Luis Rojo
Analyst · Seaport. Please go ahead. Your line is open
Thank you, Scott. My comments will generally follow the slide presentation. Let us start with a slide five to recap the quarter. Adjusted net income was $13.5 million or $0.59 per diluted share versus $22.5 million or $0.97 per diluted share for the fourth quarter of 2021. 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 II of the presentation and table two of the press release. Specifically, the adjusted net income for the fourth quarter, exclude deferred compensation expense of $2.2 million, compared to last year expense of $2.4 million. It also excludes the minor changes in our environmental remediation we serve and restructuring expenses. The deferred compensation figures represent the net income related to the company's deferred compensation plan as well as cash-settled stock appreciation for our employees. Because these liabilities change with the movement in the stock price, we exclude this item from operational discussion. The slide 6 shows the total company's net income bridge for the fourth quarter, compared to last year fourth quarter and breaks down the increase in adjusted net income. Because this is net income, the figure is not here at on an after-tax basis. We will cover this segment in more detail, but to summarize, we delivered excellent operating income growth in a specialty products and lower operating result for Surfactants and some Polymers. Corporate and all other expenses, which are not allocated to the business segment, went up $5.4 million, driven by higher interest expenses and overall inflation. The company effective tax rate for the quarter was slightly negative, may lead you to one-time favorable tax benefits. The slide 7, focus on the Surfactant segment results for the quarter. Surfactant net sales were $455 million, for the quarter and 8% increase versus the prior year. Selling prices went up 26%, mainly due to the pass-through of higher raw material and logistic costs as well as improved product and customer mix. Volume declined 15% year-over-year, primarily due to lower demand in commodity laundry and personal care and market. Lower volumes due to the transition of Low 1,4-Dioxane capabilities and Polymer inventory probability the stocking efforts. Higher global demand for products sold in the agricultural volumes, institutional cleaning and market partially offset the above. Foreign currency translation negatively impacted net sales by 3%. Surfactant's operating income for the quarter was $22 million, a decrease of $11 million versus the prior year. But even by a volume decline of 15% like mentioned it before, and higher expenses associated with a company transition of Low 1,4-Dioxane products. All Surfactant operating ratios are decrease operating income primarily due to the lower volumes mentioned before. Now, turning to Polymer on slide 8, net sales were $148 million for the quarter, a 15% increase versus prior year. Selling prices increased 14% mainly due to the pass-through of higher raw material cost. Global volume declined by 23%, primarily due to a 21% volume declining volumes and lower demand across a Specialty Products and PA businesses. The decrease was driven by customer inventory destocking, reduced construction, industry activity, and general economic concerns. Foreign currency translation negatively impacted net sales by 6%. Polymer operating income was $3 million versus $30 million in the prior year. The decrease is primarily due to the 23% decline in global volume and higher costs associated with the planned maintenance activities in the company's PA plant located in the US. North America and Europe results were impacted by lower volume across all polymer segments, partially offset by margin recovery efforts. Asia results improve on increase demand following the eased of COVID lockdowns and restrictions in China. Finally, Specialty Products operating income was $6.6 million versus $2 million in the prior year. This increase was primarily due to improve margins and customer mix within the -- product line. Turning to slide nine, despite significant external supply chain challenges and a difficult macro environment, the business was able to deliver another record full year. Adjusted net income was a record $153.5 million or $6.65 per diluted share, a 7% increase versus $143.5 million, or $6.16 per diluted share in 2021. The company volume declined 7% versus the prior year, driven by lower demand as customer inventory destocking efforts in the second half of the year. The Surfactant segment delivered operating income of $163 million, down slightly versus the prior year. Surfactant global volume was down 6%, primarily due to lower global commodity laundry demand, the impact of the [indiscernible] and customer inventory destocking efforts. Higher demand for products sold in the Functional Products and Institutional Cleaning end market partially offset the above. The Polymer segment delivered $83 million of operating income, up 13% versus the prior year. Global Polymer volume declined 7% versus the prior year due to costumer and channel inventory destocking and lower construction-related activities in the second half of the year. Specialty Product operating income was a record $30 million versus $14 million in the prior year, driven by improved margins and customer needs in our product line. Lastly, the effect of foreign currency translation negatively impacted net income by $5.6 million or $0.24 per diluted share versus the prior year. Earnings Per Share excluding FX grew 12% versus 2021. Slide 10 shows the total company earnings split for the full year of 2022 compared to 2021 and breakdown the increase in adjusted net income. Surfactant was a slightly down more than offset by Polymers and Specialty Products. The company full year effective tax rate was 22% in 2022 versus 20% in 2021. This year-over-year increase was primarily due to non-recurring favorable tax benefits recognized in 2021. Moving onto slide 11, our balance sheet remains strong, and we have ample liquidity to invest in the business. Even with our increased CapEx investments, our leverage and interest coverage ratios continued a very healthy levels. During the year, cash from operations was $161 million and we deployed $466 million against CapEx investments, dividends and debt payments, share repurchases, and higher working capital requirements due to raw material inflation. The company full year capital spending was $302 million, inclusive of our 1,4-dioxane project and Pasadena investments in the US. Now beginning on Slide 12, Scott will update you on our strategic priorities.