Good morning, and welcome to WTW's second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Please refer to wtwco.com for the press release and supplemental information that was issued earlier today. Today's call is being recorded and will be available for the next three months on WTW's website. Some of the comments in today's call may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are subject to risk and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those discussed today, and the company undertakes no obligation to update these statements unless required by law. For a more detailed discussion of these and other risk factors, investors should review the forward-looking statements section of the earnings press release issued this morning, as well as other disclosures in the most recent Form 10-K and in other Willis Towers Watson's SEC filings.
During the call, certain non-GAAP financial measures may be discussed. For a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measures as well as other information regarding these measures, please refer to the most recent earnings release and other materials in the investor relations section of the company's website. I will now turn the call over to Carl Hess, WTW's Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for WTW's second quarter 2022 earnings call. Joining me today is Andrew Krasner, our Chief Financial Officer. In the second quarter, WTW delivered results that, as expected, built off the solid start we had to our year. We generated organic revenue growth of 3% and adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.32 as we continued to make progress on our strategic initiatives. Our transformation program, continued expense discipline, and operating leverage from new business generation drove 30 basis points of adjuste operating margin expansion despite headwinds from our growth investments. We also continued to execute against our capital allocation strategy and completed $471 million in share repurchases in the second quarter, bringing total share repurchases for 2022 to $2.7 billion.
Overall, we're pleased with our second quarter performance and remain confident in our ability to deliver against our financial goals in both 2022 and the longer term. This confidence comes from our ongoing execution against our strategy to grow, simplify, and transform, as well as our continued progress in rebuilding our talent and ramping our productivity. Through the first half of the year, we've already seen top-line benefits from our investments in talent, and we expect that benefit to meaningfully accelerate in the second half of the year. I'm particularly pleased with the results of our transformation initiatives. We realized $35 million of incremental annualized savings during the second quarter, bringing the total to $71 million cumulative since the program's inception, or more than double our original $30 million target for 2022.
Accordingly, we're raising our guidance on cumulative run rate transformation savings identified by the end of 2022 from $30 million to over $80 million. It's important to note that this increase is not simply pulling forward savings previously included in our $300 million medium-term target. Our focus on continuous improvement has helped us identify both areas in which we could accelerate progress as well as new opportunities and incremental sources of value. As a result, we now expect the program to generate annual cost savings in excess of $300 million by the end of 2024. In the second quarter, we also made progress on our grow initiatives, bringing to bear the full capabilities of one WTW for our clients through both new and existing solutions.
Our strategic focus on scaling our global lines of business in corporate risk and broking is gaining traction in the market, with growth in these lines exceeding the CRB average by 50%. We also maintained a steady pace of new product launches, focusing on high-growth, high-need markets such as ESG analytics and climate risk. In April, we launched our ESG analytics program at the U.S. RIMS conference. It's already generating early results by simplifying our client outreach and solving ESG data analytics and reporting needs for clients, and it's been part of seven-figure wins in two pilot markets in 2022. We believe this solution has the potential to scale further in multiple markets around the world, and we're building a world-class suite of climate risk management tools and solutions under our Climate Quantified banner.
Following our development of the Climate Transition Pathways Accreditation Framework and the launch of our Climate Transition Index with STOXX in 2021, this year we introduced our Climate Transition Value at Risk data and software for asset managers and asset owners. Earlier this month, we announced the acquisition of one of our longtime climate analytics and software partners, further enhancing our technical capabilities. Our investments in this area are positioning us to be a global leader in helping organizations manage climate transition risk. While new products are important, our approach to everyday innovation is also supporting our growth priority as we nimbly respond to legislative and other environmental changes.
As suggested by the everyday label, there's lots happening in this area, so I'll share just one to give you an idea. In response to the U.S. No Surprises Act, we quickly developed and introduced transparency bundles, a cost-effective communication solution that supports clients in meeting their compliance obligations and is easily sold as an add-on to our existing clients. Lastly, together with our strategic growth initiatives, our intense focus on onboarding talent has built a strong foundation for revenue growth in the second half of 2022 and beyond. The pace of hiring in the second quarter matched that of the first quarter, and our new hires in sales and client management roles doubled compared to the second quarter last year. We also continued to see the benefit of retention efforts, with voluntary attrition at reasonable levels and aligned with macro trends.
