Rich Maue
Analyst · Stifel. Please proceed with your question
Thank you, Max and good morning everyone. As usual, I will be providing segment comments that will compare the second quarter of 2021 to 2020, excluding special items, as outlined in our press release and slide presentation. At Aerospace & Electronics, sales of $158 million were flat with the prior year. Adjusted segment margins, however, improved 420 basis points to 19.6%. In the quarter, total aftermarket sales turned positive, growing 3% after a 29% decline in aftermarket sales last quarter. Commercial OE sales increased 4% in the quarter after a 32% decline last quarter. Defense OE sales declined 4% in the quarter and are flat on a year-to-date basis. We continue to believe that the fourth quarter of last year marked the trough for both sales and margins at Aerospace & Electronics. We expect sales to continue to improve slightly on a sequential basis throughout the rest of this year as the pace of the recovery continues to improve and our expected timing of a recovery to pre-COVID levels continues to get pulled forward. More specifically, we are seeing North American airlines bring a substantial number of aircraft back into service to meet expected domestic demand levels, with the in-service fleet now at about 90% of mid-2019 levels. On the international side, traffic continues to improve, albeit a little more slowly, with substantial room for recovery – further recovery as global ASKs are now a little better than 50% of 2019 levels. In general, pent-up demand will drive recovery faster than expected as COVID restrictions continue to ease. And our confidence in our outlook for this business is about more than just a market recovery. We are seeing accelerating growth resulting from consistent and continued investment in technology. Our growth investments over the last decade have not wavered and we are seeing the benefits of those investments today. These investments also continue to expand our addressable market and align our business with accelerating secular trends, most notably electrification. And we are delivering on truly breakthrough innovations that are critical enablers to our customers’ growth strategies and that are transforming the growth trajectory of our business, really exciting opportunities in our power conversion business, sensing and fluid and thermal management. Taken together, and as we explained at our Aerospace Investor Day in May, we expect a long-term overall compound annual growth rate of 7% to 9% through 2030. Process Flow Technologies sales of $311 million increased 30% driven by a 22% increase in core sales and an 8% benefit from favorable foreign exchange. Process Flow Technologies operating profit increased by 83% to $49 million. Adjusted operating margins increased 450 basis points to 15.7%, reflecting the higher volumes, strong execution and benefits from last year’s cost actions. Sequentially, trends improved across the board with FX-neutral backlog up 5% and FX-neutral orders up 8%. Compared to last year, FX-neutral backlog increased 11% and FX-neutral core orders increased 28%. During the first quarter, order growth was strongest in our short-cycle commercial business. However, orders at our core process business inflected positive on a year-over-year basis in March and that trend continued throughout the second quarter. We are also seeing clear evidence of improving end demand and in some cases, the start of released pent-up demand. We expect the recovery to be led heavily by the chemical end market, which is continuing to show signs of strengthening around the world. And remember that the chemical market is our most important market, where we have the strongest position and the most differentiated offering, and generated more than 35% of sales on the process side of this business. We are seeing continued strength in MRO sales, and project activity is clearly picking up for necessary debottlenecking activities as well as larger capacity expansions, particularly for specialty chemical applications. We are seeing this most significantly right now in the United States and China with Europe projects likely to pick up next year. General industrial activity has also strengthened but primarily in the United States. Conventional power and oil and gas markets remain fairly sluggish. However, remember that collectively, upstream oil and gas and conventional power are a small part of this business and less than 10% of segment sales. As orders convert to sales in these core process markets later this year and into 2022, we expect very strong operating leverage. For the shorter-cycle non-residential and municipal end markets, we are seeing a continuation of the strength that we saw during the first quarter. For Process Flow Technologies overall, our outlook continues to improve. We now expect high single-digit core sales growth, with approximately 5% of favorable foreign exchange on a full year basis. Full year margins should be somewhere between where they were in the first and second quarters. At Payment & Merchandising Technologies, sales of $328 million in the quarter increased 31% compared to the prior year driven by 26% core sales growth and a 5% benefit from favorable foreign exchange. Our Currency business core sales increased in the mid-teens range with the Crane Payment Innovations business inflecting to a positive 34% of core growth, but still well below pre-COVID levels. Segment operating profit increased 285% to $78 million. Adjusted operating margins increased 1,500 basis points to 23.7%. Really impressive performance again in the quarter, as expected, and now with our legacy