Form 8-K

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 8-K

 

CURRENT REPORT

 

Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934

 

Date of Report: September 10, 2003

(Date of earliest event reported)

 

HEIDRICK & STRUGGLES INTERNATIONAL, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in the charter)

 

Delaware   000-25837   36-2681268
(State or other jurisdiction
of incorporation)
  (Commission File No.)  

(IRS Employer

Identification No.)

 

233 South Wacker Drive, Suite 4200

Chicago, Illinois 60606-6303

(Address of Principal Executive Offices)

 

312-496-1200

(Registrant’s telephone number including area code)

 

n/a

(Former name or former address, if changed since last report)

 


Item 7.    Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

(c) Exhibits.

 

Exhibit
Number


  

Description


99.1    

  

Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.

CL King Investor Presentation

 

 

Item 9.    Regulation FD Disclosure

 

Additional information of the registrant is attached as Exhibit 99.1 to this report and is incorporated herein by reference. The registrant undertakes no obligation to update this information including any forward-looking statements, to reflect subsequently occurring events or circumstances.

 

NOTE: The information in this report (including the exhibit) is furnished pursuant to Item 9 and shall not be deemed to be “filed” for the purpose of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section. The inclusion of the information contained herein will not be deemed an admission as to the materiality of any of this information.

 


SIGNATURE

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

 

HEIDRICK & STRUGGLES INTERNATIONAL, INC.

/S/    FRITZ E. FREIDINGER         


Fritz E. Freidinger, Secretary

 

Dated: September 10, 2003

Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc. CL King Investor Presentation

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HEIDRICK & STRUGGLES

 

C L King

Best Ideas Conference

September 10, 2003


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Safe Harbor Statement

 

This news release contains forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections about the industry in which we operate and management’s beliefs and assumptions. Forward-looking statements may be identified by the use of words such as “expects,” “anticipates,” “intends,” “plans,” “believes,” “seeks,” “estimates,” and similar expressions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain known and unknown risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed, forecasted or implied in the forward-looking statements. Factors that may affect the outcome of the forward-looking statements include, among other things, our ability to attract and retain qualified executive search consultants; further deterioration of the economies in the United States, Europe, or elsewhere; social or political instability in markets where we operate; price competition; an inability to achieve the planned cost savings from our cost-reduction initiatives; an inability to sublease or assign unused office space; our ability to generate profits in order to ensure that our deferred tax assets are realizable; and delays in the development and/or implementation of new technology and systems. Our reports filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also include information on factors that may affect the outcome of forward-looking statements. We undertake no obligation to update publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.


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Business Overview


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Heidrick & Struggles

 

  World’s premiere executive search and leadership consulting firm

 

– Executive Search

 

– Leadership Services

 

    Executive assessment and coaching

 

    Interim executive placement

 

  Global network of approximately 320 consultants working from 52 offices in principal cities of the world


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Global Presence

 

North America

   Europe

Atlanta

   Greenwich    San Francisco    Amsterdam    Helsinki    Paris

Boston

   Houston    Toronto    Barcelona    Istanbul*    Rome

Chicago

   Los Angeles    Tyson’s Corner    Berlin    Johannesburg*    Stockholm

Cleveland

   Menlo Park    Wall Street (NY)    Brussels    Lisbon    Vienna

Dallas

   New York         Copenhagen    London    Warsaw

Denver

   Philadelphia         Dusseldorf    Madrid    Zurich
               Frankfurt    Milan     
               Hamburg    Munich     
    

Latin America

        Asia Pacific
    

Bogota*

   Mexico City         Beijing    Shanghai
    

Buenos Aires

   Miami         Hong Kong    Singapore
    

Caracas*

   Santiago         Melbourne    Sydney
    

Lima*

   Sao Paulo         Mumbai    Taipei
                    New Delhi    Tokyo
                    Seoul     

 

*   Affiliate relationship


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Diverse Geographic Mix*

 

[PIE CHART]

 

*   YTD net revenue through June 30, 2003


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Diverse Industry Practice Mix*

 

[PIE CHART]

 

*   YTD net revenue through June 30, 2003


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World’s Largest Search Firms

 

    

Firm


  

2002 Revenue


  

Heidrick & Struggles

   $ 350.7 M    

  