In sum, we've been hard at work this quarter changing the way we operate and creating a leaner, more innovative, and more agile WTW. I'm confident that as these initiatives mature, they will improve our long-term financial performance as we expect and deliver significant shareholder returns. Before I hand it over to Andrew to discuss our financial results, I want to take a moment to talk about the resilience of our business in the face of dynamic and challenging economic conditions. We believe WTW is well-positioned to weather macroeconomic uncertainty, including both inflation and potential recession. Our portfolio of businesses is relatively non-cyclical. We estimate that about 80% of our revenue base is recurring, often built upon non-discretionary solutions and services. In addition, our clients span a variety of industries and geographies, and our solutions tend to increase in importance and value in complex economic environments.
For these reasons, our business is less sensitive to economic downturns than companies in some other industries. As an example, in 2020, when U.S. GDP declined by 2%, we still posted organic revenue growth of 2%. Similarly, if you looked at our predecessor company's results from the 2008, 2009 economic downturn, you'd see that they continued to organic revenues by 2%-4%. That said, we do have some exposure in economically sensitive lines of business where the work we do is discretionary in nature, primarily in our Health, Wealth & Career segment, but we would expect the impact of that exposure and recession to be relatively low. Overall, our performance in the quarter was aligned with our expectations and reflected our commitment to profitable growth and the successful execution of our strategy.
We continue to build momentum and remain focused on delivering on our long-term goals. In closing, I want to express my gratitude to my incredible team of colleagues who live our values and have delivered every day for our clients in a volatile and challenging environment. With our sharpened focus, we are well-positioned to continue driving growth and executing on our transformation. With that, I'll turn the call over to Andrew for more detail on our results.
Thanks, Carl. Good morning, everyone. Thanks to all of you for joining us today. Before turning to our results, let me take a minute to expand on Carl's comments about WTW's ability to navigate difficult economic conditions. With interest rates spiking and equities exceptionally volatile in the second quarter, we believe the market is clearly signaling concerns about the near-term future of the economy and corporate profits. As Carl mentioned, during previous economic downturns, WTW continued to thrive and grow revenues. We have also repeatedly demonstrated our resilient cost structure, which has allowed the business to maintain its earnings power during challenging economic times. Despite inflationary pressure on labor costs and the post-pandemic normalizing of variable costs such as travel, we remain steadfast in exercising financial discipline, and our outlook on near-term and long-term margin expansion remains unchanged.
Turning to our financial results, the second quarter was in line with our expectations. On an organic basis, revenue was up 3%, reflecting growth across most of our businesses. Adjusted operating income was $314 million, or 15.5% of revenue for the quarter, up 30 basis points from $318 million, or 15.2% of revenue, in the same period last year as our growth and expense discipline combined to enhance our profitability. The net result was adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.32, representing 9% growth over the prior year. Let's turn to our detailed segment results. Note that to provide clear comparability with prior periods, all commentary regarding the results of our segments will be on an organic basis unless specifically stated otherwise.
The Health, Wealth & Career, or HWC segment, generated revenue growth of 2% on both an organic and constant currency basis compared to the second quarter of the prior year. Health, which is comprised of our health and benefits broking and consulting business, delivered growth of 8%. This includes a gain recorded in connection with book of business settlements related to senior staff departures that occurred in 2021. Excluding the book of business gain, Health organic growth was 3%, primarily driven by new client appointments and further bolstered by project work. Wealth, which consists of our retirement and investments businesses, had a revenue decrease of 7% for the quarter. The decline was primarily due to a headwind from outsized performance fees that were recorded in the prior year quarter in our investments business, as we've discussed previously.
We expect to see significant improvement in the Wealth businesses during the second half of the year, driven by new client acquisition and strong market demand for specialist work in response to market volatility and legislative change. Career, which includes our Work & Rewards and Employee Experience businesses, also contributed to the revenue growth of the segment, increasing 5% in the quarter. This growth was largely driven by strong client demand for advisory work, data products, and software licenses. In Benefits Delivery & Outsourcing, which encompasses our Benefits Delivery & Administration and our Technology and Administrative Solutions businesses, revenue increased 7% from the prior year's second quarter. The increase was largely driven by individual marketplace and reflected growth in Medicare Advantage revenue in our direct-to-consumer business. Outsourcing revenue also grew with new client appointments and growth across the existing client base.
We continue to see a macro environment that supports growth opportunities for this business in 2022. HWC's operating margin was 18.7% this quarter compared to 18.6% in the prior period. Excluding the impact of foreign currency and one-time fees from book of business gains and performance fees, the margin expanded 80 basis points, driven by strong operating leverage and in-year savings from our transformation program. Our near-term and long-term outlook for HWC remain positive as we expect its market-leading solutions and the ongoing demand drivers in its core businesses to continue to drive organic growth. Looking at Risk & Broking, revenue is up 3% on an organic basis and 1% on a constant currency basis as compared to the prior year's second quarter. Excluding a modest headwind from book of business settlement activities, R&B's organic revenue increased 4%.
