Joseph Armes
Analyst · CJS. Please go ahead
Thank you, Tom. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on our call today. I would like to begin with a few highlights from the quarter and discuss our outlook for the remainder of 2018. Then, Gregg will take you through the numbers and Chris will discuss the operational highlights for the quarter. By almost any measure, fiscal 2018 is off to a strong start with significant growth in several key metrics when compared to the prior-year period. Our consolidated revenue grew 16.6% to $98 million, thanks to a 11% organic growth and an additional 5.6% from acquisition. This marks the second consecutive quarter of double-digit organic growth and is a testament to the progress we've made to strengthen and diversify our sales efforts and broaden our reach to new end markets and geographies. Consolidated revenue growth in the quarter was driven by HVAC, mining, plumbing, and energy end markets. We are pleased to have achieved this level of growth despite the absence of recovery in rail, which is an important end market for us. Our reported operating income nearly doubled to $14.3 million compared to the prior year of $7.4 million. On an adjusted basis, which primarily excludes restructuring and realignment costs and costs related to the CFO transition in the prior year, operating income was up 35.4% to $16.8 million compared to the prior year period of $12.4 million. We are pleased to have achieved this level of profitability which reflects the effect of improved efficiency, higher volume, and savings from our facility rationalization programs, partially offset by an unfavorable mix in the quarter. Major contributors to our performance in the quarter include the following. First, our Industrial Products segment continues to lead our performance. Our HVAC business performed exceptionally well as we entered the warmer summer months and our growth in this end market with 17% compared to a low-to-mid, single-digit growth rate for the broader end market. We attribute this outperformance or unique product portfolio which addresses many high growth subsets of the market, paired with our proprietary and powerful distribution platform. More specifically, we have seen the most growth in the products that serve high growth, mini split HVAC units. Notably, the strength in industrial products in the quarter came despite the absence of a major project milestone and our architecturally-specified building products end market, which has been one of the leaders in our growth trajectory in recent quarters. While we continue to see a strong pipeline of opportunities in this category, the timing of project schedules was not a meaningful driver in our growth for the first quarter. The second major driver was our Specialty Chemical segment where we also saw double-digit organic growth as this segment grew 24.4% over the prior quarter. The revenue growth was due to higher volume in energy and mining related end markets that had been a notable headwind in the past as well as strong growth in the HVAC end market. We are particularly encouraged to see the earnings power of this segment when volume ticks higher, which is attributable to the consolidation of the Jet-Lube facility into our state-of-the-art Whitmore manufacturing facility, which is successfully coming down the learning curve of new production. While we are certainly pleased with our results in the quarter, there is still plenty of work to be done to drive continued growth and efficiency. This is particularly the case in our Coatings, Sealants, and Adhesives segment where volumes remain under pressure from weak railcar volumes. Despite the plant consolidations of Syracuse and the Houston third-party manufacturing facilities, we are experiencing inefficiencies in our manufacturing process as we move production to our Longview, Texas; and Acworth, Georgia facilities. And those are continued focus for us that Chris will speak to shortly. Next, I would like to give an update on our end market. We will begin with the architecturally specified building products. This industry has continued to be our top performing end market and you should note that HVAC is not included in this end market. But as we mentioned last quarter, we are not seeing any moderation to the robust backdrop. However, given the extraordinary growth rate and the strong start to the year in 2018, we would not be surprised to see a moderation in these growth rates as the year progresses. In our energy related end markets, in the first quarter, we began to see some meaningful volume improvements for our energy products such as KOPR-KOTE for the first time since the decline in oil prices in late 2015. This is the result of higher rig count which is an important leading indicator for us that we have noted for some time. And during the quarter, we certainly benefited from the higher rig count. With that said, we are expecting growth in the energy end market to be flat on a sequential basis. So while we will lap some earlier comparables in the coming quarters, we are not expecting a further improvement in the current environment. Turning to our rail end market. Demand for OEM railcars remains under pressure and we have continued our efforts to diversify our coatings products sales and to find new markets to enter. While we are cautiously optimistic about some industry data point to stability and even a modest improvement in backlogs for new railcars on a sequential basis, it is simply too early to consider this a trend, and it will take some time to flow through to our business results. We are also very encouraged by the financial performance of our most recent acquisition Greco as it continues to win new projects and perform above our acquisition model which Chris will detail in his remarks. And now, I'd like to turn the call over to Gregg for a look at our financials during the quarter.