Federico Trucco
Analyst · Lake Street Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Please go ahead
Thanks, Paula, and good morning to everyone. Thank you for participating in today’s call. Please turn to Slide 3. As farmers know better than anyone else, agriculture is a weather-dependent industry. And while as a company, we are dedicated to helping farmers better deal with this reality, we are not fully immune to these effects ourselves. Total revenues in the quarter were $93.3 million, 20% below the year ago quarter impacted almost exclusively by the lack of rain in Argentina, which still accounts for a significant part of our business. This drop in sales affected our profitability metrics for the period, as Enrique will discuss in a minute. In our case, portfolio diversification in terms of product type and time of use across multiple crops helps us partially mitigate weather effects within a crop season. Yet, like with farmers, there is no better alternative to geographic diversification when it comes to hedging against weather events. Here is where we can see the [indiscernible] this quarter, with contributions from North America and Brazil, including the Syngenta collaboration in that country, growing nominally and expanding 2.5x as a percent of total gross profit. Outside of the financial performance discussion, our technologies continue to be recognized by global agencies. During Climate Week in New York this past September, our bioinsecticidal platform for seed treatments received the prestigious EPA’s Green Chemistry Award. More recently, we were granted long awaited regulatory green lights for HB4 soy cultivation in Uruguay and Bolivia, making HP4 technology the second most broadly approved soybean GMO event after the former Monsanto’s Roundup Ready one traits. During today’s call, we’ll address these topics as well as provide our view on where we stand at the present and on how we continue to learn and refine our strategies to impact global agriculture. Enrique, over to you.
Enrique López Lecube: Thank you, Federico, and good morning to everyone on the call. Thanks for joining us. Let’s please turn to Slide 4. Performance this quarter was marked by a slower than usual start to the high season for summer crops planting in Argentina, driven by a substantial shift of corn acreage into soybeans as well as persistent dry period during the months of August and September. Although rainfall has normalized towards the end of the quarter and has been abundant in October which resumed commercial activity, slow pace in August and September and just in time, purchase behavior took a toll on the first quarter results. Despite other geographies having gained relative importance in the past few years, Argentina remains a decisive end market in terms of shaping our performance in the first two quarter of our fiscal year. On that note, and as Federico just mentioned, we saw good top line traction in the United States and Brazil to markets in which we have been laying the groundwork for growth. Although these are just early signs of our strategy paying out, it is encouraging to get some momentum in the two biggest ag [ph] markets in the world. Also and although at an incipient stage, we started to see some good results coming in from new markets such as Mexico or from relatively recent product launches in markets where we have a historic presence like Uruguay. Despite taking time and effort, diversifying revenues on the geographic portfolio and distribution channel dimensions continues to be an important aspect of our strategy and this quarter proves the value of this approach. Let’s look to the segment by segment breakdown. The most significant year-over-year decline came from crop nutrition which explains more than half of the top line decrease and almost all of the change in gross profit as we will see in a minute. Performance for the segment was primarily driven by lower sales of micro-bead fertilizers in Argentina, where last year’s pest damage on corn from the leafhopper or Chicharrita drove farmers decision to shift corn acres into soybeans this season which resulted in an unprecedented 20% drop in corn acreage in the country. Although our micro-bead fertilizers are technically suitable for both crops, corn demands as much as 3x more phosphate than soybeans, which combined with late planting had quite an impact on this particular product in the quarter in Argentina. Although at a smaller scale than our Argentine business, micro-bead fertilizers saw some momentum in Uruguay which is good to see considering the country proximity to our manufacturing hub. October rains have undoubtedly resumed demand for fertilizers, so late corn planting will be decisive factor on how we wrap up the Argentine season for fertilizers in Q2. Let’s discuss crop protection now where sales were predominantly affected by the slow pace of the Argentine market as dry conditions resulted in less pest pressure and just in time purchase behavior from farmers. However, different than crop nutrition in crop protection, a substantial portion of the sales decrease corresponds to a conscious decision to forego sales with unattractive margins and cash conversion cycles. Particularly in the case of non-core third-party products, we tried to stay away from a market which showed a very slow pace demand matched by a well supplied distribution, which very quickly turned into a highly competitive and price driven dynamic. Staying away from that kind of market in non-core products is well aligned with our increased focus on working capital management and cash generation for the year. And although we still have a long way to go, it is important to highlight that cash conversion has become an increasingly important aspect in decision making. Looking ahead, I think that we are still early on in the season to come to a conclusion for Argentina in crop protection and recent rainfall and weather normalization lead us to believe that it could still be a normal or even good crop season. Like Federico mentioned, the United States and Brazil and Mexico to a lesser extent had a very good quarter in terms of sales, which was achieved with proprietary high margin biocontrol products. As much as I would have liked to see growth in crop protection, trading off high margin buyer protection sales in key growth markets for non-core low margin and capital demanding sales in Argentina seems to me like a step in the right direction from a fundamental standpoint. Finally, for Seed & Integrated products the decrease in the top line primarily reflects lower HB4 grain downstream sales than the prior year. Last year, as you may recall we began a downstream grain sales strategy that had a double purpose of building an industrial channel for HB4 grain on which farmers could rely and also seeking to convert inventories into cash to decrease our working capital position. As Federico will mention further in the presentation we are progressively shifting away from the identity preserve model that built these grain inventories and transitioning into a more conventional approach to HB4 commercialization. This means that going forward low margin grain sales will continue to decrease in the year-on-year comparison. As we recover cash and succeed in transitioning to a more profitable and less capital intensive top line for the seed business. Having discussed sales, let's now turn to Slide 5 and look at gross profit. As I previously mentioned, the drop in crop nutrition sales translated almost entirely to gross profit with micro fertilizers in Argentina driving more than 70% of the overall year-on-year changing gross profit. Within the crop nutrition segment itself good performance in inoculants driven by the agreement with Syngenta, particularly in Brazil, compensated a drop in fertilizer margins and drove a modest margin expansion for the segment. In crop protection the dynamics I just explained for sales translated into a gross margin expansion for the segment from roughly 35% to almost 40% this year. Like I mentioned, in this segment we made a conscious choice to preserve not only margins but also working capital. And finally, in seed and integrated products, gross profit declined by 14% primarily driven by grain sales performance and a slight decline in seed treatment packs margin. Overall gross margin this quarter expanded from 38% last year to almost 40%. Let's now turn to Slide 6 and look at adjusted EBITDA for the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter totaled $8.5 million. The combination of the drop in gross profit from crop nutrition and the change in JV results where the most meaningful item this quarter is represented by Synertech, our fertilizer manufacturing JV shows how important the impact from microwave fertilizers was for the quarterly results. One could even argue that microwave fertilizers explain almost in full, the drop of $8 million in adjusted EBITDA. On the other hand, as you can see, tight cost controls, which kept OpEx almost flat and changes introduced to the SIP [ph] business, which primarily explained the improvement in other expenses, net out the slight drop in gross profit from crop protection and seed and integrated products. Finally, let's turn to Slide 7 to look at financial debt. Total financial debt stood at $250 million by quarter end and our cash position remained healthy at almost $40 million. As expected due to the drop in the LTM EBITDA, our leverage ratio increased to 2.9 turns but still below the 3 turns of maximum leverage that we always keep as a target. Moving forward let me just say that in the coming quarters capital allocation will continue to prioritize products and technologies with lower risk and near-term payback periods, which coupled with a more disciplined approach to working capital management, aims to enhance cash generation for the fiscal year while preserving the long-term intrinsic value of the unique portfolio that we hold. With that I will turn the call back to Federico. Federico?