Chris Farkas
Analyst · Truist
Thank you, Lynn, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin today with a review of our first quarter sales and profitability where we again delivered another strong operational performance. Starting in the Aerospace and Industrial segment, sales were lower year-over-year, as anticipated, based upon reduced demand on wide-body jets within the commercial aerospace market. However, on a positive note, we experienced an uplift in industrial vehicle product sales to both on- and off-highway markets driven by solid order growth, as Lynn mentioned earlier. This segment's operating performance, while bolstered by year-over-year restructuring savings, primarily reflects unfavorable absorption on lower sales and an immaterial impact due to supply chain constraints in both container shipments and electronic components. In the Defense Electronics segment, the strong 31% growth in revenues reflects the contribution from our PacStar acquisition and a 4% increase in organic growth principally in aerospace defense for our commercial off-the-shelf or COTS products. Segment operating performance was very strong as adjusted operating income increased 42%, while adjusted operating margin increased 170 basis points to 20.9%. Key drivers of this performance included higher organic sales volumes, favorable mix toward our COTS products and the benefit of our cost containment efforts, which more than offset higher investments in research and development. Of note, this performance did include the acceleration of some revenues from the second quarter as several customers took action to stabilize their supply chains due to global concerns for potential shortage in electronic components. In the Naval and Power segment, we experienced solid revenue growth for our naval nuclear propulsion equipment and higher fleet services, which was mainly offset by lower aftermarket revenues to our commercial power and process markets. Adjusted operating income increased 21%, while adjusted operating margin increased 300 basis points to 17.7% due to favorable sales mix within our naval defense markets and an increased benefit from our 2020 restructuring actions. To sum up the first quarter results, overall, adjusted operating income increased 15%, which drove margin expansion of 160 basis points year-over-year. Turning to our full year 2021 guidance. I'll begin with our end market sales outlook, where we've made a few changes highlighted in blue on the slide, reflecting a modest increase in total Curtiss-Wright sales. Our outlook for overall aerospace and defense market sales growth is now 7% to 9% based upon strong first quarter demand and higher orders for our defense electronics equipment. This positions Curtiss-Wright to once again grow our defense revenues faster than the base DoD budget. In our commercial markets, our overall sales growth is unchanged at 6% to 8%, and we are encouraged by the strong 1.2 times book-to-bill recorded in the first quarter. We now expect total Curtiss-Wright sales growth of 7% to 9%, of which 2% to 4% is organic. Continuing with our outlook by segment, I'll begin in Aerospace and Industrial, where our top line guidance of 1% to 3% sales growth remains unchanged. And we continue to project solid growth in operating income and margin, mainly reflecting the benefits of our prior restructuring initiatives. As we look across the remainder of the year, we continue to monitor the impact on our industrial supply chain very closely. We believe that we can fully mitigate any such impact through various initiatives and expect it to be immaterial to our full year performance. Next, in the Defense Electronics segment, based on the solid first quarter orders within our defense markets, we now expect the segment sales to grow 22% to 24%, driven by a combination of 4% to 6% organic growth and a strong contribution from PacStar. Segment operating income guidance increased $2 million on a $5 million increase in sales. And as a result, we're now projecting segment operating income to grow 10% to 13% while operating margin is projected to range from 21.3% to 21.5%. Of note, segment profitability reflects a $6 million year-over-year increase in research and development, unfavorable mix due to a ramp-up in lower-margin system sales and inorganic sales from PacStar, which will be dilutive to overall Curtiss-Wright margins in year one. In the Naval and Power segment, our top line guidance of 1% to 3% sales growth remains unchanged. However, we increased adjusted operating income guidance to reflect an additional $2 million benefit from our prior year restructuring actions. Segment adjusted operating income is now projected to grow 2% to 5%, while adjusted operating margin is expected to increase 20 to 30 basis points to a range of 18.2% to 18.3%. So, to summarize our outlook, we expect full year 2021 adjusted operating income to grow 9% to 11% overall on a 7% to 9% increase in sales. Operating margin is expected to improve 30 to 40 basis points to 16.6% to 16.7%, reflecting the strong profitability and savings generated by our restructuring initiatives. Continuing with our 2021 financial outlook, where we've increased our full year adjusted diluted EPS guidance by $0.10 to a new range of $7.10 to $7.30, reflecting growth of 8% to 11%. Following our strong first quarter performance, we now expect second quarter diluted EPS to be similar to the first followed by sequential quarterly improvement during the second half of 2021 with the fourth quarter being our strongest. Turning to our full year free cash flow outlook. Our guidance remains unchanged with a range of $330 million to $360 million. During the first quarter, which reflected our typical outflow of cash, we experienced a solid 34% year-over-year improvement in adjusted free cash flow due to higher cash earnings and lower capital expenditures. Our solid first quarter performance provides us with confidence, and we remain on track to achieve our full year free cash flow guidance and exceed our long-term conversion target of 110% again in 2021. Now I'd like to turn the call back over to Lynn for some closing remarks. Lynn?