Sign in
JL

JONES LANG LASALLE INC (JLL)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • JLL delivered double-digit top-line growth with revenue of $5.746B (+13% LC) and adjusted diluted EPS of $2.31 (+28% YoY), beating Wall Street consensus on both revenue and EPS; GAAP diluted EPS was $1.14, down due to non-cash equity losses and higher restructuring charges . Q1 consensus: EPS $2.18* vs actual $2.31; revenue $5.487B* vs actual $5.746B (beats) (see Estimates Context).
  • Transactional engines accelerated: Leasing up 15% (office +18% YoY), Capital Markets Services up 16% led by debt advisory (+45%+) and U.S. investment sales (+~46%) . Resilient revenues rose 13%, with Workplace Management +15% and Project Management +16% .
  • Management maintained FY 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance at $1.25B–$1.45B, citing strong pipelines but higher macro/policy volatility; investments in AI/data and platform continue, pressuring near-term margins in Real Estate Management Services while positioning for profitable growth .
  • Cash flow was seasonally negative (OCF -$767.6M; FCF -$812.1M), Net Debt rose to $1.754B (1.4x TTM adj. EBITDA) due to compensation seasonality and a $100M investment in JLL Income Property Trust; Corporate Liquidity remained robust at $3.312B .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Broad-based growth across segments: Total revenue +13% LC; Leasing +15%; Capital Markets Services +16%; Workplace Management +15%; Project Management +16% .
  • Transactional momentum: Debt advisory revenue +45%+, U.S. investment sales +~46% (outpacing U.S. market +42%) .
  • Management confidence and platform strategy: “Broad-based revenue growth and the 28% increase in Adjusted EPS…reflect JLL’s multi-year focus on platform differentiation, efficiency and resiliency” — CEO Christian Ulbrich .

What Went Wrong

  • GAAP profitability headwinds: Net income -16% YoY and diluted EPS $1.14 (-17% YoY) driven by larger non-cash equity losses ($27.6M vs $4.9M) and higher restructuring/acquisition charges (+$18.0M YoY) .
  • Real Estate Management Services margins: Adjusted EBITDA down to $66.3M (-7% YoY) given continued technology/AI and human capital investments and property management integration costs .
  • Investment Management softness: AUM fell to $82.3B (q/q -7% USD) and segment revenue -5% YoY; Adjusted EBITDA declined to $15.8M due to lower AUM, FX transaction losses, and timing effects .

Financial Results

Core Financials vs Prior Periods and Estimates

MetricQ1 2024Q3 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
Revenue ($USD Billions)$5.125 $5.869 $6.811 $5.746
Diluted EPS (GAAP) ($)$1.37 $3.20 $4.97 $1.14
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($)$1.78 $3.50 $6.15 $2.31
Adjusted EBITDA ($USD Millions)$187.1 $298.1 $454.8 $224.8

Q1 2025 vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global)

MetricConsensus Mean*Actual
Revenue ($USD Billions)$5.487*$5.746
Primary EPS ($)$2.18*$2.31

Values retrieved from S&P Global.*

Segment Revenues (YoY)

Segment Revenue ($USD Millions)Q1 2024Q1 2025
Real Estate Management Services$4,069.2 $4,569.4
Leasing Advisory$520.4 $586.1
Capital Markets Services$377.6 $435.3
Investment Management$103.4 $98.5
Software & Technology Solutions$53.9 $57.1
Total Revenue$5,124.5 $5,746.4

Segment Adjusted EBITDA

Segment Adjusted EBITDA ($USD Millions)Q1 2024Q1 2025
Real Estate Management Services$71.4 $66.3
Leasing Advisory$74.8 $97.0
Capital Markets Services$25.0 $48.6
Investment Management$21.0 $15.8
Software & Technology Solutions$(5.1) $(2.9)
Total Adjusted EBITDA$187.1 $224.8

KPIs and Balance Sheet

KPIQ1 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
Net Debt ($USD Billions)$1.901 $0.801 $1.754
Net Leverage (x)1.9x 0.7x 1.4x
Corporate Liquidity ($USD Billions)$2.302 $3.616 $3.312
Cash Flows from Operations ($USD Millions)$(677.5) $927.3 $(767.6)
Free Cash Flow ($USD Millions)$(720.7) $868.1 $(812.1)
AUM ($USD Billions)$89.7 (TTM start) $88.8 (YE) $82.3 (Q1 end)
Shares Repurchased (000s)110.7 75.2 75.3

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Adjusted EBITDAFY 20251.25–1.45B (prior) 1.25–1.45B Maintained

