Jul 25, 2013
Executives
Anthony J. Habgood - Non-Executive Chairman, Member of Remuneration Committee and Chairman of Reed Elsevier NV Duncan J.
Palmer - Chief Financial Officer and Executive Director Erik Engstrom - Chief Executive Officer, Member of Executive Board and Executive Director
Analysts
Sami Kassab - Exane BNP Paribas, Research Division Mark Braley - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division Ian Whittaker - Liberum Capital Limited, Research Division Nick Michael Edward Dempsey - Barclays Capital, Research Division Robert Berg - Berenberg, Research Division Vighnesh Padiachy - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division Thomas A. Singlehurst - Citigroup Inc, Research Division Alexander Christian DeGroote - Panmure Gordon & Co.
plc, Research Division Claudio Aspesi - Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC., Research Division Matthew Walker - Nomura Securities Co.
Ltd., Research Division Andrea Beneventi - Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
Anthony J. Habgood
So good morning, everyone, and welcome to our interim results. And thank you for coming.
And for those of you who are on our webcast, thank you for listening in. Once again, I am pleased to say that we've made good progress across the company and are on track to deliver our strategic and financial priorities.
With underlying sales up 3%, that's of course, excluding the cycling out this year in Exhibitions, and underlying profits up 6%, we are recommending an increase in the interim dividend of 11% for PLC and 2% for NV, which is just about in line with the growth in adjusted earnings per share for the 2 parent companies at constant exchange rates. Our business profile is continuing to improve, primarily through organic development, combined with a small number of targeted acquisitions to support this organic growth.
We also disposed of several businesses that no longer fit our strategy and have bought back shares for an amount, which is just about the same as the gross disposal proceeds during the first half. Furthermore, we announced today that we're going to increase this year's buybacks to a total of GBP 600 million, which is about GBP 200 million more than our expected gross year -- full year gross disposal proceeds because our cash flow remains strong and our balance sheet is, if anything, continuing to strengthen.
Duncan will now take you through the results in more detail, and Erik will describe the progress of the company more generally. Thank you.
Duncan J. Palmer
Thank you, Tony, and good morning, everybody. I would like to start this morning with the financial highlights for the first half of 2013.
Our primary measures of revenue and operating profit growth are on an underlying basis, which exclude the effects of currency movements and all of the acquisitions and disposals, which took place in 2012 and year-to-date. In the first half of 2013, we have maintained the trends and financial performance delivered in 2012.
Underlying revenue growth was 2%, while 3% excluding the effects of biennial event cycling in our Exhibitions business. Underlying adjusted operating profit grew 6%.
Adjusted earnings per share growth was 7% in constant currency terms, with a sterling-denominated PLC adjusted EPS up 9% and the euro-denominated NV adjusted EPS up 4%, reflecting a stronger euro in the first half of 2013. Reported earnings per share were down 6% for PLC and down 9% for NV, mostly due to higher gains from disposals in the first half of 2012 than in the first half of 2013.
Interim dividends are up 11% to 6.65p for PLC and up 2% to EUR 0.132 for NV. The difference in growth rates reflects strengthening of the euro against sterling since last year.
Our financial position has continued to strengthen slightly. Net debt to 12 months trailing EBITDA after adjusting for the net pension deficit and capitalizing leases was 2.1x compared to 2.3x at the end of last June and 2.2x at the end of 2012.
On an adjusted basis -- on an unadjusted basis, net debt to EBITDA was 1.7x. I will now go through the profit and loss statement in a little more detail.
I will present the results in sterling. And in the appendix, you can find the equivalent euro-denominated results.
As we discussed previously, the revised IAS 19 relating to pension accounting came into effect from January 1, 2013. Accordingly, 2012 first half numbers have been recast on the new basis throughout the presentation.
This accounting change had no impact on Reed Elsevier's balance sheet or on cash flows. A reconciliation from the numbers as reported last year to the recast numbers is provided in the appendix.
From 2013, we include the net pension financing charge within reported net finance expenses. The charge is, however, excluded from our adjusted earnings measures.
Revenues were GBP 3 billion, and adjusted operating profit was GBP 870 million with the adjusted operating margin rising from 27.3% to 28.8%. Net interest expense was GBP 15 million lower at GBP 92 million, primarily reflecting the impact of term debt refinancings at lower rates.
The effective tax rate for the first half was 23.5%, in line with the prior year. The full year rate is also expected to be similar to last year.
Adjusted net profit increased by 7% to GBP 592 million, with reported net profit down by 8% to GBP 509 million. Now, I'll walk through a reconciliation of reported net profit to adjusted net profit.
We presented adjusted financial performance metrics to aid the understanding of underlying operational performance and to facilitate period-over-period comparability. We consistently exclude the amortization of intangible assets, which result from acquisitions, such as brands, customer lists, content and software.
The reduction in the post-tax amortization charge compared to the first half of 2012 relates to a one-off deferred tax credit. Net interest on pension schemes deficits of GBP 6 million reflects the changes made as a result of IAS 19.
There were GBP 14 million of acquisition-related costs in the period. In the first half of 2013, we recorded an overall pretax gain on disposals including the screening business, but this was offset by taxes paid.
Now let's focus on the financial results of our major business areas. Firstly, looking at revenue, you can see that, once again, all 5 business areas grew underlying revenues in the first half.
Risk Solutions demonstrated strong underlying growth of 8%. The differences between underlying and constant currency growth rates reflect the impact of acquisitions and disposals in 2012 and the first half of 2013.
There have been disposables -- disposals in each of our businesses, but the effect is most significant in Risk Solutions, where we sold the pre-employment screening business at the end of February; and in Business Information where we have made a number of disposals, including the sales of the Australian and French businesses in 2013. The overall effect to disposals in the first half was to reduce revenues by 6%, partially offset by a 1% contribution from acquisitions.
