Scott Sproule
Analyst · UBS. Your line is now open
Thanks, Gene. I will start with our net results for the quarter. On a GAAP basis, we reported earnings per share of $0.44. On an adjusted basis earnings per share was $0.53, a 23% increase from the second quarter of 2017. As Paul mentioned, in addition to our customary adjustments for South Africa and non-service related pension expense, we are adjusting out the results of the Heat Transfer business and one-time acquisition related items. In addition, we have said that we would provide the impact of amortization expense associated with our acquisitions on an adjusted EPS. In Q2, we had only a partial quarter results from CUES, so the net impact was only about a penny. On an ongoing basis, we'd expect the impact to be about $0.02 per quarter. Overall, we are pleased with Q2 results which position us well to reach our full-year goals. Moving on to core segment results for the second quarter. Our revenue performance reflects continued organic growth in our HVAC businesses and acquisitions in our Detection & Measurement segment, partially offset by reduction in revenues in Engineered Solutions. Core segment income increased modestly, while segment income margins declined 40 basis points. The less favorable margins were driven by Engineered Solutions and Detection & Measurement, which offset margin growth in HVAC. Now I will walk you through the details of our by segment starting with HVAC. Revenues for the quarter increased approximately 16%. This included a favorable currency effect of 40 basis points and an organic increase of 15.6%. Revenue grew across the segment with the largest increase coming from HVAC cooling in part due to the timing of shipments that were more concentrated in the second quarter of this year compared with the prior year. We also experienced solid growth in HVAC Heating. Segment income was up approximately $3 million and margin increased 40 basis points due to the operating leverage on higher sales. As we discussed in our Q1 earnings call, we've been experiencing rising input costs including freight and commodity inflation. During Q2, we implemented additional price increases to offset these higher costs. We started to see positive results from these pricing actions late in the quarter and expect these to continue benefiting us in the second half, hoping to mitigate the full-year impact. Given our first half strength and confidence looking into the second half, we expect revenue to exceed the upper end of our prior guidance range of 2% to 4% and now expect revenue growth in the range of 7% to 8%. In Detection & Measurement, revenue increased 15.7%, primarily from the impact of the CUES and Schonstedt acquisitions. Adjusted segment income margin was 24.5%, a strong performance but still represent a decrease of 230 basis points. This decline was primarily driven by particularly strong mix of projects in the prior year as we noted in our Q1 call. Consistent with the full-year revised margin guidance for Detection & Measurement we provided in June, our recent acquisitions of a lower margin profile after being fully burdened by intangible amortization. In our Engineered Solutions segment, excluding the results of the South African projects and the Heat Transfer business, revenues were approximately $143 million, down 7% driven by lower process cooling revenues associated with our business model shift. Core margins declined approximately 160 basis points due primarily to less favorable mix across the segment. And we also experienced higher net input costs. The impact of higher input costs principally associated with the effective tariffs and transformer orders -- transformer orders and backlog contribute approximately $1 million of the core income decline. When we gave 2018 guidance in February, we expected 80 to 130 basis points of core segment margin improvement with the impact of tariffs and higher net input costs in our backlog, we now anticipate achieving the lower end of this range or approximately 8% core segment income margin for the full-year. This include sequentially higher second half margins. Regarding the South African projects, our overall Q2 results were in line with our expectations with net cash usage of approximately $11 million. You can find more details on these results in the appendix of this presentation. Turning now to our financial position. Our balance sheet remains solid. We ended the quarter with cash and equivalents around $67 million. Following the financing of CUES, our net leverage was 2.3x which is within our target range of 1.5x to 2.5x. In Q2 2018, we generated core free cash flow of approximately $12 million which excludes net cash every core free cash flow of approximately $12 million, which excludes net cash used for the South African projects. Based on our expectations of strong cash generation from our core businesses in second half, we expect to significantly reduce our existing short-term borrowings by year-end and bringing our leverage closer to lower end of our target range. We continue to feel good about our acquisition pipeline and our ability to source transactions and deploy capital to drive incremental shareholder value. We are actively pursuing additional opportunities and have the capacity to execute during the second half of the year. As previously communicated, we are targeting at least 110% cash flow conversion of our adjusted net income and following the recent acquisitions, we expect to have capacity of more than $400 million of capital available for deployment through 2020. Turning to our guidance. For the full-year, we continue to expect adjusted earnings per share in the range of $2.15 to $2.25 or an increase of 25% at the midpoint over our 2017 results. As discussed during our segment overview, based on the strong first-half we have significantly increased our HVAC revenue guidance to growth in the range of 7% to 8%. And as I already noted, we now expect our Engineered Solutions core segment income margin to be approximate 8%. We expect full-year core revenues for this segment in a range of $550 to $560 million with growth to resume in 2019. For the first half year, net input cost inflation for the company was a headwind to segment margin of approximately 80 basis points. Based on our pricing actions and other initiatives we put in place, we anticipate sequentially higher margins for the second half and approximately 40 basis points of net decline for the full-year. We’ve included additional detail in the appendix to help you update your models, such as interest expense and tax rate as well as an overview of this key sensitivities driving the upper and lower ends of our guidance. And with that I will turn the call back over to Gene.