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Global Business Travel Group - Q1 2024

May 7, 2024

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Good morning, and welcome to the American Express Global Business Travel first quarter 2024 earnings conference call. As a reminder, please note today's call is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to the Vice President of Investor Relations, Jennifer Thorington. Please go ahead.

Jennifer Thorington (VP of Investor Relations)

Hello, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for our first quarter 2024 earnings conference call. This morning, we issued an earnings press release, which is available on sec.gov and our website at investors.amexglobalbusinesstravel.com. A slide presentation, which accompanies today's prepared remarks, is also available on the Amex GBT Investor Relations webpage. We would like to advise you that our comments contain certain forward-looking statements that represent our beliefs or expectations about future events, including industry and macroeconomic trends, cost savings, and acquisition synergies, among others. All forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from the statements made on today's conference call. More information on these and other risks and uncertainties is contained in our earnings release issued this morning and our other SEC filings.

Throughout today's call, we will be presenting certain non-GAAP financial measures such as EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted operating expenses, free cash flow, and net debt. All references during today's call to such non-GAAP financial measures have been adjusted to exclude certain items. Definitions of these terms in the most directly comparable GAAP measures and reconciliations for non-GAAP measures are available in the supplemental materials of this presentation and in the earnings release. Participating with me today are Paul Abbott, our Chief Executive Officer, and Karen Williams, our Chief Financial Officer. Also joining for the Q&A session today is Eric Bock, our Chief Legal Officer and Head of Global M&A. With that, I will now turn the call over to Paul. Paul?

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Thank you, Jennifer, and welcome to everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter 2024 earnings call. In the first quarter, we delivered strong financial results with continued share gains, significant margin expansion, and 24% Adjusted EBITDA growth to reach the highest first quarter Adjusted EBITDA in our company's history. Total transaction value, or TTV, grew 9% in the quarter and revenue grew 6%. Adjusting for fewer workdays in the first quarter this year versus last year, growth would be 10% and 7%, respectively. These strong results were in line with our expectations and put us on track to deliver against our full year guidance. Increased demand for our leading software and services resulted in continued share gains. We reported new wins value of $3.3 billion over the last twelve months.

This includes $2 billion of SME new wins, demonstrating continued progress with this large, profitable customer segment. Our focus on driving operating leverage is also clearly evidenced in our Q1 financial results. Adjusted operating expenses increased just 2% compared to 6% revenue growth, and we drove significant Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion of 300 basis points year-over-year. Our progress to positive and accelerating free cash flow remains an important focus for the company, providing us additional opportunities to invest in our growth and drive shareholder returns. We generated positive free cash flow of $24 million in the quarter, an improvement of $133 million year-over-year, and we continue to lower our leverage ratio. Importantly, in the first quarter, we announced that we have entered into an agreement to acquire CWT.

The transaction value of approximately $570 million represents a highly attractive post-synergy multiple of 2.5x Adjusted EBITDA, including approximately $155 million of identified annual run rate cost synergies. This accretive transaction is expected to close in the second half of this year, and will accelerate our growth and create significant shareholder value. So our momentum continued in the quarter as we execute on our strategy and deliver strong financial results. Starting with transaction growth, transactions were up 6%, driven by increased demand for business travel and our share gains. Please note there was a negative workday timing impact of approximately 1 percentage point in the quarter, which will have an offsetting benefit over the balance of the year, largely in the second half of 2024. So on a like-to-like basis, transactions were up 7% in the quarter.

Please also note transaction growth, which was previously reported on a gross basis, is now reported on a net basis to exclude cancellations, refunds, and exchanges. This better aligns transaction growth with the way that we measure and recognize TTV and revenue. TTV grew by 9%, driven primarily from transaction growth, as well as higher average ticket prices and higher hotel room rates. On a workday adjusted basis, TTV was up 10%. Revenue was up 6% to reach $610 million for the quarter, driven by growth in transactions, TTV, and increased demand for our products and professional services. On a workday adjusted basis, revenue was up 7%. Finally, our focus on margin expansion and operating leverage resulted in Adjusted EBITDA growth of 24% to $123 million.

Solid transaction growth was driven by share gains and increased demand for business travel from our diverse and premium customer base. Looking at our trends in more detail, which we've workday adjusted here so you can see the true momentum. The absolute growth was in line with our expectations. However, the shape was different. We saw relatively faster growth from Global Multinational customers compared to SME customers. Our first quarter Global Multinational transactions were up 11% and SME transactions up 5%. In Global Multinational, we've seen very positive same-store sales growth across several sectors, particularly technology, up approximately 30% in the first quarter. We also saw double-digit growth in professional services, pharma, mining, energy, and utilities. Our most recent customer survey shows that our top 100 customers now expect travel spend to be up approximately 8% in the full year 2024.

