Earnings Labs

SiteOne Landscape Supply, Inc. (SITE)

Q2 2021 Earnings Call· Sun, Aug 8, 2021

$141.58

-0.88%

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Greetings and welcome to SiteOne Landscape Supply, Inc. Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. John Guthrie, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead, sir.

John Guthrie

Analyst

Thank you and good morning everyone. We issued our second quarter 2021 earnings press release this morning and posted a slide presentation to the Investor Relations portion of our website at investors.siteone.com. I'm joined today by Doug Black, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Scott Salmon, Executive Vice President, Strategy and Development. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that today's press release, slide presentation and the statements made during the call include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Such risks and uncertainties include the factors set forth in the earnings release and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Additionally, during today's call, we will discuss non-GAAP measures, which we believe can be useful in evaluating our performance. A reconciliation of these measures can be found in our earnings release and in the slide presentation. I would now like to turn the call over to Doug Black.

Doug Black

Analyst

Thank you, John. Good morning and thank you for joining us today. We were very pleased to continue our excellent momentum during the second quarter with outstanding growth in sales and profits. We have seen the robust demand for professional landscaping services continue with strong residential repair upgrade and new home construction, increasing commercial activity and steady maintenance growth. In this environment, our terrific teams have continued to perform well, delivering superior value to our customers and suppliers while overcoming rapid product cost inflation, select supply shortages and ongoing freight and labor constraints. As a result, we are continuing to steadily win market share on top of the underlying market growth. Lastly, we made great progress on our commercial and operational initiatives during the quarter, while adding three high performing companies to our family through acquisitions. 2021 is shaping up to be a breakthrough year for SiteOne as we continue to build our great company and execute our long-term strategy. I will start today's call with a brief review of our unique market position and our strategy for long-term performance and growth followed by some highlights from the quarter. John Guthrie will then walk you through our second quarter financial results in more detail and provide an update on our balance sheet and liquidity position. Scott Salmon will discuss our acquisition strategy. And then I will come back and review some of the trends that we are seeing in our end markets and address our outlook for the remainder of the year before taking your questions. As Shown on Slide 4 of the earnings presentation, we have grown our footprint to more than 590 branches and three major distribution centers across 45 US states and 6 Canadian provinces. We are the clear industry leader, yet we estimate that we only…

John Guthrie

Analyst

Thanks, Doug. I'll begin on Slide 9, with some highlights from our second quarter results. We reported a net sales increase of 33% to $1.1 billion in the quarter. There were 64 selling days this quarter consistent with the prior year period. Organic daily sales increased by 22% for the quarter due to strong demand as consumers continue to invest in their outdoor living spaces. Organic daily sales for landscaping products which includes irrigation, nursery, hardscapes, outdoor lighting and landscape accessories were strong again this quarter, increasing 24% compared to the prior year period. We saw strong growth in the repair and remodel end market, which is benefiting from homeowners upgrading their backyards as well as the residential construction end market, which is benefiting from strong demand for new housing. Organic daily sales for agronomic products, which includes fertilizer, control products, ice melt and equipment, grew 17% this quarter due to the stay at home trend as homeowners are also spending more on maintaining their lawn. Geographically, all regions achieved double-digit organic daily sales growth. As Doug mentioned, our customers remain very busy, and we continue to see strong sales growth in July though at a slower pace due to the higher counts. As a reminder, organic daily sales growth increased from 3% in the second quarter of last year to 11% and 12% in the third and fourth quarters respectively. So we anticipate solid growth for the remainder of the year, but not at the growth rate seen in the second quarter. Prices increased 8% for the second quarter and 6% for the first six months, which exceeded our previously communicated range of 3% to 5%. We saw supplier costs continue to increase during the quarter with the greatest increases for irrigation products like PVC pipe and copper wire,…

