KC McClure
Chief Financial Officer at Accenture
Thank you, Julie, happy holidays to all of you, and thanks for taking the time to join us on today's call. We are pleased with our Q1 results, which were in line with our expectations and include continued investments at scale to strengthen our position as a leader in the market. Once again, our results illustrate our ability to manage our business with rigor and discipline, and deliver value for our shareholders. So, let me begin by summarizing a few of the highlights for the quarter.
Revenues grew 1% local currency with mid-single digit growth or higher in five of our 13 industries, including public service, industrial, utilities, health and energy. As expected, we saw continued pressure in our CMT Industry Group, and we continued to take market share.
As a reminder, we assess market growth against our investable basket, which is roughly two dozen of our closest global public competitors, which represents about a third of our addressable market. We use a consistent methodology to compare our financial results to theirs, adjusted to exclude the impact of any significant acquisitions through the date of their last publicly available results on a rolling four quarter basis.
We delivered adjusted EPS in the quarter of $3.27, reflecting 6% growth over EPS last year. Adjusted operating margin was 16.7% for the quarter, an increase of 20 basis points over Q1 last year, and includes significant investments in our people, in our business.
Finally, we delivered free cash flow of $430 million and returned $2 billion to shareholders through repurchases and dividends. We also invested $788 million in acquisitions across 12 transactions in the quarter.
With those high-level comments, let me turn to some of the details, starting with new bookings. New bookings were $18.4 billion for the quarter, representing 14% growth in U.S. dollars and 12% growth in local currency, with a book to bill of 1.1. Consulting bookings were $8.6 billion with a book to bill of 1.0. Managed services bookings were $9.8 billion with a book to bill of 1.3.
Turning now to revenues, revenues for the quarter were $16.2 billion, a 3% increase in U.S. dollars and 1% local currency, and we're at the top end of our guided range, adjusted for a foreign exchange tailwind of approximately 1.5% compared to the 2.5% estimate provided last quarter.
Consulting revenues for the quarter were $8.5 billion flat in U.S. dollars and a decline to 2% in local currency. Managed services revenues were $7.8 billion, up 6% U.S. dollars and 5% local currency. Taking a closer look at our service dimensions, technology services grew mid-single digits, Operations was flat and Strategy and Consulting declined mid-single digits.
Turning to our geographic markets. In North America, revenue declined 1% local currency, growth was led by public service, offset by declines in communications and media, software and platforms, and banking and capital markets.
Before I continue, I want to highlight that for this fiscal year '24, we have reorganized our geographic segments. Europe is now EMEA, and includes the Middle East and Africa, which were previously included in growth markets. The reclassification for prior years can be found in our Investor Relations website.
In EMEA, revenues grew 2% local currency led by growth in public service and banking and capital markets, partially offset by decline in communications and media. Revenue growth was driven by Italy, Austria and France, partially offset by a decline in the United Kingdom.
In growth markets, we delivered 5% revenue growth in local currency, driven by growth in chemicals and natural resources, public service and banking and capital markets. Revenue growth was led by Japan.
Moving down the income statement, gross margin for the quarter was 33.6% compared to 32.9% for the first quarter last year. Sales and marketing expense for the quarter was 10.5% compared with 9.8% for the first quarter last year. General and administrative expense was 6.4% compared to 6.6% for the same quarter last year.
Before I continue, I want to note that in Q1, we recorded $140 million in costs associated with our business optimization actions, which decreased operating margin by 90 basis points and EPS by $0.17. The following comparisons exclude these impacts and reflect adjusted results.
Adjusted operating income was $2.7 billion in the first quarter, reflecting a 16.7% operating margin, an increase of 20 basis points from operating margin in Q1 last year. Our adjusted effective tax rate for the quarter was 23.2% compared with an effective tax rate of 23.3% for the first quarter last year.
Adjusted diluting earnings per share were $3.27, compared with diluted EPS of $3.08 in the first quarter last year. Day service outstanding were 49 days compared to 42 days last quarter and 48 days in the first quarter of last year.
Free cash flow for the quarter was $430 million, resulting from cash generated by operating activities of $499 million, net of property and equipment additions of $69 million. Our cash balance at November 30th was $7.1 billion, compared with $9 billion at August 31.
With regards to our ongoing objective to return cash to shareholders, in the first quarter, we repurchased or redeemed 3.8 million shares for $1.2 billion at an average price of $311.90 per share. At November 30, we had approximately $5.4 billion of share repurchase authority remaining. Also in November, we paid a quarterly cash dividend of $1.29 per share for a total of $810 million. This represents a 15% increase over last year, and our board of directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of $1.29 per share to be paid on February 15th, a 15% increase over last year.
So, in closing, we remain committed to delivering on our long standing financial objectives, growing faster than the market and taking share, generating modest margin expansion and stronger earnings, while at the same time investing at scale for our long term market leadership, generating strong free cash flow and returning a significant portion of that cash to shareholders.
And now let me turn it back to Julie.