payment business beginning to contribute meaningfully, paired with the ongoing superior performance at Crane Currency. For the payment business, with the phased economic reopening, we continued to see very strong growth in the gaming and retail end markets. And during the second quarter, vending started to recover as well. Transportation, particularly parking, remained softer, although we have seen some substantial fare collection project activity during the quarter. At Crane Currency, we continue to see strength in both the domestic and international markets, and we continue to gain share both with our technology and bank note offerings. As we explained last quarter, we do expect margins to moderate further over the course of the year given timing and mix, with full year margins likely toward the high-end of our long-term target of 18% to 22%, with core sales growth this year now approaching mid-teens with a 4% favorable foreign exchange benefit. And like our high-margin Aerospace business, the recovery has just begun at payment – Crane Payment Innovations. Turning now to more detail on our total company results and guidance, we had extremely strong cash flow performance in the quarter, generating $141 million in free cash flow compared to $102 million in the second quarter of last year. Year-to-date, free cash flow was $184 million compared to $62 million last year. During the second quarter, we also received approximately $9 million from the sale of a property in Arizona following receipt of $15 million last quarter from the sale of another property. These proceeds are excluded from free cash flow given required classification as an investing activity. However, one of these sales was directly enabled by our ongoing restructuring efforts as we moved operations from this facility to other locations. And the other reflects our proactive approach to identify underutilized assets. Since 2017, we have received proceeds from real estate and other asset sales made possible by restructuring activities of approximately $56 million, which means that much of our restructuring has been self-funded. As a reminder, on May 24, we announced that we had signed an agreement to sell our Engineered Materials segment for $360 million. That process is ongoing, and we continue to work on obtaining regulatory approvals. When the transaction closes, we expect proceeds, net of tax, to be approximately $320 million. Our balance sheet is in extremely good shape. During the second quarter, we repaid the term loan originated in April of 2020 in full using cash on hand and some commercial paper. As we discussed in May, we believe we will have approximately $1 billion of M&A capacity by the end of this year. Valuations today are quite lofty, and we will remain disciplined. But I am confident that over time, we will continue to find attractive transactions where we can deploy our capital to create value for shareholders. We will also maintain discipline about our balance sheet efficiency. During periods where acquisitions are less actionable, we will consider returning excess cash to shareholders rather than maintaining an efficient – inefficient balance sheet. However, over the long term, we continue to believe that we will be able to add the most value through acquisitions. The adjusted tax rate in the quarter was 18.4%, which included an excess tax benefit of approximately $4 million or $0.07 per share related to stock options exercised during the quarter. For the full year, we now expect an adjusted tax rate of 20.5% rather than the previous 21% guidance. As Max explained, we are raising our adjusted EPS guidance by $0.30 to a range of $5.95 to $6.15, reflecting the strong second quarter performance and our expectation that end markets and execution will be ahead of where we forecasted them earlier this year. Remember that our original guidance for 2021 was $4.90 to $5.10, and that guidance included $0.44 of earnings contribution from Engineered Materials. That means we have effectively raised guidance about $1.50 on an operational basis since the beginning of the year. While uncertainty remains related to COVID variants and sporadic supply chain constraints, overall we have a high level of confidence in our revised guidance based on our team’s outstanding performance, driving incremental price and proactively and effectively managing inflation and their supply chain. Our revised guidance also reflects the same cadence of earnings progression we have discussed since the beginning of the year. Specifically, we continue to expect a step-down in EPS next quarter given timing and with fourth quarter following its usual pattern as the seasonally weakest quarter across most of our businesses. Our revised guidance assumes core sales growth of 7% to 9%, which is 200 basis points higher than our prior May 24 guidance. Favorable foreign exchange is also now expected to contribute 3.5%, up 100 basis points from late May. Free cash flow guidance was increased to $320 million to $350 million, up $20 million from prior guidance, reflecting higher earnings and slightly lower CapEx at $70 million. Corporate expense is now expected to be $80 million, up $3 million compared to prior guidance. Full details of our adjusted guidance are included both in our earnings press release as well as our earnings slide presentation. Overall, an excellent year continuing to unfold with outstanding execution from all of our teams driving exceptional results, growth, margins, free cash flow and we remain excited about continued tailwinds in 2022 and 2023 as end markets continue to recover. Operator, we are now ready to take our first question.