JLL Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Advisory Growth and Margin Expansion Drive Record Results
Summary
Jones Lang LaSalle delivered a record-breaking first quarter in 2026, with revenue rising 11% and adjusted EPS surging 56%. The growth was fueled by robust momentum in leasing advisory and capital markets, alongside resilient revenue streams from project management and workplace services. Management highlighted a strong pipeline and broad-based demand, even as they navigate macroeconomic fluidity and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. The company reaffirmed its commitment to the Accelerate 2030 strategy, emphasizing organic growth, disciplined capital allocation, and significant share repurchases.
Financial performance was marked by margin expansion and strong cash generation, despite working capital headwinds and increased capital expenditures. JLL returned $300 million to shareholders through share repurchases and announced a EUR 100 million investment in the LaSalle Encore+ Fund to support strategic growth in investment management. The company also provided a full-year adjusted EPS guidance range of $21.80 to $23.50, reflecting expected 20% growth at the midpoint. Management expressed confidence in long-term value creation, leveraging data and AI advantages to maintain a competitive edge in the real estate services industry.
Key Takeaways
- Record Q1 2026 performance with revenue up 11% and adjusted EPS rising 56%.
- Leasing advisory and capital markets drove growth, with investment sales up 27% and debt advisory up 30%.
- Resilient revenue streams grew high single digits, supported by project management and workplace services.
- Adjusted EBITDA increased 24%, reflecting margin expansion and operating rigor.
- JLL returned $300 million to shareholders via share repurchases, with $2.7 billion remaining in authorization.
- Full-year adjusted EPS guidance set at $21.80 to $23.50, implying 20% growth at the midpoint.
- LaSalle investment management segment saw EUR 100 million commitment to Encore+ Fund for strategic growth.
- AI and data platform adoption reached 75% across JLL, with 25,000 employees using enterprise AI daily.
- Property management contract turnover in Asia Pacific is 60% complete, with renegotiations extending timeline.
- Management anticipates Middle East conflict impacts to materialize in the back half of 2026, if at all.
Full Transcript
Operator: Thank you for standing by, and welcome to Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated Q1 2026 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference over to Sean Coghlan, Head of Investor Relations. You may begin.
Sean Coghlan, Head of Investor Relations, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thank you, and good morning. Welcome to the first quarter 2026 earnings conference call for Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated. Earlier this morning, we issued our earnings release along with a slide presentation and Excel file intended to supplement our prepared remarks. These materials are available on the investor relations section of our website. Please visit ir.jll.com. During the call, as well as in our slide presentation and supplemental Excel file, we reference certain non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe provide useful information for investors. We include reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures to GAAP in our earnings release and slide presentation. We also reference resilient and advisory revenues previously referred to as transactional revenues, which we define in the footnotes of our earnings release. As a reminder, today’s call is being webcast live and recorded. A transcript and recording of this conference call will be posted to our website.
Any statements made about future results and performance, plans, expectations and objectives are forward-looking statements. Actual results and performance may differ from those forward-looking statements as a result of factors discussed in our annual report on Form 10-K and in other reports filed with the SEC. The company disclaims any undertaking to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. Finally, a reminder that percentage variances are against the prior year period in local currency, unless otherwise noted. I will now turn the call over to Christian Ulbrich, our President and Chief Executive Officer, for opening remarks.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thank you, Sean. Hello and welcome to our first quarter 2026 earnings call. This morning, I’m pleased to report a very strong quarter for JLL to start 2026. The combination of our market leading advisory businesses and resilient revenue base drove record levels of first quarter revenue and earnings. Robust growth across our core advisory businesses was broad-based, led by momentum in the office and industrial sectors in Leasing Advisory, as well as growth across nearly all sectors and geographies in capital market services. Our data and AI advantage is driving productivity gains, increased market share, and strong financial results across these businesses. Increased revenue and our disciplined operating rigor are unlocking strong profit growth and margin expansion. Adjusted EBITDA increased 24% and Adjusted EPS was up 56%.