Disposals will continue to impact reported revenues and operating profits in the second half of the year. Looking at adjusted operating profit performance, we can see that underlying profit grew ahead of underlying revenue across all major business areas.
This was most pronounced in Legal and Business Information. As with revenues, the differences between underlying and constant currency growth rates reflect the impact of acquisition and disposal activity, most notably within Business Information.
Reported growth in the scientific, technical and medical profits included a GBP 6 million benefit from the Elsevier hedging program, and a similar benefit is expected in the second half of the year. In the first half, we converted adjusted operating profit into operating cash flow of GBP 739 million, a cash conversion rate of 85% compared to 94% in the first half of 2012.
CapEx was broadly in line with prior year period, and depreciation increased by GBP 14 million, the majority of which related to amortization within the Legal business. The decline in cash conversion was driven by year-over-year differences and the timing of receivables invoicing and collection and the timing of the settlement of some payables at the end of the first half.
We expect the timing effects to reverse in the second half and to show cash conversion for the full year in excess of 90%. Our EBITDA in the first half was GBP 1 billion , up 6% from the first half of 2012.
Moving to free cash flow. Cash interest was lower, reflecting the reduction in the interest charge.
And cash taxes rose, a result of higher taxable profits, predominantly in the U.S. Moving to the uses of our free cash flow after dividends.
In the first half, we deployed GBP 85 million of cash on acquisitions. We realized GBP 226 million of net disposal proceeds after related, costs from the sale of nonstrategic assets, most significantly in Risk Solutions and Business Information.
We applied GBP 300 million to buying back shares, partially mitigating the short-term earnings dilution associated with disposals. Other items primarily relate to cash receipts from employee share option exercises.
The majority of our debt is denominated in dollars. And the weakening of sterling against the dollar since the start of the year has resulted in higher net debt when translated at the period-end rates.
As we discussed at the preliminary results, we remain focused on managing our debt maturity profile and our overall cost of debt. Our debt is denominated in a number of currencies reflecting the global nature of our businesses.
About 70% of our gross debt at the end of the first half was denominated in dollars with the balance in euros and pound sterling. For the purposes of this slide, I will talk in dollar terms.
At the end of June, we had net debt of $5.1 billion, with gross debt of $5.8 billion, the difference representing cash and financial instruments. During the first half, we took a number of actions to address upcoming maturities, reduce our cost of debt and retain access to a long-term liquidity.
We issued $282 million of Swiss franc-denominated notes. We also issued a further $389 million of U.S.
dollar denominated 10-year notes in exchange for $309 million of high coupon 2019 debt. In addition, in July, we have extended our existing $2 billion revolving credit facility until 2018 at lower cost.
As a result of the actions we have taken, over the last 12 months, the effective cost of our gross debt was 4.9% in the first half, down from 5.6% for full year 2012. Net interest expense was GBP 92 million in the first half compared to GBP 107 million in the first half of 2012.
And we expect to incur a broadly similar interest expense in the second half. This next chart shows the impact of our actions on the overall debt maturity profile.
As a result of our refinancing activities, we have no further maturities in 2013, and we have reduced the amount of expensive 2019 maturities further. We are well positioned to address upcoming debt maturities with $900 million maturing in 2014 and $300 million in 2015.
We will finalize plans for the refinancing of 2014 maturities in the second half of the year. Turning to the balance sheet.
The majority of our capital employed is goodwill and intangible assets associated with historical acquisition activity. Net capital employed at the end of the first half was GBP 7.3 billion compared to GBP 6.9 billion at the end of 2012.
Most of our goodwill and acquired intangible assets are dollar based. The GBP 370 million increase was mainly driven by currency translation with the impact of acquisitions more than offset by amortization and disposals.
Internally developed intangibles increased resulting from organic investment in the business and currency translation. Assets held for sale decreased, reflecting a number of disposals completed in the first half.
The net pension obligation reduced largely as a result of asset returns. Reed Elsevier continues to maintain a negative net working capital position, driven by advanced receipts in our subscription and exhibition businesses.
Finally, I want to cover a few housekeeping matters that should help you with modeling our financials. I've set out the average and period-end exchange rates and numbers of shares for the first half.
At 30th of June, we had 1.174 -- 1,174,000,000 Reed Elsevier PLC and 719 million Reed Elsevier NV shares outstanding, lower than at the end of 2012. This is the result of shares bought back in the first half, partly offset by share option exercises.
The weighted average numbers of shares for the first half reflect the timing of buybacks and option exercises. That concludes our overview of the financial performance in the first half of 2013.
Now, I would like to hand over to Erik to talk through strategic and operational progress.
Erik Engstrom
Good morning, everybody. Thank you for coming and for taking the time to be here today.
As you've seen this morning, we maintained our positive operating momentum in the first half of the year, and we continue to improve our business profile, primarily through organic development. In terms of our operating and financial momentum, you can see here that our underlying revenue growth, excluding biennial exhibition cycling, was 3%.
Our underlying adjusted operating profits grew 6%. Our earnings per share at constant currencies grew 7%.
And we reduced our net debt-to-EBITDA ratio slightly to 2.1x on a pension- and lease-adjusted basis, which means that we remain in a leverage range that we're very comfortable with. All major business areas delivered underlying revenue growth, as well as underlying operating profit growth.
Our STM business grew 2% with strong growth in article submissions and usage across science and medical research. Revenue growth was driven by solid subscription renewals and new sales, particularly in emerging markets.
We also grew our author-pays or author's-funder-pays article volumes strongly, albeit from a small base. We saw continued good growth in databases and tools and electronic clinical solutions.