Corporate Risk and Broking, or CRB, revenue increased 3%. Book of business settlement activity, which stemmed from senior colleague departures that occurred in 2021, declined nominally from the prior year but did not meaningfully affect CRB's year-over-year organic growth rate. The business-generated growth across all regions, primarily from new business with notable strength in our M&A, aerospace, natural resources, and FINEX specialty lines. International led CRB's growth, driven by growth in natural resources and construction lines. Growth in North America and Europe came from both new business and improved client retention, driven by the expansion of our teams in those regions, as colleague retention rates at senior levels have continued to show improvement. In the Insurance Consulting and Technology business, revenue was up 9% compared to the prior year's second quarter, driven by increased technology solution sales and higher demand for advisory work.
R&B's operating margin was 19.7% for the second quarter compared to 23.1% in the prior year's second quarter. The margin decline was driven by our significant investment in new revenue-producing and client service talent. In Q2, R&B welcomed new leaders across all geographies. These key hires will deliver their industry expertise and specialty insights to clients across the globe in lines such as construction, aerospace, FINEX, natural resources, and facultative. Seeing steady improvements in our client pipeline has strengthened our conviction that the work we have done to rebuild our talent base will yield strong results throughout the second half of the year. We believe these actions will enable us to significantly accelerate organic growth and meet our longer-term goal of mid-single-digit revenue growth for this business. Now let's turn to the enterprise-level results.
In Q2, we generated profitable growth with adjusted operating margins increasing 30 basis points to 15.5% from 15.2% in the prior year, primarily reflecting improved operating leverage and our transformation initiatives, which more than offset our increased investments in talent during the period. We continue to expect margin improvement each year as we work to deliver on our 2024 margin goals. As Carl mentioned, our transformation initiatives will be a key contributor to this ongoing margin expansion. Our early efforts in this area have been very successful. By accelerating shared services and workforce centralization efforts and identifying incremental opportunities to drive collaboration through real estate portfolio optimization, we have far surpassed our $30 million annualized run rate savings goal for the year. As a result, we raised both our near and long-term targets.
Foreign currency was a headwind on adjusted EPS of $0.17 through the first half of the year, largely due to the strength of the U.S. dollar against the euro. Assuming today's rates continue for the remainder of the year, we've updated our guidance related to our expected foreign currency headwind on adjusted earnings per share from a range of $0.15-$0.20 to a range of approximately $0.20-$0.25. We generated free cash flow of $198 million for the first six months of 2022, an $89 million decrease from free cash flow of $287 million in the prior year. This decrease was due primarily to the absence of cash generation from the now-divested Willis Re business, as well as additional tax payments resulting from both the Willis Re sale and the deal termination fee received last year.
We continue to prioritize returning capital to shareholders and executed aggressively on this commitment. During the second quarter of 2022, we paid $91 million in dividends and repurchased 2.1 million shares for $471 million. Of that $471 million, $253 million was completed during May and June. We also raised our repurchase authorization by $1 billion to $6.5 billion, of which approximately $2.1 billion remains. We continue to be committed to deploying excess capital and free cash flow into our highest return opportunities and still believe that the return we can achieve from repurchasing shares remains highly attractive.
Accordingly, we expect to continue to deploy free cash flow in this manner, subject to market conditions. Overall, we're off to a good start in 2022, with the performance of the business ramping as we expected it would. As we think about the rest of the year, we see macroeconomic challenges that will create demand for our services and opportunities to help clients. We continue to feel positive about the investments we have made in talent, innovation, and operational transformation, and are confident those investments will drive organic revenue growth and margin expansion we have forecast for the year, and position us to achieve our 2024 goals. With that, let's open it up for Q&A.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Gregory Peters with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Good morning, everyone. I guess what I'd like to focus on is the revenue targets. You know, slide eight, I think you reiterated the target of achieving a $10 billion revenue results in fiscal year 2024. There's a lot of headwinds. You've got Forex that's gone against you. You had to dispose of the Russian operations and potential weakening of some economies. I'm just curious about the pathway. It would suggest that organic and total revenue growth has to accelerate the next couple of years to get your objectives. Can you give us some sense of how you think you can get to that $10 billion target?
