Paul DeSantis
Analyst · CJS Securities. Your line is open
Thanks, Julie and good morning everyone. The second quarter was extremely busy for Neenah as we took actions to drive our strategy, including the successful completion of the ITASA acquisition at the beginning of the quarter, which resulted in $33 million of sales and accretive EBITDA margins in the high teens. Synergy realization is on track. From a cash earnings perspective, the business contributed about $0.15 per share for the quarter. We announced the closure of the Appleton facility, which is expected to result in annual savings of $7 million to $8 million beginning in the fourth quarter of this year. We began to see unprecedented raw material cost increases, as expected, and we continue to respond with pricing. In some of our businesses, we have announced multiple price increases as we work to offset the rapidly evolving input cost environment. We announced the restart of our production line in Neenah, Wisconsin as a result of the success of our Fine Paper and Packaging team’s efforts to drive volume. We committed $13 million of capital for our new coater to support our recently acquired release liner business as we continue to see the growth we had expected in a location that was a Greenfield less than 3 years ago. And we refinanced our debt at favorable terms to support our acquisition and reduce cash costs. Sales reached $269 million, up $108 million from last year’s pandemic-influenced second quarter and up $42 million from the first quarter of this year. This quarter’s results include $33 million from the ITASA acquisition. Technical Products sales were a record $180 million, up 79% from last year and up 24% sequentially from the first quarter. Fine Paper and Packaging sales were $90 million for the quarter, up 48% from last year and up 10% sequentially from the first quarter. We were pleased with the results in a number of our key businesses, including filtration, packaging, industrial solutions and release liners, all of which performed well during the second quarter. Adjusted earnings were $19.3 million compared to $500,000 in last year’s second quarter. In the first quarter of 2021, we reported adjusted earnings of $26.1 million. The second quarter results reflect the rapid increase of input costs which, as anticipated, are impacting the business in advance of our pricing initiatives. As our pricing actions, volume increases and other efficiency initiatives begin to take hold we expect to offset the impact of the cost increases by the end of the year. Technical Products adjusted earnings were $14.7 million, up from $5.8 million in last year’s second quarter and down from $19.5 million in this year’s first quarter reflecting the disproportionate impact of raw material cost increases in this segment. The second quarter result for Technical Products compares favorably to the almost $13 million delivered during the second quarter of 2019, reflecting the strength in underlying markets such as filtration as well as the impact of the ITASA acquisition. Fine Paper and Packaging adjusted earnings were $10 million for the second quarter, up from last year’s loss of $600,000 and down from $12.8 million in this year’s first quarter, again, reflecting the impact of raw material costs and the timing of price increases. We’re pleased with the top line performance of Fine Paper and Packaging as we’re seeing it recover to 90% of the pre-COVID run rate as expected. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flows, liquidity remains strong, while cash flow from operations of $23 million was down from the $44 million recorded for the first 6 months of last year. The difference was due to working capital, reflecting the rebound in business. Trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA reached $121 million as of June 30 this year compared to the $101 million we recorded last calendar year as we see the benefits of our continued growth and the impact of the ITASA acquisition. As a result of the strong EBITDA growth and free cash flow, we’re on a path to see adjusted net leverage drop to approximately 3x by the end of the year, absent any other actions. Year-to-date CapEx was $11 million versus $8 million last year. We’re expecting CapEx to pick up in the second half of the year, getting us into the low to mid-$30 million range as safety, growth and cost reduction initiatives are implemented, including the beginning of the $13 million of ITASA expansion CapEx. Our effective income tax rate was a benefit of 21% in the second quarter of this year compared to a benefit of 19% in the second quarter of last year. Both periods were significantly impacted by the effects of impairment losses, which will not repeat. And this year’s 21% rate includes the effect of the acquisition of ITASA and associated acquisition costs. ITASA carries a blended tax rate in the mid-20s. So our tax rate is expected to rise slightly from our historical rate as we will be around 23% for this year. As we mentioned in the Q1 earnings call, and you can see in our Q2 results, we continue to face rapid escalation and input costs, including many fibers reaching all-time high pricing levels during the second quarter. Global demand resurgence has significantly contributed to widespread shortages in many chemical markets, resulting in a limited number of raw material shortages and stubbornly elevated costs for many materials. The input cost increases significantly impacted our results in Q2. Trends in the past months are beginning to indicate that our costs will peak in Q3 and generally stabilize in Q4. As we mentioned, our teams are continuing to work to offset these input costs with pricing action. We expect the impact of input cost in the third quarter to be $7 million to $8 million incremental to that of the second quarter, of which we expect to offset about half of the additional costs directly with our pricing initiatives as they begin to gain steam. Also as a reminder, we have most of our annual maintenance downs in the third quarter, which adds $1 million to $2 million to quarterly costs. As I said earlier, we expect to fully offset the increases by the end of the year through a combination of pricing actions, volume increases and efficiency improvements. And we expect to see the gap between raw material costs and pricing begin to narrow in the fourth quarter. And on that note, I’ll turn it back to Julie.