Leggett & Platt, Incorporated (LEG) on Q2 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Greetings, and welcome to the Leggett & Platt's Second Quarter 2021 Webcast and Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are on a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Ms. Susan McCoy, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin. Susan McCoy: Thank you, Daryl. Good morning and thank you for taking part in Leggett & Platt's second quarter conference call. We are conducting this call from different locations again this quarter. Please bear with us if you experience minor delays or mixed audio quality. On the call today are Karl Glassman, Chairman and CEO; Mitch Dolloff, President and COO; Jeff Tate, Executive Vice President and CFO; Steve Henderson, EVP and President of the Specialized Products and Furniture, Flooring & Textile Products segments; Cassie Branscum, Senior Director of IR; and Tarah Sherwood, Director of IR. The agenda for our call this morning is as follows. Karl will start with the summary of the main points we made in yesterday's press release. Mitch will discuss operating results and demand trends, and Jeff will cover financial details and address our updated outlook for 2021. This conference call is being recorded for Leggett & Platt and is copyrighted material. This call may not be transcribed, recorded or broadcast without our expressed permission. A replay is available from the IR portion of Leggett's website. We posted to the IR, Investor Relations portion of the website yesterday's press release and a set of PowerPoint slides that contain summary financial information along with segment details. Those documents supplement the information we discuss on this call including non-GAAP reconciliations. I need to remind you that remarks today concerning future expectations, events, objectives, strategies, trends or result constitute forward-looking statement. Actual results or events may differ materially due to a number of risks and uncertainties, and the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise these statements. For a summary of these risk factors and additional information, please refer to yesterday's press release and the sections in our most recent 10-K and subsequent 10-Q entitled Risk Factors and Forward-Looking Statements. I'll now turn the call over to Karl. Karl Glassman: Good morning and thank you for participating in our second quarter call. Yesterday, we reported all time record quarterly sales from continuing operations and record second quarter adjusted EBIT and EBITDA. These outstanding results are a testament to the dedication and hard work of our employees around the globe. Second quarter sales were $1.27 billion. EBIT was $172 million and earnings per share were $0.82, all significantly higher than the second quarter of 2020. Excluding the real estate gain noted in yesterday's press release, adjusted EBIT was $144 million and adjusted EPS was $0.66. Strong year-over-year results reflect recovery in most of our businesses from the significant impacts related to the COVID-19 pandemic. When comparing to the pre-pandemic results of second quarter 2019, trade sales grew 5%; adjusted EBITDA was up 9%; and adjusted EBITDA margin improved 60 basis points; and adjusted EPS increased 12%. Mitch Dolloff: Thank you, Karl, and good morning, everyone. First, I would like to thank our employees for driving record second quarter results. Your commitment resolved and ingenuity allowed us to navigate raw material constraints labor shortages and freight challenges to service our customers in a very strong demand environment. Your efforts and accomplishments are greatly appreciated. We had strong operating performance in the second quarter, as sales have recovered to near or above pre-pandemic levels in most of our businesses, supply chain disruptions continued throughout the quarter, most notably in chemicals semiconductors, labor and transportation constraining volume growth. While we are seeing incremental improvement in many of these areas, they continue to create volatility in both supply and in costs. Given the significant pandemic related impact to last year's second quarter results, my comments will compare our segment and business unit results to second quarter 2019, which provides a more meaningful insight to our quarterly operating performance. Sales in our Bedding Products segment were up 7% versus the second quarter of 2019, primarily from raw material related selling price increases from inflation in steel, chemicals and non-woven fabrics. Volume was down in part due to exited business in Fashion Bed and Drawn Wire. Volume was also lower due to foam shortages and labor availability, which continue to constrain the U.S. mattress – constrained U.S. mattress production negatively impacting component demand and our finished good production. Jeff Tate: Thank you, Mitch, and good morning everyone. In the second quarter, cash from operations was $41 million, higher earnings were partially offset by planned working capital investments to build and maintain the higher inventory levels that Mitch just discussed, as well as inflation in the cost of those inventories. With the expectation of carrying higher levels of inventory through the end of the year, we have lowered our full year operating cash estimate. We now anticipate cash flow from operations to approximate $450 million in 2021. At the end of the