Mark Morelli
Analyst · Bank of America
Thanks, Ryan. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our Third Quarter Earnings Call. I'd like to formally welcome our new CFO, Anshooman to his first earnings call with Vontier. I know many of you had the chance to catch up with him already. He's been in the seat now for about 60 days, and he's already having a positive impact on the organization. We're excited to have him on board. As we mark the 2-year anniversary of our separation, I'd like to highlight the progress we've made and give a view of our path forward. But first, I'd like to highlight the challenging third quarter where we missed revenues, but delivered bottom line results. Also, we're lowering our full year guidance, driven by an acceleration of the EMV roll off, which we believe is prudent given the weakening macro environment. We continue to actively shape our post-EMV business. After Anshooman walks you through the financials, I'll leave you with the strategic framework that we will build upon in our future engagements. You will see that we have significant momentum and reasons to be optimistic. Let's get into the details of the quarter with a summary of our results. We delivered adjusted EPS of $0.86 per share, up 8% versus the prior year in spite of a revenue miss. Adjusted operating margin expanded 40 basis points year-over-year, reflecting strong operating leverage and positive price cost as well as the benefit from ongoing cost actions. Core revenue declined 2% in the quarter. At the end of August, one of our key suppliers of the printed circuit boards used in all of our U.S. fueling dispensers experienced a cyber attack, which shut down their production for 3 weeks late in the quarter. This event was beyond the scope of the disruptions in already stretched supply chains. Our teams responded actively to replan our operations into the final days and hours of the quarter, but the timing of the disruption limited our ability to fully recover at the end of September. The supplier has resumed normal production and we do not anticipate this supply disruption to impact our Q4. Broader supply chain conditions continue to stabilize with modest sequential improvement in some components and logistics. I'm incredibly proud of our team's performance in mitigating this anomaly. Non-EMV core revenues grew low single digits with solid performance in our fueling aftermarket and service business and sequential improvements at Matco. However, we also experienced pockets of softer demand related to slower capital spend from independent fueling operators and larger customer project delays in our environmental business due to extended industry lead times on underground equipment. We continue to see momentum from strong price realization, consistent with the trends we've seen year-to-date. Our backlogs remain healthy and our lead times are beginning to normalize. That said, while non-EMV growth did not meet our expectations in Q3, we are confident that non-EMV core growth will return to the mid-single-digit range for Q4 and the full year. Anshooman will walk you through the details of our updated guidance, as we are revising our full year outlook to reflect our more cautious assumptions for EMV adoption. As the macro backdrop is weakening, disproportionately impacting small fueling operators in the U.S., we felt it prudent to proactively refresh our modeling assumptions. The net result is the EMV headwind in 2022 will now be roughly $100 million and the 2023 headwind will be closer to the low end of our prior range or about $300 million. There is no change in the peak-to-trough decline, which would put us at a base business in U.S. dispensers of approximately $250 million. Given increased clarity on the timing of the EMV wind-down, we're accelerating cost actions already in flight. We're also implementing a new set of actions with the intent of rightsizing the fixed cost structure and ensuring the appropriate allocation of resources. A benefit of this earlier-than-expected decline is that the EMV chapter will soon be behind us. U.S. EMV has been a great up-cycle for us. Bringing it to a close, enhances our focus on profitable growth initiatives, structural cost improvements and effectively deploying capital. We're committed to returning capital to shareholders through a balanced plan over the long term. However, at current valuation levels, share repurchase is unquestionably our top priority. Year-to-date, we've completed nearly $300 million in buybacks and have just shy of $0.5 billion remaining under our existing share repurchase authorization. As supply chains continue to stabilize, the working capital headwinds we've experienced year-to-date should improve and free cash flow conversion will begin to normalize beginning next year. Over the next 3 years, Vontier will generate roughly $1.5 billion in cash, providing us with significant strategic and financial flexibility. Before I turn things over to Anshooman, I'd like to take a moment to begin to set the foundation for the next phase in the journey of Vontier. We're now 2 years post-separation, and I couldn't be prouder of what we have accomplished or more excited about the path forward. Over these past 2 years, we focused a lot of our attention capitalizing on the inherent opportunities within our legacy operating companies and initiating a strategy-led portfolio transformation designed to enhance profitable growth through delivering smart, sustainable