Welcome to Stantec's second quarter 2022 earnings results webcast and conference call. Leading the call today are Gord Johnston, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Theresa Jang, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Stantec invites those dialing in to view the slide presentation, which is available in the Investors section at stantec.com. Today's call is also webcast. Please be advised that if you have dialed in while also viewing the webcast, you should mute your computer as there is a delay between the call and the webcast. All information provided during this conference call is subject to the forward-looking statement qualification set out on Slide two. Detailed in Stantec's management discussion and analysis are incorporated in full for the purposes of today's call. Unless otherwise noted, dollar amounts discussed in today's call are expressed in Canadian dollars and are generally rounded. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. We're very pleased to report another strong quarter of operational and financial performance. Our second quarter and year-to-date results are tracking very well against our strategic objectives, and as such, we remain confident that we will deliver on our targets for the year. There are two highlights for the quarter that I wanna touch on before turning to our financial results. The first is an update on Cardno. The integration is progressing very well and is in line with the expectations that we outlined at the time of the transaction. We've already achieved our target of $10 million in run rate synergies 18 months ahead of schedule, and we continue to identify opportunities for additional savings. The Oracle Financial Systems migration in Australia and New Zealand is largely complete, and we're in the final stages of the transition.
The US integration is in full flight and is progressing nicely. There's still a lot to be done. However, we expect this to be completed before the end of the year. The second highlight that we are very proud of is that Stantec continues to be recognized for our leadership in ESG. For the thirteenth time, we were recognized as one of Canada's Best 50 Corporate Citizens by Corporate Knights. We're honored to have earned this recognition, receiving top quartile scores this year for employee health and safety, board and executive gender diversity, racial executive diversity, and clean investments. This recognition affirms that our long-standing commitment to advancing ESG is having a real impact towards a more sustainable future, and we're very proud of the difference that Stantec is making. Turning now to our Q2 results. We are pleased to have delivered a 34% increase in adjusted EPS.
We generated 9.4% organic net revenue growth. Consistent with Q1, we delivered organic growth in every one of our geographic regions and in each of our business units. This reflects our ongoing ability to capitalize on the key drivers that I've spoken about previously and that I'll talk more about towards the end of the call. A common thread through many of these projects is the need for the skills of our environmental services business, which delivered a 54% increase in net revenue, of which 12% was from organic growth and 40% was generated by our recently completed acquisitions. Our Q2 results also reflect very favorable margin expansion with an 80 basis point increase in project margin and a 60 basis point increase in adjusted EBITDA margin.
Taking a closer look now at each of our geographic regions, the level of activity in our U.S. business continues to gather momentum. In Q2, net revenue increased by 27%, with 9% organic growth and 14% acquisition growth. We're pleased to have delivered organic growth across all of our business units as we did last quarter. This is a reflection of the robust level of investment occurring in the U.S. Investment in the reshoring of semiconductor production has driven a significant amount of activity across multiple business units. Environmental services net revenue grew by over 80% and continued to be the biggest contributor to U.S. revenue growth. The combined Stantec Cardno team is very well positioned to address the strong demand for environmental assessment, permitting, and cultural resources work, in addition to ongoing monitoring and ecosystem restoration efforts.
Water shifted into double-digit growth as activity ramped up on several major projects to address industrial and advanced manufacturing project needs and water scarcity in the Western U.S. Buildings continued its post-COVID recovery with another quarter of organic growth, driven by the need for increased healthcare capacity and investment in the civic, industrial, and science and technology sectors. Canada also continued to perform well, delivering 5% organic growth in the quarter. Consistent with the themes playing out in the U.S., our environmental services business in Canada had a very strong quarter, delivering double-digit growth on the strength of high demand for permitting work and our archaeological services. Infrastructure delivered strong growth arising from the strong housing market in Western Canada. Organic growth in our transportation sector also reflects our continued support of British Columbia's recovery efforts from the extreme flooding that occurred last year.
