Greetings, and welcome to the Ryan Specialty Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Noah Angeletti, Head of Investor Relations and Treasurer. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today for Ryan Specialty Holdings Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. In addition to this call, we filed a press release with the SEC earlier this afternoon, which has been posted to our website at ryansg.com. On today's call, management's prepared remarks and answers to your questions may contain forward-looking statements. Investors should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements. These statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. We encourage listeners to review the more detailed discussion of these risk factors contained in the company's filings with the SEC. We assume no duty to update such forward-looking statements in the future except as required by law.
Additionally, certain non-GAAP financial measures will be discussed on this call and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most closely comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP are included in our earnings release, which is filed with the SEC and available on the company's website. With that, I'd now like to turn the call over to the Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer of Ryan Specialty, Pat Ryan.
Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us to discuss our Second Quarter Results. Before diving into the quarter, I want to acknowledge the team's efforts since we went public one year ago. I am pleased with our strong results, and we continue to have a long runway ahead of us. We remain true to our values, are well-positioned to sustainably and profitably grow our business, and believe that we will continue delivering long-term value for our shareholders. I am also incredibly proud of our front line. The producers, the underwriters, and their teams are out competing and winning head-to-head in the field by innovating with new products and solutions, are unrelenting in the pursuit of excellence, and winning a substantial amount of new business.
Our performance in the second quarter again demonstrated the strength of our business, continuing the track record of success we've established over the past 11 years. We grew total revenue 26%, led by outstanding organic revenue growth of 22%. We also achieved another quarter of double-digit growth in adjusted EBITDAC and adjusted net income on a year-over-year basis. Our three specialties all performed very well, each generating strong double-digit growth for the quarter. Overall, I'm immensely pleased with our differentiated platform, which continues to prove that it's truly best in class, providing our clients and trading partners with the value and service they deserve. Throughout the second quarter, the E&S marketplace remained robust. In fact, the overall flow of business into our E&S Lines is still at historically high levels.
As we previously noted, we've invested significantly in those lines where we see clear opportunities to grow, in addition to bolstering the lines of business where we have a leadership position. Through Q2, we remain in the prolonged stages of a historically hard market. Broadly speaking, rates remained firm in nearly all of our lines of business. While rates moderated in certain lines, we saw continued upward rate movement in other lines. In addition to standard or admitted carrier competition we observed on the periphery, which we flagged on prior earnings calls, has yet to meaningfully impact rate or flow in the aggregate. We continued to invest in our intellectual capital throughout the quarter, adding to our already strong team and deep bench, and again proving out that we are a destination of choice for the best talent in the industry. Here are a few of the many examples.
We've added accomplished teammates within our renewable energy line and to our data and analytics and technology teams. We are also making significant valuable additions in many of our lines of business, expanding new industry verticals. The exceptional talent we've assembled since our founding, including recent additions over the last year, has been hard at work developing new programs and introducing new products in our MGAs and MGUs, bringing new and existing capital in addition to arranging alternative capital to support our clients. We're also pleased to note the productivity among our brokers continues to improve and accelerate and is reflected in our strong Q2 earnings performance. This September will mark the two-year anniversary of our acquisition of All Risks, which has exceeded our expectations in all facets.
All Risks is further proof that our business model provides a powerful platform for those looking to join Ryan Specialty and validates our M&A thesis that we make strong businesses even better. As we look ahead to the rest of 2022, we are mindful of the elevated uncertainty in the global economy and in the geopolitical environment. That said, we believe we remain well-positioned and expect favorable specialty insurance market dynamics to persist. We also continue to invest in our various strategies to take advantage of the resilient and increasing flow into the E&S market and further expand our market share. By building what we believe to be the most differentiated platform and deepest bench in the industry, we have benefited from a flight to quality and believe we have positioned ourselves to outperform our competition through this cycle.