This is an improvement of 4 percentage points versus the previous survey, and it's reflected in these strong Q1 trends. The percentage of clients expected to spend more on travel over the balance of this year has also increased by 3 percentage points. For SME, growth has slowed by 3 percentage points over the last two quarters, largely driven by slower same-store sales. We believe this is being driven by higher interest costs and sustained higher inflation, resulting in stronger controls on SME spending. This is a broader trend with US SME customers that American Express also highlighted in their Q1 results. Domestic and international air transactions, both up 5%. Air TTV was up 11%, with very strong growth in US air TTV of 14%. Growth in hotel transactions was 9%, which continued to outpace the 5% growth in air transactions.

This reflects industry trends as well as our intentional focus on increasing our volume of hotel bookings as we continue to strengthen our hotel content and display and provide customers with more value and more choice. Finally, here on a regional basis, transaction growth was 7% in both the Americas and EMEA. Asia Pacific continues to lead the growth rates at 13%. So turning to the commercial highlights, we continue to gain share and reported total new wins of $3.3 billion over the last twelve months. Importantly, customer retention remains high at 96%. Our biggest opportunity remains with SME customers, which represents approximately $950 billion of travel spend. We are already a leader in managed travel in this segment, but 70% of this opportunity is not currently in a managed travel program.

As our progress clearly demonstrates, more and more SME customers are recognizing the value of our leading software and services and a professionally managed travel program. As a result, SME new wins over the last twelve months totaled $2 billion. Moving on to our product and technology highlights. 79% of our transactions came through digital channels in the first quarter. Over 60% of the digital bookings now come through on our own software platforms, Neo and Egencia. In our Neo1 spend management platform, we saw 10% growth in customer count in the first quarter. Our recently announced partnership with American Express to integrate virtual cards into Neo1 is also gaining traction.

Customers are now issuing virtual cards within Neo1 to cover additional spend use cases, and they're using virtual cards to set budgets at an individual level, and this brings better control over employee spend, with purchasing, travel, and expense data all in one place. Finally, of course, an important event in the first quarter was our announcement that we have entered into an agreement to acquire CWT. This agreement clearly shows that we are executing against a significant M&A opportunity in a large and fragmented industry, and delivering on our priorities to drive growth, deliver cost synergies, and shareholder value. The acquisition of CWT will grow our revenues by one-third, with the potential for significant earnings contribution over time.

Our integration teams have now been established, and our proven track record gives us confidence that we can achieve $155 million in annual run rate cost synergies that have already been identified. This results in a highly attractive post-synergy multiple of 2.5x Adjusted EBITDA. We project the acquisition to be neutral to EPS in the first year and accretive thereafter, driving significant shareholder value. We continue to expect closing to occur in the second half of 2024, subject to customary closing conditions, including the receipt of certain regulatory approvals. And now I'd like to hand it over to Karen to discuss the financial results in more detail before moving to our 2024 outlook.

Karen Williams (CFO)

Thank you, Paul, and hello, everyone. I've previously talked about my three key priorities when it comes to managing our financial performance, which are focused on accelerating cash flow generation, driving operating leverage and continued margin expansion, and importantly, creating capacity to invest and drive long-term sustained growth, both organically and through strategic M&A. I'm really happy with the progress we have made in all three areas. Our solid revenue growth, substantially higher earnings, significant margin expansion, and positive free cash flow are testament to this. So now let's turn to our financial performance in more detail. As you heard from Paul, revenue reached $610 million, up 6% year-over-year, largely driven by transaction growth. This was in line with our expectations for the first quarter and reflects known factors, including the calendar effect from work day timing.

TTV grew 9% in the quarter, primarily driven by transaction volume and also reflecting increased average airline ticket prices and hotel room rates. Revenue yield, which we define as revenue divided by TTV, declined modestly in the quarter due to two factors. First, non-TTV driven components of the revenue base. As a reminder, our revenue model is driven 50% by transaction volume, 30% by TTV, and 20% by product and professional services revenue, which is largely recurring. So only 30% of our revenue benefits from higher sales prices. Second, the continued shift to digital transactions is in line with our strategy and has a positive impact to Adjusted EBITDA margin, but lowers revenue yield. These factors were anticipated and incorporated into our full year 2024 guidance that we provided last quarter. Turning to expenses, which are a key area of focus for us.

