Matthew Eaken
Analyst · Great Lakes Review. Please go ahead
Thank you, Quinn. May comments will generally follow the slide presentation. Let's start with Slide number four to recap the quarter. As Quinn stated, adjusted net income for the first quarter 2018 was $32 million or $1.37 per diluted share, a 1% increase versus $31.7 million or $1.36 per diluted share in the first quarter of 2017. Because adjusted net income is a non-GAAP measure, we provide full reconciliations to the comparable GAAP measures and these can be found in appendix 2 of the presentation in table 2 of the press release. Specifically, regarding adjustments to reported net income, this quarter included deferred compensation expense of $1 million or $0.05 per diluted share compared to deferred compensation income of $800,000 or $0.03 per diluted share in the same period last year. Naturally all employee compensation expenses are reflected in our normal operating income. However, we allow employees the opportunity to defer their incentive payouts until some future date in the future payment changes based on the company's stock price. When the stock price increases, expense is generated as we mark this item to market value. Because the future liability of employee compensation only changes consistently with the change in stock price, we exclude this item from our operational discussion. The current quarter results also included $300,000 or $0.01 per diluted share of after-tax business restructuring charges. These charges related to decommissioning costs from the closure of our Canadian plant announced in 2016. We expect an additional $1 million to $2 million of after-tax restructuring charges in 2018 related to decommissioning cost at both our Canadian and Fieldsboro plants. Slide number five shows the total company earnings bridge for the first quarter compared to last year's first quarter and breaks down the increase in adjusted net income. Because this is net income, the figures noted here are on an after-tax basis. We will cover each segment in more detail, but surfactants was up while polymers and specialty products were down versus the prior year. The company's effective tax rate was 18.4% for the first quarter of 2018 versus 28% for the first quarter of 2017. The decrease was primarily attributable to higher excess tax benefits derived from stock based compensation awards and the net impact of the lower U.S. statutory tax rate of 21% in the first quarter of 2018 versus 35% in the first quarter 2017. The 2017 U.S. tax reform act favorably benefited the current year quarter by $800,000. We continue to expect the full year effective tax rate to be in the range of 20% to 23%. Our material on slide number six focuses solely on surfactant segment results for the first quarter. Surfactant net sales were $358.9 million up 11% from the same quarter a year ago. Selling prices were 4% higher mostly due to the pass-through of certain raw material costs, sales volumes were up 4%, mainly due to higher North American and European consumer product, agricultural and oilfield volumes. Higher sales volume to our distribution partners in North America also contributed to this increase. The positive translation impact of the weaker U.S. dollar increased sales by the remaining 3%. The segment delivered record or delivered a record $40.3 million of operating income, a 5% increase over the prior year quarter. In the bridge we show North America and Asia in the same category because our surfactant business in Asia is relatively small and much of the surfactant production in the region is used to support business in the United States. North American results were positively impacted by higher demand for Personal Care and sales through our distribution partners. Latin American results were down primarily due to lower commodity consumer product sales volume in Mexico due to high year-end inventory balances at Tier 1 customers and higher expenses associated with the first quarter acquisition of Mexico. Brazil operating income was down slightly despite growth in the Tier 2 and Tier 3 customer base. European results were higher year-over-year due to strong consumer products demand and growth in agricultural chemicals. Now turning to polymers on slide number seven, net sales were $121.9 million down 4% from the same quarter a year ago. Sales volume decreased 9% primarily due to lower North American and European Polyol volumes used in rigid foam insulation and insulated metal panels. This volume shortfall reflects lower customer demand due to adverse winter weather at the late project starts, lost share in North America, and the lingering effects of the 2017 MDI shortfall in Europe. Fundamentally, the market for insulation materials remained strong due to continued global energy conservation efforts. The positive translation impact of a weaker U.S. dollar increased sales by the remaining 5%. Operating income was $16.9 million compared to $21.4 million in the same quarter last year. Global Polyol volumes were down 10% due to share loss in North America and soft demand in Europe as discussed previously. Operating income in North America was also negatively impacted by higher raw material costs during the quarter, partially offset by $2.1 million of proceeds from a favorable class action settlement. The decline in European sales volume was partially offset by the recapture of lost margins from higher raw material costs. Turning to slide number eight, our balance sheet remains strong as our net debt remains low at 6%. The company consumed $34 million of free cash flow during the quarter primarily due to the first quarter acquisition of Mexico and higher working capital requirements. Higher working capital requirements are typical for the company in the first quarter. Beginning on slide number nine, Quinn will now update you on our plan to increase shareholder value.