Moreover, we maintain a highly active M&A pipeline as we look for additional opportunities, both tuck-ins and large acquisitions, to enhance and differentiate our platform and capabilities. We are working from a position of strength, given our strong balance sheet and ample capacity, which enables us to act when we find the right opportunities. As I've said before, we remain disciplined in our pursuit of acquisitions. Any deal we consider must meet our criteria for strong cultural fit, strategic, and accretive to our returns. Our M&A strategy is and will remain supplemental to our organic growth story. We are not a roll-up, and we do not require acquisitions to achieve our growth targets. In summary, it was another team effort at Ryan Specialty that contributed to a fantastic second quarter and first half of 2022. With that, I'll now turn the call over to our President, Tim Turner. Tim?
Thank you very much, Pat. As Pat highlighted, it was another outstanding quarter across all three of our specialties. In May, for the first time in three years, we hosted our annual Ryan Specialty Broker and Underwriting Management Conferences. With over 800 of our teammates in attendance, it was incredibly exciting to bring the team together again. The event, led by Pat and myself, exemplified our culture of collaboration, and you could feel the tremendous energy generated by the many talented and driven underwriters, producers, and corporate leaders all in one place. Diving into our specialties, our wholesale brokerage specialty continued to achieve excellent growth across all property and casualty lines of business. In particular, CAT property, including wind, flood, and fire, has been the strongest driver of new business into the nonadmitted market today and an absolute stalwart for us.
As we noted on our last call, admitted markets face pressure from reinsurers de-risking their portfolios, which pushes more business into the E&S market. During the quarter, we saw an acceleration of this trend, driven by one of the most challenging reinsurance renewal cycles in a number of years. To that end, we've continued to develop innovative products and solutions in our brokerage, MGA, and MGU business in these high-hazard niches. Cyber continues to grow in importance due to its complexity. We believe the majority of cyber risks in America will flow into the E&S channel. We are seeing solid double-digit increases in submissions and expect that to continue. We complement our brokers with capacity from our cyber MGAs and MGUs. Construction is another class where we continue to see significant increases in flow.
Our industry-leading team, with its depth and breadth in the channel, is seeing solid double-digit increases in submissions for both infrastructure projects and habitational construction. We don't see this slowing down, and the pipeline for these classes remains at historic highs. Our transportation practice continues to grow nicely. Trucking, in particular, has remained very challenging, and the class of business is very risky. As a result, that business is increasingly being directed into the E&S market. We added Crouse and Associates at the perfect time, and we remain well-positioned to capitalize on the growth opportunities in this line. Our healthcare practice continues to grow with the addition of wholesale brokers and the development of products in our Delegated Underwriting Authority Specialties. In our Binding Authority Specialty, we continue to experience solid growth in our small commercial lines.
We have made additional progress hiring industry-leading talent, and we expect to continue to invest significantly in this specialty to drive organic growth. We are keeping a close eye on opportunities in the delegated authority market to consolidate into Ryan Specialty, and we continue on the path toward creating the first truly 50-state binding authority operation. Our underwriting management specialty posted another strong quarter while continuing to deliver solid underwriting results for our carrier trading partners. We are excited by the recent additions to our renewable energy MGU and the recent launch of new products. In addition, our Harleysville, New York arrangement with Nationwide is beginning to bear fruit. AXSAL Re, our alternative risk de novo MGU, and Emerald, our excess general liability MGU, are both gaining traction and actively quoting and binding accounts. In terms of the E&S market, as Pat mentioned, the environment remains very resilient and strong.
Pricing remains firm in nearly all classes of business, and we're seeing material firming in some niche lines. After multiple years of significant rate increases, we are seeing rate decreases in public company D&O. As Pat noted, other lines such as cyber are still firming and flow remains solid, and thus the overall E&S market is still growing at a healthy rate. As we've said before, we expect the increasing flow of business into the nonadmitted market to continue to be a significant driver of Ryan Specialty's growth, more so than rate. With that, I will now turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, Jeremiah Bickham, who will give you more detail on the financial results of our second quarter. Thank you.
Thank you, Tim. In Q2, we grew total revenue 26% period-over-period to $491 million, which was fueled by another excellent quarter of organic revenue growth coming in at 22.3% for the quarter, which reflects the continued tailwinds we're seeing in the E&S market, and as Pat and Tim noted, winning a substantial amount of new business. Net income for Q2 2022 was $70 million or $0.22 per diluted share. Adjusted net income for the quarter, which excludes IPO related and other unusual items, increased 15% period-over-period to $106 million or $0.39 per diluted share. Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter grew 18% period-over-period to $166 million, while adjusted EBITDA margin declined 220 basis points to 33.8%.