quarter, adjusted working capital as a percentage of annualized sales with 12.8%; during the first half of the year, we brought back a $187 million of offshore cash and currently expect to return at least $200 million of cash for the full year. Susan McCoy: That concludes our prepared remarks. We thank you for your attention and we'll be glad to answer your questions. Karl will direct our Q&A session as it in the group will answer your questions. Daryl, we're ready to start Q&A. Operator: Our first question is come from the line of Bobby Griffin with Raymond James. Please proceed with your questions. Bobby Griffin: Good morning, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions. I hope everyone is doing well. I guess, first I want to touch on the international bedding segment. It's been actually a very bright spot of good growth for you guys over the last couple of years. So now with the acquisition, Karl or Mitch, can you maybe frame up your for U.S. or international bedding business in kind of the go-to-market strategy, where you participate in there that might be a little different in the U.S.? And then importantly, with Kayfoam, what did that acquisition give you in terms of capabilities? Is that a springboard to launch in the more phone business in Continental Europe or kind of how do we think about the 2 to 3-year opportunity now with this addition to your capabilities over there. Karl Glassman: Yes, thanks for the question, Bobby. Mitch, do you want to unravel that? Mitch Dolloff: Yes, sure. Good morning, Bobby. And you're right, the international bedding grew for us, particularly in Europe has been really – really strong over the last couple of years and including this year coming out of the pandemic. So really, we see that it's a different market than the U.S., it's more segmented across different regions with different product types. But we do see that as a meaningful growth opportunity for us. And the Kayfoam acquisition really sets us up similarly to take advantage of the trends that were happening here in the U.S. and we see them taking place in the UK and other parts of Europe. So first off, it's a – Kayfoam is the provider of specialty foam in finished mattresses. We are interested in the bedding business, not so much in commodity foam and this fills that mark for us. They've been collaborating with Peterson Chemical Technology for over a decade and really utilizing that specialty foam expertise. So it gives us not only that capability of specialty foam but also as scale in production of finished mattresses, similar to what we got through ECS and really dislike in the US Bedding value chain, it allows us to support our customers really anywhere along the value chain from component of innersprings to specialty foam, all the way to private label finished mattresses or other accessories. So we feel like, it sets us up really well to continue to grow our business in Europe. This is primarily focused in the UK and Ireland that we will explore the possibilities of similar opportunities as we look through broader European market. Bobby Griffin: Okay, I appreciate that. That's helpful. And then I guess lastly from me before I jump back in the queue. Just on the auto supply chain, I understand the chip shortages and what's going on there, is the catch-up going to start in 3Q and 4Q of this year? Or is this really when we think about in our model the 2022 type catch-up where things will be impacted pretty much for the rest of the year and then there'll be a big catch-up in 2022 from getting inventories back in normal levels. Karl Glassman: Yes, Bobby, that's a really good question that we're trying to work through those answers ourselves. But, Steve, why don't you – based on the most contemporary information we have tried to answer that question. Steve Henderson: All right, good morning, Bobby. The way that we see it right now and then again, the caveat that is pretty opaque to us and a number of other players in the value chain. What we think we are going to see as the Q2 was really the peak of the issue. So we lost 1.4 million units in Q1 around 2.6 million units were lost in Q2. Q3 right now, we're sitting at about 1 million lost units but probably looking more like the first quarter and then we would see Q4 being somewhat lower impact in Q3, but the recovery continuing into Q1 and probably into Q2. And at that point really being able to start to build up the inventories in earnest and as the inventories right now are sitting in the – in the U.S., we are sitting at 23 days, which is the lowest since August of 2009 and down 1.2 million units year-on-year and probably somewhere between 1.5 million to 1.8 million from where they really should be. So it will take probably 6 to 12 months to rebuild out that inventory once we get to the parity again. Bobby Griffin: Thank you. That's very helpful. I'll jump back in the queue. But best of luck here in the second half. Karl Glassman: Thank you. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Keith Hughes with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your questions. Keith Hughes: Thank you. I guess my question is on the metal margins, what's your kind of outlook in this guidance for that coming in the third and the fourth quarter? Karl Glassman: Yes, Keith, the metal margin story certainly has been a good one over the last few years and really metal margins defined as the difference between the input cost or in our case scrap. And then the sales price, which in our case is either rod or wire and there is kind of two different dynamics, in that scraps inflated pretty dramatically this year with ups and downs each month but aggregate up $145 a ton. The sell price of rod and wire has increased at a faster rate. That's because of the lack of capacity in the U.S. versus the demand that exists. So over the last few years, there was a lot of capacity taken offline. I mean, heck, we shut one of our wire mills down. And post-COVID there has been really strong demand and many mills like us need to take some downtime in the back half of the year for just routine maintenance. So kind of the outlook is an expectation that scrap will probably trade down slightly in August, it will settle here sometime next week. But the forecast is down $20. There is some expectation that rod and wire pricing will despite the scrap reduction inflate again because there is – it's just really hard to buy rod and wire in this country. There is just no availability. But in any – the spreads – long-winded answer to tell you the spreads in good shape and will continue to be for the forecastable future. Keith Hughes: Okay. Usually when prices are coming down, do you actually make some extra margin, it sounds like it's on the way up now I guess could you get a double positive on your price will eventually fall. What could you see really nice margins on that in a downturn environment as well on that scrap prices? Karl Glassman: That's the near-term expectation, Keith. Keith Hughes: Yes, okay. And I guess final question in the – perhaps given more your mattress supply business particularly foam is there. When do you anticipate the industry will be caught up, if you will, in terms of getting what the producers need to meet some pretty strong demand in mattresses? Karl Glassman: Mitch, you want to grab that one. I answer the easy question. Metal margin that easy, Karl, but… Mitch Dolloff: Good morning, Keith. Yes, I think a shot at that. I mean, it's certainly been very, very dynamic, right, in every time that we think we have thought over the last several quarters that chemical constraints that translate into foam are getting resolved something else seems to happen. So I don't want to jinx this year. But they have improved somewhat over the second quarter. We expect them to continue to improve incrementally as we work in the third quarter and fourth quarter. The shorter answer – the short answer is we really don't know, but we are planning forward and we expect that capacity will continue to expand as we move through the third and fourth quarter, and we want to be ready frankly, in case, if there is a surge, right. If something happens and that foam and labor constraints are resolved very quickly. We want to be able to respond, which is in part why we're building inventory as we go through this timeframe. But yes, they will hopefully see it be resolved as we go through the end of the year maybe carryover, a little bit into next year, but that's all going to depend on primarily on the chemical availability. Keith Hughes: Okay. And with your demand and try to build a little bit inventory ECS space sold out right now. Mitch Dolloff: I'm sorry, what was that. Keith Hughes: Given the demand level and the fact that sounds like you're trying to build some inventory in the offseason, is ECS sold out for the foreseeable future? Mitch Dolloff: Yes. At ECS, so it's kind of secondary impact for us on our spring components, right. We have capacity – plenty of capacity and can immediately respond in our foam production and our finished mattress production through ECS there are – so we are constrained by the foam there. So we are basically making and selling everything we can at this point. Keith Hughes: Okay, thank you very much. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Susan Maklari with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your questions. Susan Maklari: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. My first question is around the Bedding capacity side of things, can you talk us through where you are in terms of adding some of that incremental capacity that you're working on this year. And then I guess with that too, you mentioned, Karl or – I think it was Karl, in your comments about increasing production at the Rod Mill. Can you talk through how much you're increasing there, how to think about that coming online and how that sizes to this capacity that's coming with it? Karl Glassman: Mitch, why don't you take the first part, as regards ComfortCore capacity? Mitch Dolloff: Yeah, okay. Sure. So good morning, Susan. Yes, as we've talked about over the last several quarters. Adding machining capacity as well as staffing capacity and we are largely through that as we said, we've got a little bit more machinery coming online. Most of the operations that we plan to bring up to four shifts. They are not fully staffed. Frankly, because we don't need all of that capacity today. But we are a very, very good place from our ComfortCore planned capacity expansion largely through it, as I said. And then Karl, do you want me to talk about the reheat furnace or do you want to tell? Karl Glassman: Yes, please do. No, go ahead. Mitch Dolloff: And then maybe a slight clarification there, so the reheat furnace is really not a capacity expansion and it's really of replacement due to the dynamics of that