Earnings Call Transcript

ABM INDUSTRIES INC /DE/ (ABM)

Earnings Call Transcript 2024-06-30 For: 2024-06-30
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Added on April 27, 2026

Earnings Call Transcript - ABM Q2 2024

Operator, Operator

Greeting, and welcome to the ABM Industries Inc. Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. Paul Goldberg, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations for ABM Industries. Thank you, sir. You may begin.

Paul Goldberg, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to ABM's Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. My name is Paul Goldberg, and I'm the Senior Vice President of Investor Relations at ABM. With me today are Scott Salmirs, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Earl Ellis, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Please note that earlier this morning, we issued our press release announcing our second quarter 2024 financial results. A copy of that release and an accompanying slide presentation can be found on our website, abm.com. After Scott and Earl's prepared remarks, we will host a Q&A session. But before we begin, I would like to remind you that our call and presentation today contain predictions, estimates, and other forward-looking statements. Our use of the words estimate, expect and similar expressions is intended to identify these statements, and they represent our current judgment of what the future holds. While we believe them to be reasonable, these statements are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially. These factors are described in the slide that accompanies our presentation as well as our filings with the SEC. During the course of this call, certain non-GAAP financial information will be presented. A reconciliation of historical non-GAAP numbers to GAAP financial measures is available at the end of the presentation and on the company's website under the Investor tab. And with that, I would like to now turn the call over to Scott.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Thanks, Paul. Good morning, and thank you all for joining us today to discuss our second quarter results. We are pleased with our quarterly results, which were driven by our team's execution and highlighted by a strong cash flow, adjusted EBITDA margin of 6.5% as well as by mid-single-digit organic revenue growth in our Aviation, Technical Solutions, Manufacturing & Distribution and Education segments, all of which resulted in adjusted EPS of $0.87. We were also encouraged with B&I as the business continues to prove resilient in a still settling commercial real estate environment, benefiting from our diverse client and service mix, our leading market position and our penetration in higher-performing Class A segment of the market. In fact, the results generated in B&I are a strong validation of our strategy and the effectiveness of our business model, all of which provide a clear path to generate shareholder value. Our service breadth, our teammates, and our focus on our customers as well as our ELEVATE investments and technology have enabled us to perform extremely well in choppy markets. Going forward, we expect to further leverage our ELEVATE investments as we scale the technology across the organization. We have had many touchpoints with new investors in the past few months that we thought it might be a good moment to re-ground our business model and value creation pathway while we have a focused audience. In a broader sense, we think of ABM as a consistent cash-generating flywheel, leveraging our capital-light model, scale, and leading market positions to self-fund growth and margin expansion initiatives, while at the same time consistently returning capital to shareholders. All of which drive attractive long-term shareholder returns. Going deeper on an operational level, we generate these returns by delivering a core suite of essential facility services, primarily janitorial and engineering to a diverse group of customers in a broad set of end markets. These markets tend to be mature and, on a blended basis, have low volatility through a business cycle, as we continue to demonstrate, and that helps us to provide a level of predictability to our results. So how do we do this? To put it simply, we optimize our position in these core markets by utilizing our scale, leading brands, and reputation, which has been cultivated for over a century. This allows us to attract and support top-tier clients and team members. Our clients appreciate our ability to deliver a wide range of integrated services on a local level and our capabilities to