Tom Ferguson
Analyst · Sidoti & Company. Please go ahead
Thank you, Joe. Good morning to everybody and welcome to our third quarter earnings call. Results in Q3 were quite disappointing as we faced continued contraction in our markets due to the economic fallout of low oil patch activity, lower solar opportunities, and a low level of major refinery turnarounds. Despite these current challenges, AZZ is well-positioned to benefit from improved market conditions as our energy and galvanizing businesses are important components in the development and upgrading of new infrastructure projects. As we have previously discussed, a number of high value, high organic growth initiatives have been undertaken, and while we are focused upon keeping our corporate overhead structure as lean as possible, we made a conscious decision to continue these investments and increase the leadership necessary to accelerate their impact. While we were not overly surprised by the reduced volumes in Q2, we thought we were seeing some improvement as we entered Q3 from our core markets, but this did not transpire. Our operating teams have proven very effective at managing their day-to-day business. They did recommend and initiated some important realignment actions during Q2 in the face of lower market opportunities. Although the revenue growth and margin improvement have not yet materialized, we expect measurable traction as we enter the new fiscal year. And finally, the resources we expected to be freed up as part of the NLI divestiture were not since the transaction has not yet closed. As I look at what impacted the quarter beyond the weak market activity, NLI was about $2 million of operating income below our expectations for Q3. But most of this income just moved into Q4 or Q1 of fiscal year 2018. The NLI disruption on the team is hard to measure, but probably has cost us another $1 million in expenses and delayed closing on three impending acquisitions. The issue from my perspective with closing is not due to any lack of willingness between the parties, but due to the uncertainty of the nuclear market in the United States. We remain committed to the organic growth initiatives in galvanizing and chose not to reduce expenses on these in spite of the challenging market conditions. I am pleased we are in the process of introducing a new product, which will be manufactured in a repurpose galvanizing plant. AZZ’s new GalvaBar is corrosion resistant galvanized rebar treated with a specialized zinc alloy that provides corrosion protection to prevent concrete failure. With the added benefit of exceptional formability, GalvaBar can be bent or stretched after the galvanizing process is complete without cracking, peeling, or flaking. We expect GalvaBar to provide significantly greater value for customers compared to the current computing products that lack many of GalvaBar’s attributes. We are also repurchasing another underutilized site to support growing demand for our new service offerings. We have also formed a working partnership with Natina products to produce Natina Steel, which is ideally suited for our galvanized products. Natina Steel is a surface treatment that chemically reacts with galvanizing to create a rustic brown finish that naturally blends into the surroundings. These activities amount to about $1 million per quarter in expenses, but these initiatives are critical to fiscal year 2018 and beyond. We also made the decision to keep the Brazil WSI facility open in anticipation of activity at Petrobras in fiscal year 2018. Galvanizing was impacted by lower activity in the oil-producing states of Oklahoma, Texas, and Louisiana, continued weakness in solar and still muted bridge and highway and industrial spending in many areas. The good news in the quarter was we did a good job of driving price realization as zinc costs increased resulting in improved margins year-over-year. WSI was negatively impacted by lower than expected major refinery turnarounds with projects being deferred to the spring season. While we had about the same number of projects as last year for WSI, the projects were smaller emerging work jobs that did not result in much incremental work once we were onsite. It was just patching repair type jobs for the most part. These deferred maintenance projects will have to be done sometime in the near future, while we did have some nice projects in nuclear and completed our first waterjet painting project. Overall activity was still muted versus prior year. The electrical platform for the most part had a good quarter led by our enclosure business, which had the benefit of the acquired PEI business. But this was offset by continued weakness in our oilpatch-related businesses of tubing and lighting. By the way, the PEI business has been an outstanding addition and is performing very well and brought some great talent into our organization as well. It was offset – it has offset the impact of low oilpatch activity within electrical. We did have a very good bookings quarter in electrical, primarily international projects in high-voltage bus, which provides us a solid backlog as we entered the next fiscal year. I believe we could have done a better job of forecasting the market activity going into the third quarter. Naturally, we do a better job on the energy side since we have project-based backlog, but struggle more on the galvanizing side that has no backlog. We have implemented salesforce.com to help us with customer relations, opportunity management, and forecasting and expect to do a better job of using this tool to drive the discipline around market activity forecasting. The corrective actions we have already initiated based on the issues we faced in Q3 are as follows: we expanded the energy marketing role to include galvanizing immediately ramp up with our market activity indicators and process; implemented a formal key initiative review process to ensure these activities get the same focus as the day-to-day operations; reduced the number of initiatives to those that are mission-critical to our growth in fiscal year 2018. We brought in some outside help to drive operational improvement across the businesses with greater accountability and effectiveness. I have personally engaged more deeply in the NLI divestiture process to drive its resolution one way or another and we repurposed resources to pursue the active acquisitions more aggressively. While it is too early for these actions to have much impact on the balance of this fiscal year, I am intent on setting this up for significantly improved performance in fiscal year 2018. We have great people and very dedicated and experienced leaders within AZZ to implement and execute these strategic initiatives. I am committed to ensuring that, that happens. While we are not renewing guidance due to the ongoing uncertainty around NLI, I do not see any significant opportunities to measurably improve our operating results in Q4 compared to the prior fourth quarter. And with that, I am going to turn it over to Paul.