Sure, Greg, and good morning to you. When we originally set those targets back in Investor Day, right, we were looking at three years. A lot can happen over three years, and some of which, you know, I think in terms of economic cycles, we don't try and predict exactly when they're going to occur, but we know they can occur. We try to chart a path that we thought was reasonably resilient against a variety of economic conditions that might occur over the three-year period. We try not to get too excited about what might happen over quarter to quarter because, you know, a lot of the things will even out. FX headwinds can turn into FX tailwinds. Recession can turn into growth, you know, and we think all of that can occur.
We think we've got a portfolio of businesses that is reasonably resilient against a variety of economic conditions. You know, for instance, inflation can drive higher asset prices, which will drive, in turn, higher premiums and thus commissions. We've got a healthcare business, where healthcare inflation will drive up the price of insurance and, you know, so on and so forth, right? The fact that we've got a diversified portfolio of businesses that has historically performed pretty well across a variety of places in the cycle gives us pretty good confidence. Now, that's not to say, Greg, that we were there predicting Russia would happen, but we did allow for things like that to happen over a three-year period because simply the world's an uncertain place.
Okay. I guess my follow-up question, you know, and it's so many areas to touch on. I think let's just focus on the hiring. Can you give us, you know, some additional detail around the new hires you brought in, you know, in terms of percentage of workforce or just some granular details on what's going on. We see the headlines. It's kinda hard for us on the outside to get a sense of the progress being made because, you know, an announcement that you're hiring this broker or that broker against the context of an organization that employs thousands of people, tens of thousands of people, it's kinda hard to gauge what's really going on. Additional detail there is helpful.
Sure, Greg. You know, as we've mentioned, our hiring activity during our second quarter was matched that of the first quarter, which in turn was the highest it's been since 2019. Our attrition rates on the other side are, you know, very consistent with industry benchmarks that we use to gauge our progress there. You know, hiring has exceeded voluntary terminations. Our head count continues to increase. We focus strongly on the front office and sales and client management jobs, and we're making, we think, very good progress. Some of that, yes, is played out in the trade press. You know, we're net positive. We're continuing to see people attracted to the proposition we represent, and you know, we're looking to hire people into positions that make sense for our strategy, right?
Yeah, on the broking side, we think where we specialize, we win, and that's the reason our global lines continue to grow faster than our overall business. We think we are a very attractive employer for people joining that. We do think that, you know, as we said to you, right, we bring the people on, the revenue will follow over time, and that's one of the reasons we have confidence in sort of our improving accelerated revenue outlook for the rest of the year.
Got it. Okay, well, those are my two questions. Thanks.
Thanks, Greg.
Our next question comes from Paul Newsome with Piper Sandler. Your line is open.
Good morning. Can you give us a little bit more detail about the impact of some of these book gains on the margins? It looks like there was at least some unusual level of bookings in the quarter, and maybe that had a margin impact of something that would not necessarily be recurring respectively.
Yep. Hi, Paul. It's Andrew. Happy to answer that one. As you think about the margin for the various segments and the enterprise, if you exclude the impact of the gain on sale and the performance fees, right, which presented a headwind within HWC, the HWC margin, as we mentioned during the prepared remarks, would have expanded 80 basis points without that headwind. Risk & Broking would have been the same with or without the impact of the gain on sale. At the enterprise level, there would have been 60 basis points of margin expansion on an underlying basis, if you will.
Great. Thank you. My second question actually was thinking about the comments you made from the economic sensitivity in the past. I think you referred to the predecessor company. Were you thinking of Willis or Towers or kind of both combined? Because I think in 2008 or 2009, they were separate companies.
You're absolutely right. We were separate, and we were citing both in terms of, well, how we performed during that period. I should add, right, we've taken steps to further build up our resiliency in the businesses since then. For instance, if you look at the mix of business between consulting and technology in either our human capital or our Insurance Consulting and Technology businesses, that's shifted far more toward the technology side of things, which means we're talking multi-year contracts that are less you know, less sensitive to economic volatility. That was a very deliberate step we took to make sure that we thought that the business had, you know, more sustainability to the growth rates over time. Very deliberate on our part.
Fantastic. I'll let some other folks ask questions, but appreciate the help as always.
Not at all, Paul.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Elyse Greenspan with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Hi. Thanks. Good morning. My first question is just on the outlook for the second half on revenue growth. You know, in your prepared remarks, you mentioned that you expect the benefit from talent and meaningfully accelerate in the back half. Can you give us a sense of how much revenue you're expecting from the new hires in the second half of this year? And then also within your full year guidance of mid-single digits, are you expecting any additional book gains in the back half of the year?
