L. Granmayeh
Thank you, Carlos, and good morning to everyone on the call. Before I dive into a review of our financials, I wanted to reinforce Carlos' earlier comments regarding the recent disclosure of our new purpose statement and the relentless focus and alignment to our 5-year strategic objectives. This is important to mention since every decision we make, whether large or small, is aligned with our strategic vision and objectives in mind. This discipline and focus on achieving our outlined goals and executing on our vision is the foundation to generating long-term shareholder value. Now turning to our financials. Since Carlos provided an overview of our key financial metrics for this quarter, I will review a few additional financial highlights around overhead, cash flow and leverage, and I'll also provide some color on completing our recent noncore divestitures and an update on our 2024 outlook. First, I will start off with corporate overhead, where we continue to be laser-focused on spending and cost-saving opportunities. This quarter, when adjusting our special items related to the review of strategic alternatives, which concluded in late February, along with the accounting treatment of Metals transition agreement, our overhead costs totaled approximately $12.7 million or approximately 12.3% of revenue, which continues to track lower than our previously stated 13% target for the full year 2024. Next, let's discuss cash flow for the quarter. When normalizing cash flow from operations for onetime items, our cash flow from operations increased 17.1% to $22.1 million, up from $18.9 million in the same quarter last year. This solid cash flow from operations translated into robust adjusted free cash flow. As a reminder, we are transitioning our adjusted free cash flow calculation to a traditional calculation, which will include all capital expenditures. We have provided a reconciliation table at the end of our press release that provides a bridge between our historical reporting methodology that includes maintenance capital expenditures only and the more traditional methodology that includes all capital expenditures. We will continue reporting both methodologies for the remainder of 2024 before converting exclusively to the traditional methodology in 2025 and beyond. For the quarter, with maintenance capital expenditures lower than the prior year quarter, our historical calculation for adjusted free cash flow increased by $3.9 million and increased by approximately $4.7 million when including all capital expenditures over the same period. As you may notice from these numbers, capital expenditures are tracking down 29% relative to the same period last year, which again highlights our focus on disciplined capital allocation without compromising our organic growth initiatives. This strong cash flow generation, along with our well-defined capital allocation strategy brings me to my third highlight, the reduction in outstanding borrowings under our variable rate credit facility. This quarter, we were able to pay down an additional $25 million on our credit facility, reducing the outstanding borrowings to $154.1 million by quarter end. Of note, included in the $25 million pay down this quarter was approximately $10.9 million in gross proceeds from 2 noncore divestitures that were directly fueled towards paying down our credit facility. We are especially proud of the fact that our capital discipline and capital allocation strategy has allowed us to pay down approximately $62 million on our credit facility since we closed the Greenlawn acquisition at the end of the first quarter last year. The combination of decreasing leverage and increasing our EBITDA has resulted in a decrease in our leverage ratio slightly below the 5x threshold, ending at 4.99x net debt-to-EBITDA as defined by our bank covenant compliance ratio. I would like to note here that our bank leverage ratio does not allow us to add back the entirety of our special item expenses, in particular, expenses related to our review of strategic alternatives. And as a result, our leverage ratio may seem higher than a normal leverage ratio calculation. Despite the pay down, interest rates continue to hover on the same weighted average interest rate of 8.9% on our credit facility for the quarter as compared to 7.9% in the same quarter last year. However, we will receive a 25 basis point relief on our interest rate spread now that our leverage ratio has landed below 5x. Lastly, I will turn to our full year 2024 outlook, which remains unchanged despite this quarter's outperformance in our 2 noncore divestitures closed in the quarter. As a reminder, our 2024 outlook already included our 2 noncore divestitures since we already had line of sight into these transactions at the time of our last earnings call in late February. Our 2024 outlook includes for total revenue, the range is $380 million to $390 million for adjusted consolidated EBITDA, the range is $112 million to $118 million for adjusted diluted earnings per share, the range is $2.20 to $2.30. And lastly, for adjusted free cash flow, which is aligned with our historical methodology of maintenance capital expenditures only, the range is $55 million to $65 million. Though our first quarter financial performance is a solid start to the year, we are remaining prudent in reaffirming our 2024 guidance range due to the unpredictable COVID pull-forward effect that Carlos mentioned earlier, which may be combined with historically lower seasonality in the second and third quarters. We will reevaluate our performance in observed macro trends versus our guidance ranges on our next earnings call. I will conclude my remarks by reiterating my earlier point that as a management team, we are pleased with our disciplined approach around capital allocation and executing on our strategic objectives has translated into continued momentum in our first quarter 2024 results. The results speak for themselves with increased revenue, EBITDA and cash flow paired with reduced overhead and leverage with the distraction of the review of strategic alternatives behind us and an emphasis on enhancing our finance and accounting organization with key additions, especially Kathy Shanley, our new Superstar Chief Accounting Officer, who brings more than 30 years of industry experience and best practices, 2024 is a transformational year for Carriage with critical initiatives to execute on as we position the company to return to his focus on opportunistic growth through acquisition in 2025 and execute on our 5-year strategic and financial objectives. With that, I'll pass it back to the operator for questions.