Buildings continued to deliver organic growth on the strength of major public projects in healthcare and science and technology. Growing momentum behind the energy transition and global food securi ty initiatives continued to spur growth in energy and resources. Rounding out our geographic regions is Global, which had another remarkably strong quarter. Net revenue in our Global region grew by 40%. Every business unit in Global grew organically in Q2, delivering 17% organic growth. Recent acquisitions delivered a further 27% growth. The strong financial results Global has generated year-to-date reflect the maturing of acquisitions made in recent years, and we're pleased with the way that we're performing together under the Stantec banner. Water continues to perform very well, delivering almost 20% organic growth on the strength of the UK, Australia, and New Zealand Water Framework programs.
Infrastructure has doubled its net revenue, with very strong growth in community development and acquisition growth in transportation. Our mining sector delivered organic and acquisition growth on strong commodity prices, client diversification, and the lifting of pandemic-related restrictions. With that, I'll turn the call to Theresa to review our Q2 financial results in more detail.
Thank you, Gord, and good morning, everyone. As Gord noted, we had a very strong quarter with an overall 21% and 23% increase in gross and net revenue, respectively. Project margin grew by 25% and by 80 basis points as a percentage of net revenue. This reflects our continued focus on project execution and our heightened diligence in project pursuits. We delivered a 27% increase in adjusted EBITDA, reflecting the overall growth of our business. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 16.7%, 60 basis points higher than Q2 2021, resulting from strong performance across the business. Net income and EPS decreased slightly to CAD 61 million and CAD 0.55 per share as increased EBITDA was offset by higher acquisition-related costs. We also recorded an unrealized fair value loss associated with our equity investments, health, or self-insurance liabilities.
Adjusted net income and adjusted EPS increased 33% and 34%, respectively, to CAD 93 million and CAD 0.83 per share, reflecting very strong earnings from our underlying operations. Operating cash flows decreased to an outflow of CAD 4 million for the quarter. Cash flow was primarily disrupted by the Cardno integration due to the financial system migrations for both Australia and the U.S. operations occurring during the second quarter, as we had outlined in our Q1 earnings call. To a lesser extent, Q2 cash flow was also impacted by investment in working capital to support the organic revenue growth. We view these causal factors as purely matters of timing, which will contribute to stronger cash flows in the second half of this year as the effect of the financial system migration dissipates and processing times normalize, particularly in Q4.
We've already seen cash flows pick up in Australia after quarter end, which was the first of the Cardno migrations to occur this year. We continued to be active with our NCIB earlier in the quarter, repurchasing just over 625,000 shares for CAD 37 million. Consistent with the change in our operating cash flow, our DSO is up 3 days from last year to 79 days. All of these factors, coupled with the funding of Cardno and other acquisitions in the past 12 months, resulted in our net debt to adjusted EBITDA being at 2.0x the upper end of our internal range. As our cash flow normalizes over the remainder of this year, I'm confident that our leverage will return to the middle of our target range by year-end.
I'm going to turn the call back to Gord now to review our backlog and outlook.
Thanks, Theresa. Our outlook continues to be very, very strong at a record CAD 5.8 billion. We grew backlog organically by 13% since the end of 2021, and again delivered organic growth in every geographic region and in each business operating unit. Most notably, we achieved almost 30% growth in energy and resources and over 20% growth in infrastructure, and buildings also achieved double-digit growth. Our backlog represents approximately 14 months of work, which is a high watermark for us. Before I turn to the outlook for the remainder of the year, I want to comment briefly on the risk of a potential slowdown as a result of inflation and a possible recession. We continue to monitor the situation carefully and have not seen any material slowdown in project or pursuit activity to date.
As we discuss this with clients, the consistent feedback that we receive is that the risk of cost increases is being outweighed by the need to address a number of pressing challenges, including aging infrastructure, climate change, and production capacity constraints, and the reshoring of domestic production. These imperatives continue to translate into investments and major project awards across all of our business units. In Canada, our water business was successful in winning two significant projects, the Buffalo Pound Water Treatment Plant Renewal Project in Saskatchewan and Program Management Consulting for the Iona Island Wastewater Treatment Plant program in Vancouver, which is the largest capital program ever undertaken by Metro Vancouver. In the United States, we won a contract with the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources to conduct floodplain modeling and mapping.