Yeah, sure. Hi, Elyse. It's Andrew. I'll start with the, you know, concept of hiring translating into growth. You know, we have been hiring at a fast pace. We have a lot of experience onboarding talent, and it's always been the case that the revenue lags the hiring activity by several quarters. As we said last quarter, we expect the first half of 2022 to be a gradual build and the second half to reflect all of the accelerating benefits and the narrowing gap with the industry. What we saw in the first and second quarters remains consistent with those expectations with some positive trends in our Corporate Risk & Broking segment. We are seeing top line benefit and expecting that to meaningfully accelerate in the second half.
Looking beyond that, you know, you should expect that the hires we're making now will, you know, continue to make a contribution, an even larger contribution as we move into 2023. I'm sorry, Elyse, the second question.
I was just curious, does the full year guidance, when you say mid-single digit organic, are you expecting any additional book gains or just what we saw in the second quarter?
We still expect to see some throughout the remainder of this year that relate to 2021 events as we've seen through the first half of this year. We do expect them to return to a normalized level over time.
Just a general comment, right? As we try to give you our outlook on things, you know, sort of the known knowns, right? Whether it's book gains or performance fees and changes in that, we factor that in into our expectations rather than treat those as, you know, surprises that we're trying to give you later in the period, right? We're-
Okay. When you guys say mid-single digit organic, I don't think you guys have ever defined that. I know some peers had said that's, you know, 5% or greater. You know, do you see that as 4% or 5%? Like, when you set the baseline from mid-single digit, what percentage are you using?
Yeah. You're in the correct range in terms of how we think about it, Elyse.
Okay, thank you.
Have a great.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from David Motemaden with Evercore ISI. Your line is open.
Hi. Thanks. Good morning. Just wanted to follow up a little bit on the hiring. It sounds like that's accelerated, and headcount has grown on a quarter-over-quarter basis. I'm wondering specifically, just if we're looking at it on a year-over-year basis, are we at a point yet where we're seeing headcount growth on a year-over-year basis, particularly in producer roles in R&B?
Yes and yes. That's quite correct. We very deliberately targeted, beginning with, just about a year ago, making sure that we focused on rebuilding our front office, and that's been a good deal of success in doing exactly that. We're very happy with the progress we've made in increasing our headcount, year-over-year, and are continuing to look for the right people to bring on, to continue to accelerate our growth. The direct answer to your question, David, is yes.
Great. Thanks. That's helpful. I just wanted, you know, on the cost savings, it's good to see that you guys are ahead of schedule and increased the target, the $300 million target. It sounds like the incremental upside is coming from some of the real estate optimization that you guys are doing. Could you just remind me of the $300 million plus, I guess now over $300 million of cost savings, how much is coming from real estate optimization, and what does that imply about how much of your real estate footprint you plan to cut?
As we identified at our Investor Day presentation, we've got three major buckets with respect to the transformation program. We've got real estate, our footprint there. We've got technology and what we can do to accelerate our journey to the cloud and standardize technology across the organization. We've got operational efficiency measures that we're taking. As we look toward our improved outlook, we see potential in all of these, not just real estate. You're correct that real estate was the first element of the program we could move on, and we have acted expeditiously. Our improved outlook for over $300 million for the program is from all those cylinders, not just the real estate program in isolation.
Got it. Just to follow up on that, you know, I had remembered it was, you know, $180 million-$200 million of the $300 million was coming from real estate, from just real estate optimization. Any sort of sense for how much of your total real estate footprint you plan to cut, that's embedded in that outlook?
Yeah. I think your reference to the 180 there is probably a ballpark figure based on some graphical representations of what we put out there. You know, as we think about our footprint, you know, it is a meaningful reduction in our footprint. We won't get into specifics in terms of what percentage of our real estate portfolio that is, but it is quite significant. As Carl has discussed in the past, right, the sort of reconfiguring of that workspace that remains after the fact to, you know, foster, you know, client interactions and collaborations with our colleagues. Yeah. We're actually taking the call here to David, from our Philadelphia office. This is one of the early conversions we've made toward looking toward the new footprint.
It's actually a great place to meet people.
Great. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Robert Cox with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning. Could you talk about the puts and takes on free cash flow in the quarter and how you see free cash flow growing throughout the remainder of the year?
Yep, absolutely, Robert. Thanks for the question. You know, the decrease in free cash flow was primarily driven by the elimination of cash generation from Willis Re, which was divested, as well as some additional tax payments resulting from both the Willis Re sale and the receipt related to the termination payment from the business combination. So that's what's really driving that change. Our focus, as you can imagine, remains on our long-term goal of the $5 billion-$6 billion by 2024 that we set at Investor Day, you know, as opposed to any sort of short-term performance or volatility that may arise quarter to quarter.