But declines continued in print book sales to individuals and educational markets and in pharma promotion. Overall, we're on track to deliver modest underlying revenue growth for the full year.
Risk Solutions grew 8%, with positive underlying revenue growth momentum across all segments. Insurance achieved good volume growth, primarily from the continued rollout of new products and solutions.
Business Services saw good growth in identity and fraud solutions. And positive volume effects in financial services, some of which may prove to be temporary.
Government achieved good growth driven by new sales across federal and state and local markets. For the rest of the year, we expect the good growth in insurance to continue, while some uncertainty remains in financial services and government markets.
Business Information revenue growth improved slightly to 3%, with strong growth in major data services driven by BankersAccuity and ICIS. Leading brands in other magazines and services were stable despite weak print advertising markets.
The margin expansion of 1.1 percentage points to a record 19.3% was driven by a combination of organic efficiencies and portfolio reshaping. For the full year, we expect continued good growth in major data services, stable leading brands and weak print advertising markets.
Now as you know, the majority of the value creation in this business comes from its data services, which strongly resemble our Risk Solutions business. Therefore, we announced in December that we will bring in Risk Solutions and Business Information more closely together in order to leverage Risk Solutions' strength in data, analytics and technology in a combination with RBI's broader geographic footprint and industry-specific databases.
We're now operating these businesses with one CEO, one Chief Technology Officer and one Global Head of Human Resources. At this point, we still have 2 separate finance departments and report the financial results separately.
But I thought it would -- might be interesting for you to see what these 2 areas look like together for the first half of the year. They represented just over 30% of Reed Elsevier's total operating profits, with underlying revenue growth of 6%, underlying profit growth of 12% and margins of 35%.
Almost 90% of the revenues are electronic and face-to-face. 30% of their footprint is outside North America, and they're driven by subscription and transactional revenues with only a small sliver of advertising.
Legal again grew 1%, reflecting subdued legal markets in the U.S. and in Europe.
Across our global legal business, electronic revenue growth was largely offset by continued print declines. New platform and product rollouts continued as planned, with 60% of our U.S.
customers activated on the new Lexis platform. Margins expanded 0.6 percentage points as cost efficiencies and some initial decommissioning of old systems more than offset inflation and higher depreciation.
For the full year, we expect legal customer markets to remain subdued, limiting the scope for growth. But we will continue the rollout of our new products and maintain our focus on process efficiencies.
Exhibitions grew 7%, excluding biennial cycling, with strong revenue growth in the U.S., with Europe showing good growth in international events, but softness in domestic events, and with good growth in Japan, strong growth in Brazil, China and emerging markets. We completed 3 small acquisitions and launched 16 new events, primarily in high-growth geographies and sectors.
For the full year, we continue to expect good growth in the U.S. and Japan, limited growth in Europe and strong growth in other markets.
During the first half, we also continued to make progress in the strategic direction that we laid out last year, and that you can see here, towards becoming a company that delivers improved outcomes to professional customers across industries. We're getting there primarily through organic development, supplemented by selective portfolio reshaping, driving an evolution of our business profile and improving the quality of our earnings.
In terms of organic development and organic growth rates, you can see here that electronic and face-to-face revenues are growing organically at or slightly above mid-single digits, while our remaining print revenues streams are still declining mid-single digits or worse. 83% of our revenues are now in electronic and face-to-face formats.
Our North American revenues are growing at Reed Elsevier's average growth rate of 3%. Europe is growing slightly below our average, and the rest of the world is growing mid- to high-single digits.
Rest of World now represents 21% of our total revenues, exactly the same share as Continental Europe. Subscription revenues represent over -- just over half of Reed Elsevier are growing at slightly better than our average rate.
Transactional revenues are a mixture of strong growth in Risk and Exhibitions and declining print sales. Advertising is still declining.
In terms of portfolio reshaping, we have again limited our acquisitions to targeted data and content assets and assets in high-growth markets and geographies. In terms of disposals, we closed 11 transactions in the first half of the year, disposing of assets across business areas that no longer fit our strategic direction.
With a strong balance sheet and strong cash flow characteristics and our average acquisition spend comfortably covered by free cash flow, we will take a pragmatic approach to ensuring that the value compounding in our business translates into shareholder value. As a part of this, we're going to increase the scale of this year's share buybacks to GBP 600 million or approximately GBP 200 million beyond our expected full year gross disposal proceeds.
We deployed GBP 300 million on share buybacks in the first half of the year, and we plan to deploy a further GBP 300 million in the second half. So in summary, in the first half of the year, we maintained our positive underlying growth trends, and we continued to improve our business profile.
Going forward, the outlook for the macroeconomic environment and its impact on our customer markets remains mixed, and 2013 is a cycling out year for Exhibitions business. However, the operating momentum in our business remains positive as we enter the second half, and we continue to expect full year 2013 to be another year of underlying revenue, profit and earnings growth.
And with that, I think we're ready to go to questions.
Erik Engstrom
Let's just start over here. Thanks.
Sami Kassab - Exane BNP Paribas, Research Division
It's Sami Kassab at Exane. Two questions, if I may.
The first one, do you expect the same level of margin expansion within the Legal & Professional division in the second half of this year, i.e., around 60 basis points? And given that you just started decommissioning all the platforms, should we expect the pace of margin expansion to accelerate assuming the top line stays where it is?
And secondly, can you give us your thoughts on the outlook for the pharma promotion business in a context where ad agencies are taking a more positive look in their health care-related revenues?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. On legal margins, clearly, what we have done in the first half, we will continue to do in the second half and next year and going forward.
Now probably for a few years, meaning we will work to drive operating efficiencies in the business, and we'll work to gradually decommission old systems one after the other. That will continue in the second half and in the future.
