Good morning. Welcome to the WTW Acquisition of Newfront announcement call. Please refer to wtwco.com for the press release and supplemental information that were 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 statements 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 risks 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 this and other risk factors, investors should review the forward-looking statement section of the press release issued this morning, as well as in the company's most recent Form 10-K and other subsequent WTW SEC filings. During the call, certain non-GAAP financial measures may be discussed. To provide direct comparability with prior periods, all commentary regarding the company's revenue growth results will be on a non-GAAP organic basis, unless specifically stated otherwise.
For reconciliations 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'll now turn the call over to Carl Hess, WTW's Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today as we announce the acquisition of Newfront. On the call with me is Andrew Krasner, our Chief Financial Officer. As you've seen this morning, we announced an agreement to acquire Newfront, a top 40 U.S. insurance broker that combines deep specialty expertise with cutting-edge proprietary technology. Newfront's fast-growing middle-market broking business, exposure to high-growth specialty markets, and unique technology capabilities make this an attractive fit for WTW. We are excited to welcome the Newfront team. Let me explain why this acquisition is so compelling.
First, it improves our business mix by expanding our reach in the U.S. middle market and enhances our presence in high-growth specialty areas, including technology, fintech, and life sciences. It also broadens our producer base, with more than 120 producers supporting our growth ambitions. Second, Newfront possesses proprietary technology and agentic AI capabilities. Combined with WTW's strong technology foundation and our recent strategic investments in data and analytics, AI, and digital services, this acquisition will enable us to create an end-to-end platform that will let us serve clients faster, smarter, and more efficiently.
This has been a goal of both Newfront and WTW, contributing to the strong strategic rationale and alignment of this combination. Third, this acquisition is well-aligned with our disciplined capital allocation priorities. By enhancing our broking capabilities in the key U.S. market and accelerating the realization of an end-to-end platform for the critical middle market, this acquisition will support continued revenue growth and margin expansion across the company. L astly, the transaction structure offers a compelling financial return profile, which Andrew will elaborate on, with the net purchase price representing approximately 12 times Newfront's estimated 2026 pro forma Adjusted EBITDA, inclusive of run rate synergies.
Put simply, we're confident this acquisition will drive shareholder value creation. That value proposition starts with a great asset. Newfront is a highly regarded U.S. broker with an impressive track record of growth. It's delivered a 20% organic revenue growth CAGR from 2018 to 2024 and is expected to generate an approximately 26% pro forma Adjusted EBITDA margin in 2026. Its success has been driven by its 650-plus employees, including more than 120 producers serving approximately 14,000 clients and strong technology. More on that later. Newfront's two operating segments, Business Insurance and Total Rewards, are a natural complement to our core Risk and Broking and Health, Wealth, and Career businesses.
Business Insurance is Newfront's specialized broking platform that focuses primarily on middle-market clients, representing roughly 60% of total revenue. Like our corporate risk and broking business, Business Insurance focuses on high-growth verticals, and we expect Newfront to enhance our specialty offerings and expand our U.S. footprint. Newfront's Total Rewards business comprises roughly 40% of revenue and provides holistic coverage ranging from benefit plan management and administration to specialty services, including supporting clients' provisions of benefits as they expand globally.
This business mostly fits within our health business, and there's an attractive opportunity to bring HWC's broader range of services to Newfront's clients. Newfront's mission to modernize broking was set out by its co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Spike Lipkin, whose work I've watched and admired for many years. Newfront has executed successfully on that mission and has delivered impressive growth and truly innovative technology. From a cultural standpoint, Newfront's commitment to innovation and client service makes it a natural fit for WTW. I'm looking forward to the impact Spike, his co-founders Brian Gordon and Kurt, and their team will have on our combined organization in the years to come.