We've also won awards in Hawaii and Indianapolis, which support clean transportation to help our clients reach their climate goals and objectives. In our global operations, we were awarded a transportation framework project in Scotland to support climate change adaptation and decarbonization. With respect to capacity constraints and reshoring of domestic production, there are dozens of projects that we're working on in different industries, including in technology with semiconductors, healthcare with vaccine production, and logistics and fulfillment centers to shore up supply. We are seeing significant government funding flowing into these areas. As we look toward the rest of the year, we are very confident in our ability to achieve our financial targets. Our backlog has never been higher, having grown by well over CAD 1 billion in the past 12 months, and we continue to see project opportunities accelerate.
Significant U.S. federal funding is moving forward, and even with cost escalation, our clients expect critical infrastructure projects will advance. Private investment also remains robust, especially in areas of water and food supply and resiliency, healthcare, and industrial. In some instances, federal funding is helping drive private investment. There's no better example of this than the billions of dollars directed towards the reshoring of semiconductor manufacturing. In late July, both the U.S. Senate and House passed a $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act. From this, $52 billion will go to support semiconductor chip manufacturing, including $39 billion for plant construction. Passage of this act was critical for many chip manufacturers to move forward with private investment, and we are already working with five of the top 10 semiconductor manufacturers.
The strength that Stantec brings to projects of this scale is our ability to provide multidisciplined expertise. Our environmental experts, architects, transportation, and water engineers all play critical roles in bringing these facilities into reality. Europe has also passed similar legislation to reshore semiconductor production, so the opportunity for Stantec is tremendous. Looking ahead, our outlook for the remainder of 2022 has not changed from the guidance we provided at the start of the year, and I believe Stantec remains very well positioned to capitalize on the opportunities ahead. With that, I'll turn the call back to the operator for questions. Operator?
Thank you. If you wish to ask a question at this time, please press star one on your telephone keypad. Please ensure the mute function on your telephone is switched off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. We will now take our first question from Devin Dodge from BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Good morning, Gord. Good morning, Theresa. The growth in the backlog year to date has been really impressive. Can you speak to how your bid pipeline looks, you know, what you see right now, and how that compares to maybe 6-12 months ago?
You know, the opportunities that we're seeing, we have a system we call our Stantec Opportunity Pipeline. We do track projects that come in. You know, it's interesting that we're seeing continued strengthening of projects in the pipeline. I do think that as we see these projects in the pipeline, they'll come through, you know, the bid process. I think, you know, we see positive supports for the backlog growing either even further as we progress through the rest of this year and into 2023.
Okay. Maybe just continuing on with that, can you speak to your success in your hiring efforts to expand the workforce? I'm just trying to understand if there was a significant net addition of employees in Q2, and if this is expected to continue into the second half of the year.
Yeah, absolutely. You know, one of the things that we've talked about is that, you know, we through this period of uncertainty, you know, we wanna continue to be a net importer of staff, of our employee base. Through all of 2021, through Q2 of 2022, as we talked about previously, and now I can confirm in 2023, you know, we hired more people than who left us. Our headcount continues to grow. In fact, we're up to a little over 26,500 people now. We, you know, we've had success in those onboarding efforts. We continue to grow organically our employee base, and we look for that to continue for the remainder of the year.
Okay, thanks for that. You know, congrats on Q2. Results look really good. I'll turn it over.
Great. Thanks, Devin.
We will now take our next question from Jacob Bout from CIBC. Please go ahead.
Good morning.
Morning, Jacob.
Morning.
Strong double-digit organic growth in the environment and water business. Do you expect this to normalize in the quarters ahead or do you expect to see a step change going into 2023? Maybe talk through some of the revenue synergies from Cardno.
Sure. You know, the environmental business continues to be really robust. I think that, you know, we continue to see really positive performance in that group going forward, not just in North America, but in our global operations as well. The types of synergies that we're seeing are projects where, you know, previously Cardno perhaps would have to sub out or hire someone else to do archaeological work, and now they hire Stantec for it. Where we have projects where Cardno was strong in one geography, Stantec was stronger in a different geography, and we're now to offer, you know, these combined skill sets to our clients and take on larger and sort of more geographically diverse projects.