What exactly the impact will be on margins in the second half specifically, very hard to tell because it does also depend on how quickly we are able to do it and also a little bit on the revenue growth trajectory. But I think this is an indication of what we've seen last year and what you've seen this year is probably an indication of the kinds of levels that we are able to accomplish with limited revenue growth.
When you look at, going forward, you asked a question, can it accelerate? I think within the current sort of revenue and market environment that we're in, this is what we're able to accomplish, something in this range.
And there's no automatic acceleration that happens because all of a sudden, you turn up one big system and fall off a cliff on the cost or something because the old infrastructure consisted of many, many systems, I mean in the hundreds. There's not 1 big system, you turn off one, so the gradual elimination of one after the other over several years.
So you're not going to see any one big step change. When it comes to the pharma promotion market, we are normally not the leading indicator of what pharma companies do and what they think about our advertising and how they do it with agency.
Then it comes to us afterwards, so we normally don't have any better insight than others, if anything, probably worse. But what we have seen so far does not signal any significant changes in trends.
But I think it's important to realize that at this point, this is down to -- we're probably now approaching 5% of Elsevier's revenues in the pharma promotion segment. So this is a smaller and smaller piece of Elsevier; and therefore, on the scale of Reed Elsevier, of course, even less important.
Can we go across here?
Mark Braley - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
It's Mark Braley at Deutsche. Just 2 questions.
Print books within Elsevier, are you seeing the kind of the pace of decline there and the impact of structural changes that accelerating? And how seasonal is that business?
How much of that is a autumn enrollment-driven business? And the other one is on the buyback, kind of cumulatively, the buyback is starting to add up to quite a big number, if we look at what was done in previous years, or you're proposing for this year.
Presumably, we're supposed to take away the idea that there might be something in the years beyond with the pragmatic approach. And when does it kind of become such a big number that you have to think about whether it's efficient to be buying one expensive line of stock and one cheap line of stock rather than just thinking about the listing structure and just buying the cheap line of stock?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. Let's see here, I'm going to get back in the end to Duncan probably on the last piece.
But let me start with the questions about print books in Elsevier. You asked, the way I understand it is, is the decline accelerating right now and how seasonal is it?
Well, we have -- essentially, if I try to put them in 2 broad buckets, the books in Elsevier, one are what I could look at as reference-type books, primarily institutionally oriented. They look a lot like the reference version of some of our research businesses.
Those are actually businesses that, as a whole, are holding up very well and are not that seasonal. They are sometimes converting faster to electronic, right, not as fast as research, but they are converting to electronic.
And you have institution agreements that sometimes package these in different ways, and that's a good business. That's transitioning very orderly from print to electronic with growth in it.
That's one part of it. Then we have the larger piece, and particular, in what used to be called our health areas, right, where you have the print book sales that are happening to individuals, primarily in educational environments.
That one is slightly more seasonal. It relates a bit to educational cycles and so on.
And they are going through a difficult transition with -- not just with print to electronic, but also with funding and with slow economic growth and rent, book rentals and used books, et cetera, et cetera. You're probably more familiar with than I am from some other companies that are larger in those segments.
But so -- if I look at that, still, that is seasonal, but I don't think we have seen anything that would say that it's accelerating because that's been pretty bumpy now for a period of time. But again, it's hard for us from our little tiny segment in the way we operate in that to really call the market.
I don't think we will be the right people to ask about the market situation. But they are -- the print books sales are clearly declining there, and the transition to electronics is a little bumpier.
Buybacks, well, we are going, as you see, GBP 200 million beyond our growth -- GBP 200 million beyond our growth disposal proceeds, which in a scale of Reed Elsevier, of course, and our total market cap for the combined company, is not a large number. But we do think it's a pragmatic way to look at turning business progress into shareholder value.
When it comes to the question of the 2 listings and so on, I'll let Duncan answer that.
Duncan J. Palmer
Yes. So as you know, what makes us a little different, as a combined total, is we have 2 parent companies essentially, which have 2 therefore, separate listings and they are separate companies.
They came together under a merger agreement, a governance agreement. And as part of that, there was actually a defined ratio of how the overall equity of the 2 companies combined has to -- the ratio of which those things have to be held.
So as we buy back stock, we do so mindful of the fact that we need to maintain that ratio. So it's not something that's easy for us to do because it's not one company with 2 listings, it's 2 listed companies.
And therefore, under the terms of that agreement, we maintain that average ratio over time.
Mark Braley - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division
That's my question. Is there a point to which you need to look at the agreement, look at equalization ratio and say, it's actually an interest of both sets of shareholders, where we currently stand adjusted by the Dutch [ph] line?
Duncan J. Palmer
Yes, I mean, we thought and looked at that. I think 2 or 3 things there, they really come together and make that firm agreement over time.
And a little bit materiality of our overall share buyback program in the context of our overall market capping the 2 entities combined, it's not actually that material. So I don't think at this stage, we have any plans to relook at the merger agreement.
Erik Engstrom
Yes?
Ian Whittaker - Liberum Capital Limited, Research Division
It's Ian Whittaker from Liberum. Two questions again, please.
First of all, just on scientific publishing. We had recently University of California cancel their contract within Informa, and that follows a number of other U.S.
universities, for instance, canceled contracts. Are you seeing a more aggressive tone being adopted by universities in the States regarding your contracts, and so in particularly around pricing?
And the second thing is just really to come back to a company maybe about risk [ph] and particularly, the financial area. You talked about there being some potentially temporary effects in the first half of the year and there could be some weakening in financial in the second half.
I think it was in risk. Can you talk about what exactly happened in the first half?
Why -- sort of why it strengthened? Why you thought it was temporary?
And why you think there will be weakness in the second half?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. Well, the first question there you asked, are we seeing a more aggressive tone?