As you can see, Newfront's business and capabilities will amplify our strategy to accelerate performance, enhance efficiency, and optimize our portfolio. By combining our scale and resources with their producers, tools, and capabilities, we have an opportunity to further accelerate our middle-market growth. In addition, Newfront's technology complements our existing investments and expedites our technology roadmap, allowing us to further differentiate our client and colleague experiences to serve clients faster, smarter, and more efficiently. L astly, this acquisition shifts our portfolio mix further toward broking and increases our exposure to high-growth specialties in the U.S. middle market.
Let me elaborate on what makes Newfront's technology capabilities special and how they complement our investments and accelerate our strategy. Newfront's deep specialty expertise is underpinned by a robust proprietary AI-enabled technology platform that has rapidly evolved since the company's founding, as well as the strong tech and engineering talent base that's built it and continues to expand its capabilities. At the center of Newfront's technology is Navigator, a data-rich, client-facing platform that provides a single digital interface with real-time insights into insurance, risk data, and benefits.
Navigator helps clients, colleagues, and carriers better navigate program complexity, streamlining coverage management and risk decisions. Navigator is one of many proprietary tools Newfront has developed to support an improved client experience and more efficient scale to serve the middle market. In addition to the Navigator tool, we're excited to complement WTW's broking platform and Neuron technology with the Agentic AI-enabled placement technology Newfront created. As part of their end-to-end client journey, the data amassed in Navigator is shared to an intelligence layer to prepare and enrich client submissions during the placement process.
This intelligence layer helps to bring transparency to the risk decision-making process by automating the administrative, but very important part, of the client journey. These placement automation solutions enable brokers to serve clients more productively than traditional models allow. By automating high-volume, lower-complexity workflows, these tools enable smaller teams to broadly deliver exceptional service and risk management. Pairing Newfront's Navigator and AI solutions with WTW's risk and analytics capabilities, our broking platform for global placement and client servicing, and our digital trading platform, Neuron, we're creating an end-to-end technology platform.
This platform will enable all our brokers to serve clients of all sizes with greater speed, efficiency, and intelligence. This combination will simplify the broker and client experience, improve sales productivity, enable us to expand more quickly in the middle market, unlock cross-selling opportunities, and bolster our technology talent base. I am incredibly excited about what WTW and Newfront can achieve together. This acquisition has clear benefits for our colleagues, clients, and shareholders, enhancing our existing strategy while also driving shareholder value creation, and now I'll pass it over to Andrew for a more detailed discussion of the transaction terms and financials.
Thanks, Carl. Good morning, and thanks, everyone, for joining us today. Let me start with an overview of the terms of the transaction. These details are also provided in the slides posted on our website, and I'd encourage you to reference them. Under the terms of the agreement, WTW will pay an upfront purchase price of $1.05 billion, comprised of approximately $900 million in cash funded with new debt and approximately $150 million in equity to Newfront employee shareholders. In addition to this upfront payment, the transaction includes up to $250 million in contingent consideration payable after the third anniversary of closing.
This is primarily equity-based and requires the achievement of certain operational targets. This brings the total consideration to $1.3 billion, which is roughly 12 times estimated 2026 pro forma adjusted EBITDA, inclusive of estimated cost synergies, which I'll touch on shortly. In addition, there is a potential upside earnout of up to $150 million payable in WTW equity after the third anniversary of closing, contingent upon achievement of above-target revenue growth objectives.
The merger agreement also includes long-term retention incentives totaling $100 million of WTW restricted and performance-based equity to promote colleague and client retention and alignment with WTW's broader strategic objectives. We expect this transaction to be roughly $0.10 dilutive to Adjusted EPS in 2026 and accretive to Adjusted EPS in 2027. We remain committed to $1.5 billion of share repurchases for 2025, in line with our focus on a balanced capital allocation approach. Following the receipt of certain regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions, we anticipate closing in the first quarter of next year.
As you can see, this transaction is thoughtfully designed to foster alignment, retain talent, and drive long-term growth within a financially disciplined structure that rewards strong ongoing performance. Next, let me provide some color on estimated synergies and integration costs. As Carl highlighted, the integration of Newfront's proven tech-enabled model will expand our mid-market broking capabilities, helping WTW drive efficiencies and accelerate growth in a fast-growing market. That said, we are not including any revenue synergies in our projections, but we have identified cost synergies that we will deliver across Newfront and WTW.