Scott Salmon

Analyst

Thank, John. As shown on Slide 11, we acquired three companies in the second quarter, a total five year to date with combined trailing 12 month net sales of approximately $90 million. Since 2014, we have acquired 61 companies with over $1.1 billion in trailing 12 month net sale. Turning to Slide 12 through 14, you will find information on our most recent acquisition. On April 30, we acquired Timberwall Landscape & Masonry Products, expanding our leading hardscapes position in the Greater Minneapolis market established in Q4 2020 when we acquired Hedberg Supply. Also, on April 30, we acquired Melrose Irrigation Supply extending our leading irrigation presence in Florida by adding six locations across South Florida. Melrose brings a great team and excellent new locations to serve the growing Florida market. And on May 7, we acquired Rock & Block Hardscape Supply expanding our leading hardscapes presence in Southern California. Rock & Block serve the San Diego, Southern Orange County and Inland Empire market in California from two locations focused on the distribution of hardscapes and landscape supply. Summarizing on Slide 15, our acquisition strategy continues to create significant value for SiteOne. Our pipeline remains strong, expanding across all geographies and lines of business and we're excited to be partnering with the highest performing companies in the industry and bringing outstanding new talent to SiteOne. These innovative leaders bring new ideas to SiteOne and help us realize our vision of being stronger together. We are honored that so many of these entrepreneurs chose to continue their careers at SiteOne. Long after they sold their family business, they are helping the SiteOne family provide outstanding value to our customers, suppliers and communities. I want to thank the entire SiteOne team for their passion and commitment to making SiteOne a great place to work. This continues to be the driving force, which allows us to add terrific new companies and associates, and I'm confident in our ability to deliver value to all of our stakeholders through further acquisitions in 2021 and beyond. I will now turn the call back to Doug.

Doug Black

Analyst

Thanks, Scott. I'll wrap up on Slide 16. As mentioned, we've seen the demand turn moderate somewhat in June and July from the first five months of the year against the higher comparable sales growth in 2020, which started in June. With the tailwind of higher inflation, we are seeing continued organic sales growth across all product lines, customer segments and geographies. Overall, sales growth has held up better than we had expected. Given our customers' current backlog of work and the underlying positive development that we see in the economy and in both residential and commercial construction, we expect to see solid organic sales growth for the remainder of the year. In terms of end markets, we would expect maintenance, which comprises 41% of our business to be steady during the remainder of the year with low to mid-single digit growth. We've terrific capability and great momentum in maintenance with our market leading LESCO brand and so we are very confident in our ability to perform in a steady market. Residential new construction and repair and upgrade, which comprised 27% and 18% of our business respectively. are expected to remain very strong through the end of the year and likely into 2022. Our customers have deep backlog in residential and do not plan to slow down. These markets will continue to be constrained by labor. weather and possible supply shortages. The new commercial construction market, which represents 14% of our business has been the biggest surprise this year. Commercial activity has continued to be positive and we see encouraging developments in the ABI Index and in our own commercial bidding activity, which would support further growth ahead. We now expect commercial construction to be solid through the remainder of the year. Taken altogether, we expect to achieve solid organic…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we'll be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Ryan Merkel with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.

Ryan Merkel

Analyst

Thanks, good morning everyone and to the next quarter.

Doug Black

Analyst

Thanks, Ryan.

Ryan Merkel

Analyst

First off, on M&A, it's been quiet since May. My sense is, you expect 2021 is going to be as big as 2020. So there have been any change in target desire to sell or is this just maybe some timing pushing back a bit?

Doug Black

Analyst

Yes. Thanks, Brian, I would say it's just a matter of timing. We still feel confident that we can deliver a solid year of acquisition. And if you recall last year, although we were at COVID pause, we were at about $40 million acquired sales and ended at $190 million. So feel still very confident about our pipeline, definitely about our team and our valuation process is still, I wouldn't be concerned about it.

Ryan Merkel

Analyst

All right. That's great to hear. And then gross margins, given nice execution, given the backdrop, some of the drivers you listed, are they sustainable for the second half and should we expect gross margins to expand year-over-year during the second half of 2021?

John Guthrie

Analyst

Yes. We feel we're in good shape as we indicated last quarter with regard to gross margin. Most of the obviously -- we saw more cost inflation, but the market is passing that through in general. So that has not been -- we feel good about that. Also with regard to our teams, supply chain initiatives, we think will be positive. So we've -- and the customer mix has been a positive growth also with the smaller customer itself. In general, we are still optimistic on a positive gross margin outlook for the second half of this year, year-over-year improvement.

Ryan Merkel

Analyst

Great to hear. All right, Thanks.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of David Manthey with Baird. Please proceed with your question.

David Manthey

Analyst · Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. First off, John, could you, I'm not sure if you mentioned the price realization in the quarter, could you give us that as well as breakdown by agronomics and landscape products?

John Guthrie

Analyst · Baird. Please proceed with your question.

