Pete Watson
Analyst · Bank of America
Thank you, Matt, and good morning, everyone. It's been a really eventful year at Greif, and I'm really proud of what our Greif team has accomplished in a very challenging market environment. We recorded a step change improvement in financial performance fueled by the successful acquisition and ongoing integration of Caraustar Industries and made notable progress in each of our strategic priorities. For fiscal 2019, net sales rose by nearly 19% to $4.6 billion. We generated nearly $660 million in adjusted EBITDA and most importantly, drove adjusted free cash flow significantly higher by 50%, the $268 million, despite a very challenging market environment. We use that free cash flow to fund our capital maintenance and operations to delever our balance sheet, to invest in profitable growth investments and to fund our industry-leading dividend. We are laser focused on controlling the areas that we control, customer service excellence and disciplined operational execution. This will help us build additional momentum as we head into fiscal year 2020. I’d, please, ask you to turn to slide 4. Our fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA, adjusted Class A earnings per share and adjusted free cash flow all rose versus the prior year quarter. The story for the fourth quarter is very similar to what we relayed at fiscal Q3 and that is we are operating extremely well despite continued weak demand from a slowing industrial economy and uncertainty caused by trade tensions. Caraustar continues to exceed deal assumptions and global intermediate bulk container volumes continue to grow. I’d like to now review our business performance by segment and if you could just please turn to slide 5. The Rigid Industrial Packaging segment continues to take – face weak demand due to declining industrial manufacturing environments and trade uncertainty. Our global IBC volumes grew by roughly 1.4% versus the prior year quarter and we’re negatively impacted by softer market conditions predominantly in North America. Global steel volumes declined by roughly 4% versus the prior year quarter and it’s important to note that volumes vary by region and that demand softness is not a global phenomenon. Our steel volumes in the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe, which accounts for roughly 19% of our RIPS global steel volume in 2019 were up nearly 10% versus the prior quarter thanks to growing industrial demand in those regions and capital growth projects. That strong performance couldn’t outpace steel drum demand softness in trade sensitive regions such as the US Gulf Coast and Central and Western Europe. Those two regions account for roughly 32% of RIPS global steel volume this year and we're down almost 7% versus the prior year quarter. RIPS fourth quarter sales were roughly $39 million lower versus the prior year quarter. And on a currency neutral basis, RIPS sales fell by approximately $28 million due to volume softness while fourth quarter gross profit margin improved by roughly 70 basis points versus the prior year due to lower raw material cost and improve price product mix management. RIPS fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA fell by $1.5 million versus the prior year quarter due to lower sales and $2.6 million FX headwind and $2.5 million of less favorable opportunistic sourcing opportunities partially offset by a onetime $7 million tax recovery in Brazil that's recorded as income in SG&A. Looking into fiscal 2020, we anticipate continued weak demand and trade-related softness in parts of the world. We anticipate RIPS steel volume to be roughly flat compared to fiscal 2019 due to a slowing industrial economy and particularly in the US. We anticipate IBC volume growth in the low-double digits thanks to new projects coming fully on line in North America and Europe, and also due to a full-year contribution from Tholu, our IBC reconditioning business. Those IBC projects will help us further penetrate less cyclical end markets such as food and agri chem. We also continue to examine a range of cost reduction activities in light of prolonged demand softness including shift reductions, hiring freezes, potential rooftop consolidations and targeted SG&A reductions. I please ask you to turn to slide 6. Our Flexible Products & Services segment delivered solid results despite the continuation of weak demand in Western Europe. Fourth quarter segment sales were roughly 9% lower than prior year quarter, but on a currency neutral basis, fell by 6%. Fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA increased over 9% versus the prior year quarter and it overcame a $1.5 million FX headwind. Margins improved by 140 basis points primarily due to better operating efficiencies. In fiscal 2020, we expect Flexible Products adjusted EBITDA to be roughly flat for fiscal year 2019. We anticipate market softness in our for loop Western European business to continue, and one loop vines which predominately serves ag and fertilizer customers got off to a slow start this fiscal year due to wet weather in parts of Western Europe. I'd ask you to please turn to slide 7. Paper Packaging’s fourth quarter sales grew by $290 million versus the prior year quarter due to Caraustar’s contribution, partially offset by lower published prices in our containerboard business. Volumes were negatively impacted by 12,000 tons of containerboard economic downtime and by 6,500 tons of planned containerboard maintenance downtime at Mason, Ohio mill that last year occurred in fiscal three, and this year we took the scheduled downtime in Q4. Paper Packaging’s fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA rose by roughly 75% versus the prior year. Caraustar continues to demonstrate its merit and outpace steel assumptions for the second consecutive quarter with quarterly adjusted EBITDA of roughly $64 million. In fiscal 2020, Paper Packaging will benefit from the additional 3.5 months of Caraustar and from various new capital growth projects coming online, including our new corrugated sheet feeder in Palmyra, Pennsylvania. We'll face a headwind from lower published containerboard prices that occurred midway through this past year, which will only be offset partially by lower input cost. Our assumption for OCC cost will remain lower for longer with an average of $46 on a blended rate in fiscal 2020, down slightly from the fiscal 2019 average of $50 a ton. I like to please turn to slide 8. Caraustar’s integration is progressing to plan, and we realized roughly $24 million of synergy in fiscal 2019. Recall that we originally expected to capture $15 million in the first 12 months following the deal close. The positive synergy delta was generated by accelerated SG&A activity, internalization and cross-selling opportunities, and by accelerated productivity and footprint optimization, including our decision to shut down one paper machine in our Mobile, Alabama uncoated recycled boxboard mill complex. We expect to achieve synergies of at least $70 million by the end of fiscal 2022 and capture an incremental $26 million in fiscal 2020, which is factored into our guidance. By Q2 2020, we expect our payroll systems, sourcing financial reporting systems to be on one common platform reporting systems beyond one common platform which will drive deeper integration between growth in legacy Caraustar and serve as a catalyst for future SG&A savings. We currently have over 190 synergy opportunities still to be accessed in quantified although most are smaller in nature, we prioritize larger opportunities first. Finally, we have not yet completed the consumer packaging business strategic review. We originally expected that assessment to be completed by fiscal year-end; however, we are still actively engaged in that process. We expect to conclude this review in the early 2020. I'd like to now turn the presentation over our Chief Financial Officer, Larry Hilsheimer.