We are estimating approximately $35 million of run rate cost synergies by the end of 2028, primarily from technology-driven efficiencies and overhead optimization. Our enterprise delivery organization, WeDo, which led our successful transformation program, will play a large role in executing on these synergies. We expect to realize 5% of these cost synergies in 2026, 55% by 2027, and 100% by 2028. One-time transaction and integration costs are estimated to be roughly $125 million over the next three years.
Of these cash costs, $7 million will be incurred in 2025 and $53 million in 2026, with the rest spread ratably over the following two years. In addition, one-time non-cash asset write-offs of approximately $30 million will be spread over the next three years. Within the next three years, we will have enhanced our client experience, improved productivity and efficiency, and accelerated our technology roadmap. To close, I'd like to come back to our disciplined approach to M&A that we laid out last year. This acquisition checks all of the boxes. It sharpens our focus on our core businesses, strengthening our position in high-growth specialty markets.
Newfront and WTW have shared values and clear strategic alignment, and the deal structure reinforces that alignment and helps us retain and empower top talent. As Carl shared, our businesses and our technology capabilities are highly complementary, and our disciplined approach and WeDo capabilities will minimize disruption. We're enhancing our growth profile and accelerating our use of technology to drive efficiencies, margin, and free cash flow. Finally, the disciplined, performance-focused transaction structure and attractive post-synergy multiple are designed to ensure that we achieve a compelling financial return profile for shareholders. With that, let me turn it back over to Carl for some closing remarks.
Thanks, Andrew. Before we move to Q&A, I want to reiterate how this transaction advances the strategy we laid out at our 2024 Investor Day. Newfront's business and technology are fully aligned with our focus on accelerating performance, enhancing efficiency, and optimizing our portfolio and strategic position. As Andrew shared, this acquisition is a disciplined and thoughtful step forward in delivering on our balanced capital allocation strategy, and I'm confident it will drive shareholder value creation. With that, let's open it up for Q&A.
Thank you. As a reminder to ask a question, please press star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. We ask that you please limit yourselves to one question and one follow-up question. Our first question comes from the line of Mike Zarembski from Bank of Montreal BMO.
Hi, Good morning. Thanks for hosting this call. My first question, hopefully there's time for follow-up, is on the earnouts. Maybe you can elaborate on them, including the details on when and how they might get paid out over time.
Yeah, sure. Hi, it's Andrew. Let me start by quickly walking through the deal structure. U pfront, we're paying $1.05 billion. That's comprised of approximately $900 million in cash and $150 million in equity. The $150 million of equity is going to Newfront employee shareholders and will vest over a multi-year period. For that, we believe this creates the right alignment of interest to drive growth across the combined company. The contingent consideration of up to $250 million is payable after the third anniversary of closing. This is primarily equity-based and requires the achievement of certain operational targets.
Together, those components represent $1.3 billion in total consideration, where WTW and Newfront share the risk and rewards with significant value creation opportunities for WTW shareholders. In addition, there's a potential upside earnout of $150 million payable in WTW equity after the third anniversary of closing, and that is contingent upon the achievement of above-target revenue growth objectives. F inally, in addition to the consideration and earnout mentioned, there's a $100 million of equity for employee retention through 2031. W e designed the deal in a way that we believe will retain talent, reinforce alignment, and incentivize seamless combination across our organizations.
With respect to the earnouts, as I mentioned, the $250 million contingent consideration is based on revenue performance. We believe this is achievable based on revenue retention. S econdly, the $150 million upside earnout is based on, as I said, above-target revenue objectives and exceptional outperformance. We'd love nothing more than to hit these targets. Importantly, the additional consideration would be primarily paid out in equity to further reinforce employee retention and alignment of interests.