Tailwinds for outsourcing and strong demand for project management supported the continued organic growth streak of our resilient revenues, which were collectively up high single digits during the quarter. The transformation of our property management business is also progressing, and we have now strategically exited or repositioned nearly 60% of the targeted contracts in Asia Pacific. Overall, we are building scalable tech-enabled businesses with an advisory-led approach. We expect the revenue and profit of our resilient businesses to steadily grow over time, strengthening the through cycle performance of the overall company. At our investor briefing in March, we introduced our Accelerate 2030 strategy, long-term financial targets and approach to advance value creation. This strategy is underpinned by a decade of progress, which has resulted in a resilient foundation, strong financial profile, and a unique structural advantages.
We have established scale in large, growing and complex end markets through our integrated global service offering. We have the balance sheet, strong cash generation and capital strength and agility to execute targeted capital deployment with a focus on ROIC. Our investments in proprietary data and AI capabilities over the past decade are expanding JLL’s competitive advantage. These are strategically critical and differentiating levers that uniquely position us to build on our strong market position. With this as a backdrop, we have high conviction that we have the strategy, talent, data led approach and culture to drive synergistic scale, further increase our resiliency and deliver compelling value creation through the six imperatives of our Accelerate 2030 strategy. During the investor briefing, we highlighted the revamped strategy of our investment management business, LaSalle.
LaSalle’s strategy is focused on achieving two primary objectives, investment outperformance for our clients, as well as profitable growth and margin expansion for shareholders. We have been in the investment management business for over 45 years, operating various fund strategies globally with an attractive performance track record. We’re strategically investing in LaSalle to accelerate growth of a resilient revenue base while also generating synergies with a broader JLL portfolio. LaSalle is uniquely positioned to differentiate and innovate with new products through the collective relationships, expertise, platform, and technology from across JLL. In many ways, the strategy is embodied by the first close of our global decarbonization fund, Altus Power, during the first quarter. In partnership with JLL’s business lines, the fund will execute a retrofit-led approach, spanning deep retrofits of vacant buildings, light retrofits, and ground-up developments to address the growing scarcity of high-quality, energy-efficient properties.
We have the expertise and capabilities to execute this strategy globally, including across energy, sustainability, project management, and property management. Last year, we invested $100 million of incremental gross capital into one of LaSalle’s flagship U.S. funds, JLL Income Property Trust, as we saw an opportunity to leverage our competitive advantage and potential to scale. Today, we are announcing the commitment of an incremental EUR 100 million investment in the LaSalle Encore+ Fund, one of our flagship European products, to support its next phase of growth. This is a compelling organic investment opportunity for JLL with attractive risk-adjusted returns aligned with the strategic and financial objectives of our capital allocation framework. We continue to assess a pipeline of innovative investment opportunities with considerations for LaSalle’s strategic growth plan as well as other capital allocation priorities across JLL.
Our capital deployment decisions during the quarter reflect our capital allocation principles, balance sheet agility, and through-cycle lens on leverage. We are committed to executing our Accelerate 2030 strategy with discipline and rigor aligned to our capital allocation framework. We repurchased $300 million of shares at an average price of approximately $301 during the first quarter, inclusive of the $200 million accelerated share repurchase plan. This reflects our stated commitment to be active on share repurchases, with $2.7 billion remaining in our expanded authorization. With that, I will now turn the call over to Kelly Howe, our Chief Financial Officer, who will provide more details on our results for the quarter.
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thank you, Christian. The robust first quarter growth on the top and bottom line is a product of our competitive position, focused on enhancing operating rigor and positive business momentum. Revenue increased 11% inclusive of a 200 basis point foreign currency benefit and was almost entirely organic. We also generated healthy margin expansion over prior year. Commentary to follow is in local currency to articulate underlying operating performance. Our financial strength coming into the year allowed us to return meaningful capital to shareholders during the quarter, as Christian just described. This reduced our share count by nearly 2%. Looking ahead, we maintain considerable financial flexibility and are well positioned to drive significant stakeholder value as we fully activate our Accelerate 2030 strategy. A review of our operating performance by segment.