provide consistent performance at scale, which is hard for our competitors to match. At the same time, we're continuously investing in our people, processes, and solution sets to become a more valuable partner to our clients. Our capital-light business model provides flexibility and positions us well in our core markets. We can quickly scale our labor force to meet changes in demand, which leads to resilient operating results in the face of dynamic macro conditions. Recent examples of this are the current real estate market challenges and, before that, the pandemic. Resilience is a hallmark and differentiating factor for ABM. In total, we believe our core facility services business should achieve 2% to 4% organic revenue growth through a cycle. We have also historically generated a strong normalized free cash flow yield, which we believe is best-in-class amongst our peer group. Now let me walk you through how we are building upon the strong core to enhance our growth rate and margin performance. First, we strategically aligned ourselves with key secular trends such as electrification, the U.S. movement to onshoring manufacturing, infrastructure build-out, and the outsized demand for data centers. Our Aviation, Technical Solutions, and Manufacturing & Distribution segments are all positioned to benefit from these trends and have already won significant new business because of this alignment. A few examples of these wins are the large parking project we completed at Los Angeles International Airport last year; our recent $180 million microgrid win with a big-box retailer; as well as our growth with 8 of the 10 top semiconductor manufacturers in the U.S. We expect further outsized growth resulting from our expertise in electrification and related infrastructure over the next several years as we invest behind these trends via M&A and internal initiatives. Next, we continue to see significant opportunities within our portfolio to cross-sell other services such as our ABM Performance Solutions, or APS. APS is our multiservice performance model that includes facility maintenance, cleaning, energy, sustainability, safety, resiliency, and engineering solutions. In other words, one-stop shopping for our clients. Operated under a single contract, APS improves our clients' operations and enhances the resiliency and reliability of their facilities. In turn, this creates better outcomes for our clients and stickier business for us. Finally, our ELEVATE Self-Help initiative will support margin enhancement over the next few years. As we have discussed, we are digitally transforming our back-office operations and our go-to-market strategy as well as how we manage labor and interact with our clients. These initiatives will generate direct savings from operating efficiencies, including procurement benefits and improved labor utilization while providing our clients with enhanced data and actionable insights. Taken together, these secular growth opportunities, which carry attractive margins, in conjunction with all the work we are doing with ELEVATE, will drive higher enterprise profits. The resulting cash flow will be used to enhance shareholder value by investing in additional growth via internal initiatives and strategic M&A while at the same time growing our dividend and opportunistically repurchasing shares, consequently creating a compounding effect. As we enter the second half of the year, we're encouraged by our positioning, the resilience of our markets, and our success in winning new business. We're particularly pleased to have booked over $1 billion in new sales during the first half of the year, a record. This includes projects that will be completed over the next several years, which gives us the ability to stay close to our clients over extended periods. What's most encouraging is that we are winning this business across the portfolio, including a large B&I contract with a major technology company. Aviation also won major contracts at Boston Logan Airport and Phoenix' Sky Harbor Airport. And Education won a nice-sized APS contract with Utica University. All of these new wins complement the large microgrid project we mentioned last quarter and set us up for sustained success. Given our strong start to this year and our confidence for a solid second half, we are raising our full-year guidance for adjusted EPS and now expect it to be in the range of $3.40 to $3.50 versus our prior range of $3.30 to $3.45. This increase reflects our strong market positioning and our continued conviction in the resilience of our business. With that, let me turn it over to Earl for the financials.