It was 8% for the quarter, we're seeing -- hold on, I'll give you the exact numbers a little bit -- hold on, here, agronomics was 3% to 4% with the balance being in landscaping products. We're seeing the greatest increases in probably the irrigation product line, PVC pipe, copper wire, resin that goes into a lot of the product is driving a lot of that. And then, but even in agronomic products, there is select products that are seeing price inflation, fertilizer rates are up, fertilizer prices cost are up, grass seed costs are up and in general also kind of freight costs are increasing overall. So we're, we did see more of this, this quarter, but fortunately, the market is adjusting. There's always some transition through, but the market is adjusting to the new cost.

David Manthey

Analyst · Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Yes, makes sense. And second, how do you gauge your customer backlogs, is that all anecdotal conversations with the branches or do you have some quantitative indicators you look at and related to that, I'm wondering, you talked about the, your share of wallet in the customer support, do you have metrics on same-store customer count or average revenues per customer or anything like that?

Doug Black

Analyst · Baird. Please proceed with your question.

In terms of backlog, David, it is largely anecdotal. We are in constant communication with our customers. We do have an outlook through our project services bidding group. So we do commercial bidding and certainly, we can track the number of bids that we're submitting, the win rate and etcetera. And so we've got a lot of more detail there, but commercial is a smaller part of our business, so on a residential side, it's mostly just customer conversations and anecdotal. And then, in terms of wallet share, customer count, growth with different customer segments., we do segment our customers by size, by business type, and so we track all of that. We're getting in more sophisticated on wallet share with our new CRM going in, that we're putting in, that will get a lot tighter, but we certainly can see number of customers whether we're growing transactionally by customer, etcetera and those metrics by and large are positive. As we mentioned on the call, we're growing faster with the smaller customer. We're actually growing faster with the Hispanic customer segments than we are on average, and that's a targeted strategy because we're -- our share is lower with the smaller customers than it is with the larger customers just by the nature of how we've grown in the past and so there's a big opportunity there and we see positive indicators that our strategies are working. Our new marketing efforts are starting to work. Our teams are doing a great job and that's good profitable growth for Slide 1.

David Manthey

Analyst · Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Good to hear, Doug. Thank you.

Doug Black

Analyst · Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Thanks, David.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Bouley with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Matthew Bouley

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Hey, good morning. Congrats on the results. thank you for taking the questions. I want to ask about the long-term EBITDA margin target. It sounds like there's going to be a new, I guess sort of official one to come, maybe at the end of the year. So we don't get too far ahead of ourselves but conceptually assuming that target will be higher, what might be the past, then from here that we can look forward to between SG&A leverage, just other drivers of gross margin expansion. Just what are some of the guide post we can look out for. Thanks.

Doug Black

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

All right. Well thanks, Matthew. Yes, we're pleased to be passing that milestone that we set several years ago and we always position that as a milestone. We think our EBITDA potential is significantly higher and so we will -- but will be set in that mark as we report the full year, early next year. In terms of opportunities, we're still in the early to middle innings of building our company. And so if you look at our digital capabilities and what we expect to do there, our operating best practices across our branches and then just overall pay off of our infrastructure and field support investments, we think we can drive SG&A down further over the next three to five year. So, there is quite a bit of runway there. And then on the gross margin side, we have a quite a bit of runway as well. I mentioned the small customer growth. We're still -- private label is around 15%, 17% of our business. We'd like it to be double that and that brings on profitable growth and we have more room to go on our supply chain efficiencies, our category management with our suppliers and those initiatives still have legs to run. So consider us in that in the third inning on the nine-inning game and we got lot of runway on both sides, SG&A and gross margin to make SiteOne more profitable company.

Matthew Bouley

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Wonderful, that's great color. Thank you for that Doug. Second one just on the EBITDA guide. I guess sort of a $30 million range a little larger than you've given historically at this point in the year maybe part of that is a bigger company now, but maybe you can speak to kind of what are the areas of uncertainty around that guide, kind of drivers of the high-end versus low-end. Thank you.

Doug Black

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Yes, I'll take that. And then John may have some comments. It's really around organic growth. I mean we feel good about our gross margins and opportunities there. We know in what we're going to spend in terms of investment in our teams and our initiatives etcetera. So it gets down organic growth. As we mentioned, the growth has been strong against tougher comps in June and July. We expect the third quarter to do -- to do well in the third quarter. It's really the fourth quarter that has more variability. Last year, we had extremely good weather as well as a very strong market, and so we're cautious of how we would perform against that. We are subject to weather in the fourth quarter. It's a smaller quarter and that's probably where the variability is and that defines our range primarily. The other factors, we feel pretty, pretty good about. John, anything to add to that?