Our margin was impacted by continued investments in the business, public company costs as we were private in Q2 of 2021, and T&E continuing to return to normalized levels. It should be noted that relative to Q2 of 2019, which had a full run rate load of T&E expense, our margin was up 640 basis points this quarter. In addition, we completed our restructuring plan on schedule and are pleased to report that we have achieved $29 million of run rate savings, exceeding our initial goal of $25 million. As Pat and Tim noted, the current environment presents a unique and very exciting opportunity to hire A+ level underwriters and brokers, and we expect to capitalize on this opportunity in future quarters to pursue and onboard top-tier talent.
We fully intend to continue investing in our platform, which allows us to generate sustainable margins while producing industry-leading organic growth. Our balance sheet remains fortified with $867 million of cash and cash equivalents at June 30th, and our undrawn $600 million revolving credit facilities. Based on the current forward curve projections for SOFR, we expect to record GAAP interest expense, which is net of interest income on our operating funds and includes amortization on our interest rate cap of approximately $30 million in Q3 and $31 million in Q4. It is important to be mindful that this increase is partially offset by the natural hedge in our fiduciary balances, which benefit from the rising rate environment.
Given our strong execution through the H1 of 2022 and the resilient E&S environment, we have raised our full year 2022 outlook for organic revenue growth and adjusted EBITDA margin as follows. We are now guiding organic revenue growth rate for the full year 2022 to be between 16.5%-18.0%, which is up from the previous guide range of 13.5%-15.5%. We are now guiding that our adjusted EBITDA margin for the full year 2022 to be between 29.0%-30.0%, up from the previous guide range of 28.5%-30.0%. Our business is clearly capable of exceptional growth rates, but it's important to keep in mind that our updated guidance prudently assumes less favorable external conditions than we saw in H1 of this year.
In summary, we are very pleased with our performance, particularly given the challenging macro environment, and we remain very excited about the path ahead for Ryan Specialty. With that, we thank you for your time, and we'd like to open up the call for Q&A. Operator?
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Your first question comes from Elyse Greenspan with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks. Good evening. My first question is just starting with the M&A outlook. You mentioned bolt-on as well as larger deals. Can you just give us a sense of what's in the pipeline and how that's changed over the past quarter? I know on last quarter's call, I walked away thinking, you know, you guys had an active pipeline and maybe close to something, and we haven't seen anything get announced. You know, has something happened with multiples or is it just, you know, taking a while to close transactions in this environment?
Well, the explanation of larger and tuck-ins was very specific because there are some opportunities that are larger. When you have larger acquisition potentials, there's a lot of work to do in terms of when they're ready to sell. Sometimes it's a little bit earlier than they planned, and sometimes it takes longer to get to the value that they want. They identify us as a place they'd like to join, but we have to see more evidence of their projections. There are lots of variables. Tuck-ins, we looked at many, at several. Either after examination through due diligence, we found that it wasn't exactly what we felt was a good fit for either cultural reasons or financial reasons. You're right, we haven't closed on any, but we're discreet.
We only want acquisitions that will fit our culture, will be strategic, and most importantly, or very importantly, not most importantly, very importantly, will be accretive. As we all know, there's a lot of competition, but we don't usually compete like a lot of people do in this field of our field of acquisitions, in that for the majority of the people that join us, we were their destination of choice. We are working with people who would like to join us, and we'd like to have them join us, but we haven't reached conclusions yet.
Okay. My second question is on just your organic outlook as well as what you're seeing in the E&S market. It sounds like you're seeing no slowdown, just more of business coming to the E&S market from the standard market. Yet, you know, your second half of your guidance does imply a slowdown relative to the first half. Is that just conservatism? Are you expecting any slowdown to emerge in the second half of this year?