Cost saving initiatives and productivity improvements helped offset the investments we are making in technology and content, including our software platforms and AI. This resulted in Adjusted operating expense growth of just 2% year-over-year versus revenue growth of 6%. This strong operating leverage translated into 300 basis points of margin expansion and Adjusted EBITDA growth of 24%. Adjusted EBITDA of $123 million and Adjusted EBITDA margin of 20% are both records for the first quarter. Finally, we achieved free cash flow generation of $24 million, an increase of $133 million year-over-year, continuing the momentum. This was also a milestone to reach positive free cash flow in the first quarter, which seasonally is our lowest quarter for cash flow generation.

This was driven primarily by our working capital actions, which I've discussed on previous calls, as well as timing factors that will smooth out over the balance of year. Our leverage ratio or Net Debt, divided by last 12 months Adjusted EBITDA, is 2.2x as of March 31, 2024. This represents a very significant step down for us as a company. In March 2023, this stood at 4.5x. As you can see from the chart on this slide, the momentum is a critical proof point that demonstrates our discipline on the balance sheet, and we are within our leverage ratio target range of 1.5x-2.5x. As mentioned during our full year earnings call, the reduction in our leverage ratio in Q1 drove 75 basis points of interest rate reduction on our outstanding term loan.

In total, since Q4 2023, we have triggered a reduction of 150 basis points, resulting in approximately $25 million of annual interest expense savings. As our non-call option rolls off in July 2024, we will have the opportunity to refinance our debt and further reduce our interest expense. Now, I'd like to turn our attention to the balance of year. On our last earnings call, we shared our powerful financial model with all of you and how it positions us for industry-leading returns. First, we expect business travel demand from our premium customer base to grow above GDP, as it has done consistently for several decades prior to the pandemic. Second, we expect to continue to grow ahead of the market by driving share gains with our differentiated value proposition. Third is margin expansion.

We are laser-focused on a disciplined cost structure and margin expansion. Our operating leverage is forecasted to drive 18%-32% Adjusted EBITDA growth in 2024. Fourth, capital deployment. We've talked about the pivotal moment we've reached in our business, where our positive free cash flow can fund incremental growth opportunities. And finally, we have shared before how M&A presents an opportunity to further accelerate the strong performance you have already seen in our business. The pending acquisition of CWT is a powerful example of the incremental value we can create. And so let's turn to full year 2024 guidance. Please note, our guidance does not incorporate the impact of CWT, which we expect to close in the second half of the year.

We are reiterating our guidance for full-year revenue of $2.43 billion-$2.5 billion, which represents 6%-9% growth. We expect same-store sales to contribute 2-5 percentage points of full-year revenue growth in 2024. On top of this, we expect net new wins to contribute approximately 4 percentage points of additional growth. We expect revenue growth to accelerate in the second half of this year due to the shape of our new wins rolling on and positive work day timing impact. We expect the shape of our revenue yield to be similar to last year, with the lowest revenue yield in Q1 and the highest revenue yield in Q4.

As discussed, we are very focused on driving operating leverage and margin expansion, which scales 6%-9% revenue growth with 4%-5% expense growth and drives significant Adjusted EBITDA growth of 18%-32% in our 2024 guidance to a range of $450-$500 million. This reflects expected margin expansion of 150-350 basis points to reach a full year 2024 Adjusted EBITDA margin of 18%-20%. So it's important to note that this strong margin expansion is net of significant investments in future growth, particularly in driving our sales and marketing engine, our software platforms, and AI.

In 2024, we will benefit from the carryover of some of our cost transformation initiatives and will additionally realize incremental benefits from our continued focus on productivity across the enterprise. We expect Adjusted EBITDA in Q2 to be largely in line with Q1. Over the second half of this year, we expect similar levels of Adjusted EBITDA in Q3 compared to Q4. This seasonality is different than last year due to the timing of cost savings and continued momentum we are driving with regards to productivity and margin expansion. Finally, we are targeting Free Cash Flow conversion of approximately 25% of Adjusted EBITDA. This means we expect to generate in excess of $100 million of Free Cash Flow in 2024, or more than double our 2023 Free Cash Flow.