I think we have a very broad set of customers and it's scientifically [ph] across the world, and they're all in very different economic situations in any given point in time. And clearly, with the turmoil the world's gone through over the last few years, there are several individual customers that are under more pressure during this time period than they have been in the past.
But we've seen that now for several years. And it varies significantly by location of institution, type of institution and the size of the institution and their specific funding base.
So for us, we have seen for many years that many institutions have been under pressure, and we're trying to work with them to make sure that they get the right kind of content set, the right quality set that they want the right tools, and in a way that fits within their budget and the way it grows. And I'm hopeful that we'll continue to do that going forward.
Have we seen any material shift recently across the world? No, I would say today, the situation is broadly speaking similar to where it was a year ago.
But of course, there are individual institutions, individual geographies that are in worse shape today than they were a year ago. On the other hand, other institutions in the world are in slightly better shape and are growing well compared to what they did a year ago.
So if you look at the risk, yes, the way I would describe it, I wouldn't describe it as a weakening in the second half, even though that may be how I came across. We saw in the risk business an acceleration in growth from last year's 6%, right, to the first half, 8%.
And in that growth acceleration, we believe that the majority of what we're doing here is to accelerate new product introductions, expand solution sets, sell into customers, sell into adjacencies and expand our footprint risk, and we think that is the main driver of what we -- of the growth rate in that business. However, we've also seen in financial services that, for example, in the second half last year, mortgage refinancing volumes coming through our processes came up.
And that may be, because we are very good at introducing those solutions or it might have something to do with the interest rates increasing the volumes in the market and therefore, we getting a part of that share. That came through in the second half of last year, continued in the first half this year.
So as we then cycle into the second half of this year, we would say that the relative growth rate in that segment might not be the same as what we saw in the previous 12 months. That's really what I'm thinking about.
Ian Whittaker - Liberum Capital Limited, Research Division
Okay. So it's just the composition more than anything else?
Erik Engstrom
Well, we also don't know. Clearly, there are some cycles that we're selling into, such as mortgage refinancing, they also depend on interest rates.
And with -- you can predict the interest rates and I can predict them. But reality is, it might be something else and therefore, the volumes come up or down.
That's what we're reflecting, the uncertainty in economic environment that can impact financial services volumes in the second half. And we think that's still somewhat uncertain.
So that's really what we're thinking about. Yes, let's keep going on.
This one.
Nick Michael Edward Dempsey - Barclays Capital, Research Division
Yes, it's Nick Dempsey from Barclays. Two questions, please.
Just while we're on risk, in terms of the federal government piece, if you were going to see any impact from sequestration, would we see that already or could there be a lag which we might have to bear in the second half or into next year? And the second question, on the interest rate, the 4.9% blended rates, how much more work is there to be done on taking out better instruments with a high coupon?
In other words, do you have levers to get that number lower for next year?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. Again, I'm going to let Duncan answer the second question here.
But the first one, when it comes to U.S. government, clearly, a very small part of our business is directly into governments, a small price directly into U.S.
government. As you know, in risk, our total government segment is less than 10% of the risk business.
And I would say that, yes, we have seen in some specific contracts, in some specific agencies, the question of their budgets have changed, their budgets have been cut not just in risk but some individual situations here and there. In the broader scale of our businesses, those are small, and we have seen some come through and there have been some questions about what can we spend and we've seen some individual reductions.
Could that -- do I think that these are going to continue? I actually don't know.
That would be just my personal prediction on government behavior, which I'm not going to attempt to do. But clearly, this could continue.
But again, these are small individual situations that could have a small effect here and there on our business. But if you look at overall at risk, the whole Risk Solutions business or overall at Reed Elsevier, it's not a large amount.
So, Duncan, you want to answer the one about the interest rates?
Duncan J. Palmer
Yes. So as I said, in 2012, the cost on those -- gross cost on the sort of gross debt was about 5.6%.
And so far this is about 4.9%. That translates into about GBP 92 million of interest-rate expense.
Now we'd expect that in the second half of the year to be about the same as the first half of the year. What's really been driving that is we've been refinancing actually over the last 12 months previously issued debt.
And as it's rolled off, the rates at which we have been refinancing new debt have been lower, right? So gradually, that effect has accumulated, and that's what you've seen in the first half of this year.
We've now completed refinancing of the debt that was due this year and there's some more debt obviously to refinance next year. And we continue to do that.
We continue obviously to issue in the current marketplace at whatever new rates will be. But we haven't yet finalized plans for how we're going to refinance next year, obviously, interest-rate environment, obviously, changes over time.
I don't think I described the majority of that change to the refinancing of 2019 debt. I'd see it more as an accumulation of just the refinancing of debt as it comes due.
Nick Michael Edward Dempsey - Barclays Capital, Research Division
Just a quick follow-on. Do you know what the rate is that you're paying on the debt that gets refi-ed next year?
Duncan J. Palmer
Do I know what the rate is?
Nick Michael Edward Dempsey - Barclays Capital, Research Division
What rates are you paying on that amount that you need to refinance it?
Duncan J. Palmer
Yes, I mean, it varies depending on whether it's been swapped or not swapped. I mean, it's a cumulation of different things.
And obviously, historically, it's generally speaking been issued in the past and quite generally, quite a few years ago. So it's going to be rates of that sort of time.
But generally speaking, we're higher in today’s rates, but interest rates change and evolve over time. I wouldn't want to call what I think interest rates are going to be next year unless you have a sort of crystal ball on that.
But generally speaking, we're looking to refinance most sufficient rates we can. In the marketplace, looking at the overall mix of debt in which countries to -- currencies do we issue which in, whether it's to make it fixed or floating, we'll continue to be efficient in that and drive efficiencies to the greatest extent that we can.