production and essentially really – it really takes a toll on the reheat furnace overtime and essentially just need to replace it. And now, it was the time for us to do that. So it will put us in a stable place and with a brand new reheat furnace and we'll allow us to make sure we don't have outages going forward. But it is not a capacity expansion for us. And so we'll build some inventory ahead of taking that – taking the rod mill down. So that you will have plenty of inventory on hand as it comes back up. Susan Maklari: Got you. Okay, that's helpful. And sorry for that. I thought that you're increasing the production there but that was my mistake. Mitch Dolloff: No problem. Susan Maklari: And my other question is, you did these two acquisitions this quarter. Can you talk through what you're seeing in terms of the M&A pipeline, the potential for maybe some more of these smaller deals over the next couple of quarters? So what's going on there? Karl Glassman: Yeah, Susan. We continue to look where we're always trying to find strong strategic fits and capabilities that we had a fill gap so to speak or to continue to build out existing platform. So everything that we're looking at and would consider near term would be considered small bolt-on don't expect anything large deleveraging and the focus on deleveraging continues to be important to as well. Our teams have done a great job of deleveraging. We continue to want to work pull that lever. Susan Maklari: Got you. Okay, thanks Karl. Good luck. Karl Glassman: Thank you, Susan. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Peter Keith with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your questions. Peter Keith: Hi, thank you. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. You had mentioned some capacity constraints across your various segments due to labor shortages that was I guess curious what you're seeing it’s your own factories however, are you seeing any wage inflation? Are there any pockets where you're having trouble getting fully staffed, just given the labor backdrop right now? Karl Glassman: Yes, Mitch, do you want to grab that one. Mitch Dolloff: Yes, sure. I think just like look for us and I think probably everybody in the world, labor is a bit of a challenge, but we're not really seen any place where at this point, where we're so severely impacted, we’re probably struggling a little bit in a couple of our ECS operations that are marginally constraining our output. But we'll get those tackle. But it's just – I think an ongoing challenge as the workforce is just smaller coming out of the pandemic. We are seeing a bit of wage inflation. I think that's not unique to us either. Peter Keith: Okay, thanks. Pivoting over now to Betting, I've got a couple of investor questions on this. And it really goes to the volume growth on a two-year basis. My math would say sort of back of the envelope, it looks like the volumes are down somewhere about 8% to 10% on a two-year basis from 2019. And I was wondering if you could address that you specifically called out you've exited Fashion Bed and Drawn Wire. Maybe quantify what the volume impact was from those or if you think there's been some headwind from just your general customer mix? Karl Glassman: The biggest issue, Peter, for sure is the constraint from the foam impacts, but Susan, we've never quantified the exit of those businesses. Is that correct? Susan McCoy: Not at the segment level, we have – it was quantified there is the company-wide level because, Peter, I haven't done that 2019 to 2021 map year-over-year in 2020 though we were looking at about 3% reduction company-wide, which would mean I don't know just couple back roughly for the relative size of the – as the Bedding segment and maybe that's closer to 6%, 7% or so, but that's very rough math. We can follow-up with you after the call if you'd like. Peter Keith: Okay, thanks. It sounds good. And then nice job with the beaten raise and I guess, if articulated the sales guidance raise certainly passing through Q2, but then it looks like you've got the acquisitions and the raw material price increases but we look at the EPS raise here, arguably there is much of the Q2 flow through as well? Or is there anything on the margin front, however that you're adjusting in your back half year outlook that allows for the EPS bump up? Susan McCoy: You're right about what the cost for that increases. It's largely metal margin. And no, there is not anything that we're adjusting for in the back half. So we would anticipate as we move through the second half of the year. So third quarter, fourth quarter to see sequential improvement, quarterly improvement in sales and EBIT margin and in EPS following through our – with the expectations we've talked about already relative to supply chain constraints and our ability to recover raw material costs and so forth. So, but no special adjustments. Peter Keith: Okay, thanks for the overview and good luck. Karl Glassman: Thank you. Operator: Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the floor back over to Susan McCoy for any closing comments. Susan McCoy: We will – we appreciate you joining us today. And we look forward to talking to you next quarter. Thank you. Operator: Thank you. That does conclude this morning’s teleconference. Thank you for participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time.
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