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HireQuest, Inc. (HQI)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue declined 11.2% year over year to $7.47M, with diluted EPS of $0.10; adjusted EPS was $0.13 and adjusted EBITDA was $2.80M (37% margin), reflecting persistent macro headwinds in staffing .
- Expense control was a bright spot: SG&A fell 6.5% YoY to $5.26M and net workers’ compensation expense decreased sharply to $28K from $572K in Q1 2024, supporting profitability despite lower revenues .
- System-wide sales fell 11.7% YoY to $118.4M, with management citing employers’ cautious hiring and tariff uncertainty; immigration enforcement is emerging as a tailwind for documented day-labor demand .
- Management emphasized an active M&A pipeline with more realistic seller pricing after ~9 quarters of muted demand, positioning HQI to pursue accretive deals; CFO transition to David Hartley (effective May 31) underscores continued focus on corporate development .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Cost discipline: SG&A down 6.5% YoY to $5.26M; net workers’ comp expense dropped to $28K from $572K YoY, materially aiding margins and profitability .
- Profitability resilience: Net income of $1.36M and adjusted EBITDA of $2.80M with a 37% margin; “we continue to achieve solid margins and profitability supported by the resiliency and strength of our franchise model” (CEO) .
- Strategic M&A positioning: “Pricing of deals is starting to definitely get more reasonable… industry has been in a depressed state for literally nine quarters” (CEO), increasing odds of accretive acquisitions .
What Went Wrong
- Top-line pressure: Franchise royalties fell to $6.96M (from $7.83M) and total revenue to $7.47M (from $8.42M); system-wide sales down to $118.4M (from $134.0M) YoY .
- Margin compression vs prior periods: Adjusted EBITDA margin was 37% vs 40% in Q1 2024 and 47% in Q4 2024, reflecting lower revenue and mix .
- Professional/perm staffing softness: Ongoing weakness in executive search (MRINetwork) vs temporary staffing; management reiterated demand caution and tariff-related uncertainty holding clients back .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L and Profitability
Segment / Revenue Composition
KPIs and Operating Metrics
Notes: “—” indicates not disclosed for that period in the referenced document.
Guidance Changes
No formal numeric revenue/EPS guidance was issued in Q1 2025 .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Despite this challenging environment, we continue to achieve solid margins and profitability supported by the resiliency and strength of our franchise model. Expense management remains a key focus…” (CEO) .
- “Pricing of deals is starting to definitely get more reasonable… the staffing industry has been in a depressed state for literally nine quarters.” (CEO) .
- CFO transition: “Steve will be succeeded by David Hartley… David’s extensive financial experience… the main architect of more than 15 acquisitions.” (CEO) .
- Perm staffing/MRI: “Weak… continued to impact performance… we’re controlling what we can and positioned MRI to benefit when demand returns.” (CEO) .
- Workers’ comp outlook: “Part of the reason for our optimism is… claims have mostly closed now… rates have firmed up… may be significantly better than ’24.” (CEO) .
Q&A Highlights
- Demand/tariffs: No material improvement noted in April/early Q2; tariff standoffs dampen client action despite limited real-world impact .
- Immigration enforcement: Documented tailwind; franchisees report clients returning and references to enforcement actions (raids), reopening doors for E-Verify providers .
- SG&A trend/one-offs: Q1 SG&A included timing shifts (~$190K professional fees) and minor RIF with tenure-related severance masking underlying improvements sequentially .
- M&A confidence: Broader distress and more realistic pricing; actively engaged on multiple opportunities; considering adding a deal-sourcing role rather than VP-level backfill .
- Segment/industry mix: Construction leveled; manufacturing/warehousing remain weak; declines more pronounced in executive search than temporary staffing .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for HQI Q1 2025 revenue and EPS was unavailable at the time of this analysis; no estimate comparison is included. Values retrieved from S&P Global (consensus unavailable).
- In absence of consensus, near-term model focus will likely center on revenue trajectory vs Q4 2024/Q1 2024, margin resilience aided by lower workers’ comp, and potential inorganic revenue via acquisitions .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- HQI preserved profitability in Q1 2025 on lower revenues through disciplined SG&A and sharply reduced workers’ comp expense—an operational lever that should continue to support margins in 2025 .
- The franchise model provides flexibility to maintain profitability in weak demand cycles, with demonstrated ability to cut costs if macro conditions worsen further .
- Immigration enforcement is an emerging tailwind for day-labor and temporary staffing; early signs suggest client re-engagement that could stabilize system-wide sales as the year progresses .
- M&A could be a catalyst: depressed industry conditions improve deal economics; management is actively pursuing opportunities with available credit facility capacity (~$34.8M) and modest draws ($5.46M) .
- Watch for mix shifts: temporary staffing more resilient than executive search; any normalization in perm hiring would materially aid royalties and margins given prior MRI headwinds .
- Dividend reliability: $0.06 quarterly maintained, signaling capital discipline amid macro uncertainty .
- Near-term trading: Without consensus estimates, stock narrative hinges on evidence of demand stabilization (orders/resumption of hiring), continued workers’ comp relief, and announced M&A that is demonstrably accretive .