Earl Ellis, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Scott, and good morning, everyone. Overall, our Q2 results were slightly better than our expectations heading into the quarter, and we want to thank our team for their strong performance in a choppy macro environment. For those of you following along with our earnings presentation, please turn to Slide 5. Second quarter revenue of $2 billion increased 1.7%, all of which was organic. Revenue growth was broad-based as M&D, Aviation, Education, and Technical Solutions all grew mid-single digits. Once again, B&I, our largest segment, declined less than 1%, benefiting from a diverse client and service base. We expect B&I to remain resilient despite persistent market headwinds. Moving on to Slide 6. Before we go through the numbers, I'd like to remind you that in the second quarter of 2023, we recognized $12.6 million in revenue for a large parking project in our Aviation segment. Since the costs associated with this project were incurred and recorded in prior periods, all the revenue essentially flowed through to earnings and margins in Q2 2023. The absence of that project in the current period impacts our comparability. Net income in the second quarter was $43.8 million or $0.69 per diluted share, down 16% and 12%, respectively versus last year. These decreases were largely driven by the absence of the aviation project I just mentioned. We also recorded higher corporate investments, which were planned. These items were partially offset by lower ELEVATE and integration costs and improved operating results in our B&I, M&D, and ATS segments. Earnings per share further benefited from a lower share count. Adjusted net income of $55.5 million decreased 8% while adjusted earnings per diluted share of $0.87 declined 3% from the prior year period. The decrease in our adjusted net income primarily reflected the absence of the Aviation project and higher corporate investments, partially offset by improved operating results in our B&I, M&D, and ATS segments. Adjusted EPS benefited from a lower share count, driven by our share repurchase activities last year. Adjusted EBITDA declined 9% to $125.3 million and adjusted EBITDA margin is 6.5%. Now turning to our segment results beginning on Slide 7. B&I revenue was just under $1 billion, a slight year-over-year decline. As mentioned, we continue to benefit from our end market diversification, including our exposure to the sports and entertainment and healthcare markets and from our weighting towards higher-performing Class A properties. This positioning helped us mitigate most of the impact of a soft commercial real estate market. Operating profit in B&I increased nearly 2% to $77.6 million and operating margin improved 20 basis points to 7.8% as positive business mix, price increases, and cost actions more than offset sluggish demand dynamics in the commercial real estate market. Aviation revenue grew 4.8% to $238.2 million, once again driven by robust travel markets and new business wins on both the airport and airline side for the business. Adjusting for the $12.6 million parking project recognized in the prior year period, revenue grew 11%. Aviation's operating profit and margin were $13.1 million and 5.5%, respectively. Excluding the parking projects in the prior period, operating earnings grew 19% and margin increased 40 basis points. This strong performance largely reflected improved labor utilization and positive mix. Turning to Slide 8. Manufacturing & Distribution revenue grew 4.1% to $388.6 million, reflecting solid demand. Operating profit increased to $43.6 million and operating margin improved 30 basis points to 11.2%. Profit and margin performance was largely due to a favorable customer mix. Of note, as we previously discussed, a large client is rebalancing its work. We expect to see the impact of this in the third quarter. Our team is actively working to replace the transitioning revenue and earnings. Education revenue increased 4.1% to $225.6 million, benefiting from the addition of new clients that came online last year. We are also pleased to welcome Utica University as the latest ABM Performance Solutions client and look forward to bringing them fully on board in the third quarter. Education's operating profit was $11.5 million with a 5.1% margin, representing declines of 2% and 30 basis points, respectively. This was largely attributable to an unfavorable service mix, specifically fewer work orders. Technical Solutions revenue grew 4.6% to $176.2 million on the strength of microgrid project startups and continued growth in our mission-critical and power business. Bundled Energy Solutions and EV project activity remains soft. However, coating activity is beginning to pick up. As expected, Technical Solutions' operating profit significantly improved on a year-over-year basis as well as sequentially, driven by a more favorable project mix and lower acquisition-related amortization. Operating profit increased 67% to $17 million over the prior year period while margin improved 350 basis points to 9.6%. We are pleased with ATS' second-quarter margin results and expect similar performance in the back half of the year driven by a favorable service mix. Moving on to Slide 9. We ended the second quarter with total indebtedness of $1.4 billion, including $57.9 million down by letters of credit, resulting in a total debt to pro forma adjusted EBITDA ratio of 2.3x. At the end of Q2, we had available liquidity of $561.8 million, including cash and cash equivalents of $60.7 million. Free cash flow in the second quarter was $101 million, which exceeded our expectations, aided by our team's relentless focus on working capital management. Interest expense was $20.6 million in the second quarter, about $0.5 million lower than the prior year, and our Q2 effective tax rate was 29.9%. On the capital allocation front, we repurchased roughly 555,000 shares at an average price of $42.84 for a total cost of $23.8 million. The total remaining authorization under our share repurchase program was $186 million at the end of the quarter. Now let's move on to our revised full year fiscal 2024 outlook, as shown on Slide 10. As Scott mentioned, we are raising our full year guidance for adjusted EPS based on our strong second quarter results and are confident in the back half of the year. As such, we now expect full year 2024 adjusted EPS to be in the range of $3.40 to $3.50, up from $3.30 to $3.45 previously. All other metrics of our outlook remain unchanged. Adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be between 6.2% and 6.5%. Interest expense is expected to be in the range of $82 million to $86 million, and the normalized tax rate before discrete items is expected to be between 29% and 30%. Lastly, full year normalized free cash flow is expected to be in the range of $240 million to $270 million, most likely towards the upper end of the range. This forecast excludes the estimated $45 million of ELEVATE and integration costs, with the majority being ELEVATE cost. One last note. From a quarterly cadence perspective, we expect adjusted EPS to be fairly balanced between the third and fourth quarters.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Thanks, Earl. We are very pleased with our first half performance and even more excited about our future. Our success reflects ABM's resilient business model, the benefits from our ELEVATE investments and, perhaps most importantly, the incredible dedication and strong execution by the ABM team. We are excited about the road ahead for ABM as we continue to build and shape our business to become the technology-driven leader of the facility services industry and look forward to continuing the journey. We're now available to answer your questions.