Erik Engstrom
Let's keep going back this way in. Just behind you there.
Robert Berg - Berenberg, Research Division
It's Robert Berg from Berenberg. Just staying on risk, I just want to try and get a gauge of how much of RBI should still be sold?
And effectively, how much still doesn't fit within the Risk Solutions business?
Erik Engstrom
Well, the way we look at RBI, the way we have looked at RBI, is to look literally at every single asset and try to figure out what the business profile is, what assets it contained, what data it has, what customer it's serving, how we can transform that business, how we can migrate that business as a type of business we want to be in. So the first attempt on every RBI asset is to try to migrate it into the type of business we want to be.
In some places, we've done that very successfully, and we can declare that it has happened such as BankersAccuity or Bankers Almanac Accuity or ICIS, for example. In other places we can say we're well underway, and we're confident this is going to happen, for example, in Flightglobal and Flight Ascend.
In other places, we are still attempting, and it may transform successfully or we may end up selling them if it doesn't work, right? So there on some assets that are still in that third category that we're working on.
So yes, we will continue to sell off assets across Reed Elsevier, not just in RBI. They are likely to be of the scale that you have seen over the past 18 months, excluding the 2 really big ones of screening in Risk Solutions and Totaljobs, if you look at those, they might -- we have sold many, many others, and we'll continue to sell several others, but they're likely to be more in that value range of the others.
So exactly what piece is left of RBI to sell is hard to tell, because it depends on which ones we can transform successfully and therefore, which ones we sell. But there will be some more to come on the smaller scale.
Yes, keep going back that way. Yes.
Okay, yes.
Vighnesh Padiachy - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
It's Vighnesh Padiachy from Goldman Sachs. I've got a couple of questions on legal, actually.
Can you give us a bit of color on the organic growth within legal? And from a customer's perspective, which areas are doing well, which areas are showing signs of recovery or even geographically?
Just a bit more color on the trends. And secondly, on legal, are there things you can do with the portfolio?
Are there some Europeans assets you can sell to rejuvenate the growth there?
Erik Engstrom
Yes. If you look at the different segments, I think what is -- what is probably not a secret to anybody who watches the legal industry is that the larger law firms at big cities relating to corporate M&A activity and other things had been -- have had a difficult time over the last few years, and those are the headlines that most people read about when they read about law firms, right?
I think -- so that's probably a segment we hear about the most, talk about the most, see the most. And they have had a difficult time, they're still having a difficult time.
Some of them have stabilized and some are still going through changes. But if I take a broader look, that what you're talking about and say, across customer segments and so on, it's remarkable actually at this point, that the patterns are pretty similar.
You are seeing that when it comes to fundamental electronic solution sets that people do rely on to go into court tomorrow, that help them do their jobs well, they continue to want to have those, continue to use those and continue to grow there because they need to continue to support their business. On the other hand, print, their old print reference continues to decline, and those patterns you can see across markets, across customer channels and across geographies.
The patterns in Europe are not that different from the patterns in the U.S. And clearly, on the question of are their assets we should be looking at there, we're doing the same thing in legal as we're doing everywhere else.
And we have sold small assets here and there, and we will continue to do that across of all Reed Elsevier, including legal, to see if there are assets we don't think are going to head in the direction we want them to be or if we don't see material value creation over time, we're likely to look at exiting assets in legal just like in every other division. Okay?
Yes, back there.
Thomas A. Singlehurst - Citigroup Inc, Research Division
It's Tom Singlehurst from Citigroup. This is probably a bit unfair, but it feels from the outside that you guys are not begin to multitasking, you seem to be doing one thing at a time.
First stage, obviously, balance sheet repair and products reinvestment. We go through a process of disposals.
I know there are a few acquisitions in the mix, but primarily sort of disposal-focused portfolio restructure. Should we interpret the proactive buyback as a beginning of a sort of golden age of sort of proactive cash usage?
And in particular, should we see an acceleration in bolt-on deals?
Erik Engstrom
I'm sorry, let me -- could we get that last piece again? What's the last sentence?
Thomas A. Singlehurst - Citigroup Inc, Research Division
Should we expect an acceleration in the number of bolt-on deals that you're doing?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. I'm not going to comment on the multitasking thing here.
But you said, are we going to see an acceleration in bolt-ons or are we going to continue down this path? The strategy that we have outlined, we're going to continue down the same path, which is primarily organic growth-driven, primarily organic investment, transforming the profile of the business, improving the business profile [indiscernible] making more predictable over time higher growth and improving returns.
Because we are now at a balance sheet level that we're very comfortable with, I said we were very comfortable at 2.3x. I said we're very comfortable at 2.2x.
I'll say we're very comfortable today at 2.1x. We're in a leverage range that we're comfortable with and therefore, we believe that with our strong cash flow and our average acquisition spend comfortably covered by our free cash flow on average, on average, therefore, we can use the cash that is generated on business to buy back shares beyond the gross disposal, so we're roughly remaining in this leverage range.
So the answer to that is do I see inherently a strategic acceleration in bolt-on deals? No, I don't.
I see our strategic direction being the same, the kind of strategy we're pursuing the same, the kind of deals we look out as the same. But the availability and the timing of the entire course can change.
If you look at what we bought over the last 3 years, we have bought many different companies every single year. They have averaged GBP 300 million a year in total, but we've only bought one that was in the hundreds of millions, that was Accuity.
All other deals have been in the tens of millions. So by the time you add it up, it averages one number.
But of course, it can fluctuate within a year. Is it possible we find 2 Accuitys in one calendar year?
Yes, that's possible. Is it possible we have none for 1 year or 2?
Yes, possible. Could there be a company out there at some point in the future that's larger?
It could be. But we're not looking for any major transformational deals and we're not looking to pump up the pipeline in any way beyond that strategy we've already outlined.