Got it. Thank you. Just a second question, going back to the transformation initiative. The comments were that, you know, the savings weren't a pull forward of savings. I guess my question is it fair to assume that the $50 million increase in your 2022 savings target also is a $50 million increase to the $300 million run rate? In an upside scenario, you know, how much more savings do you think you could get here? Because it looks like you're finding additional savings.
Yeah. The increase for the current year is a combination of things that we've been able to accelerate, some real estate, some non-real estate, but also some new opportunities that we have identified as the program has moved along. I'm not sure that the direct translation of the excess this year applies uniformly to an excess of the entire program. The excess this year applies uniformly to an excess of the entire program. We do expect to you know, think about our you know, more detailed guidance going forward. If there's stuff to share there, we would do that about when we give you know, our thoughts on 2023 towards the end of the year.
Thank you.
We have a question from Mark Hughes with Truist. Your line is open.
Yeah, thank you. Good morning. You got growth in Medicare Advantage. I know that's been a pretty dislocated area lately, and I think you were alluding to the macro environment supporting growth. Does that apply to the Medicare Advantage as well? How do you see that shaping up, particularly as we get an early look at maybe enrollment season?
Early days for enrollment season, Mark, and good morning. I'll address sort of both of those. First of all, in terms of the market opportunity, you know, as we're fond of citing, right, 10,000 people become newly eligible for Medicare every day. The percentage of people Medicare eligible to buy a Medicare Advantage plan rather than just use traditional Medicare continues to rise. It's expected to go from just over 40% to more than 50% by the end of the decade. There's clearly growth potential in this market, and that's even not even taking into account current people receiving Medicare. Now with respect to sort of indications for the year, remember, most of TRANZACT's revenue is fourth quarter, right? That's our, the vast bulk of our selling season.
Q1, Q2, Q3, you know, I think early days and really difficult to infer sort of what's happening today into what that might mean for the end of the year when, you know, our big sales campaign for annual enrollment takes place.
Okay. Now on the capital management front, bought a good amount of stock back this quarter. Is this a reasonable run rate for the balance of the year?
Yeah, I think it's fair to say that the rate at which we have acquired shares during you know the end of last year and the first half of this year would come down. As we've said before, we expect to manage our share buybacks using our free cash flow generation as opposed to the you know large amount of cash that we had on our balance sheet from the sale of Willis Re and the termination payment. I think that's a good way to think about it.
Okay, thank you very much.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Yaron Kinar with Jefferies. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning, everybody. My first question, just going back to these cost savings target that's now increasing to above $300 million by the end of 2024. What does that mean for the operating profit margin target of 24%-25%? Is that also increasing? If not, what offsets are you seeing?
You know, the profit margin target out in 2024 is a range, right? It provides for, you know, variability and opportunities that we may uncover along the way. I think the right way to think about that is still the 24%-25% target. One point I'd just like to make about the transformation program in general. While this is a three-year program, we don't anticipate, you know, at the end of it, we're going to be done finding opportunities for continued margin improvement across the organization. You know, the entire management team is committed to looking at how we can be the best and most efficient WTW we can be.
That's one of the reasons we've seen additional opportunities in the prior quarter that have caused us to, you know, tell you where we think we're headed on that. At the end of the day, regardless of what the outcome is for the transformation program, we'll be continuing to look for further opportunities to be an efficient company.
Got it. I think both in your prepared comments and in response to a previous question, around the margin impact from the book gains in HWC. You had lumped in the book gains with performance fees, when you were making these adjustments. Just conceptually, am I thinking about it correctly, that adjusting those out would have been a bad guide to margin, but then it's more than offset by a good guide from the performance fee adjustment?
Yeah, in terms of the headwinds and the tailwinds in margin, I think you're thinking about that right. I think the right way to examine all of the one-time items is to look at the headwinds and the tailwinds. The headwind from the performance fee was larger than the tailwind from gains on sale at an enterprise level.
Can you quantify either?
I think it will be disclosed in the Q that will get filed later today, so you can pick up that detail from there.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We have a question from Brian Meredith with UBS. Your line is open.
Yeah. Thanks. Two questions here. First, Carl, I'm just curious, could you talk a little bit about what client retention levels have looked like, you know, and maybe break it out between the two business segments and how that's been trending over the last, call it, 12 months? Is that what's also giving you some more confidence in your ability to make that mid-single digit organic growth in the second half of the year?