This significant step up is driven by strong Adjusted EBITDA growth, the reduction of integration and restructuring costs, lower interest expense as we deleverage, and the continued benefit from the Egencia working capital initiative. Note, we have seasonal movements in working capital in Q1 free cash flows that were different than last year. These timing factors will reverse and smooth out over the rest of the year, with the offset largely in Q3. As a reminder, our guidance does not include the impact of cash that will be used to fund the CWT acquisition and integration. I want to end with a reminder of our capital allocation policy, which is focused on growth, cash generation, and reinvestment to drive shareholder returns.

In addition to the CWT integration, our priorities are accelerating cash generation with a longer-term Free Cash Flow target of 45%-50% of Adjusted EBITDA, continuing to deleverage, targeting a range of 1.5x-2.5x Net Debt to Adjusted EBITDA. As we continue to see cash flow acceleration and naturally deleverage, it gives us the optionality to invest growth, both organic and inorganic, and return cash to shareholders. To wrap things up, our strong first quarter performance was in line with our expectations. With our continued focus on share gains, productivity, margin expansion, investing for long-term growth and cash flow acceleration, we remain confident in our full-year 2024 guidance. We can now move into Q&A. Paul and I are joined by Eric Bock, who is our Chief Legal Officer and Global Head of M&A.

Operator, please go ahead and open the line.

Operator (participant)

Hello, everyone. This is your operator, Shanshan. Thank you, Jennifer. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. We now have Peter Christiansen from Citi. Peter, your line's open now. Please go ahead.

Peter Christiansen (Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you. Thank you. Good morning. Thanks for the question. Good job on some of the, EBITDA margin efficiency showing through there. It's good to see. I'm curious. I want to dig a little bit back into travel yield a little bit, and, Karen, that was helpful, your explanation there. I'm just curious if there was any incremental impact from, GMN being, a bit more, higher share relatively versus SME. I'm wondering if there was any impact on travel yield with that, and then I have a follow-up.

Karen Williams (CFO)

Sure, thanks. Thanks for the question. From a yield perspective, so no real impact. I mean, as you think about Q1, Q1 is always our lowest yield quarter, with Q4 being the highest. And as you think about the Q1 performance, there is an element in terms of just timing. As you look at our full year guidance, really, you see a very small deterioration in the yield, and that's really being driven by the shift to online and the fixed components that we talked about in terms of our revenue.

Peter Christiansen (Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

That, that's helpful. And then, Paul, I guess, you know, new wins, still $3.3 billion, still a very robust kind of number there. I guess as we think about anticipation for the CWT acquisition to close, do you foresee new wins being a little bit under pressure temporarily ahead of that deal closing and subsequent integration? And just curious if you've also had any early feedback from potential clients on the acquisition. Thank you.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Yeah, no, I think the pipeline for new wins is still really strong. You know, if you look at the overall market, you know, we talked about scale of the opportunity. You know, we're in a $1.4 trillion industry, and even after the CWT acquisition, you know, we'll have $45 billion of that $1.4 trillion. And of course, SME is the biggest opportunity within that, is $900 billion of TTV, of which, you know, $300 billion sits with, if you like, professionally managed travel programs, and $600 billion is in unmanaged. So, you know, we certainly see significant runway for growth and, you know, we expect to continue to gain share.

If you look at the new wins for the last 12 months ending the first quarter, you know, our win-loss ratio is at 2.4. So for every dollar of business we lose, we win 2.4 dollars of new business. So, you know, we're consistently gaining share, and we expect that to continue.

Peter Christiansen (Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you. I appreciate that perspective. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you, Peter. Our next question is from Lee Horowitz from Deutsche Bank. Lee, your line's open now. You may continue.

Lee Horowitz (Co-Head Internet Equity Research)

Great, thanks for the question. Can you talk a bit more about the strength you're seeing in Global Multinational now outpacing SME for the first time since the recovery? Maybe just a bit more on the sort of underlying drivers of this evolving shape of your volume growth, and how you think about the sustainability of these factors moving forward. Then from a regional perspective, obviously, APAC remains a big source of strength. Can you maybe just give us an update on how you're thinking about the overall recovery in that region? How much more do you think is left to go relative to, say, other regions, and how you think about APAC sort of carrying sort of the overall volume growth moving forward? Thanks so much.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Yeah, sure. So, you know, we're really pleased to see the strength in Global Multinational. I think one of the advantages of our business is we have this diversified revenue model and diversified growth profile. We have, you know, just over 50% of revenues from SME, but just under from Global Multinational. Also, there's a really good balance between customer and supplier revenues, and so, I think that, that balance really, really helps. If you dig a little deeper into Global Multinational, I think what's encouraging there is that we're seeing strong growth across multiple sectors. Technology was certainly the standout in the quarter, and you heard that, I think, from some of the airlines that reported in the U.S.