Okay. Thanks, Andrew. My follow-up that's helpful probably for you as well, specifically on the $125 million of transaction and integration costs. If we put that in a ratio relative to the $35 million of cost synergies, and we benchmark it to pretty much all your peers now have announced deals in the past, the ratio 125 over 35, it's much, much higher than peers. O n one hand, it makes us, at least me, feel comfortable that your synergy guidance is potentially conservative. O n the other hand, just trying to understand why that ratio, why that $125 million is relatively large, perhaps there's something you would like to call out and elaborate on in that 2025. Thanks.
Yeah, sure. T he first thing I'd mention is the $125 that you're referring to consists of transaction expenses in addition to the cash cost to achieve. I f we focus just on the cash cost to achieve, it's about $100 million. That ratio relative to the synergy is about 2.8 times. That is relatively consistent with what we saw during our transformation program. I feel very comfortable about how we're thinking about the cost to achieve relative to the synergies.
In terms of the cost to achieve, it's going to come across a couple of areas, but a lot of it is going to have to do with integration of technology platforms and things of that nature to drive the $35 million of synergies, which is going to be rationalization of overhead efficiencies as well as leveraging technology to improve productivity and efficiency.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Elyse Greenspan from Wells Fargo.
Hi, thanks. I was hoping to start off on organic growth. Just if you could give us a sense of, I know you gave a longer time period CAGR, but of more recent organic growth trends at Newfront, maybe 2025, even if 2024 is helpful, and how you're thinking about the outlook. I also want to confirm because there have been some inconsistencies across how companies have done deals that this will be within M&A and not organic for 12 months post-close. I know you guys, right, had said on your last quarter's call that maybe the competitive market, right, makes organic more mid-single digits versus high single digits. Does this change that view once this business gets within your organic, I'm assuming, one year post-close?
Okay. I'll try and get to all of the aspects of that question, Elyse , and good morning, so let me begin with the organic growth perspective. While we're not going to guide to Newfront's longer-term growth, it's worth noting that they've grown organically at a 20% CAGR between 2018 and 2024, and we're anticipating about 10% organic for them for 2026. T hat's a strong growth record. We find it impressive, and it's a testament to Newfront's specialization strategy, their technology, and their talent, and all that aligns well with WTW's objectives. Like we've always said, we intend to invest in high-growth and high-margin businesses like Newfront.
Equally important, the two organizations share similar ambitions, values, and there's opportunity to extrapolate each other's strengths. The specialties and skills that we have in RB and Health and our world-class client service and capabilities, they're highly attractive assets to their business, so while we've taken a thoughtful approach to the strategy and the transaction that aligns really well with our overall M&A strategy, we wouldn't have made this deal unless we had strong conviction about the strategic rationale and about Newfront's potential to improve our overall growth profile.
Yep, and just on the second part of your question, the results will stay out of organic growth for the first 12 months and just the impact on R&B's organic growth rate overall, it's important just to keep in mind the relative scale and size of the two components where we do expect it to have an impact over time. T he relative size of the revenue base will make that a bit modest overall relative to the size of the whole segment. O ne last part. Elyse , recognize that the numbers I was quoting on growth include both segments.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Paul Newsome from Piper Sandler.
Good morning. Thanks for the call. Is there any cyclicality that we should note for Newfront's business? Do they tend to have it all at the beginning, or is it rate a bit over the year?
Yeah. The seasonality of the business is relatively consistent with our broking businesses.
That's great. W hen we're thinking about the 100 basis point goal for the Risk and Broking business, the margin improvement goal, does this reset the base a little bit prospectively, or how should we think about that?
We're not going to give specific margin guidance at this time relative to this. We do believe there are long-term margin opportunities, and we'll provide additional color about that on our 2026 outlook and our upcoming full-year earnings call. Let me just maybe hit a few points that Carl already mentioned, which include the unique technology that Newfront brings and the positive financial impact that we're going to see by expanding the technology adoption across our combined client base.