Yeah, I'll keep that from a qualitative perspective as we don't disclose retention rates. You know, I look at it this way, right? Last year we were, a year ago, pretty much to the day, we were at a point of maximum uncertainty for the organization, which did have an effect on retention rates in the business. Having, you know, a clear, destiny and, strategy that our clients, I think appreciate and like has been extremely helpful in terms of making sure that the core base of our revenue, which is recurring revenue from clients, we think it's about 80% across the organization, remains very, very strong, and they continue to hand us new opportunities to deepen those relationships. There is a variety across the portfolio.
You know, for instance, our retirement business is incredibly sticky and remains so over the past several years despite any disruption you might have seen. We're seeing that play out in just the exact same way it has over the past few decades, right? Our talent businesses, you know, the Health, Wealth & Career historically have been more project oriented, and so there is just simply a lower retention rate inherent to that business. Again, which we've addressed through, you know, our buildup of our software offerings, which are stickier in nature. On the R&B side, right, our analysis indicates that a lot of our growth is actually coming from new, which is a very healthy sign for what we've been doing.
As we stabilize retention rates in the business following, you know, the last couple of years worth of activity, that stabilization should lead to the acceleration of growth we expect during the rest of the year.
Great. Thanks. Second one for Andrew. I'm just curious on fiduciary income that you're getting, what impact did that have in the quarter, maybe on a year-over-year basis and kind of the benefits potentially on margins and organic growth? I imagine there's a nice little pickup.
Yeah. I don't have all of that detail at hand, Brian, but you're right. For every quarter, 25 basis points in rate movement, we pick up about $4 million of investment income given the investable fiduciary cash. So it has started to have an impact. However, you know, we have to have the portfolio turnover, right, to be able to reinvest at the higher rate. So it does take a little bit of time to work through the P&L. We are seeing positive impact and momentum there.
Great. Thank you.
Our next question comes from Shlomo Rosenbaum with Stifel. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Carl, I just wanted to ask you a little bit about how you're thinking about the accelerated and incremental cost savings you're generating from the program over the course of this year. Just holistically, actually, are you thinking about that as, "Hey, anything extra that we find, we really wanna just focus on driving the top line of the business, continued hiring, continued investments?" Or are you thinking that, you know, there'll be some of that will drop to the bottom line?
Yeah. Thanks, Shlomo. Good morning. I view this as a bit of an and, right? We have a three-year target for revenue, we have a three-year target for margin, and we want to chart a sensible course that gets us to that at the end of the day. There are going to be times where we invest for growth, and there are gonna be times where we'll take the savings and recognize that we've been able to permanently transform ourselves to be a more efficient company. We want to judge that as circumstances come, right? I think that'll be a quarter to quarter thing. You know, I wouldn't read too much, you know, into an individual quarter into a pattern of how we're gonna balance those two out.
you know, we have a set of goals, and we know that there's tension between them, and it's our job as a management team to get there at the end of the day. That's an active discussion that Andrew and I have all the time.
Was there any impact to the business by excluding the Russia stuff from last year? You know, as we talked a lot about book of business, we talked about, you know, investment income fees, but was there anything the Russia business that was a negative year-over-year?
Yeah. I mean, we you know when we announced that we were exiting the country and the business there, we disclosed some information in an 8-K that would give you the size of the ongoing impact from a revenue perspective. Yes, there is a bit of a headwind from a revenue perspective, you know, most notable in our Risk & Broking business, as you might expect, just given the history of our business there, focused on that part of the market.
Okay, thanks.
Our next question comes from Joshua Shanker with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Yeah, thank you. I appreciate some of the color on earlier questions. I wanted to dig a little deeper. On the move from $30 million to $71 million of cost savings so far with the-
Up to maybe even over 80 by the end of the year. That's a big change. I guess you talked about one real estate rationalization. I'm not a restructuring specialist, can you walk a little through what happens that you can find so quickly opportunities to save money? I'm just curious. It's a lot of money, and congratulations on it. Wondering how that works.
Yeah, sure. I'll start on the real estate side, where as we sat down and you know, continuously analyzed the real estate portfolio, there were opportunities to reconfigure or exit space that were economically attractive that you know, weren't necessarily apparent to us when we sketched out the program at the end of last year. That drove a meaningful part of it. You know, as we moved along, there were similar types of situations related to IT and other areas of our business where we were able to take advantage of some right shoring opportunities that you know, made economic sense for the business. You know, the other part that drove that was also you know, new opportunities, right?
That hadn't been uncovered at the outset of the program that we were able to identify and execute on, relatively quickly.
Yeah. I would point out before we extrapolate too far, right? The next phase of opportunities, right? You know, things like technology modernization or process optimization. We don't want to disturb our business momentum. We, you know, we will be approaching those in a measured way, consistent with the overall timing we have around the program.