solutions with a tighter focus on the mobility ecosystem. Since well before the spin, we've been capitalizing on an accelerated replacement cycle in our U.S. fueling dispenser business, driven by required EMV upgrades. Having gained considerable share, we've expanded our U.S. installed base to nearly 450,000 units across more than 90,000 fueling sites and strengthened our relationship with key customers. This provides a long tail of opportunity for aftermarket parts and service as well as upgrade and replacement equipment. As we've been preparing for this tail end of the curve for the past 2 years, we proactively launched a new set of initiatives aimed at accelerating topline growth and profitability. We call these our profitable growth initiatives and platform strategies, which are ultimately aimed at maximizing shareholder returns. Through the end of this year, our profitable growth initiatives will have largely been responsible for driving non-EMV core growth from low single-digit decline, pre-spin, to positive low double digits and 130 basis points of operating margin expansion in spite of significant EMV headwinds. We've also grown earnings 23%, post-spin. We more have deeply deployed the Vontier business system, introducing a program we refer to internally as the focus and prioritization process across the organization. That's enabling us to determine where best to focus for growth and where we should turn costs. An early focus was strategic pricing, giving us a head start on addressing inflation and helping us to stay in front of price cost curve. We recognize product line simplification as an opportunity and put in place a program to significantly reduce the number of fuel dispensers globally from 32. And so far this year, we've rationalized 10 dispenser lines. We will have also achieved more than $25 million in cost savings through restructuring and other actions. On the topline growth side, by more efficiently leveraging our engineering investment, we've been able to accelerate innovation in our environmental business, Veeder-Root, resulting in a 2-year revenue CAGR of more than 10% through the end of 2022. We established a local sales and manufacturing presence in certain high-growth markets and are better positioned with better product to benefit from increased regulation and investment in cost-effective petroleum-based infrastructure in the coming decade. We created a designated team to drive aftermarket within GVR to capitalize on our growing installed base of fueling equipment in the U.S., resulting in revenue growth in the third quarter of 38%. We've also made progress on turning around the Teletrac Navman business, which is now returning to growth and expanding operating margins, and increase product vitality at Matco, which announced a new strategic supplier relationship with Milwaukee Tools in September that will contribute several points of growth next year. Our platform strategy initiatives demonstrate success in the initial phase of our portfolio transformation, which includes, both organic and inorganic actions, to better position Vontier to compete in an attractive growth markets that are not ICE-dependent. The acquisition of DRB, which closed a year ago September, has surpassed our original expectations, growing their topline by over 30% and expanding operating margins by over 400 basis points. DRB's industry-leading technology enhances our capabilities and deeply embedded point-of-sale systems, including productivity software and payment facilitation. The DRB's acquisition earlier this year brings us best-in-class EV charging network software with tens of thousands of plugs under management and continues to gain traction with customers that have significant potential to scale. We believe we have a premier asset to capitalize on the build-out of the EV charging infrastructure globally with hardware-agnostic solutions. We're also making organic investments and other alternative fuel solutions in support of our vision for our multi-fuel future for the car park. Our ANGI Energy business is a leading supplier of compressed natural gas dispensing technology with nearly $75 million in projected revenue this year, up about 40% from prior year levels and expected to remain a strong contributor in the next year. In addition to being a strong business in its own right, ANGI also provides us the domain expertise and channel presence to participate in the build-out of hydrogen fuel infrastructures. In Q3, we received our first commercial orders for our hydrogen dispensers, which we'll expect to begin shipping next year. With respect to capital allocation, between acquisitions and share repurchase, we've deployed roughly $1.5 billion in capital, and we are on pace to generate double-digit returns over 3 years. As we continue building our track record around capital deployment, we will remain disciplined on our fundamentals, focusing on returns. While we do have an attractive pipeline of bolt-on M&A opportunities, the priority, near term, will shift to share repurchase and deleveraging the balance sheet. Our strategy is on track. I'm very proud of the progress we've been able to demonstrate on accelerating topline growth and improving profitability. We are at a pivotal stage in our journey, and we have unique competitive advantages to lead in many market segments across the mobility ecosystem. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Anshooman to provide the financial results. Anshooman?