David Shaffer
Analyst · Oppenheimer Corporation. Mr. Kaye, your line is open
Thanks, Lisa, and good morning, everyone. Please turn to Slide 4. We delivered strong Q3 results reporting $920 million of revenue and $85 million of adjusted operating earnings, our highest revenue and highest adjusted operating earnings in the company's history as all three lines of businesses performed well. We realized the second consecutive quarter of significant adjusted gross margin expansion, driven by impressive price/mix improvement and continued robust demand for our products in all of our end markets. Despite interest and FX rate headwinds, as well as ongoing supply chain and inflationary pressures, we reported third quarter adjusted earnings of $1.27 per diluted share, above the midpoint of our guidance and a 26% increase versus $1.01 per share in Q3 '22. As we've mentioned previously, the inflationary impact of these past two years has been truly unprecedented. For perspective, our Q3 '23 costs were $115 million higher than in Q3 '21 before inflation really began to rise. This annualizes to roughly $460 million of higher costs or approximately $9.00 per share of EPS pressure, which doesn't include the incremental impact on primary operating capital and interest expense. While we've experienced timing delays and price recapture, our focused efforts are now becoming visible in our results with opportunities for further mix improvement in EOS, or EnerSys Operating System, savings to expand profits in upcoming quarters. While some commodity and freight cost pressures have lessened, other supply chain shortages persist. Meanwhile, certain commodity prices remain elevated relative to and, in some cases, are even continuing to rise versus historical averages. We are mitigating our exposure to both through ongoing price recovery, increased stocking of critical raw materials and alternative sourcing. We remain vigilant in monitoring the global supply chain environment evolution, including energy allocation in Europe and commodity prices as China reopens from COVID shutdowns. Please turn to Slide 5. Backlog was up 11% versus prior year, but declined modestly for the second consecutive quarter, particularly in Energy Systems to $1.3 billion. Additionally, it is worth noting a calendar year-end is often a seasonally lower quarter for new orders in Energy Systems. Our backlog remains healthy at near all-time highs and demand is robust across all our lines of business. Please turn to Slide 6. We are delivering on our innovation roadmap with proprietary technology solutions that are defining the future of energy transition. For example, we are excited to have received our first orders for Motive Power wireless chargers and look forward to showcasing our maintenance-free battery and wireless charger solutions at both ProMat and LogiMAT trade shows this spring. Demand for our TPPL and lithium maintenance-free batteries is growing as customers across all of our end markets nice the competitive advantage of our offerings, which help them achieve their operating efficiency and sustainability goals through higher energy density throughput, software management capabilities and value-added services. We are advancing our fast charge and storage initiatives with our near production-grade system now fully operational at our Tech Center, including new capabilities such as bi-directional grid connection. Combined with our recent certification for OpenADR, a software standard allowing automated demand response to the grid, our system offers further value for our customers. The team has also increased focus on our supply chain as we progress on our production roadmap. I'll now briefly walk through our business segment highlights. The slides contain additional details about each line of business that I won't cover in my comments. Please turn to Slide 7. Continuing its positive momentum, Energy Systems saw solid demand in the quarter, particularly in broadband and data centers, reporting revenue of $434 million or 13% increase compared to the prior third quarter. Profitability was also much improved with adjusted operating earnings increasing nearly 170% year-on-year. We anticipate our top-line growth to continue flowing down to the bottom-line as we execute our price/cost recapture strategy and see a richer sales mix with supply chains improving. There is much to be excited about in Energy Systems with many of the major cable companies announcing CapEx increases for calendar year '23, the rollout of our new product pipeline and incremental opportunities for EnerSys such as the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund, or RDOF. RDOF momentum is building, with one of our largest cable customers being the biggest winner of dollars to date. To help to mention this opportunity, approximately 2.5% of their [$5 million] (ph) spend applies to network powering, which we would expect to dominate participation in over the next several years. As a leading innovator of critical power solution to telecom and cable companies, we continue to see 5G build outs as favorable to our business over the next several years in addition to new growth opportunities and activities at MSOs. Cable customers are expected to grow their wireless businesses and invest in the next generation of DOCSIS network upgrades as they build out their own unique wireless networks. With the estimated deployment of tens of thousands of these bespoke small cells, we expect robust demand for our power and backhaul gateway products and new OSP, or Outside Plant Power, systems over the next several years. We look forward to sharing more detail in this area with you at our Investor Day on June 15. Motive Power delivered another strong quarter with third quarter '23 revenue of $362 million increasing 7% compared to the third quarter of fiscal '22. Backlog and demand trends are strong with order rates in the Americas near record levels. And while