We do see significant opportunities to drive sales productivity, potentially improving producer validation, and a path to long-term margin improvement, especially in the middle market. We are committed to delivering on the financial framework that we communicated at our investor day, where we expect to deliver the 100 basis points of margin improvement for R&B and build on HWC's strong track record with some marginal margin improvement there.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of David Motemaden from Evercore ISI.
Hey, thanks. Good morning. I just had a question on the revenue growth and the organic revenue growth of Newfront, so it looks like, at least when I'm looking at the historic revenue growth here, it looks like revenue growth slowed to 13% in 2024 from like 34% in 2023 and further, based on the projections, to 7% in 2025, and it looks like you guys are now thinking that it'll accelerate to 10% in 2026, so I was just hoping to get some detail what's behind the slowdown and then the acceleration in revenue growth.
Yeah, sure. I t's important to keep in mind a couple of things here. One is the relative size maybe that they were growing from during parts of that period. Y ou would expect to see some higher growth rates there. Th e other thing that's been happening over the past bit of time is just, and we've talked about it on some of our earnings calls regarding just the rate headwinds in certain parts of the market. Yeah, I'd point out that Newfront does have meaningful D&O business. It's part of the business insurance business. D espite meaningful pressure in the D&O market, the business has maintained its strong growth in recent years.
W e believe that they can maintain high single-digit organic growth despite the pressure in the current market. Just like WTW, Newfront has proven to be resilient despite the uncertainty. W e're excited to be able to build on that consistency, but also amplifying our ability to win new business, enhance our client service and capabilities, and better serve our combined client base. I n the near term, we do expect some tailwinds from some producer hiring investments that Newfront has made.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Anderson from Jefferies.
Hey, good morning. T he current North America middle market business for you is about $1.5 billion of revenue, and it's a little bit more casualty-weighted. Could you maybe just share a bit about how the business mix is within Newfront, and I imagine a lot of this is commission-weighted business.
So, good morning, Andrew. I f you look at our North America business you're quoting the total number. Mid-market is a large part of that, but it's not all mid-market. I'd characterize our business as upper mid-market, skewing in both directions from there. Newfront is a mid-market business with some upper mid-market business as well. J ust a little bit of characterization there. Our business is quite balanced between property and casualty. Y ou'd find a mix with Newfront that's probably got similar characteristics. I called out D&O a while ago, but they've got a significant casualty book, cyber, property, personal lines, and a variety of other things make that up. I t's quite balanced in nature.
One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brian Meredith from UBS.
Yes, thanks. A couple of quick questions here for you. First, Andrew, the $100 million of equity-based retentions, is that going to be expensed through earnings the next couple of years, or is that going to go below the line, at least just in the EPS line? How's that going to be accounted for?
Yeah. It will end up as below the line given it's related to the transaction.
That makes sense. T he second one, I'm just curious Newfront had a pretty efficient operating model given all of the technology investment they have in the Navigator system. Your $35 million of cost savings, does that include any potential applicability of the Navigator system or whatever on Willis's existing cost space, or are there additional opportunities for further efficiencies and stuff as you implement Newfront systems into Willis?
It does include some of those efficiencies. T he efficiency number, the synergy number that we quoted is the run rate we expect after three years. We do expect the impact of the technology platform and the digital ecosystem to continue to have impact beyond that time period as well. T here's further enhancements that can come from leveraging that technology.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Josh Schenker from Bank of America.
Yes. Thank you for taking my question. As I was reading the press release, I was pleased to see that the Newfront acquisition is on what you view as the cutting edge of agentic AI. When I talk to a lot of agents and brokers, generally, the conversation is that the agent-customer relationship is sacrosanct, and AI is not going to create a big impact that changes that situation. H ere's a business you're acquiring that appreciates that future. I'm wondering if you can talk about the scope of what you think the agentic AI proposition is, what policies that will affect, and what the market opportunity and risk is here?