Hi, Elyse. The outlook for the remainder of the year is our typical prudent view and incorporates the variability of forecast. Most importantly, the fact that, and we've said this on a couple of calls by now, the circumstances that lead to a 20% organic growth quarter are really hard to predict, quite frankly. Even if you felt like you had pretty good line of sight, it's questionable whether, you know, how prudent it is to put that in a guide. You know, Tim can talk more if necessary, but I think he had really good color in his prepared remarks about the healthiness of the market right now and what we've seen in, I think, seven of the last nine quarters. When there have been opportunities, we've been able to significantly overachieve, and that's always our goal.
You know, the implied performance of H2 is still very strong in the, you know, double-digit territory would represent a great finish to the year. We're just trying to stay prudent in terms of what we guide to.
Okay, great. Thanks for the color.
Next question, Weston Bloomer with UBS. Please go ahead.
Hey, thanks for taking my question. My first one is just a follow-up to Elyse's question. So if I'm interpreting the guidance right, is really the main change between kind of the first half and the second half just the amount that, you know, of paper that could flow into the E&S channel? Or is there some variability with potentially lower nominal GDP? Am I thinking about that correctly overall? Or is there maybe more difficult comps from the back half of the year, last year?
That's the sum, Weston, of everything that we know about the market and the macro environment, including the uncertainty of the macro environment is factored in. If you think about, you know, the implied range that we're talking about and really where we started the year, like, it should make sense that what we're guiding to, what we're, you know, expecting is a really strong finish. You have to remember, like, the baseline that we've said is double-digit. It's not 20%. Just because we've been fortunate enough and seized the opportunities to do that so frequently recently, doesn't mean that that's the baseline of expectation we're trying to set.
I would add ours.
Oh.
Go ahead.
I was gonna switch to another question. If you wanna follow up there.
Well, I was just gonna add that in order to achieve 20%, particularly at the increased scale that we've grown into, that is a very significant rate of growth in an insurance brokerage field, scale. You have to have everything aligned properly. It's never really wise or prudent to assume everything's going to align. Now, that's what's been happening on seven of nine quarters. We're not saying it won't. We're just saying it's imprudent to predict that or forecast that.
Understood. Just as a follow-up, you know, you've talked about the potential for seeing higher competition just due to more admitted writers moving over to E&S. I know you're at the early stage of that, but I'm just curious, when do you think that's gonna start to more materially happen? Is it just due to pricing and either the admitted market would potentially go below loss costs? Or is another factor that I'm not thinking about? How would Ryan adjust once they start to see that, a more material competition in E&S?
Weston, the current conditions that we see indicate a 30%+ growth and volume into the channel, and that comes right from the stamping offices. We see no real letup on flow into the channel. What we do see in a few lines, like public D&O, are some premium decreases and some migration back to the standard market, and I think that's what you're looking for and referring to. We do see some signs in that line. Then in excess casualty in some of the large shared and layered towers, some migration back into the standard market. All of it is overshadowed by this increased flow of other E&S business into the channel, led by CAT property, cyber, you know, healthcare, habitational, construction, transportation, as an example.
That flow continues to grow, and we're perfectly aligned in our practice groups to capture that. We see no letup in our ability to convert that new flow into the channel.
Great. Thanks for taking my questions.
Next question, Tracy Benguigui with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Can you comment on what you're seeing with respect to increases in inflationary type of exposures? I'm not talking about unit economics, more like higher insured values, higher growth sales receipts, et cetera. I'm just wondering if you think inflationary type of exposure growth is going through some type of true up right now, so more episodic, or can this piece of premium growth maintain momentum?
Well, we clearly believe that inflation will drive up exposure growth, and so that's a proportional increase in premium. That's pretty well established. You know, it depends on how you view the future of inflation in this country, but there's certainly a factor that's driving premiums up. In terms of our ability to adjust on the inflationary front, as you know, significant majority of our operating expenses are variable, and so we have the benefit of that variability. I think you also know that we have principally a high percentage of our business are compulsory products, so they have to buy. If the rates go up, they still have to buy, as holders that inflationary pressure, with the demand consistent, and so we 're just raising those points.
We have to keep in mind that at some point, people say the premium's too high, and so they'll take a larger deductible, things like that, to adjust the cost of their premium. The reality is that the insured, guided by good, solid advice from the broker, both the retail broker in this case and the wholesale broker, you know, come to the right conclusion for that particular client. At the end of the day, the client makes the choice.