Beginning with Real Estate Management Services, the revenue increase was led by workplace management and project management. Within workplace management, mandate expansions, and to a lesser extent, new client wins, drove high single-digit growth. Higher volumes in the U.S., including from new data center wins, delivered double-digit project management revenue growth, inclusive of a high single-digit management fee increase. Healthy underlying core business growth within property management was tempered by the elevated contract turnover we continue to action and discussed in prior quarters, with management fees declining mid-single digits. As Christian mentioned, we have now strategically exited or repositioned nearly 60% of the targeted property management contracts in Asia Pacific. A portion of the contracts have been successfully renegotiated, partially limiting the revenue headwind, but also lengthening the timeline and negotiations with clients.
For full year, we expect the financial impact of contract turn to be largely offset by tailwinds from healthy core business growth and new wins in the Americas. Within Software and Technology Solutions, high single-digit software revenue growth mostly offset the continued pullback of discretionary technology solution spend from certain large existing clients. For this segment, we are targeting mid to high single-digit revenue growth for the full year, with variances by business line and weighted to the second half. Workplace management contract renewal rates are stable and our pipeline is strong, albeit second half-weighted. Client activity within project management remains healthy, particularly in the U.S., positioning us for continued momentum over the near term. We continue to balance investing to drive long-term profitable growth with near-term business performance and sustained annual margin expansion.
Moving next to Leasing Advisory, revenue growth was led by continued momentum in the office sector, an acceleration in industrial, and a meaningful contribution from data centers. The office leasing revenue growth notably outpaced the 1% decline in market volumes. On a 2-year stacked basis, global Leasing Advisory revenue growth was 29%, reflective of strong, ongoing, and broadening demand. The Leasing Advisory Adjusted EBITDA and margin expansion was primarily driven by revenue growth, partially tempered by the impact of higher commission tiers being achieved earlier this year and business mix. We expect a commission tier headwind to moderate over the course of the year. Looking ahead, our leasing pipeline remains healthy.
GDP growth outlook continues to be constructive and business confidence, as measured by the OECD, has improved even despite the fluidity of the macro environment, thereby providing optimism for continued growth in the near term. For the full year, we are targeting high single-digit revenue growth. We continue to invest in our talent and to augment our proprietary data advantage to drive long-term profitable growth. Shifting to our capital market services segment, investor bidding activity remained resilient. Underpinned by robust liquidity in debt markets, a continued uptick in transactions of scale, and stable pricing. Investment sales revenue grew 27%, debt advisory revenue increased 30%, and equity advisory revenue increased 75%. The continuation of the business momentum in quarter is reflected in the 2-year stacked growth rates for investment sales and debt advisory of 42% and 81% respectively.
Our investment sales revenue growth in the quarter notably outpaced global market volumes, which is consistent with recent history and in part attributable to the strength of our people, global platform, and proprietary data. Revenue growth, as well as lower loan-related expenses versus prior year, drove the increase in the Adjusted EBITDA and margin expansion in the quarter. Looking ahead, our global investment sales, debt, and equity advisory pipeline remain strong and underlying market fundamentals remain healthy. For the full year, we are targeting low double-digit top-line growth and see meaningful runway for continued growth over the long term. Turning to investment management, growth in advisory fees largely attributable to our capital raise activity over the prior 12 months was offset in part by the effects of meaningful disposition activity in Asia Pacific.
As it takes several quarters to deploy new capital raised, we expect advisory fee growth to gradually pick up as the year progresses, driving low single-digit growth for the year. Additionally, we anticipate full year incentive and transaction fees to be towards the lower end of historical range and weighted to the fourth quarter. Shifting to free cash flow, balance sheet, and capital allocation. Higher cash earnings were largely offset by growth-related working capital headwinds, particularly within net reimbursables. An increase in CapEx, in part due to timing, more than offset the improvement in operating cash flow, leading the seasonal outflow of free cash flow to be largely in line with a year ago. For the full year, we are targeting a free cash flow conversion ratio consistent with our long-term target of over 80%.
