Bob Mack
Analyst · Wedbush Securities. Please go ahead
Thanks Mike and good morning, everyone. Mike highlighted the supply chain headwinds we faced in the third quarter and expect to continue to face for the remainder of the year. We want to make sure our investors understand that we are working diligently to counteract these headwinds while there is pressure in the near-term we believe we are well-positioned to capitalize on the sustained demand as the supply chain normalizes. We will have more on the remainder of 2021 later, but let me first start with the summary of the third quarter. Third quarter sales were flat on a GAAP and adjusted basis versus the prior year finishing at 1.96 billion. Sales improved from motorcycles, global adjacent markets and boats. ORV, snowmobiles and aftermarket sales were down on a year-over-year basis, while supply chain constraints impacted all of our businesses, we were able to ship more motorcycles and adjacent market vehicles during the quarter compared to the same quarter in 2020, both sales were positively impacted by improved product mix as we shipped a stronger mix of premium boats in the quarter. Third quarter earnings per share on a GAAP basis was $1.84, adjusted earnings per share was a $1.98, which was down from the $2.85 we reported in Q3 last year as expected. Adjusted gross margins were down approximately 360 basis points on a year-over-year basis, mostly due to increased input costs from logistics, commodities, plant inefficiencies and labor. The input costs were partially offset by increased pricing and ongoing lower promotional and floor plan financing costs. Adjusted operating expenses were up 4% primarily due to increased research and development expenditures and to a lesser degree increased selling and marketing costs during the quarter. Income from financial services declined 38% during the quarter, primarily due to lower retail credit income. Retail financing penetration rates continued to be low due to more customers paying in cash, minimal promotional programs available from Polaris and consumers having additional time to shop around for alternative financing options. And finally, the tax rate finished at 20.5% compared to 23.7% in the third quarter last year, due to favorable adjustments related to research and development credits taken in the quarter. From a segment reporting perspective, motorcycles, global adjacent markets and boats increase sales for the quarter driven by volume pricing, lower promotions and favorable product mix. Sales for our ORV, snowmobile and aftermarket segments reported lower sales for the quarter driven by the supply chain shortages. All segments continue to benefit from ongoing low-promotional costs, given high demand and the lack of product in the channel. Pricing actions taken in May also had a favorable impact during the quarter, but were muted given the large quantity of customer pre-order units, which would did not benefit from the pricing actions. Average selling prices for all segments were up, ORV increased about 5%. Motorcycles were up approximately 10%. Adjacent markets increased about 1% and boats was up approximately 30% for the quarter. Mix had an impact on ASPs in all segments. I will talk more about pricing actions we have recently taken as they're an important countermeasure to the increasingly inflationary environment we are facing today in going forward. Our international sales increased 21% during the quarter with all regions and segments, growing sales, as many economies continue to gain traction as they recovered from earlier COVID shutdowns. Currency added three percentage points to the international growth for the quarter. Parts, garments and accessories sales increased 8% during the quarter with strong demand across all segments in categories in that business, particularly parts and accessories. Back orders driven by the supply chain bottlenecks remained high, limiting our growth in PG&A for the quarter. Moving on to our guidance for the remainder of the year, as Mike indicated, supply chain challenges significantly impacted our ability to ship product in the third quarter. And we anticipate continued pressure in the fourth quarter and into 2022. When we last updated our expectations in July, we had been expecting the supply chain constraints to ease as we headed into the fourth quarter. Unfortunately, the supply environment has improved in the ways we had anticipated. Therefore we are lowering our full year sales and earnings expectations going into the fourth quarter. Total company sales are now expected to finish at approximately 8.15 billion for the year. At this projected sales level full-year adjusted earnings per share guidance for 2021 is expected to finish at approximately $9 per diluted share. While we are disappointed that we have to update our guidance, keep in mind this is $0.25 per share higher than the high end of our original 2021 guidance range. The full year sales and earnings expectations are driven by our ability to source the needed components for our products. Our guidance assumes that supply chain performance will not deteriorate further in Q4 and that our suppliers will be able to fulfill our current expectations for component deliveries for the remainder of the year. While we typically have a solid view of the puts