Does that answer your question? Okay, let's keep going forward here.
Sorry, you can take him back before we do that.
Alexander Christian DeGroote - Panmure Gordon & Co. plc, Research Division
It's Alex DeGroote at Panmure Gordon here. I'm just going to follow up to Tom's question re buybacks.
So just to be clear then, the increment that you've announced today, which I think is GBP 200 million, should we embed that into our numbers going forward FY '14, FY '15? Will it go higher, lower?
Erik Engstrom
Well, we have not, at this point, made any decisions as to what we would be looking at for next year's cash flow or buybacks. And of course, it does depend on the question we just discussed, which is what exactly are we buying at any given point in time.
But I think you should see today, not as an indication of what a number would be or what we will be doing exactly in terms of numbers, but rather as an illustration of what we think is a pragmatic approach to the cash availability in the company and being comfortable in a current leverage range. Okay.
Can we now go forward here? Over there, yes.
Claudio Aspesi - Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC., Research Division
Claudio Aspesi, Sanford Bernstein. Two questions, please.
Bloomberg Law sales force continues to say that they're going to target particularly the LexisNexis pool of money as they try to grow their share of the U.S. legal market.
Can you give us a flavor for what kind of actions you're taking to protect the current share? And the second question refers back to something you mentioned earlier about the growth of author-pay articles.
In the past, you had a policy of returning to your customers the revenues from author pays, so that you will not effectively double dip as the industry calls it. Can you please tell us whether that policy is going to continue?
And if so, what mechanisms do you have in place to ensure that you hand the money back?
Erik Engstrom
Yes. The first question here, Bloomberg Law, since -- I mean, as you know, we -- Bloomberg is a very large successful company, has been very successful over many years.
And we have watched them very closely since they first entered the legal business about a decade ago. And we've watched them -- continue to watch them closely since the acquisition of BNA.
And what we have seen in the marketplace is, since the acquisition of BNA and the rebranding of BNA, the brand has become significantly more visible in the marketplace and with certain customer audiences. But that was primarily in a segment that is not a direct -- competitive segment to our segment.
The broad-based legal research and litigation platform business, where it's really our big core business, we have not seen any material change in competitive behavior or competitive dynamics in the recent past. And clearly, what are we doing?
Well, as you know, we're spending a very large amount of time, effort and money rebuilding not just our platform of new Lexis but also the content sets, the search tools, the workflow tools beyond it. So content and complete replatforming of the technology, a complete rebuild of the back-office infrastructure, supporting infrastructure, expanding the content sets, as well as continue to launch lots of different tools and solutions on top, that we think are gradually improving our relative positioning in the market.
So that's the legal side. When it comes to author pays, yes, you're correctly describing the situation in the past for most publishers, which is that if you have one journal and you have a sponsored article "inside an existing subscriber journal," how do you avoid the so-called double dip?
Do you charge for the article for one side and you charge the things at -- in that specific journal? The policy we have had and continue to have is that we charge subscribers for the subscription article volume and the subscription articles that the author pays or those come on the side, so that you don't include in your prices and in your price setting and your revenue stream the author-pays articles that are affiliated with that brand.
So that's the mechanism that it has existed for many years and continues to exist. Of course, what is happening today, when you have author-pays article or sponsored articles or open-access articles or whatever word you like to use, what's happening is that some of the volume is coming into your existing journals.
And many, even in the industry, many more of them are coming in separate brands or separate journals that are being started or spun out. So that there's a fair amount of volume that's happening in the separate sort of author-paid world that is not impacting the subscription journals.
Volume is not growing, it is not shrinking yet, all right. So these are really partly, and a smaller part of the industry is just the inside an existing journal where there is a direct offset, right, meaning you don't actually count them for the subscription business.
And separately, you have the author-pays volume and author-pays journals sort of full open, actually, where the volume is growing, and you don't know where it's coming from. But it's growing volume that you're getting revenue from and therefore is, if it's not revenue you had before, it's therefore incremental revenue in that segment.
But inside the journal, there is the offset, we have a mechanism, we've had the mechanism, we continue to operate that mechanism. So there is no perceived double dipping inside any journal, any subscription journal.
Matthew Walker - Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., Research Division
It's Matthew from Nomura. I've got a couple of questions, please.
The first one is, could you aggregate the -- what is the organic growth of the 8 acquisitions that you've made if you aggregated them? The same question for the 11 disposals that you made.
Second question is on legal. We've seen an improvement in the U.S.
economy for some time. I think your position really is that the legal business will follow GDP with a lag, i.e., that there isn't really any sort of significant structural change to the legal market per se.
When do you think we might see an improvement in the U.S. legal business to follow the improvement in U.S.
GDP?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. Well, that's -- if you start with the -- to make sure I understand what you said, what is the organic growth of the acquisitions made this year, the 8 that add up to GBP 100 million?
I haven't done -- I haven't calculated that number, so I can't tell you the number. But on average, the businesses that we buy our higher growth than the businesses we have, of course, right?
That's to be expected on average. Not every single asset we buy would have that directly affiliated with it.
Because sometimes, we do buy an asset base, a content, a database or something and it doesn't -- we fold it in and therefore drives accelerated growth in our core business. But it's not that, that asset by itself would have a growing separate revenue stream, because sometimes you buy small assets like that and incorporate them in our platforms.
But what exactly that numbers is, it's hard for me to say. It depends on the profile of what you're buying on any one time period.
This year, of course, we bought some exhibitions in Mexico and we've done some higher growth assets, so it should be materially higher. But it's a very, very small piece, of course, when you spend GBP 100 million on it.
The second question on our disposals. Depends on which time period you picked.