Our cash generation over the trailing 12 months contributed to a reduction in net debt, which along with higher Adjusted EBITDA, led to an improvement versus a year ago in reported net leverage to 1.0 times at the end of the first quarter, typically our seasonal peak period. Capital deployment priorities remain focused first on driving organic growth and productivity across business lines, weighted to areas of highest return on capital and long-term growth potential within our core services. Organically, we are continuously and diligently enhancing our platform and service differentiation, as well as investing in our people strategy. Our acquisition pursuits remain focused on augmenting organic initiatives that enrich our capabilities as well as deepen our client relationships across multiple business lines, provide synergistic scale, and enhance our enterprise resiliency. Returning capital to shareholders remains a top priority.
As Christian described, the 275% increase in our share repurchase authorization to $3 billion, along with the $300 million of share repurchases during the quarter, reflects our commitment to returning capital to shareholders, as well as the value we see in our shares. The majority of the shares associated with the $200 million accelerated share repurchase were delivered during the quarter at an average price of approximately $290. The remaining shares under the program will be delivered in the second quarter. Looking ahead, we intend to be programmatically active on our repurchase authorization. The total annual amount of repurchases in a given year will depend on the broader operating environment, our leverage outlook, and valuation, as well as relative returns to other investment opportunities inclusive of M&A.
Regarding our 2026 full year financial outlook, we are encouraged by the continued strength in our pipelines and underlying business fundamentals. Considering our ongoing focus on driving operating leverage and the segment top-line growth targets I mentioned earlier, we are targeting an Adjusted EPS range of $21.80 to $23.50 for the year, reflecting 20% growth at the midpoint. This aligns with the Adjusted EBITDA range we provided last quarter. The strong first quarter results put us on a trend towards the upper end of the range, though the current fluidity of the macro environment limits late year visibility into our more economically sensitive businesses. Going forward, we intend to provide segment revenue and Adjusted EPS as our primary annual targets as they better encapsulate how we holistically measure our business performance. Christian, back to you.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thank you, Kelly. Before closing, I would like to address the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. We have been growing our business in the Middle East for over 20 years with operations anchored in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Today, the business represents a low single-digit % of revenue with strong growth potential. Since the onset of the conflict, our top priority has been the safety of our people and supporting our clients with operations in the region. From a commercial perspective, there has been no material impact on our consolidated results to date, and our pipelines have continued to build throughout and following the 1st quarter. We have intentionally taken a conservative approach to leverage and are prepared for a wide range of outcomes.
We are focused on first and second order risk to our businesses globally across a variety of scenarios. To the extent tension persists and becomes a meaningful headwind to the global economy, I would like to take this opportunity to thank all of our colleagues around the world for their perseverance and focus. On the heels of the launch of our Accelerate 2030 strategy, we are excited by the significant runway for JLL to deliver long-term growth and value creation for stakeholders. Operator, please explain the Q&A process.
Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. If you have dialed in and would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. Your first question comes from the line of Anthony Paolone with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Anthony Paolone, Analyst, JPMorgan: Yeah, thank you. My first question relates to the guidance. If I kind of back into what growth might look like for areas like leasing and capital markets later this year, it seems like it would be either consistent or maybe even a little bit inside of what you guys outlined at Investor Day for the next 5 years. I guess, you know, one, is that right? Two, should we take that as just being conservative, given the uncertainty in the environment? Or do you think that capital markets and leasing has basically recovered back to a normalized level here at this point?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thanks for the question. I’m happy to address that. Our guidance obviously reflects a range of scenarios. As I noted, we are, at this point, trending towards the high end of our guidance. As it relates to leasing and capital markets, our outlook is roughly in line with where we would expect growth rates to be over a longer-term period in line with what we articulated at Investor Day. That said, as we look at the back half of the year, two things. One, we’ve got very strong comparables because we had very strong quarters for leasing in the fourth quarter, and we had very strong quarters last year for capital markets in the third and the fourth quarter. Our guidance for this year reflects some proportion of lapping those very tough comps.