That was up 30% in the quarter, but we saw double-digit growth in professional services, you know, pharma, also, you know, energy, and utilities. So pretty broad-based growth. In terms of how that's trending, the survey that I shared in the call just now, we go out every quarter to our top 100 customers, so I think it's a really good data point for Global Multinational, you know, outlook. And that most recent survey, you know, showed a strengthening of the overall spend projections for this year, up to 8%. And also, the number of customers expecting an increase in travel volume in the balance of the year also was up another 3 points.

So that would certainly sort of indicate that I think that we'll see, you know, pretty strong growth from that segment for the full year. You know, if you'd asked me back in Q4, I would have actually thought our growth rates for Global Multinational and SME would have been closer together. And so Global Multinational is a little higher than I expected, SME a little lower than I expected. You know, I think I mentioned some of the reasons for that on the call. You know, I referenced the American Express data because Amex is really the best data point we have for SME growth rates. Amex has $400 billion of payment volumes from US SME businesses, and relationships with nearly 4 million small businesses in the U.S.

So it's a really robust data point to look at the external market. And, if you look at Amex's results for Q1, it said US SME payment volume was up 1%....If you look at the same store sales for Q1, they were actually down 3%, and that's a spend number, so that includes price inflation, so transactions would have been lower than that. And I think what Amex is seeing on the payment side, and what we're seeing as well, is that, you know, there is more of a sort of impact from sustained higher inflation, sustained higher prices. And I do think that is leading to tighter spend controls with SME businesses. In terms of the second part of your question about, you know, how do we expect that to evolve?

You know, I think that will be macro-driven. I think as confidence improves, as macroeconomic conditions improve, as the inflation outlook becomes a little clearer, you know, we do expect that to change, and we certainly still see SME, medium to long term, being the growth engine for the company. Sorry, there was a second part to your question on APAC. I think that it's really not a recovery issue that you mentioned in your question. Just structurally, I think APAC is a region that will continue to grow faster. Now, we're seeing, you know, really strong growth, you know, out of our key markets in Asia and India in particular. And we certainly see that, you know, as a longer term trend, and not really driven by, you know, any recovery factors at this stage.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Thank you, Lee, as well. Just a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. When preparing to ask any question, please ensure your device is unmuted locally. Our next question is from Duane Pfennigwerth, from Evercore ISI. Duane, your queue is open now. Please go ahead.

Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director of Equity Research)

Hey, thank you. Can you just remind us how you define SME? What is the cutoff to be classified as SME? And certainly appreciate it's highly fragmented, but any particular industries you're keeping an eye on? You know, just wondering about kind of drivers there. And really do appreciate that the vast majority of this is unmanaged, and it's a very large opportunity for you, but we are interested in kind of this incremental SME commentary.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Yeah, sure. For our kind of SME definition, we actually have a... The way we're structured is we have a division, you know, that is dedicated to, you know, SME customers, and so we essentially report, you know, looking at the customers that are in that part of our business. But broadly speaking, it's customers that are spending kind of, let's say, $30 million and less, you know, in travel, but the vast majority of those are much smaller. But there are some exceptions to that, because we try to be sort of needs-driven rather than purely volume-driven. But directionally, that's a good guide, and it represents about $14 billion of our TTV. So that's the definition question.

In terms of industries, you know, I think it's SME is so broad-based, that it, it's really difficult to pick out, you know, a specific, industry. I think when you, when you look at the SME performance, actually, it, it sort of mirrors, mirrors kind of what we're seeing in Global Multinational. The, the results are stronger in the larger companies within SME, and they're kind of little softer, you know, as you go down into the smaller companies. So I would say, that, that's the, the, the general trend that we're seeing. The smaller the business, perhaps the tighter controls that are on spending. And I think that does connect back to the comments I made earlier about lending costs and higher inflation, you know, and, and price inflation.

You know, we have to keep in mind that if you look at domestic airline prices in the U.S., for example, you know, our average ticket price for the first quarter was up, I mean, 8% year-over-year, but it's up 24% versus 2022. So there has been some pretty significant price inflation that, you know, I do think is contributing to some of those spending controls that we see in the SME segment.

Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director of Equity Research)

That's great, and then just to follow up there, I think you said that your US air transaction volume was up 14%. I don't know if you have it handy, but how does that compare to hotel transaction growth for the same geography? Sorry to put you on the spot, but again, it's just something we're interested in. Do you have any insight into how trip length or trip duration may be changing as the closing corporate starts to perk back up?

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Yeah, I think on air, we were, yeah, 10% up on a work day adjusted basis globally. Air was 11% up globally, and the U.S. was the strongest region from an air perspective, actually at 14% growth. So, very strong overall sales growth... on air. I think it's, you know, worth noting that about two-thirds of that growth was price and yield-related. So, you know, you've got about sort of eight points of pricing and yield growth and about six points of transaction growth. So hopefully that sort of additional color helps a little bit on the air side. US hotel transactions, I think I know hotel sales were up 10%, so I think that's probably in the U.S.

So that's probably the comparable number to the 14%, because both of those include, if you like, the pricing and yield impact. So US air up 14, US hotel sales up 10. But you've seen a little less-

Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director of Equity Research)

Okay.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Price inflation on, on hotel. If you look at U.S. average daily rates for hotel, year-over-year, they're up 4%, whereas I mentioned before, air is up 8% on domestic. And if you go back to 2022, as I mentioned before, domestic air is up 24%, but hotels up 14%.

Duane Pfennigwerth (Senior Managing Director of Equity Research)

Thank you. Thank you, Paul, for that detail. Appreciate it.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

You're welcome.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. Our next question is from Toni Kaplan from Morgan Stanley. Toni, your line's open now. You may continue.

Toni Kaplan (Executive Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Thank you. Wanted to ask another follow-up on SME. I know you mentioned the slowdown is really driven by macro factors. Just wondering, what are some of maybe the sales initiatives or strategies, that you could deploy to maybe mitigate some of the macro factors? I'm, I'm sure that, that this has happened in, you know, a number of times in the past, and so just wanting to understand, you know, if there's anything that, that can help mitigate some of the macro slowdown.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Yeah, good question, Toni. Absolutely. I mean, certainly there are a number of levers that we can pull in an environment where, you know, organic is slower. The first is you make sure that your retention remains really, really strong, and unfortunately, that's certainly been the case. Then, you know, we have been making investments in, you know, our SME sales organization, both in the sales and the marketing channels. And, you know, increasing those investments in our sales and marketing channels obviously is an important lever for us to pull. And then there is the, what we call, you know, share of wallet from existing customers, making sure that we're doubling down on growing those existing relationships and taking advantage of the expansion opportunities, you know, that we have with the existing base.

And then the final lever is, of course, always being, you know, very focused on profitability and making sure that we're taking actions that improve the profitability of the segment. And I think Karen referenced before the work that we've been doing to improve, you know, working capital management across the business. A lot of that work has been focused in the SME segment, moving customers onto our, you know, preferred payment processes and payment options that improve working capital. And so there's obviously an important profitability lever that, you know, needs to be a focus in addition to the growth levers that I just mentioned.

Toni Kaplan (Executive Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Terrific. And just wanted to ask about April. You know, any sort of divergence in trends that you saw in April versus the first quarter? You know, maybe not, but just wanted to see. I thought you did a really good job in talking about seasonality for the year. So, you know, maybe this is duplicative of that, but just wanted to see if there's any improvement or the reverse in April versus 1Q. Thanks.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Yeah, it's difficult to say at this point because March, as you know, Easter fell into March this year, as opposed to April last year, so that creates, you know, a little bit of noise. And we also had some additional work days in April this year versus, you know, the adjustment we talked about for Q1. And so I think obviously it's gonna take a little, a few more weeks to kind of work through that and see what the trends are. But, you know, as Karen said, you know, our full year guidance is, what? 6%-9% on revenues. On a workday-adjusted basis, we came in at 7% in the first quarter. You know, our guide to TTV was saying 8%-10%, 8%-12%. We came in at 10% workday adjusted.

From my point of view, we're sort of, you know, bang on track for where we wanted to be in terms of our full year guidance. You know, we'll obviously be able to update you on Q2 in more detail at a later date.

Toni Kaplan (Executive Director and Senior Equity Research Analyst)

Terrific. Thanks.

Paul Abbott (CEO)

Well, in closing, thank you to everyone across our team for their dedication to our customers and the strong results they've delivered. We are very confident that 2024 will be another year of share gains, strong growth in profits, improved cash flow, and continued margin expansion. So thank you very much for joining us today and your continued interest in American Express Global Business Travel. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

This concludes today's call. Thank you for everyone.