Operator, Operator

Our first question comes from the line of Tim Mulrooney with William Blair.

Tim Mulrooney, Analyst

I'm curious about that M&D segment. How are you thinking about organic growth in the back half of the year? I know performance has been solid here, but I think this is when that supplier rebalancing issue begins to have a more acute impact, if I'm not mistaken.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Yes, that's right, Tim. You're right on. That's when we start lapping the rebalancing that we talked about. So you'll see it down. We don't give revenue guidance. But you'll see it down in the back half. But I think what we'd want you to focus on is we do believe in the future, M&D is going to be a double-digit top and bottom line industry group. We're just going through this period now that will take us through essentially the next two quarters and a little bit into next year. But we couldn't be more excited about the industry group, but you're spot on that we'll start lapping that in Q3 and Q4.

Tim Mulrooney, Analyst

Scott, can you provide more details about the data centers? What percentage of your business do they represent currently? Additionally, what types of services do you offer beyond your core janitorial services? How do you view the growth opportunities associated with the significant expected expansion over the next few years?

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Sure. And data centers for us really bridge M&D and our ATS industry groups. Yes, and that ranges from a number of things, Tim. It's anything from floor cleaning because data centers have raised floors, right? So it's anything from underfloor cleaning, which is more of the M&D thing to doing real power testing, taking care of generator sets, switchgear, anything with power resilience. Even the mechanical side, that resides mostly in our ATS group. And in context to our $8-plus billion in revenue, it's still quite small, but it's significant enough that we feel we really feel the acceleration in margins because it's a higher-margin business. It's where we're going to be leaning into with our efforts internally from an organic standpoint and also inorganically. So small right now, but really the center of our focus because you see the trends. This is where everything is heading. And we're just so well positioned based on our client base to cross-sell into that. We couldn’t be more excited about data centers as a whole.

Operator, Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Jasper Bibb with Truist Securities.

Jasper Bibb, Analyst

I wanted to ask about B&I. You got it to low single-digit declines for the year, but I guess, we're pretty close to flat in the first half. So is a low single-digit decline still the right way to think about that segment for the year? And I know you exited some contracts in the last quarter or two. Is there anything else that we should keep in mind that's going to impact the back half of the year?

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

No. Jasper, I think it's the right way to think about the low single-digit declines. We're still in the middle of this thing. I could answer you best as ABM and a service provider. And I could tell you like where we sit today versus let's call it, nine months ago, when we were putting together and framing our guidance. Where we sit today is a lot more positive. Our resiliency is coming through because we always talk about the fact that we have this flexible labor model. So while we are seeing tenants compress on their space, we flex our labor. And I will tell you, again, as we sit here today, what we were envisioning in terms of where we thought tenants were going to be from a compression standpoint versus where it's playing out. It's not been as dramatic. I think there is a very palpable movement back to the office, which is encouraging. Lastly, and don't forget, we play in Class A space. Even in addition to everything I'm saying, everything you read is the resiliency of Class A space. And so we're very fortunate that we've been riding through it. But I still think for the next couple of quarters and into next year, it's not unrealistic to look at low single-digit declines for the back half of this year. And then starting to ramp up possibly to neutral next year, and then getting back to where we historically been to GDP and possibly even GDP-plus.

Jasper Bibb, Analyst

That makes sense. And then you mentioned the record $1 billion in new business for the first half. Is there any way to maybe contextualize that for us versus what might be a normal range? Maybe growth versus the first half of last year? Or I guess, what new business typically looks like as part of your revenue base?

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Yes. This was another record for us and more than incrementally better than the first half. We've gotten some large projects at the start of this year that have been really helpful. And as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, the multiyear projects, which is terrific for us because we stay close to our clients. So we hit a record last year at $1.6 billion for the entire year. And we think all indications are that we're going to lap that record this year. We're off to a great start. The bigger sentiment more than anything else is that clients continue to want to expand with us. New clients, when we sit in the presentation room, are voting for ABM. I mean, it's pretty significant when you do the math that you have this $8 billion company in revenue, bringing in $1 billion of new business in the first six months of the year. We're really enthusiastic about how we're putting our platform forward and the relationships we're building with clients that cause them to stay sticky and expand with us.

Operator, Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Faiza Alwy with Deutsche Bank.