If you look at the two-year stacked basis for those businesses, actually the growth rate is very strong, including our guidance. I do think from a macroeconomic perspective, as Christian noted, you know, we’re seeing very little impact in our business today, but we are monitoring the situation very carefully. If there was to be impact, it would come in the back half of the year, and that is reflected in the range of the guidance that we have provided you.
Anthony Paolone, Analyst, JPMorgan: Okay. Thank you. My follow-up is on Encore+. You noted the EUR 100 million investment there, maybe can you step back and just give us a sense, like how much capital has been raised there? What are you looking to raise there? Just trying to understand how important that is in sort of jump-starting, you know, AUM and LaSalle and also, you know, the order of magnitude of maybe further co-invest to kind of get capital raising going across that.
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Yes.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: The overall capital raising environment has been relatively muted in the 1st quarter. The specific capital for Encore+, what we’re expecting there, the team will provide you in a moment. What I would say is that there has been an ongoing trend which has developed over several years now, that you as a fund manager, kickstart those funds with your own investment that drives a lot of confidence into the product and that usually then brings a couple of other investors coming alongside. You have this jumpstart which you wanna see to get to considerable kind of momentum in your capital raising. Team, do you have the numbers specifically for Encore+?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Yeah. We’re investing EUR 100 million. This is a core European fund. It’s an open-ended fund. We do expect meaningful third-party capital raise. I don’t have a specific number to provide you at this moment.
Anthony Paolone, Analyst, JPMorgan: Okay. Thank you.
Operator: The next question comes from the line of Stephen Sheldon with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Brendan Lynch, Analyst, Barclays0: Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. First, just wanted to see if you could talk more about what you’re seeing in capital markets. Specifically, you know, have you seen any push out in deals or delays given rate volatility and sort of continued geopolitical and macro concerns? Yeah, just curious the momentum there, you know, it’s kind of continued early into the second quarter. Sounds like it has based upon some of your comments, Christian, but just thought it was worth asking.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Capital markets started the year with really very significant momentum across the globe, and which is reflected in our first quarter numbers. This, this momentum also has continued in the second quarter. The U.S. market is pretty much unimpressed by the geopolitical environment so far. The European market, we have seen some deals being canceled. We have seen some deals being delayed, but the overall momentum was still so strong that that is just taking away an additional outperformance, which we would see otherwise. That is also pretty much the case in Asia Pacific. You may recall that Asia Pacific was relatively weak in 2025. They have very strong momentum. A lot of large transactions going on. We haven’t seen those pausing, but you probably wouldn’t see it in our numbers anyway.
It’s just what this conflict does, it takes away additional outperformance, which we would have seen otherwise without that conflict.
Brendan Lynch, Analyst, Barclays0: Very helpful. Makes sense. As a follow-up in leasing, how should we be thinking about the potential range of incremental margins over the rest of the year? It sounds like the first quarter was bogged down by producers hitting higher commission tiers as you’d expected. Should we be expecting kind of better incremental margins there looking forward if kind of tiers were set? I know it can be volatile quarter to quarter, but just generally, how are you thinking about it over the rest of the year?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Yeah. Thank you for the question. My first advice is not to look at incremental margins on a quarterly basis, but really on a kinda 12-month trailing basis. That said, in the 1st quarter of this year, as you noted, our producers have hit higher commission tiers earlier in the year than we expected. That is due to the strong performance of the business and also kind of the geo mix of where the business is coming from. We expect the commission headwind to moderate through the year. That said, we continue to make investments in that business around talent and technology and data. We expect for this year, 2026, our overall margin rate for the business to be relatively flat versus prior year.
Brendan Lynch, Analyst, Barclays0: All right. Thank you.
