Scott Sproule
Analyst · UBS
Thanks, Gene. I'll start with our net results for the quarter. Our GAAP EPS for the quarter was $0.01, and on an adjusted basis, our earnings per share was $0.51 or an increase of 18.6% from the first quarter of 2018. While Paul reviewed our typical adjustments, we also adjusted our GAAP earnings during Q1 to exclude a charge for the settlement of certain matters associated with the prior sale of our Dry Cooling business. In addition, our adjustment for South Africa this quarter includes the impact of an asset impairment of $0.39 per share. As Gene discussed, we're increasing our focus on the dispute resolution process of the South African projects. We saw increased claims activity in Q1. Accordingly, we have expanded disclosures in our 10-Q to include details associated with these claims. We continue to feel confident in our ability to successfully assert our rights and defend against claims. However, from an accounting perspective, based on guidance under the new revenue recognition standard, we determined the need to take an adjustment to earnings of $17.5 million to reduce our net asset position. Turning to our cash flow expectations for South Africa. In the first quarter, we used approximately $5 million of cash, and we are now realizing our full year expectations for net cash usage of up to $15 million, which is moderately higher than our prior estimate. Beyond 2019, the settlement of disputes may create some variability in our cash flows, but we remain confident in our ability to deploy approximately $500 million towards growth initiatives by the end of next year. Turning now to our adjusted results. Revenues increased 9.5% during the quarter. This included 7.5% growth from acquisitions in our Detection & Measurement segment, 2.5% organic growth driven by our Engineered Solutions and HVAC segments and a modest unfavorable currency effect. Segment income grew $4.8 million or 11.6% driven by higher revenues in Detection & Measurement and improved performance in Engineered Solutions. Adjusted segment margins expanded 30 basis points due to a favorable shift towards higher-margin Detection & Measurement revenues as well as the improved operating performance of Engineered Solutions. Now I'll walk you through the details of our results by segment, starting with HVAC. Organic revenues for the quarter increased 1% driven primarily by strong demand for our heating products. We feel good about this performance, given that we experienced very strong winter heating demand in the prior year. We are also pleased with the solid traction we have been seeing on competitive wins and new product introductions. Segment income was similar to the prior year, while margins declined modestly due to sales mix. In Detection & Measurement, revenues increased 29.7%, including a 34.2% increase from acquisitions and a negative currency effect of 1.1%. Organically, revenues decreased 3.4% due to project timing. Adjusted segment income margins were 23.3% or a decrease of 110 basis points. The decrease was largely due to sales mix, including the effect of the CUES acquisition, which has a somewhat lower margin profile than the segment average. We remain on track for our full year segment guidance and continue to expect typical quarter-to-quarter variations in reported margin associated with sales mix and project timing. In Engineered Solutions, revenues for the quarter increased 8%, reflecting higher revenues in both transformers and process cooling. Segment income increased $1.2 million and margins increased 50 basis points to 5.8%, due to stronger revenue performance. Our transformers business continues to benefit from improved throughput and utilization, and our process cooling business continued to see traction with our focus on component sales. Turning now to our financial position. Our balance sheet remains strong. In the first quarter, we generated adjusted free cash flow of approximately $14 million, which excludes the net cash used in South Africa as well as a modest amount of cash used for Heat Transfer. We ended the quarter with cash and equivalents of approximately $39 million, and we continue to target greater than 110% adjusted free cash flow conversion for our adjusted net income for the full year. Our net leverage was 1.9x at the end of Q1, which includes short-term financing for the Sabik acquisition. As we generate cash and expand our EBITDA during 2019, we expect our net leverage to decline, particularly the second half of the year, to the low end of our target range of 1.5 to 2.5 times, remaining well-positioned for further capital deployment this year. Turning to our 2019 guidance. We continue to expect full year adjusted earnings per share in a range of $2.50 to $2.65 or a 14% increase at the midpoint over 2018 results. Based on the anticipated timing of certain Detection & Measurement projects, we expect the cadence of earnings to be back-half weighted, which is similar to last year. Beyond the Q1 earnings improvement, the remainder of this year's EPS growth is expected to occur in the second half. In summary, we're off to a solid start and feel good about our full year outlook. Now I'll turn the call back to Gene for a review of our end markets and his closing comments.