You know, we're seeing a lot of synergy there. You know, when we went into the transaction, we certainly foresaw that we'd have good linkages, good integration between the group and generate synergies. Actually, it has really exceeded our expectations.
With the Cardno, Cox McLain acquisitions, are you right-sized in environmental now? Or, and maybe just talk through strategically how you're thinking from an M&A perspective for your end market mix.
Yeah. You know, the environmental business continues to expand. Even though, you know, we've significantly grown the size of our environmental practice with bringing together Stantec, Cardno, Cox|McLain, and Paleo this year as well, there are continued opportunities to grow that business. You know, we're gonna continue to look there, where there's a lot of midsize environmental firms in the U.S. that would really fill in additional geographies for us. You know, we're always in conversations with these types of firms. Yeah, absolutely not, would we consider ourselves to be done in the environmental space from both an organic and an acquisition growth perspective.
Thank you.
Great. Thanks, Jacob.
We will now take our next question from Chris Murray from ATB Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks, folks. I guess my first question, just thinking about your SG&A costs, you know, maybe now that we've had a couple quarters of call it a more normal run rate, with activity and folks back in offices and things like that, just wondering how you're feeling about, you know, some of the initiatives you guys have undertaken so far with real estate, and really your confidence in being able to leverage the existing SG&A or how should we be thinking about, you know, needing to add to support further growth as we go forward?
Sure. So as far as our admin and marketing costs go relative to pre-COVID, we're still seeing that discretionary costs are lower, and that has been kind of the expectation that we established in the business that they would not return to pre-pandemic levels. They are certainly higher than last year, and that was also to be expected, as people begin to, you know, continue to travel more and get out to see clients. You know, that has had a contribution to our increased admin costs this year. I don't expect that they are going to continue to rise. I think they have in some degree leveled off.
You know, we're also seeing this year in that bucket of costs, higher integration and acquisition costs, you know, the impact of Cardno and as you noted, Cox|McLain and Barton Willmore. Those, you know, being farther afield, they do have significant costs associated with those. We do have an increase in those costs as well. You know, those things together are going to contribute. But I think you know in a lot of ways have leveled off. I think as far as investments that we're making, you know, we're continuing to focus on our business development efforts on major pursuits.
That is, you know, is contributing as well to slightly higher admin costs as we move forward. You know, there's always other, you know, other elements there. There's so many costs that sort of flow through there that there are puts and takes all the way around. Our real estate, which you asked about as well, and you'll recall that, you know, sits outside of admin and marketing. You know, we're continuing to advance our optimization strategy that we began early last year and continue to be on track, we believe, to deliver on reducing our footprint by that 30% that we had talked about relative to our 2019 footprint.
Where Cardno is concerned, certainly they have many office locations that we are now, you know, sort of midway through that process of evaluating, you know, what the landscape will look like, where there are opportunities to consolidate spaces and so on there.
Okay. No, that's helpful. Thank you there. Yeah, there's a lot of things going on. The other thing, the question, and maybe Theresa, again, maybe this one's for you. You know, right now with the close of Cardno, you're really near the top of your leverage range. I guess free cash flow, as you noted or operating cash flows should improve in the second half. We've also noticed you guys buying back some stock. Do you feel any pressure to have to get that leverage level down a little bit just to support being able to do further acquisitions? I know you're still kind of inside your range, but at the top of it.
You know, how are you thinking about maybe wanting to walk that back over the next few quarters is maybe just what I'm curious about.
Yeah, for sure. You know, again, you know, as I noted in my comments, we do, you know, we do see the first half of this year as being somewhat of a temporary dynamic. I'm quite confident that that will normalize in the second half of the year. We're already seeing evidence of that, particularly as we come out of the integration, the financial piece of the migration at Cardno. You know, I wouldn't say that I feel pressure. It's always important to me to, you know, to maximize our cash flows and, you know, have as much space as possible available on our credit facilities. I don't think it hampers us in any way in terms of our growth ambitions. Access to capital remains strong.