Korn/Ferry

   338.3 M

  

Spencer Stuart

   269.4 M

  

Egon Zehnder

   264.9 M

  

Russell Reynolds

   196.1 M

  

Ray & Berndtson

   103.1 M

  

Amrop Hever Group

   102.5 M

  

Whitehead Mann

     94.0 M

  

Hudson Highland Group

     66.1 M

  

L.L.C. Partners

     50.2 M

 

Source: Kennedy Information


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Our Mission

 

We help our clients build the best leadership teams in the world


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Focus on Top-Level Services

 

  Board, CEO and other senior-level searches generate the majority of our revenue

 

  Advantages of top-level searches

 

    Provides access and influence with decision makers

 

    Strengthens the Heidrick & Struggles brand

 

    Generates higher fees per search

 

    Establishes barriers to entry

 

    Attracts and retains high-caliber consultants

 

    Increases probability of downstream work


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Representative CEO/Board Searches in 2002-2003

 

[LOGO OF JENNY CRAIG]   [LOGO OF CHUBB]   [LOGO OF NUCOR]        
        [LOGO OF NUCOR]   [LOGO OF HARRIS]   [LOGO OF BAUSCH & LOMB
[LOGO OF TOMKINS]       [LOGO OF KENDALL JACKSON]   [LOGO OF FORD]   [LOGO OF GOODRICH]
    [LOGO OF CALPERS]            

[LOGO OF IKON]

  [LOGO OF BRITISH ENERGY]  

[LOGO OF BERTELSMANN]

  [LOGO OF WASHINGTON]
    [LOGO OF THE NUTRASWEET COMPANY]  

[LOGO OF NS]

  [LOGO OF NORFOLK SOUTHERN
[LOGO OF GAP]   [LOGO OF NASDAQ®]            
    [LOGO OF RR DONNELLEY]  

[LOGO OF RJ REYNOLDS]

  [LOGO OF PRINCIPAL®]


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Economics of the Firm

 

  Fees

 

– For executive search it is one-third of placement’s first year cash compensation

 

    Includes salary and bonus

 

    Billed in three monthly installments

 

– Project based for board services, leadership services

 

  Consultant compensation

 

– Primarily cash

 

– 70% based on revenue generation (formula based) and 30% on quality and other firm building behaviors

 

– Formula-based component structured on progressive tiers structure


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Financial Performance


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Revenue Performance & Consultant Headcount

 

[GRAPH]


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Realigned Cost Structure

 

  Reduced costs by over $200 million

 

– Reduced workforce by 40%

 

– Eliminated excess real estate, bringing the number of offices down from a high of 80 in 2001 to 52 today

 

– Reduced management roles by 30%

 

– Implemented centralized purchasing programs


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Pro Forma Financial Results*

 

(Dollars in millions, except per share data)

 

     Six Months Ended June 30,

   

YOY

Change


 
     2003

   2002

   

Net Revenue

   $ 159.0    $ 185.2     $ (26.2 )

Net Income (Loss)*

   $ 4.0    $ (2.1 )   $ 6.1  

Per Share*

   $ 0.21    $ (0.12 )   $ 0.33  

 

*   Pro forma results exclude special charges primarily for severance and office closings, gains and losses on the company’s equity and warrant portfolio, and write-downs on investments in technology venture capital funds. Also excluded are goodwill amortization and reimbursements of out-of-pocket expenses. A full reconciliation of actual and pro forma results is provided on the company website, www.heidrick.com.


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Outlook

 

(last provided on July 31, 2003)

 

Third Quarter 2003

 

Expected revenue range of $70-80 million

 

    Corresponding results would range from a loss per share of $0.07 to diluted earnings per share of $0.10, excluding special items


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Strong Balance Sheet

 

  Strongest in the industry

 

  Cash flow positive in 2002 despite significant restructuring activity

 

  Ended second quarter of 2003 with $96 million cash and no debt

 

  Expect $100-110 million cash at end of third quarter of 2003


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Strategic Initiatives


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Strategic Focus

 

  Some ongoing work on the cost structure

 

  Majority of attention will be spent on market-facing activities


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Strategic Initiatives

 

  Expand aggressively our share of senior-level search, supported by our capabilities in complementary leadership services


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Strategic Initiatives

 

