Slowing Growth Hits Robert Half International Earnings

Staffing company Robert Half International's (NYSE: RHI) prospects are always going to be tied to the state of the economy, and if the company's third-quarter results and outlook are an accurate guide, then investors can expect more sluggish growth ahead. Let's take a closer look at the earnings report and see what happened in the quarter.

Robert Half International Inc.'s third quarter: The raw numbers

Starting with the headline figures from the quarter:

  • Net service revenue increased $1.339 billion, compared to guidance of $1.335 billion to $1.395 billion, and increased 2% over last year's third quarter.
  • Income per share of $0.71, compared to guidance of $0.68 to $0.74, represented a 2.7% decrease from last year's third quarter.

As you can see, earnings were smack in the middle of guidance, but revenue was almost at the bottom of the range provided on the second-quarter earnings call. If the results were underwhelming, then management's forecast for the fourth quarter was even more so:

  • Fourth-quarter net service revenue forecast to be in the range of $1.25 billion to $1.31 billion, compared to $1.305 billion in the same quarter last year.
  • Fourth-quarter net income per share forecast to be in the range of $0.60 to $0.65, compared to $0.71.

PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION UNCERTAINTY ISHITTING CORPORATE SENTIMENT AND SLOWING HIRING. IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

Weak linear trends

Essentially, the weak trends established in the previous quarter carried through into the three months that ended in October. Robert Half ended the second quarter growing at rates lower than the average -- an indication of a linear decline during the three-month period. It was a similar story in the third quarter.

Speaking on the earnings call, CFO Keith Waddell outlined how global temporary and consulting staffing revenue "decelerated during the third quarter," with September "roughly flat," compared to a 2% increase for the quarter. Moreover, trading in the first two weeks saw revenue decline 1.5%.

Turning to permanent placement, Waddell noted that September was down 4% compared to a 5% decline in the quarter, although on a more positive note, revenue increased 1% in the first three weeks of October.

Cyclical indicators

Below, I've broken out the quarterly figures by U.S. and international (temporary and consulting and permanent placements) so that readers can get a good handle on trends.

In typical economic recoveries, temporary employment improves first, and then permanent placement -- usually seen as much more economically sensitive -- starts to grow at much stronger rates, as corporations feel more confident and replace previously lost jobs.

As you can see below, the weakening in permanent employment hiring in recent quarters is a pretty clear sign that GDP growth is slowing.

Data source: Robert Half International Inc. presentations. Chart by author.

On the earnings call, Waddell characterized the environment as one in which clients "remain cautious with little sense of urgency ... in part due to macro uncertainty, in part due to election uncertainty." In such a scenario, clients are therefore being more selective and focusing on "only looking for the top tranche" of candidates.

Waddell summarized it as being a "continuation of what we've talked about for two or three quarters," accompanied by alengthening in the sales cycle. In other words, it's a difficult trading environment.

CRM system implemented

On a more positive note, Waddell discussed the successful implementation of a front office Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system in the U.S. and a new project management system for its global consulting business Protiviti, with costs running at the low end of expectations. While the benefits are seen as occurring in the long term, the trouble-free implementation helps to reduce some stock-specific risk.

Looking ahead

Robert Half International's guidance is hardly inspiring, but on the other hand, its revenue growth (particularly in permanent placements) is always subject to economic conditions and corporate sentiment. On that note, economists are forecasting better growth next year, and uncertainty over the election will dissipate soon enough.

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Lee Samaha has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Robert Half International. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.