I think that, you know, we'll just continue to execute on our plan through the rest of this year and beyond. As we continue on our M&A journey, that as opportunities come up, you know, we will fund them appropriately. I think, you know, we will continue to have good capacity on our balance sheet without having to go out and, you know, tap equity markets for, you know, the kinds of acquisitions in the size and scale that we have said, we were pursuing.
Okay. Thanks, folks.
Thanks, Chris.
We will now take our next question from Michael Tupholme from the Desjardins Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you. Good morning, everyone. Some of your peers have been very active in M&A in the last few months. With the early success of Cardno, have you thought about a larger transaction or is it still the medium to small with 1,000 employees or less?
You know, as we've kind of been talking about over the last couple of quarters, you know, you know, we continue to look at acquisitions of all different sizes. You know, while you know, we have certainly seen some of that activity in the marketplace, but you know, we'll stick to our knitting. You know, we're making what we believe to be long-term decisions for the long-term sustainability of Stantec and shareholder value accretion. Yeah, no, we're looking at all different types of firms, different geographies and you know, in due course we'll you know, we'll probably have an opportunity to talk more with you about that.
Thank you. Thank you for the color. Then maybe just secondly, on the U.S. Biden infrastructure plan, have you seen any more clarity or any early signs, or is it really more of a still a 2023 story?
Yeah. With the, you know, the big one of course is the IIJA. You know, we are seeing that the 2022 funding from that has been dispersed to the various agencies. We're currently working on projects related to that as well. We do see, you know, more and more projects coming out. While, you know, we are generating some revenue from it now, it certainly will continue to strengthen through the second half of this year and really into 2023 and provide supports even for years beyond that. You know, but in addition to that, the IIJA, you know, there's the CHIPS and Science Act that I think will continue to spur additional development in the semiconductor industry.
As we've talked about, we're already working on several projects related to semiconductor manufacturing and with five of the top 10 manufacturers around the world. You know, we also see additional supports from the Inflation Reduction Act, you know, really from the perspective of what that could do from a renewable power perspective and then renewable fuels, EV charging infrastructure and so on. I think we see a lot of strong supports coming for Stantec and for our industry overall through the remainder of 2022, 2023 and beyond.
Perfect. Thank you for the great color and looking forward to third quarter.
Great. Thanks, Michael.
We will now take our next question from Mark Neville from Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, Gord. Morning, Theresa.
Morning, Mark.
Morning.
Good morning, Gord. Earlier in your comments, Gord, you said you've already achieved, I think, the $10 million synergies from Cardno. But when you're talking about the synergies, it sounded a lot more like revenue and some project pursuits that you won. I just wanna clarify, the $10 million to date has been on the cost side. Anything that's revenue or real estate would be additive. Is that correct?
Well, You're right. The ten million that we spoke about was on the cost side, and that would include real estate, that would include, you know, things on IT systems and insurance and all those sorts of things that we've been working through. But in addition to that, separately from that, and actually we didn't disclose a number on the revenue side, but we have hundreds of joint projects that are underway. Yeah, that ten million that we spoke about, that was really only the cost run rate synergy that we had talked about. We have achieved that already, ahead of schedule.
Sure.
That's really just because of the, I think, the strong integration and the way that our teams are working together. You know, this isn't Stantec just coming up with ideas on how we can collectively reduce costs. Cardno's doing the same. Sometimes they're coming and saying, "Stantec, if you did this, you know, collectively we could reduce costs." It's actually been extremely positive.
That's great. Just on the real estate opportunity at Cardno, would it be material? Again, like I think you guys were taking 30% of your footprint out, so I just from 2019. I'm just curious the opportunity, the size at Cardno.
Yeah. It's hard for me to quantify at this stage. We're just not far enough along yet, Mark, to know. I think it could be significant. We're, you know, continuing to do that work. We'll have more to say when we're farther along.
Got it. Just to follow up on the M&A, I guess two-part question, just in terms of with the Cardno going so well, and would you feel comfortable doing something sooner, or is the main focus still integration? The second part, Theresa, you, I think in response to Chris one of Chris's questions, you mentioned something about equity. I just wasn't quite sure I caught what you said. Thanks.
