Paul DeSantis
Analyst · CJS. Your line is open
Thank you, Julie. As you heard, both business segments delivered another sequential quarter of improved sales, profits and margins. Versus the third quarter, sales increased 8%, adjusted operating income was up by more than 30% and adjusted earnings per share jumped almost 60%. These results were led by our Technical Products segment, which now makes up almost 65% of our total revenue. So, let me start there. Sales of $137 million in the quarter were up from quarter three and more impressively, grew 11% versus last year. The increase was driven primarily by volume growth and helped by currency translation as the stronger euro increased the top line by about $5 million. These favorable results were partially offset by lower pricing in a few categories such as backings that have price adjusters tied to raw material input costs. Our filtration business has continued to perform extremely well and fourth quarter revenues were up almost 30% to a record $66 million. Transportation filtration media sales grew strongly in Europe and the U.S. and sales of industrial filters increased by more than 20%. Industrial filtration growth was led by gains in products used for evaporative cooling and other similar applications. Quarterly revenues also included about $4 million for face mask media, which we began selling in 2020. Outside of filtration, our Industrial Solutions business also performed well, with almost 20% growth in backings, primarily due to increased tape revenue with new products introduced at some of our most strategic customers earlier in the year. Segment adjusted operating income of $18 million was up from $10 million in the fourth quarter of 2019 and operating margins also increased from 8% to 13% of sales. Higher income in 2020 resulted from increased sales in production volumes, lower input cost than the selling prices, reduced SG&A spending and favorable currency translation. Turning to Fine Paper & Packaging, net sales of $70 million increased from the prior quarter and as expected due to COVID were below sales in the fourth quarter of 2019. Volume was the largest reason for the shortfall, with commercial print accounting for most of this due to reduced demand for print marketing and advertising. Consumer revenues fell, impacted by timing of back-to-school sales, while premium packaging revenues increased, led by growth in labels and folding board. Segment adjusted operating profit was just under $8 million, up 15% from the third quarter, but below prior year due to lower sales and production volumes and a less favorable mix. These impacts were partially offset by reduced SG&A spending and modest benefits from lower input cost, net of selling prices. As a reminder, we have a history of successfully managing costs and our asset footprint to generate attractive returns and good steady cash flows that we can invest in growth categories. The commercial print market, while in secular decline, makes up less than half of the segment sales and our consumer and premium packaging businesses with their stronger growth characteristics, efficiently utilize the same asset base. With actions and plans underway, I am confident we are on the path to recover volume and restore historical mid-teen operating margins. Next, I will cover a few corporate items. Consolidated SG&A was $21.5 million, down almost $2 million from last year. In 2020, we carefully managed spending and expenses like travel were severely curtailed. In 2021, with the resumption of more normalized spending, we expect quarterly SG&A of approximately $25 million with unallocated corporate costs of $5.5 million. Interest expense was $3.1 million in the quarter, up from $2.8 million in 2019. The increase was largely due to higher non-cash amortization expense related to refinancing our bonds plus interest rate differentials on cash and debt as we built up a large cash balance in 2020. Our income tax rate in the fourth quarter was 15% compared to 19% in the prior year. This 2020 rate included a benefit from a provision of the CARES Act, which allowed us to increase the value of certain net operating losses and will generate a cash benefit in 2021. On an ongoing annual basis, we expect our tax rate to be approximately 22%. With $37 million of cash on hand and no borrowings against our revolver, year end liquidity was over $175 million and remains in excellent shape. Cash generated from operations in the fourth quarter was $13 million and while down from the fourth quarter of 2019 it decreased for the right reasons. In 2019, cash flows benefited from a drop in receivables as year end sales tapered off due to typical seasonality. This was not the case in the fourth quarter of 2020 as customer demand was still rebounding from the impact of COVID earlier in the year. In addition, as noted in our last call, we accelerated $6 million of retirement plan cash contributions into 2020. In 2021, we expect to return to a more traditional level of cash flow with increased working capital as we grow sales, while maintaining our efficiencies. Fourth quarter capital spending was $7 million. This included a project to increase coating capabilities at one of our plants to support growth in release liners. For the full year, capital spending was only $19 million as we cut or deferred non-critical items. In 2021, we expect to resume more normal spending to around $35 million. I will end with a few additional comments on our near-term outlook. Demand for both business segments should continue to recover with general economic activity. While we won’t be back to Q1 2020 pre-COVID levels by the first quarter due to the slower recovery in Fine Paper and less of a seasonal bounce back in Technical Products, we expect to continue delivering modest sequential quarterly gains. The second half of the year should reflect more normal seasonal patterns and will include costs for our annual maintenance down in the third and fourth quarters. With a weaker U.S. dollar, recovering global economies and short-term volatility in supply and demand factors, input prices for fibers, chemicals and transportation costs have all begun to rise off of Q4 lows. Since many of our fiber contracts have a one quarter lag to market, we would expect to see the majority of the impact from fiber increases starting in the second quarter. Our teams are aggressively working to mitigate these higher input costs with pricing and other actions. We are confident that over time our pricing will successfully offset cost headwinds, though sometimes this may not happen in the same calendar year. Input costs in 2021 could be more than $20 million higher than in 2020. However, for the full year, we currently expect volume growth and benefits from our cost and pricing actions to offset this. One positive outcome of the weaker U.S. dollar is translation of our European operating results. With the euro currently over $1.20, it’s more than $0.05 above the 2020 average. Each $0.05 is worth about $10 million annually of sales and a little less than $2 million of operating income or $0.10 per share. Finally, I would note that in 2021, our publishing business will be managed as part of Fine Paper & Packaging. The change enables us to realize SG&A efficiencies since Fine Paper & Packaging has a similar path to market and customer overlap. Publishing is a relatively small category with sales of less than $30 million and mid single-digit operating margins. So if you are building 2021 models, this business should be reclassed from Technical Products into Fine Paper & Packaging. I will wrap up as I started by saying our businesses delivered another quarter of improving revenues, profits and margins led by Technical Products and outstanding filtration performance. While the economic environment still has its challenges, demand is recovering in both segments and Neenah remains on a strong financial footing. And as always, we remain committed to the financial principles we have been known for, maintaining a prudent balance sheet, disciplined capital deployment and returning cash to shareholders through an attractive dividend. On that note, I will turn it back to Julie.