Jeff Kramer
Analyst · Dan Jacome, Sidoti & Company. Your line is open
Thank you, Mark, and good morning everyone. Yesterday, we reported first quarter results with sales up 12% to more than $260 million and adjusted EPS up 24% to $0.82 a share. It was a good start to the year with consolidated sales, operating profit, EBITDA, free cash flow and EPS all up versus last year. As we've discussed our 2018 operating plan was based on relative stability in our paper business and improved organic sales growth in AMS and we delivered on both fronts. For the quarter, the key takeaways are strong manufacturing performance and favorable currency driving top and bottom-line growth in EP and accelerated organic sales growth in AMS offset by short- term margin pressures, which we expect to improve throughout the year. Cash flow was up significantly versus last year, I'll bet in our seasonally lowest quarter and as we indicated on our last call, we project free cash flow to exceed $100 million in 2018. AMS delivered 7% organic sales growth with solid gains across most of our portfolio. Transportation, filtration, industrial and medical all showed strong increases while infrastructure and construction lagged. Going into more detail, our Transportation business delivered strong results on the heels of a soft fourth quarter. Recall that after a high growth in mid-2017, our customers paired back inventories significantly impacting Q4 results. We indicated that this was expected to be a short-term issue and in fact these sales bounced back and resumed their growth trend to start the year. While the quarterly comparisons may be lumpy, our healthy order backlog for these specialty films supports a positive outlook. In our Filtration business, we are pleased to see a rebound in water filtration sales as the general market role over the past 18 to 24 months had consistently hindered AMS growth. As anticipated, we see the beginning of 2018 upturn as the filter replenishment cycle returns and customers plan for new capacity coming online in the Middle East. We also saw continued growth in process filtration driven mainly by gains in semiconductor manufacturing where our products filtered liquid solvents used in chip production. In our Infrastructure and Construction business, we were affected by extended and severe winter conditions across most of the northern parts of the country during the first quarter. While we don't like to use weather as an excuse, this market is highly sensitive to poor conditions as it impacts construction crews ability to complete projects. Simply put many of the end users of our erosion control blankets and sediment control socks have been unable to perform installations at their sites. We believe a portion of these delay sales will be recovered throughout the remainder of the year. Unfortunately, we did not experience the entire flow through of higher organic sales so the bottom-line. As anticipated, our Austin side incurred elevated costs as we get closer to a final exit later this year. We flush through high cost inventory, incurred accelerated depreciation on several assets and endured the typical inefficiencies related to closing a plant resulting in P&L impacts. The higher cost associated with this site accounted for the majority of the adjusted segment margin decline. However, we expect to offset these costs later this year when we realize the synergy from closing this facility, which annualize to majority of our $10 million run rate target. The second issue is higher resin costs, particularly polypropylene which is up versus last year and is forecasted to remain elevated in 2018. In response, we recently implemented price increases to our customers. The increases are intended to mitigate higher resin prices and we have seen many resin users announce similar actions. The price increase will benefit the coming quarters and we anticipate it will offset a large portion of the cost pressure. Also we are encouraged by the sales momentum despite the margin impact of these short-term issues and our confidence our actions will result in better profitability for the year. Finally, our key strategic projects are progressing well as the new facility in China is up and running and we are hitting internal milestones for our new European film line start up later this year. Switching to Engineered Papers, first quarter results were solid, segment volume was up 2% largely due to growth in non-tobacco papers as total tobacco volume was stable. Currency particularly the euro drove the majority of the 10% sales increase in the quarter. Regarding segment margins, we reported healthy growth versus last year. However, that first quarter 2017 results were suppressed due to production issues related to several line restarts. Favorable comparisons aside, we performed well in the quarter from a manufacturing perspective with productivity gains offsetting higher pulp costs. In response to this inflationary pressure, we have also selectively raised prices and will continue to monitor the pulp market and evaluate further actions. Regarding our strategic priorities, heat-not-burn sales were up significantly over last year. At that time, we had just begun to generate commercial sales as our initial major customer ramped up production and built inventories. We expect continued growth in 2010 and have begun shifting initial commercial quantities to a second major customer who is preparing to launch their product. We acknowledge that there has been some volatility on the street regarding category growth reflected in earnings reports of key industry players. We have been consistent stating that heat-not-burn is an attractive long-term play but is still in the early phases of rollout and will experience some fits and starts as it gains acceptance. We remain optimistic on the long-term outlook for this innovative product line and see this more as an offset to secular declines in demand for our other tobacco related products rather than a game changer in the near-term. I'd also like to highlight a positive legal result in our LIP business resulting in a one-time settlement of $1.2 million from our competitor. While relatively small, it signals the strength and defensibility of our patent portfolio. We know this is not our primary infringement case, where we received a favorable ruling in late 2017. As stated previously with regard to that case, we are assessing potential positive outcomes but there is no update to provide now. I will now turn the call over to Andy.