Sure. Maybe I'll start on the first part. You know, a lot of these opportunities for more substantial M&A opportunities are really opportunistic. You know, it's we're, you know, we're always in different levels of discussion with firms, and it really is when they're ready to come. You know, as you say, Cardno is going very, very well. You know, if there was something that was ready to come, would we hold off on it? No. I don't think we would. I think we'd be ready to move forward. You know, we also won't move forward and just do something because others have been. You know, we're gonna keep our discipline and we'll, you know, we'll act when the time is right.
Maybe I'll pass it to Theresa for that, the other question.
Yeah. The point I was trying to make, Mark, is that, you know, in response to the question about our leverage being at the upper end of our range and might that, you know, hamper us from, you know, doing M&A at this point, and the response is no. As I look out towards the rest of this year, you know, we're such a strong cash flowing business, that really has not changed. You know, we've seen a couple of temporary dynamics that disrupted cash flows for the first half of this year, but that, you know, that will normalize. To that extent, you know, we will have a strong balance sheet.
We will have lots of capacity on our balance sheet to be able to fund, you know, the general size of acquisitions that we think about. Now certainly, you know, a bigger acquisition, I can't take equity completely off the table, but, you know, as far as, you know, thinking about the kind and size and scale of the acquisitions we've done, there's, you know, there's not a concern on my part that we're over-levered and I would be required to issue equity.
Got it. If I can ask one last question, Gord. You mentioned a few times semiconductor manufacturing. Just, like how significant an opportunity are these chip foundries for you guys, as they go up?
Yeah. You know, what's interesting when you think about, like a semiconductor manufacturing facility, other than the actual equipment that goes in inside the building to manufacture the chips, Stantec can do the rest of it. You know, all the water and high purity water, just general water and wastewater, the buildings, the site civil, the permitting, like, we do all of that work. You know, as we're talking with a number of these clients, you know, that's particularly attractive to them, that we have one firm that can provide that multidisciplinary experience for everything except what's inside the building, and there's others who do that. You know, I think that's an area.
You know, in addition to semiconductor manufacturing, there's a lot of other reshoring that we're seeing. We've just, I think, maybe been more focused on talking about semiconductors because it's an area that we're doing a lot in, and it's certainly on everyone's mind these days. We're working on vaccine production facilities. We're working on, you know, other renewable energy sort of, you know, equipment type facilities, solar panels, you know, different things like that. So we're doing a lot of work like that, Mark, and it's really an exciting area for us. So I think all of these things combined is also a very, very strong tailwind for us, actually, for many years to come.
All right. Thanks for the call. Good quarter and good luck. Thanks.
Great. Thank you.
We will now take our next question from Brian Faust from Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good morning, Gord, Theresa.
Good morning.
I guess as you look at the backlog, are you seeing a higher rate of projects, I guess, pared back or rescoped? Just maybe some comments on the health of the backlog, just given the shifting macro backdrop.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting as we look at the backlog, it's very healthy. The gross margin or the project margin in there is healthy. We feel good about that. We haven't really seen, you know, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, you know, we've seen some projects maybe, you know, people are talking about pushing them out to the right, but nothing material. You know, to your point about, you know, with inflation and cost escalation, are we seeing anything on projects? What we are seeing is sometimes that we're getting an additional assignment from our clients to see how we could rescope the project to bring it in at a lower cost.
In many cases, it's actually increasing our fees because of this value engineering component to it. It's, you know, is it something we're watching closely? Absolutely. To this point, it really hasn't, you know, pushing the backlog out to the right or cancellations has not been material for us at all.
Thanks. That's helpful. When we look at project margin, we saw similar trends as Q1, where U.S. and global were up and Canada was down. Is that just related to mix in Canada? How should we think about those trends going forward?
Yeah. It's, you know, in this particular quarter, there was a dynamic around project mix that had Canada a little bit lower. You know, our business is always, you know, going to be subject to, you know, those dynamics we talked about. You know, it's project mix, it's how well we execute, and it's our ability to, you know, to price these projects well and then deliver on what we've priced it at. You know, we have seen an increased focus and discipline around those elements. As we look forward, you know, we always talk about being in that 53%-55%, you know, kind of hit it right on the nose in the middle of this quarter.
I would expect that would continue.
Okay, thanks. That's it for me. Great quarter.