Given that, those different flows back and forth between higher deductibles and higher inflationary type of exposures, was that a net driver of your organic revenue growth this quarter?
It's early in that, but yes, to a modest degree. If it continues as it is, it'll be a more significant driver.
Got it. I'm also wondering, do you guys play in the personal line space? 'Cause there is talk about within some CAT-exposed states of some of the larger insurers, wanting to push that risk more, in their non-embedded arms. Is that somewhere that you transact?
It is, Tracy. Specifically, it's the high net worth part of personal lines that we're active in. We have a practice group vertical. We have proprietary capacity in that space, and that really is a combination of our brokerage capabilities and our delegated underwriting authority expertise. We're bringing more capital into that space. Very, very significant high demand for solutions there due to global warming and its impact. It's a great opportunity space for us.
How would you say where you rank among peers on personal lines?
You know, I'm not sure about that.
Well, I would say that there's no published data. Just intuitively what we see in the marketplace, we have a robust high net worth homeowners practice with some very exceptional talent. We're a significant player in that space.
Thank you.
Next question, Robert Cox with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I was just looking for an update on your thoughts regarding double-digit organic growth for the foreseeable future. It feels like your revenue base is a little higher than maybe what you would have anticipated. I was just looking for, you know, an update on what kind of timeframe you're thinking about for that type of guidance. Is it like the next couple of years? Can it go further than that? How dependent is it on pricing increases?
I'm gonna answer the first part and give Jeremiah the ball. They're higher than what we forecasted. But we've been optimistic that we had all of the talent and the resources to enjoy the market that has come. We're not shocked by how well we've done in that market. The market has just continued to improve, as you know. Jeremiah, you pick up the rest of that, please.
Yep. When we talk about our growth engine, we talk about being built, specifically use the word built for double-digit organic growth, and we talk about the foreseeable future. Now, the foreseeable future means different things to different people, but it's unwise to try and predict with too much precision out past, like, just say, a couple years. The reason we're so confident about a couple of years is because of the actual industry fundamentals, the secular tailwinds and secular features of our growth engine that have gotten us here so far. Those can't change on a dime. Recently, we've had a lot of those aspects of our growth engine, like take the E&S market, for example, at a supercharged growth rate. That's not gonna last forever.
We've tried to communicate that 20% is not the baseline, but you know, double digits goes all the way down to 10%. We did that and much better without the benefit of rate. In fact, when rate was going against us for several years, we printed comfortable double-digit organic growth then. We're comfortable that we're still capable of that our growth foundation, our growth engine can do that for years to come. We can't overemphasize enough that double digits doesn't mean 20%.
Okay. I think that's great. Just in regard to the talent that you've hired this year or maybe even in the quarter, you know, how does that compare to your history, maybe as like a percentage of your employee base or something like that? Just trying to get a sense of how many people you've hired this year, compared to the historical levels.
Well, compared to historical normal levels, 'cause there are periods of our early days where we hired large numbers of people off a small base. Directly to your question, this has been a fertile year for attracting talent, filling some retirement holes in terms of people that performed really well for us, but they were ready to retire. Attracting really high quality people to replace them. Also to build depth and additional A players in several of our specialties. Additionally, we've been emphasizing data and analytics, and we've continued to add talent there to really put ourselves in a leadership position as we go forward. We've been using this period of talking about adding talent and A-level talent, and we've done that very satisfactorily for us through the first two quarters.
Great. If I could just ask one more question. I know you had hired a leader for the employee benefits practice. My question is, have you continued to invest in employee benefits in either talent or infrastructure, despite, you know, no revenues at this point?
We have invested in talent and particularly in infrastructure. We've brought some really A and A + level talent in that sector. Actuarial leadership, for example, and executive leadership. They're doing a fantastic job, in our opinion, of analyzing the market, identifying the targets, working with those targets. Frankly, just as we've had in the P&C M&A space, I think we're emerging as a destination of choice for people in the benefit side who are getting ready to anticipate a change in terms of joining with someone. I think we're well positioned in that area because of the talent we've brought in, the commitment we've made, the capital that we've shown we're willing to commit to it.
Thanks for the answers.