No explicit quantitative guidance for revenue, EPS, margins, OpEx, OI&E, tax rate, or segment-level outlook beyond qualitative commentary provided on demand, pipelines, and investment pace .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q3 & Q4 2024)Current Period (Q1 2025)Trend
AI/technology investmentsPlatform/AI spend tempered margins in Q4 Work Dynamics and JLLT; ongoing investment narrative Continued platform investments in AI/data; near-term margin pressure in Real Estate Management Services Sustained investment; margin trade-off near term
Office sector recoveryLeasing led by office; large-deal count rising; U.S. office strength Office leasing +18% YoY; U.S. office exceeded Q1’19 levels; large deals improving Accelerating recovery; market outperformance
Debt advisory & investment salesCapital Markets momentum; U.S. investment sales up ~30% in Q3; ~60% in Q4 Debt advisory +45%+; U.S. investment sales +~46%, ahead of market +42% Strong growth; market share gains
Macro/policy/tariffsNot highlighted in releasesVolatile backdrop; decision delays; tariff-policy uncertainty discussed in Q&A Elevated caution; watch underwriting
LaSalle fundraising/AUMAUM 88.8B YE; incentive fees in APAC; advisory fees pressured Raised $1.9B in Q1; AUM down to 82.3B; advisory fees lower Fundraising improving; AUM lower
Data centersNot a major revenue driverParticipation across lifecycle; limited stock; small but rapidly growing Emerging opportunity

Management Commentary

  • “Broad-based revenue growth and the 28% increase in Adjusted EPS…position us well to navigate real estate cycles and continue to deliver superior client outcomes.” — CEO Christian Ulbrich .
  • “We are maintaining our full year adjusted EBITDA target range of $1.25 billion to $1.45 billion.” — CFO Karen Brennan .
  • “We are the largest debt intermediary in commercial real estate globally…revenue growth exceeded 45% in the first quarter.” — CEO Christian Ulbrich (debt advisory) .
  • “U.S. office leasing increased for the fifth consecutive quarter, exceeding first-quarter 2019 levels…large leasing deals increased across nearly all asset classes.” — Segment commentary .

Q&A Highlights

  • Macro/tariff uncertainty: Management expects slower decision-making near term; longer-term growth tied to GDP with JLL’s growth historically ~3x GDP; outsourcing drivers (cost, expansion) likely resilient but timing uncertain .
  • Real Estate Management Services outlook: Near-term margin pressure from tech/AI and hiring; property management integration carries transitional costs; expect stronger profit/margin in H2 and full-year margin expansion vs 2024 .
  • Capital Markets underwriting: Bidding intensity broadly steady; variability in bids rising as buyers adjust assumptions; healthy lending markets support transactions despite uncertainty .
  • LaSalle trajectory: AUM pressured by dispositions; fundraising momentum improving ($1.9B in Q1) with dry powder to deploy; expect advisory fee stabilization over time .
  • Data center exposure: Active across leasing/capital markets; currently small share of fee revenue but growing with capability build-out .

Estimates Context

  • Q1 2025 beats: Adjusted EPS $2.31 vs consensus $2.18*; revenue $5.746B vs consensus $5.487B* (EPS beat ~$0.13; revenue beat ~$0.26B). Primary EPS based on 9 estimates; revenue based on 6 estimates* (see table above).
    Values retrieved from S&P Global.*

  • Implications: Estimate revisions likely move higher for Leasing and Capital Markets contributions given outsized transactional performance; Real Estate Management Services margins may temper near-term EPS leverage due to continued platform investments .

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Transactional momentum is strong: Leasing and Capital Markets both delivered double-digit growth; debt advisory and U.S. investment sales outpaced markets, supporting near-term earnings power .
  • Resilient backbone: Workplace and Project Management growth (+15% and +16%) underpin revenue stability through cycles; continued platform investments in AI/data should enhance long-term margins and differentiation .
  • Profit mix: Adjusted EBITDA rose to $224.8M; breadth of transactional beats offset investments; GAAP EPS pressured by non-cash equity losses and higher restructuring—focus on adjusted metrics for core performance .
  • Office recovery is gaining traction: Office leasing +18% YoY; U.S. activity above 2019 levels with improving large-deal flow—supports Leasing Advisory trajectory into H2, barring macro shocks .
  • Balance sheet/liquidity solid: Liquidity $3.312B; Net Leverage 1.4x TTM adj. EBITDA; seasonally higher Net Debt should decline as cash conversion improves over the year .
  • Watch macro/policy risk: Management flagged tariff/policy-driven decision delays; underwriting variability rising—pipeline strong but deal timing sensitive to rates and macro .
  • FY25 guide maintained: Adjusted EBITDA $1.25B–$1.45B maintained; near-term margin pressure in Real Estate Management Services likely, but H2 profit/margin expected stronger vs prior year .