John Guthrie

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

No, I think you headed it. It's is organic growth, primarily variability and uncertainty in the fourth quarter. In addition, in the fourth quarter, we do lose a week of sale but, obviously that's built into the guide from that standpoint, but it's the uncertainty in Q4 that hits you top or bottom.

Matthew Bouley

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Right, understood. Well, thanks for the details, and congrats on the results again.

Doug Black

Analyst · Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Thanks, Matthew.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Keith Hughes with Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Keith Hughes

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you. You made some positive comment on June and July and that was going to hit double-digit growth. Can you give a sort of a feel for what the comps looking at -- where the comps coming in out of these numbers as we hit these -- hit the pickup in business last year.

Doug Black

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Yes, we were at 11% and 12% in Q3 and Q4. So that is what we're comping at. Q4 especially was a strong in November, December, because they were especially warm. So those are the comps were running against as opposed to we were comping against that 3% and so about it, roughly 10% increase in comps from that perspective.

Keith Hughes

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Okay, so for June and July, are you what -- I mean are you running up mid-single digits [indiscernible]; I mean it was double-digits in June and July last year, is that roughly we're looking at or can you give us any feel on that?

Doug Black

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Yes, I think we be a little stronger than that. We're still strong in June and July. But it would be in the low double-digit range in those months.

Keith Hughes

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

And inflation is probably running a little bit hotter than what it was in the second quarter, is that a fair statement as we still get price increase coming out, correct?

John Guthrie

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Yes. I would say it's similar to the second quarter, maybe slightly [indiscernible].

Keith Hughes

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Okay. And then, your comments on commercial very interesting, any sort of feel for what parts of the commercial market are the strongest and will it still be next year report that business would really see boots on the ground pickup in a strong demand scenario?

Doug Black

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

We've seen the strength kind of come through and it's the type of commercial that follows residential, retail, fast food, those types of -- obviously it's not the office side of the market etcetera and when you look at kind of intercity or high rise, that does not have a lot of landscaping. So what we're seeing a strong residential and then commercial following that as you need to build out and support those expanding neighborhoods.

Keith Hughes

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Okay, thank you.

Doug Black

Analyst · Truist. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you, Keith.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Mike Dahl with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Mike Dahl

Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Thanks for taking my questions, Doug and John, I appreciate the color so far. I wanted to stick with the second half guide [indiscernible] down a little bit more. It sounds like just based on the price inflation guide, your pricing is 6% to maybe 10% implies for the back half of the year, which gives you a nice tailwind on organic, can you give us just a better sense from a volume standpoint, what you expect the volume contribution to be in the second half and then the split between 3Q, 4Q, to your point, I mean the comps in 4Q?

Doug Black

Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

We're not giving specific guidance with regards to the volume -- with regard, we think we are saying that Q3, we expect to be significantly stronger than Q4, is what's built into our guide and if you look at the EBITDA guidance range, It's really around the variation with regards to Q4, with regards to where we end up.

Mike Dahl

Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Okay, understood. And then, just back on the prior question around wallet share and market share overall. This seems like the environment where you're logistics supply chain, your scale, all that in a constrained environment, the strong demand. It seems like your lines up pretty well for accelerated share gains. So, anything more specific on what you think the market has grown up in the first half of this year compared to year growth organically and how you're thinking about whether or not the share gains are accelerating through this year or if it's still just kind of steady on taking share? Thanks.

Doug Black

Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Yes. Well, it's very hard to pin down because there is no -- there is no good industry sources for activity broadly. We can get snapshots in certain areas, so we lean on information from our suppliers and how we track with our customers. But, all indications are that we are accelerating our share gains and you nailed it. it really has to do with our strength. We've been working obviously hard on the first side in terms of serving customers, our NPS scores continue to go up, our sales force is getting more capable and more focused and we've got now marketing firepower that we're using on the front end, but we really have shine through on the back-end in terms of having product in stock when it's been in short supply, leveraging our supply chain, areas like in nursery where your size give you the capability to partner with growers and be a first mover to get product into the branches. And so based on all those factors together, we do feel strongly that our market share gains have accelerated, specifically how much of the growth -- when everything is growing and the market is really strong, It's hard to take out exactly how much of that is share gain, but we know it's, it's higher than it was last year and it's getting stronger in our capabilities to sustain that are getting stronger.

Mike Dahl

Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

I appreciate that. Good to hear.

Doug Black

Analyst · RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Damian Karas with UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Damian Karas

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Good morning, guys. Congrats on another solid quarter.

Doug Black

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Good morning. Thank you.