Operator: The next question comes from the line of Jade Rahmani with KBW. Please go ahead.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Thank you. Just to confirm your last comment, the relatively flat margin rate, that’s on capital markets. Is that right?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: That’s on leasing, to be clear.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Oh, sorry. Leasing.
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: On leasing. Yes. In capital markets, we, as Christian noted, have a strong pipeline. The momentum is good in capital markets, and we expect a strong incremental margin for capital markets this year for the full year.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Okay. It’s still in the 35%-40% range?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Yes. I’d say mid-thirties is generally where we expect to be for an incremental margin for capital markets.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Okay. Thanks. I wanted to ask about AI and how you’re managing the rollout. You know, there’s some concerns about potential disintermediation in this space down the road. I know that keeping data in a closed loop system is centrally important. Could you give any color on how you’re approaching it with respect to what % of the sales teams are currently using AI and how you expect to manage that going forward?
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Sure. Well, as you know, we have been investing into technology and especially into our data platform now for over a decade. We believe that we have by far the best data platform within our industry. All our products are tied into that data platform. Every data goes into that platform, and we can bring all the data back to whatever type of product or agent we have created. The adoption rate within our organization is incredibly high. There’s a lot of excitement amongst our colleagues to really use these new large language models, and so on that end, we feel real momentum. There are several agents becoming live per week on the citizen development side.
We are working from a corporate, central perspective on some very interesting approaches to really drive additional productivity, but also to change how we are getting to market and how we are solving a topic. To your second part of your question, point about disintermediation. I mean, we spoke about that at length during our Investor Day. For now, we are not concerned about any potential disintermediation. In fact, for now, we are very clear that AI is a tailwind for our organization, first and foremost, because we have this very rich data platform, which allows us to provide a lot of proprietary data to the benefit of our clients. That data platform is growing with every transaction we are doing, with every service we are providing to our corporate clients.
Over and above that, even in those areas where people are speculating that there could be potential disintermediation, and what has been mentioned the most is the value and risk advisory business. At the end of the day, there’s also a very important aspect who is confirming the potential valuation, where the brand aspect is absolutely significant, and we believe that the JLL brand will go a very long way on that end as well. In summary, for now, we don’t see any risk of disintermediation.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Thanks for that.
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Maybe just to follow up with a couple of data points for the first part of the question that Christian addressed. We spoke about this a bit at Investor Day, but we see 75% adoption across JLL, across our core enablement product, products. We monitor this closely. We’ve got 25,000 employees who are working on our enterprise AI applications every day. We’ve seen a 60% year-over-year increase. We expect that to continue to grow.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Thanks for that. Lastly, on the capital management side, what are your expectations for full year share repurchase given the accelerated repurchase late in the quarter?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thanks for the question. As, as I think both Christian and I noted around our capital allocation, strategy and priorities, organic investment, return of capital to shareholders and strategic M&A are the three things that we’re constantly balancing. We’re very committed to returning capital to shareholders. As you noted, we did a $300 million capital return in the first quarter. $100 million of that is what we would consider to be programmatic, and we look to continue our programmatic share repurchases throughout the year and into the coming quarters beyond that as well. The $200 million was more opportunistic relative to market conditions.
The exact amount of the programmatic repurchase in any given quarter or any given year is gonna vary a bit depending on the operating environment, the external market, what other opportunities that we’re looking at, and returns on those opportunities. We do intend to have a fairly programmatic approach to share repurchases as we go forward.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Julien Blouin with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Julien Blouin, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Yeah, thank you for the question. I appreciate the comments on the fluid macro, I just want to understand your comments. I think if I understood correctly, you think the impacts of the conflict, if they were to come, would likely be felt in the back half of the year. I guess, why is that the case? I would think that the impact would come quicker than that. Just comparing it to Liberation Day last year, which was similar in timing, though obviously a completely different issue, the impact was felt in Q2, then by the time we got to the second half of the year, sort of capital markets were back off to the races.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thanks for that question. I wouldn’t necessarily compare the two things. The imposition of tariffs was an immediate kind of load to the economy and an additional cost. Here we have a conflict. If the conflict would have been solved within 4-6 weeks, I would have said the impact outside of the Middle East would have been almost unnoticeable. With every week this is continuing, we have these higher energy prices and all the other implications around lack of fertilizers, impact on the chemical industry, you name them, you name them. What people have stored, which helps them to bridge that impact, is kind of fading away. At some point, they all have to pay for that higher energy. Look at the airline industry.