If you say, again, the ones we disposed of this year, if you say the ones we disposed in the first half this year, well, the biggest one we disposed of was screening. And you saw how that was doing in the second half of last year, first half of last year.
Order magnitude, it was growing probably just below mid-single digits, right? Or in that kind of range, and you've seen -- we've disclosed that separately for the last couple of years.
You know the growth profile of our screening business. The smaller ones we've sold this year have mostly been local RBI operations in different countries that would fall into the category of what we've called in RBI typically as other business magazines and services, which had been essentially stable, or in most countries, you'd expect that those would've been flat.
So if you average out all of these, where do you end up? Not sure where the average is, but that gives you the profile, yes.
Last year, of course, we sold Totaljobs, which is going well into double digits. It's a very high-growth business.
So -- but it depends on what falls in which time period. Want to come this way?
Sorry, I forgot. Sorry, I'm sorry.
I apologize. What was that about multitasking?
So U.S. legal, yes.
We don't believe that we are a good indicator of -- sort of leading indicator of economic activity. We think that many of the industries we serve are, in particular, legal industry, they are serving a customer set.
So our customers have their customers. So when their customers -- our core activity picks up, then our customers start to do that and then it comes to us afterwards.
We're normally more of a lagging corporation both going into economic downturns and coming out of economic downturns, maybe history would indicate that, that's the traditional pattern. So therefore, if you look at signs for U.S.
legal industry picking up, we're probably not the right people to ask, even though at this point, I have to say, if you look at what other people are doing today, documenting what's going on in the legal industry, legal industry hiring, billings and so on. From what we've seen that's available, it fluctuates quarter-to-quarter, the growth rates.
But we have not seen any sustained trend change at this point that we can talk about. To me, it looks like very similar to last year or 2 in the U.S., which is what you're talking about.
Okay?
Andrea Beneventi - Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
It's Andrea Beneventi from Kepler. I have actually 4 questions left in my list, but they're all short.
So I will try to ask the 4. How much of the 2 points of growth of Elsevier come from emerging markets?
We don't talk a lot about it, but I think it may start to be an important component. The second is the share of Elsevier revenues coming from OpenAccess in all its colors and forms.
Could you update me on this one? Third is on journal subscriptions, is revenue still growing by something like 4%?
I have that in mind for last year. And finally, the share of legal revenues from the solo lawyers, any progress in addressing this segment, please?
Erik Engstrom
Okay. I want to make sure I really understood your first question.
Emerging markets revenue growth, you're talking about what -- yes, emerging markets revenue growth for Elsevier, was the question?
Andrea Beneventi - Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
Yes. I mean, within the 2 points of organic growth of underlying growth of Elsevier, how much of that comes from new contracts in emerging markets?
Erik Engstrom
I see. Okay.
I think you have to look at Elsevier in a slightly different fashion. I think you have to say that, if you look at the whole thing, we have declines in Elsevier in print book sales to individuals and educational markets, and we have declines for our promotion.
The rest is growing therefore higher, because those declines are mid- to high-single digits, as you know. So there, if you take the rest, it's therefore, on average, going higher.
So you need to divide out. Because those 2 segments are behaving slightly differently in emerging markets.
So if you take the emerging markets growth, you would say, Elsevier is almost entirely 1/3 North America, 1/3 Europe, 1/3 the rest of the world. Your definition of emerging markets might be different from mine and different from what they call themselves.
But if you assume, just broadly speaking, that rest of world is half emerging, which is what most people tend to think for our businesses, you could say that, on that kind of categorization, you're not talking to 1/2 of 1/3 that you might call emerging. And typically, the growth rates in those could be, on average, in the high-single digits.
So you can then do your math yourself and figure out which part falls where, but that's roughly where it is. And you have to, with the way we look at it is that these emerging markets, they're clearly grow faster and you can look at their GDP growth and so on, and that comes through into our business as well.
But we want to make sure that we have a sustainable share of that growth and that we can continue to grow with them over many years. So that's...
Andrea Beneventi - Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
So 1 point out of 2?
Erik Engstrom
I'm sorry?
Andrea Beneventi - Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
1 point out of 2.
Erik Engstrom
I'm not sure I understand how you would do that math. If you took 1/2 of 1/3 and then say that, that grows in the mid-to-high single digits as opposed to where the rest would be, excluding the education and pharma, I'm not sure I get to that big a number.
If I did the math, I think I'd get to a smaller different than that, to be honest. Because -- yes, so you said OpenAccess revenues.
How much is it in total, is that what you said?
Andrea Beneventi - Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
Yes.
Erik Engstrom
Yes. In total, broadly speaking, order of magnitude for Elsevier's research business.
Broadly speaking, this is order of magnitude: 1% of the volume, 1% of the revenue, order of magnitude. What exactly it is in the half year versus before?
It's up significantly from last year, but it is order magnitude, it's a percent, right? This is not on a big piece.
You talked about the journals business, how is that growing, broadly speaking? Is it growing similar to last year?
Yes, the trends are, broadly speaking, very similar to a year ago. If you'd add it all up across the whole world on the ongoing like-for-like subscription-based revenues, which I think is what you're asking, it's very similar to 1 year ago, even though there are individual differences by customer and by geography.
Last one, solo lawyers, you said specifically. Solo lawyers are not big consumers of legal information tools.
They are users and they're interesting, and we are very happy to serve them. But as a share of the total spend, they are a very small portion.
We have tools for them, and we sell them and we launched it. It was on the earliest segments that we targeted with the new Lexis platform.
And we have made good progress, and we're very pleased with how it's going. But if you look at it again, in the scale of LexisNexis or even legal U.S., U.S.
legal, it is not something that you're going to be able to track or say that this has a significant impact on the revenue profile. Okay.
Well, thank you very much for joining us. And I look forward to seeing you again soon.