Damian Karas

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

We've covered a lot of ground here, maybe just a follow-up question on pricing. You alluded to the incremental inflation over the last few months and the 8% or so price that you're looking to pass through for the year. Just curious as, supply chain issues eventually start easing, we get some a little bit of easing of the freight conditions and raw materials, would you expect to get some of that price back that's driving some of the daily organic sales growth this year. Maybe you could just talk about how we should think about you know what the price impact could end up looking like next year?

John Guthrie

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

I wouldn't expect in general that we would see much price deflation. I think the market is pricing up given the increased demand. There will be certain items we can identify some of the more commodity items, but in general, we think most of this price -- after years of very low price inflation and the fact that the demand is driving it from our suppliers, we don't expect a major decrease or decreases in cost coming to us significantly. I mean, we can obviously identify certain items of more commodity related that would do that. But, if you look at the overall picture, I don't think that we would see, we would be putting in a negative number on next year from that input.

Doug Black

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Just reinforce that, remember that we operate across a very broad product range, from irrigation products that are driven by resins chemicals which have their own drivers, fertilizer nursery, hardscapes, landscape supplies like soil mulch. When you take that altogether, It's typically a very stable portfolio of products that they tend to average out and so we have seen elevated levels, but we think that will settle back down, but it's not likely to go negative in terms of the whole portfolio together, it's likely just to sell down to our typical kind of lower number.

Damian Karas

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Okay, great. That's really helpful. And then if you wouldn't mind just clarifying relates to the guidance, how much contribution from acquisitions you're assuming for the full year?

John Guthrie

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

We don't split out acquisitions, but we have not included any new acquisitions that we haven't already closed. So, it would be incremental EBITDA potentially for additional acquisitions at the same time that we closed in November-December that there could be losses due to the seasonality and -- but neither -- no acquisitions that haven't been announced or closed are included in our current guidance.

Damian Karas

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Fair enough. Appreciate the time. Best of luck, guys.

Doug Black

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you.

John Guthrie

Analyst · UBS. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Stevenson with Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Jeffrey Stevenson

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Hi, thanks for taking my questions and congrats on the strong quarter.

Doug Black

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you.

Jeffrey Stevenson

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

So, were there any deferred sales in the quarter due to product shortages that will be a tailwind into the third quarter and then also, do you think we could see an extended construction season given the labor constraints. So the fourth quarter seasonality won't be as pronounced this year?

Doug Black

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Yes, just to address the first part of the question, we don't see any deferred sales. I mean the market is tight, supply chains are constrained, but we tended to find a way to get products for our customers and so we're fighting through and don't feel like there will be any deferred benefit later. Could you repeat that [ph]?

John Guthrie

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

With regard to the fourth quarter, I think our customers are still busy now that they're working as much as they can. But if it's raining, if three's snow on the ground, they're not going to be able to work and they'll shut down. So, I don't think it will extend the season while there is trumps demand and what it's really doing is, if we get in early spring, those projects will push -- early winter, those projects will push, most likely push out 2022.

Doug Black

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Yes. But we are, we are in a constrained environment in terms of labor. So, as John mentioned, there is work that's there that the contractors just can't get too because, they don't have the workers. And so, like John mentioned that will all push into 2022. And so that does bode well for next year. And so, it extends the season into the following year essentially.

Jeffrey Stevenson

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Okay, great. And then, just following up on residential. Is there any concern about the recent deceleration in new construction? Is there is a long runway, given the historical lag between landscaping and new starts?

Doug Black

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

There is a lag obviously between starts and when we actually do the landscaping, its six months or so, but we see a strong residential market. And quite frankly, we think that those trends are here for a while and when you think about the whole stay at home situation that we've been in over the last year and a half, and now the fact that a lot of companies are going to more hybrid work arrangements where there people are coming in two days and home three days or some combination of being at work and being at home. It really accentuates the need for homes and the desire to have a home and lessen the net commute to work and so all those factors are working together to drive new home sales. And that's a trend that we feel is going to be here, not just this year, but on into next year and possibly beyond. So we feel really good about the residential market and the course our business is primarily residential and so that bodes well for SiteOne.

Jeffrey Stevenson

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Great, thank you.

Doug Black

Analyst · Loop Capital. Please proceed with your question.

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question and answer session. And I would like to turn the call back to Mr. Doug Black for closing remarks.

Doug Black

Analyst

Thank you. And thank you, again for joining us today. We appreciate your interest in SiteOne and we're very excited about our long-term opportunities for performance and growth and the potential of our company. We look forward to touching base again at the end of the third quarter.

Operator

Operator

This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you all for your participation.