Faiza Alwy, Analyst

So I wanted to follow up on B&I. It sounds like what you're saying is that the commercial real estate part of the business is maybe a little bit better than you had feared. And then you're seeing sort of this offset from like the sports entertainment part of the business. So I just want to dig into that a little bit more, like how much of B&I now is sports entertainment and give us sort of the relative performance of those two segments within B&I.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

In the B&I sector, sports and entertainment are growing, but they make up a small part of the overall business, amounting to roughly $100 million to $150 million. This segment has remained active as people return to events. However, we also have the engineering part, specifically stationary engineering, which involves engineers within buildings. The staffing levels for these engineers remain constant regardless of occupancy levels. Whether a building is 95% or 75% occupied, you still need the same number of engineers to operate the systems. This provides a level of stability in B&I. Additionally, the pressures we’re seeing from tenants occur gradually over time, with lease expirations spread across a 2- or 3-year timeline. The shift is happening slowly, and it’s a trend we observe across various clients and companies. There is a noticeable push for employees to return to the office. For instance, during our recent Board meeting, a senior executive shared that her decision to join ABM was influenced by the company culture and collaboration, stating her desire to return to the office after previously working remotely. This sentiment is encouraging for us moving forward, but it is important to acknowledge that we are still in a transitional phase. I believe it will take another 6 to 12 months to reach a more stable state.

Faiza Alwy, Analyst

Okay. That's really helpful. And then just taking a step back, right? It sounds like you're doing really well with new business. But I'm curious, was there something specific that was better than expected in the quarter that led you to raise the guide? Like is it more on the Technical Solutions side? Or is it just a little bit of everything across the board that helped you gain confidence and be more optimistic for this year and beyond?

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Yes. I think for us, when we look at the year, we take everything into account. We don't look at things quarter-by-quarter. We look at all the different metrics, everything from new sales to how we're performing to a strong lens on the industry group. And as we frame out the year, we just have an increased level of confidence on how we're performing, and we felt this was just the right move at this time.

Operator, Operator

Our next question comes from the line of David Silver with CL King & Associates.

David Silver, Analyst

Yes. Scott, I was hoping to maybe just have you drill down a little bit into that $1 billion of new business. And when I hear $1 billion in the first half, I mean, it's a pretty dramatic pickup over, let's say, a few years ago when I believe $100 million per quarter of new business was considered pretty good. I understand it's not apples-to-apples, but if you were to take out, I don't know, the microgrid business which wasn't owned by you a few years ago, and I don't know, maybe the charging business. But apples-to-apples compared to several years ago? In other words, just the core activities across your non-ATS segments maybe.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Yes, that's a good question. Let me give you some context that we're pretty proud of. In 2016, which wasn't that long ago, our full-year new business was $750 million. So now we're on track to do $1 billion more than that on average in a particular year. And look, we talked about that $180 million microgrid project that we got in the first half of the year, even if you take that out as an anomaly. And by the way, we don't think that's an anomaly. We think we're going to have these big chunky microgrid projects. But even if you wanted to kind of carve that out, we still grew as compared to where we were last year at this time in terms of new sales. So really optimistic. And David, it doesn't happen by chance. Not only is it based on our ability to execute in the field and win the confidence and gain reputation from clients, but it's also by putting a really structured framework on our new sales, leveraging CRM systems, leveraging training for salespeople, bringing on more salespeople. This is not random. We invested in hyper-targeting, which is a way to triangulate different real estate databases to figure out what different regions of the country we should be going after new business, how we should be targeting that business, and who the people we should be going after are. Part of the ELEVATE investments, it's not just our ERP; sometimes we get caught and talk about ELEVATE as our ERP systems, but we are investing dollars in organic growth and it's absolutely paying off. But it comes from having a very structured approach to it.

Operator, Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Joshua Chan with UBS.

Joshua Chan, Analyst

Maybe focusing on the new business gains as well. Given the momentum that you have in gaining new business and it sounds like that's sustainable. Is there a chance that ABM could exceed the historical 2% to 4% organic growth that you gave earlier over time? How are you thinking about the contribution to the overall growth going forward?

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Yes, I believe so. It's a long-term perspective. We mentioned that we typically grow in line with GDP, and with our ELEVATE initiative, we expect low to mid-single-digit growth, which would be historically high for us. This expectation is driven by our investments and the improvements in our platform. Therefore, we anticipate a higher growth rate for ABM over the long term. However, this won't manifest as consistent quarterly growth, which is why we refrain from providing revenue guidance, especially with an increasing portion of our business tied to projects. We prefer not to focus on short-term results.

