Robert Buck
Analyst · KeyBanc. Please proceed, your line is open
Thank you, Jerry. Beginning on Slide 6 and before reviewing TruTeam and Service Partners' financial results and our continued operational response to COVID-19, I want to thank our entire TopBuild team for their dedication, teamwork and ongoing push for operational excellence, especially during these difficult times. Everyone from our installers, to our warehouse workers, drivers, office and sales staff, build leadership and Branch Support Center team have pulled together to deliver a very strong second quarter results. Moving to Slide 7, as we respond to the current environment, our cornerstone value of safety for our employees, their families, our customers and supplier-partners remains the guiding principle for all decisions. We enforced social distancing and sanitizing both in our branch operations and on job sites, and our work-from-home policy at certain operating facilities, including our Daytona Branch Support Center, remains in place. Internal communications have become even more important, bringing our employees together with central themes, including safety, diversity and inclusion. We push these values throughout every level of our organization, building a stronger team, creating a better workplace and helping us win in the marketplace. On the next slide, I want to stress that our strong results are due to many factors; most importantly, our flexible business model, enabling us to quickly adapt to changing market conditions; our ability to attract and retain labor; our integrated systems that allow us to share labor, equipment and inventory; our strong supply chain which ensures we can meet customer demand; our long-term customer and supplier partner relationships; and our company-wide focus on operational efficiency and sales and labor productivity. As such, when the pandemic hit, we were confident in the steps we needed to take to care for our employees, serve our customers and ensure the financial health of TopBuild. Turning to Slide 9, we entered the second quarter operating in all of the 4 states, New York, Pennsylvania, Washington and Michigan; where residential and commercial construction have been deemed not essential. As a reminder, Washington represents our fourth largest state in terms of annual sales. At that time, in response to the shut-down and overall uncertainty due to the pandemic, we began pulling multiple levers to take costs out of the business, including eliminating most discretionary spending and non-essential capital expenditures, cutting overhead, and reducing labor in those states where construction was deemed non-essential. We also implemented a COVID-19 Leave Plan, paying impacted team members for a period of time to help provide assistance to them and their families. We did this to create goodwill and to increase the probability they would return to TopBuild when conditions improved. It has definitely been a success, enabling us to quickly ramp up in those four states where construction has again been deemed an essential service. As we moved through the quarter, our branches stayed busy, most working on a strong backlog. In addition, our builder customers' optimism grew steadily as they saw buyer traffic and orders increase along with consumer confidence, fueled in part by very low interest rates. Moreover, based on recent builder surveys, there appears to be a shift of buyers moving to more urban and rural areas. We are optimistic this shift will stimulate demand for single family homes. Along with this good news, by late May/early June, the four states that had deemed construction non-essential had reopened and our crews quickly got back to work. Looking at TruTeam's second quarter results on Slide 10, sales declined 3.4%, in large part due to our being shutout of commercial construction in several metropolitan areas in addition to the 4 states I mentioned previously. Sales improved as we moved through the quarter, and June revenue increased compared to the same period a year ago. Despite this drop in revenue, TruTeam's adjusted operating margin improved 100 basis points in the second quarter to 15.2% and increased 110 basis points for first half of the year to 14%, clearly demonstrating the strength and flexibility of our business model and our focus on bottom line results. Turning to Service Partners on Slide 11, in the second quarter total sales grew 1.3% and for the first half of 2020, sales increased 3%. Service Partners' adjusted operating margin for both the second quarter and first half of the year was 11.6%, an increase of 170 basis points and 160 basis points, respectively. As you can see on Slide 12, we introduced a new product line at Service Partners, professional grade sanitizing and disinfecting supplies and equipment. We are marketing to contractors who are already in the commercial cleaning industry as well as to contractors who may see this as an opportunity to create a new revenue stream. While relatively small in terms of revenue generation thus far, it demonstrates our team's creativity and flexibility in meeting new market demand with minimal investment. Moving to Slide 13, our commercial business, on a same branch basis, declined 12.9% in the second quarter and is down 6.9% for the first 6 months. We have seen a number of large commercial projects delayed or slow to ramp up due to new guidelines governing the density of construction crews on site. Pre-COVID-19, it was not uncommon to have 10 to 12 trades working on a job site at the same time. Obviously, that has changed with social distancing rules, elongating project timelines. We have also seen some projects cancelled, but during this same timeframe we have been awarded a number of new projects that will help offset some of these cancellations. As a reminder, comps this quarter and last were very difficult as commercial revenue increased almost 22% in the second quarter of 2019 and close to 25% in the first quarter of the same year. On the heavy commercial side, bidding activity remains strong and we are looking at potential jobs with start dates through early 2022. A lot of the projects we are working on and have been awarded are distribution centers, healthcare facilities, and infrastructure projects. Overall, the commercial recovery will be slower than residential, but we remain confident in the long-term growth of our commercial business. Material costs are holding steady and it's too early to predict whether we will see a second cost increase this year. Labor is still tight, though in certain markets, particularly those hit hard by the steep declines in the oil and gas and hospitality industries, we believe there could be an increase in the available labor pool. However, this will depend, in part, on the federal government's subsidies of unemployment benefits which are yet to be determined. Looking ahead, we, like all of you on the call, are closely monitoring housing starts and are optimistic the industry will continue to see strengthen as we move through the year. Thank you again to the TopBuild Team and congratulations on another strong quarter. John?