Ophir Yakovian
Analyst · Benchmark Company. Please proceed with your question
Thank you Yuval and good morning everyone. I will start by discussing our first quarter results. For the first quarter of 2021, global revenue increased to $146 million, representing 15.4% growth compared to the prior year period. The year-over-year increase included approximately $20 million in contribution from our acquisition of Omicron and Lioli Ceramica. On a constant currency basis, first quarter revenue was higher by 9.8% compared to the same period last year, primarily due to the contribution of acquisitions. Now looking at our regions. In the Americas, constant currency sales were up 11.8% as we began to see benefits from our Omicron acquisition. In the U.S. and Canada, our performance continues to be impacted by lower sales at IKEA stores. This impact to our big box channel was partially offset by increased activity at U.S. Home Depot stores, where our first quarter performance was better than expected. In the U.S., we are happy with the sequential improvement in our business and see positive momentum into the second quarter of 2021. In Canada, rigid government restrictions related to COVID-19 continued to impact our sales. In the APAC region, constant currency sales were up 21.5%. In Australia, which accounts for the majority of our sales in the region, solid results were driven by improved demand and government stimulus actions. Contribution from Lioli sales were also additive to the APAC region sales in the first quarter. In the EMEA region, constant currency sales grew 3.3%. We experienced strong performance in the U.K., which was partially offset mainly by the impact of continued COVID-19 related restrictions on our indirect markets. In Israel, on a constant currency basis, sales were down 24.6% in the first quarter, primarily related to slow recovery from the country's third pandemic-related lockdown, which ended in late January as well as the timing of Passover holiday. Looking at our first quarter P&L performance. We were pleased to improve our gross margin by 90 basis points on a year-over-year basis to 29.7% as we continue to benefit from our actions to improve efficiencies across our business. Adjusted gross margin improved 120 basis points to 30.1% compared to 28.9% in the prior year quarter. The year-over-year improvement in gross margin primarily reflected better product mix, improved efficiencies and more favorable currency exchange rates, partially offset by the impact of higher manufacturing unit costs due to lower fixed cost absorption and lower selling prices. Operating expenses, excluding legal settlement and loss contingencies, were 22.3% of revenue compared to 24.7% in the prior year quarter. The decrease was mainly due to higher revenue. Going forward, we expect operating expenses to remain elevated as we return our investment in sales and marketing to a more normalized level to support our brand and future growth. Adjusted EBITDA in the first quarter increased 54.1% year-over-year to $20.3 million, representing a margin of 13.9% compared to $13.1 million or a margin of 10.4% in the prior year quarter. The 350 basis point improvement primarily reflects the higher gross margin compared to last year. Adjusted diluted earnings per share in the quarter were $0.42 compared to adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.13 in the same period last year on a similar share count. Turning to our balance sheet. As of March 31, 2021, Caesarstone had cash, cash equivalent and short term bank deposit and short and long term marketable securities of $118.7 million with total debt to financial institution of $13.4 million, providing us with a solid net cash position of $105.3 million. The strength of our balance sheet continues to give us confidence that we can successfully execute on our strategic initiatives. In accordance with our dividend policy and based on our net income performance during the first quarter of 2021, our Board declared a dividend of $0.21 per share with a record date of May 18 and a payment date of June 1, 2021. Moving to our outlook. I would like to first take a moment to comment on the impact of raw material inflation to Caesarstone in light of the tight supply environment across the industry. While we did not experience a material impact from inflation in the first quarter of 2021, we anticipate that higher raw material and shipping costs will be a significant headwind to our margins in the coming quarters. In regards to timing, we anticipate that these headwinds will start to impact us in the second quarter and will continue throughout the remainder of the year. We expect to partially mitigate this impact through price increases and other cost-cutting initiatives. For some additional context on the breakdown of our raw materials, in 2020, raw materials accounted for approximately 34% of our cost of goods sold including both the purchase price of the materials and the costs related to logistics and delivering of the materials to our facilities. This excludes the cost of OEM products sold, which accounted for less than 10% of our cost of goods sold in 2020. Quartz is the main raw material component used in our engineered quartz product. In 2020, quartz accounted for approximately 39% of our raw material costs while polyester, which acts as a binding agent in our product, accounted for approximately 31% of our raw material costs in 2020. Historically, the price of quartz have been relatively stable while polyester is more prone to a significant price fluctuation. Since 2020, we have been using dynamic hedging strategy to reduce our exposure to changing polyester prices. However, our hedging results are just to finance expenses and therefore do not offset the impact of polyester prices on our operating income. We will continue to carefully monitor the impact of price fluctuation in our raw materials and we will update you accordingly as the year progresses. With that said, we continue to anticipate 2021 revenue and adjusted EBITDA to be higher year-over-year with the expectation that revenue will grow faster than EBITDA in 2021. This outlook assumes similar gross margin compared to 2020 with higher revenue impact, offset by higher shipping and raw material costs. In addition, we continue to increase our sales and marketing expenses to more normalized level to support our sales growth. As a reminder, we also temporarily reduced or delayed significant costs during 2020 due to pandemic-related impacts, which are now returning. Our outlook assumes that both pandemic-related business restrictions will fade and that the supply environment will improve as the year progresses. In the second quarter, we expect revenue growth to be driven by the contribution of acquisition with a return to organic growth as well. With that, let me turn the call back to Yuval for closing comments.