You have some airlines who have to cube the pricing for the aircraft fuel they need, and others don’t. Those who don’t are immediately feeling that impact now, and that will have repercussions on their performance in the broader economy. The lengthening out of that conflict will have a heavier load on the global economy, and frankly, especially in those countries where there is a very, very high dependency on purchasing energy and on purchasing fertilizers and other products which are coming from the Middle East. It’s least felt in the U.S. You see the pricing also in the U.S. at the gas station, the U.S. is very independent. That’s why we also see very little so far in our business environment in the U.S. When you go to Europe, you feel it quite noticeably already.
If you talk to our friends in India and in other countries who are heavily impacted, they are seeing great concern if that conflict continues over the summer.
Julien Blouin, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Okay. Thank you. No, that’s helpful. Then I guess on the office leasing front, I mean, you know, results continue to be really strong, but I guess what are tenants and brokers telling you regarding their future plans for footprints? Are they confidently moving ahead with plans, you know, for later this year or next year? Are you seeing any indication that first they’re trying to solve for sort of AI impacts to their go-forward headcounts and sort of office using employee bases before they sort of commit to space?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thanks for the question. Our leasing pipeline is quite strong. The indication that we get is that organizations are plowing forward with getting their people together, getting people into the office. In some cases, we’ve even gotten feedback from clients that they overshot on the downsizing through the pandemic and now need to correct for that. Ironically, I would argue that the AI boom has actually been also a boom for our Leasing Advisory business as the ecosystems around all of the AI startups, AI and I would say financial services, has really caused an uptick in activity, particularly on the coast, San Francisco, New York. At this point in time, we’re really not seeing an impact on our business from kind of what people are thinking about in terms of AI concerns, headcount, employment, et cetera.
Julien Blouin, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Okay. Great. Thank you.
Operator: The next question comes from the line of Seth Bergey with Citi. Please go ahead.
Seth Bergey, Analyst, Citi: Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to kind of ask about the commentary on kind of the office revenue outperformance.
You know, is that kind of driven by market share gain or deal size mix? Can you just talk about if that’s kind of, you know, in any particular geographies?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: I assume you’re referring to leasing specifically. I can go ahead and address that. Yeah, our office demand was very healthy in the first quarter. It is driven both by an increase in transactions and an increase in deal size. We’ve seen both. It is definitely driven by gateway markets. As I noted earlier, in particular, we’ve seen a lot of strength in places like New York and San Francisco, driven largely by kind of AI and AI organizations looking for space to get their people together, and also financial services.
Seth Bergey, Analyst, Citi: Great. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Brendan Lynch with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Brendan Lynch, Analyst, Barclays: Great. Thanks for taking my question. Could you provide a little bit more detail around the decarbonization fund within LaSalle and examples of similar projects in the past and kind of the size of this current initiative?
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Well, this is a new initiative, and I’m not quite sure whether there are a lot of examples out there from other fund managers. What we are doing there is we are looking for mostly existing buildings, which are not up to the expectations of the higher-end potential tenants in the market. We wanna completely refit those buildings and turn them into a level that they can meet the expectations of the top tenants in the market. That includes obviously that these buildings have to be very excellent in their energy consumption, ideally net zero or close to that level. We are starting with a couple of projects which have been identified.
The initial size in our first outlook is $300 million, which we wanna operate with. Obviously we go into fundraising now, and hopefully we bring that fund up to a decent level relatively swiftly.