Yeah. T he two propositions you put up front there, Josh, are actually quite compatible. We're not saying that there is no human element here. T hat's actually an important part of the equation, and we're really impressed how Newfront's been able to balance that out and how they approach doing business, they provide us a unique opportunity to accelerate our technology roadmap, and really importantly, their technology nicely complements the technology we've been investing in.
In particular, their client-facing interface, Navigator, you cited, and the Agentic AI-driven property and casualty placement solutions, those accelerate speed to market, and they provide more scalable client solutions in an efficient manner, and we see applicability to that across our portfolio of businesses, even beyond broking over time. M eanwhile, our investments in our CRB technology platforms have focused more heavily on data and analytics, trading and connectivity, global placement, and client servicing. And we showed a bit of that in the supplemental materials.
When we bring together Newfront's technology with WTW's broking platforms, our Neuron digital trading, our risk models, our data analytics, we'll be creating an end-to-end platform that enables us to service clients of all sizes more efficiently. S imilarly, Newfront's benefits management technology, like the Navigator client portal and Benji, which is their benefits assistant, they're much more effective in serving the middle market. WTW's health benefits management enrollment platforms are tailored to global and large market clients. T he combination, again, is highly complementary. We see opportunities to accelerate our ability to bring large market solutions to middle market clients and vice versa.
Do you foresee any risk of the current relationship situation that there will be some business that goes digital and the market share of the relationship oriented business will change?
Look, this is a business where a human touch is appreciated. T he ability to make that human touch more effective and more efficient through agentic AI and other technology is going to be significant. W e're really delighted how this combination is going to accelerate our ability to do that.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Tracy Benguigui from Wolfe Research.
Thank you. Good morning. It feels like you're a bit later in the larger M&A bandwagon, and I'm wondering why now. Is this deal specifically that you like, or do you feel like you've made good progress on your specialization strategy where you're ready to focus your efforts on M&A?
There's a combination of things here, Tracy. One is when back in 2021, we announced the strategy for the organization and the transformation program, we were very, very clear during that period that we wanted to make sure we focused on the successful outcomes of the transformation program, and transformative M&A would be detractive from that, and so we deliberately took a timeout from doing that.
As we referenced during our investor day last year, a mission accomplished with respect to transformation, and we did signify our pivot to a more balanced strategy, reflecting continued driving organic progress in the organization, as well as looking to augment what we could do through targets that could advance the proposition we have, and we are very convinced that Newfront does exactly that. We're doing exactly what we said we would do.
All right. Very good. A lso, I noticed you still have healthy debt headroom post-deal. H ow are you thinking about future M&A?
Yeah. W e said this before, so I apologize for repeating myself, but we take a thoughtful and disciplined approach to evaluating inorganic opportunities. We applied that same framework to this transaction. We're going to continue to do so as we assess opportunities that could strengthen our portfolio and advance our long-term strategy. I'm not going to comment on hypotheticals, but we're only going to pursue opportunities if the expected returns and value creation potential are compelling versus other capital allocation options.
When we see something that meets that bar and we believe we can execute on it without disrupting the business, we'll be fully prepared to act. O ur overall M&A philosophy that we talked about last year remains unchanged, and we're operating from a position of strength, and we'll move decisively when the right opportunities arise.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Hughes from Truist Securities.
Yeah. Thank you. Good morning. You talked about the Navigator technology. Is that something that you might be able to target a little smaller market strata if it's a little bit more of a direct model, perhaps? Does that widen up your aperture for the size of client you might pursue in the broking space?
Navigator is certainly a more efficient interface as we approach the mid-market and the smaller end of the mid-market. That was an attractive feature for us, Mark, as we evaluated the combination here. Y our thesis is correct. there is probably a lower limit to that at some point where, to one of the earlier questions, digital might make sense for very small organizations and personal lines. T his clearly expands our capability to efficiently operate in a broader space than we had as a standalone organization.
Is that part of the integration strategy with this one, is that to roll out or make the Navigator accessible to your wider platform? Is that part of the current strategy?