Next question, Jimmy Bhullar with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi. Most of my questions were answered, but maybe if you could talk about the various drivers of your organic growth, whether it's growth in the E&S market in terms of exposure, pricing, and then any changes in market share. Can you, to the extent you're able to quantify or just rank order, which ones have been the biggest drivers of your growth over the past year or so?
I think the biggest driver of our growth is winning competitively in the marketplace because everybody's had the rate factors and the exposure factors. What's differentiated us, and there's been some data published on this, is that we're growing faster than our peers, than our competitors, I should say. That's because our commitment to A-level talent. It's also our initial commitment and sustaining commitment to independence, to no conflicts with our clients. You'll see a stark difference between the wholesale growth of our position as an independent and for those who own captive wholesalers. I'm not gonna get into any other detail than that, but it's public data. Yeah, we're winning. The biggest driver is we're winning more in the market head-to-head. We've been doing that all 11+ years, but it's particularly strong right now.
Maybe another one just on margins. Typically, with growth this strong, you should see a lot of expansion in margins, but I'm assuming you intend to continue to invest in the business as long as you see this type of growth. Should we assume fairly stable margins at least in the near term? Or should we assume that margins would expand commensurately with the growth in revenues?
Well, I won't go out beyond 2022 for guidance, but we have been consistent about the imperative to continue striking that right balance of investment and healthy margins. I think healthy margins is an example represented by our guidance. Jimmy, you've studied us long enough to see that exceptional growth does lead to scale, and we're committed to banking some of that most of the time. I've said publicly that we intend, we expect to, on a reported basis, show margin improvement most years. There are times, this year is a great example, where it is the right long-term decision for both organic growth and margin to make investments. We're gonna stick to that plan.
Yeah. Just lastly, with all this business flowing from the standard to the E&S market, and then also I think there's been consolidation of, like, panel consolidation on the part of some of the retail brokers. Are you envisioning any changes in, like, sort of commission or fee structures, and commissions you share with the retail brokers, up or down?
No, I think it's been very stable. We have a very strong relationship with our clients. They use us because we bring value add. If they don't think we can bring value add, they don't use us. It's not over commission, it's over whether they need us or not in their mind. Fortunately, they continue to believe they need us, and they do, and we deliver. We talk about execution. Execution and outcomes for our clients drives everything we do.
Thank you.
Thanks for your questions.
We have one more question coming from Meyer Shields with KBW. Please go ahead.
Thanks. I have one real question and then just one repetition. Tim, you've talked frequently about building a 50-state binding authority operation. Other than acquisitions, can you talk about what's going on internally or organically to get there?
Well, historically, Meyer, these binding authority companies were very, regionally oriented, and so they tend to give the underwriting authority out locally and not on a 50-state basis. Over the last several years, we've been able to get all of our trading partners to give us 50-state authority, which allows us to distribute binding authority in small commercial solutions, more aggressively and to really, have a strong opportunity to consolidate, the small commercial business on a binding basis. Our electronic trading platform has been a big investment there. This platform that we have has created a 50-state solution based a bility that no one has ever had before. We're bringing that to the market, and we're winning RFPs, and the increase in flow in small commercial continues to grow for us. Great long runway ahead in that space.
Okay. Understood. That's helpful. Jeremiah, you gave sort of a definition of interest expense with regard to the third and the fourth quarter, and I'm not sure I caught all the details. I was hoping I'd get you to repeat that, please.
Yep. That's gonna be our interest expense there, which is the interest. It's three pieces. It's the interest we pay on our term loan, on our bond. It's also the amortization of our interest rate cap, which is, we're very happy we did, we put on earlier this year. It's offset by interest income on our operating cash. That's why you see on our financials it's interest expense net. Just based on the current SOFR curve, we thought we would take as much guesswork out of that for those at home playing the model game and just give our best guess of that for the next two quarters, assuming no major M&A.
Okay, the corresponding number in the second quarter, that's at 24.8.
Yes.
Okay, perfect. Thank you very much.
I would like to turn the floor over to Pat Ryan for closing remarks.
Thank you all for your excellent questions and your support. We enjoy the chance to explain our company to you. We're very proud of our company and our results. Thank you for your continued support, and have a good evening.
This concludes today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and thank you for your participation.