Milt Childress
Analyst · Sidoti. Your line is now live
Thanks, Eric. We had another solid quarter despite the well publicized headwinds we and many others faced. As reported, sales of $280.8 million in the fourth quarter increased 1.7% year-over-year. We saw strong demand in the semiconductor, heavy-duty truck, aerospace, general industrial, and food and pharma markets, as well as contributions from the acquisitions of Alluxa and NxEdge, which were largely offset by the reduction in sales due to divestitures and weakness in the automotive market. Organic sales for the fourth quarter increased 10.4% compared to the fourth quarter of 2020. Adjusted EBITDA of $47.7 million decreased 0.8% compared to the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA was impacted by inflationary pressures, affecting raw materials, freight and labor costs, and higher SG&A more than offsetting pricing initiatives and the benefit of the reshaping actions completed in 2020 and 2021. Corporate expenses of $26.9 million in the fourth quarter of 2021 were up from $10.6 million a year prior, driven primarily by acquisition-related expenses associated with the NxEdge transaction, as well as increased incentive compensation expenses, driven mainly by our fourth quarter share price performance. Adjusted diluted earnings per share of $1.23, was essentially flat compared to the prior year period. As noted during prior calls, during the fourth quarter of 2020, we changed our adjusted EPS from the previous presentation of this non-GAAP measure to one that excludes after tax acquisition-related intangible amortization. Such amortization, amortization of acquisition-related intangible assets in the fourth quarter was $12.7 million, compared to $10.9 million in the prior-year period, reflecting the additions of Alluxa and NxEdge. Now, let's move to a discussion of segment performance for the fourth quarter of last year. Due to the impact of divestitures, Sealing Technology sales of $143.9 million decreased 7% versus the prior year. Excluding the impact of divested businesses and foreign exchange translation, sales increased 12% versus the prior year period driven primarily by strong demand in heavy-duty truck, aerospace, nuclear and food and pharma markets. Also, due to businesses divested in 2020 and 2021, adjusted segment EBITDA decreased 12.3% versus the prior year period. Excluding the impact of divestitures and foreign exchange translation, adjusted segment EBITDA increased 3% compared to the prior year period. Results in the quarter were also impacted by inflationary pressures, affecting raw materials labor and freight costs, with such pressures concentrated in our trucking business. These costs were offset by pricing initiatives and leverage on the organic volume increase in the segment. Turning now to Advanced Surface Technologies. Fourth quarter sales of $69.1 million, increased 38.5%, versus the prior year period driven by strong demand in the semiconductor market and the acquisitions of Alluxa and NxEdge. Excluding the impact of acquisitions and foreign exchange translation, sales increased 16.6% versus the prior year period. For the fourth quarter, adjusted segment EBITDA increased 35.7% versus the prior year period, driven by the acquisitions and strong organic sales growth. Excluding the impact of the acquisitions and foreign exchange translation, adjusted segment EBITDA increased 10.4% compared to the prior year period. The growth in EBITDA while strong was partially impacted by timing delays and the launch of advanced node chips. Moving forward, our qualification and production work with semiconductor customers gives us confidence in the organic growth and profitability profile for our semi business, both in the coming year and over the long term. In Engineered Materials, sales decreased 7.3% versus the prior year period, driven by the divestitures of the GGB bushing block and CPI businesses. For the quarter, sales to the automotive market were weak due to chip shortages affecting auto production, particularly in comparison to a strong auto market in the fourth quarter of 2020 that continued in the first half of 2021. Excluding the impact of divestitures and foreign exchange translation, sales were flat. Fourth quarter adjusted segment EBITDA decreased 21.9% versus the prior year period, driven by raw material inflation and supply chain headwinds, as well as the decline in automotive production in Europe and the United States. Excluding the impact of divestitures and foreign exchange translation, adjusted segment EBITDA decreased by a comparable amount around 20.2% compared to the prior year period. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the fourth quarter with cash of $338.1 million, $310 million of which is located outside the United States. We have initiated efforts to repatriate portions of this cash for use in debt reduction, where it makes sense to do so from a tax efficiency perspective. At December 31, we had $213.6 million available for borrowing under our revolving credit facility. Free cash flow in 2021 was $123.2 million, up from $39.3 million in the prior year, driven by higher operating profits and lower cash taxes, resulting from a tax refund associated with a federal income tax audit resolution, partially offset by working capital investments, supporting stronger demand. During the fourth quarter, we paid a $0.27 per share quarterly dividend. For the year, dividend payments totaled $22.4 million. Our Board of Directors voted to increase our quarterly dividend to $0.28 per share effective with the March payment, representing our 7th consecutive annual increase in our quarterly dividend, since we began paying dividends in 2015. Moving now to 2022 guidance. Taking into consideration all the factors that we know at this time, we expect low double-digit revenue growth over reported 2021 sales of $1.14 billion and we expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $263 million to $275 million, implying adjusted EBITDA margins north of 20%. Further, we expect adjusted diluted earnings per share from continuing operations to be in the range of $6.70 to $7.25, using a normalized 27% tax rate, reduced from 30% last year. The reduction in our normalized tax rate assumption for 2022, results from the portfolio actions completed late in 2021, which tilt our portfolio to a higher portion of earnings in the United States. Our guidance assumes depreciation and amortization expense, excluding amortization of acquisition-related intangible assets of $37 million to $39 million and net interest expense of $30 million to $33 million. Our net interest expense estimate, factors in 425 basis point increases in our variable borrowing rate as 2022 progresses. Underlying demand and order trends remain strong, as we enter 2022. Even as inflationary raw material cost, the impact of the Omicron variant on labor availability and supply chain and logistics constraints that put early year pressure on growth and margins. We will be implementing additional pricing actions across the company as the year progresses in response to inflationary headwinds. Finally, I want to note that we continue to monitor the current COVID situation and will remain attentive to the safety and well-being of our colleagues who have demonstrated great resilience in the face of the very challenging conditions over the past two years. Now I'll turn the call back to Eric for closing comments.