Absolutely. It absolutely is, Mark. T hat's not just a U.S. comment, right? As I said earlier in the call, we see applicability to Newfront's technology across our portfolio. We'll take a thoughtful measure, not trying to do everything at once, right? But we see the ability to have this apply across vast spans of the WTW business, whether that's our different lines or our different geographies.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Meyer Shields from Keefe, Bruyette & Woods.
Great. Thanks so much, and good morning. I'm wondering, is it possible that you'd end up paying the $150 million earn out on revenue growth without maxing out on the $250 million of contingent consideration? Are those codependent?
It's possible, but relatively unlikely that that combination of events would transpire.
Okay. Understood. F or 2025, the original $1 billion, now $1.5 billion of capital deployment, that was, as I understand it, intended to cover M&A and repurchases. Since the cash component of this deal is being funded by debt, is that $1.5 billion a good starting point for 2026 capital deployment?
Yep, so we talked about the commitment for 2025 of $1.5 billion, and we still have meaningful deployable capital available on our balance sheet, and of course, our businesses generate a substantial amount of free cash. We're not going to give specifics on 2026 right now. We'll do that on our full year 2025 earnings call, as we typically do. As we've always said, we'll evaluate all options for capital allocation, which includes share buybacks, internal investments, and of course, the carefully considered strategic M&A like this transaction, and with that approach, it ensures we are maximizing value creation for our shareholders.
Okay. Great. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Katie Sakys from Autonomous Research.
Hi. Thanks. Good morning. I just wanted to circle back to the projected pro forma just to get a bit on margins for Newfront in 2026. T wo points are about that of your expansion is quite impressive, and I was wondering if you could just walk us through a little bit more detail on where exactly you think the drivers of that expansion are coming from for Newfront and really what you think the biggest risks to that expansion over the course of the next year might be?
Yeah. F irst, let me start by saying we feel fairly comfortable about that margin for 2026. I t's really being driven by two things. One, the increasing scale of the business and the organic growth that they're achieving naturally creates some operating leverage. O ver the past year, they have taken some cost management measures, which will flow through their P&L in 2026.
Okay. Do es that also contemplate the producer investments that you had previously mentioned Newfront made over the course of this year?
Yes, it does. T his is a dynamic we, of course, saw play out during you look at 2022, 2023, 2024 for us. As you invest in talent, you monitor and realize that return in talent. It's an industry dynamic we're very comfortable with, and we're happy to see it playing out for Newfront as well.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Tunis from Cantor.
Hey, thanks. Good morning. A couple for me. First one, just big picture. When about Newfront historically, it's been the anti-bolt-on, right? You've got a management team that's really invested organically, and the talent that's gone there has done so to get away from the bolt-on noise elsewhere. I'm curious if Willis shares that same ethos on how to expand middle market from here. For you guys, is it more of an organic growth exploration, or would you consider incremental bolt-on M&A from here?
Well , first of all, you've characterized the Newfront approach very well, and it's worked very well for that organization. We want to continue the momentum they've been able to build. T he 120 producers they're bringing to the table, that has been an organic build and very successful, and we look forward to their ability to be even more successful within WTW. Yeah. W e don't view the Newfront platform as the beginning of a roll-up machine.
Got it. A follow-up. I'm just trying to figure out if I'm thinking about this right. I would guess that the producer CAGR over that time period is probably somewhere in the same ballpark as the 20% organic revenue growth. I f that's the case, I would think that the way to think about organic going forward for Newfront would be probably most impacted by incremental growth in producer count. Just curious if I'm thinking about that right.
I'm not sure I quite buy that all the way, right? And one of Newfront's features that we found very attractive is the ability for their technology to improve sales velocity and producer productivity. T hat's reflected in the growth rate. It's not just a headcount story.
Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Mitchell Rubin from Raymond James.
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my call. Could you please provide some color on the step-down valuation for Newfront from its funding round in 2022, which valued the company around $2.2 billion? Thanks.
