Glynis Bryan
Analyst · Matt Sheerin with Stifel
Thank you, Joyce. In the second year of the pandemic, we continued to focus on helping our clients forecast their needs and ensured that they were the chief supply as it became available. This led to rapid bookings and backlog levels exiting 2021. For 2022, industry analysts expect low single-digit growth in hardware. However, in our first quarter, we're seeing hardware bookings in North America improve double-digit year-over-year, compared to the first quarter of 2021. Also, we exited the fourth quarter 2021 with elevated backlog, primarily in North America. We expect that this will benefit the first half of 2022. Moving on to slide 11 to 14 for our consolidated results, our net sales in the fourth quarter were $2.6 billion up 12% in constant currency and also in us dollars compared to the fourth quarter of 2020. This represented net -- record net sales for Insight. Gross profit of $385 million increased 12% year-over-year and gross margin was 15%. SG&A expenses were up 12% year-over-year in constant currency and up 13% in U.S. dollars. As a percentage of net sales adjusted SG&A was 11% consistent with prior year and as a percentage of net sales, SG&A on a GAAP basis was also -- was 11.3% also consistent with prior year. Adjusted earnings from operations was a $103 million up 12% year-over-year, also up 12% on a GAAP basis to $93 million. An adjusted diluted earnings per share was $2.03 up 15% and $1.69 per share on a GAAP basis, an increase of 13%. On an annual basis for 2021, as Joyce mentioned, we set company records for net sales, gross profit, adjusted earnings from operations, and adjusted diluted earnings per share. Annual net sales of $9.4 billion were up 13% year-over-year. We maintained focus on leading with services which also grew 13% year-over-year. Our gross profit of $1.4 billion was up 11% from 2020. Gross margins for the full year was 15.3% compared to last year of 15.6%. Our Services gross profit was 49% of consolidated gross profit compared to 48% in 2020. Gross -- Cloud gross profit in 2021 grew 21% driven by SaaS and Infrastructure-as-a-Service with a combined gross profit growth rate of 35% year-over-year. SG&A expenses were up 7% year-over-year in constant currency and 10% in U.S. dollars. As a percentage of net sales, adjusted SG&A was 11.5% down from 11.7% in 2020 and below our guidance of 11.7% for 2021. As a result of net sales, SG&A on a GAAP basis was down 11.8%, down 30 basis points year-over-year. Adjusted earnings from operations were $362 million, up 12% year-over-year, compared to $322 million and a 22% increase in earnings from operations on a GAAP basis. And adjusted diluted earnings per share was $7.10, up 15% versus $5.95 per share on a GAAP basis, an increase of 22%. Our Cloud gross profit results for the quarter and full year were 17% and 18% of consolidated gross profit, respectively, this compares to 16%and 17% in the prior year, respectively, representing our cloud results exclusive of any Tier two our Cloud service provider net sales, which were previously included in our stated Cloud results. For more compatibility, we're reporting Cloud service provider net sales as part of our software product category. This signs within our historical and ongoing U.S. GAAP financial reporting and increases the focus on the faster growing Cloud related elements. Moving on to the results of each of our operating segments. And starting with North America operating results on slide 15, fourth-quarter net sales were $2.1 billion, a record for Insight up 13% year-over-year, driven by 19% increase in hardware net sales. Gross profit in North America in the fourth quarter increased 30% year-over-year and gross margin of 14.7% was relatively flat year-to-year. This was driven by the mix of products and services in the quarter. As I mentioned, we exited the year with elevated backlog in the business. Selling and administrative expenses increased to 14% year-over-year, driven by higher personnel and variable compensation costs resulting from higher net sales. Adjusted earnings from operations grew 9% year-over-year to $85 million. GAAP earnings from operations grew 8% year-over-year to $77 million. Moving onto the [Indiscernible] Slide 16, net sales in the fourth quarter grew 7% in constant currency. Gross profit also increased 10% in constant currency. Faster than net sales, primarily due to an increase in higher-margin services, partially offset by a net decrease in margin -- on product margin. Adjusted earnings from operations was 13.2% of 27% in constant currency. GAAP earnings from operations grew 35% year-over-year to $12.5 million. Now to APAC on Slide 17, net sales of $54 million and gross profit of $14 million in the fourth quarter increased 19% and 22%, respectively, year-over-year in constant currency, primarily due to higher sales across all categories in the region. This led to adjusted earnings from operations of $40.7 million in the quarter. GAAP earnings from operations was $114.4 million. Moving on to our tax rate, our effective tax rate in 2021 was 20% compared to 24.4% in 2020. The net increase in our rate was a result of tax benefits made available by the Cares Act in 2020, partially offset by increased tax credit. Turning to the details of our 2021 cash flow performance on slide 18, our operations generated $164 million of cash in 2021, compared to $356 million of cash in 2020. As we have highlighted previously, our cash conversion cycle is inverted, meaning we pair partners on terms shorter than we received payments from our clients. This allows us to drive more cash flow when hardware sales decline, while in periods of growth, more cash is used in our operations. In 2021, hyper-growth recovered significantly, returning our business to a more historical range of annual cash flow generation. In the fourth quarter, our cash conversion cycle was 30 days flat year-over-year, faster than our cash conversion cycle included the following: strategic inventory procurement and supportive plant projects, partially offset by improved DSO and deferral of payments to certain vendors. In 2021, we invested $52 million in capital expenditures mainly related to facility at technology investments. We also received $31 million in proceeds from the sale of real estate assets. Lastly, we spent $50 million to repurchase shares of our common stock in Q2 of 2021. We continue to have $75 million remaining under our share repurchase authorization. As of December 31, 2021, we had almost all of our $1.2 billion capacity available under our ABL facility and we have ample capacity to fund future growth. At the end of the year, we had a cash balance of $104 million, of which $84 million was resident in our foreign subsidiaries. We had $362 million of outstanding debt, including our senior convertible notes at the end of the quarter, compared to prior year cash balance of $182 million dollars and total debt of $439 million. Moving on to liquidity on slide 9, we exited the quarter with a leverage position at less than 1.0 times debt-to-cash flows or EBITDA, which is well within our level of comfort. Under our ABL agreement, our primary compliance covenant is a fixed charge cover to ratio, which includes trailing 12 month EBITDA coverage over capital expenditures, taxes, and cash interest. As of December 31, we're 4.1 times the minimum requirement of 1 times, and we're confident we can support our capital requirements and liquidity for the full year 2022, guidance on slide 20, we expect to deliver mid-single-digit net sales growth. We expect that the adjusted diluted earnings per share for the full year of 2022 be between $7.65 and $7.85. This outlook assume interest expense between $30 million to $35 million, an effective tax rate of 25% to 26% for the full year of 2022. Capital expenditures of $75 million to $80 million, including final completion of our new corporate headquarters and an average share count for the full year of 35.6 million share. This outlook excludes acquisition-related intangible amortization expense of approximately $31 million and assumes no acquisition-related or severance and restructuring expenses. I will now turn the call back to Joyce.