Joshua Chan, Analyst

Okay. That's perfect color. And then for my follow-up for Earl, I think you mentioned right at the end, Earl, that Q3 and Q4 EPS should be fairly balanced. I know that it moves around historically. But I think usually, Q4 is a little stronger than Q3 based on normal seasonality. So could you just talk about how you expect seasonality to play out this year and why it may be different than normal?

Earl Ellis, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Yes. No, great question. Typically, we would actually have a little bit more revenue and profit in the back half, especially driven by ATS. That really is a back half business. But remember, within M&D, we're going to have that reset associated with the rebalancing of one of our major clients, which really kind of offsets some of that favorable seasonality that we would typically see in the second half.

Operator, Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Marc Riddick with Sidoti & Company.

Marc Riddick, Analyst

I wanted to discuss what was mentioned in the press release and your prepared remarks regarding the performance of Class A properties. Could you provide some context about the difference in performance between Class A properties and the rest of the portfolio? Additionally, even though we don't typically break down revenue, could you elaborate on the potential to increase Class A as a percentage of revenue and how we should consider your goals moving forward?

Earl Ellis, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Our strategy has been established for a long time, focusing on Class A properties. This focus isn’t due to foresight about hybrid work trends, but rather because we appreciate Class A clients. These clients value what ABM offers and don't simply chase the lowest price. Class A represents a significant portion of our business, and while we remain diversified with some Class B and C clients, they make up a very small part of our portfolio. We don’t anticipate a major shift to increase this percentage further since it's already high. For a company like ABM, which is investing in technology, sales, and its workforce, being in the Class A market is crucial. Luckily, that aligns with where tenants want to be as well. A key point is that if tenants need less space but can afford the same rent, they can upgrade to Class A. This is why Class A has proven to be so resilient, as Class B tenants are able to transition to Class A now.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

It's pretty uniform at this point. Some of the markets that we're having a tougher time, like San Francisco, are starting to see increased activity because of AI. There's always other events that mitigate some of the things that are happening in a particular city. The whole Sunbelt area is growing with manufacturing now, also with AI and data centers. We're starting to see increased activity across the board. Some of the things we differentiated when we talked regionally in the past was about back to office. We were seeing a stronger push in the South than we were on the coast. Even on the coast now, we're seeing people get back to the office, so that's becoming more uniform as well.

Operator, Operator

Our final question is a follow-up from the line of David Silver with CL King & Associates.

David Silver, Analyst

I have a couple of cash flow-related questions. First, you mentioned that you repurchased 555,000 shares. Would you consider that to be an effort to offset dilution, or is it more of a strategic cash flow decision? Secondly, regarding your free cash flow for the year, you're showing significantly better results in the first half compared to last year. Traditionally, your company tends to generate free cash flow more heavily in the second half. Should we anticipate that your free cash flow will be similar in the second half, given that your EPS guidance is approaching last year's levels? Or are there factors that might cause more of that free cash flow to be realized earlier?

Earl Ellis, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer

Yes. To answer the first part of your question regarding the share buybacks that we did in this past quarter. You're right. We did about 555,000 shares, and that really was associated with offsetting the dilutive share-based compensation. And based on our strong free cash flow as well as relatively low leverage, it affords us the opportunity to potentially do opportunistic share buybacks in the future. You're right. We are really pleased with the cash flow that this company continues to drive. If you recall at the beginning of the year, we gave guidance of normalized free cash flow, excluding kind of like the one-time cash outlays of $240 million to $270 million. Based on what we've actually seen in this past quarter, we are well on track to deliver that for the full year. If any, we actually think we may be trending more right towards the high end of that range. When you look at the back half of the year in our EPS call like I just mentioned, although we have a really good backlog on ATS, which is normal to actually have a strong second-half quarter, that will be offset with some declines that we mentioned within M&D. That does actually have an impact on cash flow. But suffice it to say, on a full-year basis, we feel really good about the strength of our cash flow.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. This concludes our question-and-answer session. I'll turn the floor back to Mr. Salmirs for any final comments.

Scott Salmirs, President and CEO

Okay, thanks. I just want to thank everybody for participating today. I just want you to make sure you understand, it's not lost on us that we could not post these kinds of results if it wasn't for our teammates who are just out there working hard and doing what they're doing for our customers and for each other. So I really appreciate the team. With that, have a good summer, and we'll be back to you next quarter with our Q3 results. Thank you, everybody.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.