Brendan Lynch, Analyst, Barclays: Great. Thanks for that color. Maybe for a follow-up on the M&A pipeline, are you primarily looking at geographic expansion or new capabilities or technology investments? Just any additional color that you could provide there around what you’re targeting.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Well, as we stated in our investor day, we see very significant growth opportunities in our core activities. We will focus therefore very much on those areas which we already cover today as core services and look for, if so, for opportunities to increase our market share in geographies where our market share may not be where we’d like it to be. If there is an opportunity on the M&A side, we will look at it. As we have said several times before, we are very confident that our organic growth rate will stay at the high single digit level. There is no need to do any M&A. The M&A market overall has significantly increased in activity in our space.
We also see, what we would call a little bit of nervousness on the seller side with regards to the price levels they can achieve. It may become more attractive in the coming six months, also depending on how the geopolitical environment will pursue.
Brendan Lynch, Analyst, Barclays: Great. Thank you for the color.
Operator: Thank you. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star 1. The next question comes from the line of Mitchell Germain with Citizens Bank. Please go ahead.
Mitchell Germain, Analyst, Citizens Bank: Thank you. How should we think about how we measure the performance of the investments that you’ve made within the within LaSalle? I mean, this is the second, I think, believe $100 million investment. How do we think about, you know, maybe the economics and how it impacts your earnings and the types of returns that you’re targeting?
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Mitch, as we have said before, we will be very consistent around that. Every use of capital goes through a very rigorous analysis. First of all, the biggest hurdle it has to beat is it has to be better than share repurchases. We looked at the proposal which came from our LaSalle colleagues, the last one and now the one we have spoken about today. It is well above the returns we expect from share repurchases. Obviously there’s numerous implications when we expand the footprint of LaSalle. It is not only the opportunity which is directly within the LaSalle P&L, there’s also notable cross-selling with the broader platform of JLL.
We are very comfortable when they come with a convincing idea that this is, from a shareholder perspective, an excellent opportunity to use capital and as I said, well above share repurchases.
Mitchell Germain, Analyst, Citizens Bank: That’s super helpful. Thank you. And then the last one, Christian, appreciate the color you gave on the recycling out of those property management contracts. I think you said 60%. So, you know, I’m assuming we’ll see these contracts are about a year in term. So should we think that, you know, kind of by mid-year or maybe 3Q that you’ve cycled through, you know, what you wanna accomplish there?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Yeah. Yeah. We started on this initiative to really take a deep dive on the contracts last year, and started cycling through second half of last year. We had, as I think noted earlier, expected to have that process wrapped up kind of halfway through this year. One of the things that pleasantly surprised us as we got into that process was that many clients were actually interested in renegotiating terms of those contracts, which we view as a win. The upside is that obviously the outcome for us is better, but it’s taking a bit longer to cycle through those, and we expect that to go through the end of the year at this point.
We do expect the headwind from that to be offset from strength in other parts of our business, namely in the Americas, where we’re seeing strong underlying growth in that part of the portfolio.
Mitchell Germain, Analyst, Citizens Bank: Kelly, if I can just follow up. What sort of, maybe renewal is not the right word, but what sort of stickiness have you gotten from that process?
Kelly Howe, Chief Financial Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: The specific contracts that we were targeting were in our Asia Pacific region. Many of them had been structured in a way that frankly were just unattractive to us from a financial standpoint. Very, very, very high pass through costs, you know, low portions of actual value add fee revenue, generating a portion of that. I would say the stickiness has been, it’s been about, I would say a third of those contracts as we’ve gone through, have been interested in renegotiating to something that is more attractive, I would argue for both sides. More attractive for them, but also more attractive for us from a commercial standpoint.
Mitchell Germain, Analyst, Citizens Bank: Thank you.
Operator: I’m showing no further questions at this time. I would like to turn it back to Christian Ulbrich for closing remarks.
Christian Ulbrich, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated: Thank you, operator. With no further questions, we will close today’s call, and we are looking forward to speak to you again next quarter. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.