Yeah, sure. I don't think we can opine on the valuation of prior rounds of financing, but we're very comfortable with the consideration and the structure that we've put together for the Newfront shareholders and the employee shareholders.
All right. Thank you, and could you give us an idea of the Free Cash Flow conversion on a pro forma basis for the company? Thanks.
Yeah. Newfront has a run rate free cash flow margin, which is relatively consistent with ours. As we realize the synergies from the transaction bring our intellectual capital and technology together and scale in the high growth and high margin areas, which we've talked about, we expect to drive adjusted operating margin expansion with that. T hat, in conjunction with the abatement of integration costs over time, will drive free cash flow margin expansion over time. As we look beyond the completion of this deal, the capital management strategy that we've set out remains unchanged. As I mentioned before, we've got a lot of flexibility on our balance sheet. Our leverage profile is still within target, and we generate strong free cash flow.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Scott from Barclays.
Hey, thanks. I wanted to expand actually on a couple of the questions there from Ryan. I had also had the perception that Newfront had an interesting angle on being able to acquire talent, maybe a little more based on the technology, the entrepreneurial atmosphere, etc., versus maybe some of the team lifting that happens at the big brokers that might be more compensation motivated and so forth. T he question I want to ask is, well, how do you maintain that? How do you maintain that edge? Can you still achieve that special sauce when it's part of a bigger organization like Willis? And what are you doing to achieve that? Will it be more siloed? What's Spike's role going to be at the company? Can you help us think through all of that?
Yeah. A lot of dimensions, but we have put a lot of time and energy into thinking about that. I might take a little bit of an exception as to your characterization of the big broker culture. W e've got something at WTW that's pretty special in terms of teamwork, in terms of staying close to clients, and in terms of intellectual capital development. T hat's one of the reasons that the organizations are highly complementary here, and this is a real win-win for both clients and for colleagues within both organizations. We've put a lot of thought into structuring the transaction to retain, to align, incentivize the entire Newfront team, both production staff and technological talent.
We view this as critical. B oth sides are really excited about being able to incorporate the strengths of both organizations in a way that preserves strengths, enhances capabilities, and focuses on state-of-the-art delivery and development practices. That'll enable us to accelerate the execution of both organizations' strategies. With respect to Spike, Gordon, Brian, Kurt, the co-founders, we have tremendous respect for what they have done and the business they've built. They are going to transition to WTW at close. The process of bringing organizations together is going to be collaborative.
That means we're going to be working together with the leadership team at Newfront to facilitate a seamless transition, define roles, and maximize Newfront's potential as part of WTW. Just on a personal note, I'm really looking forward to welcoming the Newfront team and the impact Spike, his co-founders, and their team are going to have on our combined teams over the years to come.
That's all helpful. Thank you. I know you mentioned earlier revenue synergies weren't in the projection, but just wanted to get a feel of what could those look like? And maybe even if you're not willing to quantify anything, just what are some of those opportunities and how will you drive those revenue synergies over time?
Yeah, sure. Newfront's a great business that has generated significant organic growth in recent years. If you think about their market-leading technology, the producer base that complements our strategy and our market footprint well, and leveraging the capabilities in the middle market and the high-growth industries that we mentioned. Like you said, we're taking a conservative approach and not forecasting any revenue synergies. A s you can gather, we're very excited about the opportunity for the combined teams and expanding the use of the technology.
W e see opportunities to strengthen the growth profile, enhance producer productivity, particularly in the middle market. You heard Carl talk about sales velocity and efficiencies earlier. We also see opportunities to cross as we think about bringing the full suite of WTW capabilities to Newfront clients and to the middle market, especially in HWC, where we have a very broad offering. T he opportunities are exciting.
Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Carl Hess for closing remarks.
Thank you all for joining us this morning on relatively short notice. I am very excited about the opportunities this transaction unlocks, and I am once again going to say how delighted I am to welcome the Newfront team to WTW, and as always, we want to thank our shareholders for their continued support. Have a great day, everyone.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.