and takes for a given quarter, which gives us confidence in providing a realistic guidance range. In this environment, the timing of component shipments could significantly impact the quantity and mix of products we were able to ship in a given quarter and therefore our results. We are doing all we can to deliver vehicles to our dealers and consumers, but have limited ability to quickly countermeasure certain unexpected supply chain disruptions. As such we have provided you our balance projection for 2021, which is reflective of our current viewpoint on the component availability and production run rates. One thing is certain we will always do what is in the best interest of our consumers to get their requested vehicles to them as soon as we can. Moving down to P&L, we've made the following revisions. Adjusted gross profit margins are now expected to be down approximately 70 basis points, which is at the lower end of our previous guidance. The escalating increase in input cost, as Mike indicated earlier, has been significant. Mike mentioned the $300 million plus increase in input cost since the beginning of the year, but just in the third quarter alone, our input costs from logistics, ocean and truck rates, commodities, labor rates, and plant inefficiencies increased over $100 million were approximately 580 basis points when compared to the prior year third quarter. Given, the magnitude of the input cost increases in the expectation that they are not transitory, we are quickly adjusting our pricing for model year 2022. Here in October, we announced price increases that will increase the average sales price on most ORV and motorcycle models in the mid-single digits percent range. Similar increases were also announced for associated PG&A. These increases are in addition to several price increases we have made earlier in the year. While the cost environment is the headwind that will continue to impact our gross profit margins in the fourth quarter, the benefit of the recent pricing actions taken or announced will not have a significant impact until the first quarter of 2022 as the dealer's current pre-orders are set at the previous pricing levels. Adjusted operating expenses now expected to improve 90 basis points as a percentage of sales versus last year, again, at the lower end of our previous guidance range, driven by the lower sales growth expectations, partially offset by prudent cost management. We are continuing to invest in the business while controlling our flexible expenses commensurate with our sales volume. Income from financial services is now expected to be down in the low-30s percent range, driven by the continued historically low dealer inventory levels, as well as lower retail financing income due to lower penetration rates of our retail providers as I explained earlier. And we're adjusting our income tax provision rate expectations for the full year to be in the range of 22% to 22.5% and improvement over our previously issued guidance, reflecting the flow through of favorable tax adjustments related to the R&D credit. Guidance for the remainder of the P&L items remains materially unchanged from our previous issued guidance. Our sales expectations for our segments have been lowered given the supply chain challenges with the exception of global adjacent markets, which remains unchanged for the year. While our adjacent market businesses are feeling the same supply chain challenges with our other businesses. They were in a better position with finished goods and dealer inventory given the B2B market has recovered at a slower rate in the consumer markets. Our current plan capacity is adequate to meet the current demand. And when the supply chain constraints ease, we will have the needed capacity in place to ramp quick and begin to fill the dealer channel with much needed inventory. We are expanding our Monterey facility by over 400,000 square feet adding approximately 35% more capacity for Razor in general over the next year to accommodate the model year 2022 vehicles, the new Razor is coming in Q4 and additional ORV models expected to launch over the next couple of years. For Boats, we added approximately 55,000 square feet of manufacturing capacity in Elkhart, Indiana to meet the demand for Bennington. And we brought the Syracuse, Indiana facility back online to support strong demand for our Hurricane deck boats. In addition to adding manufacturing space, we have also invested heavily in welding, bending, injection molding and painting capabilities to support higher assembly volumes. With these capacity adds, we will be ready to meet the anticipated strong demand when the supply chain improves. Year-to-date third quarter operating cash flow finished at $153 million down significantly compared to the same period last year. The decrease was driven by an increase in factory inventory due to the increase in vehicles waiting for parts in our pre-buying of components to remove as much uncertainty around the component availability as possible. While share repurchases remains a lever, we like to use to return capital to shareholders. In the current supply constrained environment, we will concentrate much of our capital towards organic investments until the supply chain improves. With that, I will now turn it back over to Mike for some final thoughts.