Tricia Fulton
Analyst · Stifel. Please go ahead
Thank you, Josef and good morning, everyone. On Slide six and seven, I will review our first quarter consolidated results. As Josef mentioned, we delivered significant growth in the first quarter supported by our focus on delivery lead times, our expanding sales channels, strong end markets, and of course, the addition of Balboa which exceeded our expectations. Net sales grew 35% sequentially and 58% over the prior year period, as we executed our growth plans. First quarter gross profit of $75.4 million increased $22.7 million or 43% compared with the trailing quarter and $23.5 million or 45% over the prior year period from higher volumes. While consolidated organic volume was up over the fourth quarter gross profit was also affected by the mix of products sold, Balboa’s gross margin profile and the impact on operations from increasing freight costs. We are working to offset the impact of these items with cost containment, adding shifts to reduce overtime and working on our global supply chain efficiency program. Gross Margin was 36.8% and was impacted by the difference from Balboa’s margin profile, supply chain constraints, and increased freight costs. Adjusted EBITDA margin grew to 25.1% or 160 basis points compared with the same period a year ago and was up 190 basis points compared with the trailing quarter reflecting our cost management efforts, productivity improvements and the contributions of Balboa. Non-GAAP cash EPS improved $0.39 to $0.99 for the first quarter compared with the trailing quarter and was up $0.43 compared with the prior year period, reflecting better than expected performance of the Balboa acquisition. I should point out that our effective tax rate for the first quarter was 23.2% compared with 22.3% in the prior year period before impairment, primarily due to increased earnings in higher tax jurisdictions. Please turn to Slide eight for review of our Hydraulic segment first quarter operating results. As Josef mentioned in Italy, our QRC business had its company record high sales quarter and we are growing that business through a combination of leveraging customer relationships deeper geographic reach and from strong demand in the construction and agricultural end markets. The cartridge valve technology business is also seeing marked improvement as the distributor channels are depleting inventories and beginning to restock their shelves. Combined, these efforts delivered solid hydraulic sales of $119 million up 15% over the prior year period. Foreign currency exchange rates provided a positive $5.7 million impact on sales. By region, the segment had growth in both EMEA and APAC reflecting end market demand. QRC had strong growth in APAC driven by China. Sales in the Americas were down due to softer end market demand but with strength in certain markets such as ag. Q1 Hydraulics gross profit benefited from higher volume while margin was constrained with rapidly increasing freight costs and efforts to provide deliveries on time to customers. Operating margin of 23.6% compared with 20.7% last year reflects operating leverage on higher volume. In fact, CVT has significantly improved their operational performance over the last seven months getting back to their top tier lead times in executing well on cost containment. I should note that we are intentionally being very selective with price increases in our Hydraulics business. Instead we are positioning to gain market share well uncovering additional productivity efficiencies to drive margin. Please turn to Slide nine for review of our electronics segment first quarter operating results. As we said earlier, Balboa exceeded our expectations and was a significant contributor to our electronics segment sales for the first quarter. We could not be more excited by the potential this acquisition continues to bring. Electronic sales were $85.7 million compared to $25.7 million in the prior period, an increase of 234%. Growth drivers include the first full quarter of Balboa revenue, new product introductions, and strong demand and recreational and health and wellness end markets. Notably, our organic business was up very healthy double-digits driven by record demand in the recreational markets. Electronic segment gross profit of $30 million in Q1 increased with the acquisition and higher volume. Electronics gross margin was 35%. This reflects the impact of mix primarily related to the different margin profile of the Balboa acquisition. Operating income for the electronic segment of $18.3 million doubled the trailing quarter and was almost 4 times greater than the prior year period. Operating margin improved to 21.4% up 270 basis points for the same reason. The 2021 first quarter margin reflects the strong operating leverage inherent in this segment. Please turn to Slide 10 for review of our cash flow. Cash from operations was $15.1 million in the first quarter. We are carefully balancing our working capital requirements with our efforts to provide timely deliveries to our customers and its record demand. For the quarter CapEx of $5 million represented about 2% of sales. While our plan for $30 million to $35 million in CapEx for 2021 is unchanged as a result of higher sales, it will likely be closer to approximately 4% of sales for the full year based on our updated outlook. Free cash flow was $10.1 million at the end of first quarter equating to a trailing 12-month free cash flow conversion rate of 170% as Josef mentioned. We believe we have significant financial flexibility to further pursue our flywheel acquisition strategy. Regarding our capital structure on Slide 11, we continue to rapidly de-lever our balance sheet with a pro forma net debt-to-adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio of 2.65 times. This is improved from the 3 times at the end of 2020. Total debt was $452 million at quarter end, reflecting total repayment of $10 million during the quarter. At quarter end, we had $150 million available on our revolving lines of credit with total liquidity of $176 million. As most of you are aware, our financial strategy is to increase leverage for disciplined acquisitions and then generate the cash to quickly payback down. Our capital priorities our debt reduction, organic growth through new products and technologies, acquisitive growth, and finally distributions to shareholders. We have been a consistent dividend payer over the last 24 years. We recently paid our 98 sequential quarterly cash dividend on April 20 of this year. Now let's turn to Slide 12. And I will discuss our outlook for the rest of 2021. While the second half of 2021 is not yet fully visible, we are definitely encouraged with the strength we are seeing in our end markets and the success we are having in diversifying our markets in gaining new customers. Our guidance for 2021 assumes constant currencies in quarter end rates as well as the assumption that our markets will continue to recover from the global pandemic. We are raising our revenue outlook for 2021 to the range of $740 million to $750 million, which implies a growth rate of approximately 42% at the midpoint of the range. Adjusted EBITDA margin outlook remains unchanged at 23% to 24% as we continued to leverage our manufacturing efficiencies to offset the higher raw material costs and freight expenses in the macroenvironment. This implies we are raising our expectations for adjusted EBITDA dollars to the range of $170 million to $180 million or 44% annual growth rate at the midpoint of the range. Additionally, we continue to invest through non-CapEx related items into our manufacturing strategy to reap the rewards of margin improvement over the long-term. Interest expense outlook at current borrowing levels and rates remains unchanged at $16 million to $18 million. The effective tax rate for 2021 is expected to be in the range of 24% to 26%. Depreciation is expected to be about $22 million to $24 million and amortization will be approximately $30 million to $31 million. We are raising our non-GAAP cash EPS outlook to between $3.30 to $3.50 per share or a 52% increase over the prior year at the midpoint of the range. The increase in our guidance for 2021 is driven by the strong end market demand we had in the first quarter and expect to continue throughout 2021. We are able to leverage our fixed cost base and maintain are strong margins even give them the headwinds on material costs and logistics and our decision to manage pricing to our competitive advantage. With that, I will turn the call back to Josef for some final comments.