Americas was broad-based with double-digit growth in core, mid-sized, and large leasing deal sizes. By asset class, office demand remains solid, and we saw particular strength in industrial, including data centers. EMEA and APAC leasing increased 10% and 9% respectively, with particular strength in Germany, the Netherlands, and Greater China. Turning to capital markets, we reported 14% global growth in the quarter. Our continued strong performance in capital markets reflects the work we've done to add top talent and strengthen our platform. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:07:30Office was up 11% globally, performing especially well in the Americas with gains across all deal sizes and particular strengths in New York City, Northern California, and Phoenix. Industrial grew 25% with double-digit growth in each of our regions. Our services business expanded 7% globally with continued strength in project management in both EMEA and APAC. The Americas benefited primarily from new business wins and expanded client mandates in our facilities management business. To reiterate what we said at our recent Investor Day, we are focused on driving steady, profitable growth in our services business as we continue to move up the value chain with our clients. Turning to cash flow, our first quarter use of cash was in line with historical working capital trends, including the annual payments of U.S. bonuses and reflects typical seasonal patterns in our business. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:08:27Our trailing 12 months free cash flow was approximately 70% of adjusted net income, in line with our target range of a 60%-80% free cash flow conversion rate. We closed the quarter with approximately $600 million in cash and cash equivalents and $1.6 billion in total liquidity. Our net leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was 3.1x, a near full turn improvement from the same time last year. Moving now to our 2026 outlook, which remains unchanged. We continue to anticipate revenue growth of 6%-8% and Adjusted EPS growth of 15%-20%. I'd like to give an update on our 3-year targets we provided at our 2025 Investor Day, given the recent changes in our reporting as disclosed in our April 8-K. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:09:14The previous 3-year fee revenue growth target of 6%-8% has been transitioned to a GAAP revenue growth target and remains at 6%-8% growth. While we will no longer provide specific EBITDA margin targets, we continue to expect to achieve roughly 150 basis points of margin expansion over the 3-year period. Our targets of annual Adjusted EPS growth of 15%-20%, free cash flow conversion of 60%-80%, and net debt leverage of 2 times by 2028 remain unchanged. With that, I'll turn the call over back to Michelle MacKay. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:09:51Thanks, Neil. Over the last three years, we have intentionally reshaped this company into one that is more focused, more agile, and better positioned to lead through market transformations, allowing us to compound profitable growth. Quarter after quarter, we are converting strategy into performance, delivering predictable results, resilient growth across our business lines, and durable earnings through changing market conditions. Our consistency of execution is not by chance, it is by design, and it is a defining characteristic and a key differentiator of this company. Importantly, consistency for us is not only reflected in our financial performance, but also in how we lead our clients with clarity and tailored strategies during periods of transformation. The work that our think tank, including the continued expansion of our AI impact research, reflects that mindset. Today, we are proud to launch part two of our AI series. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:11:02The first part, which focused on introducing our AI dashboard, engaged over 15,000 clients and stakeholders, cementing our position as a true thought leader in this space. Today's release goes even deeper, examining how AI is likely to reshape economic growth, employment patterns, and space demand by sectors, roles, and geographies. By translating complex macro and technological shifts such as AI into clear, actionable insights, we continue to support better decision-making for occupiers and investors. I will close today with this. We are confident in our outlook, grounded in the visibility we see across our businesses and the durability of our model. Thank you to our teams for delivering another strong quarter and to our shareholders for their continued confidence. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator00:12:07Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. We ask that all callers limit themselves to one question and one follow-up. If you have additional questions, you may re-queue, and those questions will be addressed time permitting. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two 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 star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Julien Blouin with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Julien BlouinAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:12:52Yeah. Thank you for taking my question. Just wondering on the leasing results. They were pretty impressive in the quarter. Can you remind us how much of that was driven by some of the recruitment initiatives over the last year? From a recruitment standpoint more generally, how do you feel you stand today across your different segments? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:13:15Thanks, Julien. It's Michelle. Good morning. In terms of recruiting in general, we're doing extraordinarily well. We're building out the capital markets platform still, we've had a significant number of hires there. First quarter, we had a significant number of leasing recruits land as well. In industrial leasing, that's been a consistent bright spot for us over the past two years, we expect to continue to do some really strong leasing there. We've recently landed some teams in Boston, our expectation is that fundamentals will continue to be strong in U.S. Industrial as minimal supply is out there. Let me give you just a couple of data points around that too, for leasing and industrial in particular. Demand is accelerating in Q1. Absorption in the U.S. was up 52% year-over-year, this is a great place to recruit. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:14:07New and modern facilities are winning. Larger users are seeking modern logistics facilities to support automation, higher power requirements. That's becoming the primary driver of demand, and construction is down 60% from peak levels in 2022, which is gonna help vacancy drift lower, but also importantly, the industrial leasing market is now 80% larger by dollar volume than it was pre-pandemic. As those leases roll over, transaction values are gonna be significantly higher. So net-net tightening market there. Very similar dynamics in U.S. office leasing for us as well, where demand on a 4-quarter rolling net absorption exceeded 5.2 million in Q1, which is the strongest level since pandemic. Leasing obviously are unfortunately, I guess, overlooked sometimes relative to capital markets, but it's doing extraordinarily well. Julien BlouinAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:15:01Thank you. That's very helpful. I think you noted in the slides that the strong services growth out of EMEA was driven by improved facilities management in U.K. and Ireland and then strong project management in France. Just wondering how sustainable those improvements are going forward. Should that higher growth carry for the rest of the year? Is this sort of, you know, evidence that the restructuring that you did last year is really taking hold or actually the year before? Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:15:37Julien, as we look at services, certainly very pleased with what we're seeing internationally. Project management, you didn't mention that. That was an area of particular strength both in APAC and in EMEA. We certainly are seeing very nice improvement in margins in EMEA. It's our first quarter of margin expansion, and some of that is as a result of the structural work we did around our services businesses. In general, feel very good about where services is going, and the growth we're seeing. Operator00:16:14Our next question comes from the line of Seth Bergey with Citi. Please proceed with your question. Seth BergeyAnalyst at Citi00:16:21Thanks for taking my question. I guess the first one would be just, you know, one of the topics at Investor Day was the ability to kind of cross-sell and, you know, drive that by 200% by 2028. I guess where, you know, within kind of the 1Q results can we start to see, you know, evidence of that and how you're tracking that? Or can you share any color on that initiative? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:16:46Yeah, certainly. Part of this is motivating teams in a cross-sell capacity. We've recently brought together the GOC, which is our next top 50 group of leaders, and aligned them on our compensation structure, which involves KPIs associated with the cross-sell. We're starting to make good movement there. We're tracking a series of KPIs to ensure that's happening, and we hit our targets over the course of the next three years. Seth BergeyAnalyst at Citi00:17:12Great. I guess just, you know, a quick question on kind of guidance with tracking 9% kind of ahead of the revenue target. You know, I know 1Q is a bit seasonally weak, you know, just thoughts on kind of, you know, leaving the guidance unchanged, tracking ahead with a strong first quarter. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:17:33Yeah, sure. I can address that. Look, certainly very pleased with the first quarter we had. Solid first quarter. Solid leasing. Certainly services, it was right in line with expectations. We do continue to see strong momentum in April, and pipelines look good. We started the year with a fairly very ambitious targets. We remain very confident in achieving those targets. At this point, yeah, at this point, seeing everything pointing towards a solid year. Operator00:18:09Our next question comes from the line of Anthony Paolone with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Anthony PaoloneExecutive Director at JPMorgan00:18:15Thanks. Good morning. Maybe I'll start with the last item you mentioned, Neil, and maybe Michelle. As you kind of look into April, May, June, whatever the sort of visibility looks like right now, can you talk about where there's been any changes or particular places of strength, property type or business segment wise? Especially since a lot of the first quarter, which was very good, was locked up before the war and some of the geopolitical matters. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:18:46Yeah, Tony, we're still seeing significant strength in April, and that really is across every business line and segment type. Anthony PaoloneExecutive Director at JPMorgan00:18:57Okay. My follow-up is you mentioned 50 data center projects in APAC. Just wondering if you were calling that out just as you were going around the globe and calling out different items, or if that's kind of where the bulk of your data center business is, or if there's any big geographic differences in your capabilities on the data center front, like in APAC versus the U.S. or EMEA? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:19:24Yeah. Let me talk a little bit about that. We pulled that out because obviously that's a pretty substantial number, and that involves project planning, project development, construction and delivery, cost consulting, and technical due diligence. In the Americas, we recently won a five-year project management mandate with a blue chip tech firm, and this also focused on higher value, more technical services in the form of project control. We've won several leasing deals in the Americas since the beginning of the year. In EMEA, we've recently won five mandates in the Nordics for pre-construction advisory service. It is across the globe that we are seeing business and execution in data centers. Operator00:20:10Our next question comes from the line of Brendan Lynch with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Brendan LynchAnalyst at Barclays00:20:15Great. Thanks for taking my questions. One on the office leasing. It's been really strong to start the year, as you suggested. Do you get the sense that companies are still catching up from not leasing sufficient space over the past couple years? If so, how far are we through this process? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:20:35I mean, I'd say there's a bit of that. You can talk about sublease space, which is trending lower and down about 25% from the peak, so businesses are taking their space back. We also have this really interesting supply dynamic that exists in the industrial market as well, where the U.S. construction pipeline is 85% below its Q1 2020 peak. The dynamic is driving demand into the best located Class A space. There's a bit of a scarcity play going on here as well. Lease terms are holding. It is not, you know, a single quarter event. The fundamentals are aligning to really support sustained activity in the office leasing sector. Brendan LynchAnalyst at Barclays00:21:17Are you getting the sense that companies are leasing space in anticipation of future growth as well? That was kind of the trend years ago, and that kind of dissipated a bit. Now I'm sure they're seeing the lack of space that's on the market. Are they getting more assertive in trying to lock up space for a longer term than they have in recent years? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:21:37I think that's a good point. They're getting more confident. I think if you weren't sure if you were gonna take the extra 20,000 sq ft and you found an asset that you really like to take space in, you're gonna go forward with that. Operator00:21:52Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Sheldon with William Blair. Please proceed with your question. Stephen SheldonAnalyst at William Blair00:21:59Hey, good morning. Thanks. Great to see the continued acceleration in services. I think the commentary here has been the pipelines are good. Just curious what you're seeing in the pipelines there and how different that might look between the different businesses within services, especially with the push you're making into more technical areas. I would just love an update on the services pipeline. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:22:24Sure, Stephen. Look, as I said in the script, overall, our global services businesses are performing exactly where we want them to perform. Overall, up 7%. As I mentioned earlier, great to see the tremendous work that our teams are doing in APAC and EMEA, particularly around project management. Also property management in EMEA. The 1 area where we have seen slightly slower growth in the Americas over the last couple of quarters is in facility services. That's our janitorial business, where we've seen some contract transitions. We feel very good about the work we're doing there. We are strengthening the platform, and we like the pipeline that we're seeing and what's happening. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:23:13I think another key area of strength for us, particularly in the U.S. and globally, is our Global Occupier Services business. That is our outsourcing of large enterprise clients. We've had some very big notable wins recently. That's a real bright spot for us and lends itself really well to cross-selling and growing the business. Pretty excited about what we're seeing on the services side. Stephen SheldonAnalyst at William Blair00:23:42Got it. That's helpful. Then maybe on just as we look at regional profitability trends, it looked like APAC took a step back this quarter. Was down quite a bit year-over-year. I'm assuming that's just, I think maybe that was the tough comp and, I think especially with the capital markets and then capital markets being lower year-over-year. I guess anything to call out there on the APAC profitability and maybe how you're thinking about that over the rest of the year? Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:24:12Sure. You know, fundamentally, APAC has not slowed down. We like what we see, what we saw there and what we are seeing. There were really 2 primary drivers for that drop in profitability. As you said, the first one is was capital markets in Japan. We had 2 very large upsized transactions there a year ago. If you adjust those out, actually Japan was up almost 100%. We like the underlying fundamentals, but those tough comps certainly contributed to what we saw in the quarter in that market and in APAC overall. The second thing was we did recognize $3.5 million lower earnings from one low joint venture in China as a result of a one-time provision for credit losses. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:25:03China itself actually started to see a bit of recovery there. China itself is pretty strong, but we had that one-time impact. You know, overall feel good about APAC, but certainly, you saw the impact of those two things in the quarter in our results. Operator00:25:24Our next question comes from the line of Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Ronald KamdemAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:25:31Hey, great. Hey, just going back to the margin expansion target, you know, that I guess you still expect to achieve. Maybe could you just talk through what sort of that entails, 150 basis points? Is that mix? Is it services? Is it some of the other business lines? Like, just in, you know, I'd just love to double-click on in, in your mind where that margin uplift will come from and if we could start seeing some of that this year. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:26:01Yeah, sure, Ron. Look, as we look at margins, we're very focused on profitable growth. I think, you know, growth is clearly the headline, but at the same time, as we grow, we wanna make sure that we're doing that profitably. You know, where are we seeing the margin improvement? Certainly, as our transactional businesses grow, that's leasing and capital markets, that mix will result in higher margins. On the services side, we've got a lot of restructuring. Restructuring around contracts, looking at the back office, making that more efficient. It'll really be a combination of both of those that drives the margin. You know, very mindful of the investments we're making as well, making sure that those investments have a strong IRR and are driving both growth and profitability. I feel good about where we are. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:26:47We saw the 30 basis points of margin expansion in the 1st quarter, and certainly we intend to keep that margin expansion going as we look out over the next 3 years. Ronald KamdemAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:26:59Great. My second question, just going back to AI and data centers. Maybe, you know, I think you highlighted in terms of leasing, there were some data center exposure. Maybe can you talk about, you know, some of the tailwind in some of the other segments from that trend and what the company specifically is doing to position themselves? Thanks. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:27:26Let me talk about us first, AI at Cushman. We view AI through 2 lenses here. 1 is as an efficiency enabler, and 2, as a growth tool. We consider efficiency gains table stakes. We know what these are. These are simple operating with rigor kind of standards, and we're continuing to evaluate ways we can optimize workflows and outcomes across the entire platform. On the growth side, the growth aspect is what excites us the most, leveraging our proprietary data to capture net new revenue. In this vein, we've entered into a strategic relationship with one of the leading AI companies. This provides us with external thought, leadership, and domain expertise to ensure we're considering every opportunity to drive growth across the platform. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:28:15When you talk about AI in the macro, which I think is where you're going, our view, which you're going to see in that report that I mentioned in my script, will be released today. We believe that AI expands the size of the economy. That translates long term into more demand for space. Based on our research, we name how much space that is. We expect AI to drive a net increase of $330 million. I mean, 330 million more sq ft of additional demand over the next decade. We're already seeing early signs across office and industrial. Here's a couple of interesting points of information. U.S. office demand in Q1 had its highest post-pandemic reading. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:29:01In the Bay Area, we're currently tracking an AI footprint of 7 million sq ft, up from four and a half million sq ft in 2025. Manhattan and San Fran, with strong tech ecosystems, were among the leaders in net office absorption in Q1. Industrial demand, like I mentioned earlier, was up 52% year-over-year in Q1, according to our internal research, with a focus on modern facilities designed for AI and automation. That's accounting for most of that net absorption. AI will be a net positive for demand. There's some nuances that you need to pay attention to, right? Office will continue to shift toward high-quality Class A space, flexible and tech-centric spaces. Industrial will shift toward, as we said, modern, more power-intensive facilities. Multifamily expect performance increasingly concentrated in high-growth markets, in talent-dense markets. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:30:00In retail, we expect the K-shaped economy to persist, driving outperformance at the high and low ends with pressure on mid-tier retail. Operator00:30:11Our next question comes from the line of Mitch Germain with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your question. Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:30:19Yeah, thank you. Michelle, I think you mentioned clients shifting capital to specialized sectors. I'm curious, you know, how are you guys positioning to capture some of that activity? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:30:33Thanks for the question, Mitch. For several years now, we have been allocating dollars into those specialties, both in terms of bringing in valuable talent to the platform, increasing our cross sell, and building out those platforms globally. When we talk about whether it's data centers or specialized logistics or life sciences, it's not just that we have the talent when you think about transactions, we also have it in servicing, and we support some of the biggest names in the world with regard to the assets that they either own or occupy in those spaces. Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:31:10That's helpful. Just curious about the environment, with regards to hiring, because this is clearly a trend that seems to be consistent across most of your peers as well. Are you seeing shifts in sort of the ask, the economics around that or anything you could share, please? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:31:29Do you mean in terms of hiring advisory or brokerage talent? Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:31:34Exactly. Sorry about that. Yeah. I mean. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:31:36Yeah. Not really. Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:31:37Are the contracts different today? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:31:39Yeah, not really seeing a shift from our perspective in the way that we're structuring our contracts. We have a very specific way of going about analyzing and structuring our contracts. No, we've not seen a material shift in those structures. Operator00:31:55We have reached the end of the question and answer session. Ms. MacKay, I'd like to turn the floor back over to you for closing comments. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:32:03Thank you everyone for your time today, and we look forward to speaking to you again on our second quarter earnings call. Operator00:32:11Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesMegan McGrathHead of Investor RelationsMichelle MacKayCEONeil JohnstonEVP and CFOAnalystsAnthony PaoloneExecutive Director at JPMorganBrendan LynchAnalyst at BarclaysJulien BlouinAnalyst at Goldman SachsMitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMPRonald KamdemAnalyst at Morgan StanleySeth BergeyAnalyst at CitiStephen SheldonAnalyst at William BlairPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Cushman & Wakefield Earnings Headlines1 Russell 2000 stock with competitive advantages and 2 we questionMay 21 at 5:09 PM | msn.comCushman & Wakefield Arranges $74.1 Million Financing for Bank of Italy Office-to-Residential Conversion in Downtown San JoseMay 21 at 5:09 PM | finance.yahoo.comSpaceX eyes a 1.75 trillion valuation - here's what to knowElon Musk's team has quietly filed confidential paperwork with the SEC for what Bloomberg estimates could be a $1.75 trillion IPO - larger than Saudi Aramco and any tech offering in history. CNBC calls it 'the big market event of 2026.' According to former tech executive and angel investor Jeff Brown, there's a way to claim a stake before the public filing drops, starting with as little as $500.May 22 at 1:00 AM | Brownstone Research (Ad)Head-To-Head Comparison: Cushman & Wakefield (NYSE:CWK) and Daito Trust Construction (OTCMKTS:DIFTY)May 21 at 3:33 AM | americanbankingnews.comDallas, Texas Ranked No. 1 Primary Data Market in the World as AI Demand, Power Constraints and Regulation Reshape CRE StrategyMay 20 at 9:00 AM | businesswire.comAracibo Quintana and Marty Arrivo Join Cushman & Wakefield to Expand South Florida Retail PlatformMay 19 at 1:00 PM | businesswire.comSee More Cushman & Wakefield Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Cushman & Wakefield? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Cushman & Wakefield and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Cushman & WakefieldCushman & Wakefield (NYSE:CWK) is a leading global commercial real estate services firm headquartered in Chicago. The company provides a wide range of services to occupiers and investors, specializing in transaction management, property management, facilities management and project management. Its clientele spans corporate occupiers, landlords, investors and government entities seeking solutions to optimize their real estate portfolios and operations. The firm’s core offerings include leasing advisory for office, industrial, retail and multifamily properties, as well as capital markets advice on acquisitions, dispositions and debt and equity placements. Cushman & Wakefield also delivers valuation and advisory services, helping clients understand market trends, asset valuations and development potential. In addition, the company offers strategic consulting, workplace experience services and sustainability consulting to support corporate real estate optimization and environmental goals. With operations in more than 60 countries across the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia Pacific, Cushman & Wakefield maintains a network of over 400 offices and tens of thousands of professionals. Its global platform enables the firm to mobilize local market expertise and cross-border resources, catering to multinational clients as well as regional businesses seeking to expand or consolidate their real estate footprint. Founded in 1917, Cushman & Wakefield has grown through a combination of organic expansion and strategic acquisitions. Over the past century, the company has evolved from a regional Chicago brokerage into one of the world’s most recognized names in commercial real estate, serving clients with an integrated approach to property ownership, occupancy and investment.View Cushman & Wakefield ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Overextended, e.l.f. Beauty Is Primed to Rebound in Back HalfDeere Beats Q2 Estimates, But Ag Weakness Weighs on OutlookNVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, welcome to the Cushman & Wakefield First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. I would now like to turn the conference over to Megan McGrath, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Megan McGrathHead of Investor Relations at Cushman & Wakefield00:00:29Thank you. Welcome to Cushman & Wakefield's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Earlier today, we issued a press release announcing our financial results for the period. This release, along with today's presentation, can be found on our investor relations website at ir.cushmanwakefield.com. Please turn to the page in our presentation labeled Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Statements. Today's presentation contains forward-looking statements based on our current forecasts and estimates of future events. These statements should be considered estimates only. Actual results may differ materially. During today's call, we will refer to non-GAAP financial measures as outlined by SEC guidelines. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, definitions of non-GAAP financial measures, and other related information are found within the financial tables of our earnings release and the appendix of today's presentation. Megan McGrathHead of Investor Relations at Cushman & Wakefield00:01:21Before I pass the call over to Michelle, a quick reminder that on April 8, 2026, we filed an 8-K with the SEC outlining several changes to our reporting presentation effective January 1st of this year. To better align our reporting with industry peers, we will no longer report service line fee revenue along with the following non-GAAP measures, Adjusted EBITDA margin, segment operating expenses, and fee-based operating expenses. As a result, our discussion of revenue and associated growth rates will now be inclusive of gross contract costs. Further detail on these changes as well as 2 years of recasted historical financials can be found in the 8-K filed with the SEC, which is also available on our IR website. Lastly, comparisons discussed on today's call are against the first quarter of the prior year in local currency. Megan McGrathHead of Investor Relations at Cushman & Wakefield00:02:10With that, I'd like to turn the call over to our CEO, Michelle MacKay. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:02:14Thank you, Megan. Thank you everyone for joining us today. We delivered strong first quarter results demonstrating consistent execution of our strategy and measurable progress toward our long-term financial targets. We delivered 9% revenue growth exceeding our long-term guidance range. We generated mid-teens Adjusted EBITDA growth as operating leverage continued to build. We delivered 67% Adjusted EPS growth, reflecting both strong business performance and the structural improvements that we have steadily made to our balance sheet. These outcomes are deliberate. The product of a strategy designed for durability and growth. Supported by our solid first quarter performance and continued strength in our pipelines, we remain confident in our full year guidance of 15%-20% Adjusted EPS growth. I want to focus on the breadth of our growth, which is a key driver in our consistency of our performance. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:03:24In high growth asset classes, clients are shifting capital and demand towards specialized sectors, including logistics, life sciences, and AI related industries. AI is a structural tailwind for the business, supporting leasing activity across geographies and fueling growth in our data center related services. With 50 technical advisory data center projects underway in APAC now and expanding global mandates, this is a long duration opportunity that continues to scale. In capital markets, we delivered our 6th consecutive quarter of double-digit revenue growth, including 22% growth in the Americas with institutional client revenues up 32%. This reflects the compounding returns from our talent and platform investments and the increasing connectivity within our institutional franchise. In leasing, we achieved the highest first quarter revenue in company history, growing 17%. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:04:32Performance was broad-based across industries, deal sizes, and geographies with growth in 15 of our top 20 cities in the Americas. That breadth matters. It reinforces both the sustainability of the growth and our ability to consistently capture share. In services, revenue grew 7%, reflecting steady progress as clients increasingly consolidate toward providers that can deliver integrated multi-service capabilities at scale. Project Management growth of 15% driven by international performance underscores our ability to manage increasingly technical work streams for a growing global client base. Taken together, this is what consistency looks like. Diversified growth, scalable margins, and disciplined capital allocation. With that, I'll turn the call over to Neil to discuss the quarter in more detail. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:05:43Thank you, Michelle, and good morning, everyone. As a reminder, all comparisons are against 1st quarter of the prior year and in local currency. First quarter revenue was $2.5 billion, up 9%, fueled by broad strength across our service lines and continued positive momentum from our growth initiatives. Adjusted EBITDA grew 15% to $111 million as we drove operating leverage across our platform. Adjusted EPS of $0.15 was up 67% as we benefited from the strength of our core business and the capital structure improvements we have made. Continuing our balance sheet transformation, earlier this week, we announced our decision to redeem $100 million of the $650 million outstanding on our 2028 notes. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:06:31Once completed, this will mark approximately $600 million in total debt repayments since the start of 2024 and further progress towards our target of reaching 2 times net leverage in 2028. Taking a look at our revenue performance by service line for the quarter. Leasing grew 17% in the quarter, with Americas leasing up 19%. Our leasing growth in the Americas was broad-based with double-digit growth in core, mid-sized, and large leasing deal sizes. By asset class, office demand remains solid, and we saw particular strength in industrial, including data centers. EMEA and APAC leasing increased 10% and 9% respectively, with particular strength in Germany, the Netherlands, and Greater China. Turning to capital markets, we reported 14% global growth in the quarter. Our continued strong performance in capital markets reflects the work we've done to add top talent and strengthen our platform. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:07:30Office was up 11% globally, performing especially well in the Americas with gains across all deal sizes and particular strengths in New York City, Northern California, and Phoenix. Industrial grew 25% with double-digit growth in each of our regions. Our services business expanded 7% globally with continued strength in project management in both EMEA and APAC. The Americas benefited primarily from new business wins and expanded client mandates in our facilities management business. To reiterate what we said at our recent Investor Day, we are focused on driving steady, profitable growth in our services business as we continue to move up the value chain with our clients. Turning to cash flow, our first quarter use of cash was in line with historical working capital trends, including the annual payments of U.S. bonuses and reflects typical seasonal patterns in our business. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:08:27Our trailing 12 months free cash flow was approximately 70% of adjusted net income, in line with our target range of a 60%-80% free cash flow conversion rate. We closed the quarter with approximately $600 million in cash and cash equivalents and $1.6 billion in total liquidity. Our net leverage ratio at the end of the quarter was 3.1x, a near full turn improvement from the same time last year. Moving now to our 2026 outlook, which remains unchanged. We continue to anticipate revenue growth of 6%-8% and Adjusted EPS growth of 15%-20%. I'd like to give an update on our 3-year targets we provided at our 2025 Investor Day, given the recent changes in our reporting as disclosed in our April 8-K. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:09:14The previous 3-year fee revenue growth target of 6%-8% has been transitioned to a GAAP revenue growth target and remains at 6%-8% growth. While we will no longer provide specific EBITDA margin targets, we continue to expect to achieve roughly 150 basis points of margin expansion over the 3-year period. Our targets of annual Adjusted EPS growth of 15%-20%, free cash flow conversion of 60%-80%, and net debt leverage of 2 times by 2028 remain unchanged. With that, I'll turn the call over back to Michelle MacKay. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:09:51Thanks, Neil. Over the last three years, we have intentionally reshaped this company into one that is more focused, more agile, and better positioned to lead through market transformations, allowing us to compound profitable growth. Quarter after quarter, we are converting strategy into performance, delivering predictable results, resilient growth across our business lines, and durable earnings through changing market conditions. Our consistency of execution is not by chance, it is by design, and it is a defining characteristic and a key differentiator of this company. Importantly, consistency for us is not only reflected in our financial performance, but also in how we lead our clients with clarity and tailored strategies during periods of transformation. The work that our think tank, including the continued expansion of our AI impact research, reflects that mindset. Today, we are proud to launch part two of our AI series. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:11:02The first part, which focused on introducing our AI dashboard, engaged over 15,000 clients and stakeholders, cementing our position as a true thought leader in this space. Today's release goes even deeper, examining how AI is likely to reshape economic growth, employment patterns, and space demand by sectors, roles, and geographies. By translating complex macro and technological shifts such as AI into clear, actionable insights, we continue to support better decision-making for occupiers and investors. I will close today with this. We are confident in our outlook, grounded in the visibility we see across our businesses and the durability of our model. Thank you to our teams for delivering another strong quarter and to our shareholders for their continued confidence. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator00:12:07Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. We ask that all callers limit themselves to one question and one follow-up. If you have additional questions, you may re-queue, and those questions will be addressed time permitting. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two 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 star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Julien Blouin with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Julien BlouinAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:12:52Yeah. Thank you for taking my question. Just wondering on the leasing results. They were pretty impressive in the quarter. Can you remind us how much of that was driven by some of the recruitment initiatives over the last year? From a recruitment standpoint more generally, how do you feel you stand today across your different segments? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:13:15Thanks, Julien. It's Michelle. Good morning. In terms of recruiting in general, we're doing extraordinarily well. We're building out the capital markets platform still, we've had a significant number of hires there. First quarter, we had a significant number of leasing recruits land as well. In industrial leasing, that's been a consistent bright spot for us over the past two years, we expect to continue to do some really strong leasing there. We've recently landed some teams in Boston, our expectation is that fundamentals will continue to be strong in U.S. Industrial as minimal supply is out there. Let me give you just a couple of data points around that too, for leasing and industrial in particular. Demand is accelerating in Q1. Absorption in the U.S. was up 52% year-over-year, this is a great place to recruit. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:14:07New and modern facilities are winning. Larger users are seeking modern logistics facilities to support automation, higher power requirements. That's becoming the primary driver of demand, and construction is down 60% from peak levels in 2022, which is gonna help vacancy drift lower, but also importantly, the industrial leasing market is now 80% larger by dollar volume than it was pre-pandemic. As those leases roll over, transaction values are gonna be significantly higher. So net-net tightening market there. Very similar dynamics in U.S. office leasing for us as well, where demand on a 4-quarter rolling net absorption exceeded 5.2 million in Q1, which is the strongest level since pandemic. Leasing obviously are unfortunately, I guess, overlooked sometimes relative to capital markets, but it's doing extraordinarily well. Julien BlouinAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:15:01Thank you. That's very helpful. I think you noted in the slides that the strong services growth out of EMEA was driven by improved facilities management in U.K. and Ireland and then strong project management in France. Just wondering how sustainable those improvements are going forward. Should that higher growth carry for the rest of the year? Is this sort of, you know, evidence that the restructuring that you did last year is really taking hold or actually the year before? Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:15:37Julien, as we look at services, certainly very pleased with what we're seeing internationally. Project management, you didn't mention that. That was an area of particular strength both in APAC and in EMEA. We certainly are seeing very nice improvement in margins in EMEA. It's our first quarter of margin expansion, and some of that is as a result of the structural work we did around our services businesses. In general, feel very good about where services is going, and the growth we're seeing. Operator00:16:14Our next question comes from the line of Seth Bergey with Citi. Please proceed with your question. Seth BergeyAnalyst at Citi00:16:21Thanks for taking my question. I guess the first one would be just, you know, one of the topics at Investor Day was the ability to kind of cross-sell and, you know, drive that by 200% by 2028. I guess where, you know, within kind of the 1Q results can we start to see, you know, evidence of that and how you're tracking that? Or can you share any color on that initiative? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:16:46Yeah, certainly. Part of this is motivating teams in a cross-sell capacity. We've recently brought together the GOC, which is our next top 50 group of leaders, and aligned them on our compensation structure, which involves KPIs associated with the cross-sell. We're starting to make good movement there. We're tracking a series of KPIs to ensure that's happening, and we hit our targets over the course of the next three years. Seth BergeyAnalyst at Citi00:17:12Great. I guess just, you know, a quick question on kind of guidance with tracking 9% kind of ahead of the revenue target. You know, I know 1Q is a bit seasonally weak, you know, just thoughts on kind of, you know, leaving the guidance unchanged, tracking ahead with a strong first quarter. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:17:33Yeah, sure. I can address that. Look, certainly very pleased with the first quarter we had. Solid first quarter. Solid leasing. Certainly services, it was right in line with expectations. We do continue to see strong momentum in April, and pipelines look good. We started the year with a fairly very ambitious targets. We remain very confident in achieving those targets. At this point, yeah, at this point, seeing everything pointing towards a solid year. Operator00:18:09Our next question comes from the line of Anthony Paolone with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Anthony PaoloneExecutive Director at JPMorgan00:18:15Thanks. Good morning. Maybe I'll start with the last item you mentioned, Neil, and maybe Michelle. As you kind of look into April, May, June, whatever the sort of visibility looks like right now, can you talk about where there's been any changes or particular places of strength, property type or business segment wise? Especially since a lot of the first quarter, which was very good, was locked up before the war and some of the geopolitical matters. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:18:46Yeah, Tony, we're still seeing significant strength in April, and that really is across every business line and segment type. Anthony PaoloneExecutive Director at JPMorgan00:18:57Okay. My follow-up is you mentioned 50 data center projects in APAC. Just wondering if you were calling that out just as you were going around the globe and calling out different items, or if that's kind of where the bulk of your data center business is, or if there's any big geographic differences in your capabilities on the data center front, like in APAC versus the U.S. or EMEA? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:19:24Yeah. Let me talk a little bit about that. We pulled that out because obviously that's a pretty substantial number, and that involves project planning, project development, construction and delivery, cost consulting, and technical due diligence. In the Americas, we recently won a five-year project management mandate with a blue chip tech firm, and this also focused on higher value, more technical services in the form of project control. We've won several leasing deals in the Americas since the beginning of the year. In EMEA, we've recently won five mandates in the Nordics for pre-construction advisory service. It is across the globe that we are seeing business and execution in data centers. Operator00:20:10Our next question comes from the line of Brendan Lynch with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Brendan LynchAnalyst at Barclays00:20:15Great. Thanks for taking my questions. One on the office leasing. It's been really strong to start the year, as you suggested. Do you get the sense that companies are still catching up from not leasing sufficient space over the past couple years? If so, how far are we through this process? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:20:35I mean, I'd say there's a bit of that. You can talk about sublease space, which is trending lower and down about 25% from the peak, so businesses are taking their space back. We also have this really interesting supply dynamic that exists in the industrial market as well, where the U.S. construction pipeline is 85% below its Q1 2020 peak. The dynamic is driving demand into the best located Class A space. There's a bit of a scarcity play going on here as well. Lease terms are holding. It is not, you know, a single quarter event. The fundamentals are aligning to really support sustained activity in the office leasing sector. Brendan LynchAnalyst at Barclays00:21:17Are you getting the sense that companies are leasing space in anticipation of future growth as well? That was kind of the trend years ago, and that kind of dissipated a bit. Now I'm sure they're seeing the lack of space that's on the market. Are they getting more assertive in trying to lock up space for a longer term than they have in recent years? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:21:37I think that's a good point. They're getting more confident. I think if you weren't sure if you were gonna take the extra 20,000 sq ft and you found an asset that you really like to take space in, you're gonna go forward with that. Operator00:21:52Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Sheldon with William Blair. Please proceed with your question. Stephen SheldonAnalyst at William Blair00:21:59Hey, good morning. Thanks. Great to see the continued acceleration in services. I think the commentary here has been the pipelines are good. Just curious what you're seeing in the pipelines there and how different that might look between the different businesses within services, especially with the push you're making into more technical areas. I would just love an update on the services pipeline. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:22:24Sure, Stephen. Look, as I said in the script, overall, our global services businesses are performing exactly where we want them to perform. Overall, up 7%. As I mentioned earlier, great to see the tremendous work that our teams are doing in APAC and EMEA, particularly around project management. Also property management in EMEA. The 1 area where we have seen slightly slower growth in the Americas over the last couple of quarters is in facility services. That's our janitorial business, where we've seen some contract transitions. We feel very good about the work we're doing there. We are strengthening the platform, and we like the pipeline that we're seeing and what's happening. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:23:13I think another key area of strength for us, particularly in the U.S. and globally, is our Global Occupier Services business. That is our outsourcing of large enterprise clients. We've had some very big notable wins recently. That's a real bright spot for us and lends itself really well to cross-selling and growing the business. Pretty excited about what we're seeing on the services side. Stephen SheldonAnalyst at William Blair00:23:42Got it. That's helpful. Then maybe on just as we look at regional profitability trends, it looked like APAC took a step back this quarter. Was down quite a bit year-over-year. I'm assuming that's just, I think maybe that was the tough comp and, I think especially with the capital markets and then capital markets being lower year-over-year. I guess anything to call out there on the APAC profitability and maybe how you're thinking about that over the rest of the year? Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:24:12Sure. You know, fundamentally, APAC has not slowed down. We like what we see, what we saw there and what we are seeing. There were really 2 primary drivers for that drop in profitability. As you said, the first one is was capital markets in Japan. We had 2 very large upsized transactions there a year ago. If you adjust those out, actually Japan was up almost 100%. We like the underlying fundamentals, but those tough comps certainly contributed to what we saw in the quarter in that market and in APAC overall. The second thing was we did recognize $3.5 million lower earnings from one low joint venture in China as a result of a one-time provision for credit losses. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:25:03China itself actually started to see a bit of recovery there. China itself is pretty strong, but we had that one-time impact. You know, overall feel good about APAC, but certainly, you saw the impact of those two things in the quarter in our results. Operator00:25:24Our next question comes from the line of Ronald Kamdem with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question. Ronald KamdemAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:25:31Hey, great. Hey, just going back to the margin expansion target, you know, that I guess you still expect to achieve. Maybe could you just talk through what sort of that entails, 150 basis points? Is that mix? Is it services? Is it some of the other business lines? Like, just in, you know, I'd just love to double-click on in, in your mind where that margin uplift will come from and if we could start seeing some of that this year. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:26:01Yeah, sure, Ron. Look, as we look at margins, we're very focused on profitable growth. I think, you know, growth is clearly the headline, but at the same time, as we grow, we wanna make sure that we're doing that profitably. You know, where are we seeing the margin improvement? Certainly, as our transactional businesses grow, that's leasing and capital markets, that mix will result in higher margins. On the services side, we've got a lot of restructuring. Restructuring around contracts, looking at the back office, making that more efficient. It'll really be a combination of both of those that drives the margin. You know, very mindful of the investments we're making as well, making sure that those investments have a strong IRR and are driving both growth and profitability. I feel good about where we are. Neil JohnstonEVP and CFO at Cushman & Wakefield00:26:47We saw the 30 basis points of margin expansion in the 1st quarter, and certainly we intend to keep that margin expansion going as we look out over the next 3 years. Ronald KamdemAnalyst at Morgan Stanley00:26:59Great. My second question, just going back to AI and data centers. Maybe, you know, I think you highlighted in terms of leasing, there were some data center exposure. Maybe can you talk about, you know, some of the tailwind in some of the other segments from that trend and what the company specifically is doing to position themselves? Thanks. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:27:26Let me talk about us first, AI at Cushman. We view AI through 2 lenses here. 1 is as an efficiency enabler, and 2, as a growth tool. We consider efficiency gains table stakes. We know what these are. These are simple operating with rigor kind of standards, and we're continuing to evaluate ways we can optimize workflows and outcomes across the entire platform. On the growth side, the growth aspect is what excites us the most, leveraging our proprietary data to capture net new revenue. In this vein, we've entered into a strategic relationship with one of the leading AI companies. This provides us with external thought, leadership, and domain expertise to ensure we're considering every opportunity to drive growth across the platform. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:28:15When you talk about AI in the macro, which I think is where you're going, our view, which you're going to see in that report that I mentioned in my script, will be released today. We believe that AI expands the size of the economy. That translates long term into more demand for space. Based on our research, we name how much space that is. We expect AI to drive a net increase of $330 million. I mean, 330 million more sq ft of additional demand over the next decade. We're already seeing early signs across office and industrial. Here's a couple of interesting points of information. U.S. office demand in Q1 had its highest post-pandemic reading. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:29:01In the Bay Area, we're currently tracking an AI footprint of 7 million sq ft, up from four and a half million sq ft in 2025. Manhattan and San Fran, with strong tech ecosystems, were among the leaders in net office absorption in Q1. Industrial demand, like I mentioned earlier, was up 52% year-over-year in Q1, according to our internal research, with a focus on modern facilities designed for AI and automation. That's accounting for most of that net absorption. AI will be a net positive for demand. There's some nuances that you need to pay attention to, right? Office will continue to shift toward high-quality Class A space, flexible and tech-centric spaces. Industrial will shift toward, as we said, modern, more power-intensive facilities. Multifamily expect performance increasingly concentrated in high-growth markets, in talent-dense markets. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:30:00In retail, we expect the K-shaped economy to persist, driving outperformance at the high and low ends with pressure on mid-tier retail. Operator00:30:11Our next question comes from the line of Mitch Germain with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your question. Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:30:19Yeah, thank you. Michelle, I think you mentioned clients shifting capital to specialized sectors. I'm curious, you know, how are you guys positioning to capture some of that activity? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:30:33Thanks for the question, Mitch. For several years now, we have been allocating dollars into those specialties, both in terms of bringing in valuable talent to the platform, increasing our cross sell, and building out those platforms globally. When we talk about whether it's data centers or specialized logistics or life sciences, it's not just that we have the talent when you think about transactions, we also have it in servicing, and we support some of the biggest names in the world with regard to the assets that they either own or occupy in those spaces. Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:31:10That's helpful. Just curious about the environment, with regards to hiring, because this is clearly a trend that seems to be consistent across most of your peers as well. Are you seeing shifts in sort of the ask, the economics around that or anything you could share, please? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:31:29Do you mean in terms of hiring advisory or brokerage talent? Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:31:34Exactly. Sorry about that. Yeah. I mean. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:31:36Yeah. Not really. Mitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMP00:31:37Are the contracts different today? Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:31:39Yeah, not really seeing a shift from our perspective in the way that we're structuring our contracts. We have a very specific way of going about analyzing and structuring our contracts. No, we've not seen a material shift in those structures. Operator00:31:55We have reached the end of the question and answer session. Ms. MacKay, I'd like to turn the floor back over to you for closing comments. Michelle MacKayCEO at Cushman & Wakefield00:32:03Thank you everyone for your time today, and we look forward to speaking to you again on our second quarter earnings call. Operator00:32:11Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a wonderful day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesMegan McGrathHead of Investor RelationsMichelle MacKayCEONeil JohnstonEVP and CFOAnalystsAnthony PaoloneExecutive Director at JPMorganBrendan LynchAnalyst at BarclaysJulien BlouinAnalyst at Goldman SachsMitch GermainAnalyst at Citizens JMPRonald KamdemAnalyst at Morgan StanleySeth BergeyAnalyst at CitiStephen SheldonAnalyst at William BlairPowered by