Jeffrey Niew
Analyst · CJS Securities. Please proceed
Thanks, Jeff. We reported second quarter revenues of 188 million, down 12 million from the same period a year ago driven by weak demand for MEMS microphones, partially offset by increased demand in Hearing Health and our Precision Devices segment. Audio revenues of 129 million were down 14% from the same period a year ago, due to weak global microphone demand for consumer electronics, COVID lockdowns in China, and excess PC and smartphone channel inventory. The decline in MEMS microphone revenue was partially offset by increased shipments in Hearing Health, on market growth, share gains and new products. The Precision Devices segment delivered revenues of 60 million, up 19% from prior year driven by growth across most end markets with the highest growth coming from defense, industrial and medtech markets. Second quarter gross profit margins were 41.5% at the midpoint of our guidance range and down 90 basis points from the same period a year ago. Audio segment gross margins finished 300 basis points below 2021 levels, driven by lower factory capacity utilization in our MEMS microphone business partially offset by lower factory spending and favorable mix in our Hearing Health business. Precision Devices segment gross margins were 46.7%, up 350 basis points from the prior year, driven by favorable mix, productivity gains and higher factory capacity utilization. R&D expense in the quarter was 18 million, down more than 3 million from the prior year driven by lower incentive compensation costs. SG&A expenses were 24 million, 4 million lower than the prior year driven by lower incentive compensation costs. For the quarter, adjusted EBIT margin was 20%, up 210 basis points from the prior year, driven by a reduction in operating expenses. EPS was $0.33, which was $0.01 above the midpoint of guidance and $0.02 above the prior year with the increase driven by lower operating expenses, reduced interest cost and a lower share count, partially offset by the impact of lower shipment volume. Now, I'll turn to our balance sheet and cash flow. Cash and cash equivalents totaled 48 million at the end of the quarter. Cash from operations was 20 million, near the high end of our expectations, primarily due to lower net working capital. Capital spending was 7 million in the quarter, and we repurchased approximately 940,000 shares at a total cost of 18.6 million. Before moving to the third quarter guidance, as Jeff stated earlier, we're accelerating our strategy to reduce our exposure to lower margin commodity microphones. We're taking actions beginning in the third quarter to right-size our manufacturing capacity and operating expenses in our MEMS microphone business. This restructuring is expected to yield 25 million to 30 million of annualized savings, with roughly half of the savings coming from lower factory overhead and half related to lower operating expenses. We expect Knowles to exit 2022 with a quarterly operating expense run rate of approximately 45 million, which reflects both the impacts of our restructuring actions and normalized levels of incentive compensation. We expect to incur cash charges associated with the restructuring of approximately 23 million to 28 million related to severance and the settlement of vendor obligations. Lastly, the cost reduction actions we're taking today support our strategy of focusing on higher value solutions, which should enable us to deliver on our mid-term financial targets of 22% to 24% adjusted EBIT margin and 15% to 17% free cash flow margin earlier than we communicated last November. Moving to the guidance for the third quarter. We expect total company revenue to be between 170 million and 185 million, down approximately 24% from the same period a year ago, driven by lower shipments of MEMS microphones in connection with weak consumer electronic demand and excess compute and smartphone channel inventory. Revenue from the audio segment is expected to be down more than 30% from Q3 2021, primarily due to lower demand for MEMS microphones driven by the macroeconomic headwinds we've discussed. Precision Devices revenue is expected to be up more than 10% over prior year levels, driven by continued broad based strength in defense, medtech and industrial markets. We estimate gross margins for the third quarter to be approximately 37% to 39%, down 390 basis points from the year ago period, driven by lower factory capacity utilization in our MEMS microphone business, an unfavorable mix due to lower shipments to the high margin compute market. These negative impacts are partially offset by productivity gains and improved capacity utilization in Precision Devices. R&D expense is expected to be between 18 million and 20 million and selling and administrative expense is expected to be between 26 million and 28 million, down from a year ago period driven by lower incentive compensation costs. We're projecting adjusted EBIT margin for the quarter to be in the range of 11% to 13% and EPS to be within a range of $0.17 to $0.21 per share. This assumes weighted average shares outstanding during the quarter of 94.8 million on a fully diluted basis. We're forecasting an effective tax rate of 12% to 16% for the quarter and full year 2022. For the third quarter, we expect cash generated from operations to be between 20 million and 30 million and capital spending to be approximately 10 million. While we don't typically provide guidance beyond the current quarter, I'd like to provide some commentary as it relates to our expectations for the fourth quarter of 2022. We're expecting 15% to 25% sequential growth for the total company, driven by Precision Devices and Hearing Health and a modest increase in microphone shipments as channel inventory is expected to improve. We also expect significant sequential improvement in gross margins, adjusted EBIT margins and cash flow as we benefit from higher shipment volumes and begin to realize the benefits of our restructuring program. We are estimating Q4 gross profit margins to be between 40% and 42% and adjusted EBIT margins to be above 20%. For the full year, we expect free cash flow as a percentage of revenue to finish above 10%. While demand and inventory levels in the consumer electronics market are challenging, our strategy coupled with our optimized cost structure positions us well to grow profitably when demand returns. This, along with expected continued growth in our Precision Devices and Hearing Health businesses, will enable us to accelerate achievement of the mid-term adjusted EBIT margin and free cash flow margin targets introduced last November. I'll now turn the call back to our operator to open the line for questions.