  Expand aggressively our share of senior-level search, supported by our capabilities in complementary leadership services

 

  Build broader, deeper client relationships


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Strategic Initiatives

 

  Expand aggressively our share of senior-level search, supported by our capabilities in complementary leadership services

 

  Build broader, deeper client relationships

 

  Attract and retain the best consultants


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Strategic Initiatives

 

  Expand aggressively our share of senior-level search, supported by our capabilities in complementary leadership services

 

  Build broader, deeper client relationships

 

  Attract and retain the best consultants

 

  Improve profitability and cash flow


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This Is A Growth Business

 

  The past four years have been aberrations

 

– 1999 and 2000 saw hyper-growth

 

– 2001 and 2002 saw severe contraction

 

  Cyclicality more pronounced than previous recessions

 

  1993-1998 CAGR was 24%

 

  Double-digit growth rates should return when the economy improves

 

  Fundamentals remain strong


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Fundamentals Are Strong

 

  Shortage of management talent

 

  Higher-caliber talent is aspirant and mobile

 

  Executive management tenures are at an all time low

 

  Focus on corporate governance will create opportunities

 

  Cash compensation of placements will continue to rise


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Summary

 

Strengths

 

  Premier brand name in executive search

 

  Unparalleled group of consultants

 

  Outstanding client base

 

  Strongest balance sheet in the sector

 

Goals

 

  Capitalize on our strengths

 

  Improve margins and cash flow

 

  Continue to invest in people and initiatives


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HEIDRICK & STRUGGLES


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Reconciliation of Pro Forma Results

 

The following is a reconciliation of the company’s actual and pro forma financial information.

 

The pro forma financial information is included because the company believes that it more accurately reflects its core operations.


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Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.

Consolidated Statements of Operations

(In thousands, except per share data)

 

     Six Months Ended June 30,

 
     2003

    2002

 
     Actual

    Adjustments

    Pro forma

    Actual

    Adjustments

     Pro forma

 

Revenue:

                                                 

Revenue before reimbursements (net revenue)

   $ 158,985     $ —       $ 158,985     $ 185,199     $ —        $ 185,199  

Reimbursements (1)

     11,886       (11,886 )     —         13,317       (13,317 )      —    
    


 


 


 


 


  


Total revenue

     170,871       (11,886 )     158,985       198,516       (13,317 )      185,199  

Operating expenses:

                                                 

Salaries and employee benefits (2)

     117,067       (8,016 )     109,051       133,170       —          133,170  

General and administrative expenses

     42,960       —         42,960       56,060       —          56,060  

Reimbursed expenses (1)

     11,886       (11,886 )     —         13,317       (13,317 )      —    

Restructuring charges (3)

     5,500       (5,500 )     —         23,169       (23,169 )      —    
    


 


 


 


 


  


Total operating expenses

     177,413       (25,402 )     152,011       225,716       (36,486 )      189,230  
    


 


 


 


 


  


Operating income (loss)

     (6,542 )     13,516       6,974       (27,200 )     23,169        (4,031 )

Non-operating income (expense):

                                                 

Interest income

     960       —         960       911       —          911  

Interest expense

     (90 )     —         (90 )     (88 )     —          (88 )

Net realized and unrealized gains (losses) on equity and warrant portfolio (4)

     248       (248 )     —         (1,242 )     1,242        —    

Write-down of long-term investment (5)

     —         —         —         (5,000 )     5,000        —    

Other, net

     (1,137 )     —         (1,137 )     107       —          107  
    


 


 


 


 


  


Net non-operating income (expense)

     (19 )     (248 )     (267 )     (5,312 )     6,242        930  

Income (loss) before income taxes

     (6,561 )     13,268       6,707       (32,512 )     29,411        (3,101 )

Provision for (benefit from) income taxes (6)

     2,785       (35 )     2,750       (11,380 )     10,364        (1,016 )
    


 


 


 


 


  


Net income (loss)

   $ (9,346 )   $ 13,303     $ 3,957     $ (21,132 )   $ 19,047      $ (2,085 )
    


 


 


 


 


  


Basic earnings (loss) per common share

   $ (0.52 )           $ 0.22     $ (1.17 )            $ (0.12 )

Basic weighted average common shares outstanding

     18,147               18,147       18,074                18,074  

Diluted earnings (loss) per common share

   $ (0.52 )           $ 0.21     $ (1.17 )            $ (0.12 )