Great. Thank you.
We will now take our next question from Ian Gillies from Stifel. Please go ahead.
Morning, everyone.
Morning, Ian.
Following on from the M&A questions and the success you're having with Cardno, how does it change your view about maybe sizing from an employee count perspective? If we went back a year ago, it's kind of the target was 1,000 people or less. Cardno was obviously substantially bigger. Given your experience today now, are you willing to go to an even bigger size if the right opportunity presented itself?
Yeah, you know what? I think it all depends on exactly, as you said, the right opportunity. The reason that the Cardno acquisition is being so successful for us is that it's the right type of business, and the cultural fit was there, and that's so huge for us. Absolutely. I think if we saw the right firm with the right cultural fit, transacting for the right reasons that would be additive to us, we absolutely would look at it, Ian.
Okay, that's helpful. Switching to the organic revenue growth side, global's been very, very strong for five quarters now, and you mentioned the term maturing in your prepared remarks. I was just hoping to get your thoughts around if and when you think the organic growth in that segment may revert to the mean or towards kind of the corporate average or whether it should stay quite high for the foreseeable future.
Yeah. I think, Ian, that it really has been pretty spectacular this year for global. I would not expect that, you know, over multiple years it's going to have, you know, such high double digit organic growth. I think it will normalize. You know, we haven't completed our planning for next year yet, so I can't tell you where we think that will land, but I would suspect that it will not be as strong next year that it could repeat this kind of organic growth.
That's helpful. Thanks very much. I'll turn it back over.
Great. Thanks, Ian Gillies.
As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one. We will now take our next question from Sabahat Khan from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Okay, great. Thanks, and good morning. So I guess on the guidance, I think, you know, when we think about margins for the rest of the year, first half looks roughly in line to slightly ahead. Is there any commentary you can provide on kind of the cadence of EBITDA margin through Q3 and Q4, any big picture puts and takes that we should consider?
Well, I think, you know, generally, when you think about the cadence of our earnings, including our EBITDA margin, you know, Q2 and Q3 generally tend to be the higher margin quarters. That's when we're busiest, you know, and Q1 and Q4 slightly less. I think I would expect it to see generally that same shape this year, that they'll remain quite robust for Q3 would be my expectation, and then, you know, come back a little bit in Q4. But our target range of that 15.3%-16.3%, you know, remains in what we're focused on delivering, and I think that that's still realistic for us to be moving towards.
Okay, great. As we think about, you know, kind of the bigger picture growth strategy kind of going forward, you know, one of the things that you kind of I think you indicated you want to project on the project management side or program management. A few of your peers have really focused on that side of the business. You know, how do you feel about sort of pursuing more work in that area versus design? You know, is that capabilities you wanna add? You know, what's kind of your mix right now? Just want to get your perspective on that piece of the business.
Yeah. Yeah, program management is a very attractive piece of the business, absolutely. We are always looking to expand into that area. You know, when you think about the project that we spoke about there, the Iona Island Wastewater Treatment Plant project, it's a massive undertaking. The program management there will be for five years or more. You know, it'll be for five years or more. These are really nice long-term, long-duration projects where we can make a difference for our client. It is absolutely an area that we're looking to continue to grow into, to grow even further, Sava.
Okay, great. Just kind of one last one. I think over the last few quarters, you did indicate that you won some projects late last year on the U.S. side that were just getting going. I guess, with the growth that you reported this quarter, should we assume that those bigger wins from last year are kind of starting to flow through and those are underway?
Absolutely. Yeah. That's what we're really seeing. You know, it takes a little while for the funding to get going, for the awards to happen, and now we absolutely are beginning to generate revenue from a number of these larger U.S. awards that we previously announced.
All right. Thanks so much for the call.
Great. Thanks, Sava.
As there are no further questions in the queue, I'd like to turn the call back to your speakers for any additional or closing remarks.
Well, just, you know, thanks again for joining us today, and we look forward to connecting with you know, in the weeks and months to come as we continue to evolve through executing on our 2022 plan. Thanks very much, everyone.
Thank you.
Thank you. That will conclude today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. Ladies and gentlemen, you may now disconnect.