EMEA order rates were somewhat soft in the quarter, we believe our order and backlog strength position us well for growth overall. We are monitoring this business very closely as it is our segment that is most vulnerable to economic slowdowns. Our positive Motive Power results reflect the strong customer demand for our proprietary NexSys TPPL and lithium-ion maintenance-free product offerings, which were up 140 basis points year-over-year as a percentage of Motive Power revenue mix. We expect these solutions to keep increasing as a percentage of revenue as the trend towards automation and electrification of material handling equipment requires technology-enabled power solutions. Our Specialty segment reported revenue of $124 million in the quarter, up 4% year-over-year, primarily driven by the continued pricing actions and improved mix. Though demand is still strong, this line of business is still challenged by our TPPL capacity constraints in our Missouri plants. With the team fully assembled and retention improving, we are laser-focused on driving operational efficiency improvement in these facilities and further realizing the financial benefits of strong product demand. Q3 started slowly for our Springfield factories with attendance and equipment issues, and as a result, we were unable to close the gap even with a strong push in December. However, positive momentum has carried over to a record Springfield January production. In Transportation, backlog was on par with the prior third quarter and Class 8 truck OEM demand signals are strong. We also remain very well positioned in our aerospace business and the recently announced 9% increase in the fiscal year '23 defense budget should provide an additional tailwind for our U.S. defense market, which is anchored by our premium TPPL and lithium technology. Moving on to some updates in our production capacity and operational efficiencies. The operations team continues to be confronted by a mix of headwinds, including ongoing inflation and productivity challenges. Utility inflation in EMEA and increased COVID cases in China have also presented some challenges, while we work with ongoing instability in our supply chain and elevated costs in the business. Putting the EMEA utility inflation into perspective, we anticipate our fiscal year '23 energy costs in EMEA will be 150% higher versus fiscal year '21, and for the first time in our history, is expected to exceed the annual cost of our direct labor force. On the positive front, we are seeing utility costs coming down from the peak in August, signs of cost stabilization and freight rates coming down, chip allocations improving with certain suppliers and better availability of raw materials, all of which begin to generate benefits in future quarters. Collaboration across operations, sales, finance and IT remained strong, with efficiency and capacity improvements in Missouri the top priority heading into the end of the fiscal year. Our two new lithium-ion module assembly lines are running as planned and the Ooltewah transition to Richmond is already paying dividends through greater operational efficiencies. We exited Q3 '23 stronger than last quarter although there remain significant opportunities to reach our full potential. Please turn to Slide 8. As one of the world's largest energy storage companies, corporate responsibility is a key area of focus for EnerSys. We had several ESG announcements in the quarter, including the appointment of Ms. Tammi Morytko to our Board of Directors. Tammi is the President of the Pumps Division at Flowserve Corporation, where she has established a reputation in the industry as an enterprise operating leader and a supply chain subject matter expert. Tammi's decades of experience with global industrial manufacturing operations will provide excellent support for the EnerSys' leadership team and our strategic objectives. Please turn to Slide 9. In closing, we are increasingly optimistic that our strong Q3 '23 results reflect the continued progression toward achieving our long-term financial and operational goals. While we are not out of the woods yet with inflation and supply chain unpredictability and there remains considerable uncertainty in global markets, demand remains strong with secular trends in our end markets that, along with a strong balance sheet and superior products and services, provides us a buffer from the impact of a potential economic pullback. We believe the steps we have taken over the past three years better position our business to benefit from global megatrends such as 5G, data center growth, material handling electrification and automation, grid stabilization and electric vehicle fast charging, which provides us near- and long-term growth opportunities that are starting to materialize in our financial results and outlook. In addition to these trends, we are excited about our opportunities to benefit from U.S. Government mandates and funding that are driving markets to us, such as broadband expansion through the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund. We are still waiting for clarification on the Inflation Reduction Act, but we are cautiously optimistic that a substantial amount of our batteries could qualify for the Section 45X tax benefit, which would provide meaningful upside to our profitability. I look forward to ongoing progress during the remainder of this year and in fiscal 2024 as the true potential of our business that continues to present itself. I want to thank our employees for their dedication and hard work, consistently capitalizing on opportunities and confronting a myriad of challenges head on. We, as a unified team with a common goal, have positioned EnerSys for long-term success, and look forward to updating our shareholders on that success in the quarters and years ahead. With that, I'll now ask Andi to provide further information on our third quarter results and go-forward guidance.