Diluted weighted average common shares outstanding

     18,147               18,731       18,074                18,074  

Salaries and employee benefits margin

     73.6 %             68.6 %     71.9 %              71.9 %

General and administrative expense margin

     27.0 %             27.0 %     30.3 %              30.3 %

Effective tax rate

     —                 41.0 %     35.0 %              32.8 %


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(1)   Emerging Issues Task Force (“EITF”) Issue No. 01-14, “Income Statement Characterization of Reimbursements Received for ‘Out-of-Pocket’ Expenses Incurred,” (EITF No. 01-14) establishes that reimbursements received for certain out-of-pocket expenses should be reported as revenue. Similarly, the corresponding operating expenses are presented separately in operating expenses. The pro forma results exclude the impact of adopting EITF No. 01-14.

 

(2)   In the second quarter of 2003, Mr. Piers Marmion resigned as Chief Executive Officer. In addition, Mr. David Anderson, who was previously the President and Chief Operating Officer, also resigned. As a result, the Company recorded a charge of $5.2 million in the second quarter of 2003 for these separation charges. The charges are considered part of the Corporate segment. The pro forma results exclude the impact of these separation-related charges.

 

Also in the second quarter of 2003, the Company recorded other severance-related expenses of $2.8 million. By segment, the severance-related expenses (excluding the separation charges for Messrs. Marmion and Anderson) are as follows: North America $0.5 million; Europe $2.0 million; Asia Pacific $0.2 million; Corporate $0.1 million. The pro forma results exclude the impact of these severance-related expenses.


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(3)   In June 2001, October 2001 and October 2002 the Company announced reductions in its workforce and the consolidation and closing of offices and as a result recorded restructuring charges of $53.2 million and $48.5 million in 2001 and 2002, respectively.

 

In the first quarter of 2003, the Company recorded an additional $5.5 million of restructuring charges related to unused office space that has yet to be sublet and which will remain vacant for periods longer than previously anticipated. By segment, the restructuring charges recorded in the 2003 first quarter are $0.4 million in North America and $5.1 million in Europe. No restructuring charges were recorded in the second quarter of 2003.

 

In the first quarter of 2002, the Company recorded $23.2 million of restructuring charges related to reductions in its workforce and the consolidation and closing of offices. The 2002 first quarter restructuring charges include $10.4 million of severance and other employee-related costs and $12.8 million related to the consolidation and closing of offices. By segment, the restructuring charges recorded in the first quarter of 2002 are as follows: North America $13.3 million; Latin America $0.1 million; Europe $7.0 million; Asia Pacific $0.3 million; Corporate $2.5 million. No restructuring charges were recorded in the second quarter of 2002.

 

The pro forma results exclude the impact of these restructuring charges.

 

(4)   The Company receives warrants for equity securities in its client companies, in addition to its cash fee, for services rendered on some searches. Some of the warrants meet the definition of a derivative instrument under SFAS No. 133, “Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities,” and its subsequent amendments. The warrants are recorded at fair value, net of consultants’ bonuses. In accordance with SFAS No. 133, changes in the fair value of the derivative instruments are recorded in the Consolidated Statements of Operations. Each quarter’s results of operations are affected by the fluctuations in the fair value of these derivative instruments. Upon a value event such as an initial public offering or an acquisition, the equity securities arising from the exercise of the warrant are monetized, resulting in a realized gain, net of consultants’ bonuses and other costs. The pro forma results exclude the impact of the realized and unrealized gains (losses) related to the equity and warrant portfolio.


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(5)   During the second quarter of 2002, the Company wrote down its remaining investment in ETF Group, incurring a non-cash charge of $5.0 million. ETF Group is a Europe-based venture capital firm that helps emerging companies expand into international markets. The pro forma results exclude the impact of this write-down.

 

(6)   The Company’s tax provision reflects an expense of $1.2 million and $4.3 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2003, respectively, for the reduction of deferred tax assets related to the excess of expense for accounting purposes over the related tax deduction for tax purposes that occurred upon the vesting of restricted stock units in the first half of 2003. The pro forma tax rate excludes the impact of this expense as well as the impact of restructuring charges and other items which are adjusted for pro forma purposes.