Okay. I think I know the answer given other questions, but if you had, like, put things, organic growth into three buckets, you know, retention, new business, and price for what you're selling. I imagine to get in step with your peers, the element that's been weak so far is the new business production. Has retention been on par with your expectations? Are you getting the price from them for your services?
Yeah. You know, as we look at growth to date and where we expect the growth to come from, you know, price will be a contributor, but as you sort of alluded to, not the main driver, right? New business has been in line with our expectations, and we expect to continue to accelerate given all of the hiring that's taking place, as Carl mentioned in the front office. The retention rates are in line with our expectations. They've improved over the last year. We continue to expect improvement in that metric as we continue through the rest of the year and into next year.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Ryan Tunis with Autonomous. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning. Yeah, back in February, in the 10-K, you guys disclosed a number of unfilled seats. I think it was 2,800 then. Could you give us an update on what that number looks like today?
I don't think we have that to hand, Ryan, so we can follow up to the extent we've got a comparable for you.
Sure, no problem. Then, on the wealth business, you mentioned some headwinds you think that'll get better in the second half of the year. Could you give us some idea of, you know, ignoring those headwinds this quarter? I think you said it was negative 7% organic, but stripping out those headwinds, where did you see core organic in the wealth business in 2Q?
I think the answer is absent that performance fee, wealth would have been down 3%, and that's principally due to timing work within the retirement business. Retirement is the bulk of our wealth business, right? It's our retirement business and our investment business. Retirement is a bigger business for us, and the timing of that project work is the principal cause of that decline. We actually have visibility into, we think a rebound of activity during the remainder of the year.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Mark Marcon with Baird. Your line is open.
Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions. Have two questions that are macro related. The first one is, you know, aside from broking, are there opportunities to raise prices in any areas, you know, with any sort of significance given the inflationary environment? We're starting to hear from other companies that have been taking up price, you know, where historically they haven't. I'm just wondering if you have any opportunities from that perspective.
We do. Our consulting businesses charge on a variety of bases, but one of them is still good old billable hours, and we have the ability to modify billing rates. Some of that is subject to, you know, contracts in force, which may specify hourly rates, but others are prevailing rates, and we have that flexibility. That is something we do look at in all sorts of economic conditions.
Great. It sounds like you're opportunistically taking advantage of the environment and doing that.
We look to pull all levers in our portfolio when it comes to the revenue side of our business as well as the expense side. I think the safe answer to that is yes.
Great. Then the second one is, you know, obviously we're in a slowing macro environment. There's no doubt about that. There's some debate about whether or not we're entering a recession or not. I'm wondering how are you thinking about, you know, levers, you know, to continue to hit the targets. Obviously, you've got a cost reduction program that's proving to be even more successful. But just wondering if things get a little bit worse, you know, historically, like Julie's business, you know, it's been highly responsive to the fluctuations and we've made adjustments. Philosophically, how are you thinking about that, you know, given that we're in the process of rebuilding headcount, recruiting and retaining this. Do you still have the flexibility to make adjustments?
How should we think about it? Are you more focused on the three-year goal and, you know, if a year falls a little bit short, you know, because of the macro, that's not really the overriding concern?
I think it's an 'and' in the way we approach this, right? We don't ignore the short term, we certainly don't ignore the long term, and we manage the business for the greatest amount of resilience we can. There's, you know, as I said, there are levers we can pull here, right? I mean, one of them is like many firms in our industry, a lot of our compensation is variable. So as our performance varies, you know, we share the rewards and the burdens of that variation in performance. So that's one. We have done our best to sort of again transform our businesses so they are less economically sensitive.
Julie's done a lot of work over the years in just that, in the career side of the business. The wealth side, the health side are less economically sensitive. As I said, as we've moved from a pure consulting provider to a solutions provider, we've taken some of the economic sensitivity out of that business. I think particularly what makes this one a little interesting right now is that, there's still great demand for our career business in the light of, you know, the great resignation and now the great what are we gonna do about inflation. The demand for our services looks very strong over the short term, despite the economic clouds we're seeing.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. That's all the time we have for questions. I'd like to turn the call back to management for closing remarks.
Thank you very much. A great question today, and really happy for the engagement with you. I just want to point out that, while we think we have made good strides and have appreciated the chance to explain how we are managing this business going forward, there is more to do, right? As we said earlier in this call, right, the three-year program we've outlaid is a good start to achieving all that WTW can be. We think we have a great team, and we look forward to continued dialogue with you as we achieve it. Have a great day, everyone.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.