Thomson Reuters keeps outlook, but wary of slowing economy

Reuters

Published Nov 01, 2022 06:46AM ET

Updated Nov 01, 2022 10:22AM ET

By Nick Zieminski and Kenneth Li

NEW YORK (Reuters) -Thomson Reuters Corp kept its financial guidance for this year and next after a forecast-beating rise in third-quarter earnings on Tuesday, but warned any worsening of the economic outlook could impact its ability to meet targets.

The news and information company said its three biggest divisions - legal, tax and accounting, and corporates - had held up well to economic challenges so far, helped by a large proportion of long-term contracts in all three.

"Our results and our outlook speak to the resilience of our business," Chief Executive Steve Hasker said in an interview, calling Thomson Reuters (NYSE:TRI) products essential and not discretionary spending for clients.

But looking into next year, he said the company was monitoring cost-related inflation - labor in particular - and said technology vendors had demanded "significant" price increases.

Shares fell about 2% in morning New York and Toronto trading.

"Thomson delivered another good quarter, with solid organic growth and improved profitability," Edward Jones industrials analyst Matt Arnold said in a note. "We like the relative stability of demand for its core products. However, we believe these positives are fairly reflected in the shares."

Thomson Reuters, which owns the Westlaw legal database and the Checkpoint tax and accounting service, made $1.57 billion in quarterly sales, up 3%, slightly below expectations of $1.59 billion. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 57 cents, 7 cents ahead of estimates.

The company still sees sales growing 5.5% to 6% next year. But it noted 2023 margins were trending towards the lower end of the 39%-40% guidance range amid heightened inflation and investments.

"The cost of labor is going up, and it's a very big part of our cost base," Hasker said.

Thomson Reuters' peers include RELX Group’s LexisNexis, Bloomberg LP, News Corp (NASDAQ:NWSA)'s DowJones, and Wolters Kluwer.

The company's three main divisions reported single-digit increases in quarterly sales, as did the Reuters News division.

Reuters News makes about half its revenue from supplying Refinitiv, a data company spun off from Thomson Reuters and now owned by the London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSEG) (LSE). Thomson Reuters holds a minority stake in the LSE, worth about $6.3 billion as of Friday, which it will begin selling in tranches next year.